Newspapers / The Echo (Pisgah Forest, … / June 1, 1948, edition 1 / Page 10
Part of The Echo (Pisgah Forest, N.C.) / About this page
This page has errors
The date, title, or page description is wrong
This page has harmful content
This page contains sensitive or offensive material
VACATIONERS PLENTIFUL IN INSPECTION DEPARTMENT By Kenneth McDaris Inspection News: June is not only the "Month of Brides”, it is the month of vacations in our department. The following list of those having June vacations proves it: R. E. Matthews, J. T. Hollis, Oscar Lothery, Arvil Byrd, James Shep pard, Edith Stiles Summey, Myrtle Pruitt, Wayne Nicholson, Joe S. King, Jr., Jack L. King, DeLeon Taylor, Lewis Redmond, Fred Bishop, Walter Scruggs, John Sprouse, Hubert Batson, Ernest Cagle, Rastus Smith, Edwin Ponder, James L. Clay, Anna Holliday, John H. Buckner, Lee Reid, O. Lynn Pressley, Thurman King, Richard Shep pard, Frazier Sentelle, Preston Wright, Preston McCrary, Wanda Nelson, L. Earl Coates, Johnson Morgan, Gladyce Teague, Frantz Bishop, Paul Ledbetter, Babe Norton, Clifford McCall, Robert Quinn, and Earl Lance. Charlesteen ScoPt, sister of Coleman Scott, was salutatorian of the Etowah class. She plans to enter nurse’s train- ing at a Spartanburg hospital this fall. Gladyce Teague visited her sister in Tuscaloosa, Ala. . . Wanda Nelson and Appless Matthews got nice tans at Carolina Beach . . . Bob Mat thews took his family to Myrtle Beach . . . Fred Bishop visited relatives in Philladelphia . . .Ray Byrd built a barn . . Wayne Nicholson had his tonsils removed (not much vacation) . . . Lewis Redmond, Joe King, Clifford McCall, Jim and Richard Sheppard spent most of their time fish ing. The others stayed home and took life easy. Herschel Galloway is doing something about the high cost of living. He bought a calf from Colman Scott and plans to pasture it until this fall then kill it for beef. Ben Bishop recently bought a new home in Hendersonville. Clyde Orr has started to rebuild his home that burned. Judy Hensley and her husband have a new Nash sedan. Ross Wilson is helping Earl Garren dig a well, by hand. That is the hard way, boys. Earl recent ly bought a pure bred Brahman bull. Elmo McCall is trying out a new kind of farm machine—a corn thinner. That is one thing most of us don’t need this year since the dry weather has it thinned already. Howard Wilkie served on the jury at the last term of court in Buncombe County. Oscar Lothery and family visited in Bristol, Va. on his five days off. Ralph S. Smith took his family to Charleston, S. C. on his days off. Mrs. Walter Hutchins is improving at her home following an operation. Our deepest sympathy goes to Raleigh and Ralph Waldrop who recently lost their mother. Randall Lankford caught some nice fish in Hia- wassee River near Murphy. One measured 24 inches. Lewis Redmond and Joe King were fish ing from a rock in the middle of Green River when Lewis caught a large rainbow and fell in while landing it. Joe became so excited that he fell in,too. Too bad our photographer wasn’t on the scene. * t * * * Put a man in the grease pit of a locomotive round-house and give his Persistence and he’ll come out Walter P. Chrysler. Make him a country job in a bicycle factory and season with Persistence and you’ll have Chas. F. Kettering. Give him a job in a bicycle factory and season with Persistance and you’ll have Wm. Knudsen. Give him a job sweeping out a country depot in Nebraska, add Persistence and you’ll have Wm. M. Jeffers, president of the Union Pacific. 4: 4= 4= "He was a man who had indeed suffered much,” says a country paper, in a short obituary notice; "he had been a subscribed to this paper since its first number.” Wilma Jean McCall, daughter of Bob McCall, Inspection, was valedictorian of her class at Etowah High School this year. She was active in all phases of school life.
The Echo (Pisgah Forest, N.C.)
Standardized title groups preceding, succeeding, and alternate titles together.
June 1, 1948, edition 1
10
Click "Submit" to request a review of this page. NCDHC staff will check .
0 / 75