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The Log Vol. 4 No. 10
Item
Item’s are ‘child’ level descriptions to ‘parent’ objects, (e.g. one page of a whole book).
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THE LOG employer will also be able to A Monthly Journal of News and judge by the kind of service Information, Published by and for the rendered IK this trying hour, who is the profitable employee, and mark the slacker as undesirable. WHICH ARE Y Employees of The Champion Fibre Co. and Devoted to Your Interest and Mine Correspondence solicited from each and every employee who desires to work for the welfare of all. Let the 'Relief' Do Your Loan- dry Work Leave your bundle at the Lunch Room office, as tC will not make collections from ..ther points. This is for the convenience of all workers but don'i brteg/bmfo uxukmgs, Sign all communication: full name, address drop in anv suggestion boj tributionswill be accepted Hv SUBSCRIPTION RATES V Copy 0c -:- Per Annum $0.00 s Invariably in Advance i Another Axe-Accident work s lum- tr the anting -.d i • Think This Over iv f ,h "Can you say truthfully that SowJ-*s you always do things just the The ,*8y you wouid do them if you s,ve" nn >wned the whole works?" (tactioni The above quotation was found and Rat n the desk in a certain office sponsibi ere at the plant. departtr Read it over carefully and wnte hl oughtfully before you answer. Sorr The time has come in the life this nation when the controll- ng thought of every life must the thought of self-sacrifice. Secretary McAdoo is quoted as saying? "It is as serious to the r untry for an employee to be a acker in his work as it is to be a slacker in the army.'' The man or woman who i i employed in any line of industry —factory, mine, mill or store, is virtually helping America win the war. We must realize that upon the ■ uited effort of the entire citizenship rests the successful outcome of democracy. In this supreme hour of trial, the patriotic employee will have a good opportunity to prove his loyalty to employer as well as to the government, for the employee in every line of industry "who halts the forward movement of the national aim, is a slacker." We must work as never before—we must sacritice as never before, in order that we win. Every man should remember that upon his effort de pendt a part of the success of the war. The welfare of the nation rests upon the employee as well as the soldier at the front, and he or she is duty bound to give the best poaefola service to employer in this rno- THE PAPER ON WHICH THIS ISSUE OF THE I Q HE s again i fr< The Sherlock Holmes of The Log has ing to fix the blame for this trouble and has made the following .It- During the reign of former Traffic Managers Grunert, Henderson the Sulphite never suffered a shut down from this cause, and the re- ity rests upon the broad shoulders of "Huge" Mease, of this "terrific" »nt. We warn him that if he does no better in the future we will n up in The Log. Someone asked us the other .lay where "Billy" Battison now gets his coal. We don't know his source of present supply, but during the extreme cold weather a few weeks ago, he adopted a most ingenius scheme. When the plumbing was frozen in the houses of his neighbors, "Billy" invited them all to come to his house for water. He was out of coal at the time, and any- neighbor bringing a bucket of coal could get a bucket of water without paying the water tax No wonder he likes Canadian winters. Day men should do all in their power to put things in order so that the night foremen can go through the night without "break-downs" and delays. Night time repairs are always expensive and the poor night foreman experiences many a handicap unknown to the day man. One instance was recently brought to our attention. A break-down occurred in the Wood Room on the night of the 11th and Foreman Trantham proceeded to phone for Ed Self, the mechanic. He tried the Time Office, Generator Room and Extract phones, but couldn't get "central" and it was necessary to dispatch a messenger to the up-town office to get her on the line. Then she couldn't get Mr. Self, so the repair was held up until a caller could be sent to his home. We know that ma'-i.ii.eiy will Ln-ak, that even phones will get out of order, that it is war time, and that our repair men are as loyal a bunch of fellows as you can find. It is in their behalf (for they don't like these night jobs any better than we <i<>) thai we say: Oo the fixin', so far as is humanly possible, during the day. While he was in the hi.sj.it a representative of The L called and had a chat with hi learned that he is five year3 i as a Champion employee a during this period has been the "First Aid" room for tre; ment only once before this tin the injury being a cut fingi which did not disable him. The conversation drifted ir war talk, and we found that U Haynes, though only thirty-fo years of age, was for nine yea in Uncle Sam's service, havii enlisted when eighteen. He h been in both the Coast Artille and Infantry and has seen sor of Uncle Sam's poss Fort Sumpter, Fteemont, D troit, San Francisco and Can Bumpus, one of the Phillipii Island Camps, eight hundr. miles south of Manila, were ; visited. While it. the far La- he spent a day at I'ekin. Chin The old offic< iing has been disn intled and all busi and two in Narkask ., .bean. He $ was once static ned at Hismark. North Dakota, and vividly rerol- 8 lects a one bundle. and t\vent\ { mil., hike thnunl the Had 1 Lands, \ suron on - Ti. .11 Wash- i. he 40th AND SODA PULP
Object
Object’s are ‘parent’ level descriptions to ‘children’ items, (e.g. a book with pages).
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Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue.
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