Newspaper man turned toward industry, Paul Hosmer has seen pine logging change
from the days of horses and high wheels to 230 h.p. cats and all during this time he has produced
a little gem of a house organ for Brooks-Scanlon, “Pine Echoes.”
Paul is gifted with a needle-punch sense of humor and the ability to make loggers and
lumber men something more than story book characters, something like people with human
foibles. Many of his contributions to national magazines and sketches in “Pine Echoes” such as
the one following are No. 1 select literature.
from the days of horses and high wheels to 230 h.p. cats and all during this time he has produced
a little gem of a house organ for Brooks-Scanlon, “Pine Echoes.”
Paul is gifted with a needle-punch sense of humor and the ability to make loggers and
lumber men something more than story book characters, something like people with human
foibles. Many of his contributions to national magazines and sketches in “Pine Echoes” such as
the one following are No. 1 select literature.
You can download the article here.