Word: gurley
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...sinecure; 55-year-old Fred Gurley will earn every cent of his $60,000-a-year salary. The Santa Fe has a tough year ahead. Its Western divisions are snowed under by a record wheat crop...
...Fred Gurley is as used to trouble as a railroad man can be. He started at the bottom; his first job (1906) was as a clerk in the superintendent's office on the Burlington, at Sheridan, Wyo. Gurley stayed with the Burlington for 33 years, moving up through the operating department to become assistant vice president in 1936; he was a prime mover in Burlington's pioneer work with streamlined diesel trains...
...retiring president of the Santa Fe, genial, spry Edward J. Engel, 70, lured Gurley from the Burlington in 1939, made him executive vice president of the Santa Fe. Since then Engel & Gurley have spent over $200 million for new rolling stock, better signals and improvements to Santa Fe's 13,500 miles of track. Both became diesel enthusiasts; the Santa Fe owns more diesels than any other railroad. With the new equipment, Santa Fe has been able to keep pace with the traffic boom that shot gross revenue from $160 million in 1939 to $471 million last year...
...like to retire. Toting his brief case, he looked back at his old office last week, said wistfully, "I've been walking up that corridor for 45 years, and I'm going to miss it." But as a Santa Fe director, Engel will cast his eye down Gurley's corridor for some time. President Gurley will need lots of help on postwar operations...
...Fred Gurley will be the main loss of the track men when they go to the meet, but Jaako Mikkola is depending on John Bayliss, Dick Bryan, Joe Crowley, Harvey Waldon, Dick Jones, Archie Lyons, Fred Pierce, and John Shillite to scalp the strong Indian team...