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section hand การใช้

ประโยคมือถือ
  • The middle section hand can't be hers, though, as she couldn't reach that far.
  • Stafford's wife and daughters opened an eating house, mainly for the accommodation of the section hands.
  • Another theory is that section hands in early times used a tool called a gandy, a metal tamping bar.
  • Wells later worked on a larger livestock and grain farm and as a section hand on the Canadian Pacific Railway.
  • In a weekly series of articles, he wrote of his memories of the Mexican section hands in the 1920s and 1930s.
  • He worked most of his youth as a cowboy, then began working for the Santa Fe Railroad as a section hand.
  • A : Immortalized in the song " The Gandy Dancer's Ball, " it refers to a railroad section hand ( construction worker ).
  • Thaddeus worked as a farmhand from the age of seven, then later as a railroad section hand, a farm tenant, and as a sharecropper.
  • In 1903 the only buildings were the section house where William Savage lived; a dugout for the section hands; and a small two room building that housed the telegraph office.
  • The first structures within the limits of the new town were two little half-sod and half-board dugouts which served as depot, freight house, and shelter for railroad section hands; this is one of the very few mentions of sod houses in McLean County.
  • Massena Jones, ( former postmaster of Vaughan and director of the now-closed museum there ), said " When they found Jones, according to Uncle Will Madison ( a section hand who helped remove Jones'body from the wreckage ), he had a splinter of wood driven through his head.
  • In 1903, the first group of Korean laborers came to Hawaii on January 13, now known annually as " Korean-American Day ", to fill in gaps created by problems with Pacific Coast as farm workers or as wage laborers in mining companies and as section hands on the railroads.
  • The first royal figure to be present in Canada was the future King Edward VIII, had been frequently meeting with everyday Canadian people in 1919; as he said : " Getting off the train to stretch my legs, I would start up conversations with farmers, section hands, miners, small town editors or newly arrived immigrants from Europe ."