Newspapers / The Echo (Pisgah Forest, … / Nov. 1, 1953, edition 1 / Page 26
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TECHNICAL By Jack McCall We wish to welcome How ard Barnes to our department. Howard is now the Statistical Control Engineer. He has been with the Research De partment in New Haven, Conn. Joe Mertes visited us for a day. He is with the Sales Department in New York. Paul Frisk is busy these days remodeling his home on Park View Drive. Jack Fenwick isn’t planning a trip to the North Pole. That cold weather gear is for early morn ing golf matches. Anyone that has a problem of any kind, from politics to ’coon hounds, can find a quick solution if they want to consult the team of Richard Mc Kinney, Henry Heatherly and Jim Fisher. If they aren’t satisfactory, Ellen John Parker will arrange a sitting with a real live fortune teller. Several of the fellows have ben complaining about the dry weather. So Monroe McCall and Curtiss Banther are wanting to help the hunters get another chance to go into the forest before the season is over. They heard that rain could be made to fall by seeding a cloud with dry ice. When last seen they were heading in the di rection of Mt. Mitchell with towels and a bucket- full of ice cubes. Luther Fisher has quite a collection of fire arms. He is just about to give up hunting, as it is too much of a problem of which gun to take. Ray Wike, "Shorty” Roberts and Richard Fan ning aren’t going on the "government” hunt. They said those people tried to take their money with out guaranteeing that they would kill a deer. The Casting Department may lose a popular foreman when the Government finds out the weather bureau wasn’t at fault for not foreseeing New York’s snow storm. Local reports has it that the snow was really just duck feathers that floated down from Clinton Iowa way. Wow! what if he had more time than three weeksl Spurgeon Ashe, Claude McMahone and L. K. Moore have "gone professional” with their sing ing. They have meetings that are closed to all but music lovers. WHY DO YOU "SEE STARS”? When the nerve leading from the eye to the brain is jarred or irritated, impulses are aroused in the nerve which the brain perceives as flashes of light. This can happen even in a dark room. Therefore, the man who says he was hit so hard that he "saw stars” may well be telling the truth. I \ j Patricia Hall is the 8 year old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Olan Hall. Olan is in the Technical Depart ment of the Cellophane Division. Patricia is one of the pretty tumblers with the Brevard High School Band. "C SHIFT COATING John Baldwin and John D. Smith Lonnie Jones starts his vacation next week. The last time we saw him he was wishing it would rain so the deer hunt would come off on schedule. Jim Dalton is ready for "come what may.” He has his deep freeze filled with persimmons. We are all glad to see D. S. Winchester and his oldest boy Max doing so nicely. Troy Bryan was up at the drawing in Brevard the other day trying to sell his trade tickets at 100 for 25c, this, of course, occured after the drawing. If you smell anything strange around the Coat ing Area it’s that coon’s foot Paul Ledbetter has been carrying around. Hubert Batson and Jack Mackey have been doing a lot of squirrel hunt ing. It would appear that Batson has been using blanks though since Mackey gets all the squirrels. That pile of junk lying in front of Joe Black’s house is rods and stuff that he couldn’t get back in his "Stupid Becker” when he overhauled it. Better check with Joe, Jule, before you overhaul yours. Leo Burden is on vacation • at present to get acquainted with his family. He is the proud papa 24
The Echo (Pisgah Forest, N.C.)
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Nov. 1, 1953, edition 1
26
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