m&m Pjer i " 'sjpsj. 7i yVJ JiWSSW rJwffifrgt WWZn va-VC SfXZS" .VW5?V m '". m rt' . j Tt.. .. .a W.w?' OfV- TRIP IJV CJB OF WORLD'S FASTEST J& isjJKbE " MiJ flp-r-" VvTnfMWnBMMilWMTrrnnMMMBnCTWMi rwm MM V TRJL (R ! Fat; . Uffel H,mHetH Waring Ride of 55Vz Miles in 50 Min- W'Utes en Engine of "Beard walk Flier" ?& Proves Exhilarating Example of i-fV'h, uru. ;; rne c, "QltUTf J rr tAvfg uvrtittji. vj kjjuvc and Laggard Minutes farERAN OF RAILS HOLDS Mmlyte THROTTLE WHILE $NDSG4PE IS A MERE BL UR . t ? TV fyimy Face and Wind-Swept Tresses VYCetnpensaiea rer wnen journey te Atlantic City Is Completed Ahead of r, ,. a Ail r. rr-.iLJJ r 7r lime siii in a uay s worn is YK Nonchalant Attitude of Trainmen 1 , . ,.,..,. . By SALLY LOCKWOOD JiHETY miles an Tieuri JN iianging out the window of a locomotive cab, where no ethor woman ltd ever ridden! A rush of wind and dust that turned te grime in the slinging pelt (Irtinl ' , i Clamoring bell; shriek of the whistle; rearing of steam; het blast frem the" firebox with, ever all, a. glorious feeling of flying en and en UffOBjn pBinp, turn ejmm.b, nun muugin niituiug ui . ' ,Ahd,' at the end of fifty minutes, a qucerly shaded bluish-gray fact that meant no complexion at all till scrubbing brushes had scrubbed their bariest, " . These were some of the sensations of my first ride in the engine caD f,th "Boardwalk Flyer" a marvelous experience if you care nothing for personal appearance or complexion. In fact, by the time you are going Jaetv miles an hour you are se ex- hilerated that Hairpins and ceia ewm mean nothing in your life jb Just want te keep en moving Hkt that forever. At least. I was mighty sorry that tlit '"fastest regularly scheduled jatstngeTtrain in the world" didn't go ninety, miles en hour the entire dfy.flve miles' from Camden te At lantic City, instead of just across these flying miles of perfectly itrtlfht roadbed that' He- en the meadows. Strange, isn't it, that the pas stagers' can sit se calmly, back in the coaches, reading their papers or powdering their noses, without get ting single thrill ever the speed the train is making? They would ealy grumble if the Boardwalk Flyer pulled in a minute late at At Untie City. ISqends Are rreaeus i Watches Race On t never before realized the tromen tremen tromen tetnV importance of seconds. They had beta merely trivial divisions of min stM that never bothered trie. But when wfwint a mile in lerty fcecends and tM entire fifty-five miles in a trifle note lhan fifty minutes; when I saw a engineer and the read foreman of teflnes and the supervisor of fuel con cen con lenratlen, watches in hand, counting up fte.Mcends our Journey had consumed, I eWkleil as contentedly as they, end Ml that te get into Atlantic City even Hewdi before schedule tlme meant neth. lVhn my trip In the cab was being planned aeerea came fevlh with augges-Ueu.' 'Wear knickers and old clothes and We'll need goggles," said IlcadlngRall nr officials. Wear a bathing cap te protect your 11,' f Hid eeme one elite. -Be ure te cover vnnr fnen with wM ejeam befere you start" and "held cljt, the cab rocks like everything "" m weh't have a spring Heat. I ",, yen don't get seasick," and Ulk te the engineer." minute after we started I was Uin ever the last injunction. The IS?' hun out his window at the "IM of the cab. I hun out of the jMn window nt the ether Mde. r'th the' constant ringing of our Ml, the Intermittent shrieks of 2u t,e' the c,UI,l"K of lire doers JHtneflrcman'H shovel, the rear of the " and the sweep of wind and drla- wait our faces, if I had shouted "top of my lungs I think the en "Hr probably would net even have f"W me unless he had been listening ' ttl veir laiimurh wiiii n-i.L. . " """" "uunaser, renu wjesti of engine, who served as my w, bad explain,.,! te me the duties of ntlneer, I really hed net expected v auentlen from William Ilebert JJjnlU, driver of the Boardwalk ;Wes keeping his hand en the thret- 'ii was un in him . u,.. u (... C,t, . ' " l,ninc nil U' g:a railroad creimlngu nnd blew the ?" Bl SUCh nloeoil! tn nnln tllH Per anil miinm.iu .... i ,i him uh... .1 . . . te i. ""-r ,,,e irneu was cieur; "JW the water level in the boiler ; r 'W an e en tli.. t.m .,. n Zwt valve if the Rteara pressure 'Z.if reat! en(l te wntch th ilr ,W tnat .hewed whether the pressure editi suiclently te operate th Wfm of Mania Bess enormous Iren Steed Mi fci superintendent of the i r,iHhoire ,,lnM- had taken me temilen train nhn.iy ...i. ... .... ,'f ,' er.l'ln" of the Boardwalk il.B2?l8f,,,r"'.SB t was there thut "! nuiinill. with his long-speutcd oilcan he hnd te Atnmt en tititoe te wnir the dark linuld ever the Joints of his great race horse. Beside the huge locomotive his slight live-feet tigure looked like that of n pygmy. Whrn he heard I wns te ride in the cab with him, hi wiped his hand en some waste und turned te shake mine. "I hope we give you a geed ride," he smiled. He hnd carefully inspected the engine, an usual, nlthetigh he knew it was nl wnyH straight from the roundhouse. When the two quirk whistles sounded an a signal te start, he was In his box and opened the throttle en the instant. In the tlrst mile, when wc were going only thirty an hour, he made his running test of the brakes, then gradually gathered speed. It was the firht day anthracite had been tried en Engine 121, nnd the trav eling fireman, as well n Jehn Kntrikln, the regular fireman, was shoveling coal. The ninety-seven square feet of fire box had already been fed a ten nnd n hnlf of oenl te get the Jocemotlve tn working trim before we started, and en the way te Atlantic City another ten was fed In, shevelful by shovelful, as the furnace ate It up. Nearly 0,000 gallons of water hnd tn be evaporated In that fifty-minute ride with a locomotive weighing, mere than 273,000 pounds whining half a dozen coaches along the rails. J.ntcr en, in the summer, this same englnu will pull a dexen or mere coaches te the seashore at the same rate of speed, consuming perhaps n trifle mere coal and evaporating 0000 gallons of water. When we started the superheated steam pyrometer In front of me regis tered about three hundred pounds of steam. When the speed was greatest, the needle pointed te 702. Flying, Poles Loek Like a Leng Picket Fence One of the trainmen had told me I could Judge our speed by counting tele graph poles forty te the mile. I started bravely with wrist wntch out, counting poles nnd seconds till we were going sixty-five miles an hour. Then fear, of becoming cress-eyed stepped me. The peles seemed frightfully close te- getner. ine wind nnd rain beat In mere fiercely and the engine was noticeably ruumiiK. The fireman hnd clven m n hnnrifni of brightly hued waste te protect my nanus irum uic pu and dirt or the en gine, but I forget thnt nnd clutched the window ledge as we went faster and taster. It was a Joyous feeling. I began te understand the. fascnutlen this tort of thing litis for these trainmen. 'The en nine seemed reallr nllve unu .., swlft-fllng, rearing beast thnt hnd been iraiiuu 10 respena te uic sllgl)tpst caresa or touch from the driver a hungry monster that needed always te be fed. At Plghty-flvH miles an hour (Mr. Bnltlmser, standing near, was "keeping score") I wus thankful I had worn a naming cap. At ninety miles the cap was blowing off and I was glad there were mere hairpins In the traveling bag back in n reach. The goggles remained firm, up firm thnt I had queer white rings about mv eyeu In the midst of a mulatto complexion when we reached Atlantic City. As we Hew pnst stations and cross cress ronds I sketchlly saw thut people stared und waved. I mnnnseil tn im a wad of waste fluttering In the breeze e they would guess thut their saluta tions were returned. I marveled most at the train slg mils, especially the automatic bleck-slg-mil system thut serves te keep all the truins u certmn uisinnce apart. At cer tain times of the day in summer there are as many as twenty-five trains run ning en the Mime track between Camden and the seashore with schedules only live iiuiniti'H uunrt. Jl gemetninr enra wrong with one train the entire line of high-speed trains Is held up. But this seldom happens, "Perfectly built and perfectly kept engines) expert and tried firemen and engineers, and excellent track ure the cscentlnls for high-speed trains," Mr. Lewis had told me. "and everv nre- caution Is taken 'wh.vb. The engineers arc tee proud of their records te let anything go. wrong if there is the least chance te prevent It," The automatic signals are what keep the trains from colliding, he'explulned. The line is divided Inte blocks or sec tions, and the entrance te each block Is guarded by appropriate signals, When the train wheels pass ever the track they touch certain instruments or levers and set In motion the clectrlcul opera tions that move the signals, When the signal shows green It means that the line Is clear for two blocks ahead ki the train may proceed at high When green snows above yel- flled but that the nest home signal will be at "step," And when the red shows above yellow It mead's that another train Is en this block and also indicates step. The engineer knows these signals se thoroughly that hlseycs catch the colors mechanically as his locomotive whizzes by. and his flnsers arasn the levers that Increase or decrease his speed accord ingly. t Ahead of the Schedule Despite One Slowdown Only once In our run did we have a signal te slew down. That was at the bridge Just this side of Atlantic City, where repair work under way made .caution necessary. After the previous speed It seemed we scarcely moved across the bridge and only crawled into the station. But we were ahead of schedule by, several seconds. The greatest speed was made between Bide Ancher nnd Cologne seventeen miles of-perfectly straight, clear road bed where the ferns by the wayalde seemed merely a carpet and the trees entr long mass of green broken only new nnd then by a splotch of color that was house or barn or station. "Did. you like it?." The query came from hnlf a dozen trainmen. When the swift Journey was ended "Beb" HammlU smiled beneath his sandy mustache and asked me te ride again. He was n's calm and detached as though he had Just come from the corner grocery store instead et from the en gineer's box of the fastest train in the world. "Ne, I've never been afraid of any thing In my life," he answered, and smiled nt the question. "Wheri my mother died at fifty-eight she had never .been frightened In her We." He wasn't boasting. He simply doesn't knew what fear Is. His nerves have been trained nftd hardened by fnrtr.flrn vpnra nf railroad service. Thirty-three of these years he has been an engineer, most ei tnc lime arivmg the fastest trains en the read. Many men after years of preliminary training fall te pass the final test that puts them' Inte the fast drivers' class. Mntiv nthnra rnflian tn nin fast trains. LThey want their hands en the throttle of only freight trains. There nre still ethers who stand the strain of the speedsters for n few years then completely lese their nerve nnd go heck te firing, or else te the throttle of slew-moving locomotives, Speeding Engine Is Pet of Veteran Engineer But "Beb" HammlU, wbe will be sixty-four years old in October, only smiles his calm smile, pats Engine 121 much as a wee confident lad might stroke the biggest circus elephant with which he has made friends, nnd admits : "The faster they are the better I like them." In his forty-five years -with the rail- can against accidents. Only recently In a heavy rain we had te slew down en our way te Atlantic City. I think It was near Wlnslew Junction. "Driving ngalnst a heavy ram, the water poured 'across the boiler in sheets and streamed down our faces. It was almost Impossible te keep our eyes clear. We Just had te slew down, and that meant holding up all the ether trains aleng1 the line behind us. "Kvcry engineer hates te de that, and he hates te pull Inte a station off sched ule. On the ether hand, he Is always blamed If anrthln.t sees wrong, se he tries te be careful." There was still plenty et tlm before he would need te go ever the engine with his oil can te see that it was fit for the return Journey. ISxcept en spe cial occasions, whrn there Is need for an extra man, HammlU makes only this one round trip a day te Atlantic City. New he leaned against the rear wheel of his locomotive, gloves off, oilcloth cap pushed back and relaxed. He was lb the humor for reminiscences. Plenty of Roem Open for Crack Engineers He wns born In Ireland, he said, but his parents brought hint te America when he was an infant. "When I was a lad," he went en, "my mother told me I must either go te school or te the Iren works. I wasn't much for book's, se I chose the Iren works. Then In 1877 I started work with the railroad as water boy for a 'section gang, "It is a long, hard training te get into the engineer's box even new, and In these days there wasn't much pay, either. New the pay Is bigger because all the boys want te be conductors In stead of engineers. Nobody seems te want the Jeb and the railroads can't get men se easily. "When my water-carrying Jeb with the section gang ended I went into the railroad shops and later started firing. Thirty-three years age I was given my first run and I have been driving en glnes ever since." The Boardwalk Flyer Isn't the first train te go ninety or even mere miles in nn hour. Hut it is the fastest reg ularly fcheduled train. Only last year J. Lewber Stokes, a Philadelphia banker and broker, paid $427 te have a special train carry him from Philadelphia te New Yerk in eighty minutes. The thirty-five miles from Nesharalny Falls te Westen were covered In twenty-eight minutes, un average of one and a quarter miles a minute. Fer the 3.0 miles between Westen and Bound Broek Junction only two minutes were required, an. average of 1.05 miles n minute. The ninety-mile run te Jersey City was made in eighty minutes. The previous record for the run was eighty-four minutes. Even In 1008, trainmen say, there were many trains that made ninety miles an hour at times along their routes. In that year W. II. Newman, ..c. r CPWS ;V 1-' W v. V ? i . y HKBgR2 amiiiiHBBBipgiiiiiiiiMaiiiiiiaiiiiH t :t!t3?t; yir-,;- u?w4? k. KwiArefl&r anv'jht? XtltltltltltltltMXflMXtltMXtMSfltltltltltltltIM HHiMffl 1 1 1 1 J! 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LLWtLs i'7rVWssssssssssssssssssm wLrimsmsrklm-:'' '&2LW :''J7ssWsmsWlsK WkwMfrkWWyfmiLL':' "&sWr ' '' MssWssssWssW a kmNk:4WFW 7a; iiiVl " . h. ksmssssssssW ft iik: K TV i jrv wHsl ' f iliViiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiV k LwkWu&FI'M f ' sWSmAi hvti 'swsWsssWsWm L SSSSMFdwJr.t'iif''It -WBr--"' H v''v 'mSM'MBBKB8!K&rtSx? mwww'&k Tfi s V v YsWkismsmSmr L.LM'-:'M:4-'h:r-: V'-'- 1 1 - YjBsmkWsWsT : iiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiii KJMfKvXvXvX "Beb" HammlU oiling up for his trip en fastest train in world president of the New Yerk Central, ordered slower train schedules brenue of a wreck en a train from Menter, O., te Chicago. However, he reversed this order when he found that speed had nothing tn de with the accident and the Twentieth Century Limited contin ued its clghteen-hnur schedule. But there are still old trainmen who can tell of problems that confronted railroad experts of early Philadelphia days problems that today eiiKineern laugh at. Railroad managers poured ,,,,',,,,, ,,,,, ever reports of experts nnd questioned , tnllMi nj ,ur'iJ, rucu tuner un i me iuiaimiii tu err making engines burn eon I, pull truum without setting them en tire, and tnku curves without the slipping nf wheels. When trains arrived nt their des tination the same day they set out, without the cnKlneers linviug been ar rested for poaching " the preherves of without less of life or limb, the towns people turned out te marvel nnd ap plaud. When a cog (.lipped or a tar wns derailed, or nn engine fell apart, it meant mnny deaths and it wasu't an unusual occurrence. The "Iteckct," which Is new en ex hibition in the Columbia Avenue sta tion nf the Heading, wnt one of a group of engines which beaun te arrive In Philadelphia in the winter of 1837 and tnu spring of 18JJS j ears before "Heb " . It weighed ubeut eight nc its lite run a total of 810,104 miles. When 25 Miles an Heur Was "Real Whizzing" It was considered one of the best locomotives of its dnv nnd could take a train along the read nt a speed of various legislative jurli-dictiens, und twenty-five miles an hour, ltunning it wns n simple job compared te pull ing the throttle of the Boardwalk Flyer. The weed used as fuel was en the platform beside the engine. The engi neer and fireman en this primitive engine were one and the same man. There was plenty of time in these' days, though, and it was net necessary te atop the train te fire the boiler. There was only ene lever and thnt was the throttle. When it was away ahead you get full speed, and when It was pushed way back you reversed. The engine had four wheels, no driving reds and no brakes. It had kerosene bull's eye and n pep whistle. "Beb" HammlU rejoices that he doesn't have such an engine te drive. lie lins seen great development in loco motives even in his day. When the Boardwalk Flyer was first put en he was selected as engineer, and he is mighty proud of the job. Kvery afternoon, seen after 3:30 o'clock, veu enn find him in the yards oiling nnd petting Knglne 121, getting ready for the start te the shore. He examines the gauges, tests the brakes, nnd takes up the slack en the throttle. Then he sits by the window waiting for the two pept en his whistle which nre n signal te start. When he gets them he braces him self, takes held of the throttle with both hands nnd gives it the first notch. Frem the time the train starts it does net reduce its speed until it rwu'hes the bridge this side of Atlantic City. The locomotive is one of the newest types, a Pacific engine, with electric headlight and electric lights in the cab. with bell ringer and tire doers operated by Its own electric generator. Com pared with some of the ether locomo tives, it is low and heavy, built for power nnd speed. "Seme of the lighter engines enn run just ns fast," said Hnmmlll, "but thc.v couldn't pull the lead this does. New that passengers demand pe much luxiirs en the train, parlor and club cars with every accommodation, It takes u heavy engine te pull the weight. And then the steel cars of today are much lienler than the old with." Wants Sens te Fellow in Dad's Footsteps! Hnmmill is new third eldest en the Heading's engineers' roster. He is hoping that one of his sons will some day fellow in his footsteps. The boy is new making bis start in the railroad shops. "Beb" and his family have lived In the same house in Gloucester for mere than fifty years. His parents lived there before him. New there nre his wife and four children. His wife. Ilka these of hundreds of ether engineers, accepts "Beb's" job nnd its hazards with a fortitude born of long schooling and knowledge of the work. In the early days It wan harder, for his hours were longer nnd the risk grcnter. Most of the train officials with whom I talked had served their day in rail road shops as firemen and engineers. They knew their engines as the geolo gist knows his most precious specimen. They carried around pictures of their favorite locomotives. They could tract the evolution of the steam engine from queer little runts up te the powerful and massive machines that urc consid ered best teduy. And the faM.'Inatlen for trnins, with all the noise and bustle nnd gay -colored lights of the railroad yards, seemed te , hnve spread te the wives, tee. At least, the.e I met seemed te love and te knew thoroughly the trninmen's lore. Many of them had ridden the engine beside their husbands or swcetheurtH nt va rious times, A group of trainmen and several women had stepped with me beside the Heard walk Fljcr's locomotive te talk "trains nnd shop," and by the time HammlU had te begin his oiling task nguln there were mnny ethers standing near nnd stnrlng in our direction. If the firemen and engineer were as dirty nnd hungry ns 1 they welcomed the home lights that evening. But be draggled nnd hungry as I was, I found myself counting telegraph poles as I passed them in the trolley homeward bound. k.'l I Was ,,,""" ispecu. vtnen green snows buoys yei 'i, """ me engine and even mew it means umi mis macs is uuui-vu ivy; , fend he has never been in n train Wreck where any one wns killed. "Once, In my early days as a fire man, the engine 1 was riding Jumped the track but the results were net seri ous," he said, "And in a storm about twenty-four years age my engine col lided with another at Cedar Broek. My engine turned ever en Its side and I was thrown out of the cnb. A broken left arm laid me up for about seventeen weeks, but I guess that's the only time I ever did get much hurt. Ne passengers were Injured, "It is much harder te drive at night than in the day time, of course, ter It Is mere difficult te see signals and crossings. Ne, I've never worn glasses. A fellow's eyes Just get trained te see the things he ought te see, and mine never have bothered me, "If an engineer had any business te get nervous nt all It would be during a storm. Klther rain or snow Is pretty bad, nnd when there Is lightning It is even worse, It blinds jeu se you can scarcely see slgnuls, "What de we de in a storm? Just slew down and take all precautions we y.- w j "'v. -H y v 1 .' .f- ktl- JV ,n. A jfetJtX W-jS-1 i 'KV.ft.Ml ' L tSS SSHSSsE J9L-dLJUa namnra B?H . I.,-1 Nv e wm :wvwy- WJte mm WBr7"-n WlE'.-JTvjr- lM.n T"W WUHTM QHI IGMIXJHX I ! .- 1.RZ If ji , .vrivTi ffiffl The Reading's famous "121," which pulb the "fastest train In the) ttjerld" le Atlantic City every day Kil 1 1' t Ml