. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . the Remington is also without fault. Charles F. Smith, of the firm of Harring-ton, De Ford, Huxley and Smith, ourYoungstown counsel, called J. A. C. Bond of Westminster, Md.,was also a welcome visitor. He has beencounsel for the company for 51 years. Hisp irtner, Francis Neal Parke, alvvays with asmile, gives us frequent greetings. Years ago, when our trains with evennumbers ran west, and odd numbers cast,it was a standing joke at Deer Park, whereI spent every Sunday, for one to ask if thetrain approaching the station was yester-days tra


. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . the Remington is also without fault. Charles F. Smith, of the firm of Harring-ton, De Ford, Huxley and Smith, ourYoungstown counsel, called J. A. C. Bond of Westminster, Md.,was also a welcome visitor. He has beencounsel for the company for 51 years. Hisp irtner, Francis Neal Parke, alvvays with asmile, gives us frequent greetings. Years ago, when our trains with evennumbers ran west, and odd numbers cast,it was a standing joke at Deer Park, whereI spent every Sunday, for one to ask if thetrain approaching the station was yester-days train or to days. Now, Baltimore anil (^hio trains encoun-ter no such familiarity, for wc operatetrains with an exactness that is remarkable,and as I have often observed, I can set mywatch by the running of the trains I use onmy week-end trips. In conversing with passengers who areusing our lines for the first time I callattention to this especially, adding other(lu;ilifications the Baltimore and We cannot put it on too Francis, age 6, and Harold, age 4, children ofFrank W. Barringer. Jane Mad-lox, niece, isdaughter ot Baltimore and Ohio employe, andstands in front ==%^ Office of Vice-President Operation andMaintenance Correspondent, Hakhv H. Graphic Clerk Mirry Christmas to Everybody! RAMni,iNGs: It is morejjlcasant and satisfying to be l)iograi)he<lby ones intimate friends than to l)c writtenup by ones enemies. Accordingly—in the interest of humanhajjpiness and ])rogrcss—I am about topresent a most interesting character. Inthe early days of mans evolutionary lifeupon this planet—he was more closelyrelated to the large roving animals of Cen-tral Africa (than he ajipcars to be today),e. the brazen I)aboon and hairy ape. Seton Thompson, in his Wild AnimalsI Have Met, gives an intimate study ofour early day ancestors. Natural Sciencecarries us further back to evolutionaryorigins, claiming man is a growth frombugs and insects


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