Newspapers / The Echo (Pisgah Forest, … / Oct. 1, 1948, edition 1 / Page 13
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Our photographer snapped this photo when pany of Baltimore paid our Company a visit. Mr. R. C. Haberkern, Vice President of the R. J. Pictured left to right are Mr. T. N. Word, Mr. R. Reynolds Tobacco Company of Winston Salem, C. Haberkern, Mr. Harry H. Straus, and Mr. F. and Mr. F. J. Costello of the Federal Tin Com- J. Costello. John Manvllle Group Has Interesting Visit (Continued from page 10) land at the Asheville-Hendersonville airport. It is equipped with all of the modern conveniences to make flying a delightful means of speedy travel. The most interesting convenience of the plane is that it is equipped with a telephone and during the flight the group called Mr. Straus by phone fropi a location north of Norfolk and gave him their location and approximate landing time. LT. WILLIAM B. HEAD TRANSFERRED A nice letter from Lt. William B. Head, Jr., formerly of "D” Shift in the Machine Room, brings the news that he has been transferred to Fort Benning, Ga. He says he is continuing to enjoy The Echo and especially likes the new maga zine format. He sends regards to all of his bud dies in the Machine Room. "Liberty and Union, now and forever, one and inseparable.” —Daniel Webster Mr. Harry H. Straus Re-Elected To Engineers Foundation Harry H. Straus, president of the Ecusta Paper Corporation, was re-elected vice-president of the North Carolina Engineering Foundation at the annual meeting or the crganizatiou’s board of directors at Raleigh, N. C., September 10. The foundation raises funds for supporting research and educational work of the North Carolina State College, School of Engineering, in an effort to advance the industrial development of the state. BRIEF—AND TO THE POINT You can take a day off, but you can’t put it back. To err is human, but it feels divine. Crime: Society’s permanent wave. Nothing cooks your goose quicker than a boiling temper. A speech is like a wheel—the longer the spoke, the greater the tire. There are two sides to every argument but no end. 11
The Echo (Pisgah Forest, N.C.)
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Oct. 1, 1948, edition 1
13
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