FEINBERT/WHITMAN LITERARY FILE Prose "On Drivers and Conductors" (undated) A. MS. draft. Box 36 Folder 41[*153*] On Drivers and Conductors: prose. A. MS. (1p. 10½ x 18 cm. Written in ink on two scraps of paper pasted together, 107 words: [long hours] In New York, Philadelphia, and all the great cities I know nothing more infamous than the way drivers and conductors (of many thousands so employed) of horse cars are worked by the [bosses] bossies -- worked 17 and 18 hours out of 24--[often]mostly fine [physical] specimens of robust young and middle-aged men, of country breed, fagged out, [physically and] ruined in physique and spirits by [the tyranny of their employers,] the unnatural strain of their occupation. All the United States--the Northern ones especially--are [This This is but a sample. America is] full of such samples, each after its kind.[?[one?] [infamous?] [long hours] In New York Philadelphia and all the great cities I know nothing more infamous than the way the drivers and conductors (of many thousands so employed) of the horse cars are worked by the [????] bosses - worked 17 and 18 hours out of the 24 - [often] mostly fine [physical] specimens of robust young and middle=aged men , of country breed, fagged out, [physically and] ruined in phisique and spirits by [this tyranny of their] the unnatural strain of their [employers] oscupation. All the United States - [*xx*] [This is but a sample], [Americans] full of such samples, each after its kind. (?