SaparotRob
Unter Gemeine Geschwader Murmeltier XIII
I have delivered hundreds of train orders in this way. The Form 19's, A-cards and C-Cards are rolled together and tied to the string and are visible next to the conductor's elbow. The string is suspended between the two forks and is looped around a clip at the fork of that contraption that will easily release when snagged. The operator holds up the stick and the conductor snags the bundle in the crook of his elbow. This operator's equipment is exactly what I used. It's a real hoot when 80 billion tons of GP-38 comes screaming in* at you at night and you're about an arm's length away from the train. Usually some mischievous engineer will flip on the brights on approach just for a laugh. A favorite conductor prank was to grab the entire stick and toss it into the brambles and bushes a few hundred feet down the track from the tower.View attachment 753782
March 1943. "Dalies, New Mexico. Conductor C.W. Tevis picking up a message from a woman operator on the
Atchison, Topeka & Santa Fe between Belen and Gallup." Photo by Jack Delano for the Office of War Information.
Source: Internet
Good times!
*EDIT: Honesty compels me to mention, after just talking to a real locomotive engineer, the speed was about 15 mph.
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