. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . y[. T >fAT.(_>xr:Y On September 9conductor M. caught anegro in a merchan-dise car in train , took him to Day-ton and turned himover to the city au-thorities. On September SCharles H a w n .switchman in Ross-ford yard, discov-ered a defective condition ana looiv ncco^arysteps for safety. On September 12 C. L. Miller, engineer,found a car of straw afire and extinguished theflames. On September 17 Samuel McGIonc, switch-man in Cincinnati yards, discovered a defectivecondition. J. J. Schorhenbher, road brakeman, dis-covered and reporte


. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . y[. T >fAT.(_>xr:Y On September 9conductor M. caught anegro in a merchan-dise car in train , took him to Day-ton and turned himover to the city au-thorities. On September SCharles H a w n .switchman in Ross-ford yard, discov-ered a defective condition ana looiv ncco^arysteps for safety. On September 12 C. L. Miller, engineer,found a car of straw afire and extinguished theflames. On September 17 Samuel McGIonc, switch-man in Cincinnati yards, discovered a defectivecondition. J. J. Schorhenbher, road brakeman, dis-covered and reported a defective track con-dition on September 26. HE WAS A SAFETY MAN A pipefitter in the Cleveland roundhouse wore these goggleswhile chipping babbitt out of a cross head. A piece of themetal flew against one of the lenses with enough force tobreak it and dent the goggle frame—but the man was not hurt. SAFETY ALWAYS PAYS Submitted by F. P. Neu, Secretary to the Superintendent, Cleveland Division What Makes Men Loyal? By W. C. Holman In System I I KNOW a football coach who tried to turn eleven gawky, ignorantplayers into a team of fighting demons by getting behind themin practice and yelling with a fog-horn voice Get through there!Break em up—smash em up! Rush the ball over! The playersdid not know how to do the things he commanded, and they had noincentives. So long as he coached, the team lost every game. The man who replaced him taught these eleven boys, as indi-viduals and a team, just how to do every part of their work—howto stand, block, tackle, charge, help each other—play together—stopopponents — make gains themselves. Then he promised letteredsweaters to the boys who made the team. He worked up plans thatinduced the school to attend practice games, watch and cheer allgood plays. He sent the school paper reports of every game, in whichhe described each good play mad


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbaltimo, bookyear1912