. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . de Dailer without Frank Boyd. R. C. Gruver when he is bummingsomething to eat. Peewee Schafer when he is not usingthe telephone calling Thelma. Larry Michel in a hurry. D. W. Edelen when he is not dreamingof Angela. R. T. Brooks with some of his fish. Jimmie Michels with a clean straw hat. Jimmie Mitchell without his chewinggum. Anna Kock doing something unimportant. A. V. Coxon when he is not hungry. Bernard Lyons when he is not growlingabout something. J. O. McBride when he is not tellingabout his hard luck in the army. On a Saturday afternoon recent


. Baltimore and Ohio employees magazine . de Dailer without Frank Boyd. R. C. Gruver when he is bummingsomething to eat. Peewee Schafer when he is not usingthe telephone calling Thelma. Larry Michel in a hurry. D. W. Edelen when he is not dreamingof Angela. R. T. Brooks with some of his fish. Jimmie Michels with a clean straw hat. Jimmie Mitchell without his chewinggum. Anna Kock doing something unimportant. A. V. Coxon when he is not hungry. Bernard Lyons when he is not growlingabout something. J. O. McBride when he is not tellingabout his hard luck in the army. On a Saturday afternoon recently Bob-bie Evans (ahas Rudolph Valentino),our standard operation clerk, left WheeHngon Train 52 to attend a football game atMoundsville. While enroute he noticedthat a young lady on the train was tryingto flirt with him. After he had picked upenough courage he made himself acquaintedand when the train arrived at Moundsville,Bobbie failed to get off, and when hecame to himself he noticed that the trainwas standing in the Fairmont


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1920, bookidbaltimoreohi, bookyear1920