Southern Appalachian Digital Collections

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Hardwood Bark, 1923

Item
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Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).

  • ^lAll^BAG^GOSStP? Z=7 News and Personals from the Field should be sent in so as to be in the Editor's hands before the end of the month. Shortening of articles due to space limitations, sometimas is necessary, but is no reflection upon the contributor. Care will be taken to preserve the writer's meaning in all cases. COLUMBUS OFFICE Almost the whole office force attended the wedding on December 27th of Lucile Taylor and Christy Metzger. Lucile for several years has served as stenographer in our Legal Department, while Christy has been with the Company since March, 1910, except for a period of two years in the army during the war. He is now in the Credit Department. We extend to the Newlyweds our best wishes for a long and happy married life. WHAT'S IN A NAME? The first person to register at the Southern Hotel on January 1st, 1923, was E. S. Longyear, Beckley, W. Va.—Columbus Citizen. Ed. Longyear is our salesman in the C. & O. coal field territory, and he happened to be in Columbus on business the first of the year, hence the above. Of course we are all absent- minded at certain seasons, etc., but here's one on Kitty Reardon. She was wishing Anne Nangle a Merry Christmas on December 23rd, and a young man came up, who has not been at the office very long. "And I wish you a happy Christmas, too, Mr. Fishbaugh." Anne said: "His name is Birdsall." When they teased her about it, Kitty's comeback was "not so far off; got the live creature in." PRESIDENT WILSON VISITS THE COLUMBUS OFFICE In December Mr. H. T. Wilson, President of the Red Jacket, Jr., Coal Company, and the Norfolk & Chesapeake Coal Company, was a business visitor at the Columbus office. Mrs. S. C. Taylor, our Western Pennsylvania salesman, and Miss Jeanette A. Froehlick of Buffalo, N. Y., were married on November 29th. The newlyweds paid Columbus office a visit during the holidays and we all agree with Miss Dear- min that Sid was a good "chooser." Our best wishes for their future happiness go with them. SEBEN COME 'LEBEN Reilly received from Santa Glaus a fine new pair of dice, and he and Elsass couldn't resist the opportunity. As a crap shooter Reilly seems to hold the honors, for he seems to have most of the money in his hand. Elsass says, however, that "He didn't get it from me." HAZEL CREEK Our "trumpeter" announces that there are two more leaves to add to our laurels for 1922, but as it is possible that some other operation may have done better, we_ will merely state the facts, and invite those who have done better, to let us know about it, before we take credit for these new records. With the exception of our "trumpeter," all of us still have our feet on the ground and are wearing our normal size hats and caps. It happened thisaway: You all know what it means when export is released to be at tidewater for a certain boat. Such insignificant things as break-downs, lack of cars, shortage of men or equipment, floods, fires, strikes, treasons, crimes, acts of God, or the country's enemies, are not considered as any reason for delay when Mr. W. E. Weakley issues routing on an export order. We were down for two and a half days through furnace trouble in the early part of the month when a release notice arrived on six cars of 4/4 Pin Worm Holes No Defect Chestnut, S2S to 7/8", all to go forward in one train. Mr. Weakley conceded that some demurrage would likely have to be incurred in doing this, and Mr. Horton helped considerably by giving right of way with no restrictions upon wide stock. We arranged to run the planing mill nights if necessary in order to get this order out and gave the yard crews one day's start of us in loading. At five minutes to seven next morning we turned five of our crew and the surfacer loose on the order and that surfacer hummed and sang with her bed plate full from the start of a car to its finish, then while the crew dropped another car into place, Charlie Neal jointed up, and when the six o'clock whistle blew that night there were three cars finished and a third of the fourth one loaded. No, we didn't run any that night; these fellows, like the Village Blacksmith, "had earned a night's repose," but next morning at five minutes to seven they were at it again, and by exactly three-thirty, the seals were on the sixth car; we gave that crew the remainder of the day to rest up. On figuring the tallies it was found that in seventeen and a half hours they had run 97,686 feet, out of which there was 2,056 feet or seventeen
Object
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Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).