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Erik Cagle
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"We would pay ourselves a little, but put most of the money in the business," he says of the early years. "My wife would come in and write the checks for us. She would note that we spent a lot of money on paper and we needed to cut back on it."
Harding laughs.
"I can remember living at the shop for a while, with all of my stuff in it," he admits. "Things were more loosey-goosey then. It was easy to get your vision across because you talked to everybody every day."
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Erik Cagle
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