. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . o. 1 hav(; jmrcliascda Thrift ) book for niy wih; and each of my three children. I am contributingone dollar per month to the Red Cross. When shipments arrive at our depotfor the aviation fields or munition plants,I never wait until the cashier sends awritten notice, I immediately phone theconsignee. Very often this material isdelivered within a few hours of its so doing I am putting a plane in theair and a shell on the field ahead ofschedide. Devotion to a cause is notonly manif(^st in labor and contribution,but also in personal sacri


. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . o. 1 hav(; jmrcliascda Thrift ) book for niy wih; and each of my three children. I am contributingone dollar per month to the Red Cross. When shipments arrive at our depotfor the aviation fields or munition plants,I never wait until the cashier sends awritten notice, I immediately phone theconsignee. Very often this material isdelivered within a few hours of its so doing I am putting a plane in theair and a shell on the field ahead ofschedide. Devotion to a cause is notonly manif(^st in labor and contribution,but also in personal sacrifice of neces-saries and pleasures. During this ])(riodI have not purchased a single drink,eitluM- soft or intoxicant. I have noteat(^n a dish of ice cream. I have notspent a dollar for tobacco. I have notpurchascnl for my family the amount ofHour or nu^at that Hoover has allotted asmy shai-(\ 1 nc^ver fnirchase an articleof wearing ap{)aiel that (contains never ridc^ in the street cars. THE BALTIMORE AND OHIO EMPLOYES MAGAZINE 21. F. M. KIRKENDALL Every atom of energy and every poundof muscle, I am trying to convert intocash or combustibles—cash for the cause,and conbustibles for the Kaiser. If youhave the dope on any one who has abigger bit with an equivalent amount otbrains and income, I would like to knowhis pedigree and the color of his hair. □ □ Arnold Kennedy Severely-Wounded in France News has been received in Baltimore thatJ. Arnold Kennedy, for three years a clerk inthe Baltimore and Ohio yards at Locust Point,has been severely wounded in battle in a letter to his mother he shows the spiritthat the American soldier is made of and whichwill be the ultimate cause of the success of theAllied arms. The loss of his leg is of minor importance tothis hero, for in the body of his letter he statesthat he believes the war will be over a brave lad means surely that the end ofthe war would come only when Germany isdefeated and even in his hour of


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbaltimo, bookyear1912