. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . e was a great shock to hisassociate employes as well as all others whohad become acquainted with and known himduring his many years of service with theCompany. Interment was held in the Cemetery ofSpring Grove, Cincinnati, Ohio, on Friday,November 17, 1922, among those presentbeing W. H. Jameson, J. C. Osterman, Creedon, H. A. Ling, G. L. Hartman andG. M. Morris, auditors. G. , travehng station accountant, and Gifford, L. Y. Glessner, A. L. Carney,R. A. Da\4s and G. T. Thomas, travelingauditors, were the active pall-bearers.


. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . e was a great shock to hisassociate employes as well as all others whohad become acquainted with and known himduring his many years of service with theCompany. Interment was held in the Cemetery ofSpring Grove, Cincinnati, Ohio, on Friday,November 17, 1922, among those presentbeing W. H. Jameson, J. C. Osterman, Creedon, H. A. Ling, G. L. Hartman andG. M. Morris, auditors. G. , travehng station accountant, and Gifford, L. Y. Glessner, A. L. Carney,R. A. Da\4s and G. T. Thomas, travelingauditors, were the active pall-bearers. Ser-vices at the chapel and grave were conduc-ted by Lafayette Lodge No. 81, F. & A. M.,acting in the interest of Mt. OlivetLodge, Parkersburg, W. Va., of which hewas a member. Mr. Pollock is survived by his widow,Catherine, his mother, Mrs. H. E. Pollock,of Huntington, W. Va., and two brothers,L. A. and C. G. Pollock, the former also ofHuntington, W. Va., and the latter auditorof Miscellaneous Accounts for the Companj^in The late Stanley W. Pollock An Old Chimer By John J. Sell THE accompanying picture is of the oldbell which tolled the hours on the oldengine house at Cumberland. It wasmoulded in our Mt. Clare Shops way back in1883, and was placed in the belfry at Cum-berland the same year, replacing a smallerbell. In those days the engine house waslocated in the center of the citv just off Bal-timore Street, back of the Windsor Hotel,where the new Baltimore and Ohio FreightHouse now stands. Before the steam whistle came into gen-eral use most of the enginehouses on thesystem were equipped with bells for callingthe men to work, and for tolling the hoursof day and night. About the year 1903when the old enginehouse was razed, a bignew enginehouse and shops having been builtin South Cumberland, this bell was takendown, and Mr. M. J. Mulaney, proprietorof the Windsor Hotel, purchased it. He hadalways admired its sweet tone, and had itset up on his beautiful country pl


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