. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . MISS MARY RYAN 114 THE BALTIMORE AND OHIO EMPLOYES MAGAZINE. G. W. HESSLAU G. W. Hesslau, who has made such a goodrecord as correspondent, says he is of Germandescent, but neutral. He is twenty-one yearsold^and was born in Chicago and educated inits ^public schools. After graduating fromschool he studied electricity, but when aboutready to go to work, his mother, after givingSafety First due consideration, decidedthat he drop that line of work and go to businesscollege. So he took up a thorough businesscourse in the ODonnell Business College ofChicago


. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . MISS MARY RYAN 114 THE BALTIMORE AND OHIO EMPLOYES MAGAZINE. G. W. HESSLAU G. W. Hesslau, who has made such a goodrecord as correspondent, says he is of Germandescent, but neutral. He is twenty-one yearsold^and was born in Chicago and educated inits ^public schools. After graduating fromschool he studied electricity, but when aboutready to go to work, his mother, after givingSafety First due consideration, decidedthat he drop that line of work and go to businesscollege. So he took up a thorough businesscourse in the ODonnell Business College ofChicago and graduated with honors. Afterleaving college he was employed by a Chicagomail order house as bookkeeper and stenog-rapher, but soon resigned and accepted aposition as stenographer with a company manu-facturing heavy machinery. In the fall of1911 he was born on the Chicago Terminalas private secretary to superintendent. Afterabout ten months he was promoted to stenog-rapher in the local freight office and two weekslater to. chief clerk to road foreman of May, 1913, he became claims in


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectbaltimo, bookyear1912