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The Log Vol. 37 No. 07

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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; Pasadena, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue.
  • • * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * .JULV • 195 * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * * l I L.-- ·-----~~-----~--------- ---- ·----.---~----~-.......1 - • • • • • • OUR COVER ll11 •·- '"" ' kd, a fJIIJil)( 1<•\ ., " e-.:prr ' <HIt fJlld< l!l Ill" fr 't.iltJI1l t\ hkh h.• I ., 11 \JHtrl, ' ~ ltn r- j ul~ l , 17711. h I t · Cl fl·l <HI' litl 'n• th•t Lf11 ·1f '1 t 1 •1 1 t \I ( 1 11 0 • .. ~ • 1., d c { . tllll. , ·hn \ ;II fin i11ht d t h r 11 i11 J!Hl j >;1it •t ilts:-t ~horll ' ;rt d t. h • 1 .. l '.rr1l i< \ lH• t a tor J ·do Htut hi» l 'T he ~;u r• r •l \ <•rl•l ~jJI r! I!J I he \>!Hit nr Jul y 1· . It THE CHAMPION PAPER AND FIBRE COMPANY ' Generql Office • . . HAMILTON, OHIO Mills ot . . . HAMILTON, OHlO CANTON, NORTH CAROliNA PASADENA, TEXA.S SANDERSVILU, GEORGIA Editor, STEWART ~ONES Division Editors: $1tANTON NEWKIRK, Qhio JAMES DEAJ.ON, CaroJlna JOHN WALKU, Texas Editot~ol A~$istont; JOAN" MESSNER EDITOIUAL STAff OHlO DIVIS"ION- M ~rlc Uap1 ·~ . Joe Bkv· t'"'· Wt'~lr·•¥ Cohh, Uewcy Mintou, }Rck ~ I ulle11, Dowthy l'ugh, O!to ){t·i(l, Mil(' n•1vk~. J~ hu S< hlllill, HeQrgc Stdllt't. Ball The ll) I )J~f>ll . CAROLINA DIVISION·- F1 e<J D<t}LOil, Cl~d.l· .ll:.~ n JleLL. W. "ituU Htun:y, Cl)dt' ~ - I lv<:). Jl'., W:' tltu f-h,IIOII, .Jark Ju~l iot~, I· 1 1 u:·~ t M t·~ -,t' f, R n \V c- 11 a ~I Of r 111, U 1 u Ct' ...:a ll! It'). J. I\ . Willi;uu~«m . TEXAS DIVISION- 11cny, BdJtnytr, (,_.1 111: Ch~mh , Alice Copd;md, f en~ l.<iilldiu -,, (..(;Iilia DkL.rt ·un, SaUl flli~. hed fuwns, A. \'. ll :mtUlot). S.P!CIAL .REPORtERS-1\Iurii'J M. ,\Jic•n, (;eHc r t1 1 01 ficei Gla!l ys t:. Hwfgt'~, Sanclcrsvi llP. ' Thi month one o( o ur Ohio Di ·i ion cor-rcs1 ondents will Gnd hillrsc l[ filli.ng a tJCW role- that uf a w ri/f'( in- . stead of a writ er. It prolably will come a · a mpris t) Wes Cobb, but while on 'acation he became one ( h principaJ subjects of an artid 1.) ' Di,·ision Editor , t;m Newkirk. Actllall y, vVes g-et: into priut by virtu . of his dtl r . tJtl l~a rr ,·s accom pi i h me>n ts. VVe 'r' r -rta in, ho.wevcr . tha r. pnp ·w ill b pleased to enjo the rdlectc I gl ")· You ' ll , ·~~ what we mean wlten •ou tln'n Lo pa·~ c ~30 . • . '·:-;o.o ner or la l(:r, l!vt ryone o-m~·s to Tn;a/1 - n ·en ~wt pk ftu 111 l'Jc-·, · J crse .'' So Hett · BH!tttyet· h -~j us 1Pr i nt <' tt:'sting ilk 1ch of I ·<·e B{' la ngcr, a forru er airline~ h o,' t ·ss ' lw i'> ll()W (I Te ·u Divisi ) ll Ch:tlnpioll. ,,, ' ll, a tty shtluld l,.,nt ,, .. p<tri icul,.tt'l aJ1u1t t t h "Sonucr" pan - \h ' lt ns<:lf is l'nlln B:4t f l<·lwi lie. Oklu . In Tt-'Xa~ fal»flion. Rq l~tl'l.cr Alin ' Cnp "l,tnd tr-i )\ to go lt ('r p ;q'd.Hvl' t)ll(' lwtl<.'r. Shr writcs <1ho n t Br att in' Ca nl\CJ, who (": ts '\' ' 1 on . will" n tll l . It) Tt''\.JS Jn)l ll u,rw:tii . , \lit e' .~ ((llmnu .i~ 1 be fu111.1 l ~ ~n p :1!-)' .~~). and l l'r tv's on .I':'W' ·JO. •• Catolb1, . Colr1111ni :-n Sr 111 I l ,_.. ('\,' l"l'l'nuut s Jmw ;w ~~~ d - dt' t.ll :d s:-tl " <It ' ' lnotlmll sla litHlt h lpt:( l to lllnl on .Juuiur .\i I it·H 111 •nt p1ojc< r i11Lo :r profitable hos.ines:-.. ,.v. think ;ou' ll enjo) I 'C'~tditJ g' ' ' Ellt :rpri st~. lJ nlimitt·d · . Lanillil n1• • I ' ' " HI N E I HBOR, Wel­come" was the invi tation Lo thou. anu of Ha miltonia ns several day I efor . the Ohi< lli i. ion 's Open House. ThL b uge ,_ i g n wa~ tTetched aero. s " .B" Street shortlv aft r the picture was taken' . Bet' een lO and J I thou and C h ampion n ighbors re­sponded by ace pting Cham­pion's ittvitation and a tLend ­i ng the 1954 Opcp House. 4!1.- 9fll • PARKIN& IN RHEAAYE.NU£ LOT Eleven thousand Hamiltonians exchange a friendly HHi Neighbor" with their Champion hosts G r iLST,' filed imo .Ohio Uivi~icm\ No. I M achin • Rouu1 lo Ct' pap ,r <H.rualh fl~ i llg l\1'adc 0 11 To. 7 llruJ , 'o. il Pnper \1 a~.-hin ~ - '\ n ~ " 1ing qw·,li(J!IS wc1e Ma hine T t•nu r B()b ~'jll h : <~o Ohi<> Divi.' iun ~tid , ;md a rtpH:~cntcti v • vf Cit, n.tpwu . Yoluntc ·1 frr<: bJ •gad ' . . . . ' A BRUSH FIRE on the outskirts of H amilton couldn't have spread mox,f': l'a:'[5i'dly ·than the words "Hi ' ' Neighbor" during Champion' Ope n. Hou e ]ast Ma . It was "Hi Neighbor" a t the mi11,. in school and churche , on street corners and in tavern . - Those ·who had never believed that an inclu tr could come alive, found out that Champion was bur ting with fri endliness generated by the folks who work there. And so they came to see- some 10 to ll thou and • neigh.bors of the Ohio Division in Hami.lton. They wer treated royally, too, with chartere l coach. ·ervice from the Rhea Avenue parking lot to the registration point on North "B" Stree t, and after the tour o( the mill. buses were waiting and rear!. to lea \'e for Thom. on Park e ery two to four rninut s. Thomson Park ·was a ne·w ·wrinkle in th i t 9.:"J..J, OJ en Hou ·e, and guc ts were La ken to tbe recreation area for prizes, rcfre. hm nts, souvenirs and dispbys. Even thou h 1'ain.. fro st an cl ool co nditions, r spcc tivel y, px Yall d on eacb of the three \'Cn.ings. fo lks s!Jruggcd th ir shoulder. aud wem on to have a grand time. VVbat did the · think of Champion? , 111 lik Juost visitor · were impress d wiLh the onl r l · w. y that pro­dtt cti on con ti nu ed. th · t.l eanl i ne :-. of the mill, til c lrie11dly attitwJ " of Cha nt pion~, and th pl a nning · that had be n done I >' Open Htllt:c ornn tiu e ·nt e n. T hey t<unt: away from Chatl!pi o tl l ttst May Lhirtk ing ot ll1 mill not as '' that pap ' I' plant on 'B' Stre t"', b ut a.s a neighbor - a corporaL d t it.en . where frif'ncls, r + ­ti n~"'i au d. acq u ~ in li.tnu·s work c1 hn rd to pr J lL1ce qu ;:d i l y J.Ji.l p •r s, he"tring the n:unc Cha ut pion. CONTINUED ON NUT i>A,Gt; 1 ~ I '' l f r ' ' t .1 O , ' THEIR \VA Y to the Shipping Room exit, guests pa u ed every few feet to note the dc~tination of (wndreds of fittish d skids of Champion ,paper waiting o be hipp d . St.atio11 guides point d ou L Cll ' •s hound for many p{lrts of the United States as well if~ r(J] ign <: l fl fltri >!;, Q - • • (-?' HOUSE v I ( 1 F-lAVIN(, STI:YI'tiJ Of'!:' a ch.trtcn::d hus after lea' ing their cars in a p::11 king lot. gu ts lined (tp :o register on the third <lay of Ohio's Open House. On Champion family Day hundreds o£ employee' ami their £ami­lie;; waited in the rain to register before touring the mill. BE\ ' f a.trra tiYe girl £rom C~t . ortlno- handJ d nwr tl•an lO,OOO 1 -g:i. tration during the Lbr c-cla) Open Hou• . \'elwol ­ing smile. put vi itor at ea ~ am! did much t h lp m, c the tour a u ces· before it a.ct11alh ~ tart d . • , __ , --- • B: I ( TYPTCAI. Of i\f NY GRO · p that toured Champion wa this delegation from the Fjrt l\'alion11 l ftank. ;md Tru t Com pan ' <Jf Ham.ilton, he ded by A. D. F il l . Not w be outdone by 'ltampion, Fir.'l 1 ' ational em11oye chartered their own . bus to take them to Cha mpi.on and then to Thomson P<u k . Following the mill tour. visitors •• l l\ TH'E .ALE DER ROOM, Sup rvisor Tom Manring shows 1\trs. Freda B. Jaw on and !drs. arrie . \ 1·ight, boLh of Hamil ­fnll, th · differ •nce b ttv en a cal nder d and uncalendered . heet of paper. 'ig11 · urged g ue t · LO a k que ·tion. QtN fq~ :~rt.=m N ( lfNOCR pu11t>k ~ ukll!b I<)Q.r .®r St~l\ !IIO!lklli<ntlo in 1 r I ;(.Qiti\Oi) fit. .,tfjJJ(. flBI;lt: ~ ill"\l<j da . . ONE OPER.ATTO t which a ttracted a goodly hare o.f attention 1vas the trimmi1lg of paper. Trimmer operators a nd h e lper ' oon became used to having th ou ' a nd ~ watch them work. T luoughout the mill guest " ·ere impYe sed wir.h the fact that the paper making co ntinued in an order ly fa shio n. CONTINUED pr0ceeded to Thomson Park, VI' a the buses which left at regular intervals CONTIN.UED ON NEXT PAGE 3 • .. • I ·'TH RE L M RF' TO CO IE .. react a s.i~n :ll the lHt,pin: Room e'-.it- \"i ·iwr~ hoarded btl e: bunnd hJI lhom•t n I',Lrk and rl'f reslnucn t . dtl0r pril<'~. . Pll\cnir•. di'P la, s. and mo> it' .. Chane red cnath~ left the mill ,fl {\HJ· lf• i m1 111 iu\l te it.t~-rn1 h. S0:\1F.. ·1,5fJO PEPSH.:OLAS, '150 ga.Jkm$ of coffee, !'iO.O(J(J co.oklr-;s, and flO g;t Ho n~ o1 I monadc wtt e di par.ch d to t d ~ty visi tors hy Slater Syst ·m, Inc. durin g tl a : three-day pe riod, k.eeping .Bob ChaUer :md his cn~w r cousLa ntly b11sy . 4 .\I r JOi\1, 0\' P R . cndl lCRi t<Jlion Ht~' 1\:J~ dtr1p.ptd tntn a bo. for d jfv duro!' 1 rtLL~. Bdcm ' l.A"IJ vL.~""·r ~1ltn"' In ClcLtl f( tlli\<'l. c>w· nf th~ man} p ilt~s, In l'attiua .i\ld>tmo11gh, ,rnrl \>\ inni \ ar'lllp. l~r.1'1-1lll' \ ac l'nitdt· :1t the e11tl of ;Jch da). • • CONJINUEO ' . • ' 0 1 '£ OF Tt'IE NIAJN TTRACTIO . · at Thore­n Park was the display area depicting tlte role 1 afl'er has pJay d in rh ach·ancement of religion, ci 11 1", an, mu. ic, alJd lit" r il ttlJ.'e. Yach of the 26 disp.l ys ~ a backed by a photo-mural Lending :tnth nti ·i ty to ea h. of the displays. SeYeral of lh displays d :'c il d the Ohio Dillis io11 ' indus­trial rdaUon polici es. r • •• "SAFETY GLASSES won't break when hit, tl)' it" ;'Lncl a chubb y, carrot-topped youngster did. This waR part of the .. ~afet y exhibit at Thomson Park and re­ceived quite a play from the yotJnger set. In spite of constant pounding, the glasses did N OT break. ' Refreshment s, • prrzes, souvenirs, displays . were some of the attractions under the pavilion roof • • • • f . . ... T:\fT :RVl ' WI, 'G A C UE:T r r tampion 's Tq · du ni ght "Hi cigh!10r" prngr a:trn i ' Don . 1e ks 1.1£ 1~atli1 Sratiott W t\lfOH . his vi'ii to r told Meeks t\~;tL J1e ton• c1 th Ll'ip tl1 ugh Cb a mpi . u v ty itlf,ere. Jr~g • 1 1cl •ery worth\"hilc. n. did 1;b .majorit r f p , , tt ~ ~" ll o wtrc inr r rew d h Dem. ' 5 I I ' i ' l l i • • H ·, ·R · R 0 B I , 0. ' . left. of Texa~ Fore t Fan11~. fY.lusc~ to chat ·itJl Ch~1:mpion wt · d con ­t actor rank r ortner, c('nrcr, and Rea an , mitl1 . Texas Division CHARLF,S STEA L£Y, 'left, of the 1 n­d: epend f'l J>ulpwood Pwd1 <:t'r~, l11 t ., and Brn St.f: wart, ighL, alsw of IJJP J , hat wfth a pu1pwt;od produc r duriug th J lorning act.ivit y. YIELD [rom a pr •J:>.Ct l <,u~ woode 1 ar tv rc ~he lllJje t ·of Cllampion James , lOckman's t.J . S rn of th ' 1 ulpwood pn~ducc-r. nd contractOJ, al'e ·hown i!'l tl te background. G assists • 1n a ' • ' • • • demonstration of good forest practices Gooo currmc and conservation practices were the highlight of a day-long demonstration in Cham­pion's Texas woods area last month a Champion col­laborated with the Independent Pulpwood Producer , Inc to stage the event. Speakers outlined the practices with the help of ei ht different plots whieh graphically iliustrated good cuttincr over the years. . lunch a-imed at pleasing the rugged woodsmen was .servecl at midday. Among Champions participating in the program were James Stockman, Lucl King, Earnest Golden, Paul hep­ard and Herman Knous . Successfully operating their own business firms, young Junior Achievers personify t ?IL\. .~.. 1f , C UR.ERS OF OF f'TLL0\'\1'8. ruemb s f the Pmgressive Achie~'emenL Ccwpanr ld a lor. of the .. e ilem !.luring the Juniox Aebicvemcnt business yea r. From lei f to I igbt: atn math r . ow l'!o n , Belt} Jean Miller., Marlene Burnett. • By Scott I-lm"Vey A PL:CT 10 ar a anton Hia-h ch ol oot· ball am may f a,·c been 1 ')Iron ibl for hoving T b · Progre .,],,e l ieYem."nt C.omJ,~any - ne o( thr Junior Arhl \C:n nt rontpanie ~pon orcd by the Carolina· Dhi· . inn - o\cer th l1t t major ob racle to uccc,s. J he ~P l i Jr, \ h . · h· . id > was evidr.n tJ . ore ncl \d 0 of! 'ation as thU!> mC"J · llHJrC a Ltle , noticed a ·cmng m:.tn in th t<tdiuu1, d :pond ntJ clutching . e\ a J J ill r)\ . H a f pu Jad (''rl t ht· ho. and i nq uir ul jf d re pillrJW ·el for :;;ale. Y , lhc c n inl .,., ·r , }aid th W!UI... al ~rn, n - , ' n an l i-, t: ( sh<J t d that h · OJ tld hardh l ~ iie-w hi e;n~. • • But a !iaJ- ·a an t<dlv m· eft: En 'JU ,lged , h ' bo · b ·gan letting ( he put' tor' k 1 tJh 1 c hact wh, 1 f h ' TJ 'ded : fna1 rul L ·r ;,tadl run pill•J\.'- g-•;od •>o · l a rc.a,cmiiblt- p i:<.. • Otlru -.al I Ht'll Jid tfw ., m , ~t ll d from tl1 11 m s<d c boomNl. ' l he co111pauy IH~gau tlw 111 1wl~tu Jl t of lH·d J.illo,~ · awl :>t:ilt nt...JJUHh, \dtkh al ~n ~old \c•ll. l hot. llf d•·J n ·\ m et,J1;igeme:nt in FebH1:rry, 19 ",1 tht itfl'J ,Hided :t t t<11l) diller n Jillf·, ·nnden n.JJJie pl&<t " tt.ll(l (fddtt · s.i g11s for th 1 wn. Wl1 n th c mpan, cl is o1v rl itself in Apdl. it had so many unfilled onle1 . tha.t ~c dtl} Skagg . in mb ol th fi.rrn , wa · ,on \'inc d. he on1d pr (i t bl · unci rtak tllebu. in· ·sh ims1Cthi ·nnHner . Holders of the 161 ~ha.r s of &tock, ltl b · ad'li v roo. (wbcn. the company ' as org-n.nitt•d to fi1 nee ib op r - r.i 10., rett:i'-"Cd a lO ;Yr di,·id ·nd )\ •r their inv nnen t. rhe board Of dtteCtofS <I l!:,o Ulhori7 d thL ' tnploy ' t"'.\ ha1·c c ( the uncxpe ted a rning . ']he nth ·r (\ o .J \ ou1p:nties p n 1 1 tl b 'han1 - tJioHdic Hl)t a tcaswll,buttll . a<! td. rit r b\t.i n ""' ud -oJ otni(... in J • • · 11 n n "' <~ I a . ., n dt·aHT f o t ht ~~~ lm U\ in t'h " c ) npanJt·s. , llwn Jfanis. ·a]' arh i ~<· r roth ~ Unit d Produt, C()WJ 11). !1 ·lil" .. tk•t th<.·-;l· la<.ts ~ ·r<> chi,· n hom . in rile 11 t wn11th of rhe roll p. 11 's ot.!ratim . Tlh 'e" uh- 111 rmxlw ti . and. saJ t fl(>fg ', lw ' ic' ;ttl>. rl hi" to' I ~~I'd 1 ' t tpdt' lo iw rca-.t' hy I J 7{ du. jr).g th llt~>tHll . ··u e !Hul ur l h d ano£11 -r llJOIHb l1k' ta " fl. I ' t.. lailiiS. qQNTJNUEP ON Nl 1' PA ! 7 • I I I ! I l ' . r, G A BAr\D , .A \ V. ,\fehin Reed , ~rC' <id m 1.>£ Lhe Progr s i ·e J chicve-ment Co!llpany, , ' ' . t1t name plate board a, . h\sor i orris ~Ht b ·11 1 erve the opcr tion, \ • • ' CONTINUED ' Carolina Cham pions serve as advisors for three company'"'sponsored JA firms Fl 1f '!-'liNG as.b tray. , th tn ml ts of tb United Pro lucLs Com­p< u y rnon srrat.; th ir skill t<J tl1 i ad vi~or · . . mm left t.o righ.L : Ath Gor Jirn Haddns, Donald B'i.lone, Jeanette TrulL, Advisor A: I H:u· ri.s and .Ralph \ \Vode)'. t Two OF. THE J VNIOR AG. Hl!.VEMEi'\T companies -pon-sored by the Carol.ina Division consisted of tudent · from Can ton High Sch ol. They were the Progre ·ive AchieYe- . ' ment Company: mak($rs of cu h:ion ancl ign , and the United Products Company, whi h produced various type. of metal trays. Both the tock an l the fini shed products · "\cvere sold in Canton. The third Champion- pon ored company, the Knitrht Printers. consisted of Ashe i1le tuden ts. Thev manu- . I factuxed hand-painted no te paper. 7 1 'ine employees of the Carolina Division served as a<hi or' to the Junior Achievement companies. Those advi. in the Progre ive Achie,·ement Cornpany included Jim nder on, Control Laborator : Bob !layer, Inspec­tion; and , forri Mitchell. \'\forking with the United Produc Company were Frank Clonlz, Purchasing; Jim Harkin Engineering; and lbert Harris, \ tVoods Depart­ment. Counselors to th Knight Pri11 ters Company were • Barney Sledge, Engine ling; Conley Gibbs, Taxes and Insurance; and cott Harvey, . rea urer's Office. T A Kl1 C ON LETT RS, Progt-essive Achieve- 11lcnt ompany members how how th ey made a su e e. o[ their business this year. From left • to right: Dav Miller, .J ohnny Qlteen, Ad vi -or Gob Mayer, and Melvin Reed. A J7INAL BALANCING of the books revealed that the Knight Printers did fajrly well finan­cia lly during the Junior Achievement year. Here Con ley Gibbs, advi or, lends Georgi;) Landers a hand with the bookkeeping. IT RD A' \· ORK, IUcmb rs of the {{night l'ri n t rs Com p~n y ar pi t\1 r d p p . ring 'l' <:t­il go card~ and o t.l1 ·r malerinl . Srott Han• ·, ad\isvr. look.s on . ca ted , r.nn J fl to J'i.ght: Ju. rine Low ·nbu rg, nn tcvcu , R o,; r llalh rd, f~<ll1Cf" Jordan. Jl, .ri l La a. , <! and Loi ,' hJ ein. CONTINUED ON NEXT PAGE 9 - • I " I j ' I l I • ' • CONTINUED Texas Achievers also have a prpfitable year · U .lLlKE }10ST OTHER bu inesses, Champion Enterprise, a Texa Divi ion· ponsored Junior Achievement company, . saw a brief re pite this summer h·orn business activity after it had dosed out the year at the animal Future Unlimited banquet for .JA units last month. More than 1,000 achievers and their sponsors and advisers ,.vere on hand for this occasion at the Rice Hotel. Good food, awards and ·peeches highlighted the evening which brought to a close mo~t JA acti vity in the Houston. area for the year. Champion's finn could look back on a good year, with a large dividend paid to stockholders and a low inventory. • • 10 • ADV ISOR HARL Y CARTER, lef~, and "\f rs. Carter h,a t 1-Vith Mr. and M .:. J ack Donnell, t ight, duri'ng the eve ning fe t iviti . Donr1ell is \OC.ational advisor at Pasadena. High cbwJ, help to coordi· nate the JA program. CH R D tlfM ll li:I' lk is ' ra,.,i r , lso ;t Cil: rt1,pion,. rne 1b ~~ t t . :1nh 11. pr •, i dent of Cha:l'upion F.nr 1'1 ri · r th pa' t · ~::, ·r . 1.-t'lokin on au: RidnJrd Alk?rd , r i ~ht. and Lan1 tlfill r, kfr, d:tuglH<:'l' of · h t~ n1 p i < n t:l, 1 k l\Hilc t'. • ' IJJ'J~ IH , Tf..N P E r u ( !'.~, a d <' n ~ '· ehuvls Vin.1'C J'lfiU~t: p n.u ~cs l tJ char 1\' ilh tl1r · m tll il rs of' thJ' 'lwn1 pi.nn J•: ttk rp d ~ t' fi n; t. l\Hller w :1 ~ n plT i.d · 11 <'>-1 ol c l,nrupi,w , t !11 an TJt t;l! Fi tllll'<' ll tdillii.l ·d I a nqlti·t, I - I i I I I DEPl;TY FIR£ Hl · , Willard GiU sp i , third from left, in­' truct Robert Cheitz a tbe • 'i'e fir t -a id to a '·vic r.im ." Other JUCJtlUCJ, of Lhe cla - " -.atch Lhe pro1..eclure . By now, th "e men h:nc completed their train ing and ha\'e r ce.ived a Red Cro ·s certificate i o liT t -.aid. · • Y ou HE R LL Kl ' ll'i of talk about I ro(iting fJ urn p st <:xperien.c ' . • ornetiw s it's me>. tly tal . Al Champion's Obio Di: is.iou , howev or, thct 's a gro11p of maiat nance men ' ho w > a< tioJt. Th ·y l rofitecl irom pa t cxp riem_e and 1 ·arnul from new c, perienn . Jt L ·~-an al out a , ·<n al-{o when J • uician L uis Fishc.:r wa~ jolt. ·d ir rJtn atop a po~ tr statjor. . h _ metal hut on on Fi<>lr ·r'!) ap } acl brush ·d a " hot" wir · u t r ,­ing ·ou1 2,3( 0 , ·oJt ~ . Helpc1 l}ol , ~~wJlin lu Id ly kill:'' 1dtat lO do, a ppJi d artj Jicial t ~>}JinHinn , a11d r ·vive I his un on c ious b tdd , po !)ihly . av.i:ng Fil>h\:r 1 Jif . or !on ,. <tfte lhat, el-c.t i ian 'l foJ q.ndcd a H'c.j\l ·~ l to ~h TtainiJJ . cti<.H1, tlnon~h th ·h- supl4. i lr, tOl fil . aid trait jn . ·1 he bad <·t1i how i111portaut H rol • DOl STA 'J'Z I~ R rcc ·i s tr auncnt for a non-existertt bro eu leg fro r11 Will Gi llespie Louis Fisb'r, standing a t 1ft, kJII'IIV' th • va lue oC eruerg n cy Lrear.m •nt. He was sav d by an ifi ci<d rcsr irat.ion when a "h t " wire knocked llim ou t. Tf:lE APPLICA T IO of a traction splint i shown to class m m b r Al Wiseman by inst ru ctor Wi.ll Gi llespie. Ele ri­cian , mill police and apprentice tra.inees took part io the trai ning prog,·am in whi b ome 88 men were certified . • • th ~nowJ lge of arti.fkial r pi1 tion and tr atn'l nt of sl to -k could play in d t. J.He o£ a working man. ll thus -. m about that a lO-luur fir t aid oul" wa set up on omp:tn um lor l ctr.i hn , nill poli nd appr HrLc train · . 'om )8 m n w .r rtified. Bttt that wa~ ju ~t the b ginning·, D pul Fire hi f Willard Gill -~ p j ·, im 1 u clO ·, informed 'hantpi n _rh t dt · t hom ~i' lr aining oulu lJ · ~1ppl icd w the compl t 2~~1 our <tTLi Gt~d Ked. 'ro!) · Jirst • ill t >un . b u 10 H\C il ·dd d w go allea l, o.n th ·ir own time. Hy nu\v thee m··n hav }tnpl ' t d th ir trainin. Tlte \ \' a< L , 1, ;u1d a t rhe sa.n tuu ha\ · b tter d thcnJ h e and th ir < ontpan ·. ·. h wef tf l fo:r d to tak ' a <<JilL c• it1 Lir t [lid. ou · 'C - Lh<: · a:k d for it! 11 • • I ' HIGHLIGHT OF TH DAY was the bar­b ue with all the trim1~1in ' s . Among th.e GOO who enjoyed Lhe feast were these two, ~'[r. and Mr."'. F. G. Anders. CHECKERS occupied the tiiue oE a few "Old T imer." like !3ugle Stamey; right, a 35-year vet­eran . He ch allenges ]. H. Clarke to a game as, left to right. J oe Domorad, R. . Coffee, OliYer Stiles and Red Freeman look on. ttF • Annual ball game and a ranch- style barbecue h.ighlight the Texas party • S MMER • , ' )va oH lO a fa~ t ·tart la~t month a · more than · 00 Te a ''Old Time:r" and their famiiie a th red at: th Recreati n Ground ·· for their an.nual barbe ue. ' Ther were lauohs g:dore ' tori of ) ar" one b . .and talk of wl1at's ah ad. '"'J1i le ' ri,·e nrl · hildr ·n wam, p'layed bingo; r de p ni · a1 .d j>1 ved am ""· th rnen a ther. d to ju t rh w th t t. pla) ·ottb ll, 11<l pit . h h 11 shr:Jf:s The· tCipper wa'.> lh. big barbecue Kith all th trimmins' wi1ich lefc·tl1 m re th n 650 \i inrs n .irh a 'mile of picurea.n contentm t and the ,, ri fied £ ~ !.­in that onl ' a {ull da' :an O'i,e. I I 12 • FA 1\HL Y GROUPS clotted the Champion Recreation Ground . Shown here are Mr. and Mr . John Hacker, and their chi ldren 1 .Barry, Wayne; Sherry, Linda a ncl Debbie - all intensely intere ted '+' in the goi n's on at the swimming pool. - ' "L\l f'JR ·• TA.' \YY~.~. T 'irtnall_ had 1:0 IHJJd off 111e ea:ptain~ 0 1 the t w th< ll 'f:t>an · \~ hu met in their ann u-al clash at the h. -tb ue. 0. \- . Laou antl Bi ll . f or i ·, l~ ta;, aptain d tl1e d:n 1 o l..trs 1,hil Ja · H rd amt Jim Dunn h cled lhe ·hifl l orker . ' I I Cold and rainy weather didn't discourage these Carolina Champions + CO'\(.EYJ R..\'f L\;(;. 0~ BL\iC.O, n al1\ Old Ti111crs can be irl lltified io thi · pa·' il ion pic.tur '!lappell ~ ltn ·jn~-, steady 1 ain. Cecil R.o!Jcru·, J)oli; Plou and Doruthea Jun ' Gidne~ conclt lfi,Cd 1 he bingo gmnc. l l' R. ' f .\."C TO <..OfF[E, Old Tilll f: JS fo nght off pan of rhe late a fl cn ,oon ch ill . Cof(c · "as the uopular be,er~ge a 1J Carl H<~ r d - , r igl11, and R ev. :h:Hii . Balt l •[l did a gc,od joh o r ·rYin g. IT WAS n o tl1i.ng sh ' of ov ' r 1at w ather when the Carolina Divi ion' Old Timers, about :}50 ol thent , a ·-;em bled al Camp Hope for their annual dinner meet­ing ·l\.lay .1. . . Although 7!)6 Caro l.b a Chatnpion.s are inclu leu in tbc total dub m ·mb r:>hip - indudi11g 58 " ho hecaw e ligibl for membership this year- many of them were unable to attend the annua l mc:e ting. The weath r could not have be ·n worse for such an occasion. lt had rained hard [o nea rly 21 hours and the atmosphere was· damp and plumb cbiJl y. l t even rained during th <.Linncr, and th ·ides of the pavi lion were covered with felt b lankets to .k.eep out the chill. B Ll t though th weather drove them inside, the 0 ld T imers found considcntble p leasure in playing et-back and a little shuffleboar9, and just chatting among thcm­sel es until the dinner hour at 6: 30 p .m. hrought on the knife-and-fork activiry. t J) IU \ ' 1:.:-.1 l . TO E. Old ' f in' r •njo1 d s r· had. and o rh •r iJ, <II HJs of p a:rilne a' it rai n .. d . \ ' ic ·- l'r . ict ~ llt Dwight J. 'l'l itmr st!ll , !vii . l'll i t' ' cofCt· ' 1,'> h r liatg wit it l.m .urn;ur. r!'lin.:rl Old Tjlllcr. l l' \ i ~ Cl:lrk Th lltl SOrt (. till w· <J l illg l.<1pwat) sl"uds 'aL 'Jll cr• n[J, ,n ·i•'g ~et - b ack pr gn :s:-. j • • • LYD • H.-\ 1LETT, Call'leria, C. rolin:1 l)[,i , i<n ~" ly nwst e njo ·ablc vacatinn was s1~ ' Ill w Lching the 19 '19 \Vutld · ries b tween the 'ew \' ork. Ya nkc ~ and Brook! 'll Dodg rs. I · tick ·rs ar­ri, ·ed at. the la:t nwment and 1 ·trrivcd in New \ ork j ttst in time to ·witnes the first o·a me of the series. l wa~ lucky. t 10, ' . for m · eries ·e< r was just f 11 r row b k 1 >f home plat ... BOB BOLA.N , CM Shi pping, Ohio Divi­sion: "I took a trip to Arizona o ne time to see my bro ther in Tucson. We went to Boulder Dam and throu gh the R ock­ies - ·aw all the scen es. \ Ve went d own into f...Iexico on tha t t r ip, too. VVe h ad a darn n ice trip. \tVe d rove all over, and the Grand Canyon was probably the out­standing part of the trip." What's the most you ever had? THE GLEA n (; beach s of Florida, the gr en-clad slopes of the Adir nda ks, the lak s of Michigan - or rltat ol<l hammock in the back yard ... \Vhat' ll it I fo your v. ati n t hi~ summer? \1\Thatever you d _cid , you an rc t a~ ·ut-ed of one thing: th 'H' will b thousands of pi asure-s eking Ameri an o; whu agr 'vith your choi -and mil lions mo · who don't. \N'h ni t c me to a atiom, rhe po'Ssi bilitt s. r ahm,-;1 limitlr'>'>. Just to prov it, the " l nqu iting Rep >r1e1' ' thi ntonlh a.;;kt•d th que. tion, "What' the most inL r '>ling \acation you t''H'I hncl ?" Only two of Lhe quiz s \'Cn ·am dos to aglel'ing, .111 <1 doubt! :-. )'O ilY choi e would hav be .n different qiJI. But o\lWn'H ' f ·nu go thi , ar, wha tever •ou do, 1 t ' hop that t/111 . ea t ', var t.ion turn. out to b the be t yeti 14 (W - K.,.'-\.YE 1\l ENNINGER, ample Depart­ment, Ohio Division: "I think that my most in teresting ,·acation wa in Florida. T wo o ther 0 ·i.rls and I went to Ft. Laud­erdale in 1941. Nothing really exciting happened, but ·we got to wim in the urf, and "Om e friend took u - a ride on a yach t. T hat was lot of fun. \1\Te went tO all the b motr restanran ts while ·w weTe ther and went out on a gl, s­bottomerl boat to e marine life.' - . ---- . --=. => t FR. \ , K OOK, Trampo tation, G n­. al Offic( : '' B<- t \ac tion 1 e er had was ju r thr .e ~ea1- a o thi month' h n J drO\ f; throug-h the \'\' t with ' UHlfJlC' ,,f lri •ntk \'(·coveted , ,9 0 miles 111 2 ~ rlap. an I visited 19 , tar, - ar&d 'I ijuan·t, . fe:-. i! o. \ ~aw 1 ·w Otl ·all'>, Lo An­g('(~_>..,, '-,an F1 anti.< o , Y o1o.unit · Park and a lot. ot (lf!Jn inL ·r ·ting pla e'; hnt dw ou L t· nding, one '\ 't'> tll .tau I Canyon --it': llllt' o( 1h • Jll(ht. inspiriug sigltts l'v · C\ -r en." l\L\ RTI N .-. \ V • ESS. Plaul Protc tion Dcp. nrnent, · re.·as Di is ion: '' [ woul ln't "''< nl p Oj l to think 1 wa a Tr~rhee l , bttl the mo ·t int 're-;t ing trip 1 ever took wa · 1 hroug-h. the ' outhcast :til I through Smol-.v, lonntain l\ational Park. [ es-periall r enjoyed the park b ause t'd never :cen mountain beiore. ~Iy wife and tv o children and f drove 1 tore than · ,(i00 mi l ~ on that tri J , b tt it was the be 1· we'd ,,. r ha ]." JIM ~1 RTIN, No. 2 Shipping, Ohio Di i i.on: "Be·t vacation I've bad was in ·wiscon in, fishing .. . didn't catch a fi h though. We ju t had a good time tr ing to ca tch muskies . Two other guys and myself were up there for two weeks. W ·ure had fun trying, though." t THEA E. J l fZ, Division 1faw ger's Hi , arolina Di,·i!:>ion: " h mo t inter ting - cation to me is my hri rna holiday in Ca1 ada. f<i )1. o a ll, it give~ me the oppor­tunity of J ·ntling the hulid< y " •irh my brothtt <lit I his Jamily nd fri 'll(ls. ']hen too, I c-njn , the ~now nd winl r pons which we l<lt1llCJt J \(· jll til arolinas. fogcth .r with the v.ra rn1 !1ospilali t y ·tnd 0 ld \' orld charm ol th Pwvin lf O!tebc·<. J ha\ • fnun<l that Chri'}tlll~t iu Fr nch" Queb ·c is L' .iting anll '\ ondtl [ ul." t • A. J. NAVARRE, Techni­cal Services Lab, Te~as Di­vision: "I think it wa the year I went down to Big Bend National Park here in Texas. Anyone who hasn't seen that should ee it. -it's·real.J nice.. The mcest part was gettmg up in the mount in and the beautiful s enery through-lllt the park. The cost of living in the park is not too high either." )5 l . l ! I ! j THE LO~C HAI. · which leads 10 rhat final paycheck Hal't " ·ith the lunching of the Lin;~ e card by each employee. This aCLion . ets off a $Cries o.f C\ em s requiri ng dozen o[ pcr:ons ami many machines . •• ··. THAT TL\1E CARD punched ear lier bv a Texas Division Champion now is reY i e>~· ed in the Time OHice, where it i checked a.gait1 st t.l~e Lime sh eet filled out by the £orenmn. Checking card are, left lo tight, Nell Scarbrough, Leat.rice Stile and Dori E ti e. • .\ LL T)l':I)l 'CTl0:\5i fo r hu trl) mplo) ('< s .'lie h.nHlh•d -IJ) J <ll:kie C ~m lt , ri14l•, ,,·flo ht·rc: dtc~,.t,. - a pt•' ible tll:r ttjit~ in d eduction ~ lor !'<Jl .\4l 'lmtH:IL Dt> lunluth inclutk iu ·on1. t<1 xes, CJcdil uuion, in-m:mce :Htd . urial S (ttrit\ . • DE . N DEMKE of th Prope rty Accounting Department run~ time h eeLs f'or the f.MLh com.ing pa>• perioJ. These sh<.:et« include Lhc names of all hourl y emplo>ees, and are used b) Foremen and . ttpen isors Lo dtcck employees' ti111e on Lbc jol;. l'\EW CARD VERIFlER at Lhe T exas Di1ision ma ic-alh translate information from Lhe Lime sheet ' to a dai'l jou' ' card made 011t for ea h job or e~ t ch employee. ilabel Pierce is the 01 era tot'. , .r. - ... ' "· I ' Ff · ',\LI 'I" T iff .ll f.CK l.'i RF.\ 'IlY ro be r~11't LIHO ll ~h th · m. t,hilll' and th(• ll lilfc (>I' r u lilj' is cle: tt1'd lu1 :ut1ltll ·t l \(' \1ccl-;•. C otdOtl i\Jon.i' ln . b. o1·e; the 1.ll tk.• :rs the} om th1\ltt.gh tb ~: tn.::t ·hin ·. A:'\ A OUN'TING OF L"<SL'R .\ NC.ES :wei c:cxe n1 p tio ns for T xas Di\ isit n bourh personnel j · kepl hy ~l arlh <t Giblr o( the T ime Offi , Hare sb • check,s her records 11·i1 h Boh Hal'Rc r, 1 b di visio n's a ,j,t. nt P"' ma ~t ,-. look in, on. I HO L' A":'\ lJ:~ OF DA IL. JOB . ARD made 01.1t .in lh'c Texas I aiJu lating Dep ;tr iJ tlClll a rc cl1 ·ktd hy J olu , 1\lfo rrow. r\ . man )' as 3H,00U ate co10pi1e l dtllin~~ one 11\'0·wcek pa · p er iod. Oil r etnplo}'ec 11 1. v IJa\ c H n•>.tn }' lt 100 of' th cst> job card ·. \I' ·1 fJI· Y:\D O J· ' llfl~ 1.1\:E, ., . , , o lo _r 1-tiol:t}. I ill' tlln} , ;, e h.twkd <•ttl ft<m t i1C l i1 Offiu·. l' · \L t;;"lcl ( . illlC"•I li :tltk 1Ja11ds li itd(h· B \IJIIIJr t·ti'- hutl.. l o ll' thllll J,tuo T ex:1'> ( lluwpi<>n j11i11 But J,' iu e njr1yiHJ.\ the '' IJig pa. o i L ' At the Texas Division , Time Office and Tabulating staffs wade through a maze of paper work to insure Champions of the bi - weekly '' • . .. lr USUA I.T.Y You." Then more than E1 os with a cheerful "Thank I ,300 h ourly employee of Cham-pion 's Texas Division will fo ld their paychecks and tuck th e.rn a·way in a wallet or pocket. • But where dlles it start? \tVell , ac tually it starts ·when the: ind ividtt al tune . cards a.re ptUJd,ed each day. T he rn az.e o [ paper work. which l.ollows is charged th en to several. dozen p erson . • v.:h.o see to it that Champions receive th eir paych~ck . Time cards- the o nes in the clock alley - are .checke l aga inst time shee ts made o ut by the foreman or sup r ­viso r. Tl1 is ,·eritics huw o ften a man workerl on any particular job. Hmv often? Ever da of e er pa · p eriod. Frout the Texa D.i v.ision T ime Office th ·cene .. hifts to the Tabulating Departm.ent wher • a mountaJOOll · volume o( machine work is clone. T h ere a lail_ job c_ard i. ma l up from the ti tne sh eets. J n ord er to u a.ns fcr a ll information 'tbo llt the employ · to this job ard, it ma · b · run tllrongh ·ix. m:1 chi 11 • . P~tp r ,.vo t·k:- l .i!> lt:n In thi.s: during o ne 1 ay p riod, a man 1n :1y have as man · as 100 joh carll'i, d ·pend ing up011 rh • number nl j ob · ll hit ~ p rfon11 d. Each nf th 'W 100 ct:tHl .s lllay be procc.s<;c-d ix tiut ·s - !urint, tlt ' pa r p ' t iocl. m· , it's a ·lo nnding. But tltitlk., L'O, of ll1 work whi ch must g t ) illlfJ labulaling d ' dt! Ctipt, ; - i tJ. . rnc t::~ x s, ued.it union , in)•uranc , 'ocial Sc urit Th ·n' . m . it st::ub in tltc Ti.m · O[Jic a 11d ends in th Tabula t­ing · I) -p<lrLIIJcnt wh •re il m:.H.Itine punches Ottr a l1 ' 1· t. ic p:tttcln ~,-\'ltidt o11 ly it ca n d e~i ph cr. , \1 I put togvt hn , it\ ~• ··big- pa) ofJ" Jux hun h· ds of 'J (.; · ;t '> J)j yj~ i lH l Clt;.tll') JiOll'i. 17 • I I l l l t \ i I i I . J OFFICERS and directol'S o£ lhe Ka­J ional Paperbo rd . s.~ iati n ar • h '' n as rheY toured the .arolina Divi~ion dming tl1t>ir lhree-da con· 'emiou at the GrO\ e !'ark lnn . . ~hevi lle. In addi Liou t the m 11 ~ho'm here i1t tl e Finishing R oom, mher aS£ociati n members mad the t ur- a total of 75 . A COOLING IDEA on a hot day in Texas \I'Ould be a swim in the Champion Recreation Grounds pool. . Here Champion youngsters beat the beat dul"ing the " Old Timers" pic­nic ~~·hich was held in May for the 15-year g:roup. LIBRARIANS [rom a delegation oE the Special Libr aries Association's Science and Technology Division vi ited Cham­pion duri ng an international com·ention in Cincinnati. They are showo here in the Genera! Research 1ibrary, whose 18 staff hosted the group on their tour of the Ohio Divi ion. They are Mrs. Lisa Otto, Champion Librarian David Weiser, Mr . Fred Battell , Miss AJison Finne­more, Mrs. Glady Blose, Mi s Helen Tattershal.l and 1iss Corienne Casper. LES TINCHER of Ohio Divi \ m ' age Ad­m in.,i.stration recently won a one-semester sch lax· sh.ip from the Uuivers it ' of Cit1cin na ti Evening College. L s was one o( four .E:inance tuden ts who \"~re cb.oren for the honor on the basis of their ou tstancli1lg s Llolastic record . , ' ,. • - ;. ,. • ... .. --- - • • ,. - . , .. ' ·. ; • ,,.. ' Pictorially presenting Champion and Champions in everyday happenings in and around · th€ milL A BRO. ZE "JOSH£ . ,"' tbe Match Jndu try Jh[ormation Bur a.u'. ··o ,car, .. was rece ntly awarrled to Champion for having made Lh m ~t ·'d i 't in_guished use of match bO< k acll'er ti i;Jg" atrwno- pulp and paper manufactmer during I%:3. The p laque was received br As. istant Sa les Manager Dana Pratt, right, at '' Han:Uiton Chamber of Commerce luncheon. Hob King, left, of the Chamber, prese tl the award a £1 a \'v.chr. a sL~taot advertising manager, and Ri lt a1d W l'th , ex w iv-c of the Uni ver~a l Match Corpora­tion, look on. THE FIRST T ROPHY of the young softball. season was copped by the Texas Div.i sion Champion Knights last month a they tbo.k the pre-season tournament o.f the Pa adena lRdllStriai League with fo ur straight wins. Ge11e Rhea, Knigb t left fielder, &bows the trophy to Jackie Gantt, left, and ' ell Seubrough, Time Office . • • "THE LONGEST BOOM I can ever remember edng here at the Texas Di vision ," is the way Construction Supervisor Claude Pace described ~he giant boom shown h ere. The boom was used to set new tacks on the Recovery Unit last month. It towered nearly as high as the Digester Bl'lilding which measmes eight Storie . 19 • • IE Yl '\ \. tbe \ lill ( 1 i t'. mnul>er~ ol Lhc T, -.;,t, ...;,lft't ( <'llltni t · . tt'\.. ~Ltl t :1 t t~urou~ [\11 hotll mill l•'Ur. ftom leiL to n<>ht .ue j;~d, llattlt. '\ eil \ 1c­kintW\. \fn \ irgil la'''oll .1nd \do l j b 11rr>tk. • • ~JE.'\IllLRS OF THE C0\1\HTTEE chat wit h Harry Chal'f c, <lii-,e~ter col k, a" ih"-·) proceed lhrc.ng·h the 1'11lp Mill. '' \'e it iJpc I\' 'n: helpi11g 111 tn<~k c people saf ·t ) nHI'dnll s 11 ' J ill lour~," ~. ,, U<utl . ' • 1 T HE> OLD SCA.l!FO Lot NG under the ram1) to the Hle11dino n Tanks shou lei be removed . . . . "The hole in the wooden floor aroun l the \ah c at the northwest corner of Av\7:7 vVasher should be eliminated .. :· \1\Tords front the de:k oi .top management at 'lw.mpion', Tex·1s D i ision? The co nld be, l ut they 're not. They arc, instea.do tips [rmn Cham pions th em elves, ·i ven Lhroug-h t1 cit­safety committee. T he e particular words ·omc from the Te ·as Sa [et y Com­mittee's inspection group, which touT · the ntire mill in earch of safety ha7.ard . Each month three member accomr <.HI )' Chairman Jack Battle on the long task. I though th"y bear no particular mark. of idcnti Cicatinn, Champion workers know who the conunitt men are and whaL their purpo c i as th e ' insp ct railings and t:1in~· a ys, talk with upervisJr ', and d1e k on wktt h·~ b n clone abonr pr :vi.o u.· recomm. -·ndJ tion:;. La ·t ntonth Comn1itt ' .hairma n Hatll · took with hi Ill me11tbet·s Adolph Brock., ' cit t l.cKinn y :111 l 1\lrs. Virg- il Lavv­VIll. Altlt\ lU!!;lt lt t Jld th 11 1 ·wltat Ln look for , tit· tri1>. tyc~ had . barpcned to11s ideruhly IJ · lhe tim · the r r;h'ltcd til ' tnidw;,t, poinr o l lhc lour. You lan Jnlluw the n lltltnitll'C tn1 Lltis pi< to1 ial sa l'e t · tour 1)1 lh mill :t \ they tn:tk (' lilt Jour h< u r jm1ruc·y Their . e'> • <ne up ·11 c·d Jor -;;d'ety. c \ \1\111 Ill. \ll .. I HI R \I tH. I' II 1\f OCK ltv ks 1ltc hont •Ill th,· )Hill\ ol l'lllp l!it rl;.cr . \ ll~t•d Httnkt t. C.n>~ p 'nlli n t\ lt t•nt f •lln\' till plo\('l' h IItle ot lht· ~t'\1101(' ' of a '>llllC Itt! lWi l. - ' \: ·,, . .\ \ ll~I'L\C£1J GRl.LLL is noted 1,, ~ h ai lltl:t ll J <H. Hatrlc witl1 ~be h lJ (J( .'\dolph J3rock. A ch 1.:. during lhc inspection t•J'tll' tJf N · .. \R ' I HF • 'ART of the tour. ll<~ttl c ami \lei' illll(' \ ' L;.~k e- the " high toad" i11Lo tl1c Cro11ndwood \! i ll. chccki1 1g' a ll po:-,si iJIC sa[c ty lmLard point s ~-d f eLy work. Tl 1cir ll i<Jrou ~ ll!l css in p1o1'CS 1 h eir alc1 tness in .\T THF. SlTE o ( one ol' I\J53's aui · de11L ~ . rn ·n1l> .rs o l' the committee rc­Yiew Lhe incid ent with Ca l e nd e r Operator r. I-l. Mauney. The accident, 1 a lthough not too serious, in vo lved lcl'l 'f time, a nd bore further inves tiga tion . • ' til • fr,!Jowing HLUIItl.l will tdl wh ·thcr or n•H ill ~!: n:t'(lll)ll lCn<lati(lll\ f li!f' CCJllllll j [lee aJ C lJ j Jl g' f<liJOW<'d, CONTINUED ON f\1£")(1 PAG 21 emo . S -.. fety F · rst ,,,,. I lJ l n . , " ·- l frnm the \ m•tl R r•om to 't ;~ !i ;. \1,1 thr dnps ('('tl "C\o t >. mt ml}I:'J nf th \%,' tn ._:-._ mme uard 1alb ami bdl j!tl.uJ-. Z2 thr t• p of the lhAl tcr grottp p.i\1 <;(; along the CHAT vVlTH . ! ' PERVJ ORS along the l' \ ar pa rt of the pro{,rtaru for 1he in spe~.:tion comrn itte Here Ba ttle ta lks 111ith Grou nd' ood . UjJe t dsnr Bob Hagerman. I - A REFRESHI:'--!G BREAK i:; taken bv rhe wm­mittee as ~h ey pause fur a cold drink a nrl talk over tbe territorr they've co~er~d 'K> L.'l r. T hc:ry 'II 1 report back to th 18-member safety commitrce 'f with a two- or th re ·page report.. I I P 1~ ER :\L-L ' LT. T 'RISC Ka>- ·con,:icler d among the roost illpO-.rtaJll cb ~ during .tl~o :ea,r_ t nsrru.ctor J ohnn · Bull , technical ach is.,1r in J'aper · nd B urd ~J anufacrurio , and Jlill Goobbv. f~J I l11Jn in Paper .\tan u faetn ri ·p , are coni­men4 d {or liLi r w yl( l y Di l'i inll ,\J a1 ~ag r H . . H kler. Ending a vocationa l training year, 171 Carolina Champions earn T AKJ G n -ANTAGE of the opportunity to in­crease their knowledcre of their jobs and to better qualify rhen1selves for advancement which may lie ahead 171 Carolina Champion enthusiastically participated in the Carolina Divi-ion's extensive Lraining program dming the pa t · ear-. Fi e Gf thee Champions were awarded three diiJerent certificate each, during a dinner meeting at Camp Hope, _ Ma 26. T ·wen t -six Champions earned two certif icates apiece, and the remainder drew Qne _certificate each. The trainin program thi year, while not a record· breaker in orne t€ pect , wa labeled entirely sTIH::cessful b those in charge and by those participating. Graduation xerci es fm: these certificate winners were featured by a specia1 message from H. A. Helder, vice-president and Carolina Divisiot1 manager, who paid r;pecial tribute to the e Charnpions whso are anxious to m rease their overall knowledge of ('_..hampion's vast operations. Helder per onaUy delivered the certificates. - I - -· \ om as Don Randolph, supervisor ot training;· presided at the dinner roeeth1g and lauded the effons and the wholehearted cooperation of the train ing instructors. .Johnny Barnes, assis tant industria 1 relations manager, referred to the training program this year as "most suc­cessf< Jl," highly comm.ending all those· associated with the program_. Champions erving as instructors during the past year were J. B. Soesbee, Echv-ard Furness, Ramon De­ShazoJ Jolln Stephens, James Stutts Ralph Roger , George Edgerton, R. H. Mehaffey; Gerald Hilt Joe King, Johnny Bull, Bill Goolsby, Hoyt· Langford, Gud­ger Palmer, Paul Warner and Elmer Keener -plus many supervisors who took part . in the "Forest To Finished Product" sessions. The Caroljna Division anticipates an even more extensive training pxogram next year, and present indi­cations point to an increasing participation in the variou courses. RECE l Vl !\G T HRE.J!: . cc rtific;;~t . th 'Se f or ::~ro lin a .halllpio n: a(e b6t),g- cc~ng t·ar- ula 1 ed b) H. A. He ld r. F1 \In left to l'ighE: B ill \Nin f:i l J. R e h e r c ·'M.i<.;k •y'' J t•lS· ti..;c, T3 l rrw-dg . F1erd1 er, na~id A.;;IJ. ;m GI H. :\ , Helch·. Phil ThransQn . ~b. e. nt , a l.so rt~ c i'ed th r~e c n ifi cat c . . 23 I I l ' • j ' • ' A Thousand HCooks" Completed On a Fridav . afternoon la te in Ma y, H;erbert T . . . Randall, vi e-pr idem and di rector of R esearch and En-ineerin? ·, op e ned the valve wl~ ch " blew" the mini(:}ture dio· tcr in the laboratof)' of the ·Gen eral Research 0 Departm w t. ln celebration ol: the eve nt, aJ l oJ: the Pulp R.esearch gn1up, other members o [ the Res·ar cb De partment, and President Reuben B. R ob ertson , .J r . we re m atte])dance. Thi~ was no ordi11ary blow; it ma.rked the completion of the one thou saJl.dth experinuem al cook in th labora­tory d ige!> t,ers since they w re ir1. tallecl in 194-9. At tl. c Cq.rol ina a:nd T exa. p ulp m ills> cli ge.~ te r blows are n umbered by the do1cns each day . One thou and might n<J"t 'be -an impoxum t figu re i:.r'l su ch a l~r ge opera­tion . Jn R ·search, bcn, rever, each pulp cook 1s followed b care fu l tes t ing· and an~d ysb w se J1mv a similar Ill J.(; f <\ :\1 \ 'I T l ORI.i lr.l Cham pit JIJ \ l"t' JC lw n~d "> I ( '(h t lf( ~ll fn gJiiW<.'I Ho t :\ or<lerll :l l .· left , ~ l l lll r. J·,dl\:lld .r n,q.p, :b I l~IIJ I d in; wr of Rc~><· a t dr. '1 h ey arl' \V ~ti<<: r I h~Hil mc· n :111 4! :Rt~ l wrl. Fa1 :~ r( ol P 11p t er i r·~ d l'' o ll.l do \'\'alii I (' , 11 '-I I AJ r · · I~. 21: "" ' • .... • I ~~ I HERB R ANDALL o pens r·hc va.h c for the tbousancllh hlow of the R es arcb digesLe r. Shc lh:~ .Rank· of lh R ~eatd t 1Julp gro up srand.., :t t rig h t. THE OCCAS I01 · ·w :,. marked by LAc ~c t'"V i ng ul ice ae;11n. c~l,.c and coUee Lo which a ll t:n ern bers of the Ce ner<il R e;.e:atch lJ partmcnt we re in vited. i\tfar y Skilln1 an. righ L, helps serve the gr up. 6pcratwn would work in the g 1an t digc:m:rs at th cJi visio ns. T he one tho-u andrh. blow on the R esearch d igester r epresent«:d co u.ntless man-hou r in th e study o£ pulping. bleaching, chemica .! ~ nd pbysi:cal testing. Ca reful] y studying the pulping and bleaching variables, the P ulp Research group has performed a vita l . ervice in h elpin o· to improve Champion's pulps. ·Among the substantial contribu tion wh ich the Re­search s ~aff and the small digesters have made to Cham- .pion are the irnproving o f hardwood emi-chemical pulp. · A tribute to the one thousan d th b lo·w w uld n o t be complete, however, withmrt a h ·t of tho ·e m mber ,· < f the Re e<frch staff who make such pio;neering in pulp possible. They are Pbalti Lawrenc , i\lfal L ·a rt, Ma1-y Skilln1an, Ellis Parrnelller, Corn lius B tten , Arh y G il­laspie, Art Salisbury, A lben Kind, E lwood Ebie. Bob Green Morgau Ro binson Ton1 Butle-r , Jim D i 1.cr­sche id, Claren ·e Par Jey and Shell y B:wks. Belgians Visit Champion .l;clgian j rHlu stri :tli sL':i, vV.alt.l'f Tht:>nHll cn and, l~n l I'"L Fa vart we re amo.ng di;.tiug ui ·;h ·tl g u<.:~ r · a t Cbampwn Jrt Hamilton dut ill g- htl J\4ay. ThL y o nfe rrLxl ·wi th orn­pany ·,·ec"r.ti vcs in reg·an_l to ·I h t~ d v ·.lo prn en t nt Cb<tnl-pitm' ' roa ttng proce~ses 1.n lklg!L1rn. · . _. T e hn.ical J~ 11 g-ln · ~ 1.· Ho 1: 1 o:rc.l<:olan. and l'. £(h \' ·1rd K11app, a'ls i.slatn dir c ~m ol C e nera .l R.es~: a r ' h . :s~rve I_ ~t s IJ fh't':i 10 the Y~ ~ ito rs . Mr. T li<Jilllnen i a cll cntr i'f wrth Pap teri<·-> d Pom du \ a.rch c, nenr Hru;-;scl ', whi.l · t\fr. Fav:otrt is 1 h techni c~tl director Lor Llw Belgjan fin r-1 :.\S w ·11 <t> tor twu a lditi.()Jnj 1'"'-per nt a Jwl"adllring: cntH' n1~ in tha t < mJntr '. ' , 'Jr. Knapp ~ p e 1H nm sid ' r:-tblc time i1:1 _ l1 e l~iurn ~~ n<l ot h ·r foreign a re;rs Jarc h M }'L-<tl', rc 1~ r se nturg Cham.pl< n .in a )l\ rdy of pap r waking- operatio ns, • • • • • BORfl\' .\ . D IHLLY JOH:\, 0~ arc the g•·anrbons o f Bill Be lls, "heeL .\Ictal Depart111ent. ::JtHl I ine I oking Ia Is they a r , too. flobb,· "as in t tc -..e.cond gr;adc o[ ,cllool t hi. ' car, H'hile Bill\ Jtlen<kd l.:indcro-ancn. What's Next? Knot less Pines! ];y (;eUP,!{' \ff'/11('1' Hnc j.., good nn\·) to paper maker~: the knotlc'>~ pine j, pro111i-ul in the future . . \ . 1 rce" cannot li, c 1,·id1out brand1e to bea1 the lea\(: ~ 11l rongll wlliclt they breath, lOJe ... tel could ll()t do an) thing a bout the knots. But lltn\ a prole ... ~nr (nme::. up with an idea that ,,·ill yie ld knotJe,.., lo~> mon than CJO Lcet long. CtnHc:ntioJ a! pnuJ<:P, o f pine. and other everor ·ens J t th · \OU11f4 uc·e KW W tc1 a con.,iderable h eight be fore J•nmiJJg Then the low< r b ranch es are Jopp e<l nU, whi h I ·a\e a l<athei-du~tcl top t() dcv lop to full size. But hy doin~ this the b<lies of the )t,W l>ranche sta · irnb clded in the heart of the u ce, to b c:com • troub le'>o n, c: kno t.. The n \' Ill •thod allow- th . you n~ tree to d e \ elop a IJmhy g1cJ \lh ncar tl1e gJottnd until a bou t eigh t yca J'> old. 'J he ceuua l Je;:uleJ in t.h c you ng tre • i'> pr ., ' tlt ·d frotn pmducing a11) wor IJ ra nch ·., b ~ pinching u ll -,idc.,h' Jill'>. 1 he kadc1 g-1 tl\ ~ i1 1to a long, -, ll·rtdn pole (w, IH!pt ·). IJJc·athing through lht.: ndf or IH antb ,~ t1 ·ar til t: ~ touud . \1U.:l it h<t'> g1rJ\Il w abuut ~() kJtuLk~'> f ·c t i1 j, allo'-v<·d lo IJJ·tmh quL PajJ r 111a C1., wil l !J le<.tdillg tl1e Iii" ol R i I c' . • H~s Feet Say No, But His liver Says Go fu '>pitt. 'IJ bi~ 11) a 1ad ..,fllll(' ~Par..,, Bob .\Jc ftll · tl •,anital•ou .... till pa1 lHIJWLh a nrl c·nj(l )., the '' ·tk l) ltne· dtJI\ ll'> rlw '''i j ~J Jl1" l· linv ~ ,.., " · ll ' liP lot ' t< r· 1Hk ('-, ,.., ,..., \Jl ·r a ~lli..'JHUII I d ;1_ a "!ti le IJ..H , g ob ')ig lt C'd a td ~aid tcJ j.niH.., Fo In: " \'1,' 11 · h.l\ ing · 11 llindi;.:, II1JJig l11 , lw t I d<JII i. now 'dlclhl•J I'm going or lllll , .\I ) hL ;nt .,:n. ~ '(- I HJ t Ill JcN -.u' n >." ~ . . J :.tllln Ft, v. lt·t , ' ·lw I t J<> h'> ;tlHJtll Hflll\ lo\'(• l r11 I HI li t t 111i1J..., <t~ k. ((l J, ,1, \ itJt a ~ l'IIJ. "\' h011 d(JI':, ~()llf' li\ ('J' ""' ~,. l~uiJ H' jJl ied, " lJ 1 lhrCJt to 111y ]i,t: Llw11 I go.' ·r he win Sam J on '!, (ltc m,,,.j,H ·rl hi!) wif · tlwt a wo1u an lo 1ks sto tlt in a f11 r coat) of the "itorcruom OJJ i · · a s: " , \ulOlllOIJiJ ' ~ arc ;cd,ll o-. a ll stee l. The ouly tbi ~t g wood 11 j . th . head or til . average cl r i V('!." Sam, dues that lll Cttll that II'C ·h nu ld i i'Car g lo ves wl1c11 we !>( r a t( !1 nur h ea d..~ ? * * * ,, Lo <.>l ' Chri ') titH ' .lon s o[ th · El ·nricaJ 1>C' p<•nut<.:nl OJlic r ush\'d to Sa ni tat ion Hm ~ Ray Lin 11's tl ·sk dur ~ ing Lh , hot da s and Oll lpla incd : '· \ <: h a\(~ M1 Jllall fli es, wlwn •r111 kill. onc 11 •> come a lnng a 11d carr; ltin, o iT Pl '<J .'C do som t l1ing almul it ." Before Jcaving Chri:-ti n ' ~n id , " How mncl t ktppicr ll'c a ll would be if Noa h h ad .~ l ·ppcd on the maJc Jly be fore it Jdt th · <Ilk." ~r:: -:;. * iX,: Beca us · 0 11 of Otto R eicJ's r ·latiV(''i on Lll (' Reid side was kill cl in a div on Lh • Lower East Sid ·. he in sj ~ t s 0 11 L 11 i ng everybody that Lh t H.eid ~ are y;ond • ~\ ' llllln n. ~,·.· \Vc arL: not trying to com r ete w ith Riple y, bu t jus t 10 ]Ji:l:. 0 11 an unbe lieva ble a ccompLishme nt ; we report he re what w · .~aw while watching a wincle1 111an unload his pockc:ts at quiui11g 1.ime . H e took Ot tf .one then11o" bottle, pocket kni[e, k ey ·, tm> pencil s, <;tcnc il brmlt, cigarew:s. li g hter , spoon, .' C:l sc rews, . et <;ere'"' wrench. scrap e r, mon y. comb, g lo ve~ , <tnd a wal lc.:t. .\nd hc had o nl y two poe ke ts. THESE CUTE little lass ie aa Lhe d a ughters o( J a u d I' u lkl'll, , lo. 2 .R '' i nd r . . Pegg-y J a ne i' (i , ami Do11 n::1 Sue i:; x vcn~ old . Th '\ 1 csi Ll a t 127 J • '\'ch tcr i\ ,. n11e. T H \ I ·s R 1(, 111 - \ 'o11 't t: -;cci n~ doubl e' ' l lt e\c; hu ~J...~ t1' in are • .J c n a 1 1 d ·r c 1 1 ~· • I -rca; · (II d r1c pltcws <JI .Joe \linton , lnspc • tiou Depa rtme n t. 'J hey ate the soil> o f: Denz il ~ li nlon, (otmerh o[ C \1 C(Jatcr and Reel • • 1111· <.0\ .\ ' C fiiLDRI· '\ a1c ii H~ son a!lll d.ltl gb tn of Cl~ll:'ll!l' C'< lll': tll , C\1 La ll'nd t·t ,. (:.,,11 1ic i-; !l 'Cat~ o ld .!lid ge uin ~ 111 I><' qui lt. ;t ll at tt <J(Ii"· " rung- lath .. \11 -pt ulC:d up 11i1l1 ll'l t ::wd lit''.'. liv 1 · i{OI!ll it•. 7. \11\' o f lti ' f t H'llt!l. 11· ifl t ·\ llJ\1 lh 'il h .·, ";tlJ bO\. I j j ' Oltio ALBERT RlL • , ~ . Fillishin<>. and Roy Hollister, aptain of !he l\fill Police look ov r the I . t it ll'ls in RoY·s "coll ection" Alben rec ntly £ und ~- 0 in front of a canteen ancl sea:rched \lntU he found •th owner of Lhe money, in order tc;~ return it. What Did You lose? B) Derve; linton Kin~, duke or president- such ti tles! H ow much more noble ju t to be a friend of man: to make it a little ea ier to do right than to do ·wrong to smooth the rough road to ucce and character, competence and manline. s. Mo t of man's memories are records of his mediocre efforts to be a better citizen and a more admirable human being. Hone t is a trait of character which demands respect from everyone. Honesty in the discharge of our fellowman. Temptations make character, and what could be more tempting than finding a large sum of money? What would we do if ~ve should find a pocketbook con­taining ."203? Many thoughts may run through our mind. \1\Te r.ould take a vaca tion, we could pay some bills or we could buy present f0l· our fam iJy . . We could apply the · aying, "Finders keepers, losers weepers;" but we could also apply the Golden Rule, that we have h eard so much and practiced so little, "Do unto other· as ve would have them do unto you." ' A Billfold Returns t"O its Owner Such an. incident happened recently when one of our reliable mill policemen was walkiHg through the parking lot. He found a billfold whieh had been run over by several cars. The billfold contained · 2'03. 'We know not what thought ran through this mill policeman's mind, but surely he mu t have r member d 1 bat ''hone~ty is th best poli y." Tills money was turn cl j,r;, to Roy Holli~ t'r, captain of Mill Jl>oli c and ke · per 0f t.ll lost and l.ouncl de panrn . ent. To prov "' rh · efficiency o.f this departro nt, the f)'WtlCr o£ th . 203 w~to notified b fore he rea.Hz ·d th · rnon Y. bad been lo t. l;his ctrtainly prov that a "fri nd of man' ' is a more nul.1Je tit'lc than king, duke or presi.d nt. ]bert Riley who works in Lhe 1 o. ~ . inishing n.tly found ' 3'0.00 il'l front Q[ a ant '('f1. Aft··r q~.:1 estioning .s v raJ peopl 11 [ und tb<~ own ' r, ~a1d tl nwn y wa-s r tnrncd to her. Thes , are but a f '' · of th man in id n t con­< ~ming lost and. found a t•ti I · that l1apJ en cw•r I da at Cl1atll pion. Tb ·. ·i ncid nt make 115 (€el p1 uLtd that we ar · working with hon t p op1 , who b~tli -ve in tQ fact lltat i'll-gon.cn gaint. profit non . 26 ·vid ·nee of th · hon t of Cll::Jillpion emplu s ·an h ~ ·en in th .lo t and fuund d •pa tment. ~, hi t p• rt ment, which i. in 1h < · p~bl lwi'H.i· of :)o HoW ter. \·Vho ha11 hccn with Ch mpio1 2:1 y ars, re eiH:s everal unid<" arh ve~::k frrm.1 hone t 'ha npions who find th .m. 1os( of the;e arti !e arc k y, arring, po t koiv altd ci~:;a ~ ne li J"]H es. ,aptain HnlliM r a ys, "ln the 1 1 t £ 1r · "ms · t 1 a:'t eight wat he and ~ oo i11 a&h ha v ' bc·n LL(rned in all lo ( iecms nd return d to the w1 c s via th lo t and found d ·part n ·nt. T it . more ,.~ iuabk item are a.d verti!ied i.n HIPS, I ut a( r 30 da s if th y ar undaim d, they re te· turned to th find er. At pr s nt there ate ev ~ral hundred keys. which include automobile keys, honse keys, padlo k keys, dog ollar l<e 1 an 1 a k y to a depo it box in one of t:he local banks. Ther are severod earrings of cllf[erent .,.izes, hap s a nd color, tie clasp , 5- l - and J 5-year ·ervice pins, , everal good pocket knives, billfolds a!Jd cigarette lighters, some rings and one pa kage of chewing tobacco. The oddest item that ha ever been turned in is a small hatpin. This item, which may em worthle s to the finder, may be very valuable to the owner. This hatpin could be a gift from a loved one, which the owner deems priceless for sentimental reason . Captain Hollister, being in a position to know ay , "In my opinion, you will never find a .more bone t group of employees than those who work at Champion.·· Henry Clay once said, "I wotd.d rather be right than be president" but we at Champion say, "I would rather be honest than be president." OPE HOUSE at the Ohio Di· vi ion had the .member· o£ er­vice Secti.0n workinrr overtitne and then soroe. Here ttist Bill Fowler ptHS the finishing to uches on a . i"'n whi 1 rankd o ur the 1 heme , " Hi r ighbot'." B.ill painrcd a nd si. lk -scr >neGL hun­d Pds 1f signs and po i' r (ol' th vent. I' TERRY WILSO, , age 7 year., an.d Sally J o, just I year old, are tbe clri ldren oE :\1ar<Tie \ il.on C~if orting a n.d i\Iarvin WiLon, Machine Coat. Gilbert \'/ are, No. 2 Roll Stoxage, is a errand­father to the 'oung ter , and Mario.n \ Vare, · 'lachine Rooll!l, is ·a,, ~mcle. h ampion$ first aw Sal!}' J o in "Portrait ol' a Pop" ·which appear d in the June, 1953 LOG. B ONDlE :\LDWtL.L, ervic Se tion. ' . ks with the ph to· en,larg .r for th •·IJiow-ups" or pllOtO· IIlllr, I ~ tl'l< t Wt:C y_ d. in th rJi.s1 lays ;1t Thow. on J•ark. A rw1 dark l'HO!ll in the Accivi­ti ~.-:~ B11 ild l11g help d Blomdie t cornp1el ' her 1 ork on s h ~dt1J e. ftcr tl1 , 0pe" l !ous , .~ h mad l!turu !I e Is ot pri '' ~ of. the pi · ture that 1 cee t:1.ken d n1·in <• fh t' L' t oc 'ed in >'\'~. Oltio Classmates of Yesteryear - 1931 By Bill Th01npson A MERlG w \ GHT m the maelstrom of a world-v.id depr -ion. ln<iustry wa paral yzed. Even hanq ion be ame slack. Howe er, Champion carried on! Luxurie w r ( rgo u en, but th food and lothing w r there for every Champion family. . ll v.ra ' not o·loom. Am rica was at peace. Family tie. became mor :, Ct re. T he American home, whi h made meri a, wa- being full , appreciated. Family circl s were makin a larg radio audienc and some gr t .radio · ho\· were the natural re ult. 'Twas the Heyday of Ed Wynn and Kate Smith Rem mber Ed ' 'Vynn' ·'Laugh Parade" featurin3 "Ooh, that Ki'," nd "You're l\·Iy Everything"? Kate ~' mith added chce1· wjth "\ Vhen the Moon Comes over the \1 untain" and ''Where th Blue of the Night Meets th o·old ( the Day.'' Tho~e fortunate en ugh to freq uent stage shows were ein .,. m "tly musical . Th 'Band ' 'Vagon" featured ucb hits a "Dancing in the Dark," "I Love Louisa" and " ·ew 'un in the k ." "The Cat and the Fiddle" intr0duced "She Didn't 'ay Yes and he Didn't a No." and "The Night was :.\'lade for Love.'' ln the pectacu lar "Earl Carroll Vani­tie " we heard "Good Tight, Sweeth eart," " It' Great to be in Lo e" and ·· · onight ot Ne er." Depre ion audience al o wexe hearing and singing "\Va that the Human Thing .To Do?" and "Now' the Time to Fall in Lov ," "I urrender, Dear," "Lo e Let­t r in the 'and," ". !l:oonlight , a ing Time" and "Smile, Darn)a. , mile-" Movies alleviated some tension with \-tarie Dr _ ler '\·.inning the female ''Oscar" in "Min and Bat," and. L ionel Barrymore taking the a ting honor. in "A F -e SDul. '' ' 1 '>0 . l \'G FOR. LAD IJ~S were on hand w rtect d ·wh irl1 a "hi neighh ," d11ring th OJ io IJi \ t ic))l 0 en Ffpu_-c :in \f <t). ·r b(: .u1 ~a1-;•'""' " re gi 'll Lu the hv 1 e ·e · 1}, Ch;, ru ­l i<m L eft to !igltt a1 t !Uta I lm , C 1)1'1, f' • iue. ·:urie hocll •n c~n, lr 11c ar :etf , Ella £1li11g'><>U. \da . l <:\li ll an, .> cella C(Jo ·, l.CJttle ;\ lfon1, Lr orgit• \!ill ·t , Julut Cate-; a11 d Ll•ri,tin • GtiHlt. ' T he tragic news of the y .ar was the unti.m ly death of K.nut · Rockne. He wa · kill -1 in a plane cras lt in J ansas on Mar h I. Schmeling Wins the Title Max Schmeling was ··onsidered the h avywejght cham­pion. He was the first man to win a title whil' itting on the qoor. Jack' Sharkey fouled ~i m in the fourth round wtth a Iow punch. At that um a foul meant defeat for the guilty- no t just the loss o£ the round as of today. · Asiat ics were active as now. Japan cJjsarmed China and overran Manchuria. Many grad of '31 cast tl1e·ir lot with Champion. Hamilton High School endowed us wi th Woodrow Ham­mons, Frank Hobbs, Robert Stephenson,.Edmond Storch, .James Thompson, Robert 'tVei~ er, Albert ·wiseman, Stan­ley Wynn, Duard McElravey, Ru th Fillrno and 1ar Hoel. From Indiana came Helen Estridge of Burnett High, Dorothy Lihbridge 0£ Brazil High and Joe Lace' of Short High School in Liberty. . Lafe King from "Fruit Jar High" Kentucky responded with lice Plank, lark County, ·winchester; Ted Elliott, Dry Ridge High: Ed Pri . Lewisburg High; Luther Hacker, Manche ter High and Lafe King, Berea or "Fruit Jar" Hioh. (Lafe expla in that Berea High received the nickname " Fr1>1it Jar" as the result of an argument among s hool board memb r during which one mernber broke a· Crui t jar over the head of a fellow member.) Last, but far from l ast, we have Bill Ta lor f · alem Rural High, Urban , Ohio, and B b Lwnpf f nearby Monroe High. . I 1 • 0/tio PFC. 1>0 "\ALl COR, ' I l n ... ~~~n o l . l1. a1Hl :Vft~ . Lvthrr Comt'ttt'. L' ~~ l tl >ll ('d i11 Korr:1. n o11 ''oti.ecl in ;-..o. :2 .\1 · 1hiuc Rt~O il'l h ft>r · enl ·ring ~ tr\.i te; ;111d :It (ltdiug l!l fljs Ill 0 I lH' l I) >'lrla >01'11(:'11 ", \I (II lfd lik tO hr<tr l1 ll l l his .1 ;~mpitnl lrlen L-~. Hh: addrc.~s i ': l ' k . nnuaJd L. ornrtle , l · .S.:\1 .... H : - S· J-lf . l~t. J\1<tr. m, . F.l\I.F .. ( / 'F.P .O. , S;:~ n Franci··co. .ali f. ~"You Got It, or You Aint" By OUv R eirl \-ell, " tcw, it ~eem._ a how iuri 1 Allen believes : ou ·m1ld profit by lending· an ear to the 1:cal 1\'fcCo . It --eem ' you haYe a. hankeri ng to parrot a lntle I rogue that ain't ri btfullY v urn. and I stands to relat that < < mountain brogue is the hardest language on earth to master. You either .g._,· o t it. or Y. ou aint- it's an instin ct. frn from the Cumberlancls o f Kentucky, but \'OLL kaint • r hardly tellit. Kt)W, take Joe Dimaggo: He wuz learned how to r un the ba es, how ro field, and what base w throw to. But them battuw e)·e and to table Ja~>-t Tetlexes · wuz a g·ift \:") ., • tl of his maker -I mean the" air instinct- akin to hancll:in' mv la.not,.1-av-e. ' I 0 u Age ha took a toll on Joe's ability to h andle a fast ball, but he' till a ,~· hiz- bang fer a judge o( curves. · (1 peak with re,·erence which is acute.) Why, feller, his marriage to manelous Marilyn i · the most talked ahout affair ince General lke found a smothered G .O.P. (snowed under by the democrats), a11d Qrclered 1t to aTise, take up it's lead, and talk . The Futldre of the "Monroe'' Doctrine In my neck o' the 'roods, only a hundred-dollar-mare coulda s-tirred up as much intere ·t as Monroe. Betcha, that future generations will think that the Monroe Doctrine ·wuz a mighty puny blonde. I wuz airnin' to fetch you up to tawk on things that ha . happened- which should be eas - com;iclerin' th;u ·you allus seem to be trailin ' the pack - kinda like a three-legged houucl in a fox :race. Reckon you should know that the ~>4 th All -Ohio­Safety Congress ha done went, ancl that a large ga ng of us Champeen wuz there. \-V ' had a steak djn:ner - at ·which I lo ne myself kinda t)YO~ld. l\int h <td so mu h to "a l ' in e the l a ~ t h()!;·ki11iug I wuz :11. lown at grandpappy'.·. fL wu:z. a cauti0n to wa tch. me eat. Ona L ·e LO)e t )t tr mag1 ian F. a jah Keppkt-, to watch L.h.aL " n0v you s • it, now you dvn' t." Tr)ok a po. itinn -with Lh t taTJJ · ttbout , i ' il'lch~ · f1om my belly, and r ct till th y uruched. 'Th head Will itn: -,~ f(.: tJ,:hed m · a hak ·d tate dHH weigl1c l. nigh on to half a poun.d and a lit ll · dab ol real ro\v-butter i (J m ·It on tire ~ptHI. Th ·re 1'117 jtr->l barely eno.ug-h. of tl1at butte r so's J'd kn )W \: h ar it. Wll/. Hut, it had ahnm rh ... arn~ e lfc 1. on -!h:11 tau·r as one 'lftt>rt flea on <t hound. - just co rtl clo 't 1< ·11 llo dil I ·re nee. J fdL rlm n-h ·an •d., aud rnll d 111 pleading- c 't'~ • t th · ·waitrcs:s, like a di s<,usted .mul , th al i I> ipg turne t down the row (i11 Lh 'ppo:·it c diru.1 ion of the knn) w lt c~ u J1e ktli1ws duru wdl it i\ q11iHil1' l.i!m·. l told JH::r t.lt.aL W LJL the first co 1-bu tt r l had tet>.<t ·d iJJ years, .an l thanked her [ ·t rdre ~ h in g· 111 ' t.llC.lltt )ry a ~ 28 to it~ ta~t c. 1 fold ln that oJ ·o wuz aH I ·()u ld - tf.ord. Ever tl !Jult'l d ead -panJH.:d U1 · npin iou that l hr.Hida sa"' n:mpQn~ to h able w clo ... c: tbe d at 1t·r C\l'h ol·o. That g; l ll coclcd th end ot our tab l · wit.lt Lhem li de <{ltare. n( mw-lwttel. lik · a.n addled goose slF<ldiog fcatheJ at tcr til · cow q · p ~ on Iter. Th ' g<d i 11 th sl<ll rh d w hit g.itigham se~ ,'·" ho ~­do l J ike n1y ~ teak , and l say'<: " DHJUto, fete h me on<:: and 1'11 ~; hor~ tell y >u." "She Wuz Sizin' Me Up" She looked m an ~tnd t il n sofH:r. J could 6 e slu: wu7 si.t:i n' 111c up. Pati ·rnty she rnu ttrs "rare or clone." C u ·s.~ she thott ht I migl• t ea t it raw, ~o J o;hows nw p: tLie n · ·: "Shore, 1 want 1t cooked - Thmw on a coupl~ o{ n w fore ti cks." r tried o ne o l: them 1 ares onct, and J had to rhas it J 00 yard . o's I could pj n hint clown the f. cond time with n:J.y fork. She wuz giving me the sid e-sb(rw-once-over, <~nd think­ing that she h ad a la&t ·e ·n a feudist from the Batfic ld­M Coy cl ·n . (Sh e wuz wron.g, cause 'f was never fired at but once. The clurnb-ox ne ver had a han e - 1 heard it coming- and aint b en back to see who mi~sed). L e t her worry .about our sorry habit of kick ing oH a man now and then witJl a rille. l t js a rotten way to li ve. But, h oly smoke! It aint a clrop-in-th e-b11cke t to the 200,000 men, vvomen , and pore little children th ttt get gmuod up on h er fancy l1ighways each year. And en·n my s traight-shooting people don't commit u u rder with any more intent than her speeder. 'Bout then, 1 ganderecl at a h aH-et .-wiss steak some­body was leaving, and, T couldn't stand it airy bit more. I says to the waitress, say l: "If I only had a piece of (')'iled-paper l'd tote tllat air hunk o' meat home fer my 14 year-old youngtm to look at. H e aint never seed any­thing like that beioJ·e, 'Cour-se I'd let him admire it. and then I'd let n y wi fe eat it. She'd like a steak., a .nd he hein' much younger, mont still li\·e tong ·rwugh to ge t hisself one. An ho\v, he's go t the odd irt his l ~tvor. " · You know something? That gal had a heart as big as the Salvation Army- only hope she . till ha a job. 'Cause she brung us an extry platter of hoL buns J:er -that cow-butter. ' 1Valter J ohnson and Larry Shelter took fu ll ad antage o( everything I wrangled to eat. lt aim no vvonder they air two of the big.ge, t varruint · in our company. \1\Thy, pon-my-honor, tbem guys i.s lJigger than some of Chal'npion.' competitor . Did I Set You Rite? 'Sides wanting to set you r it abom my old- La shion.ed English, (whi ch same I delen.d ·t being a plumb-, ite lo ·er to what our pappts' [e tched O\·er on the !\'fay­flower than this ''hep- at' ' lingo o t.rr yo ungster::; are mo uthing over tl'l tel •phone to each ot he r) . l had an exp ri nee ·\'ith the migration l'el l 1' at C inci nn;t t i ·which co.n,,i.nccd m ' tlutl som bed r is ta1k irtg wr011g in this count·r>' - 1111d ir ai11t uw ! M . da ughter-in -law i ~ <t l iLt le J ~'\1 i I gi rl , bortt in T J.:H i\', braci. B ' in t; a lurriner . .sh ll arl 10 tro thcr ' fer a barrd of red-tape. r '''CiH a long .. ·\tter we talked aw hil-· w tit · erni t">ratim t k:Uc r he frown d at o ur lawy •,r tnld said: "Of uours ~ I an roll r her 1 urt ' we.ll - slJ .. ~ he ·n in th i. c Hl.llf l' • six mo t1 thii. hu~ l ·1 mand 1111 int rru pter whil e J qu e.~ tinn rh i. · H..J · id ~ ftftr.n· 1 sf1: I! i jJtt','!J fid rt." I ~:t il: ' '1 10\V lotlk here. son my Lnnbly To un-tlcd R. ·idsvi ll l', '\!.C .. hut, if you iu:..i t ' on u~t n g th · nt air j ~t wl! n•:tkrr '\'Or ls '\'(' n eel two of 1h m fel l er~: n1c tn li.~ l t: ll ' t.' f) l h LT t I } b i I!:' lIt a.L s II dT d () \' n 1. () \' 0 n ls l) r 1U v s .i I . " • l wt rl hot und r Lb c. n)Bar ns a lumcssed ho, s in Jt11 )', :.rn l I tn l<t hlm. oO.: in U4t: ·outhcrn hol-llmt d ' palav .r. He emed to follow me fer awhile, but a I g t madd r and lo I' to rny mother-tongue thi giver­men t man did lik all official ·; he p;;tssed the buck. aid t m l w er ; ''Yore job o[ g trio ' hirn natural­ized i gc nna be ' onh of 'Ore hire, e"ell i( he pays vou louble. Two t one, h e's a diarnond n th uff.'' ' I r eckon that' one rea on I like so many kinds of . Americ n · - begorrah. w hav 'em all jn m fambl y. , nd, I'm mor than pas, ing pr ud [ this daughter-in­law. Wh ', n , I'm proud .r than grandpappy wuz of his registered bull. Y u know - the one he y k d up and pl wed Jike a . te r- just to Jearn him sorn o' the tough fact of life- jut want" d tO . how him that life war'nt all love and romance, ·wanted to go t int with our LOG gann, but had promi. cd n T opmiller to go tO the safer congre s. l'm ity-brok nough to go to either, but 1 ain 't no Gabriel - can't ·tand with one foot on the ea of Colum.­bu-, t'oth r on the land of Cincinnati and keep tootJn my one bazoo double. How Happy Can a Hog Get? U Champeen grunted a contented as a hog- snatch­ing hi · back on a rail 1 nc ·. 'We wuz happy and proud ' hen the feller who eerned to be guiding- the h ebang­introduced our Ken Faist a · "The Old Pro" of Ohio Safety. I ' uz glad to ee him get reccwnition, and to . ee him ri e above the eli grace of hiring me twice, and fai ling to tire 111e either time. Ken come closer than any man 'cept Lazaru.s of being riz from the dead. I love him, ·cau e he done for me what my own folks would have kicked over th a traces at the thought oL he sujJ-pm- u·d rne twice! · ·wen rew, s.ince 1 planned to write on m)' fJrlde in Charnpeen safety) and aint ''Tit any, I'll lrap you one jewel about it. lf a man steer clear of feminine en­tanglements for 365 clays on any given leap-year, and then get manjed on the 366th _day- well brother, he too ha had a bad accident. I know- J been marri ed 28 y ar come Tovernber. \'hich only goe to pro e Lhat it aint safe to practice :Safet part o the time. W goua bristle like a spittin' . omcat at every danger sign, if we want to li ve . out one Jif:e. Rem mber, the tomcat has nine and the way he act, he don't take no chance with any of hisen. · 'Course I appreciate how :.mootl our safety pro­gram run . It's a credit to our managemeJl.t, to Art r pmm r, Ken fai~ t, and eyery bloomin' soul ·on the job. And, the b est ir human endeavor comes from that kind of coopera Lio n - not from bulldozing law · of Thou Shalt, and h u 'halt Not. "'My Folks Got RLch Making MQol'l" R emember pr Jhib.ition? Well, .som.e o£ my folk. g-ot . r ich making moon, and a lo.t of y01·e folk bought the stu£ (n t that they want. d it, uut it was against th law, and against their pri11eipl . to b hormwuggl cl by rule . . ) That'· th onl,' tim · in hi tory when it was a ·y lo " :ke pup \vith th ' J one 'S." 'o many of th em toJk th jak '- Jaig that nw'>t p opk co1.1ld ke p up with th ' rn . 1ow, let thi be a lesson to you . You ~ Li k to yore Texas drawl, and fll tick to my language "alHl ncv 1 t he t \ ajn l <.lJ m ct." E c ·pt, I'll rne t you on a de ·rt rue day for a bra,gging-bcc. ] her · ~hall be no ·p __ ta tors - for not ev n a lm wg-rif1 _ ,~-rhrld kil I [ opl ·· d acler tl1an a buJ1 -ses~1 on ot tat ·' gl ry hy a f cr ­tut;; kian and <1 Texan. ...-... • • - THEY DON'T h<tve a tiy trouble getting chubby Cbarle. Richard Lnbber to eat, judging from his pi tu re . " Ricky" is the lU­month- old SOJJ of J ean Lubbers, CM Sorting. "A PRETTY GIRL is like a melody"-yes, with parkling eyes Julia Ann McDaniel strikes a pose for U1e cameraman. She i the 3-year-ol<l daugllter of Jo e­phine McDal)iel, No. 2 Sorting . ' MiCH. t: R. LA IB, a~-:c 12, i ~ tl.1 . $<'>11 ol 'fl •dlll:I L;~ntb , C!YI Swrtlng-. 1ikc i ~ :t sixth gra le pupil <lt l'i.Cl Cl' ;ic lll)fJl - ~u1cl a im ·ky i:u •c' at that. Ro . !let•. C •lOt Room , L( ·~m ;tn l r\ li en , CM C;tlt-nrl •Js, ;md . ' ()liiUlll. LHrnb, Nc 1 Macbiuc· Row11, 'll'c till the IJG~y' un les. Oltio "THEY'RE i\ IJGHTV .tJTE at tb at age," i · a po1 u lar state­! 1len t. .1' rqof is J 1:1 this pi turc of Hrcnda Duty. daughter of Rirl·tatd Dot y, CM Cutt · rs. and gta ntldaught r o( John Uot , M 'hit pi11g. John Dot , Jr.. and JnJ1n Conye rs are undes. JEANNE Tl CH ER is migbty fond and proud of h er niece. u san J a kson , 18- month -old daughter of G e n eva Jack o n , formerly of: i\f Sorting. By tbe look of this picture Su•an seems to he a happy; chi lei . H ND 0!\l £ \' ?-\ , :'\L\.t1 with a wi nning . mile is Don ld V a n . Forsy th e, ag · fi. H e is the son of Don Fors\ t be, N l. 2 , lilt Beaters. :mel lVfinni For­ ·' tl\ , C f Sortin g·. 29 ' ' l • I I Oltio 13 '" R Y C<~n.l3. ~o n of ( hio . 1 id'i1•11 t lrte, 1 ud n t \' ' I .ohb, 1\t>Cnt. to lx ft ll<'" ing hi father· foot. teps in jou,r ni! l i~ t i(' eod~a \ or. l uny\ . ( twl •t ic n~ t·­Oid al ll ~ntmet· H iAh . 'wul '[ l u~ hi, tra ·nuTirulu a I i vi t i s ' 'Oll hifll a sdlUlnr~hi p to i\1ia n1i l. nh .L i tY . \ hl~l'' he pl:tllS t 1 1 ud}· jot~ruali m. We Honor Father and Son B1• tan Te1.oki1·k ' :Manv [aitMul readers f the \ es Cobb olumn have nv doui)t ·canned thi · i su . f The LOG to no avail. ·we. went n a three-week ·a a tion in Jun and begged off hi corre·pondent d utie for Jul '· 'o ·e re taking thi · opportunity to "sneak" in a tribu te to a memb r of \ Ve. ' family, and to \ 1\Tes himself for that matter. Ko lit tle fanfare i due a correspondm'lt vdw ha more ·ears of LOG writing under his belt than any of u on the reo·ular · taff. Barry Receives a Scholar.ship ' The mo. t important thing in V\Tes' life right' now-and little ,,\'Onder - is the honor that has been bestowed upon his n, Barr _. \t\Tes' readers are familiar with _many of Barry's antic -hi. "ne'iv" used car, his best girl, the number of telephone calls he gets.- via the "Fam.ily I)or traits" section of hi dad's column each month . But late in -fay, Barry reached a status that set him . above the run-of-the-milt hairbrained teen-ager forever. A J NE GRADUATE f:rotn t.he Oxford, Ohi.o, High Sd1 ol is Ray Christoph L He is the SOl · o [ Vemon Chri ·toph l. o. 25 Coater, and .n p hew o f Ti o b Queutin, G!\1 hni. bing, 1.u~d Su (tUJ n tin , C:\1 'o r!.in g. 30 . \N HO'\fOR •. I' DJ.. ' l' wh o gtadqac ·11 fmm Ftit fi •lli Hi ~h Sc:h•cJo1 iu fnn , lo\ 11' T <>r.i Cnr· ' oan i ~ riH' rl aoglll vt of \ f r. ·rll(f Mrs. · ra11k , urr; 11 Han ilron . She i · fl1. g~<M dda u•• hl t>r fJf Fd ,':> inglcr,lo and l•.d • rlJf\ IJCl\, ho1 h w£ l h e Sic;u tl Pl a n t. D111'i also ~t' t :1 n·rurd nf att ' 11£1 i ng bt i r· Held to1' II e<n~ willuJLH HJi ~ , si.I g a di.l) o( . cbooL H gt'tduat d fr m l hu\O· H igh S- ·h () alJd rec ·i-ved • lis:ti ll et hn ' · 4i ami ni' ·sity aw(lnJ d l im th Hani, SdtoJar ·hip "in recogn.itioa of ' t fl ottt: nd.ing : hula tic r cord.'' In l1is fou r yea r~ a t H an JVCJr, B· rry cMabHshed an Lmusu ll ,· lin :r · met n )t only in g~a<le, t ut in hi patrid v ti o i11 ariQ tl~ ~d wnJ acti' i ti · ·. He I as b ·en ·Jetted pr idcnt of th· ::.tud •o t body for h Ia t three ca . , cr iug as pn·<i ident f hi .~ 1 ior lass for this p.ast e r . . llatT ha~ a l · J . l1ovvn tal nt in ttl', field of jo 1rnali. 1n, <JU1t:e n.a tura.lly so. He ha been p JrL" litor oa the H(l:noveT H raid Ior three yea s and i · ediw of Lht s niors' /J'I1'nzutl. For the la~ t three y a s, he has I een a pa Him ffi >rnber o£ the Harni lton j aw·ncd New.y ·L<tf{ c w·ring county athletic vents f ot tha : daily 11ews1 aper. Wins Honors for Journalism At the beginning of his senior year, lte to k. indi­vidua l ho-nors at the Miami Valley H igh chool Jrmrna t­i ~ Association Clinic, in whi h 35 schools · ornpcted. H1s was named the be ·t sports sw y, and he r ecei ved honorable menlion for his olumn, " The Eagle's 1\.Test." Active jn Hanover's sports prograrn, Barry wa · a member of the varsi ty baseball ·and croc'ls w un try teams and captained the va1·sity basketball squad d ur in,. his last two years in school. Now Barry's plan include enrollment u n der h i newly-won scholarship at Miami nex t September. He will ente1· a study o£ pre-journalism cour es. . Wes, a 19~year Champion who work in the Ca t Coat Department, modestly says: "He's accompli h eel more in four ye?,rs of high school than I would have if they had let me go for eight years!" VVell, we disagree with that. The honor that o-o to Bany Cobb could not have been accompli J1ecl ·withom a lot of wise guidance. And after reading yards of Cobb copy, we can't help 'but feel tl1at \'\Tes wa ve-r · capable of rearirJcg a properly bent twig. GLEND R,\ J:o: \V ILSOr i~· 11.1..: ·h, q11ing d ~IUJ.riHOl' of h. M1d M rs . .J.mJ ' \Vil llf,P, 199" ])j-ldf'! Hig!n nt. S h · .~ s tiJo• g:rant:l· da 11g ln e o Mr . 1o a . l , r • liot' d , :wd :r nt cc~ of Hub· r l Co !l ~ 's, C f T1 imm T .. JOANNE RYAN, da ~rghter ot ] a n1 RYan of the Ohio Color Room, graduated from t lle Cin­cinn: Hi J en·ish Hospital' Sch oo l or NtLr-ing 011 fay 13. ~ra cl ­ll~ lt · ( ~ t.h 1951 cia' of , o tre D:lro ~ 1-Ii."'h , clwol ] oann.c i­a lso rJ1•e ni ce of Ru · el R ·an 'alen l •T . ';.VEARING FULL REGALIA, 25 of the no.ore than 40 members of Lhe Canmn Chapter of De\lfolay are shown here in the lo<;lge h all­The n e~v chapter wa sponsored by th.e Canton Masonic Lodge , 'o. 3 6. Masons Sponsor De Molays Spon ored by t.he Pigeon River hsonic Lodge No. 38·6, a DeMolay unit ha been organized in Canton which in clude many sons of Carolina Champions. T he De.l\-folay movement was started in 1919> in Kansas City, ivfo ., by Frank S. Land. Sjnce that time n.1Dre than 11;2 million young men have passed through th portal · of DeMolay and kt).elt at its altar. The en tire owani.zation of tbe order is unified and governed by a group of outstanding Masons known as the Grand Coundl of the Order of DeMoJay . . DeMoJay i . p on ored 'by recogn ized Masonic bodies, b ut i t .i~ not affi li a ted with the Masonic institution and doe n ot promise member~hip in the Fraternity . . DeMolay b as for i ts major purpose the tea hing of dean and uprigh t 1i. ing l)y in ul.ca ting and practicing tbe vir t ues of com rade hip, re •en:n e, 16\?·e of par- nt ·, patriotism , ·ourteryr, clean'line. s and fidelity. T he Can on DeMoJay unit J!JOL only includ s the so i1s of many 'aTollna Champions, I ut the ha pter advi. s~n- , Howard M Wrt,. and another arlvi 'or, Jaeck S ·roggs, ar Carolina Champion l'tnployee . Jn the accompanying p.i ture, th (olJowing D ~ 1olay members ar shown : frout rt>w, l -ft t right are BilJy Pace, J ack \ orlcy, Ikuce McKinni h, G ·org Hud~ on , ha.rJts Gaddi~ . Coble 1\JcCra(k n, Max Shepbexd and H (lWanl .Mo.f.filt, cha pt:er ~kd isM· s ~ concl Tm , Virgi I I vcy, afh isor, 'Llri t phe Bramlett, Ton1 Bo011e, Dickey Schulm.an , Ralph \Vorley, Br uv AJ · ~m~oler, BntC;"C Sma thcr:, aJ1d 1 eat 1·-Kinni h , cJuq Ler u·ea ur r; ba ·k row, Clar rnc.e n't'lrrdl, cha;pL<.;.r cri iJ I Charle ' etx.er, \!VilLi am 1lcEintth, David Hayn es, twrl s Rl." tor, Jarn -. Side ·, Earl \lilli;un. , Doug1as KeH), R.ohu)d Oshomc, RichanJ HoJland, Asltl t=r Neal, .Jack . 'c.rogg-s, advi r.;r, Morris .lkoyl ~ and Darrell Ha·wkins. ,/ CHARTER MEJ\tfllERS of th Champion YfviCA-sponsored Gra-Y Boys' Club are shown here wit! J ack Justi ce, left foreground, assi ·rant secrewry r [ the Champjon Y, who organized the club everal years ag·o. Justice had the club members out. for dinner in May . Since m a n . of them gradua ted [rom Canton High this spring, it may be some time befoxe they 1u:e together again. Left to r ight, Ju tice, George Price, Germ n " Nazi" Miller, Jimmy H emphill, Bill Cod y, Jimmy Sides, Bol by William on, Ch arlie Carpenter, Bobby Je·nkins, Hngh Powell, Jim Swafford, Don Boon and T om Bool'! e. T HEY DON'T FORGET - Carolina Ch ampion '· Cafeteria . taff memben are qui te thou ghtful wh en 011e of th em is confined t.o h.i.s home by illness. Harold McDaniel , center, 1va. visited dtu·ing .his recent il.loess by Clyde Bam le tt, l eft, Cafeteria manager, ar d Carroll Smath.eP , assis~a nt maoager. \Vha t's more, Harold is ho ld ­ing a bask..e t of f n,1it that C;;tJelerla personnel ~ent along to br ighten h.is days as a shut-in . li:NJ\>YkG C.h ei Gr ·t IO!)k • t t\1 C\ 1wlila'1 Oivj. i u ar Obio Cllanl.p:ion. J\ l <ng-. u:~l (l.J'ld !bert fkckbam, I ft. 'iargaret, a '!.8- t~u Ctt. mpirm. "nrl Alt n. a '.!.7 ) , r ~-:ha1np.ion , wo1.k. i11 th Cpati.n~; fill Offi ; 111 d b ' . oabi::f ~''" Mill 0l'pmLl,nt:llL Tcsp ti el ·. ·rh ra nt iou .din IJ,1c " L:wd of tlw Sky" l:Jt in 11a . \ ith them arc: Rnbl'rt l\:Jid g11e. Scltulihci ~~d th"i.r !;(HI " '1d d <lll .. hre r, Te ·ry ~111d J oyt.t:, also Ql' H ~nni l ttJII )~ob rf. ~ 'O rks f<w Ulack -Ci aw'm\ U1 r ·, 111 k L of (.;a !loli ml. humpi:on's o. 13 and JiJ Paper M· chin · . . 3.1 • ' J 0 ·c H. 1 '\fO. · · fe:uuted th aft Pt< n cnlextainm, nt s StOll. Jtea: . me f the gi..rls ing an dd lll.lm ber. .Left to t i.gh t, ! tent Cogburn, CoH cu aldwin •. ·\.lice Hall nd 1 ·an . Wells. - WE.-\ R..D-IG BlG .!\fiLE , Employees· Store Dc:partmen t beads ·were cauf!ht by tile LOG camera as they awai ted £or the even ing meal aL Camp Hope. Left to right, front row ; Ray P1·essley, Glenn Frad,·, Lo:!Je Snyder an·d George M. Trostel, Carolina Champion's mill ffi4,nager and chain:nan .of the lJoanl of direeto rs oE Employees' Store; back row, Karl F. ·weuz, p resident, Lee Camp bell and H oward HemphilL Fred Peden, store manager, was absent becau se of il lness. 1 KY A.' INGLETO ~ , 13 months old, is lhe attractive d· ughter of Mr. and Mr . .Bru e Singleton. Her ~-,ran(l11Jot h r i rvr a.!> I SJ ugl ·ton, a Carol ina Fj n­is. hin'g D par 111er1t employee. 32 • T II L C R J 0 M .S hD-ill.\' i~ i rr d<·c4 P" ltd ul Juv RtnM·, 4 rn.:'Hll lr '>, :md \I •II liJe) sllo n4d lw. Jl<•J dad, N n1 ru4n. j, a 111 ' lll iH' r <)I C:ll'l d i 11.a 1 ;11. JH }J lou\ Crd ,,.. t~.: 1. ia , ,.a f f. T HE MAJOR DOOR PR IZ£, an expensive writ watch. i p.r; ·­~ ' rlled to Bill Lnve, left. by H<:H\:'a rd Hempb i !1. ma ~ tcr of cerernonie . Th · bingo priz • · a l. o we e wor th winning. Store Stages Biggest Party . V\ hen valuable bingo p rize , an o utstanding dour pn z.e, plus a personal gift. and a dele tabl meal run the total above the 500 bu k mark . .. that's a real party. And when less than ~ o persons are involved jn the ente r~ ainmen t fea tu re . . . that makes it even a higg r occaswn. For som.e reason or another, personnel f the Cham­pion Employees' Store decided tO· go "all out" thi ~ su m­mer and stage the biggest party they'd ever attempted. And they did! It may have been that tl ey had suspected that their president, Karl F. Wenz, in charge of Carolina Cham­pion's Tax and Insuran ce Department, might retire from active service before another year roll around. Bingo prizes were exceptional and the were many. T he door prize, wpn by Bill Love, wa · an out tanding watch. They also presented Wenz ·with some handsome lNggage because. they deeply appreciated his leader hip and counsel down through ·the year .. " :--JN fHHl ." )t }'~ Ju l i a A1'11 ( i(-•okc to 11 11; ,- ,m ·-r:.lman d ntill !:'; th is em · '' ,itting." 11h \l G•tn 111 h­old Julia 1J.::J s lt ' t lc)(ll;. ILk ~ he ' ~ rc:t llv 111ad • L a11 vbotl ·. Sll • .is • file daught er o f 1r . nd 1rs. ,\lt li ~ l'Pol;:e, J r., of Ca nt or . JT, .,. J.."l:rmLltl iz> w. n. ' 1'111 n.tgi-11 <.1f t 11 · C:.~ , ol i I'"; a J'll lp 1\·1 i II. DA1 lEL MITH. n of Jim S.ru.i tlt, a 35-year Carolina ham ­pion, i now t't t.ion d with the Na\ .' in Bremerton, a.slL Young .Smitl . ' t"lter d I he Na' ' 1 ~ t r ­tobeJ · 12. a nd c mpl t .d h.is basi , tra iniug- in Sau Di o, ·~ lif. • lODER.: ' EQUIP1\1EI T aid Le. r r L. mathers. a 22- ear Caroli 11 ;1 ham pion, 11 his . mall f::tllll in Lhe 1~h ickc tv . ·ction. near C, nt n. ma!..hcr i. pic­f. u reel mowin~ , n,·o-a re ITact of ;1 lfalfa with hie, Farmn ll trac­tor. Hi~ rop of h ' this <.:ar l<>0k the h ' I" f01: ~ vera l .~e:a~o n s. He .'[ ccts to geL at lea. t four (" ll Lti n.g . Haynes- Haynie Pitch Camp They've been pitchi.n' camp each •ear on ru~ged Ca ttaloo h ee .. _ and thi urnm er '"as no exception. ,V. . " ent" Havn s and Gladson Haynie. both repre enting; Carolina Champion's R. M. and C. Depart­m nt, plan theiJ· annual jaunts to trou t-infe ted Catta­loochee at lea t a , ear ahead ... in order that every detail wiJI be e.-x:actl rig-ht. . nd ach year, after they',,e caught enough to supply the d emand of hungTy appetites, they invite a £ew close f ri end over to have a trout dinner. h eir encampment thi ear la cked nothing. Every-thing wa in piace and th whole program clicked right up to the minute. E n the rainbows hit well and they experi<'n ced little difficult in nagging their limits. Yes, th e . 're already planning n ext year 's outing! vV. . Hayne-, Jr., Book Mill Manufacturinp;, and "Stump·' Riggin , of the Paint Crew, augmented the regular encampment thi year. "Haywood County Day" Observed Many Carolina Champion vi ited the Lak · Juna­lu ka d ethodi t A sern bly grou nds June 6, iNhere they participated in a non-denominational "HaY" ood Coun­ty Day" program. There was plenty of food ervcd picn ic style on the ;c emh1y ground at noon an l plenty of good hymn . nging during the afteTnoon. • ,.. * '*' 1'\eil Cody, son of Floyd Cody, of Finishing D epart­ment, atl nded the Boy tat at the University of North Carolina June .13-20. Young Cody's entran e t B.oy. State was spon ored by the Varner-Rbjn hart Am d ean Legion Po t No. 6"1 o[ Canton. Ralph vVorJey, "on ot . B. W rley, of Canton, wa the Mher youth sc1 ted for the educatior al p rog·,ram . $ * 4 ncler the d ir ction uf Bill M(1 g:m , Pulp Mill t h ­nician, lhe annl'la1 sp1·ing· ltorse sho·w, spons()rcd I r th Canton a dell· and Brjdle Club, wa a.. big suLc ""· ons UJ r, Chawpion Cr dit n.ion staff mem· b r, erwd as cr t r f the cv n t. Ent ies \-\' t rc iilh: 1 from many ()th T ridjng lub<; in \ 'e ·t ·rn 'onh C<1 olina and up\,rar ls ( 3,000 pe rso n. wnwd out to w itn . .,~ the Sabbath af ernoon affllir. Cantc n High choo l " Be'L Ci.tizem/' e-lud ed eH:ra1 s(;)ns ~u1 cl daughters 0 f • £o 1h year i11- .aro 1 ina h ;.tm-pwns. . . 1 ' h.~.: H •st iti; en award 1ndudt-s a gu J and hoy !rotrl. the e:: ighil1 Lhruuglt th twelfth ~Tades. Bill Par. ;;m t Joan Owen wer . nan ·d B<·'i l Citi ten in th g1a Juari11g das: KaLhr n od , and 1.' ·i l CDd \VCFe nam -cl in the elev nlh ; Mary Ann Moon an 1 Dale hilders were the s le ·tjons fr nn Lh t nth grade; Est lena Robin on and Wile · Carpenter [rom th ninth ; and Ann Kinl en ancl C bar1es Duke d rew· the bon rs ft(';)m the ighth. Bill Howard, R. M. and C. DeparLme nt, has (ormed a habit of nagging .. . and lan ling . .. h eavy tr ;ut reganlles of the w ath er . No soon had tl · s ason . wung pe this . pring than Bill aught several rainl.Jo1.v and. brown trout which wcr · lunkers. Bill h as a sys ter:n o[ hts own .. . and hts stem produc s results. Carpenter Chosen Hi~ Y Prexy \1\Tik , Carpenter, sophomore at Canton H i and_ th son of Fred Carpenter, Carolina Clwmpwn O ld -:r:1mer employed in the P1;1l p Mill,_ has ? en _c hosen pre~udcnt o( th newly orgalllzed Jun. tor Ht-Y Club. The club, of ourse, functions under the guiding • wing of Ch_arnp_ion YMCA_~ ith Jack Jn ·6ce, a · 1tant secretary, du·ectmg the poltoe . . . Elected vice-president of th · new umt wa· Kermit Hyatt. Richard Willjamson wa_ · chosen · ec~etary, and Charles Gaddis, trea urer. DavJd Hayn es w tll be pro-gram chairman. . · · The lub membersh1p represent youngsters who were selected on their scho1a tic and general leadership abilities. The new club was formed by members of the eni >r I-Ii-Y Club with Kermit Duckett, Charlje Carpenter, Bnly Pace, Don Boone and Bobby \ .Yi1l\amson taking the leadino· organizati.ona l role. A BRIEF R EST is taken by Her· ·man GiliL , ri ght, and "'i•\T. C. "Bill" Earle)', both Old Timers, <lS they are i ri the mid t of mmv­in! r ttie lawn . Earlev, a Board ~ I ' Mill emplo ~ ee, ba been WJth Cllampion since 1922, while Gil­lis, \loocl )' i1 rd eng·ineer, was em­ployed .i.n 19 17. • H \1'1'\' COlll'l f. J.';nd and K lHhc ·.J inc R.tll ' arc pi( til ted IJ (!r • folliJWill g' tlk ir \'c·dtli11g .'\ p ril 1). \J 1 .. Ral•y i lh <' fol · .1111 K:, l h eti. IH' Pl u llllll O II ~. \ Vc·; t l•c Vi l!r·, . nd i ~ L"llijJlq c.l ~' ' O'l.f ~ t ary to (.(•o rge:- \ 1f. J'HJ I I, Jflill lll ;l n :<).\et . l',tcd , nl ploy •d in til · Fnq•l<ll e '8" ,' tot <', ; , th , n 11!' U1f" Rc, , \I. H . lta h1 , , R ll'illlil' l l'ot>nl . J\{1 S LOL FORD, d:wgluer o( .J es:c Ford, a arol ina . ham· 1 ion, :md S I Sgt. 1 .fa. Y, rbot·­Ott g·IJ 1\"Cr married a t th ln r11e )( Lh brid •, pa rent · ,vlnr ·h . 0. ergea nr Yarborough h ·ts re-turn ·d to h is h''' at eaLtle. [I--IF,£. ''OC\ ; 'i 1 fR ' at the g ;.~ nu ons o( 0 . 1.. math r, , of th Jc .R. PI nt. The>' ;nc . Uk •, : . and Kcdn. ' months, th ~ous of Jr. and \Irs r. rl ~· m. the1 s. The ent>r ti beL J.t" also the grand· n' f ..eo e Berron Cha 11piull ld Timer in t.h Trans( r D ·pt. an ttracted To Ramp Feast Bv R on e nr~ . .1.Uoni . ttracted, n cL ubt. bv the ~m·ee t e. t ar ma in the ' w rld -the smcll of ·amp l oking - scores of Cham-pion Finishers attended the Ramp Convention at Camp Ho pe. · he weather '":as perfe t and the ramp eaters and politician. were out in full force. The fam:ilie- ~md friend . of a large number of Finish­in employees were en during "Open Hou e.» We're glad that the · came anc,l hope the ' enjoyed it as much a ,,-e en joyed haYing them. · , Roy .Brown and Arthur Scragg · attended the North Carolina Fire College and Drill School which was held in Charlotte, N. C., the firs t week in May. Both are · members of the Champion Fire Department. " Pop"' Gool by, "Big-un' Trull, Harley Stiles and l\1ark Herren spent part of tl1 eir vacation trying to out­wit the bas at Hiwassee Lake. "Pop" took the prize ·with a 6-lb. "Bugle-Mouth". everal cards have been received from Mr. and Mrs. Charles Hawkins, who are now spending their vacation in California. ·with tb.e experience Charles has had in photography, he should have some interesting pictures of their trip. They are expected to return to Canton on June 15. Grace Snyder, assistant sorter forelady, spent her vacation isiting relati es at Spruce Pine, N. C. Ruth ' Tilliams t·eported a nice time in Richmond, Va. and Washington on a two-w k vacation. ~ 1r. and Mr . Bergus Nelson announc the birth of: a son, Jerry A ll~ n . M'r . Nelson is the (ormer Mi's .Jenice P bam. B rgus haf, been a Champion ince 1946. / • \'\'£ TAK · PLE . URE in J 1esenting th two fi ~1 . hi ldr n of M . and M 1 s. Wal c r penc . ·h a rl ~~~ l-i'a rry ~~ >s • T flld , nnd Rhea Carol)1ll is 7. Tb il' dart h a~ be ll Wil h Cnroliua Ch;,jn r·i n for 17 )'ttt r ~ and has alwn )'S IJ 11 11rrive in sporls drd es, llwir lltoth~· r i. Lh form I' Kathken Rhine hart, daugh ter of H<"nnall llhiHchan of the .RoU Wrappin$" crew. 34· All E. B. Employees Own Homes Br R r II ("{1 • • {J'/11/ rv Son1l·rm j U'tl J ·nmd .. .<cl (Ill r lt, It igh pen en tag · of hom o' lwr,LtLp awong Ill • J:. H. c'tnl dow.· · ·~. I Jpnt chc·cKing up. ' ' fi n l it to be abl>l.lf a~ ntar 100' r a. ll(J~;'>ib f '. In L tl , ti l(' on ly n<m own ·r h s. id to bt.: l•eg-n lia r i11g !1)r l1o • ut pres 'Jlt. \ 'e think rhi ~ i · J;tth . J ttmarkahlf• . .ln our hnok, home own ·r.-.h·ip is Lh barkbon · nf a l ),L nf th ' thing 'i that go to rw k<.: up our heritag , our c iti n: n~hiJ . an l 11u1· Am ·ri au way o l Ji( ·. H on1e o •n rship i<. do~" ly woven into the {ab ic of collllllunit lif . T o ·urn it up, \' lc 1 t.hat when a f lJow buys a hl ITl ' , h' has Orf.le to stay. Sorrells' Theme Song Comes True H rn r Sonells ha just dosed a cl al for the pur­chas · of lhc R ev. W. H . PI ss hum and 23 acres of Ian jn the Sta01ey Cove. This gives Homer just what he wants- pl nty of elbow room. H is theme song ba'> been and still i-;. "Don't Fence Me In." vVe knew Homer wa · lookin for a place and that he would come up with a good one. ho orrelt b y are hard to fool. • it • • Robert Davis appeared on television durin the la t month while attending the annual meetin"' of the Fire College at Charlotte. Perhaps you saw him. Robert ay he wa the guy carrying the greater pan of that big long hose up the ladder. '\1\Te can say one thing; '\i\'hate·ve:r rhe job rna , have been, Robert would surel have b en in there doing his part and more. Otis Cole checked in at the Memorial Mi ·sion H os­pital last week for a repair job. H e ays the doctor can't keep him down long, and we think he is right, knowin"' Otis the way we· do. ·what we're thinking about is that if the doctor doesn't watch, "Ote" will trade him a mule for about half his operating equipmt"nt. Marvin vVest has been a busy person la tely. H e ha­been making extensive changes in hi hou ·e in the Beaverdam area. Marvin says it is about all finished now and he can · oon sit b<tck and njoy the n ew arrangement. We'll have to check with fr. \Test on the it m f re t. Did It Improve With Age 1 Last ear Stew Jon c ~ . nt: us a bookl •t th titl of whi h was "Th ' , . P. VVri,titw Handbook." A tually, now Lhat w h ~t v ' hunted th ' thing o nt a ain, the a mmpauying: lett er l:ihow ' i l to hav . b n ~e nt out in .Jul , 1951. '1\T < nl • m edH t l let it age al· out tt ycnr before r ·alling it. How tiJllc flies! \IV' · rnu. l fire np and rea t m.1 o.f i L h ·fore ~Ill other moll th goes I·> . W c'lo no tic in his .le tt c.:r s n t wi tl• t h hool·ltt thd Sr"' adrnoni ·he" us tt) b hun ':H <•nd truthful in ur • • r P' rung· - to nut e · aggera l ur m rs-rcprcsel!l . That •nakes thiugs 111iglt y toug h . ·what d es th ruy ex1 ct? H e g i ve~ yon a jnh t·n do and lh n tak ... awa all your HHHcrials and toL}k Tbl,s l<·,lv ·s m · :.ilting in a ~I'TaJ •g . wnt Jd . Sr ~'\· nllt.'l Jtave he ~Jl r ading in the Bihl ·whete Ph.m.oah lor eel the ltilch eu ,)f lsrad tu uJakt: bri ck without sl aw. \1 'r · glad ,, t· did11 'L rca t his kt.tcr two or rhrtt )'t'a.r Jgo. \Ve'll ' t'C \ h ;H we .. n dig up nut of th i A P bookJ t n ·x l l i111c. BI~ 1' - . TOR in ''inning the Blue Ridg :lunnp1 .mhtp pro ·ed t l e harli .. arp Yllcr. out­, tan liug Bla k E aT hurler, 1 I t nted her t i ng a fc · wann-t\p p1t lw hcf re th~ g:H e wiLh Ch:uloue. rp nLer, ,. lc .ted 11 the All-St. te Hig-h .cho I ba ·eball ,quad .. en ters \J :1k. - F r ' t College thi fall on a football . holatship, CO 'FERENCE CHAMP • 14 of whom are on f arolin· hampions, are ~ hown here ju st b ·fote th y won fina l chamj)ionship game f orn Hend r,onviH . High 3 to l. L (I to right. kneeling: · It Cod y, Rol•e• t Wilso n, \Ieaver Hipps, Joe Bob \•Ve!' Lln orel;wd, J) wayne 1 filr cr, llobh '\Villi illnson, J(· lvin orgfln a nd am. Pow 11. St. ndipg: "' ach BopJ .t\11 n , h<trli ' Carp nt t'l , 'luLrles Wfst, David Amle rson , Wi ley Carp nl ·r, Je ry Rax ter, J() · Rhin ha rt, :Billy Stamey, Sm ith Ni choll s, Jack J\J.no;:, KennClh i\1 e<.~l><: and R iLhard \'\Iilli· m •n. Black Bears Repeat Victory "'we pin~ askle all pp ).·.ition, th Canton High . chool Bla( k B a:r ba. ehall ,quad tuck d anor.her Blue Ridg Conferen e :h< mpion J1ip under their youthful, hut a cnrate arm r.hi · pring for the e ond con ecuti.v Vt'ar . • Encouraaed by 1h ont tanding :mound work of harli Carpent -r, tl1e 'B ar m t defeat only once dur­ing th season . . . nd that downfall cm.ne at the hands of Hender:.ondHe High from whom the .Bears snatched th Blu . Rid Conferen ce ha.mpions"h.ip by a 3 to 1 m· rgin in th .final :-tanza, of the playing sea 'On. Continui~ their winni nn· way , the Bear downed a <>lron :1'\orth M cklenbur High S bool team 6 to 2 LO re d per into the , tate AA. High drool play oHs. After reaching the emi-final- in tbi event the B ars ,·er eliminaled b , .ray High chool, of \1\Tiwton.- aJero, tt) the: tune f 4 to . Beginners Get (In the Swim" · \' ral \H: ·k a '0 a group of et rmined C nt 1n " ·omen <.l -cided tiJ Je- n t.o wi rn. The; 7rutdt· d ·c.isio L '1 I e · '\'nul l join the . ham­pi m Y. I - pu 'Jr d wirnming cl~l t.c'> fm adult who '·couldn ' t: ~\·i 1 a Jjck." :\fan . of th · m . wow c·n \dH \ ·e · k., ago ' ·e c· r·luaant to 'en ta ·e l;l hant · j11 II · Y ptJIJl ut today '·IJaddhn, J ·ir own (aJll;l''>." \'Vh at' 1 w t the ·~ · ') l~· imwitt ~· ha ·e .'l'Ilcrat d a J ' t of ' MllJT1i.l • b~. 1nn~ . '' i th goo(t durin,"., th and \ 'all r Holum an.d P :1l R1 g·ch. \ :-.tanr d th lHJl'l - ~'' imn1t J' l<, l , hut • t•tfl Jll(·JllJ 'I\, ~un 1\ , nn th£- • ri .Jll rnHt h c1tH il c \'1 ~ . bc•'" tnninu. , nd tl ·-.t: l\~JUt< n ' 1 o\ ( lt'anwd to .. wiHt ~i ru · tha 1 tin1 ' ha\e coudn. c d fllii(•J noJt · w iJJIIJH' l '> tltal dwy tot' ' 0.111 le;ll'll u, \' l!lt. ,\. · J< · ~ul t 1.f tlJi) \,mJ·•Jf JlHHrth H col~ ll(;Odati()fl, Jon- wjnlla• i'> ,JI ' wak 'ug thvn ap­pcara 11.: t the · r·:·ulall , w r; k tht~ · a ll ilupot'tJJJ t I -;~l>lt. 'J !Jr-tt.' :1.0uth T <U ~ ~' tn Jhf' \tell\ · h'\ of tlt1 HHJ .,wimm i.JW '\". <~tll n tt(''' d h (tthcr 11 ·} •w:.dlv IIIli il tfw • · 1a1t~d W kara tu ~w rJJ l ide hy .jd in th.c \ t..tt,ol. ci r..~day i.in abuml }1( e ll gnl cUetltn -... 1 'p ,. j,.,._ • Iuo-ng Young Carpenter, the son 0f Fr 1 Carpcnler, a arn­JiJ'la Champion Pulp Wl employee, was hy far th most effective mound nan jn. the Blue Ridge Conference this season . , . and he rlrew a quick h rth on th 11-State Ba eball team, , elected by more than 20 . port writers in all sections of th · tate. Althot1gb h i consid red an on ~ tanding pitche , yo1.1ng Carpenter enters \ tVake l7ore t olle e this fall on a 4-yt:ar football scholarship. H i. a threc-1 tl r grad­w. ate of Cam on High, ha i r g starred in haseba ll, basket­haJJ ;mel on the gridiron. A lthough Carpenter, Bol:>b vVi'lliam son, .. ec md ba c­man, 'Weaver Hipp , left field er , and j' B b \ Vesrmore· land, relief pitcher, will be lo, t to th BJack B ·ar , t uad next season as a r sult of gradu tion thi · prin.g, th. Bean shonJd make "big tracks" toward anoth r ch m­pionsh i p flag nex t s a on. At lea t that's the wa1 th y'r thinkino· w lav~ the group. The njo tire ·who1esom,e p:1 tin1c 'tnd th rtjoic in the fact Lllat they ar f>a ining ::t lut o f n . a-ry el[-con rid u cc in Lhe rn antiw . Champion ).' lCA i ~ 1 r ULl ~ d the 1 r • re .. r c rded during J ccc n t we •k, with non-swimm r ~ in rhL <om­ml, lnit . And :luuupion Y hop _ th e. cl. , ... . Jo n n­s vimm r. "'ill <OlHinu<' tn g-mw ,J.s tim · r 1lh ~ 1 ng. 1\; I J\ l L ·r; I I 1.11. \ 1'001 . C r IIli i '' < m 11.. \dl · •'ltl•1 $\)in at .tft ' " " ' I , I •H • ",.~,,q .t• ' d-oin' ri~J,~ \, dJ " H(IV , tlnmk t! th· t 'h.atupi"ll \'. 1< \ d .~.·,n, f.,,. lJ '<rillll ' '' l lw l>llllt'lt '><'ill ·<1 on th • Jl•><~1 ' t·<lw· '" P wa,uswd "~ J 111na·• 111< t. tn h.l\ c .tlllllt tl ''!tile l.l't.• 1•1l lt r- an !f'.tll ll llg • HI • l LR nnan \I ill - take~ a rief \"art -up befor g me t im , Canton team also ' seeks sixth straight N. C. state title A 1 1 1::'\'CO~EH , (.em gc Tmt,yfiJJ , 1va' :pn)\ i n~ ·invu l uabl . <Jfl th nwnnd. J r. d isiQc;, Ltd hi s shot alder; h01n:M t' t<, in 11 g·am wifl't l.ow ·n­s- tc~ in 's of ITamilt! •ll i 11 tnirl ·Ttllte and ma be CJ(11 fr,r the rc 1 crf U1c" >ea nt. WEARLG 1\ \ , 'TFORM •. 111 miJt:r. ol th . Champion VMC.1\ 'lflftha ll t ~m , !tampions -of (Jrfh Laru:Jina tor tlte p ast fi.w· cons n ­tiv .. y ;'i t'S, ;lf' pictured L1 rc on i l t )'(}OJ ~ fi e ld. 36 0 T I ... LD R , tam ) , Jim Rh a am .in a huddle are nd lyd Mill r. ear p edy AT LEA T 10 outstanding soft! all team will invade Canton August 30- September 3 to seek the coveted 1len's S~:mthern R egional Softball c::hampionship. Teams from Georgia, Alabama, Florida, Tennessee, and North and South Carolina will be on hand to give local fans some of the fastest · softball in the nation. The event will again be sponsored by the Can-ton Y's Men's Club. · In the meantime, Champion YMCA, state champions of North Carolina for the past five consecutive years, are "going like a house on fire" in winning softball ga.mcs front all wmpetition. T he · tate champs had won 8 o·ame and dropped onl on.c cleci- H < R. BOBllY rUE.ASE, left, regular r ,c iver, cha ts ·with R d Ivester. ion by June 4, afler meeting ome fa t aggregations. G e rrnan " ' a zi '' , ( il ler and George Turbyfill are clrawin/ the mound assig-nment for Ch ampion thi sea o n . The outfield rema in the arne, " ith Jim Rh ea, Speedy Stamey and Clyde Miller covering the outer garden , • The receiving as ignme n t .has ·been dropped into the t-apable lap of Bobby Mea e. Around the infield, Champion Y h as B yd · llen, Geo ge Pri e, Dee Steven -on and Barney Gradman. The regular are fortified by excell n t re · rve trength . Tl:ms, hampion Y i again pre­pared (or the o uthern Regit,)n l. Ancl o ar tbe thousand of ' Oftball fans iJl ·w estern .. ort l1 Car lin . L ' '>PI:: GIFT . C . . Suttle~ , ex cutivc scctctHv of :ham pion YlllC \ . ptOudlv opeth pr scms tor the benefit of the annn.tl Pfll!:tam lead ·t~ . Left to riuht arc corg > h e). of Charlou.c·. chairman ol the l ntcnt~JLe Y\l .. \ bo.11 l ()f f!t · t11·o .aro linas; '>tHtl ''· .eorge , immon~. :1nd Tom Rcc1·c , Carol it a Champion. Y Banquet 1-lonors Suttles He ha · served .ha 11lJ ion Y J C.\ as executi ve r c-tan for 2!'1 ears . . . nd more than 200 Y members a:-:emblcJ at Ca.m1 Hope June 1, for the annual )' ban ­qw.: t "''hich paid him a \cr; pecial tribute. G. . , uulcs. 'rho ha u P"·ard or ·10 years' service in the indu trial YMCA fi lei , c::tme to hamp iou and Champion Y\f ,:\ ba k in 1929. Thi man, 'dw ha, con. tan Liy sbmvn a deep intere ·t in the youth of the nation , me lO Canton when bu. i-lll'\:"> ,,·a. not ··quite o good" as it is today. He has een the annual Champion Yl\iCA b udget row (rom a meager . 17,000 to the hand ome and ade­< Iuate fit!ure of ne3.rly ~ 110 ,000 today. Champion \" tota l HI mber hip today stands at more than 3.G:JO, the second lar e::.t in 1u stria1 member hip in the ·tate. Thi on tautly increasing Y enrollment can be attri­buted almost directly to the unti1~ inlf effort of u ttles, who ha· worked do ely with he Y and the commu nity life of this Haywood County town incc he fir t in vaded this ction. He Received Lifetime Membership In appreciation for his lo a ll and devotion down through til }Cal'>, tJH:lJlbers uf the Canton Y's 1 n·s Club pre nte l uul·:. '' itb a lile time membersh ip anl. ) ttle~ was instrumeutal in (JrganiLing thi~ act i \f~ un it nme ) ar. ag . 'hampi n Y. lCA I (Jard nt ·m l;er:. abo r memb red tltl·ir ·x cuti\·c ~tcr tar; dming- [be ban 1u et and pre- 3Cnt -<1 hilll with o,pcci, I gift'>, including a batc.h o f trav­e l •r)' chec ~ wl:ucl ddra)ed expert'·~ ol a mid-June: \action inti' Penmylvania and otlwr poiHb. C. C. "uLtle., wa:. deeply gratelu] ... aud 'i::tid so! Jl Si ging \Vaitrcs'>C'>, ;dl r11erub rr.; o l tlJ(: T<·eH· (JuL, l'tu ticming und 1 the lead •t .,ltip c,f .EiiJ<tbcllt rhotUI . n, y Ladi·-,· St'<Tetaq, did UlllC: cxc..dlelJL ~i ll ,'· ing during the program. Gemg . hey, 'iecret;,u~ -trea~urC' (II .J. B. l vc:y a1 d Cunq any, CJi CltaJ l•1 <·, < amt ltp tor th<: banquet Ln jJH.· c·nL (.7c o1ge 'ii tnlltOJl..,, Jnl( .. t taH· ) lCA .,en na1y of . ·otlh and "Olltlt Carolina, who ' ·a., tlrc JH itJ<.ipal peakc r. Both h ·y and . IJl11lHHJ' p:ud high (I iLut lo Sttllks a a 'r 1 fC and ( o mnrnrL, kadu of ouht~ntd ing JJiftil. llill) l'~H. t, who gr· rl ~at< ·d 11' 0111 Ca11tou J li gh ( lwnl J fa. t l, with "'P •rial ltOlll r~, hacJ c hall•<· o( tit<.: <I V<l tiunal Jlart of tlte p1ugra.m. ' • • _ _ ...:..Jij • SfNGlNC WAITRESS£ p lay d an imf orl<lnl musi .al role iu con · neclion with th annual Champion YM dintter m ·e ting at Camp Hope. The)' handled thr e numb rs b autiftlll y. 11 are memh ·rs of the T e ·n·Y lub. h b11Cfe t sl l meal was served by a spr ial ·orps of YMCA m rn be• ~. ROY Et\ RLEY, 8 years olJ, is the y ullgcsL of the f i1e chi ldren of Caro li na Champion Frank Earley. Hi. clad fi11tls e. tra time LO hoi I regul at pa. Lorat . in two Hav. woocl Countv. church es, in :~ dditio n to rai.ing Ro . a nd his two broth e t·~ ancl rll'o sisters who arc shown bc lo\'. D.\V[J) A.\!0 ROGI·:R EARLEY ar t '"0 f th thr e son · oC the Rc\l~ re ml Fran h. Earlq, a ,arolin::J h::unpion for ~ ? year •. D:t ·id i ~ 12 <tt Hl R.og ·t i~ 10. Although Frank ·works full-tim at h,1n1pion, h find · 1i11 tc l o minister w tl ·o H a'·'''(IOd County churches regu· bt 1\ . I lis l ll'<> dau gltl e rs, who vmpl •tc his fi1 r hilllt·en, are shm •n lwlm1. f'11 '" O:tte Zelda \ l <n , tile eld st, who is 17 ' ars o.ld , and ' ' . h , t< ki c, ll. 37 • ' • • • • T HE JOB of night Finishi ng Room fo renun went lo John i\forner shortly after h e retu rHecl to Champion from bhe ervice in 1915. ' Speaking of Supers ... By A l ice CofJeland The Ji£e at T exa Champion for John Marner, night Finishing Room fo reman, has been full and varied. A native of H amilton, Ohio, where he also graduated from high school, John started hi Champion career in 1937, working in \Vet End Contr.ol. During 1938 and 1939, he worked in Machine Coating at Hami1ton he­fore joining the Texas Divisiqn in 1940 as upstairs coaterman . Four and one-half years in the Army as an aircraft hydraulics sr cciali t interrupted John's Champion career until 1945, wllcn he came back to h is old job. Later he went to tile Inspection Department and then to his present job. John's !ipare hours now are taken ·with his 11ew home in ·ere n's Bayou Estates. He is building it himself. 'Vhcn he's not working· on his home, his hobbie., photog­raphy and cabinet making, tak up a lot of his time. Marrj d and the father of one da tght r , Joy, J hn now Jives at 510 E. Thomas in Pa 11 d c m~ . ' . HIS BIG SMILE might signify i.he llaJ•PY L>i rthd ay lir.tl , St.cw;:n Ccrlby :is enjoyi.n g, He'll be l ~ear ol :1 thi. month. Steven i~ tbc on of Jolm !l ry. uLiliti ~~ enginec::r, .r1d 11a · t JJC broLit ·r, E: regory, IJ, rmd Dne ~ i. t J', D-i· an a, 3~. • • I • . EVENTEE YE RS w!tb Champion's T exas Divi$i.on ended for C<dvin Clio , r ight, who an nounced h is retirement last month. Luty Jury, 'bakes hands with Calvin , who has been a crew leader ror nwr:c tlr au eight years. Calvin Cline Retires Calvin Clin e, who joined the T exas Division at its very start, annoll:nced his r etirement last month. A Champjon for 17 years, he b ecame the sixth Texas D.i :i­sion Champion to re tire. A native of Texas, Calvin was born i n Flatonia, where he also attended chool. Calvin later worked for the American ConsLTUction Company and the Morton C. Tuttle Company before joining Champion in 1937. Since 1946, Calvin has worked as a crew leader in the Yard Crew. H e is married and lives at 7334 Alba Street. in Houston. PR 1SE 1T D l"OS IBLE .FUTURE hampion H'ne up for a picture. 1'h are Maxine, J H, and J. M dearis· and children Jitnm.r. . and Jud ·, 7 . . J· is a millwri ht , while Ma ·ine is n for 1, d~' on the Fan Line. J nnnl)' and Judy a,tt tHl Kru ·e EJemen· t · ry hool in Pa adena. • St;;.;t,U NC GREETr, G C RDS ami tationn · brill.!{' p odrt\(j lllQIF V ro l2·yea -old Bobbie j 0 J a k ·on, d ftught.er o f u ilk ,Jack scJn , spal' .utter op mtor. Hobl~ Jo is a ·i. th grade stu ­d ent J t I' ich y cbool in Pasa­dena. HAPPY DAY in her nati\·e Hawaii m igb t be th u bfe<:'t of conversation between Beatri e Canno, right, and her Texa Dh·i ion forelady. Pat Ripp l , left. Bea, a c nYC)Ol" ~ort r, liv d on the islan l o( l' anai. F MED DlAMO D HEAD in the far backgJ· und , i part of the "back yard., for Bea tri ce Canno' parents who still lj,,e on the isl::mcl of K.anai. The pic­LUre a t. u1 per right was t::1ken look ing clo·wn fam.ed Waikiki beach . Texans from an Island Paradise By Alice Copeland Three , cars ago Beatrice Canno of the T -exas Di-<1ision orting Line and h r husban d, Joe, came to the United Sta te hom the Island of J ana i in the H a' aiian Isla nels. Kmv, the) look back to the paradise-Jik surround in gs of their form r i 'land horne, a little no talgically, perhap , but the horne of her parents. Nearby .;.vere fam ed Diamond ·Head cliff and \IVaikiki Beach. But while the beautv of the ' islands brings back many memor-till happy in their Pa ~ adena home. An ocean (or a back yard i about the \·a Bea \·vill de cribe ies, the Cannos now arc dyed-in­the- 1\'0ol Texans, avid Boston Red Sox fan s, and enthusiastic follower of middleweight box­ing champ Bobo Olsen who also hails from the islands. Although they plan a flying trip home n ext winter (their first), they're here to stay. A SPOUTll'lG HORN crea tes a rare gey er through the rush of water into p erforated rocks along the. rough coast of the island of Kanai. ·water spout. into the air more th an 50 feet. 13 G BROTHER. and UJ.1 l i'5te . rr use for a minute for tbe ca.meram::1n . Th y're Ronni •, 6, a nct Mar · Loui:- n<lerson, 4, t hildt 11 of Louis . nd ·1·son o [ th Te ' 3, Division . 1 til "' Une . . \ re. i lent f 'B'n t0\~'!1, Lou i · l. as I; en wi th ' J-campion for 1 I\ o 1 c;, r . ' ( A (. R I, T lila r lt<::.tll~ "<i ll IJO " i lh(· u ad · 111 '" k o£ 6- Jl- o.l d l'olllrn n l ltn\f'l", 1;(1[1 o l 'J t;)(J'> !Ji vi ir,n tl::fJ J·, I <• r lklt B •Jl ­nn )'. fktt~. ;, r .. ut -) ~·r (ktm pitou, i ~ a frrrf'la•l) in 11 1 · fitoi >1 i11~ Ko >m. R IG H'f SM .<\ : out of a Cb m· piou lamil ' is littl Bill . r (JtSOTI, , . Ott of <.. :1 1 Dor-MJll T('"1s Divi-;i()ll pij,dittcr, and Mal l· r ~LTl~ ~ D•J(\<Hl, roo ve \>I' 1\(J t'tcT, Dad h , he 'n wilh Chan1pi 11 f11r fll • \ ·<or.s, IIHllb r fot :1 little 0 i.'l' ._! ' ~ l. • F T RE lletty Crab! t Po - sibl y. That long, [i.owin o- blonde hair b longs to Deborah Whit · mire, 6- ear-old d::~ughter of H. len Whitmire of the T xa f>i l'i ion Label Depanmcnt. D b­orah 's alw a fancy skater keeps a E amkeel an.d tror ical fi ~b for pets. <- • 39 - 1exas U : · UEL!\N _, gR, ight, r 11 the u y~ oJ her flyJng ('_ar t ~lth a,r:o her l)f rh ' T X;l.$ Di\isiOI I r ln isbing Roo?'~ g'i rl . -h doe n ·~ mr'>S the ( H a· n ltost!"_s, I> ·c<J n ~ nwru g ar1d a f;pntly bm •ghL rh fl) tng da · trr a1 <Ytcl. }' MOu.· PERSOt' U T J CS dott ·cl the fl ·ing c cer of L c .B t ng~ hef1 lC she joib d: th · T exa!'l Division F ini~lting Rot>Jn . Here she i bJ)l~ . , :i' right, with John Har rynwn:: J r., A11JI \ iJJ s, Lo is BnlleJ antl \; 'r~ody Blanton· t Lbe end of a Tra ns-T cxa ir~ra rs fligh t. A Happy landing for lee B) Belty Bell.tn.yer ~ oner :r l ater, e, ~ery one comes to T exa:; - even · people kom K w J er ey. But it i n ' t often tha t they ha.-e an opportun ity to see large chunks of it all at nee. d_a,. after di'rv. • J That' the way i · wa , however , for Lee Lock Belan.­aer. of the Texas Di \ i ion Sorting Line, wl:;w for more han three years flew as a stewaroess foT Trans~Texas Airwav..s . . Lee, a native of a lem, N . J., where she oTaduated fcom high . chool in 1945, transplanted her elf" to Texas in 194 after attending Cen tral Bible College in Spring­field, "'1o ., for two years. She al o took correspondence training in a irline ' ork. She came to T e as when an opening appeared on the Trans-T exas s taff. "' 'fy first flight I was so nervous I announced our arrivai in Galveston when a<.: t:ually we ''~ere cir ling to land in H ouston,'' sh r ecall . She didn ' t pu1l an more such boners, but sb:e did . IARY D UNN :HJd het h,u lJ~md Jim, a f o a 'J' ' xf:l. h:lniJlhm. lu(•k over a p0rti<lll Q( her p, st ls ,,•h ic:h sl-1 h <J.~ kFp t ru l~tt lJ in lll'r llfJ111 . T he unti11i.b <I woJ k she I old$ i~ <l l):!pl'odurrio tl of fhc . pl'if eov of 'J ll • LO '· 40 see m a ny sltt.latio ns, some h umorous, ome dan ernw" ... Like tbe time he had 21 Latin rn:eri an pa ~>envcJs /') aboard, on] y one of whom could peak En Ii h and he sparingly . . . Or the time l1e a:rri veel in B.ro-wnwill.e onl to find the ground cover ed with wa ter and the nly e-xi t from the plane via baggage truck . . During one flight, L e was thrown again r the ceiling o£ the plane and th en to the floor when the pl ane hit a suddert air poc~et. Pa engcrs then did an ab( nt face · a.nd h elped 11er to her-sea t. There ·were . other. narrow e cape:, too. such. as the time the vJane's lancli11g gear ·wa ha nging by a mere tJ~.reacl and would rtot ha,·e tak en, a nother landinq. L ee saw a fe·w celebrities ciur inf" her thr ee · ear . with the airline . Among them. Robert Cumming , John. Barr more. Jr.> ancl Chill \l\1ill . Now married and tl:te morher of one daugh t r. Deborah, Lee li\les with h T husband . Martin. ::. t 56 0 Nightingale in B ou ·ton. Sh e 's bG ·n a T xa :bat 1pion sino.; F bruary, 1953. Mary· Dunn - .. Pastel Artist little o cr [i \'t car<; ago J\ lar Dun11. f ex'l'> Dh i· '> tO ll Soning- Litle', decided . h •\1 1ik. • to d:u · 111 ·tltinv.; wirh It ·r ;1rti sti<. t-!hiliJ . N<Yw, •~t the i,: lld ol tllrtl time~, ~ lw hn:> pl'O\' l ' ll , lJCt nuly ro he-r -e lf 1n1t 1l) a hn~r \~ r Cl1 111pinn h i(·u b , th ~tl l1e·r tuknt!l sh 11L<t not lrav' gon \Ill 11 0 1 in ·d. Prt-;Lt: l::. art l1>ll( iu h;Lik a.nll th ~ n gentl · rubbed inr o the 1 ~q wr. 'l:lr ' h:ts nov('r don ~ dit or '"":Hl'r 'olc'1-r \ " I liud pa ~ t eh at'L' the hest for .;nnJ OOJl t who i: workin ~· awl t·an 111ll In .it iu tlwir ~par{' vinw," -. b ~;e ad\i· '"· .S II · ll a~ d(lz.cns of t"' i< rul 'l'~ tn pnl\'<.; her p•>i nt. 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