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Nor did Michael know even as little as the baggageman knew.
He worked as a baggageman for three months at which time he was laid off.
Following his lay- off, he was re- employed as switchtender and never returned to baggageman.
He saw the baggageman lying inside.
From that first night, he was known to everyone as Eel-vomit, and even the lowliest baggageman used it contemptuously within his hearing.
Them's the high-jumpers," said the first baggageman. "
Yep, has fits," the man said, hiding his mangled hand from the baggageman, who had been attracted by the sounds of struggle. "
He came from Chicago and when he arrived was drunk and got into a fight with Albert Long- worth, the baggageman.
Dr. Eggerston helped him to get the position of baggageman, which is one of the functions of a trainman.
There were two conductors near one of the passenger ramps, and one of these Calhoun sent back to attend to the baggageman.
And the baggageman, whistling cheerfully to himself, heard nothing, and was still bent over the electric truck, his arms full, when Vincent Coniff smashed the gun at him.
The Reverend Cecil Aylston gave orders to the hotel baggageman regarding their trunks more like a quartermaster sergeant than like an Oxonian mystic.
On this particular mid-September morn, the baggageman shoved the usual assortment of sleeping bags, packsacks, and guns in expensive-looking cases to me, where I loaded them on the platform truck.
What the baggageman did not know, and what Peterson did know, was that of these thirty-five dogs not one was a surviving original of the troupe when it first started out four years before.
A baggageman riding in from one of the platforms floated sedately past on an empty electric truck, after which Calhoun settled himself behind the proper track bumper for the arrival of Train Number 52.
But what the baggageman did not know was that in the towns the hell was not mitigated, that the dogs were still confined in their too-narrow prisons, that, in fact, they were life-prisoners.
Counsel for the Respondent argued that Mr. Nowell had been advised that he would be considered fit for work as a baggageman, a trainman on a passenger train, a towerman or a car retarder operator.
When he was 13, he left the village for Aberdeen to find work, first as a baggageman on the Great North of Scotland Railway, then working with horses as a hostler and variously as a farmhand before apprenticing as a blacksmith.