Yes, they stayed on after the War. And a lot of things like that. There
was a time when the women… We used to run yarn off of a spool, but it
was metal. The spool was wood and had metal heads on it. We called them
iron heads, but really they were spools, and we had them on a tray. And
that tray would hold twenty. And them things were heavy when you'd get
twenty on there with a little bit of yarn on each one of them. Or
sometimes we'd have to lift them when they were full of yarn. And we had
to stack them, six high. And there was a time when the women didn't have
to do that. When they would empty them, we'd just take them down. They'd
be empty. Take them down and set them on the floor, and the service boy
would stack them up [UNCLEAR]. where we had to stack our
own. That's [UNCLEAR]. The last job I worked on, I guess,
was about the heaviest I ever had. We had some yarn. I told one of the
guys from Planning, "Them things weigh eight to fifteen pounds." He
said, "Aw, they don't." I said, "You get in there
and hang four hundred and some of them and not stop, and you'll think
they weigh twenty-five pounds." [Laughter]