^$/icTOKY M i buy inilTEBSTAm ‘"‘n vm 1 M.S4WGS ‘ "Ibosds Kk and msmm , but two itely push fast :ular id 3 ,mes THE ECHO Quality of Product is Essential to Continuing Success S^ICTORY BUY IMITEB STATES MR MS ps mms Volume No. 3 PISGAH FOREST, N. C. August, 1942 Number 17 tODDCnON BOAKD 9STSIIBIS NEEDED 10 RON U. S. ARMY And Used Household Ar- ticles Make All Necessary Implements In War Jhe steel in one washing machine make three machine guns to Japs. ^enty-four autos contain enough and rubber for one 27-ton U. S. % tank. average passenger auto uses OOOHt 14 gallons of oil a year but a destroyer consumes that much ^ quarter-mile. Rubber used to make garden hose last three months of 1941 would '6 bullet-proofed gas tanks on 400 Plying Fortresses. at top speed, a fully-loaded ^^ engined bomber burns up as much oline in a single hour as the aver- family car consumes in six 37'ths. jg^.^^kers of toys and novelties used ®aough crude rubber in the last of 1941 to have equipped qjj two-and-a-half-ton trucks for the 2^3 or 10,000 half-tonners. 333 ®^ore a U. S. battleship can fire 333 Jlvo from her 16inch guns, alcohol 333|.}^§h to provide antifreeze for the 533jj’^tors of 198 autos must have gone )33 ® Poking smokeless powder. circus did its bit for the Pro- * ? iwi ^ Drive in one Florida town re- when clowns and trick dogs Ponies moved from winter quar- So that machine tools and work- Could move it. ^t^at 100 pounds of waste paper away every ten weeks by the v^ge U. S. family would have made ^^iners for eighty 75mm shells army or 35 fibre cartons to ^ canned foods to our soldiers ^Jfseas. ^ washing machine 'I make gas masks for three U. S. (Continued on page 6) THIRD ANNIVERSARY OF PAPE MAKIG AT EOISTA CORPORATION August; 23rd marked the 3rd anniversary of the first run of cigarette paper at the Ecusta Paper Plant. On that date in 1939, 1229 pounds of paper were run on what is now num ber 4 machine. This, of course, is a very small fraction of what is manufactured at Ecusta today. ert Gordon Here On Furlough ,i5|^lbert F. Gordan, local preacher in iit'lg Asheville Methodist district for . Past four years, is spending a fur- with his mother, Mrs. M. Gor- 11 Herron Avenue, West Ashe- [f®- He is stationed in the U. S. with the Headquarters Com- of the 30th Division at Fort assigned to the chaplain’s for duty. i ^J'dpn entered the Army on July |/941, after having been employ- y the Ecusta Paper Corporation year. He had graduated from fiif^ble high school in 1937 and from ' ^''ard College in 1940. I ® Was first stationed at Fort Mc- H ^son, Ga., and for four weeks was k^istant to the chaplain in the re- center. He was transferred L ^^^p Croft for basic training and (nJ Went to the 118th Infantry at J Jackson. He became identified Headquarters Company six ago. iL^ate Gordon preached at the Tk, Asheville Methodist church last spoke to the boys of the ij^ediate department of the school at the morning assemb- ^^riod. i^rother, Sam Gordon, is awaiting for service in the air corps. D. L. Thorne Returns To Navy D. L. Thorne, Jr., returned to the U. S. Navy on August 12. D. L. serv ed four years on the aircraft carrier, Ranger, prior to his coming to Ecusta, during which time he suffered a crushed finger which was stiff at the time of his discharge. He volunteer ed for re-enlistment on December 12, 1941, but was turned down because of the bad finger. However, in the early summer, Navy Officials told him that he might re-enlist with the provision that the finger be amputat ed. This he did and is now stationed at Hampton Rds., Va., awaiting as signment to active duty. MST DEADLINE FOR ECHO CONTRIBUTIONS AND CIRCULATION GIVEN Date To Be Announced Month In Advance. From this time forward, each month’s ECHO will announce the deadline for ECHO contributions and the publication date of the following month’s issue. For the month of Sept., material will be accepted through Wednesday the 16th, the publication to be cir culated by the following Wednesday, Sept. 23rd. PRODUCTION MUST GOON! Keep Your Supervisor Informed On Your Draft Status In order to keep the mill running with no interruptions due to changes of employees, it is very important that your Company knows beforehand if you are leaving the Company for service in the Nation’s Armed Forces. When you receive notice of your classification from your Draft Board, or if your classification is ordered changed by your Board, please notify your supervisor or foreman at once! Bus Schedule An addition to the bus schedule from Brevard to Ecusta has recently been made. For the benefit of those whose schedule requires them to be at the plant at 8:15 o’clock in the morning, a bus now leaves Brevard at 7:55 A. M., arriving at the plant at 8:05 A. M. WANTED: Your support in making the ECHO the type of publication that is interesting to you! Send your contributions in the way of pictures, poetry, notices, editorials and articles of general interest, to the editor’s desk in the recreation office. Your support is invaluable in making the ECHO a publication worthy of your approval. SAM MATTHEWS WINS PICNIC PHOTO CONTEST Competition in the 4th of July photo contest was not so keen as it might have been had there been less rain an^ more sunshine but Sam Mat thews managed to cop both first and second prizes in spite of the weather. We had planned to show the winning photos in this month’s ECHO but were unable to get satisfactory cuts made. Howeved, Sam gets “A” and our con gratulations for winning first prize of $1.00 and second prize of 50c, both to be given in Defense Stamps. ‘‘Moment Musicaje” Ladeez and Gentlemen—Puhleeze! The band is now tuned up and if you will kindly restrain yourselves from shouting above a whisper we will proceed to play a short concert of special numbers dedicated to various members of our band, and for our band, and by our band. We are de lighted to have such an inspiring audience, and hope that both of you will remain, at least until it quits — (censored) outside. We shall dedicate our first number to you: Donkey Serenade” . . . Ahhh! Your response was overwhelming (where aid they get those eggs?). f P^^®ctor, John Eversman, now caKes the spotlight with a violin solo entitled “Fiddle and I”. Music, mousetrap, cheese—I mean. Maestro, Please! . . . That was fine John, But folks, you should have heard him, ac companied by Mrs. Mary Glass at the piano last Tuesday night at the band Continued on Page 4 BUY BONDS AND MORE BONDS FIRE PREVENTION IN FOREST IS STRESSED BY ECUSTA CORP. Government Urges All Patri otic Citizens to take Special Steps in Preventing Fires It is not too soon to begin thinking about fall forest fires. The U, S, De partment of Agriculture Forest Ser vice says “The first essential to prop er forest management is, of course, protection against fire. If fires rage unchecked timber, streamflow and water supplies, wildlife, grazing, rec reation—all suffer”. And our Gov ernment is taking special steps to pre vent such damage in war times. Everyone recalls the tremendous areas afire during the drought this spring. It was reported that one of the local fires was started accident ally by an Ecusta employee burning weeds around his home. True or not, such occurrences are very com mon, and the vigilance required of our armed forces is no less than every one of us should exercise this fall (or any other dry season) to prevent de struction and ruin in our lovely Pis- gah National Forest and other wooded areas. Fire danger is acute in war times because of enemy sabotage and ar son, as well as the possibility of aer ial bombing and ground incendiaries. Wood is needed in immense volume for cargo and fighting ships, air planes, shipping crates, as a substitute for metals, and many other purposes. But, anxious as we all are to guard (Continued on page 5) A Letter From A Former Ecusta Man To Department Head (Editor’s note: Th^ following let ter was received recently by one of the department heads in the pidnt and was given to The Echo for pub lication with the names of the writer and receiver to be omitted). The original is now on file in Mr. Bennett’s office. To An Ecusta Dept. Head: How is everything getting along at the plant these days? Fine, I hope. Boy, I sure regret being such a sucker for this place up here. I real ize now what a nice job I had at Ecusta. I think that about everybody I talk to up here feels the same way about this place as I do. I’m living about 12 miles from the plant and this board is really getting me. The town is alright and the work isn’t so bad if a man has an interest in that type of work, and I don’t have an interest in it. On my papers I got before I came up here it said I would be put in the Body department, but instead they put me in a little place they called the Reworks. They classify that as a part of the body department, I think, but there isn’t anything .to it. I have hardly done a thing since I’ve been down there, and you know how time passes when you are loafing around. The first day we went in down here for work, the first thing we heard was a fellow wanting us to join the union and make them raise our pay; and from the way that things are be ing talked around the plant, I’m afraid it’s going to bust in just a few days and I don’t want to be here when it does. I’m telling you this place isn’t (Continued on page 5)