Mr. Pullman. Yes.
Mr. Griffin. Tell us about that.
Mr. Pullman. Well, it was just when he was trying to get some idea from me since I was a furniture man, or was, because the twistboard has some kind of a swivel device in there that we use in swivel chairs, and he wanted to get some ideas about it, whether it would be better off for him to manufacture them or let someone else make them and contract them, but he never went any further than that with me. He wanted my ideas about actually making it, fabricating the whole thing, and buying and getting the parts and assembling it.
Mr. Griffin. What did you suggest to him?
Mr. Pullman. I just would let them stay where they are—with the people that were making them, really running them, and see how they go over first, and then eventually go on his own.
Mr. Griffin. Did you make that suggestion before the Texas Products Show, during, or after?
Mr. Pullman. It was during the show. You see, I didn’t know about this—I hadn’t seen him up until the Texas Product Show.
Mr. Griffin. Then, this would have been about late October that you first learned about it, or were you actually set up at the show?
Mr. Pullman. No, at the show—this all happened within the week of the show.
Mr. Griffin. So, the first day that you opened out there at the Texas Product Show, you didn’t have the twistboards?