. Electric railway journal . dWilliam N. Casey. Mr. Adams entered the service of theDenver Tramway in 1890 asan office boy and was ad-vanced through a number ofpositions in the auditorsoffice and transportation de-partment until he was madedivision superintendent ofthe East Division. Thisposition he held one yearand returned to the audi-tors office as general time-keeper for the entire sys-tem. In 1900 he left theauditors office to assumethe position of division su-perintendent of the WestDivision and was trans-ferred after one year to theposition of superintendent JAMES L. ADAMS of the East D


. Electric railway journal . dWilliam N. Casey. Mr. Adams entered the service of theDenver Tramway in 1890 asan office boy and was ad-vanced through a number ofpositions in the auditorsoffice and transportation de-partment until he was madedivision superintendent ofthe East Division. Thisposition he held one yearand returned to the audi-tors office as general time-keeper for the entire sys-tem. In 1900 he left theauditors office to assumethe position of division su-perintendent of the WestDivision and was trans-ferred after one year to theposition of superintendent JAMES L. ADAMS of the East Division, and then to superintendent of the North Division until April , when the two divisions were combined and he wasmade superintendent over both. He served in this capacityuntil Aug. 15, 1915, when he resigned to become vice-presi-dent and general manager of the Crown Hill CemeteryAssociation and of the Denver & Crown Hill Railway. Hereturned to the Denver Tramway on Dec. 1 as superin-tendent of OBITUARY Sir George White, Bt., of Bristol, England, is dead. SirGeorge was interested in many British railway and indus-trial projects. He was perhaps most closely associatedwith the Bristol Tramways & Carriage Company, of whichhe was in succession secretary, managing director andchairman. W. F. Pascoe, promoter and builder of electric railways inCumberland County, Pa., died suddenly in Carlisle on Mr. Pascoe was for several years superintendent of theCarlisle & Mount Holly Railway and built the line betweenCarlisle and Newville. Recently he has been in business atEaston, Pa., where he made his home with his daughter. Hewas in Carlisle on a visit when he died. Mr. Pascoe wasalso interested in theatrical enterprises. He was fifty-nineyears old and is survived by his widow and six children. George S. Haley, president of the General Engineering &Management Corporation, New York, N. Y., died on Dec. 3from injuries received in a street accident. Mr. Haleyw


Size: 1425px × 1753px
Photo credit: © Reading Room 2020 / Alamy / Afripics
License: Licensed
Model Released: No

Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1900, bookpublishernewyorkmcgrawhillp