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The Log Vol. 35 No. 05

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  • Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue.
  • M A y • I 9 5 ' • F R 0 M THE EDITOR ·S Thank-l.:-Gram arrived n t long a [)'< {rum one of our 1 a 1 rs Mi ,· Lillian temp f Whiting lu L lL r d"; '·F ,. ~ rll ' lime [ ha\·e b en < n tl:i mailino- h. t f r The LOb, Toda the · Jan•h " j , . u.e ani ve t and on e again l notit d thn:t • • : u ' · Ol1tJI11iiU ,, to feature Ch ropion · ,hurchc · Tbi i · n · u~ll"nl idea and I d , " CO'l.TliDCil y U 0 · lt. 'nn::, it inc ption ''-1 y :;~rs aN), tbe l'lW .adn · ha.s lw· ·s . ughr to poru·a · th p r 11al :m ] spirit.t1al a · \>\' It ~~ · othc1 sid -. of Champion Iii. Anl it i· the di,i ·io11 cur s1 o1\d 'nt - such a~ A. \1• Hanultc n dto write · · 'Ch <HUJ i ()fl ' hun:hc ., - to " hom The LOG i· im:kbted f r mu('h oi this r ponlt1g. The edit r · vrite man feature tori about Chanq ion indll s­trial and communit · activiti · '. But the personal tou h, which is a cm·n r ·tone of g'OoJ rer ortincr, i l:u·g ··l ' du to th , divi sion corr 'P ndents. A. ,V. Hamilt n i,ncidentall ' ligr'sses thi,· month long enmwl1 to tak stock o£ our dlOol ·stem a · :it affects the Cham­pion Famil · ( ee ·'Good Schools- Good Citizens," page. 18-19). In Jun he will return to hi- church cohunn. • Another 'e ·ampl · of th ·'per sonal touch" is provided by Hou ton Corre I ondent delle Guidry, whose by-line has appeared in The LOG since ] ul y, 1950. Adelle has covered many of the big and little tories about life at Champion and, moreover, has helped the editors to o btain many of the "family album" pictures which are so p·opular among employee readers. This month Adelle team up with co-worker Cecelia Dickerson for the latest install­ment of her colunm, page 39. The Champion Paper and Fibre Company General Offic.e:s . . • lU.M·Il TON, OHIO e Mills ot . . • HAMILTON, OHIO e C.&INT.ON, IJIORTH CA.ROliNA e HOUSTOI'I, TEXAS e SANOERSVI~LE, GEORGIA Editor, STEWART JONES Editorial Adv;.isors, R. 8, ROBERTSON, Jlt D. J. l'HOMSON CAL SKilLMAN H.AMILTON- Div,isictn Editor, Lee Doeltman Joe Bleveas, W ley Cobl, Joan Mc~sn e r . }l<.k Mtllkn. DCJroLhy l'ugh . Rulh Raqu .t, Ott0 Reid, Mae Rooks, GcMge Stein r. Bill Tbvlil pSt,rl . CANTON - D i>~i sion Ei,i·itor, James Dtoton }Jred Da:yt.On. ed Fcrg-nw n, Cl ~<.le H a mlt~ fl . C l ~ tlt• R. llnq, j1., \'\ a li('t Holton, Ern llt Mcs . r, BrU(;(' N;wll · ', J. K \·n!Ji;,,,, ,,oll. HOUSTON- Division £ditor, Vern Oeloploin Sa ro IW i ~. 1: u tn·ues$, Adelle C u.idr , A. W. 11 ·mi l.ton . ') tli;lUih' t-ltlf \!, ' . SPECIAL REPORTERS C l.adJS E. Hodges. Sanders ill ,; Wesley C:<Jhli, :\ ~l.i f thPok of (.(llu1 f iY l ,n,. i t'l~; M m icl A Hen, Gcncru'l ·Office. ' • ~ . • j j'J. ~I -J 0 U R C 0 V E R To the Vo1umeer State, Tennes· see, horne of tl:le company·~ Knoxville Lime Plant, tbi.~ month's cover :is dedicated . This is the fourth in a !>erie~< tlevoted to s tates in which Champion mills and offkes ;ne located. Copies for framing, witb date and LOG title removed. may he obtained by writfng General Public Relati-ons, Champion , Hamilton , Oh1o. 1\fruly a b~;l ul il'td wulcl'(;ill lik t.: rh «•t1c nl> 1\c m;q• he vi-si.tcd 111 t.he mounrain urC:'\ uear C:mtun . Printed in U.S.A. VOL. XXXV NO. S ' . _, • A-pproximately 300 Canton Junior Old Timers turned out this year • to enjoy the traditional I UL DYS " R IGHT , 11 cw secreta ry o f the Ca-nton .J uniot: Old Tinte rs rec;eives a h arty l t ~u t tls.h il ke from !'{c tJ ben B. R o l> e r t~on fo llow­i ll g- the <trlll t l, l !..i nne r pa rty in th Ch;m1pion " \"' gym. Left to right : ar Robert Rowe, Soda -Su lp ha l ; U. A. Held •r, d ivision mana­ger: M r. Rohen son ; MiJ>s Wrig ht; J ack f elme t, n w cl1 tb vlce -preside ill; Guru ar \V. flohn ~· dahl, n c·w club pi' ·iden t; and C. - . Ston e, )nastcr of' c remot ti e&. • J UNIOR OU 'J.'J I\.IE. t{ S ( f;elow, l!' ft) I I!C t c cLq ly_ it tl rested i11 "Tu lf's T ales'' by TuH J ~u:niso n , re tired Old Ti rn cr, whcrr th is IJa n ­rtuct f(J(Ifl.l plCllirC VaS ll l a clC. p p r ifTUllcJ)' 300 h arnptqus a twnd ·d th · part y. 'O IJ T I·~.SS l' trLA "KI of l'olanrt p wvcd an int er>.~ tirw sp eaker ;ts 'be rt? l·<l t 'd h r w< r­~. im · e .p rieu •cs- in that co untry. Slle ""5 a speci al gu st a t the pa ty. C ANTON CHAMPtuN's J~wior OJd Timer:; turned ont in grea t nu rnbe r. for th ir twelftb annual dinn t meeli-n a t the Cl1ampion "Y" March 8. It: proved t be an even t fea tu ri ng plent of go d fo d, good ent rtainmemt and good £ 11 ,, hip . R u ben B. RoberL~on , party host and h t:drman of Cham­pion's board of lire tor . w ;,1 · the pr incipal p ak r. Reuben .B. Rob ·rt ·on, Jr., Ghamr ion 's pr si ent, tolii Lh Juni r Olri "'im r. of t be ·omp n · prop .>s d _ pansi n pro am nd what jt would .m ean in in.crea. · l h igh quality pr du lion and gcn ra J o pe ra L i n~ eff icien c ' at all di vi ion . !)wight J. T horo :; m, viu-pr ·sidcnt in charg' or Industrial and Pub I ic R la tiiJJtS, sp(Jk.c br icfl aknw- a humorouz- v i~1. H. · . fi eld r , ~amo n d] vf,s ion roao agt•r, wcl omcd the g ue>s . and R ob n Rm-\1(; u f th . Soda-SnlpJt te n e lYiTI I1. ·n f C'lpO-tH.L d . Cnmu · Pu laski, f Puland, , , p cial gu · 1 t) f M , R l ··l't ­~ on, (!tit t'f (<d ll ('lt ti l <? t4ronp ·witlt tW t fl o f ! CT ·war-t ime e. p<'r.i· . CHf C' - in tha t counq ·, and T ull J:Hnt..,(.Jn, ret.ircd Old T~m~"'r, ~ c nc: th1 oll,~ l.1 Ui :.lfotc rfuH \·vi t.l hi · 'TuW:; Ta lc!-~," Otmnar \1!. Hol,nsrl, h l. ,chi ~ f paper an t boanl in sp r l o r at GMli011 Cllnnt p ion., WiiS lc t(•d .d ub p <·sidcnt for the emu i t t ~ y :u , l'l l rl J;t · .Fd m ·r, 'Uti li tie~ Of p. a m ·n l, 1' ' U(u 1Jr d v in· jHC\i>dt •n t. (:lady · Wri-.gtn , ,)( Ship pi 11g oJii ' pt•t :,oJ.Htd, ·wa (' I "ct(· I s. · fLl :'t.r l • BOW 1:'\C L.-'\~ E. h;,t'\· illlprO\ ed at Hamilton as interest in the sport ha grown throu hour the cit y a ~ well a "· amon n: Champion ('mpl< y · '· Eight b wlin ·ites i11 H .unilton no\ pro,·ide lhe dt~ with a towl or 6~ lanes. Sh Wll at rig+tt ar the Linden -\llrH. VE.TE RA~ BOWLERS from the first Champion Industrial League th.a t was organized in 1929-30 are still interested in the sport, though mot. are not active bo1ders now. Some 23 mem bers o[ the firsl league are till Champions; .15 are shown h ere. I 1me ow 1n The tenpin game now ranks as a favorite recreation - at the Hamilton Division By ] oan M essl1.et· BACK u YF..ARS AGO, i the fall or 192H, members of t.hc Hamilum Champion Safer 'ommittcc attended a conference in Cnlumbns. Ohio. i'<iting a bowling all ey Lhcrc, they saw [ndusu-·i<ll bowling I a . " 'i in action , George Svincr a11d Ker1 Fai l wt-:rc impr sscd by what they saw and hrongb t 1 he idea h"ILk wi 1 h them. Plans f()r the first Hamilton Divi ;,ioo INt gU~' WtH' formulated h Ken. Fai ~ t, then employment rna nag J . aud John Kyger, s -c:retary of tht' Hantiltcm l\ lonst• Lodg ' where the t:eams were to bowL Six eeams panicipatcd the iir. Ly<::tr 1929. M t(bc1·- 2 • . · KEN FAIST, general coordinator of employment a.nd safety, and John. Kyger, secretary of the Hamilton i\1oo e Lod re, look a t a picture of one . o.f the fir t Champion bowling teams tO bowl on lbe Moo,;;e alleys. ' I ' '· BOWLING R EPRESENTATIVES in rhe ChlHBpion r11ployee Actidties A~ ·o in ti on aye Rob rt Fr )'berg and Winnie Goodin. Boil ep•· senr · <ti l [h organized rn n'$ leagu s <Ill I Winttie t' pre­sent: the women. • sltip wa -l7. Of those H fi.rst bcnvlerl', 2:3 rn ' rt ar . tjiJ rnplo . Ctl at Champion. Th prcwre is radicall di(fercnt no'N. Tb 'lt ar s i;~.. bowling ka~ue: at the H i11n i lro11 Divisi H'l " ith a tot a l o[ :JO tt· m ·. That n~caw. that ahmtL fi v' hundr d cmrloy<.:CS noW bow} on \Ot!lpany teams. ln ;;~drlition, , m ·n 's team and a '"''om~·n ·:s team rcpr s 'll t Cbarn pion 1' n 1o urna rn ·n t ·• Thns it j._ t.hat Cln111pio~1 b(.rwling al J-(;;uuilton has grown up fr·CHll an id a of two 111 11 in a Cohtm.bus • • bowl in. alley to a sport · progra.m 011 a gTand s.ca lc. ' ' ' To inform its reade-rs a&out the widely discussed H ooveT Pla·n for Reo-rganiza­tion- one of the most impor-lfllll issues confronting th f' A·mericrm people today - The t.OG tnesents the lnst in a series of •t·rticles by Dr. Robert L. .Joh nson, presid ent of T emple University. U.S. SPENDING AND YOUR TAX BILL ON MA.R H 15 011 nHs YEAR the Ameri­can taxpayer paid the large&t Lax hill he has ever been caJlerl upon to meet. It amounted to $1,750 for the average An~erican fatni.ry and_ i~. went ,to make up the goverrrmen r s cuneut <J r l.ti hill! on bu I get, the largest, except for 011e of the Workl War 11 year , in the nation's hi . tory. The ta amou.,nted. to 30 per celit of the national . mco;rne. E\ n if the 1953 budget goes no higher it will mean ,.460 for every man, woman and child 1n the country. But there -~l"e some ominous sign that it wi.Jl not stop there. Some o.ffrcial estimates have placed the ptobabl@ to tal of next year's costs of government at from $80 to , $83 billions. This would mean expenditures of between '2.011 and 2,0 5 for the average American fantily. ifany of us who have to meet the tax biJls have Hilnch to ay on the :ubject, but, as Mark Twain said about the wearh,er, ''nobody does any thing abm1t it." However, since we are bound to discuss mounting taxes we £night as well do .it a!ong constructive lin es. There is a way ~ to .r edu. ce the wa te in government, and I should like to pomt ll out w you. · A substan tial part of the cost of government was found due to bad managem~nt and excessive losses through o erlitppin.g of functions, duplication and waste. rhe e evils a~count fo r an annual loss of at least $5 . illion, a loss tha t can be salvaged. · The plan which can trim m:pch of the waste frolll the federal si.ru ct.ure isn't a "cure-all" that will immecl ia tel y lower .l.ederal taxes., but it will in sure that our tax money i used to the best advantage and will open the door to ru ture tax redunions. · · The plan can be -accompli'shed by adoptin~ the 4·5 per. cent of the H oover Commission program that te­m. aJns unel:ractecl.. 'Before lhe Congress toda arc 20 bills which a ·e based on lhe recoJlHl'lendalions of the Com:­missi<? n· In addi t.ion, 5 J reorganization plans hav been ~ubrnttted to Pt·esiclent TrTI'man . . Sin ·e lh Congress and the Presid nt rece ived the lnll a.od pLans, little ha be n done a bout th em. But it is ?~v iow. :hat prompt acr.ion can save us hundr cb oJ _1mllwns of dollars ann ually. H re are some o.f the thmgs that would happen if action is ta k.en : , (1) Feel raJ pel'Sonnel poli cies wqulcl. be str am Uned. roday ~1(::. goYernment syst 'lr'l Ol hirin~ _b 110l d •sigr1 •d for obtammg ~md ho lding the best people for the jol,}s. .(2) T he l cpartm nt of: Agricultur · ·wCiuid be reor­ganLz~ d. A c.on ~ l onJ ~,r~tion o l b<,>.a:rd s. bureaus, and otlH~r agenc:J ' i'.i need sJmpltf:mg, (3) Tl e Pot Offic would b . take11 out Gf 1 otitic;. V\Then we head our post o££ices with political appointees, as is done today, incen~ive is stifled among the other employees. (4) Government construcLion practices would be con­solidated. Today ag(;;ncies within the federal system are competing with each other - noL w see which can spend the least, but in many cases to see which ca·n spend the mosL (5) Federal medical activities would be welded to· gether under a single administration. Over 30 agencies HOw have their medi cal activities, and each. one knows little of what the others are doing in regard to medicine. (tl) The Veterans Administration wmild be put on a bu,siHess-hke basis. Because of conflicting lines of a·uthority and responsibility and because of over-grown staffs, the VA is not serving the veteran in the most efficient manner possible. The Hoovex Com1nission, wh ich was composed o£ , ix Dem0crats and six Republicans, was formed in 1947., It had _the help of some 300 experts to make an a ll-encom-passmg survey of the execuuve branch. · About 55 per cent of the rewmme.ndations have been put into effect. To date, 27 .reorgan ization plans and 21 laws have been passed as a result of the Commjs. ion 's plan. They are saving you some $2 billions a yea r. On the basis of the Hoover Commission Report, the armed services have been unified. The report produced the General Services Administration which has saved us millions of dollars by coHsolidating the housekeeping hmctions o( the government; red tap~ has been .cut in the business of procurement, purchasing, 1·ecord-kecping, and storage. Accounting methods dating into the la st: century have been modernized. The Presid e-nt can use hi time to better advantag·e; he is now abJe · to deleg,ate such duties as signi.ng Ji een:ses fo[ whale fishing. 011e of the mo ·t heartening· fac tOrs oi this work has b en the way in which both political parties have joined to SL~ppo rt reorganiza tion. T his bipartisan attitude h a~ kept the prograH:1 from being dragged down by bitter p0litical fights. We p_ropos to main tain the bipartisan natl,trc o£ the Hoover Commission ptogra111 b trying LO '1v6id politiGal involvemeJH in the election campa.igns. r'o do t.hi s, the Ci r iz.ens Com:rn i ttee tor th Hoover Re­pmt Jo> lans to Sl~ge one hard, Hnal drive ac.nd hen· lose Jt:s doors Ju ue flrs.t. ~ You can join us 'in g u~·ng behind the H.om;e1· Cor:n­tnissi. on p ·n~g-rttm. 'W1·ile to )J01n· senalo•ts, Ht j~res.en.tttli ves a,1ul the P·rt1.bidl'nt and ask the1n to see that th e- job i, romple ted i:n ·the nex t· f 'w weeks. lt nw)1 ·well be yot-tr llf.,, t cliJmce to help build a ueUtn government ttt a b tte.r ?Jrice, • ' . - -- - ,, • 4 INSTALLATION of eight new dtyer rolls and 69 other alteration, inspection, repair and maintenance jobs on o. 26 Board Machine were eornpleted re- I/ or cently b y operator and mechanic in onlr 21 hours. This ,pictuTe shows ene of the new dJ:yers being lewered into position b a lw tling crew. o. Changes increase speed, efficiency of Houston's board machine M ECHAN tc<; A n Ol·ER ., 0 1 at Houswn bav ' "gang d up" on No. 2G Boan..l M:a hinc to g t som sp ed o LH of th ' "ol gal." No. 2G 11.1 uaHy h.mLben along at n roll sp cd ( well ·lmd r l 00 L ~ t per nt.inut ". Rcc ~ nt aJterarinns may boo~ t the sp<: ,d lo.sc: ro th ' 100-lo t. xnat k - a r ·sp TUtbl " pac , cnn ·id r­ing its prndu t, u LWily h ·:w~· weight sa ni­tary ('Q fll ·tiH •r I nard. ; boo' t in ·1, 'ed nf rJn ly a f ·w fe 1 pt r rnimnc will add con­sid .•ra ble wn nag ~ ov<·l t hl· p ·riod of a tn m til nr a y 4 ar. Th ltcnttiuns <~ hould alsn h 11 in oth('r w·• ·~ . Fo1· in'i ta·n e, opetato t'l wi ll b(' al1k to dry light wei lit gradl.'. a1 k1wrr u·mp<.'r­at u r "~, e lintill ~ll ing; til'ofc('l :) ~:au~cd b, t ' ce s heaL jn th • d1 ing pwce. (). lt J ,th or, Hi e .hani " and o pcratQr~ completed 70 ep.arate alteration, in pection. repair od roainr nan · j bs on the n:tn chine. The i nsta ll ~L ion of cieJtt n ' dryer wa , th higg<.:st task . Openw rs ·h:ut th · rna 'hin down at -6::l0 in the rnurning. At ;3: ''0 the n xt monting 21 hourli hner, u1 I'nechani .. turn d. it back t!J th 'm. To in stall thr new dryers, th n1 t' ·hnni( . 1 tH e n h ~td to rip Olil a p< n o ( tb o ld dr; r ~ · tion . Then tlw et in n '.v st}HH.L re· plnn:d tb · old dr ·rs an I add . L th n w unit £. The new ;Jrr:'lngl'm nt · ' L]UiJ·c.Ll ::--:· ten. i e ~:har1g -s of the oil, el ·r,ri al ::tnd st 'Hill connccrtc.)I1S, R ·m.ovi.ug and 1· pladn the dry •r hood was no sma ll job in itself. A mech ni 's on•mcnt, " \1\! didn' t w .: t a lick," J H't~ tt y w II ~; unnn e I up the planning and conp ' ration th.al \Vent ·inlo the job. R . NO A. WORKME discus theh next owv on No. II 1\'l achinc. W. M. Bat. I . ht lt man. is at ldt; ~1t right is .Joe "h11l er, pip firt r. vV .tde·r. rigo-ers, LinsnJ.i t b~ ?J.nd others at the Can ton Di· 1·i-i n b Qk part irl the hi.g j b. Mt\ H£1 f £; l\ffi. T came in for their hare of tile work d(lrill§ the shutdown. Larry Har "·bo·rn, as:i tant superintendent o( p~per manufacturing. assists f t·om a lacl­dcr a. n .ob Kelle~·, Glenn Fletf.her and Earl Whitesides work on top of the dt·} e~·s nearby. i\!ANY PIPES had to he changed during the shu tdown , aud the welders came in for a lot uf fast and ac urate act ion . Here Kay Cri ~p handles a LOrch in the i\fachine Room. ha~e ment. SP'E:E:D AND ACCURACY featured the removal ·of the No. 14 Paper Machine si:te press from the basement to tbe Machine Room Floor. This roajor alteration wa completed in record time b ' Champion workmen . • • • Canton paper machine gets a face lifting, too By Fred B. Dayton C ANTO ' CHAMI'ION's No. 14 Paper Machine, oldest paper making unit in the Book Mill Manufactur­ing area, re eived a po. itiveface-lifting duritig the latter part of Mar l . . This machine, which [irst started op ~x-a.tion way back . m Ma , 1922, has ompiled a splendid re ord. Jt will · build better re orcls 11ow that the size press, th " fi rst Lo be used al tbc Canton Division, back in. June, 1932, has be ·n r moved from the ba emer t to th Machj ne R om floor. Man.' other mi1.10r changes also we e made in re orcl tim ~ ·beginning Tuesday, March l 8. By 10 a.m., Satur· ·d~y, Marcb 22, th. d pendable machine was rolling wlth "g(Jod'r pap r on tl r 1. 1o. 14· Ma hinc will e an increas in quality p:ro­riuction as <t r sul · r thc~>e imp ovcm ·nls, wh'i.ch wer ma(l r<q id1 a 1rl a .curat .ly on an around-th •-cl J<.:k ba ·is 1 y Champir,n ' orkmcn. Additional dryers will be added to this machine in the not too distant future on another schedule of pro­g: res ion to achieve the company's aims of higher produc- • non. Supervisors and workmen alike w re bu. · with their assignrnents during the brief hut down. ' tVeJde·rs, riggers, tinsmiths, belt men and other ern­ployee t.ean1ed together with near-perfect rhythm. Their main goal was ro complete th job as quickly and accu­r; ately a~/ossib~e~ ne er losing si~ht of .the safety an~le. They cb the JOb well, coop ratm.g wtth the Machme Room Gpe:rarors on a tightly knit schedule. · Canton Champions also were busily engage l with N0. 17 13oard Ma.chine . Iteration the first few day i 11 April. Th No. l7 job .is .improving p1 oducrion Canwn Champion .. anotl1 r step :<~nd quality in th nf th dire tion of product at 5 \ This Champion holds a unique dis t inction as Ca nt on 's first Fl RST PF:RSON LO o·ive two o-a []ons of bJood to the ,.., -- 0 . R ed C.ro · cen tcr in Ash ev ille was George R obert- ~ n , Ca-nton Leenth pint. Champion , ~ b ow n don;Hi n~ b b urse r ell AJbrighL a." i l -. . SIX-on or H ERE's A RORUST Canton Champion wh o 's not sti ngy with his bloorl. ... T he official records will prove i r! \1\Thcn the R tl Crms Bloodmobile unjt from region a l h cad­qua n ers in A h eville visi ted Can ton for the . ix teen th tim on \ farch 19, Geor:ge Roh' rtson, Chemical Laboratory, fre ly g-ave hi s sixteenth p int of blood. Red Cross ·hapt er offic rs IJ Oted th o casim1 ;JS C u1rge ·tppl it d lO give h~Ond.. " Jt'S b is SiXtC' nth C W, ' nti \' ' pint , HI <.l f h op ' he pass· ·," whisper d H len Pr . )] , s crc·tal y ol t ) J() Canton Red CnJ ~S bapter. "Oh, h ·'ll p a sli all r iAIH," COJ ilnl CJ Jle d I .ou is E. Gates, Cbampicm's a <~si s t a n t chi ef cJJ ·w ist and hl<Jnd ch:dnuan for lh Canwn R ·d Cro~s chapL ~ r . C ~ u ge Robertson J jd p a ~~, -- ;md b <:nt rtH" !he fi rst p ·n,t)p in vV ·st • t1 orlh . .)a. oJi na IO ~ i v fWo ~~l lJ t) J1 ') o l h lor)(] Ul th · r gi<mal cenr ·r !:l in(' • tb uni t was L's Wb li ~ h ·d in l ~ l 'J0 . f q'Jtowing; the Ju;ua1 rc-. t p J' iod , H.ob •r t on Wt!" 1 J t·sc·n t ·d Ids \>\'n -galJ.()n Red Cross blood pi tt by l\'h ~ - }. llallnwl · foo1 ~ . h airro ~m 0£ Groay L<~ d i ~ of lf1 t: C~• rll o n chapt'r·r. T l1 n.: ar nuwy other Cant 11 C: ln. rn pi nn.~ aut! ot het. wh11 h, ·c given li l)<.mllty of t:h cir blo 1d, but Rob 'rt ... n 1 n ~ i ved tlw d i ~ tin c ­ti n of b~c )J11ing r'Jle fi rst "T wo-( ~ ;Jll on ' ' don ot in 11l i-: a ,., . 6 G orge is Lhc son of lr. and Mrs:. \V. B . " Hi ll'' Rol; c·r~So rl ( If nnton. Bill is a siS,tant up r iJ 1 ncl ent of Chf'mi c:l l R ~. nn:er . •1 WO-GALL01 r PTN L~ pt •sc n ~ (>cl ~o RoiJenson lry h s. J. 1.1. mwn !\ !om·1·, hair111 :t11 o( 1'11 Cta • 1 .• . li ·~ unit ' cJf 1 11 ~ Gauton Red C.ro s ch apter . l.oui ~ F.. C ~n es, R(•d · ro:>s hll'Jo I h<l irm:w , look. <'H1 . n a e, v -er •r MOVIE TECH"'ICJ ' lS <><ot a pre\<iew of the problems iAvolved in " :-fuoo'ting" Champion durill<Y a tOl.ll' \ rnicb took them to all d hisions and d1e fore tr'i a;re:as. ho vn on Hamilton 's CM Sort- • in U ne are f-acing a~mer<l: Ed Grabill oE \Vilding Pictures Production. director; F1~a11k Ho bbs of Wilding·. lighting e ngi­neer; and Bill Cla1 k, Re.<;eardl, d10 se·n· d a · guide. F oLL "' ,, ·c. several years of tudy and delib- _tation, early la t spt·jng · hampion embarked on what is consid re<.l to be f the m0 t tomp1·ehcn ive JnQvi p oduc:ing prtgrams e er en · r d into by an industrial Grm. With th proje t as ign d to th . G neral Puhli R ' httio1r . Depart1u nt, p.er. onn 1 mad a thoron h ur· vey-of a umb r o( Eilm p.rodu rs. - in Juding r ·put:ahlc nr anlzation~ in New Yor D tf'o.i , Chicago and lse­wh 1, - th prim objc. ti e being tn se u r ~ th mos-L rp.Jdlifi.ed produce J vm fl ti wpoint Jf fa j)ili · a rvl 'If p~rien ce. . Vitdir g Pi u;, es Pu luni 1 , Tnr: .. Cl1k g - th . -a l, c rg:ani..:a ti<m whi h Pf' du·c · l ,I mpio ' only · nJOVJ li1 daw, ' ' Papt-r ~c>-.ttW '· to Life "~ was unanifR-ou · ch(1iu·. 1 he . el t 1 ion a b<) ~-~.·as appro\ d b 1 tl e :ari u. .cbampirn <>ou e. di c.tl} conc·r:r c·d wtth !h - utder­u 10 . . rlJ !JS. thP f lJ'r:,t St!"p } atl IW{'O i:.ken lTl <I Jong­r: a ugc p1-ng_ram. Fo a f.Jtriod of ~ ·\·eral' "" · k • ud,- w~ 11. dr-v~)<t ·d to the p <.i li . trJl. i t (> ht told in th pi 1 ur ."' i he fi 11 a.l d .. ed~ i.o11 t ' ing u pt< dn thr l:ti·mi t:lult' :olot films, c_ 1 ·rkg a mall) highly diH't ifi d field~ . · 'nt · thr ·t: filrJ\' clea1 with Charnpio11's HulU: t1 ial· The curtain will soon go up on three new full -co-lor movies, which are to be made about Champion operations ,.....~---""·~, _.,.. ,.. .. .. vrsrriNG CANTON as well as Haroilron and .Rou ton. t,he Wilding technicians made plans fo.r the equipment they wil1 need " hen their camera crews beg.ia filming the mevies sometime in June: Silo vn above are Ray Ganett, General Public Relation ; Frank H.ohbs of Wilding; A. M . .Fairbrother, Canwn pn>dnctiofl manager; Eel Grabill of Wilding; and Dw'igh t J. ·Thom'son, Champion Yicecpre ident. • ommunit relations, for stry and sal s nd advertising. Wilding assigned J e>hn Davenport to"\'\ ite ~e sHipt for the first fi lm, with Sam Beall re pon~"lble f r th Jatt r two. For , v •ral m nths, thJ l · o writ r sp m ·on, iderabl time at all CJ.1arnplon .mill, and in other peratino: a.r s> doing ba.ckg-Tonnd r ear h. r 1. ti,,c to th · thr e s "ipts~ \Vhen the stori s were ·ompl t . d) th y ' 'er tap ord ·d and pr s nted w Cham.pion 1 }'s?nn -1 t ll divi.. ion for comm · nt~ nd apJ?rov l . 'Ih1 procedur wa 'rep a.ted ~ · ·1 ! umes for ln'lp tn .nt :1 d c u · ac in th (.'.tip ts . - The n xt t p t nk 'Wjlclin f.i.gur s into _a ll Cl · mp1nn rl ill 111d • rca. for rn r d t .tlcd 111 1 pmg d th - a · tHaJ picllc~l' ~(' ne. a_t l l? · I tnd ' ~f. tb Lightinrr r))ob1 rns con(romed m d()mg tl~e thr f1lrtl, in' C-tJ I(J~r,f Th1 , w.a\ unJJn t l ll~) J, n a m tl. ll r f t •c ltn't ·a 1 al"ism·s hom : li Cha:Oli>ioo mills, ~1 ld in ltic.<tgn ~ {", we ·ks ( o. Com~'> carl jtH e, n n-11: ra , nd . ou1Hl t rcw. viii _be nu th '>!I'll<: -rnd i11itial " hvoting' ' ill be st. r-l · I, with J ·rtd ch~tt':tct< · r roh: to h pb ~d I_ proft·s; i nal a tors, ;u'ld a J1ll1Hh ot h 111Ilpi•ms in poin:t.~d .. '(11C . , fo.r Ll"l(_ lllOJl ·nt, it's "On S'l g , " "r 1) d •[" 7 .. .fU:\'ALUSKA COMMUNITY entered thi <ttlractive Uoat (Tigh t) bearing the Pilgrim , evergreens and a snow-covered church. The Rev. Ja k Honeycu tt of Lake Junalu;ka is general advisor for the count ,_ wide pro Tam. CANTON SCHOOL BAND played a colorful role in the street parade. This scene shows a part oi the huge crowd which witnessed parade. Many decor­ated automobiles also were entered bv Sunda School • clas es and other church departments. H R B~ F WAY 1E5VILLE em red thi float. · •[any other ch liTh il coum < lso ha.d p cirri entri . The Rev. F.lm r •F en o( \'a} ne. 'Hie i . general chai:r11nn of the ·· Ba k lo Gbnrch" mo e­ment. ' • G -- - - - ·-- - - c NTO AND HAYWOOD County witnessed it biggest parade in this area Saturday, March 29. It \vas t11e official launching of a county-• ide '"Ba .k To Church" rno ement pon ored by the Hay' ood Count ' Ministerial Asso iation and Commu nity Devel­opment leader. 1 t wa · th begi1ming of a religiou · emphasis program de_i ned to increa ·e dwrd1-goi ng imere t among the p ople of Ha ' 'OOd County. lt Ka ' a program wbich imerested Ch;1mpron and hundr d of Cb.ampions a.nd th ir fami li s throughout the unt_'. It was a pt·ogram which appea l d lO mem- 1 r of the W · dwrch s in Baywood Count)'· The p radc .f a turing many ori ·inal r 1igiou - lo­._ aw ahd ol ful floats, '~a an hour in pa. ,il\ in revic,,· n l xt nd d for more than t wo miles along the b1 ln a: a it 1 t neon for Cl : de, ' Vayne·v:ille and H azeLwoo i. L o'k Ma, , tine ''look d in" on the ev m and c- \' re I .... , ·>~ HE.R.E'S THE WAY bill1 tpi(lll ·s f lo:-tt appea.t•ecl in U1e safety parat,le in sb:e"iJle Apr·il 1 afte-r a cti ange was made in t[)e u1e s::ge: .. h, _ith ·o f' Our Fathei"s - lhe SAFEG U RD oE Om He it. ge." Another view i · shown bela" ', .1·igh t. CH RCHES OF BEAVERDAM areaJ uea1· Canton. featured th i .float showiug children in church and sugges ted to wit­ne ses that they ''Go to church with them .. " • ImTHEL CHURCHES entered tlls doa t, inviting all to "Come with u to chu.rch ." Haywood CoLlnty has 10 churchc , and al l of them ar ·u pponing the program which is to continue through June 30. CR ANfPJON'S FLOAT is shown as finishing touche we n~ appl:ied near the Pain t Shop where it was com­phlted by several members of the .Painting crew. ,, . ------------ - -- ----~-------------------------------~- ---------- • the religious festival in picttltes and Lext. An assistant editor and staff photographer were assigned to tbe tory. The county-wide movcme11t wilt cc>ntirru throu gh June 30 and aU committee chainn n and assistant · will exert everv possible effort to inc.rca e church and Sunday . . chc ol attendan e in th county during that p ·riod. Canwn Champion 's parad entry teatur d a Ho;;i.t of ~ ta ined gla~s c.hurch winuows, a r ali: Lie pul·pj t, light d candles an l an op ·n Hjbl·". Jt W3!i. r gard d a:; out tand­ing b, tl m at ds <>I p ·n,ons wbo lineJ th " streets. Th float bore th words ''F<Ji h of Our J<athcrs'' in oll Engli h leu ·ring. he iloat, wi t.h ,~.~. ~>light chang in wording, also wa. entered in t e s,a£ ty parad in Ashe· i lle AprH L Other float - in the " Bae.k To Church" parade rried wch thoughts a "Fam.ili s that pray og ·thel', slay to­geth r;· an.d "Following in Hi& fore ·.t p ." · h • Re . Elmer Gr eo · oJ '\Vayne '' ill is g n cra1 ' -'- chairman of the "Back To Church" movement. The Rev. Asrnond MmnvelJ, pa tor of the !forning Star Mct.h odist Church charge, was parad chairman. The Rev. ]. la ton Lim , pa tor of the C'anton First Presbyterian Church, is pubhcit d1airrna.n f r th coun­t '·wid.(;;) rnovem ~ut, a.t~cl .J tlll ~t t han \IVood ,, .w· ideut of 1he F ir ·t Natio n ~tl B aFd~, \~a •n ::.'vill i :hainn.an o[ n nancu. Mrs. M. B. Le , Ql: Haz:clwood, is d1..ainnan oi rewnh. a nd David Und rwood, Wa yn 'sville, had cl ar~ of dec r~t timr. Wayne Co1·pening-, · Hap\·ood · nn t ·Fat~lll ag:et1t, i"> iJJ d :w.r,...,e o[ Mrg-anizuion during th nnvemcnt a,rtd. th ., R ·v. J a k. H~ ~~eyctHL of Lake Junaluska, i~ .O"e'l ·nal ad ,.., vi ol'. The R v. CJ 'd e Colll ns of Bethel ~ a. ~ ~ .in cbarg- . of a sp~ ialmas. m.c ·ti ng program at th€; court hOUSt it' \IVa l) S~.i lJ ~[Ui 'd<l)' night ~O~ lO'\·Vin,g_ the y a­ra<., tc. B r. J. C. Gr 'et, dn·ett0r of RebglOtt.l:i .Ectu ·atwll, U11i trsi ry o( forth CarQ.Jina, ~·as prin ·ipal ·peakcr. 9 - • ' A mutual esteem and understanding is developed between leaders of business and education as .. . • l r 1HE MA HI ~ ROOM the leacheJ s inspect a sampl of paper that may end up in one of tbeir li.lssroon1 s. Guide Stan \Vag r l lh h(}W tabl l p p 1 i · rnade. 10 ex as eac HTHE I NDUSTRY you wi ll s ~e today is mun umen t to our prof ·s)!j ion," the r, 6 teach rs visiting Chan pion's Houston Di isi n for B-E D y were told. "With­our edu ation it would not be pos ible." The tea her heard much more - about Champion policies and its place in th community ... about pulp and pal r making and the skills, knowledge and machines that made modern paper making p ossible. Concerning this phase of the paper making a junior high school teacher later wrote: "1 am a teacher of ·world History, and in the course of study I 'REQ lJE 1 H . 'f. (1·i gh t) iLl~ operalOl - gav the l adll!ts d '­railed inf nn cion :Jboul pr cs;ses. H re a t chcr I aru · abou · cutt r ' ork from Dal Huffman . ers ave attcn1 pt to e ' plain the working of capi ­talism and socialism and communi!-lm. l use the plam s a long the Ship Channel a.~> concr ete examples. uring my visit with you, 1 wa, p articularly interested in your good employee-worker relation­ships . . . and in the concern you ex­pressed for our creeping paralyzing so­cialism in the U.S .... I shall continue to use your plant as an example, and now I have better information abou t it." Next on the B·E Day program was a trip through the mill for the teachers to see the processes they had been told about. Duri ng the trip through the milJ, a 0 they were eparated into small groups; each gn up had a OLupet nt guide to tell them about the mill an<l answer tl1eir many que·tion. A "thank ou .. not' [rom an elc­memary leacher to b T guid said: ·'Thauk you ft)r the interesting and informative tour through Th ChanJ­pion Paper and Fibre Company Fri­day. f r husband and I are grateful to you for the man ' con ·id rations :hown us." Often in li' idual teacher- tOpped along the W<i • to ta I k to OJ e1·atm· . . · '\' ' ral comm n ted n the cou rt s B-E 1). 'I at tb.e Ho tou 1 h·i ion 1 gan a· :-;) teacher ·em hleu for cor fee and dm.l~h­nut ill tbe ·CiufJt) u!>e iJdo:re Lh se 1on Legap. More than 50 teachelll visited han­n 1 , ea induS:Lries n B-E Day. YJ Ll ' TH after lhe lOt II , lht:: a:a her · talk UV{T \~·hat lh{;y n<!\e ~ t11 With tl1 i1 lticf ~ .,., ~ · oy M(·a~<". tt'JlLf•t .• l.tll} of the i 'tu 'JOH: ( harnpl JU manag•mt:IIJ., nn J~Hruenting the H.>ntpal t · <m ll uu~ of B·E Da\', • • '' earn1n and complel r ·ce i vcd. A letter contained tit 11 ss or the ausw l's they ioned bv five teach rs I . commend ation: "We certainly me away with a n ·'W ad­miration f r .. . the warm feel.i.ug of fri ndliness and ooperation so appar­ent arnong barnpion peo1 le.·· Aft r tlP tour they h.ad luocb as guests of Champio n. A panel s ssion followed lunch with answers to the teach rs' questions being ·upplied by Division Manager 'W. R . Crute, Mill Manager I. D. Well , and Technical Servic s Director Gerry Moyer. C fJDES RE II TROD ED to lhe teacher b Cliff hawd, training sup rvf-or. Left to right: Jerry Cornelius. Sam Elli s, .Jim Hen­derson. Roy Mea e, Clyde Miller, Od II Sa n­ders, J. Thayer, Stan Wagers, J ack Murph . • A l'A t .L " " .~10 . ,diC'I' llit\lh jf.IY til<' [J:<:U. h I liH t>pfOJIIlllil · tn a'b. II lt:lj\Clll'JJt ut mbc·, . I!Wt< · lflW~l.i• ,n ... On tlh. paHd, ldt CIJ li~lll, are I. D. \ t:.ll, W. J . n 11 , J 'rt to; er ;utd Ma tcr Df C !( 111o 1i •s Cli f( ·· ha \Ill. Four D ~er Park teachers wrote their h osts: "Your gracioL! · ho-;pitality and the interesting talk of the plam combined to make a memorable occa­sion wbich we :h all long remember ancl appreciaLe.'' When the session ended the teach­ers wer pr ~cnt d with a pack t of souven ir from Champion. s1 c ial education teach er re­spon cd: " Please don' t forget the "£" part of B-E Day. We look forward to the lime when some of your people will visit us and se what we are doing in pedal education." · PAPER M KING A1 ART and a .·dence is des dbed briefly for tbe Leach rs. b · Te h­nical er ices Director Jerry Mo:e , The t achers wer12 an attentive audien e on their h oi ida visit. \ H\1'1'\' lE •\C i li•,R :\4\, go 1tlh}<' as ~he lt>:t \ <:'~ \,.iLl an :11 tJ 1 ul v 011 cn.i rs an 1 a gn • I i1 1p1 c: io11 of (.. l;ln •piuo an 1 iuct11sn . . All ouv<·nir \>Ct~· JUOJ.II h ma lc (rorn lu11npiou p:1p ~' 1 rcl<lt ·J maJe1 iah. 11 J As you oil up your reel. test that fly rod, overhaul the outboard motor1 you'll . be suffering fron1 a malady know to Canton Chan1pions as 1n ever .,, " !t 1' ! !1':1 1 -- BASS ANGLER, Cricket aargro;ve, right, wile of Lenoir Hargrm,e. M acRine Shop fore ­n1aH , in~pects a ba ·s reel in a Canton spoxl · shop as saleslady Elizabeth J>less a ist'. THERE ARE ALWAYS mino.r repairs for those fa\'Orite dry fl ' rod a ncl Frank Swatiford, shift foreman in Champi0n's Pulp Prod~1ction Area .. t. kes delight in this p.re-trout season pastime, Frank i in.terested o.nJy in trout . .. the Great Smoky Mou·ntains vari.ety. Smoky Park Streams open May 16. 12 ~fEN THE BASS EA. ON is in full swing and the trout sea on is gradually ouin •· i:nto its o:wn in wond rful \t\7 st rn Nanh Carohna you an b L your bottom. dollar tl at an~l - r an ong the Cmton Chanr­pion J!'amily are com pi t 1, pr par ·d for the omdoor water r sUval. H ynu ~\7 a nt to h ' nwnh ·r d among the fiut on rl e lake or n a the slr · rns, ycnr 'Jl ha\-C to mak · m::m pTeparations; bur if you ar' a r :;:~l fj herman, rou'll enjo¥ tb job. Your r el wrll hav to v ork m >Ollrly. Lt li 1 1. t season, buL·you want to b sun; it\ .right agaiR wllt•n r:he eason s·v ings ajar. Th _re's that fly r d which had perJn t a .ti-op la l August when trout were jun1ping, but it rnig·ht n. · d a little ligturning of th.€ joirrt h. ·rc an l th l' . J<or -ome re ·mJ. ou nrnst wipe it off ornpl L 1 o tlu t it wi ll lo 1k nice and shiny op n.in da '· You' IJ find yourself thinking of possibl buying an w reel or line for Lllc 01, ening j · not far a.wa .· • and you'll f ·cl lik a kid witJ1 :1 n . w ro . Tho ' dry flic~ th<J.t floated "o high ~md dry 1, st snmtn_ r may ba. e become a liule past '· They'll n cd a n . w "slrot in tb ann" by holding them over ~ st 'aming k · ul so tb .u thos ' ha kk will be om Huffy an.d produ tive for opcHing day. ·.rhe w<:tders ma be -·nLirelv ok hnt th lt".lt on tllc . , ·ol ~ that k • p you right side up on the slipper ' It .. ) ... IHLI HO\ \RD. rigJH . gf>t~ ::.~ C<l of e;;rly season h a<,.~ [i, hillg fc"er ,JIId lull!..~ o•e1 omc ne~< C<[ u i pmeu l i11 the Cham p io n Empl O} ecs' • Ir,r k." JJ1a ~ lw \rlln too tnwh . \ III'W layer of kit llljght t:;iH \u I (J f<dillf4 uf lllfJll ' (Oillpk!(' '>CI Ill il) . ·1 h( outhf)alli n <JliJI th<Jt -.<.'UIW<l ;=t lillk lat\ HI! • the· '>t a tl ;I( thf:' 1 nd ol ht;)l 'o<'a..,r-,n n1igln Jwl'd -.p('l'i;J] attuJti1111 . J lt<: l>oar '"~'1 i11 a link li•n IIHJC It \'I aiel lo1 -.afc lak<· f hllln~ l ·ht ~~ a.,rnl, btll ~ou .,inq>l) did llllt ta (' tiJJit ' ltJ 11·phir i1. You'll do thi-. tht>Jt' and gladly· b irm· \Otl Lake Lo the \ at<·J 1hi.., ~>pting '11H !.t an: a thr,u-.alld and otH· litrl<• thiog \'fl11'll ' 'l;tll doll!~ £1\ tltc Jn .,, Ll}\ uf illl ('(IJ I) "I'' ing 1111 t .-t\l'> .,J,ado,_, . .., atounc} about )Oil. \'f· . tiH.Tt <11<.: Jllan_ thill,.!,S Ltl he: doJH IJt 1\o\t'(·JI :-.<'a Olh, a11d il ou 'r(' Jil;.(' tlw <nerage· z.tngle 1 C)u ' ll pul it oil till the la-;t miuut - hut \ou' ll !)(' 11 .uh ' llJt tl1at op ·ning da,. Stm sports department. llan () "·en. derk . .tt.ljll,lS a J!CI\' reel \)II a mod e1n g l <~s~ b as~ tod 1\'b ich in teresb Howanl. H~ \~h. O{'H :\ , T ~o1f· ~ fil. llq>,llllllt'llf , l,lk t - ;Hh ,ll lagt• p{ an l':lll' .l t itl ptt-.1 ,tll1 Fdll' \1 ,11\ ~1111 10 tompl< I<: a lllill­n l tC'p:til on lti' nnl­h•>, ud trtUlllr. (_)ue<·ll , ~ •t ~;.,,~ ,1 11d lt •llll fl,fiCt · ln,111. ltJ;:,., ftn hi . 111o1or to p111 r "i( ll dl'· )X'Illl.tl;iiit\. .\ 11 0 \ ( ' t haul !.dolL' th · \<'.i,Oit up . ·n~ i" 1 I H' :lllSWL'l. • . • ' • I I • .. .. • • • A EW WAREHOUSE for the H0ost(Jn Division ha~ 2!1,000 quare feet of stm·age space. Larg doors give ready ac ·ss to utJc.k , and I - - - - - .-.... - ·- - .. ·ky lio-hts of translucent plasli provide good lighting. ·Doors 011 the fro:nt op en ooto a spnr tra k . e mo • ! ' Houston Division's spring cleaning ~nd improved salvage system results in economy for the company -- - - SALVAGED MATERIAL i restore t, pain ted, and classified by this cTew Eor folur.e Teuse. Al terations and . mpa;irs bring a con tant flow Qf tlsed materials to the new building from almost au departtnent.s i n . the mill. - • • ·- • • .. ' • • • • - • .. • IT w B UKE movin,g day and spring cl aning a ll r olled in to one - only on a mLtch Jargcr sca le than the usual household task. Dozen:, of Houston Divi­sion men, tnt cks, cranes and other n.1.a hines work · d hard and fast for several days on this job. TheiT airu was' to ·epar ate, clas 'ify, paint, and rearrange the h.undreds of item, in the Sa lvage Yard. As tnany as J)Ossible of the val ves, pumps, Uanges, gears and other reclaimed materia ls were . . put 'under cover in the recently completed ware-bouse. Cast iron pipe and other eq ttii ment not easily harmed by exposure was stacked and racked neatly, according to she, type or Gther distinctive cb a ra c te.ris tic. Tons of juuk, unfit fox salvage, went to fill the great need for scrap felt by the stee l mills. Scrap is an important iLlgredient of new steel production, vital to our nation' deten e. Removal of everal old buildi ngs was another phase of this ., prjng cleaning" p1-oj ect. And -when the cre''\'S finished their work, the mill had a cleaner and moPe orderly appearance, like a home after the usual seasonal onslaught with mop and broorn. - • S HE.L V £S AND R.A.CR.S p.ro ide x tra , to rage p a. ·c and a visu<IU "inventot " of th equipmen t on; hand. \ . J. Ca. key tacks anotller g~EJa-r on this neatly M · ranged rack in the new w Fehm.ase, P ropar 1Jandling of used equ i proelH can st~ve thou a nels of clo'lhli • I ~ • - - SPORT SMA ' HCP team trophy is pre en ted to Teddy Rhode, of the Morn ing Star School team, by German ··Nazi" Miller, of the Canton "~ " taff. ' - - PAT'fO;-.i SCI<TOOL ~won rhe girl~ ramm;rr ;td ~> "k t ! ,,Jt t >u rn v at the Cbam1 i n ··Y". Left t ri. hr, . at l: f'ln llis \ elJ , I>a<tt '. Brookshire , nd Maxine Smith. St. 11<:Jiil1~: ;\!;I) H nders(!n, T""<uuue Bnrrell. Be tt\ Rhud ~- 'fla le . ·f 'r.td<cn f\ ll' I', 1 o.e. "hirlc ~ . . . K nt, H '<l ·r Medford, D<ln lh\. R~Li nes 1wd o:\(h O f\ iHe :'ltiJJ.kwu. • 16 - • 7 • ~t..tl'l'ON zz • tjHlK ' UNDEFEATED Ca nton "Y" jun ior girls won the champion ·h ip of Norlh and So t~ th Caro li na. :Fr011t row: Frankie L.rael, l:ktty Bra ll ­son , W<~nda J o h nson !\ li e€ Fay Pierce, "T eeny" ~ I i ll er , Barbara B· ra n ~o n. Jh1ck row: Chri!fty Banks, BHI) .\1orgall, Ro7.e lle 1\i LTn, Frankie Ow·en . Dena i\.fo rgan, Eliz<J h eth Tbompscon. • < - :'\IOR.:'\lN ' T .\R "'I .HOOl 1' m Lhe b } ·' gr, n1ITtal' grade b sk.et­b: Ul w tn-11 ;H11e nt. l\.11 ·lin : Ju li u$ HufftHan , 13ohb; Ho leu . D 1)11 ) Ham1.th ;.tilt! j -'tnL Tho rn;t··on. . tand ing: Ja kie Set?eT. \'\' il • Catpentel-, Jinllll' P1 nuno11.; . Reddy Rhu.cl s, \ Vi lhe Row 'm, Lhcr:: and ,o.+~ h E. C. D t1 kctt . \' t.''-.1.:\T?\JG lh por ul <lr E1va H igh School ba~kctba H t< ttninnient., tl \e~e Ca nt-~n H.igh S llool . Black Beflr bHl'kerhallers snapped other la ur ls to their athletic bel t hi.s spting·. The · enjt))Cd utJe of their grea test ~C<.Lons. Lik tile ~ta t e champion Bethel girB. l' irt ttalh all of the Bla t;;k 13ear .q ttad members are ons of · a nw-n thalll pions. BETHEL HTGH S 'HOOL gi rls are champion. of North Carolina . They won this distinction in Lhe state tourney held in 1 bercleen in M<n ·ch . Their coach was C. C. Poindex ter. who is not shown in this picture. Man , like other p layers in tl. is ·e ti n, are d a u gh.Lerg o[ C~ti i ton ChampionJ. \>\'L 'XING ·l -B: bo}s' t1asketbaJJ Learn were lhe Canton Higb School Juniors. '1ey defeated Moming Star in th.e fina ls 45:26, Left to rigb.t: GbaTles W ~t, Boh.by Stam y. Chnles Wilson, Doy e Cannon , Jinunie WThitesides, . harles Jo1mwn, But h Morgan, David An derson and George Hughes, xl.e. "lptain of the Learn, receivirtg trophy. CRABTREE-JRON DUFF girls won tbe Haywood County 4-H ba-sketball tournament conducted at the .Canton Champion ''Y." T hey defeated their neig-hbor , Fines Cree.k, 40-22 to \"in the girls' championship. -n a_rbara Sm:ith, tea l).l captain, is receiving the rroph frolll German "Nazi" Miller, of the "¥ .. staff. Cl"l r .\>~P.10 . 1 .. y·· .\11 rs ·~•er rumoer'\-up in rbc Jll.tcr­' ltat \~tCA I J.~ ~l> .I !Ja ll t£JL!Jt1 •y nJ c;,,e tl\"Vuod •. C. rota HM: Hud"'.UL J >nh in;;, Var ~>u, R cUr and Rh:icwh<HL Hack ow: J~ . t?tu~!)l .li', ' I. ('.(11)11 • o~ (,( 1'!1 ' BT !!#Oil, P· u:, King. Jo11tl t;.<i>tt, R,l'l~t r, \~' illil!n~'fJro ,uuJ fc JHI<-k r1. • Canton area youngsters ha ue ' . WI nn1n9 ways C ANTON ALWAYs expe.ri · nces a good basketball sea.on , but n ever befoxe have so many o utstanding· laurels on a s l·ate-l jd and int:cn; tale basis com to 1'-Ia 'wood County athlet es. T he Beth ·J High Schoo l girJs ~vo n vinuaHy a ll district tour­namen ts in tltis division an l th. 11 'vverlt on to win the sla te champion&.h iJ at tb ~ Ah rd een LOurn ")'- . T he Charupion '' \ '"junior ir.irts won. the ham1 i mship h mvrs .in th · lnte:rstal.ct; ¥ 4Cr\. bask t ba lJ t.onrtJ ·y condncr'd a t ]?ock Hi ll, S.C., and the Ch ~t ilpion "\'" Mir.es WC'I' ' ruml r. -np in t:ltc hH 1r &Ot tt? IJ (J : ' un:i ro y at Greeu'\ivood, .S. C. - T it C0lnHy·1·1f·id 4-fl ba~:;k Luall wurnau u.t h ld ac th' CFJ.a.mp:ion ''Y" prc>.dtrr·d son c ·olor£ul l>as k e~ tball Ztmong Ltl o~mgs v·ts. Th . · Crabtrc•c-lt·on Duff girls w m t. lv -H champion- ~ ship in t.bctr di i~do n 111 l the Canton Hi1,h . dwol JuDiors w u t h b<~ ~o.' 1-H honors. P<rJ ton S boo! girl look th thampionship i1l ·th ' ~dvw l l nsk~· l ha It (:v 'tH. wh il th ~ . 'l m ·i ng SLJ I' buys vi to lm.t '~ in their di i ·iotl. ' gramt'lJ 1' _arne ott t 17 • Pl:BUC SCHOOL VISITOR'S \'EEK in :\'larch brought huncheds of parent~ imo the schools to 1\'alch how their ch ildren are be.ing H L: "DR · DS OF C HA i\1 PI 0 . S h<ll e 1.1 l-c1: lh ;u1l~t~-;e ol the e' · 1~" 11\ill· IOGt lio na l lt;.rining plan o lfet d lo) Lite l'a~.Hfrll.l -.£1wol s;~t m. "J ll~::se Cllampiuns oiC attending a tla~s taught b) J. K. Kirkpatrick ot the Ho11 ton Divi:-ion. ] ~:, . r laughl. Thi · group of Champion mothers vi:ited Pa~tlena·. Kruse Elementary school one day. .'>CI .tOOL J.lF · tu<LI~ i~ . mlt:ll' hat mutt <'olll plit atcd. Thi~ pi<ll•tt: '"""' ,111 •· \ " bomb drill. .Lt J'rusc U cmcnl:trv Sdlnol. This ltall11a' anti rhe uouthing po.,irioH ofle1 tit ht·Nl ;I\ ai l, blc ptor.:rtion (or th th..ildreu. • . TEACHER RE.T U RJ\'t;D llw vi' iL la t(-t in Lll hlOnth clur.iJlg V · ;J(] na's .B -£ i);o ', 1\,iQ Leadters \ ho v i · ·~ d 'tl ~!lTI pi u wcr · 11 s, Fr;m Fc! l.gl:laru, c~n t er, and Mr!i. Jac Murphy, 1 igl'l . , SCHOOL BO · RD B NQ UET (for pan and presen t board member) b rought tbese Champions wge ther with Vince MiJI.er, center. s-u per-intendent of the IJa sadena School Di t.ricL l7onner boa rd me111ber Gl.eun Smathers, left, and pre ·ent member Bevi Fnnier al'e shown. wiLh Mi Uer. 00 c 00 s-- ~ I 1zens • • • ' B)! A . Trfl . Hmnillon p RO£ABLY NO OTHER F ACTOR h as CO.ntr Lbuted more tO the greatness of An'lerica than its free public sc hool system. 1- though we are the stockholders in this great public enterprise, most :people are prone to take no personal inter es t in how our b}l iness . is run. However, this heritage which is ours is one that requires a constant and diligent supervision if it i - to fulfill the purpose an,d interest of its authors. A.s the yooth of our land Is taught, so is d etermined the futtue oC our counn-y. Our conception of the ba ic ''Three R 's" n ds occa ional revi­sion. 'Ne have emerged into a highly technical societ of people whose requirements are vastly different from those of even a fe'"'' decades ag . As the local industries seek trained p rsonnei to meet their special need s, it becomes e.,' pedient for the chools 'to u pply them. Scientists, techni cians and skille t tradesmen are necessm· to maintain anc.l operate the giant indu trie aro und Pasadena. Partly as a r sult of th interest shown by Champion a11d other local industry, Pasadena has achieved a high schola tic sta11danl. Nlain uaining a voca tional progn.tm gear l to th n d of the col'l11llUnity ;,1nd keeping: pa e ·with the rapid e" pawion of rhe _m11mtmiry has xequircd exp ·rt i adership and planning < n th .. par t 0f tbosc entrwsl ·d wilh lhe job .. Char:npi ns h ave play ·d a vital patl jn rlt i work, S"-rving on the Sch ol Bo nl and taking act iv , pa . ts in th , PTA. T he ~,. o rn,p e tc nct;: of t h , lea hers .i a tt 's teel tn b v Lh • ht< t tha _t rnor·c tb , :w half ha. · rna ter•'s d ·gre ~- Ar pre~> lH thc r a re 7, { i(i s wden~s ill th s ho ol~ fro1:n th JirM throug+t the tweHtb gr~tdes, bu~ by J 9f'6. J957 t his will have iJJ.ct ·.aoed to an e'S~ ima wd I 0,81)(). ·. 'ix r\ ·w :i tto:s ha ve b " ~ n purchaseJ fo1 futw· · growth to supph:mc:nl rhc Ch. isti ng 11 sch) >Is. A ~ stodholdetii in this · cut rpri c, e han.1piorn take an active iutcr ·s ·, iH rht.'ir .'Lhonls. \1\fe pour million of ta, ~loB a r~ into this l:nL·n 'SS but tmdo ubt edJy it pa y~ (Iff with lh Tl!ate ·t tli videnGJs f II UUSl l11 .:;S l 11 f U r C.:Ol.liH l.ty. 19 .· S I \C KJ . '(. C:\ R I () '\;S of "'t.ott h t :tjH' 1ddd1 !talC jtt~t bl'{:JI n •n·i1 ·d i~ Juliu:. r L il t i-.tlll. T his ~t q J fJ I) of tape will C\Ct\ tn;; lly go 1o the J'tinl_ :-.hop wl\e1L' it '>\ill l.Je lCtj ll i\iti <lllCd I;~ I:JIIOII'- ol fite pt'r 01111C'I . Macy's and Gimbel's haoe nothing on these Ham ilton Dioision employees, who handle thou sands of items in STOREROOM CLERKS are kept bu } day and 11igh t i~ · uing upplies and ma­te rials. Bill .\1ers. I lt and Loni~ B1 ick fill an ord er for oil nd grea<.e. THE HA~t t LTON Ol\' ISLO:--J Store­roo rn is a wide spreading section of our mill, tor it operate<; the supply line ·wh ich furnishe'> the operating depar lmems with all ol th eit' nece:ssar · materials and . eqUJpm nt. E\'<: ry ir ern. no matter how large or s111:tll, is handled bv the • Storeroom, l nder the sup '1'\ i~ i o11 of HatTY S m ·s. lt mav be a gia tll I I nwtor of s ·n~ ra l hun Ired horse-power or k red by l'lowanl Adall\<., chief o f th · F.lt'<.Lrical lkparr · 111 ·nt ; o r perhaps Oscar Jbkrr. l.aL hi 11 • Sl \()I su pl' \ i ·or. h a' need of :1 stn. ll drill nr special lllachinc ~ c n.: w . \Vh atl' \- T it may lw. til · St or root11 ~ t a ff wi ll folh >w til t' ordcri tt g· ol i l ~~~~d t he( k its arriva l at Ch;1111pion. Tl1 <.: ordering of spt•rial parh and matN·ial,, and til · maimc­n :HKC o l a CllllSinnt invC'ntorv of ' ' • N I~ S EU.l ;\'"GSON lias q 11 i te a job ro perform 1,, h(m h e ta.kes an i twenlOr_y of the supply of na ils swred in the tool sh ecl. Large quanh~ies of. ma u~!'i al.. are :' tored j r1 thi~ bud-ding; tb-e r eco1'ds _are kept on file in the Swreroom. • -. tfte hundreds of items norm.ally used in day to day operatiOn a1e the major functions of the Storeroom. Johu Reiff is directly in charge of keeping the .inventory up to date- and thereby keeping the bins and sh elves well stock d . Some of Lhe new impro,•emenrs in this departrnenr have been the r ebui ld ing of these. bins; new lighting fixt ures and oil purnp bave also been "installed. A [l e t of se· en gasoli1~ e trucks is operated from the . S~ore­room under the direct charge: of Dan Manning;. Many Gham­pi ns ·v.·iJJ rec~1 ll that it was Dan who made the first em,erg-ency nw from Me1·cy Hospi tal in Hamilton to Cin cin.n <bti's Gen eral Hospital carrying an iron lung needed for a patient This ru11 , made un(ler city and sta te · p(>Hce cs.vwt wa. ma<!1e .in the ~nnazing time of 23 rninut s, which is, ati Dan says, ''really mov ing a tru ck." Since tha t first trip severa l more have be n made, and .ome tirne ago when the Canton mills wer · flooded. Ha.mj]ron 's S tor<.~room trucks h auled mergt:ncy e lec­trical equit>m€.nt to a id them in g tting back .imo prod uction. These trucks ~ l so ha!J1linishcd paper to the ~u stom er and l)r iJ1g raw matttr ia l from sioragt. ln. uch a large and vc.r-satik department as this, a grea t deal of carefu l checking and p lan1 ing j · r · quin~cL Hany Syroes, £ reu Polls ancl a ·well · rou ndcd t a ff of ~> .pe6aJ i ~ ts- in the deparbl1ent, help bO keep the "wheels of industry" moving by .supplying t:he m.aretial. n£ productio n. --· en era JNSPECTI-:\!"G 1he 1 ew wiudsl!l ield sticker'~ hi h is issued this vear • it1Stead of new liceme tag. m·e, Champion Truck Drivel' Robert Ha n l ey~ left, and Dan i\•fanning. truck ili ~ patcheT. Both :1re mem­be rs of Hamili o n's Storeroom taH. ' GORll01 l.f>LEH · RT looks tnto c>tl:e of the S:tor roMt'S 111 ;11Jy bins for the correct ~i ile bolt to filt a n -m-d- ·c hc.:1d h • Ra)'11H!IIU J efhi e ' of dtc M'i l)-l,,·pighL 1> p~trun 11t. CONTINUED ON NUl I!A.GE 21 - T h is d e p a .r t m e n t m u s t • see to it that the right equipme nt reaches the rig ht place at the rig ht time. ' Store" CONTINUED T Hit I 'VL•.NTOitY. h.CT10N h e ;~ckr,J by John l{eifl . li J.; Iil , I.HJ an impQrtam p an ip the <~p 1a1!on o f th kp:u tmr:ttL. Huhll tl Mdnt.o;;lt , lefr. <~ nd vVall.er J ohmwJ a~" i '~ i1t r conling II H' with tlr<!wa l.., an I new purcl1<1-tts ,'O t)a; r ~: will be •nol tg'll 1pplks on hand at ull tim e., l'or a ll needs, 22 ELSIE R USSELL is the departme11J. stenog· rapher who types correspondence and per ­forms most o( the £ili~~ g duti es in the office. Because of the man · materials handled daily. record keeping 'g an imponant job • in the StoTeroom. ' \ 'iS,IS J'A r l~ LRVI\(Il{ Evel ·tt !'Oils po ll\~~ to ll biu o( · ] C't'• Ll h al ~ll Jt H t!~ fu1 nit (' of tl1c c ltcrrkiun . E\ TNl ·[$ a \'e ter :w Ck 101pion <' tJlplt•)C; l•:v 1 L~ l u.J$ work ·d in Lhe StOreroom fo-r f he pa st 22 ' ·n r' . II 1 e, ~I S tn ~o ltl <J. Il)' (Jt her ~I ·partu1 111·- ol t h mill, e p 1:) II(' i:. a11 a.: 0 t. SUPERVISOR HARRY SY.\fES keep, btr'l checking the "three ec1iom (.\rotor 'I tuck..;. Salvacre c and Rcclam:nion SLCircroon•) undet 0 his s upe rvi ~ ion. T lt roug·h the effort~ of H·•n ~ and Head Clerk Cr ' ·\' il e}. rhe Store10om j, getting a new look. Replacing and reari-ang-· ingold bins, obtaining tl!." \1 crad le t~pe dmm racks and changing the lighting ~)'>tcm h;:1~ improved the departm e nt. ELECTRIC TRUCK DRI\"ER Jim Polmo (abo 1e, left) make~ ~everal dail · uips thtOug-h both mills. Jim delivers small boxes, <.arton,, and packages l.u the Cen ral Office .lnd to other office in the rnill. RECFIVING Cl.FR KS Sam Junes :111<1 Robert l.ca l, keep hu~y in both trn<"- pit~ and the Storeroom entr::tncc. utdoading 'onte of the snppli cs and Ctptipnt Ct tt 11 hich :1 1e ddi1t:red to C hampion duily . • 23 l .. I Pictoriall () () Presenting Champion and Champions in everyday happenings in and around the MilL \'\' JN, ER S of the rece.nt Can ­ron High chool sp eaking CO il LeS t, sponsored IJy the Canton \Vo·linen.'S Club, a re, , eated: 1 ancy Galhen.ne <.m(l Carolyn Roberts, first and ~eco nd place winners respec­tivelv in the J·uni'or-sen.iol' • J d ivision. Standing are Joyce Owen ·and Martha Po index­ter, Tatecl tops in the fresh­man- sophomore -cla sses . aDcy and Carolyn al"e the d:JUghters of Canton Cham.­pions, E. J. Ga lliemie and Richay l Roberts. BETHEL RA P1~1ST CHLi.RCH m en~IJeL hef:,t !'e rvi ce~ in their new church buildi t1 fo1· the first time Sunday, March ~0. The trm:Lure i' ~-a1ued :H 11early .,40,000. ome of the con rega­tion, rnany 0f 1\'ho:m are Canton Champilnr , may be seen on Lhe te( : o( the new bu.il'din . • • C..RA V LADJt·:S gi\'C valuahk- aid d uritrg- R ·d C t-'<h~ Hloodr11oldk vit;i. 1 ~ L'J .Can1on. Seated : .~1 ~- .) . II. -fo<.n ·, d ~ttiltWt£1 , Mt'o . J, Htttn• Ylmf<lHl, ll !Jl'il''· aid . Mrs. Can·i11 C 1 , !VI1 . lC \'. tlwll , Mnc 'Not1 l1 S11<:11f _lei , 1\-ft s. J. R. \>\ 'c~'l fli or b11rf. St~lltli ug : Mr~<. Cl)dt' Hocy, Jr., M1s. P.fJI> ,o\11 1()11 , ~ J1 :. [.tJt{iln WliiL~.:, Mr!>. l·.!wnoci 1-'l •i<·. Mr$, L. H, Har!.~ h01:11 , Mrs. J. L. R;.,:,·ve;o;, Mrs. IJ . t\ . lJ t•ltkt , ~[, ,, _ lliiHE CIIA IVJP'(ONS (PuHt n·t1·r:tl Offi ~ W•' r(: ad.il in lh ' 1\ larvin Alexaml .r. Ahseut; Mt · . .K eeuc t·, Mr. ' hne. 24 :\Tl~ cm .vt·td i••tt 'dJh lt dH·w mm•· 1ha 11 ~00 intl11 'lli t\l ed it ors w c n 11lfta ti ~b. • 11 211 - ~1-\. Lcf~ 10 l'ighl: ·pJ,nlnw;J plt r BHh Crow. :1 "l)(:,tkcr: Clt :-t mpion l atth:l J .,·k ~ou , regi'l l'llllvll idt·: .lu:11npiot <..:a t ."ki l hn:tn , , ~ ~walc1 ; Dr. Clu.ud,e: Rc~ lliH ~o n . prc~idCill. ()plui0tl R · ~(:<i!Ch Cut p ., a 1-pc.1 c•r: Jim 4cConulck, rdi, t o~· . /u, Pont l aga! ill e-, pwgra111 L'l.aim1: 11 ; Chaw pion St ·w jonas. couventioil chairma11. I:--;DCSTRIAL £:\GH\EERl:--;G STUDENTS from North Carolina tate College made a tour of the Canton Di1 ision 1\'Iarch 17 under tl1e leade1 :,hip of their in tructor .. Ruddell R eed, Jr. This ''' a~ tlleir fir t wp on an eighr-<lay, three -state tour of sotHhem i.n d u ~- tr ies. After see ing the mill at 1\"0rk. the grotlp participated in a question a nd ;Jnswer forum with Champion SllfJCni;nr-: C. .\. ' tone, " .13nck." Fairbrother, Fred V. Doutt, Het,chel Ket:ner, \'iJii, Kirk patrick antl Bruce Mocford. H, '-tKI .' Il3 ·'\I.L CIJ \IP'-t of tlw !T.ttnilt0H J)j, ii-.illll 1 h, ni< a! Jlunlap, /\ll<tm,. H<u old AlllOitl 'fill LC~Ig iH' !hi \<!ill I\(' IC tltl: 1<' ­fjllillt(' l. Sum<li11g: h111;1 gt·1 Hwl C.enc· Stllrupll, D<•ll)!; -J olJi<h, " ,\u·" f1 ant 'fui!H·r. Cit, rk\. 1t I' ilJncv . . Farmc•. Kn din~: Dirk ~hKint•Ult, Holstci11, ]);de \lie nd.e1. \fE' l Y :'Ill- '\ f101n Clt<JIItpinn ;~nd tl• · lkrkrtr P;•pcr ( ontp.lt!) :111' hlwwn with Col. Ro. flit' Ttlll1ll 111;1111 ~ l lt"<t.kCJ .Ll th (' "(('\T I1lh ,ltllltl ;cll Bullet <.null!\ Regiona l S;;fl'ly Corti 'l!' tHI ', held " ' fl:1rttilrnl! i11 :VIanh. I e lt lO light: :\1 t 'I op­Jnillt: l, ll ;ll tlllton Di\i~i!JII: C:tliO!ld ' ltanJn : Fd L11111 uf Bnkeu·s; a11d I eu J-'ai~l. L <'Jl<'l'al Oll lt~. • I . c.. '·SO'\'>Y" H.\RNF:' l T. ki t. tt't.t'llth t t: lllllled to 1 ;,it the Hon-­'"'' [)j\l o;in ll ;titer '"mplt>ting hi' \ir l·wL<: B>l';k tr:tillill~. \l:tll\ Challlpi .. n> 1\ ('r on ba11d Ln w:rk(' hitll kd <II llt>lUt: -:mton g- tln' !l l , hi-; ln•thh 1 IunH·r \ ll'\.:mdct. 25 I • l ' 26 I GIRL-. COU L a 'au­lim posul for l hi<i group pi<:tnr follow­ing th Coun of Honor ·in the Fir t , l thodisl hullh dtJti11g Girl Scout \Vect... Rttth G-rngg o~ da~rlul in g. rh; irman of lh' Com­munily Group, i. shown wJlh orhe kad­ers at the exne-rn.c left. fn tercst. in Gid out· ing is "tcadi~-y gainin•5 new momentum iu the ,iJncton area. FIR T GLAS n~rtifi­ca te are presented o Gwyn Wright, 1e£t, :.nrl Re becca Rodg r b\· Harry ~1atthew~ . of the Book .Mil l Beater Room. Gwv, n and. Re- I ,ceca are the fir t !:,•it to r ece.i ve First Cia ·· Girl Scout cenificate-. i n Can toft since Girl · co1.1 t io "' w; s reorgan-i;; cd two years ago . nntversar • Canton Girl Scouts mark the founding of their national organization and point up their own advancements during the past two years . c ANTO ' GlRL SCOUTS, sev · 11 troop o( them, · obaerv d tb fortieth anniversary of the founding o( Girl Scouts of meri a with a cookie elling program ;md a. Court of Honor at the Can1011 Fir. 1 l\ Te thodis( Church th ·• w ·ck of Mard• l(). t (i . Many of the Girt S nu Ls r c j v ·d Tli fi La t t'i or merit and advanccmcltl:::; ltrring the Coun o f Ho!Jor and t W<fJ others, R ··h (' ~~ Rodg T S 13, datJgh­t. er of .Mr. and Mrs. W. Gordon Rodg rs, and Gwyn \1VrighL, J 3, granddaHght ,. of Mr. and Mrs. di llis. \t\' r igJH, wrr·c awnrded FiJ'ill CJiilsS S out ranks. The awards wer<' present ·d b ' 1 fany Matt lw" ~. of Lhe Book Mil l, Jong il( liv in l1ullt C~t b ."cc.JuL:­<. IIld Gir l Scou t <tctivlti( · ~ in til · C:;tllton ;n e t. nth G;ragg, Sdwchding O lfin·, chait nl;m ol the Cnu ­lliUJJity Croup, presid t' I over Lln: Court .r.>l Hr.Hwr, wi tll Gwy11 \1\frig-ht nuking tlt · <U•IIO\lll t.t·m e n t :- . T he Girl Scouts sold a l '('n)l'd uurl!h ·r of t.oolv ic:. during tlJe w e k.. T lt i ~ mo1W · will J) • used in fiw111 ci ng Girl Scout work i fl t h(' Ca u Lt n .a rea. The seven troop-· aJ'ld their 1' ders and a ·sist­am lead r arc: Troop No. l , (r ·. Rozell Ra ' and Lotti sa \ •Velch ; Tr op No. 2, Mr ·. Mar Cogburn aud Mr . . Lu ' illr Duckett ; Tronp No. 3 Mr . . Nell BnrncLtc and Mrs. Hubert Bntd; T roop No. ·L 1\ l r . J\tl rtk 1\llill ·rand Mrs. oyd Ford : T roop N~l. :> , • ilrs. K:uic Sta fford and 1\'frs. llctt , H o lcombe; Tmop No. (j · 1\lrs. Pauline Srrogg. and fVIrs. B r­ni ct' f!ttll.l'Ufk lcl , J r.; <'111<1 Tr hp Nn. 7. 1rs. V\'. Cordon .RodgCJrs and Mrs. Brtt · Na nn 'y. Aft ·r J ing dol' l'll i ll ll lp r· for snm ' titnc. G irl , routing was r t)rg;.lni.J ·d two r:a,t·. ngo wh en a trnl>p as rornwd b ' 1-h rr .' M attbews ~lnd the Rev. I.. E. l\'Lthr a t th · Ca nt OJl Firs! 1Nhod:ist Churth. 'fhn \1\'esL'an '[ •thodi sl Clll!rch ' ' ;b u e. t t 1 I a H in li.llc with Ur · r ·or g'lll iza t i.on. pr •gran1 and ttHh the c ;:trc fmn lru cnnccl iatc and thr ·e Hrown­i ~ ll O<JfYi funnion ing with ~t dd.crrnin at ion lo "d thinrar s ' fro nt day~ to da v, . ' I ' • @, • Trip to Mexico Pays Off By JV[ne Rooks "P1int o( the ·Month" honor. w nt to Wi lliam Bill I aylor of the Re,earch Depanment a t the recent Shm­terbu~ LOlli s t. Bill entitle. lti. print "Amecameca Courtyard ." The picture wa · taken. as th title. indicate , at a. mecca ~n ;\1 '.·ico and i actually a n ano nt courtyard 111 the hls­wric capital city. Bill ha., heen a m mber of the Shutterbug Club eveT inc.e it , ... a or. aniz ·d, and having displayed many fine print;, ay.-.; he ha been interested in pb.otography ever in< e he ras jn gr mmar cbooJ. He has been m the Rc ean:b Department with Champion for 13 years. .\ liT. ( f Itt flf( II 1· \,< · '""'( ,,h_,,! l1\ Utll J it'I<H .uu! I i • (;,m,c·la dHtt Uill awl hi· fmlih ll'<•>dul 1!1 \lc ILO h-! H• ill l~ill" j>iUil• \em th · h i111 of lb 10111l1'' ~"' •ul dunng IIH' ~f ,, h ru<< tu•g c,f tlw H milll,ll\ ~1plftc·• J.u · rnt• ( h•h New literature Worth Reading Uy r; co rgr: S tr i 11 e r i'l'lana g- ·mc11t 's d cr i~ion ln briug- th t: snviu· ol the Na t i 111al R1 ·~t: arch Bun·au to Cha11 pion wa~ au cxrcllcllt one. The reading m· l t r found in th newly imtallccl ra cks i ~ iJ structiv >, inforJllative aud cutrnaining; and th(Te i:s IHU< h Jood !'or thought a nwng- this literat urc lha t is casi I diges t 1 L • • • • " \1\/hy are ymr so downhea rted, son?" a"kcd .Mrs. R eid , the wife of our infallible Otw. wl1cn her youngest soH Jan w;dk ed int( the h ou~: with a st~ck.. of groceries .he "~as ~ ·nt to purch ase. "Aw, get:, Mnw!'' answered fan , " I forg-ot ro bring the hrcad." " l)(ln't Jet that '-''OIT you, darling,' ' said lvh-s. Reicl <iOot hingly, and th en with a twinkk in her eye~ quippcrl , "When your father comes home !rom. work h wi ll 11robably ha"c some pun · for us." Harnilton Di vis ion EdiLOr Let Dodlman ~ays tlr(' n w te levision sets with onlv two c1 ntro l ~witch{·~ an: nothing new. His se t has had two comrols ever since he ha1l it: his two little girls and his wife. A Larry Hightower o f Ellcnsburgh, \IVash. , stal~C'd sometime ba k from his home with a wheelbarrow whH lt he intends to push a round. the worlJ in 12 y ars. \1\londer if he is a n y relation to our Lcter Hightower of the Drum Coat Department? * * oil- * John Brehms, CM Cutters, who is as good ~ d1c~ ker player as he is a cutter setter, bkes to pia} a httlc JOke on his friend when be . elh them egg . He puts a few extra eggs in the bag which are bard boi I 'CL The other clay we asked Bill Par ley, one of John's Clll'tomcrs hr w he liked the eggs. Bill's an wcr "as, "John'· eggs <an·t be beat!" vVhen Jim S hwalm's ister-in-Jaw came our. of the hospital with h er new born hab q~tite "ome {imc back, he ·topped at' Jim' h rnc £?r a whil . Jim\ littl · :.on Mike an obs rvant lad, n u ced that the bab · had no I • te th . vVith gr at con cern he ran to hi father and , ai i, "Dadd , . untie forgot th bab 's teeth in d1c ho ·pitaL" Mill Poli c CapLain Roy Holli:~ttr is smoJ...in~ < ne ,. r,rand o( ig-ars, named , '' Pull awa ', brav bo '." 1 HI• T\0 ( lflf])RJ· · ol 11 .. •ud \h'\. \'1 l1i • llllmcm ill"' '.tto! \nn. dghl ~t·:"'' old ;n .. t ( h .llh'~ Ra\ . 11 ~\::tl\ old. ·1 hci1 <~dche"' ;, !{ . 1 ,, ll.unihm l ht•i • d.ul h.!"> h·l'tt .1 (hampttm fn1 ll ~~· .1 •: lw 1 11 1~ i11 Uw t•ip~ ~~~~ p. ,. ' ! assma tes 0 ester ear ~m \'f· . · CHA\11'1(};'\ ' tvhn l~C: J c h i h ·drf!f)l 1,w du. vs nf I!.JJ ~~ aH: .'>h()WH h re lo(Jking a1 CJ;.n-k HayJUtr\ Vear hc)l-ik Fron1 t it • t ft arc, ,'\-J ut r<l } R a nt . y, , 'orm CooPJ I1s, Keu foot • Clark HJ\ ' Ilf:'t\ V~oil - • I i;mr P. -, aylM. £lm<::r Warr eu <lJl~ 'HJ · I } Ri d J. With he ex cptinn of Elm r Warrer1 , <til of ti re 'HI ract a from · ou t-o f· tOwtJ . choot~ . : I mer gradln:tte:J fro u H milton C:albolic High SchooL - • . By Bill Thompson W oRLD WAR I had ju ·t ceased and many already · sensed that it had been fought in vain. Woodrow Wilson '\Kent abro<i!d to h elp formulate the League of Nati.ons which we neyer entered. Prices were soaring. Millions were striking. Prohibition was just around the corner and the American Legion was chartered. Touring cars with collapsible tops and wood spoke wheels were mo t frequently seen . Cincinnati and Chicago squared off in ·what was to become the mo. t tra,gic World Ser.ies in history. Ci.ncy's "Dutch" Ruether headed the National pitchers ·with a gr at J 9-6. Eddie · Rou, h of the Reels led the league hitters at a .321 dip. Ty Col b's .3tl1 h eaded a LI major batsmen. Babe Ruth tagge<il 29 ho1 tcrs. Ed Cirott ' of the v\Thitc Sox, winner of 29 games, al.on with sever(,tl men1bers E}( his lub, soM out to gambl n and " 1hre·w" tll <.: Series w th ~ tmdcnlog- R eels -seven games to two. Discovery o[ the " fi x'' (:Hme well nigh ruin;iJ:'lg organized ba$ebalL .Judg · K. 1VJ , Landi ~ o( Mill ville, Ohio, sa· cd the ·national pastime when h . lcrr ~ ted out th gn iJty 'rVhit.e Sox players ~111 l ba.HL'iltc.d th cn1 tor v r from organiz ' 1 ba ll. nill JohnWH1 ('Jili 'i din as at!Jlet • of the <'ar ... Sir Ua:rton won th ~,; K-nt1Jck )' _Dcr l>y . , . Ma•• -0 -VVar won nine <wd lost th · lo•.J;t • rae of hill (o]orl• II t a n.·e1 . . . \rV.ilcox won the Jndianapoli, Ra(;l~:, i11 4 PeuAC0t Sp1:cial with af! aver<lgc nf a cli:tt.y ~H rnilc ·s p<T ll rJur ... Howl· ing'& best 'l-"'h Harry Ca,lilll \·vi ell a 71 H ... \1\ ':!ILVJ J lftg'('n was "Mr. Coif," and the Rose Howl g:1 m(· wa-. c~uH tiLed due lo war. L '. · we J:(J get - J;,wk Dempsc·y "pllltt'llllc. , , ., the out ·oJ· COJ1 d ilion and aging g i ;.u r. J e.~s \' i lh11 d, tot tht· h avywtight b '11. at ~r.,l edo on Jul)' L \ .Vha t with war ncr c: 1cll ev cl - 1 het e \a... b mnd to come a Lhang ' i11 rhc l'<:mpo of lif iu g n er~ l. Mw~ i c wa Hot the c 'JLi ou. The t.onducling y<:at' of the ~ 'cone! 28 decade was merely the lulJ before the R oaring Twentie~ storm of fa,st ·living and syncopation. Our music had accelerated some'}'hat with ragtime: flaming youth wa. thirsting for excitement and . "jazz" it was to be. Hamiltcm's Johnn'y Black came out with his trange "Dardanella"- hit song of the year. lt ha.cl a contiJwou pattern in base - no doubt the fir ·t "boogie-woogie'' in American music The battle of the Darane ll€. wa till fresh .in people's minds and the a ociarion no doubt helped to make "Darclane.!Ja" t11e , ear' · favorite. "Shimmy" 1vas the new dance craze. "Sl1immy'' wa.· slang for "chemise· · ;;~.nd tbe full uamc of the dan e (used in George \Vhite's Scandal ·) wa, ''.Shimou.e Sh - wobble." There were many l'l;€"W tun .$ that year includiJ)g: "Let Tl1€ R esto( The World "o B ,·· ''T lJ l\ le,'' ''How Ya Gonna Keep 'Em Dowu on T h Fann?" ' 'Jn My .~w ee t Little ..\lire BLut Gown,·· 'Tve Got 11y Captajn Working· for i\11 c No-w," "1 \1\Tisb I Could Shjm m '· Lik . . My Sister Kat(,!,· · ''I'm For ver Hlowi;ng Buubl - ·,'' · Yonr •.yes Hav Tol(l 1\.f · S<J, ·· ··oh \'\fha t \ Pal '\ V~1 s :Mar ,,.. ·· J'he Wor.ld Ls \.Vaiting For Tbe S nn ri~c." ' 'J\ Pr>Uy (;id Is Like A M >lodyo'' ·'You 'd Bt Su rpri · d." "Akn· h fll i c B b t('S," " O.n-La· La-'We ' \,. . c0." "F r ·ck les ·' ··'I slc of Gold 11 Drea.ms," "Oh, H Jin ~o .'' "Stpping Cid t' Thrnugh A Slraw,·· " S~vc t Si . 10cz•n ," "T Luu Naug-ht W· ltt," '·Tulip T in H.::· and '·vVait Till Yllu , ' l Th 'tn lJ p l.n The Air, Bn li.'' \.Vith th.c ,·x u.:pt.ion uf Eh11 <.:r \.Va r•rcn, all ol: our 'E) g tad!-. ,,i:£Tl f1om onL·o(-town schv1)1l). Elmer g-radnat "d lrnm lfamilto.t\ Cathqli c. Other1) indud -·: Stan ky ){ ied ·I. R ykcr'-s Ridg·e f'J.igh, Madison; · I 11 r­Ja. y Ra111~ ·y M Cuff · Higt1 , Oxford; Ken Moor . N ·w t\ l'ha n y Hig-h, N<'W Albany; Hi II Ta lqT, l\•1 org;;tn J>ark High. C. hit<tgo ; Clark lhyner, Stc J. High, Dayton; and NMm Cooaub~, \.mdia Public, Anwlia, Oltio, • Man Here Has a uGreen Thurnb" By W es Cobb T h ouo·ht for the month . . . How oft n v,re come across a blt of v c e or a little saying, o true to li fe ~nd · o perfectly put that w . wd1 mightily that we m.1ght · have po ken or written n ourselves ... lt happened to us the o ther d ay. The item lay in wait for u s be tween the covers of ~ tiny leaflet ·ntitled .''Treasure? Ver~es" - . the on. ol booklet we dig up m the attlc wh1le pnng clearung and cam)ot resi l the irnpuL e to explore. Thre · short paragraph be. ide a.., sk e t~h of_ a yell?w rose ?.b~ttt t~ burst into bloom. 1 he tttl of the p1ece wa R1ches and the wri ter b elongs to that gre.at, unselfish fratern ity known as "An.on ym.ou. " or "Author Unknown." "You are rich er today than you were yes terday if you have laughed often , given something, forg~ ve n even rnore, made a new (riend today, or made steppm g-sLOnes o£ stmnbJing-blocks. "You a re ri cher if you have thought more in tetms of 'th self' than 'myse lf,' or if you h ave managed to be cheerful even if you were weary. "You are r icher if a little child h as smiled at you , or a stray dog has licked your hand, or i( you have .l· ooj.zed for the bes t in others, and given others the best , m you. * * * * Have you ever raised an orchid? If so, yotr belon~ i t l that select circle of gardeners whose "green thunJbS" work magic with dee good earth. A ~whi le back Don Cropenbaker of the R ewinders read an article describing the exr.reroe ditficulty of: pro­ducing this g-orgeou . flower un d ~r normal gar? ening conditions. L ess tban one plant u1 a hundre·d. 1s able to sur ive the early stage of grow th. As a resu lt Don h.a chosen as his spring project the careful -n urturing o ( an orchid bulb. ln case yow 're interested , b ulbs can_ be purchased from the Am erican Orchid Society a t a cost of $5 each. Congratulations to two more of our boys fm· whom "soro.ething new ha been added" ... The Earl B,rowns became proud parents of a brow~1 -eyed baby .girl on · February 11 ... T wo boys and a girl s-h cmld be · a sure­fire recipe for a .!1appy home : . , Hob Carson's lovely wife presented htm wrt.J1 an eightJ>Ound baby boy on \Vedce. day, March !J. ll' · a small world . .. Bu l1 " Bud" Evans has a J9•yt:aJ."-old neph "w who sp ent n J.O t of his ea rly sclw0l' days in France whe:re his dad i1:. in business. A y ar ag0 the ]ad catTle to this o untry w atv ncLOb rlin: Co!Jege a11d mar .re en tl y has been visi dng at the E nns home. The otlu"!r day he boarded a bus and sat dowH h -.•dde a French gir l, now a V .C. stwl ·nt, wh om he had "not ">een sine· hi g .ad tt sch ool days i11 Fran · ·-e ith er krtew that the oth r was ~vc r in the S ta tes~ How to make your wife l al)PY in 0n noHoo- a ... y let>son ... Onee e very two months ~or.liss Drake rakes ove:r a · .chef for S:unday dinner, plans the m ·nu, eLs the table, broil the r oa st, p:repares a fancy salad, whips u p th m.aslted potatoes, and winds up by con ·o (iHg a luscious d ···s n ~ . . And (you won't lilcc thj , fellows) . . Hamilton Foreman Drake says he love · to do 1L ... And, be liev i t o-r not, wif Pauline says the res ul LS are wonderful. 'Want to know ano ther r ecii e fot keeping the little woman on yow' side? . . . Vernon Arms tron g, our dapper and eHicient insurance man, sends his wife a d.ozen Am rican Beauty roses 01.1 each and every o ne o( the ir weddil"lg am'liver aries. Bu(fing the drums ... Ed H eflin o f Co lorcast recently took in the ABC Bowling rneet at Milwaukee a long with N ig1H Boss L eo Rose and several o th er Champions .. E I reports that friendly Milwaukee &'ave th~m ever ythtng but prize money ... A plug tor Jtrn L ew1s who has se t up a shop for sharpening and r epairi11g lawn mowers . .. Power .mower overh auls a sp ecialty, a t reasonable rates! ... Les Sexton can stand in his yard a ncl throw a stone onto the s iglt t of the n ew atomic p1an t out Okeana way . . . Les sa ys he thinks it wil] be a good deal f:or Butler County . . . If you 've ever visited w.ith John Holland and his wife and their famil y o f eigh l children, you 'll say that theirs is the happiest and most harmonious group in tmvn . . . (And they've had more than their share of tips and dow!ls, too!) * * * * R ebuffing the drums ... That was qt..tite a h ouse­wanning party they threw out a.t Marvin K~es · place the oL,h er day ... More than a dozen Cha rnpwns cam ~ with their harnmers and nailed on lath$, p repared the n ew horne for plasteriug in the tw inkling of an eye ... Paul Blurne has a n l 8-yea r-old boy s tatwned w1th the Navy in: Brookl yn ... The six·loot. y oun~er . .B lume starred on a Gob basketball team Ia. t wmter, rrppmg the nets for 74- points in thJ"ec games . .. If y.ou find " Peachy" Becknell and Les Hightower huddling these clays, res t assured they 're discussing plm1s for their 11ew hornes .... Marvin Hacker has bo-ught a 60-acre farm out lnd1an Creek way, all of it .tillable except fou.~: acres . . . . Bo.b Fowle1· is ano th er hunter of the Don P1 erce vanety; Jus (ace lights up when he tells you all about it .. . Mos.t unusual name in the department b e longs tO Arnazon Bill of the R ewinders ... Agree? ... J ess Fowler h as snow-wh i te hair, and he's about the best-looking oldish chap we've seen in many a moon . .. J ess will soon be a 35-year Champion. TH.I!, F.IRST MEE:TfN(;. b n\·ecn Georg Scbwat·Cl rwd .his g.rand­J~: lrenr.s jn, Gcr t'lil.1ll1y, Mr. and Mrs. C Q'T@ Sc'tt wartz, wa Ot~de ~ possiuk this year wh ·n Gcor · was se-nL to Cen t!lJ' ' ~o ·erv wnll tile {) . S. ccu pa tion l ro 1ps. Geo·rgc's g:;~.-a ud parent · are both R~ yea,rs '()hi; th ey tiv in Epp nbnu:n), G :tlHIH ', a s~ua!L v dla~ • nea1 the cj,ly of Pil;mas(;ti . , T'hcy . a~ . 1!>0_ tl1 _ par n ts o,f I~dmoa~l Scb wanz, of t b Haunltoo D• V!Sl.Q I1. E.h'tn llof1· Edm!>t d 1 Cet'Jrge 's u n '1 ·• 29 • t I ·'\[\ .;o;-. .. th LanHite photo of \fr. and 1\Jrs. Fntnh. T liornpwn . IL'L' made I>' hank a. the ·onq .tnion 1 ieee to a poem, " "My So11 ,' ' Kriueu b\· L .• .olumni l \" i' .obb. Poetry in a Picture B 1 Mae R ooks This is the fa\·orite picture of Mr. and Mrs. Frank Thomp on, and i titled "M Son." Frank wa in pired . to take the picture 'because of a poem o( the -ame name, written by \t\Tes Cobb. Here we have tv.·o men - one an author, the other a photographer - each trying to put on paper a page (rom the life of hi son , one with a pen, the other with a camera; here again we have the old a rgu men t - picture Yer u wDTd . \Vith all respect and adr11iration for the author and the wonderfu l poem he has penned, all the hours of thouyitt, writing, and rewriting he bas put into it, could it ever be o realisti as the picture? Frank and hi - camera along with all his know-hov,, and experience has ca ugl1r it all · with one click of the shu tter, even to " the (ace so sweet" and " 1 he one-eyed teddy bear." So the picture along with the poem h angs on the wall in both the Cobb and the T hompson homes, each having a compli hed in I i'> own way th . 1ask he scL OU£ to do. The Tale of Two Citizens By 0 tto R eid Had a lri nd J a llus on::.idercd lucky, and in ab~urd way:, he was: he fell off a bridge and land d 40 fee-t below on a ro ky '>andba . Didu' t far · too badJ ', eith r . . . <swallowed a nwuth lull of s nd ... ncc·d cl thal lor his .craw. H e had IJ(: n s toop ~o; ho11ld •red, bm the lall o;tra iglt 1- eued the kinks, 11om whac lik · you can straight •n a crooked uail with a hamm r . Had h ' be ' II a young man, with lh . J>lOt)lj ll : o l <l run. avorting Jift ahead, he'd a-di d. But dH· lu1u1 • held no such alLu re . • . h · had bw ned th • fo!Wa shbu< L.ing· avenu bridg(~ s in fnJnt of him; h " had marr·ied. TlP fa]J knock ·d ou t si llhsc ' .. (·d t etb, cau~ug h .i ~ d entist w groan lot~dcr than he Jid. The fall bro'k ·a ·ook d :1rm that h ea led b;i II fro1 1 a previous break. This tim · ir heal ·d traighl ... No pain .. . H. had tood all the pain h ~ could. {rom Lite prcviou. break.. 30 lli ~ '\i ft· ' so mo ·rd l y hi . PtJar•rlt bad lud .. 1h ;1t :-.lw ra lll ·d 1n,'<dly tc• h<'r rna' . Sh · ex r 1. (•d a '''<Jlllan · mi1 d·lllanf{ing p1 ·wgati\e and presented him ' ·ith only ~"ll H' ba! y. Sh Jr l b en all •t to pres ut hnH with 11 ipkt-.. Tlu:y l Ml 2~ o1J1 'l"'>, and .·h · was alre ely sick o! h · ring }Jl'IJple a-,k hilll what his oth r hobbie w rc. l poi n1 ·cl to him with pri<l - until I m t Jo Shult:t. Joe took th ·hin t: h OHI hi r ·co d: 1 wo y ar& a o Joe roar ·d , " bin ·o, l y Cranny! " H e collect d . l ,600. Sine th ·'n h Jns nibbl d a [ w rn[n< r priz 'i, and a few w eks ago llin ro, by Granny." Wh n th · tabl ~ quj• bouncinO', and the vindow pall s show J no pains Joe m des ly che k d the 1,200 priz . Some p ·opl • are born to be lu ky, om are just born to be born , some are bored to be born, and I'm beginning to wonder rhi : i n't it b e tter co never be born? That makes it unnecessary for you hip to ome • Ill. But, none of us are giving up. vVe a e like Roscoe Sexton's 85-year-old uncle. H e ha a baby two )ears ol and one just born. His ambition' to r ear these chHdren to maturity before he gets old. (H ope i older than the world; younger than anything in it.) l\lly son had me feeling somewhat proud [or an in stant. H e claimed he "\Va mu h like me- a chip fron1 the old block (head). · 1any of my trait were hi . " Wh) . paw," he said, eriously: 'Tel even like to write on The LOG. Just like you, I can write thing: that are \er · . very funny - except to the people who read· 'em:· 1 couldn't an wer that direct, bu t by coming around by Harlan's corn patch I kincla got eYen. 1 told him 1 doubted that he had ·wo much writi no· time, con i.dering that he spen t hal£ his time going some place, the other half before a mirror carres ·ing li · mind ·witlt a \•icw of a very handsome phiz. I tol I him he Fa ju t an opti ·at­d e lusion to me. \1\Tith that se ttl ed, I settled back. to rn , paper . .. wanted to see Ozark Ike in action again before the basketball season is over. The o th r on e e m · shirtl e-,s back and r emarks sacll y: " ~( · go h! what a phy ic.'' ''Crab a dictionar ' and , marten tq . (re hie. T hat word is physique." (L gazed on him with p it '· ''Scz ou," he came back ''I stilt mean ,\·hal I sa id. You l.ook lik a c<Hnll •t ·~ ·hour t> n1e." 1 swatlmvc<l rny prid , hid 111 ' te ~w behind the pa per. and :-,quinL .d at thiugs 1 saw plainly , few ' ·ars ago. Then arne :tnother int 'rruption. " I'· w-paw." M t-.vo- '•ar-o ld grandson was tugging ·11m knee . . lc had a 10-da 1-n ld broth •r . and was jealous :111d hnn b neglccl. I took up Ill }' k et 'llHl pap 'I' ... ::t11d w·1lke l to the b droom . . /\s w · IJ:fll'<\ uldcr w~ snl\lll ... until a gr. JH·I­clii] d hold · us in a j11g ... and the ('()rk. in its h ~n I. Bur, I'd h<td cno11gh . J'n1 IHH ~~ h ·rinit. but ·nmt"llm 'S th. t [,vdn ) Ill is < g·od. end. Onrsid of he::tri11g a uci h· hor'il dog· tha i b:nb ~N tin1cs LO ·a rll 100 breaths. it's kluda pt'lH ehd i.n tlwr . But ... I'<l I etl(• g<J back and bring the gra ndson in wil11 m . H ·'.' having a oul{h lime dividing the ~lft ' llti o n h did gN with thi.s snotJng that ju t bl w iwq the l<ilnily rbil. 'f-l.e 's almady al my door as l op 'n it. J give , swooping hug, au d. vv lc me. I don't " ant hi111 to f el that 1 v n knm lhe other babv's name. ' ' CURLY H IRED Linda Rave ' Powell i the claugbtei oE Mr. and Mr. R aymond Powen , 1317 Glenb wr>k Drive. be . ·is the grand daugh ter of Geo,ro:e Mill er ocf Sani ta lion . H er mother is a former employee ol' t he Gen er.al Office. Linda L four years old , '' HO\ DY 'FOLKS," s ·ms to he \'hat bo~m .ing- Barry .1'\.J'n ld Conrad il' sa ) ng here. Barr is tl c J 1-month -o ld ~~ n of Mt'. <lOd Mrs. Ar11o ld C0m ad , ICR. 3, H ami lto n. proud grand­parent is J ohn McKi-1~ney. No. 2 'ivt ill C'tleml e rs. Meet The Boss • • • By ]ach 1Vlu.llen A coa terman since the age of 16, Jack Heflin , gen eral . upervisor of Coaters and Reels, has a total of 37 years as a Champion this last time. · Starting at the Inii'l in 19ll , Jack worked here about a ·ear then went to Kalamazoo, Mich., w·here he ran coaters for the Monarch Paper Company. Jarck return ed w Champi~) n " (o.r good'' on May 15, 191 5, starting a ­a J1elper on No. 17 and No. 18 Coater . . Tom McDonald a nd J ake \Vagner were shifl fo i·emen and Bill Shank: was ~uperinte ndent at that time. In rhos.e da coatermen worked bare(ooted, just as machine tenders did. On that first day ,.vhen Jack got ready to o home, he found his socks had di sappeared ­f-. O he had to go home without so k.s. (Very funny to his buddies!) · \VI en the Coating Mill was rebuil t follow i.ng the d i a~ trous 19 13 flo dan l fire, new pmTlps and cisrerns were ln tailed on the co· ler ~. U 'fore rhat coa ting wa~ d ipj eel b, _hand into the oatil'lg machin" . A fter r unning . oaten; f )r a nun.1ber of year , Jack was made a s.hi(r roreman. On :May 1, 1951, he was , promoLd to his present job u1 on the retirtmt: nt of a nCJl.l t r v ' lera:n coaterman, Clar€nce v ~x tou . . Concerning hi job, Jack has this to say: ''1 like to think o l "ny depanment as a clasb>k ·xawple of the reasou Champion has be ·n uGc 'SsfLd jn th paper b t s in ts~. .. Ou t (Jl 58 1ntn .1n the CoaLing Departr11<:t nt, 39 will re c1-ve U1r ·c.:: w~ ks \a catiqn wi th p~ this stm•n• ·r. The tuajoriry of my men an! 20 to l:!J -year v · L~;: ra n s. " In my Of:>inion ther ih n ubstitt..tl ' foe ·xpG ri l: IJet~ ia running a oacing n achlnt. 1 he fact that these met¥ have stayed a.t the ir jl;b$ so long a -; ·m•<'• - Lh t: ct>mpar:Jy of the max..inwm io q uali tr p1 du don. Y6u could not J o lh job w-id~ g·reen m 'n. "Tlte reason we have: stayed, a I , · it, i the 11.i01p.l~ Hamilto~ W'INNERS of the Hamilton, Fraternal Basketball League during 1951-52 were the Blue Devils, coached b}' Cl ay~ 'i<\' hisman, s and.ing on the right, and rruwaged l:lr Charlie Moyer, left. In the final game the Blue Devil.s deJeaLed the Ahepha of }bmjlton team by the score of 65-41. Left ~o right, b2.ck row: Moyer , Mark chef'fel , Jim Donaldsmt, Bob Kennedy, Capt<tin Dave .Buon. and Whisman. Fron t row: .Bill Clark. Ron Halderman, Earl Alexander and Bus te r Dooley. JACK H£17UN -, Hi: 1 iJl ob.s rve his thirry-~eve nLh Chm-npion anui er!illry. the bh· emh of this month . His f<HOrite ~por t's ;;u e -ha~e ba H and so[tball. a.nd he L~ ;l loyal Green \'ave ro · ter. fa ct tha ( we ha vc been lrt::l ted well and a I wa.ys gt:L b tlc r (han ~n e-ven br ·a k. "lf ym• ,. ant' to speak t.o top ntal'lugcmem. ·on don't have Lt) wade throug h miles of red lape. Even Re11b Jl Rt>bcrtson is Hs c· J S~' w talk to ~~ · m ' lorem:an o.u the job." \Vhen. pri.Hg rolls aro utl<,l . 'J ~~ d [nsc bn I J ba ts ?egin t e) Ct"<.~,c k a~·:unst the old horse h1de. J ~l ·k oocc aga 111 ·.loob lorward to his favoriv sp0n. He ha b en known w wa tk tive miles to vi ·w a hall game. _l ;uk abo _loves lO w_atch softball in the evenings atid tollows tlu.· tonulles oJ the Gr<~ cu \'Va e very clo:seJ . _ Mr. aud Mrs. Hefl in re~ide a t H-1 Not'Lh " " Street. They are parcuLs of one M'lll and thr e n~aniecl daugh. ters. Jack,_ Jr .• a - fo:t"ll!er Ch:unpion mployee, i~ s rvi ng in the Armo"rec.l Jnfanlry at Camp Robe rts CahL 31 . • I 1 I R . lA f}fOTH eight and one-half pound laJge mouth bass was maaged by J ud'>on Hen.on, l ft. of Canto n ·~ Uti lities Depa rtmen t, '' hile trolling with a Red Head L. and S. pl ug in La ke Sa nteetl ah \4arcb ~ . Bill H arri ' Oll. aloof the til ities Depa rtment, witnessed the catch: it almo 't ·topped the small outboai·d motor when the !,, truck. Steam Plant Crews Are Busy Power De partment men have been saddened by the death of R. A. Gragg, an Old -~ i mer who retired last Au ust after more than 4J years o[ con t in uous service in the Champion Power Department. ''Unde Allen" han been losing ground for several weeks before hi final call came on March 13. Fou r of his five sons are Champion ·; one o( them, El li s, is fo llow­ing hi father's examp1 by working with th Power Depat~Lment repair gang. "On le Allen" did a lot of work during his y ar h rebut he a lways eemed 10 have the tim .and the gift for getting a l0t out oi l il a he went aJong, and for b ·I ping others to njoy corni ng in ·ontact wich him . Lloyd R ·no a11 ·J l .is 'I uddi s ltave giw.:n 1 he st:cond anct third stage: (cc·dt>v·attr h at rs their annual spring­deaning. T h e;sc: hea1er-., arc about the ~ :l.II IC s i7 · a ~ si" or s ·ven J::1rg' · oi.J barrels laid <·rHI w end and cuntain lllmdn::<.ls of. bra;;s tube), ah()Ut th · l'l i t o( a 111an '.' liH itJ fing ·r. \Vat ·r for t!J ' hi.gh urek!'>Ur boilers pas<, ·s LIHough th e-;· tub ~s and js h at<.:d by . t c.on on tl1 e: Oll~":>id •. H ('rt l­iog the fee ~hv atcr t na bJb the boil ers f (, m ~1kc 1 10rc ~ ~ 'l tlll i!llld u ·e J ·!)~ coa l. Gr:1dually a fm.ting i'i d ·vosil "'<l on 1h · in~i<le ol th e~; ' t ubes, wl 1ich p r 'VC' II I.s tlw ..; (< '~1n l I 0111 ge1ti11g tlw w;.~t 'l' hot •nough . T his coa ting has tu I(.' n·l rtovt'd periodica ll y. , S v ra 1 meLhod,<:J of defl.n i llg hav · lJ '<:n U'ied hut the most sat ista tor one fo und :iO f;tr i to . hwJl :r "bu llet" th roug·h ead1 tu be witl1 a high prc~sUlv '"·atct gun. T he c ''bul.l ets" ar - rn tal p lug!) with fou1 ~pring 32 ~ted snap T'> frmncd 1) li.t th ·in ide ol tl - tub·~. Wben ho thtolLgh d1 ' tub ~· dw'iv n<tlJill'" cllv ·. ret tm·e aU th· n Ling .nd l •av<· til Lube~ dS gotJl a u , ... a•ajn • . \L fi r t it took a cr··w a iJ( Ill · w ek to< k n a he:H r: l ul Lin tl li:.ts Ill that do ·n to bou · twr and n •-hatf da '· now. \!Vr 1·king wi h him n tit~ job wen~ Ra} Mea · a1H1 il Dat nell. . ., Hugh · ·r ·11 took h i· wife and sc n and follow d th n th 1 f-1j gh s h ol girls tO berd ·e n, 1 .c., where they won th tat ' bask tball champion~1ip in thei fi rs t tr at ·udt a tr phy. That had him feeling p u) good: but he ha <;n 't ht:ld both fet:t m L1 · g und ~in<e they cam · hom and won the Enka tournam 111 the ncxL week. We welcome No. 9 Smelter into the family of higl press ur steam. producer s. Jt replace. the old I ;w pre - ure sme lters and a llows us to make more el tri.c {Y>W r and sa e some coal too. BilJ Harrison and Grady Roger<; piped up the feedwater level ont ol, \.dth Harold Han-en and Glenn Howell making the final a ijustment . "O tt" Norris in stalled and a lju ted the hi,.h and lu,\· water alarms in the water columns and put, the te po - ary and permanent gauge glasse~, with L. J. Chamber h elping. All the instrument men sp ent quite a bit of time there installing and ch ecking the various gauge ', thermometen anc.l controls and ma king the f inal adjustment · on them. Con st ruction of su ch a unit gi_ves lots of people a chance to add their skills to make a perfect whole. In installing the 24-inch exhaust team line froti} No. 12 Tur bine wo crew were u sed. Buildin ... th e line to connect the turbi~1 e ou tlet to the steam main in the Generator Roo'm basement were Z. J. Reece, Lloyd R eno and Ray Davis. T o keep from h aving th main out of eryice a Ion · time they welded the ir connection onw i t while it rill had steam p assing throu gh i t, put on a val c, an l then h ad to shut down on ly long eno ugh to cur out the in id se.ction where the two p ipe m t. G rady Roger Bob Cockrell, and "D e' 'teph en on hung their part of the t 'am line to th cO<.ll tr stl with one bn tnch going toward the Book mill to coru1 ~ t with a line built by the .R. and A. , and the oth T heading in tlte opposite di rection tow:1rd tJte lower eud f th mill. C. G. Klopp and R ay EJlis rnad the drawing · lor th ·s lim•s ani thc:;y wenl Loge th.cr ver 1 well und r rhe eagle e -·s of Glenn Howell and Hill .M<:udell. Spring fever gol 10 11 y t? J)U~ f' CK: r oN, hackLCilCl r on No. ](I lloard Machine, i pic­lilt' cl here wnh I n~ ~adt,llc horse, '' l)e~ m o n , " .ousictcrcd one o[ the b . t sadU! s in thb se ti.on where rid ing is a popular pa. time. • T HOMA · .UY M URRAY, no., a st &t f( "ergcil nt. i" pi ctu t•ed h ere a~ he re ei\·es the .~ ro rl7.e Star (rom hi co n}ma nd ing o ff ice;· 'iti J a pa n . Si'rt. Murra •. the h rothe·r of G lad ·s B ~t r r e l.l of CMt:o.n Cha mpion '. Shi p j in ,.. Dq artm nt, bn - . p ent more th an IR mantbs '' ith rhe Air Fore in Kor a. He ent red the se rvi~e in 1 ~)4 1 <n td lought ·wit.h Lhe J nfa n tl .' .iu the l'a if.i t\) el) ter of ope rat ion. cltui ng \?odd " 'etr H. He is th . on of Mrs. T . C . Murr;t\' of Cat.U0n . ' . Items About Champions '\'Vhen · ark Auherry of Sod:a.-Su pl1ate -reeled jn a JOYf-pound nook. it was the hjghlight of an e ventful vacat ion trip to For t Lauderdale, Fla . irs. Auberry al:so. ·nagged · e\·eral nooks but none that heayy. Howard a,nd Louie H empbill, son-in-la·w and daughter of the Auberry' , a1 0 recrister ed some nice catch es during th@ trip to the "Land of unshjne." . · ,ing an L. an.d S. Red H ead plug, Judson Henson of th Utilities Dep artmen t, caught t11e heaviest bass of his length fi bj ng career from Lake Santeetlah late in March. he mon ster wa · snagged while trolling deep aud Bill 1-Iarri on, also of U tilities, was an eye witn~ , T he large mouth tipped th cales a:t eight and one half pounds. J ack J ustke and ·German J\IiUer of the Champion YMCA staff are exp -cting big things from members o£ e Lin le League b.a ball teams in Canton this surnn1er. pr.ing pra t-iGe got under way April 7 and the league is n w in full s' ing~ · .. • "' 'II! wo Charnpic()ns - farrha J ean: 'alv:in an I Jo Cath y - w:er m a rri d in Gre ·tl ville, ·.c., 1 <~r h 15 b" Dr. L B. Latimer. p:a. tor of t be Gre- n ill f.i st Bap· Jist Ch l~J'(.h , Mar ~ ha .f<•an,, a l2·Y!o! ~t h· n1pion, . i!· ' nt­plo) l 111 lnclu ·tn .al anl Conni1UU 1ty RcJau c n:s J >cp.urt· A • · I':W S1.l1 f .. r d ott.c · '!. ;l t> pl i: ' t-llf ed l{f F. ' · \ \ 'Hii.tlll • U> ll~ttrt t: t i 1J el f' r 11 ida tl ll·l Canton Cltatnpiou, n cr, o;1 hi~ e ti eJH·Hl.L t'rllnt a c!i:H~ vi1 c M:on·h 1 b · John :'!fi lm·, xtl m I f t. foF_en an 1n r iJ J !J-ulie . l<f·ctfon of R.. and .·\ Milt e pJ C't'Oil'rl tb • g ift: ~) u f,e.h aH of atl the d ·t fri• ian a a good \ttl~ 1Jarl.mg g wrc·. Wil!ia rf}s J' f't hNI afv :f 28 ·earJ-. o t. I<Hl tiJwun"> ~el.l- i ·; 1Je 'a empl< ycd in ) <"21 . t\ J' ARK r\'U l~fRR \' , So Ia · Sill · pha te, hold:; a LO ~ ~ pou nd f'l l1f H1k h · L 'ok, fn11.n Flo riel a w , 1 J s ~t ear Fott Laudcrda'le du t ir,tg a .re ent two-week vacation . t\ · :y WRIGHT , th srnillug y un ' I dy pi ctu red here, is th 13-ye;tr -o ld d a (l ~ ht rot M:r . <J nd \vJ rs. l; red Wn ght. F ed is a rll cntl;cr of tlt Cnfetetja sLafl' . m e rH; Cathey, a m.achinist jo R. and A., ha been with Champion sit1ce ] 946. . · · Martha JeaJ1 is lhc daughter of: Mr. and M'rs. Bil l Calvit"l of Canton. Joe is the son of Mr. and Mrs. "! '. J. Cathey of Bethel. Girdwood Smathers, El ectrical Departrnern, past pres­ident of the Haywood County ramp con ention, already is . laying plans to attend the annua·l conven tion this spring a t Camp Hope on May 18. ·Fred Dayton f ~he J~ookmill office staff, also an ardent ramp eater, a! read ~~ has completed plans for the gathering. ''Ho s" John on of the . Bookmill area unques tionably will be there - along with hundreds of others who haYe follmved the event for years. · * * ill< * Gladson Hr~ynie, painter fol.·ern ;;~li. , and. a special crew of painters, did a grand job with Champj n ' floaL entry in the "Back To Church " parade st af"ed larch 29. The fleat also was entered in a sp€ ial a fety pnra.de in Asheville April 1. * .. • *' George Price, one of the · fin " t you ng athl t ever to cOrile mH o£ V\le-tern N or th Car oiina. join d the physi al dt.n::atio11 staff of CJ1ampi.on !\f A April H . Pr ic _!1ad btlen witL. .t\J-)~ Tic:w E t;,k~. Co1yora t~on. for se ra.J years before be JOtn d th ) . t1,U . Pn ., !h . son of ~fr · . li.arJ Pri , ncJ the Jat Mr. Pri e, a fomH'I' Extrac t up 'l'int ·nd ' Jl t. will w~~rk d < I ·with Jack Jt sli c aod German Mill ·r o 1\.ing taff. " 33 • , • • t :\ S. FET\' Ql ' IZ CO. TT E T ,,·a held in the Canron area for the fu"'t time 'd en th fi , r q uarrerl.y meeting of ·\·Veslern 1orth arolina :,afcl\· unci! mrl ~l a TCh 0. i\1 r . . Ann Kemmerer of • . d\a w mi. tre.s of rerern onie . and J:tm s B. Hurle , a Canton hantpion . . tam! to receive a 1uesl"io n. Hnrl y placed ·econcl . Safety Men Hold Quiz Contest . You co uld have heard a pin drop in the huge audi - torium. You c ould se n. the interest among the par-ticipants and the audience of more than 200. ' It ' as the fir t quarterly meeting of the Western "'orth Carolina Safet Council, and a safety quiz contest was under way for the first time before an audience in this section of the tate. T here ·were more than 20 important questions asked the eight contestants and many of the answers were intere ting and urprisingly accurate. Mrs . .-\.nn Kemmerer, wife of Ralph Kemmerer, coun­cil chairman, and a member of the supervisory staff of The Mead Corporation, at Sylva, N.C., proved a clever mi. tres.s of ceremonies for the p~cial event. Jame R. Hurley, of Canton Champion's Purchasing Department, came through with second place honors and brought home an excellent prize for his efforts. Cafeteria Enters Sixth Year By Clyde Hamh·tt As Champion' · Cafeteria [or Champion. cn1crs its ~ i x th year of opcratirm, we fin.d the following who ha' · completed fiv · years of ontinuous servic ; (,Jenn Pope, cook; Wade Sarh:y, cameen No. l ; Ruh , ~ f org-.ul, h an of count r; Freid a M u ', office wtf! ; \'faric Carv r, aJad dt) anment; F'rrd \Vrigh1 , bead < ook ; Grady Harnktt, r lief f'(Jr all d · parLmellt'i; Clyde Ham le u , rnanag r; Jo!>c•pl Burn ' tte, dining roorn; Law rc·n e Grin t, bakery ~u pcrvisor; and Jam · ~ B1 tlCk, Can­I ('Cn No. I. Jam'S wa~ the only ernplo ce hi1 ·d hy t l1c cafe.fcria durin~ 1917. \1\1 also extend a h 'art ' wei onw tn Arw•trd Clnn11 , who r "ntly joined thf' Cafl'tcria ~taiL ' VVe at · .. ur(' /\y'ward wi ll mak" hint8t: lf one ol 11 ~. PictLire<l .in thi~ i~:>sllt> is lhc attra t.iw ~ ~~yea -old da ngh rcr of Fred Wrigh 1, head of ou I' kj t ch~.:n d<'pa n mcnt. Nan y is he1. name ami she j," <t <>tud 'lH at Norllt Canton Gntdcd <hod! wh :r h r rna-rks an· a moll~ rht• l1ighest in her das . The Wrighb rcs!de at No, ~$ Pauon Avenue, Canton. 34 THREE TOP WI ·, ER · in the af ty Counci l quiz contest at Da vid Millard Junior High S·hool in shevi.lle larch 2fl, were. left to right, t orman Morgan, Dave S[eel mpany, A~heville, tbir d : James B. Hurley, Canton Purcha ing Department, ·cond; and W:wne Cooper. meritan Enka Corp0ra lion, fir t . Wayne Cooper, maintenance foreman for the Amer i­can Enka Corpora tion , was first place ~ · inn ·r. and Norman Morgan, a welder foreman for the Dave ted Company, Asheville, placed third. The second quarterly meeting an OLLt(loor p i ni c. will be held late in June. This d eci ion was r a h rl by unanimous vote of the audience. Plans for the March council meeting were laid in Champion's Cafeteria early in March when Cade ton Bellamy, Cantor} Champion' safety supervi or , called a special me ting for that purpose. Attending the meeting were Bellamy, Ralph Kem­merer, chairman; Glenn Howell, of Dave Steel, trea u rer : Tom Mason, of Coca-Cola Bottlino· Company, A heville; and Jimmy Williamson and Bob Putnam, both of Cham­pion's Industrial and Cmnmunity R ela6ons Departmen t. A special effort will be made in the future to timu­late additional interest in safetv throughout all1ndu trie I ' in '\t\Testern North Carolina. Korean Veteran in Japan Sgt. '\t\Tcldon L Goolsby, 23. th ·on o( Mr. c nd .Mr.. Lawrcnc Goolsb of anton, i now on dut ·with th battle-toughen d First Ca air Division on .l-Tokk i 1 , th nonh rnmo. t of the Jap:Hi • e home is land . A squndr n l c. d r , ."gt. Goolsb , had b ·en in Kor a sin 't' r nne l 1-, 19r; l. nd \ ears th , Condnt lufanu· - Ulan ba lge and the Korc. n scrvi c ribbon ·with one • u1 nlp<ll g n s w r. Weld m 'olunt ' t:'r('d for ~e1vi e and c·ntered t he cavalry .in D ' CCLIIO ·r. 1:150. H · wok his ba. i training at Fort Jackson, S. C. Weldon\ dad h as b n witll Canton Cha1Hpion ~ -1 rears and is cwployed in th Fini~>hing An·a. Weldon graduated from Canton High School in 1.917. • • ;\! A.R.JNG PLA. S for the new vear . newly cl cted orfirer·<> or ElJe anlo·n .. , .. , f\'1 n '. · Cluh .. (tthouP all CanL n ham­pion~. a r pictu r d here i 11 1 he Y~ I CA dtt hn')nm . .'ie;1 Led . left to right, are H nry :\1ichad, l '·es.irl .nl. and Hob l'hillip~ . dee- pr esiden t . !oli.MI ling are C ;". Q,,,Cfl. Jr. , u·ea:·urer, and TOllY Tone~ . ' . Civic- minded Champions help th eir community by promoting • J)fRV ' TO R !:~ ol tile "Y's' . ;\ ten\ C. luh ( IJelt..nc ) are re1 ie1ring thr ~ 0ft i> a U tourmtmm tlS S<:hedu led fot Canton t!1il; su:nrn e r. Seated . } ft to rigllt. are J. R. echrest and W. L e i\fcE irath. rcc nth e lecred go rnor of the Textile Ui stri ct of ·-y· ·· i\J cn·~ club;. Standing are Jimmy Reeves, immediate past j?Te:;ident, AI Phill .ip~. Don Ra.udolph and Rudy Jlarnes. G. l\'at Fortn ey. a two-n:ar board me!l1-ber, wa ab ent. · · • a '' rows WI serv1ce • T HF. l.ANTON "Y's" l'Vfen's Club, ponsor ec1 by th Champion YMCA and organized in 1932, now boas ts an <Kti.ve membership of en rgdic civic lea ders who ar doing worthwh ile th ing · £or the it conti11 unity. Although th club c.lid not receive its chan r until · '1933, it' a · known ar the begin:tiing that it would prove its wonh to Can ton and· H aywood Coonty. · The mernhersl1ip , 'omposed of roug.hl y. 95 pe1· cent Canton Champwns, ha · sponsor d many proj 'Ct in the Can ton area and l.'la dra'\vn n1an y favorable cira t.i()t'l!-, from che national association as a re. u l t. One of the majrn proj .cts spoJ-:t.sorc:d by t he chLb each year i · tl1e annual Paper Bowl footba ll lass ie whlch i.s g-rowing by leap · and bou nds ,.virh ead) annual program. Then th . ·r~ j :-; th <.: st:a tc soft ua:JJ tournan1<;!nt whlich rile d pb p on ·or C<H. h ugu:. t. Club rnc· rnh rs handle alJ detaih. T he Cant0n dub recently experieoced th. distin ction of ha\!ing a member elected gOvernor of the TextiJ ' - \_ ,;t Distri..ct, South eastern R egion of the Inrernation.al Asso-ciation of "Y's' Men's dobs for t.he sec~md con secuti v · yea r. T he new dis tri ct governor is \1\T . . Lee . '( ·Elrath, super ­visor of the cmplnyn.1 nt sc tion of lndusu-ial and Com­munity Rela tions. McElrath Stlccc.ed cd. Ca rlton Peyton , Accou n l'i ng 1) ' partmen t, ,,vh o h eld the oHice las t ye·rr. H enry l\th chael o f the Chemical Labotatory. was el<.:n d presid ent o( the Can ton dub th·is spring Sttc ecd­ing Jirnnty R eeves, Accounting. Other newly el ·cted offi cers inchLdc .Bob Phillips of the Chemical Labo ra tOry;, vicc-p.r:(·sident; /\.. C. J on ,·s, also of the La bon tory, scc­tetary; and. C. S. Owe-n, Jr .. Ac mmting, treasurer . The J)C\v directors elected wer .J. R . Sechres t, J r., . <:nior ch emist, and W. L e · McElrath. 35 - Camp Hope To Open Soon Camp H pe i · 1~0 v l'<Xt.' iv in g its u. ual :-.pring " f· c lift. ino-_" The winunit" pool i · lwin · d r ~d g·ed _ <llld the dam rc paire'd. The pla~ "'ro und h' ha ! tnp ·od add 'd rot~· removed and new g ·a,·:-; ~c d d. A sud-a.c on tlw t nH ~ own " ·ill he wdcorn • dditi 11 . l\IanY Canton voung, ter · ,.·j ll again enJi,- n th · campus ' at C:unp Hope' thi~ ~<>UH1n e1~. Th ·, boy11 will l'lllcr camp on Sunllav July 6 and lea\ e und~' Y July ' 0. Girh wi ll em r i\ tonda · July 21 and 1 ar Mo~tda .-\nou t ·L Each hoy and girl n ay enroll f< r e1ther une or two ·we k -. The ·ouncr ptx p l ,· cunr ing· program inclu ics soft­ball, swimmintr, ar hery. tennis, badtlint.on, horseshoes and many other porls- togct11 er with campfire pre ­lll" anr. relig iou.;- ttajn i ttrr, mane. , han~llcra l-ts, . n ature ·tmlies. indian lore a nd man · other thmgs of mte rest to hoy and girl . The children axe hon ed in cabin:, wi th n o t m o re than eight to, a cabin , A u·aine I counse~ or is ~n eh a rge of each cabin. An e 'C llent cook staff w1ll be m. charge in the kitchen a nd the food _i -- always excellent. Although liYin cost haYe j ncrea ~ed, our local children still have to pay· onl · ~ 15 per week. Application s already a~·e comin• in and the limit of 63 camp ers per week wdl • oon be reach ed. ' * * * * Member · of the Teen-Y Club enj oyed an overnight encampment at Camp Hope in rrrid-Mar ch under the leader h ip of Elizabeth Thompson of the "Y" staff. Girls making the trip were Patr icia Allen, Joyce Branson, ·Margaret Gidney, J eaa Scroggs, Sandra Smith, Ann echre t, Draytan Shull, Be tty Br u ce Nanney, Vicky Jo Sm.a.ther , .Margaret R obinson , and Mrs. Clifton Miller, a · istant leader. A new Girl's Club has been organized at the YMCA, known a s the GMY Club (Girl's Monday 'Y" Club) with Mrs. Clyde R. Hoey, Jr., as counsellor. This group meets weekly <~: t the "Y" for a varied prograf!l o£ ac;~iviti es . On Monday Ap_ril 7 the club was entertamed w1th an Easter party by Mrs. H oey at h er home on the Asheville Road. It has been announced by Marie Bell that the new Champion YMCA square da.nce team h"as been organized for 1952. The tea-m' consi rs of ni n ou ples, on alter· • natmg. . . Gltls ar Carolyn Cabe, Edtth Hut J·nns, Aun .n hur, Margaret Ri.(e, Rarbara Nell Shav r, Nan y Calvin Jrm · Myer s, Sandra Wjllia.Jll,~ a1H.I Caro)yn .aJnpbcll. Boys are Don Cabe, Roy Ingle, .Bruc · Stnath e•·s, Bobby Qu . n , Ri lwnl Row , "\1\la y,n ~ Hawkins, Ch•u-Jes W . t, B~Jbby Led lord and Gcn HLtdson. Cab ' and. Ca!J ar · the t ·ading muptc, Don Cab ' d _ ing th n1lling. R ·hral!.~ ls g t under way April I. Th L am is undn th d ircct iqn of Ma i B .II, and 111 · ChtnnpioH '' " Rhythm Hand wi ll ma e rhc "swing music" fM th , tc~101. Tt 1 JOks likf~ a big Slunm •r ah.ca.d lc r Lht'.lli, with many I slivals and :x bibitions. Pl ans ar a lre-;.Hly in dH.: making­for a lrip to R_,n fro Valley thi~ '->Ullllll r. Jjl){: LJ rc DOW;-..i l ri the b t~ s i ne s~ :-II band, Ja( k and ft"jt lKI'Ji ~nvg"g · w()rk 011 con ·sp< nckuc-c i1.1 comH;<tiun 1vi1h 11 it H<'W V •,'W­du t i t;~. J <~ k , a Hoard 1\'1 ill n I r RrlntH cmplo (' ' h<~ S b tl"ll II . ~ r a l lc·d ,; COt'l lt u ;1Jlcl('r M th Ed\'ard," (: l<tlk .\1 . r poM of VF\-V; ltis l, ife Fra11c s wa i·ns.t.u llcu a ~ prcsiJ~?lll. o[ tiJ \' £•\' f\~J ili-tq . ",)6 Don't Be Discouraged By Fn·d JJ . Dayton Dotl' t 1Je di ro ur<t ~cd wi th th · "'t·a tlwr lw r ~ in \ estern 'onh Carolina. 11 it dc)e~n't pi a ll{; yn 1, J1an~ ar und ::tbout J5 miout ~ and we'll g ivf" yuu a change N ' i-; ideal fi ·hittg W' a ther for th0..,~: w.l:m really fish, but for ho'-C whn ju 1 pr ·fc tht<> nut door lite at­tached to il, it is a little cool a.L night , and nul tr10 war n.1 in lh · day lo sun bathing. '*' • ., * E1scwh 1 . in thi~ issue th re ar picLUrcs of the repair job I)Jl No . 14- Machine. \-Ve al ·o are big hoRrtl procluc rs. Number 17 Mad .ine had a complete o'\ er­h au i, b u t it was a l itll· too late for d i ~ issue of The LOG. Mor about that job later. With vacations gradually taking on speed we exp_ ct to see many of o ur Carolinians who have been domV' h o nor to the state of T exas by establish ing the ir rc~.i: ­d ence th ere. Always glad to have them \'isit us and ·ee what Can ton Champion is doing. What are you r unning for? Politician · are ha"·ino; to wear badges to identi fy themse l v e~, there are o m~n y . T hat is o ne rare p rivilege we Amen~:an s- h~ve, the ngh t to vote and worship a:s o-ur consctence d tct_a te . ~V c should, of course, make ou r elves more fam tlla r wJth what is n eeded and r equired of an office and thereb y be better fitted to vote for the right one. Baseball and softball is now getting a good tart. OuT state champion softb a llen are shaping up into what appears to be another champion team. · 't\That do you do during noon hour? A recent survn of the various department revealed many forms of di ve rsion~ Some look forwal'd to a good square meal a!ld then a n ap : You V\:rill see some in town window shoepin&- Others . will be gathered around_ a ·setback game trymg to set the other guy . A favonte sport with many is "shocking" 'em up ~m a .Po?l. table in the "Y." All this shows that the vanous mchviduab have their own ideas of an enj-oyable lunch hour. 't\Te n ever know what the o ther fellow ha troublino· him. Sometimes acciden ts are caused by worry over sickness, accidents at home or fi nancial troubles. '"'e must take every step p ossible to make things safe and pleasant for the individual, ther eby lessening the chances of an accident. • PL 1 fo1 lh rwcnty·. c nd ann ual H ywood m•nty Ramp (;On · ntion t Camp Hupc thi . pring w .rc whippet! into hape late in 1 far :h b ' t his group of original nvc ntion oWe n:. S a te l. l ft t rigln: . W. ] arker, Pres ident ; W. R . Palmer, fir t vic · p re~ill n t and h tirman of the Olwe nti un boa rd ; a nrl Bob Co ·seu . . e ond vice· t • sid m . S t ~1odin g are Clarence C. i\ledfurd. third ''i e-prt· id ent a.nd :caeta ry; :llld J. N'. "D ick" Pn11·ell. .lJ'easurer. The o n,·ent i n ~'' i ll b h eld 'unda • i\fay 18. Ramps at Camp Hope? Yes, Sir! T h annual Ha ..,,oo I Count ram1 con ve nti on will drop a ppr ximate l ' 2.000 fee t thi · -pring - but th er e' ll b · no c:a, u a ltie,, and very body wiLl be happy. 1 he d ror in elevation from !'> 000-foo t Black Camp (;ap ?-.1 cmm ain to :LOOO-foot ,amp Hope may even serve to reduce Lh po t ll C_' of the wilcl little \'egc tablc to a c rta iu degree. Pictu re. qu Camp Hope will be the scene o( the twcn t - cond ramp conventi on ome Sunday May 18. T hi. was lecided l::tte in Mar h ·when members of the ori ·inal ramp convention ommittee were notified that urplu · road con tr uction dirt had covered the ramp onvention ite a t Bla ck Camp Gap and that they would ha 've to mo·ve the ann ua l affair to some other location (or this y ·ar at l c>a t. Camp Hope' modern convenien ces furni sh a per­fect e tup for uch a con ve ntion , where so rne 5,000 per­ow will be involved on an a ll-clay basis. For the pot n t li t tle r amp, however, it will be .its fir. t 1 ng ride from the very h eart o( the fertile rarnp produ in~ ar a, Black Camp Gap. · Thee wild little b ul os, r esembling a sr;nall spring onion, grow in innumerable quantity in the fertile soil around Black Camp Gap. T h ese little bulbs will be pulled 24 hour. ahead of the con ention and transported to Camp H ope for the annual feast o.f country cured ham, scrambl d eo-g ·, ramp , black coffee and corn bread. VFW Husband-Wife T earn Ja k and Fran es croggs- a husband-wife combina­ion- were in ·taU cl as commander and president, re­• ectivel , of the Edwards-Clark-Messer po 't of Veterans of For ign vVars and th Po'lt Auxiliary Unit Saturday night, Apr il 19, at th Post home near Canton, in a < lorfuJ it1Sl21llati()n C"r emony. J ack, the new po t comman l r, i · a Can ton 'C ham­pion emp!o ·ed in th Board Mill Bealer Room, and Frances, u p un til a few w tks ago when she res ign ed i11 faHJr ol homek eping, wa , a Can ton CJ ampion with nine year <,(;YVi e. fran ces is th e uaugh t •r ot Frank 'r: £J.th ers, R. and . lorewan. Other n ·wly el 'tted Po~ t >flice · a rc Horae • Ellis, e n.ior vir<.:- omrn.ander; J enning<. Ba ll, juni r vire-com­ruand r; Carl CiHi), q ua1 t.erma t -r ; Thomas Morgan, a.dw;(.ate; R '\· . .J. Cla tc n Urrn.\ cbapJai11 ; l) . H ugh . , f a tth~:ws, su1 geo1 ; · nd Clar nt , Slyu r , thn.: -y a1· lru. Le , . OtiJer ,\u iliar r,ffi( ·r~ arc Fran cs Deaton, senior vk ·p! id cu t; Emi ly 'Willi rns, juniot· v i( e-prc. id ·n t ; Mahala ' Ja r v, u·ea))urer; GJ,.t , : I Ion, c b apl <~ in ; Irene C1 isp, CMuiu lrcs<J; 1£1.1 rha Gilli , g uard; aud H e len R. ·no and H ·leu ~harp, tn r-.t(' ·~ . uxiliar appLJ irHi ·. o ff i.(. rs in Jude Eve: lyn Ruhill­" on , ~i;telaJ y; Kath ·Ti ue Warren , J o yc~ Medford, MaTie . 'marh ·u. a 1td }:1n , Woody, et1lor b · rer~; Mary Cogbul·n. hi lf1rian, and B ·tt 'Vall, patno tic jn twctor. New Respiration Method ' .. By 8 ruce N anney We have just fini shed a refresh er cour in ar Li ficia l respiration in the E. B. ' 1\foody R obertson of Industria] and Community Relati ons is teaching the new method - the Hogler-Neil son back p ressure armli f~. All the boys seem to like the simpli city and effeuiveness of the ne.., p1an. Woody hould have a lot of credit for the ·ervi e he is rendering the plant and community in this valu ab] work. He is an able instructor and has been faithful in his teaching to num r o us gro up- and organi zation for the past l 0 years or more. , Proof of the value of ar tificial resp ir a t ion was bt,:o ugh t in this week by Charlie Willis after h e had be n tra ined in the new me thod. A bab calf born a t hi . farm tha t showed no sign of life until Charlie went to work: on him a -la-vVoody R o bert on . Pr esen tly the alf ·w . breathing normally. Jesse Brown wa a little kep tical of the n w method at fir ·t. J e se tells us of an in cicl nt whi h o cu rred while he was a member o.f the U.S. , nn · : J e e pull d a fellow oldier from th wat r and, usi1w the oil me thod, not only pumped th.e ,.vat ·r out of th g11 and re tOrcd his brea thing bu t al recovered the blackb 'r­ries th fellow had been ca tin o· ju, t prior to takina hi ' • sw1m. Jirnm.ie Fmnes and Odi math rs a re enjoy ing w 11 -carneu aca tion this Jll OJ th.. J imm i and his wi fe a r).d sor1 ar removin ~ th fi h tnm1 Hi av.: a s~ e Lak . whit Odi i x p lorit g a fe\ i t ms n his D utch CO\ · far•m. Bill and Mrs. Han ·is bad ' goodb · to d a u~· bt c r Margar t Brook · hi r an I her son:-., Butch ;,mel Billy. T h y r turn J to Papa Bno k ~ hir in T n nan y b st wr k. As llf:etl ' as w · could t ·ll, Bill w,ould hav ' l> :,:n ju.·t · happ j f th bad JJot gon . Ro bert Da is ud h is l;;tth 1-in-hw. Clint Hanlin, had a sizea ble pig dowLH.:c\ iu lw fe rHe (Oliler l • · ring' hi ~ llOM.:' when their dc;w rn c)\lcd. in tO \· if b (oll kl b of al y h -lp. T he pig didn't thjnk o a11J .h 'h'e<l b. is d.i ~ l i k ' [ot' the ·iw atlOll by p u tting up a \ iuJcn t ~tH g rl ~ dur­in ~ whi<...h tit pig, gu t .<n ~~ • and Rob n ut tll r ing cl inch ·d in his north n ' pQ urc. 37 , ' • BILLY LAY CHARLES MURPHY DeMolay Honors lay and Murphy Billy Lay, Houston Division summer worker and son of Champion E. C. Lay, rccemly received the degree of Chevalier, the h. ighe t honor that can be conferred on a De'Niolay. The DeMolay is a XJasnnic organi1ation for young m n. Sgt. Charles Murphy, another Champion <;ummer work r receiv d the ame dc:grce. J. G. " Frcnchy' An I ~~-s. a nH.:mb r of the · dvi,or 1 Council o( the local DelVIolay chapt ·'r, sa id that thi i& the li r~t tim ~ a Pasadena boy ha:-, received tlli. citation. To the b r;t of his knmvlcdg- , only ~ix in this entire area ha e been honored with tl ' ckgn~' c ( Cl-wvaliet. Nom­ination lor the degr ·e is nad by tb Gtand Counci l of the Oruer of D ,Molay lor ( ut'>canding 1kM ,Ja) a tivit , and >vork. · Bill , 2 L. j: now a stud ·nt at . ,'· · 1 Col h-I{ •. H ' graduated [rom Pa ndc.:na High S ho 1l in I~Htl. Both .Bill and Cbarl :.. :tr pa t ,\1a')ter Co ulseklr\ ol tlw p, a den<l Chaprer of th Ordc r of lkMolay. Charles, 19, is nO\ i11 tht· Air Fo1 :c ani i~ .)t~lti(Jilrd a r Scott Fi 11 in ] II inois. rwo 'KORF.\ :--' :EXTLE.\1 E~ in !\ PLG.ll n U\ dr<·, 'JI{!.Ittl, ~~· pl10t,)g-raphed in l'u 11 . Korea , ll\ J.n I John••Jil whik J.ul 11.1 01 J " • 1 J\I Ill lT ·g0-1'0111 IJ. " 3 HERE \ E H VE O-uann.ah n on Bt011'11 , a~e d fiv , 'iOn anJ •lcpllew of Houston Division Champi(JIIS. Father John \V. B•ow11 l ~ it1 Fini~lting . l -n le Cla.1·eure 1'. Brow11 is Jllachiue supe 1i11tt.: 11d nt in tl1e Paper i\fill On a Navy Merry-Go-Round By Fred Furness Like the man ca ught in the revolving door, Jarl J ohnson, now back .in Property Accounting after another involuntary hitch in the Navy, went a long way ju ·t l get back where he started fro111. Jarl really got to s e the world. But tak.e it hom him, "lt ain't what .it' cracked up to be." H e re's the swry in J arl's own words: "I flew from Houston to San Diego on O<.:tober 18, 1950. 1 waited there fo r two weeks for an assignment. T hey told me rny ship would be the U.S .. Thomas J ef­ferson . .Then they sent me to San Francisco to catch the ship. '"' h en 1 arrived there, the ship was in Yokohama. "After another two-week wait, 1 boarded the U .S.S. Randall for Hawaii and Japan. From Yokohama, I took a 900-mile t rain trip to Sasebo. But again the ship was not there. Back to Yokohama and a temporary duty assignment as a gate se ntry at Camp McGill, Takayama. "On December 31, I left Tokyo by p lane for v\ ake Island, Honolulu and San Francisco (where 1 started from). Finally on January 2, 195] , I boarded the Jeffer­son at Oakland, Calif. Two days later we were 'under way for- you guessed it- Yokohama. "During th.e next 12 months we made seven trip to Japan, five trips to Pusan and lnchon, Korea, three trips to Alaska and two trips to H onolulu. "I got m.y release from the Nav 1 at Treasure lsland, Calif., on January 31, 1952. Alter two hitches, I'll gi,·e rny place in the Navy to any Champion interes ted in see­ino · the world. I've seen eno ugh o( it.., .Jad has hunclr cis o( beautiful color picture he made dllring his travels. Viewing hi.s color slides is like eeing the world [rom an ann chair. T he accnmpan 'ing picture wa 1nacle in Pusan , Korea. TI L E R I'.~ A. 1:? )Car . o ld . ''"I 1\loll ie, l !'J \Cil l ~ n ld , ar c Lhe da ugh te• ~ of DorN iw H o llic fi cld , Fin i.hi ng. Ther ~a a t tends K r u ~ El -111 entary Schoo l ;tnd ;\1o ll ic is a t Jac.kson Jll nior Jligh s 'c b oo l. .l3t>t h :1 re ;ndeu l . ka l ­ing fan s. DO YOU KNOW YOUR MILL? Hen." are the an. v;er to the quiz ques tion. on page -lO: I. Cap cut- .Ferne Orlik. ~ - Po ny ta il - Mary .Jo Taylor. 3. Contour cu t - Opal Sa il er. -1. Bra id s - Felice Olsen. 5. Fea ther cut - ~lari a n H la \ aty. 6. Poodle cut - Billie Henderson. The Gay Effects of Spring ... Ry Adr>llc Cuidry ond Cece lia n,;clw rsnn "ln the "Pring a young man's fa ncy . . . " Only this time its {our of the Sorting Li ne gir ls wh o marched down the ai•ile to the !itra ins o f the ' ecl rling march . ~fi~~ Dori-. Gilbert became the bride of Charle.5 L e­Baron of the Fini1>hing R oom. 1\h. Valma Adcock became the bride of Pf . Roy \'\Talker of li.S. Ai r Force, stat io n ed in San }\[arcos, 1·cxa~. Beulah ~Iedford became the br ide o f Adam B. Zurn~·alt. Fannie .\1ae Barrett became M·rs. Earl Po tter. All ·were honore(l with a <shower by the Sorting Line. * * * * Fou r coons in two h our s. T hat was t 11 e · s c o r e racked up by Has­ton \1\Tebb, l e ft, and l\lf. R . Goins r ece n tl y . H aton ha b en htmting these crafty nest rob! en> for a long t ime, but a bag like the o ne pic­tur d here i ~ un­u ~ u a l cv n for l>Ca· ~o n d hunters. H e a ncl hj'> wire, E thel, \ pend much of th eir '>pare tim e om wi th the do~~ in ''< O<Jl l cr>u n tl y." .., . . . Glenn ''Hot Rod '' Lo d, forme1ly c,f the Flni !!>h ing Room. and nc1w o f the U. ':,. Army in Calllp Rob n , Calif ., r · pm·t~ he is enjoying hi'l rad io \' ry mu(h. 1t wa ~'~ a going away gift from the ',m ting Lin e. He !lay th a t Unci, Sam \ pay <h rk dnc,n 't n • ca~llr c up to C..! ampinn' , bu t lh · ha i r cu t~ and '>hob 1h thmw in help a lot. ,. ., • ~ hir k · \ Jea'c was -. mpri:-.cd on h<·J bi t t! day by a gift of (h ina from thr .So1 tjng- Line Ki' h . Ca ke was <'n d. by Edna Ca~ ke y jn honor ol the ocra -. io n . JO LL Y C O \ ' PO id:~ S a t the tcml<>r age~ o l "a llll o~t fo111 " 11 11u 18 m mths. iHC \lichael Ve rnon R o h i n ~on. lcfl , ;~ n d ]ohn R a n da l l Ru hi nso u, the so n ~ o l John Ro hinso 11 . John ha ~ b en a Huw-ton Di v i ~ ion we I d r fpr eight \Ca l\. ,. A YOl !NG C I-1:\R ~ I ER is J a ni ce H o ll in, (o ur· lllOnth -old d a ug hter o f Be n H ol lin , night s u p e r v i ~o r ill the Pa per l\ lill , <~ n d wi fe .J enn ie. Houston BI LLIE J EAN \4!\RTL . H. is a stu rl l! lll at J ack<;on J ur ,ior High Schoo l. Her mother, Sv l,if !\far­ti n o f the Fi11i~h in )?; l ~Prn, tells us th , l Bil.lie J e;~n is vcrv much i11 tcrc~ t e d in cll amaLjt,, IJ1tt her \ J reer choice i~ that of a u thor. :RADL'. \ TJ;\'G in J une from J acbon ] 11t1ior High Schoo l is Mnlv Anne Did.crson. dangh t('r of C' ce li a Dicke1 ~0n o t he .Fin ishi ng Room. '\rt and g:tr­d enin,<.>, are M, n' · . \11 11 's fa\Ol ite hobiJi s. SfH.RRII'. LOl ' \'ill !{f'ie ltl , lt- ft , i'> on l) 13. but ha-; a h..: a; t · lni.d('d or , lwt futurt' ,a n·u Sh pl;llls lo lw <{ 11111 •. l·k• ,· 1'- l c 1 .. ·v;1 J am•, 15, pr. lch li lt' < <~H"r ol .1n ,ti di n<' llo'l ·~~- Bo t \1 ,Jit (' lld J: t k on Jttn ior lligh Sehoul and ;1r · 1hc d a rP>l ll trs o l I Ot<l th \o ingfidd o{ i h S01li11g Lw ' i Houston MARY JO TAYLOR OPAL SAILER • now .·o u· r . I 7 Test your HIQ" with a quiz on feminine hair styles at Houston B;1 Sam Ellis • THIS PARTJCOLAR Q rz does not require a knowledg:e of mill operations or machines and it ought to be easy for both Champions and Championettes. The objective of the quiz is to match the hair sty le listed below with the proper girl. 'il\'hether the quiz is easy for you or not, certainly everyone will agree that these Hou ton Division 01ampionettes are easy on th eye . Correct answers will be found on page 39. Can you get all six righ t? FELICE OLSEN MARIAN HLAVATY • I • BILLIE HENDERSON FERNE ORLII< 40 Hair styles worn by girls pic­tured above: I. Cap cut J. Pony tail 3. Contour cut 4. Braids 5. Feather cut 6. Poodle cut ·. H.\l Rl:.STR0.\15; a paper cmnpa11y in Swcd<.:n, is or.e of the torei,gn mill\ 110\' w.ing Ch<tmpion ·-. p:ncntcd rnachinc o:tl t)tocc''- Jn th<' lcfl f01C~f(nntd ol thi~ picttne i.> a cana l used to transpot t tnarcrial~ to and from the plant. ,\ ll'::tter [ilkd c1na·l-bt idge spans ihe mountain s11carn h<'IOII. Haft<.:,ttunts produces sumc 18 ,000 t()lt~ of paper and J:':i ,OOO tons of sulphite pulp J \C:tr. ·1 h<.: Ollllp:tn~ tllake-, printing and writing paper-.. as 1\ <.: ll a;;; ~pee ialts Iitie,_ like ,,. ~,,ed papct .. tml ucpc p<tpcr. I