ç "Thank you for contacting Eveready Consumer Services. Kindly elaborate further your query to be able to assist you the best possible way. We appreciate your cooperation in this matter. If you have any questions or concerns, please respond to this email for further assistance. If you have any questions or concerns, please respond to this email for further assistance.
Sincerely, Eveready Consumer Services"
What is the name of the Cat
Thank you for your response. Kindly note that we escalated your inquiry to the designated team, and they are currently looking into it. We will get back to you shortly. If you have any questions or concerns, please respond to this email for further assistance
Days later
Thank you for your patience. Kindly be informed that, the cat does not have a name, it is just referred as the Eveready cat. If you have any questions or concerns, please respond to this email and we would be more than glad to assist you.
Sincerely, Eveready Consumer Services
Should be “Eveready” from now on. Good cat name.
You should probably name him Eveready.
Freddy
Sparky
Wow, Eveready is among the oldest trade names in America. It dates back to 1905.
Most of their batteries are made in China, but the company’s headquarters are in St. Louis.
How about Kyra, Greek for energy and light?
Ever-Lee
Carmelo
Marlene
Maurice
Frito
Zipper
Male? How about Cecil? (C cell)
Ev. Or since this has a connection to batteries, Elon.
It doesn’t matter what you call it.
It still won’t come.
It’s a cat.
Union Carbide
We need pictures of your little cat.
BTW have you fed the cat?
Fritz The Cat
It is winter, set him up a box with a heated cat bed.
My cat’s name is.....
Cat
My dog’s name is now Leave the Cat Alone.
My ginger stray lives on my small porch now and is named Alexander the Great, but I call him cat for short.
My other stray is black with white like yours and I call her cat also, and it doesn’t seem to cause any confusion.
I also have a 95-year-old Eveready flashlight, and I know why flashlights are called flashlights.
https://mysticalnumbers.com/number-9-in-greek-mythology/
ZOT!
A friend of mine lived in a 1923 bungalow in LA, quite possibly a Sears catalog home. In all the time he lived there, probably 15+ years, the doorbell never worked. He had really let the home deteriorate, it was in pretty ratty condition, but then again, to make it decent he’d have to strip it to the studs and well beyond and he couldn’t afford it.
One day, a delivery guy came to the door and pushed the doorbell button. The doorbell rang! And then started to work. Sometime later, he investigated and found out the power for the doorbell was a 1920’s Eveready dry cell just kind of tossed up into the rafters. He contacted Eveready with the story, thinking it might be a good story for an ad. They never expressed the slightest interest.