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Page 5
... Superintendence Account . 54,109 15 3,193 06 4,327 22 2,177 84 $ 688,037 70 $ 55,282 02 $ 48,703 95 ] 249 16 Salaries of all Officers , Agents , & c . , on the Road , Stationary at all Depots and Offices on the Road , Contingent ...
... Superintendence Account . 54,109 15 3,193 06 4,327 22 2,177 84 $ 688,037 70 $ 55,282 02 $ 48,703 95 ] 249 16 Salaries of all Officers , Agents , & c . , on the Road , Stationary at all Depots and Offices on the Road , Contingent ...
Page 7
... Superintendence , & c . , 819,344 40 67,184 60 60,275 30 Or 130,92 cents per Through Passengers , 6,559 13 $ 3,133 62 4,619 90 11,184 49 18,938 01 . $ 2,895 18 2,879 95 7,652 68 9,745 68 4278 64 6,672 23 946,804 30 Total Expenses ...
... Superintendence , & c . , 819,344 40 67,184 60 60,275 30 Or 130,92 cents per Through Passengers , 6,559 13 $ 3,133 62 4,619 90 11,184 49 18,938 01 . $ 2,895 18 2,879 95 7,652 68 9,745 68 4278 64 6,672 23 946,804 30 Total Expenses ...
Page 11
... Superintendence and Office ex- penses , 2,672 87 $ 45,114 14 September Freshet , 30,726 81 New Merchandise Cars , 9,167 85 New Locomotive Engines , Express- " Stag , " $ 5,101 64 " Cambridge , " 7,500 00 " Patapsco , " 9,750 00 ...
... Superintendence and Office ex- penses , 2,672 87 $ 45,114 14 September Freshet , 30,726 81 New Merchandise Cars , 9,167 85 New Locomotive Engines , Express- " Stag , " $ 5,101 64 " Cambridge , " 7,500 00 " Patapsco , " 9,750 00 ...
Page 12
... superintendence and office expenses , New locomotive , " Stag , " for roadway depart- ment , 1,454 29 2,672 87 5,101 64 Less sale of engine " Gem , " 2,000 00 3101 64 To these should be added the cost of five new first class locomotives ...
... superintendence and office expenses , New locomotive , " Stag , " for roadway depart- ment , 1,454 29 2,672 87 5,101 64 Less sale of engine " Gem , " 2,000 00 3101 64 To these should be added the cost of five new first class locomotives ...
Page 20
... Superintendent . He has conducted it with distinguished ability and success . 90 T The prospects of the Reading Rail Road are sufficiently cheering . Its character and capabilities are now known . The talent and energy of its officers ...
... Superintendent . He has conducted it with distinguished ability and success . 90 T The prospects of the Reading Rail Road are sufficiently cheering . Its character and capabilities are now known . The talent and energy of its officers ...
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Common terms and phrases
amount Anthracite Coal April Axles Balance Bar Iron Belonging to Belonging Bituminous Coal Brass Broad Street cent Coal Region Coal Trade Cords cost of transporting Coupons due 1st Dividend Fund Eight-wheeled ending November 30 Engine and Tender Engines and Cars Freight and Tolls fuel Galls grades Hardware increase Iron Castings Items of Cost January July Lateral Roads Lebanon Valley Locomotive Engines Machinery Merchandise miles ran Mount Carbon Norristown Passenger Cars Passenger Train Philadelphia and Reading Philadelphia Branch Road Port Carbon Port Clinton Pottstown Pottsville profits Rail Road Company Rail Road Iron Reading Depot Reading Rail Road Reading Railroad Company Real Estate Receipts Renewal Fund Repairs of Engine Richmond Wharves Roadway Department Ross Winans Schuylkill Haven sills Sinking Fund STATEMENT Steel Stockholders Stone Bridges Sundries Superintendence Tallow Timber and Lumber tonnage Tons Total number track Wages of Engineer Wood Wrought Iron
Popular passages
Page 21 - ... of only 10 cents per ton on the average freight (which cannot fail to satisfy the public) will, without any increase in the tonnage, equal $165,000, or, in other words, an additional profit of 4 per cent upon the amount of common stock. That the demand for Pennsylvania's great staple will continue to increase, none can doubt. It has become, by its price, by its ease of transportation, by its economy in use, forever connected with the steamengine, and is thus inseparable from the Commerce and...
Page 22 - ... per cent, per annum, payable semi-annually on the first days of April and October in each year.
Page 68 - Without troubling you with farther details but leaving those who may desire it, to follow me in the calculations from the data given, I respectfully submit the following as the cost of transporting coal on roads of various grades, exclusive of drawbacks, or of interest on capital : — Level Road»— Average net load, 487-2 Iota. Capacity, 4,000,000 tons. No. of trains, 9,149. Cost per ton per mile, -Л5 cent«.
Page 72 - But the level roads can do double the business of the others, and that with the same amount of motive power, so that, whilst the graded road is carrying its 2,000,000 of tons for net cost, the level road can, at the same prices, realize on its 4,000,000 of tons a profit of $1,200,000, or the interest on $20,000,000.
Page 72 - ... the country is such as to forever debar the possibility of a work being constructed equal to it in capacity, either as to the extent or cheapness ol coal transportation. We occasionally see it gravely asserted that grades are of small importance on railroads, but we have been reviewing an extended system, in which the capacity varies from 500,000 to 4,000,000 of tons per annum, and this variation is produced by grades. It is not the object of this report to draw unfavorable comparisons except...
Page 47 - ... commonly used in Connecticut. " The Iron Quaker " machine, plate VII, manufactured by the Wellington Machine Co. of Wellington, Ohio, represents a horsepower machine. It weighs 4,500 pounds, and makes 15,000 to 20,000 brick per day, with two horses and from five to seven men. It is six feet high, five and a half feet long, and three and a half feet wide. Five molds of six bricks each are turned out to every two turns of the horses. This machine is adapted for small yards. The firm of AM and WH...
Page 24 - December 1, 1851, it is stated that "satisfactory results have been obtained from the application of an improved method of burning anthracite coal in locomotives, invented by James Millholland, Master Machinist, by which the quantity of coal consumed and the intensity of the fire are alike diminished. "The successful experience of this improvement for several months, in five engines, has established its value, and proved that anthracite coal is, at present prices of wood, the most economical fuel...
Page 40 - Amount of Coal received from various Lateral Railroads in Coal Region. Mount Carbon and Port Carbon Railroad, at Port Carbon, from Valley and Mill Creek Railroads...
Page 1 - Report of the President and Managers of the Philadelphia and Reading Rail Road Company to the Stockholders, January 13, 1845 (Philadelphia, 1845), 8; and the excellent survey of the road's finances in David A.
Page 15 - Minnchciha, have been completed, and in use for some months. In economy of fuel and repairs, and general efficiency, these locomotives have proved superior to any yet used, and are believed to furnish an excellent model for others which may be hereafter required for similar service". This proved to be a fact; for the Reading designs of the late fifties continued to be built, with comparatively little variation, until the advent of the Wootten boiler in 1877. Millholland 's locomotives had boilers...