Signals, by John A. Hill and 
Jasper Ewing Brady 
 
Project Gutenberg's Danger Signals, by John A. Hill and Jasper Ewing 
Brady This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and 
with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away 
or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg License included 
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Title: Danger Signals Remarkable, Exciting and Unique Examples of 
the Bravery, Daring and Stoicism in the Midst of Danger of Train 
Dispatchers and Railroad Engineers 
Author: John A. Hill and Jasper Ewing Brady 
Release Date: August 8, 2006 [EBook #19007] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK DANGER 
SIGNALS *** 
 
Produced by Roger Frank and the Online Distributed Proofreading 
Team at http://www.pgdp.net 
 
[Illustration: "Quick as a flash the Kid had my arm."]
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DANGER SIGNALS 
Remarkable, Exciting And Unique Examples Of The Bravery, Daring 
And Stoicism In The Midst Of Danger Of TRAIN DISPATCHERS 
AND RAILROAD ENGINEERS 
By 
JOHN A. HILL and JASPER EWING BRADY 
ABSORBING STORIES OF MEN WITH NERVES OF STEEL, 
INDOMITABLE COURAGE AND WONDERFUL ENDURANCE 
Fully Illustrated 
CHICAGO JAMIESON-HIGGINS CO. 1902 
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Copyright 1898, 1899 By S. S. McClure Co. 
Copyright 1899 By Doubleday & McClure Co. 
Copyright 1900 By Jamieson-Higgins Co. 
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CONTENTS 
 
PART I. PAGE 
Jim Wainright's Kid 7 
An Engineer's Christmas Story 35
The Clean Man and the Dirty Angels 57 
A Peg-legged Romance 75 
My Lady of the Eyes 97 
Some Freaks of Fate 151 
Mormon Joe, the Robber 191 
A Midsummer Night's Trip 227 
The Polar Zone 253 
 
PART II. 
 
CHAPTER 
I. 
Learning the Business--My First Office 1 
II. An Encounter with Train Robbers 11 
III. In a Wreck 12 
IV. A Woman Operator Who Saved a Train 25 
V. A Night Office in Texas--A Stuttering Despatcher 33 
VI. Blue Field, Arizona, and an Indian Scrimmage 42 
VII. Taking a Whirl at Commercial Work--My First Attempt--The 
Galveston Fire 52
VIII. Sending a Message Perforce--Recognizing an Old Friend by His 
Stuff 62 
IX. Bill Bradley, Gambler and Gentleman 68 
X. The Death of Jim Cartwright--Chased off a Wire by a Woman 80 
XI. Witnessing a Marriage by Wire--Beating a Pool Room--Sparring at 
Long Range 87 
XII. How a Smart Operator was Squelched--The Galveston Flood 96 
XIII. Sending My First Order 104 
XIV. Running Trains by Telegraph--How It is Done 111 
XV. An Old Despatcher's Mistake--My First Trick 125 
XVI. A General Strike--A Locomotive Engineer for a Day 137 
XVII. Chief Despatcher--An Inspection Tour--Big River Wreck 147 
XVIII. A Promotion by Favor and Its Results 160 
XIX. Jacking up a Negligent Operator--A Convict Operator--Dick, the 
Plucky Call Boy 168 
XX. An Episode of Sentiment 185 
XXI. The Military Operator--A Fake Report that Nearly Caused 
Trouble 192 
XXII. Private Dennis Hogan, Hero 203 
XXIII. The Commission Won--In a General Strike 222 
XXIV. Experiences as a Government Censor of Telegraph 237 
XXV. More Censorship 246
XXVI. Censorship Concluded 257 
XXVII. Conclusion 269 
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List of Illustrations 
 
PART I. 
"Quick as a flash the Kid had my arm." Frontispiece 
TO FACE "I noticed his long, slim hand on the top of the 
reverse-lever" 22 
"It was a strange courting ... there on that engine" 70 
"We carried him into the depot" 100 
"He was the first man I ever killed" 176 
"'Mexican,' said I" 236 
"What seemed to be a giant iceberg...." 282 
"A white city ... was visible for an instant" 292 
 
PART II. 
Facsimile of a completed train-despatcher's order 1 
"Two of the men tied my hands in front of me" 16 
"After many efforts I finally reached the lowest cross-arm" 30
"One of them picked up the lantern, and swaggering over to where I sat 
all trembling...." 38 
"He looked at me ... then catching me by the collar...." 100 
"... Half lying on the table, face downward, dead by his own hand" 128 
"'See here, who is going to pull this train?'" 144 
"Are you not doing it just because I am a woman?" 190 
"... Dennis, lying under the telegraph line. His left hand still grasped the 
instrument" 219 
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DANGER SIGNALS. 
 
PART I. 
JIM WAINRIGHT'S KID 
As I put down my name and the number of the crack engine of 
America--as well as the imprint of a greasy thumb--on the register of 
our roundhouse last Saturday night, the foreman borrowed a chew of 
my fireman's fine-cut, and said to me: 
"John, that old feller that's putting on the new injectors wants to see 
you." 
"What does he want, Jack?" said I. "I don't remember to have seen him, 
and I'll tell you right now that the old squirts on the 411 are good 
enough for me--I ain't got time to monkey with new-fangled injectors 
on    
    
		
	
	
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