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The Log Vol. 38 No. 12

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  • Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Paper and 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.
  • i ' -- \ _, • - • T - • • • • • -• 0 z ---> ~ )( ..J g ' ' OUR COVER Otle .of tJ:re brigb:test pictures b1 the world rs the face of a .bapp child · reflected in thli! shiny ornamen t." banging 6n the tree when tJlat wouder{ol Chri tmas morning dawm·s. But to thooe who say tnat "Christmas ts only for chiJ d1;en,'' we answ -r that rejoicing of he Christ Child's birth belongs to .au · maJ\lki ra l thro O-gh'lllut the ages, ' THE CHAM'PION PAPER AND FIBRE COMPANY Ge.n er.ol Offii·ce • • • HAMIU.ON, 9Hl0 Milts at ... ' . fi:AMilTON, OHIO CANTON, NORTH CAROLINA PASA.OENA, TEXAS ' ' . SANDER!Will,E, GEORGIA Editor, STEW·ART lONES Division Eii:i.tors: STANTON NEWKiiK, Ohio JAMES DEATON, Carolina ROIBRT HAlT, Texas Edttoriol Asslsta:nt: JOAN KINCH EO'ITOJtiAL STAFF ' ' . O.HIO DIVISION -Toll) i\:dc1sperger. Mctlc Bay.neN", J~ lJlevens. Dhwdie Caldwell (phiJtnp;nlJ:rhe.r)., W~ley CObb, Dewey Mtr~­t< tn , }ack Mullen, Otto R . eid, Mae Rook$, John Schmit!, George Steiner, Bill Th.ompson. ,CHOUNA DIVISION ....... l'red .))~~~ l ou , Cl}tle llarul t". Clrde R. HM.y ~ Jr .. \'a lter Hoi. LOn, :f11t k Ju~>IIH· , Rt•v.eua Mnr • ~. U111ce N:t>tUlC')'. J. F. . "\ \ i Ilia til :it'll! . TEXAS DIVISION ....... Betty BellnJ}Cr, .JOhnny Boyette. Jerry Corne liu ~ Cecilia nicker­son, Sam Ellis. Fted Furness. A. W. Ham­Hton. Leon JohnS(m, Geafge 't'oung. SANDUSVILLf ..;_ Clild y~ L Hodge ·. • Leading off this issue is au article by a newcomer to The LOG's editorial column;- Jerry Moyer, supervis.m of Technical Services at the Texas Division. We'd like to see more of Jerry's by-lines in The LOG. And after ·you've read "SQC Spells Quality,'' we thin.k you'll agree. Jerry has a way of explaining technical sub-jects t11:H is both entertaining and infm111ative. . At any rate, you certainly won't want to miss his current article. "SQC'' is a term. you're bound to hear more and mo.re as Champion comtinues its p11ogress toward more uni­form quality. FurthermOO"e, itLs a technique that's likely to pay off in additional pioHt dollars for us an in years to come. • T be name o£ Otis Cele appears as anotl1er new by-line in TJ1e LOG. Otis wrote his first article for th€ November i sn e, and he' back this month with a report on improve­lllents in Carolina's E.B. Department. See page 34. • Dewey Mintou of Ohio c:0ntinues his popular, ''That's My Boy!" series (page 32) with an anide about Tilfo,rd Stvrm's son Lowell -- who has elirnaxed his football car .· r b beco~·ing assistant conch of rhe Los Angeles Ram . Ouo Reid aplly describes Dewey Minton s talent for '~rti ting by saying. ''The boy is good, because h€ write · as he lives . . . . ' dose t'() th~ people whose story he tells." Application of a new technique points the way to improved production T "HlRE iS .\ NtW PHRASE tll the vo abulary of a good m ny Champion the ·e da r·. lt's ~ort of a lonoue twi ter, and sounds rath er t dmical, wo. T h e pbrau ! .· '" ' tati<:.ti al Qua.lit Contro l. '' Even the peo ple ,,·bo knmv wbat it rnean - - aud there are more and more Champion learning at out it every month - flncl it: hard tO ay. This problc..: rH is n ea tly handled by short­enin )' the mouthful to .-imply "SQC.' J\ll(l , a LUal1y, under·Landjng ·what il 1n:ea.ns i a lrno t a - irnple. Cham.pion ha · practi d qualir contro l ever since _ Lhe arli s da) ·, when it b usines· consisted of buying pap r, oating it and ·elling the best pap r then avail­able for the print-in~)' J book ·. oday, there arc many t t · ·a pplied to the ra'w m<tte-rial - ·wood. ·water, s·tarch. clay, etc.- from. which . ,\·e make s.uch a (Treat varieLy of high quality papen. 1. e tin umtinu{C thTouo-h tht:: whole pro ess, s tart~n g wi Lil th making of pulpin; and bl achin3 1 iqu ors, tbe <:< oking the pulp bl.eachi n £~·, a nd the preparation of tb.e \'. J l:.I.UO"J , !":o. 2~ l'ar ex \1 c. chine I n">pcc­~<, r , c h et. 'i th . ba.Tt "eig tt <.If 1 uu of Ll l· L l O!.h." -ct.o.c .. ()u a I j 1\ o n - - Ifil-l t h;JJ ~ ~ c laLTJ .... hed b~ '· .':tq " he l[J UJ O!U lJ o-1 mor . ;if'( ! H<~tc l r I h is in t· pulliinl J;:~nur t,f pap ·r 'tHt~.lit . . ind1at qu.;. lh) ronf1o l .HHl i <lie lrdlt)?, r l<•d . al (Jbio a1•d (,no­Jj u a. '· ' • ' I . • -- By Jer ry Moyer- I ' • ' -. ' . furH:1:, h and coMing going to the pa per ro.a. hines. Th · skill or the opetatnrs all ;,:dong the hnc is ,con ·en t.rat d on making the highe:, t qua l.i ty prochtet~ as economically as possible, and the Inspection I>e partn1cn t furni..;hc a continuou t:l< w of information' about the c1uality of rhc paper a, it is being made. So we &ee that m.any Chan1pions- tes ters, in pect TS., technicians, and operations -- are already prac w. 1 n~~ Q1;~a.lity Control. \Vhat tl1en is cliff rent abo ut " QC?" Jus t thi s: ir recognizes that tb re is such a thin a variation and gives us a: scientific basis f or li ving t,·itb i t. This o uncl - :;o simpJc rhat w might be tempted to say, "S co~ what?'' It takes just a nloment's refle t ion w admit that practically everythi.n!S Ul nature .·hibit · variatio ll. No two hu111an being are exactly a like; we CONTiNUfO ON NEXl l'A(;E 1 are L01d rh l nf t1 t: cotlliLl · , 'JWwllakc tiH' l C .ue pr )bab l nc t\ ·o ali kt· in t' ' q I • ta il ; i :Vnuld b i111pu~ ihle to lind L \O l>l~dl!s of gr<.t 5~ jus alik. . It .i · lik ' i ~ true Lha w manu fanur iwr pt·~ e ·s lla · ct b en d ·j t: d which can pr lu piec a lt r pi t> ·c, batrh ~ .ft r I atch. or sh t after sht>et of paper' ·ithnm variati n. no matter h w au ( matic th ' op ration. .-\ · long ~l (' \ r ·tl ing js "in n mrol. '' th i. variatio 11 " ·ill follo·w a mu u al rhythm. · vioging gradu-:1 ll C:r-orn Jightl: al O \ Lhe av<?rag:e Jor the 1 roc ·s lo slight! ' bdo\· the 3 \ ' rag-e and back again . It ·om tim s hap1 n that dw O[)CJ '<Jtnr will Htake an adju:;tm nt t bring qualit back to the ·tandarcl, or a ·erag . wh n the process i · n1.c:re.l r goi ng tl1ro ugh thL nawral cyd . · he effect of this i t s -t up a n w tenter fine or tl1e Yari< tion t '":ing atound, the final re "ult a tuall. · eiug 6reater vari a tion in the ma terial produced· b cau. e ·we n ,,. have one cycle u per imposed n anot11er. ·Thi - i "or er ontrol." On lh other hand. some ex ternal influen ce may ·uddenly, or o-radually, throw the pr ocess out o[ balance, and i£ the op erator does no t q uickly real.i ze that there i. more than normal ,·ar iation pre ·em , the f iral r esult i ao~ain . reater yaria tion in the material produced. Thi i " un d er control . " \ I' l ' 1.1' 1 \. o., I' I· C I 0 R Ill dl'll' I JH i ll· pu lp ,Sen iu•;oo, La iJr raiOJ . tl•ro11gh th u e of ·· '-) IU IIH H \ltl ll)'iJI , 11 n :1 ltilkn l c lfl !, 1' 1\.~ llgl ll i·ll l ilt'., , •.• . l)j\iirr n ' , r,.,)llti<al I ht· \ 1u lkn r e,.fel i:. b..•·pr in t <tlilll <tlioll O-C'' ( lu II . l'he~ twn 'kindb r)i "aria ion trc known to th<.. s ) . Ll'dlllici;ln a. no11nal va ri a tion ;md a ...... ignaiJlc v tL e ·triati n. We can now begin tiJ ~"c ,,·by thi n ""' ~ i<·n­f iJi< l< ol i,· su v· lu · bl .. Stati ·ti( a l Qu .:t i1Ly Cc1tHrol u~ .., he dat.a 1unli bed by l1c prores tr, sc 1 t Jltt ttl 1V1nnal , .. u·i:uion from the assi nabl c u~ '~. J t teiJ Lb ~ op rat()} ci tlter. ''Thi" tnt \alue is a.,. ciO' to th <.: stan lard a we can logi a ll) c.x p t it tn be-,'' or, "Tl'lis test is 1 ot nnnn· 1 and it is time to mak an a ljustm ' tt t." 1L aids hi · judgelllcnt a o wh n to I · ·tv tll ings a lon e and wiJ eu to tak aetimL Failure to do tll right thing at the righ t time will alway-. lead trJ mor ·· variation than is nee · ar . ' Control Chart Keeps the Record T h e rneans by which th.i very h It ful knuwledge is a pp1i d is the Control Chart. Plo ttin, of te t ·alue<o in ch ro n ologica l ord r on a hart i O{Jtb ing ne"~ .. ,-. T here are two thjng that make a C ntrol Char unique, however. These are: f ir s t, a line drawn acro .. s the chart to indicate the avera.ge or standard valu f r the quality being measured; second, line are drawn above and below th is average lin and are kno·wn a') upper ontrol lillli t and the lower control limit. As long a · a t .;r value falls between thes outer line , the p oce · .i "in control." CONTINUED • t. l '\ .... c \RHDRO I C II , J ho1nc Blearh npcr. tnr. nditt,·t · tlt _ pl l Ill t h~· l . ,,, ~ l) j ,j,jnll ·l> t hlm iiW di o:-; id t• I ll\ l. T tris is- llh:: ell' ·e,cr ~d \ar iahk, r •qn it in!'\ d w.c: a t ter11inn IJ...• ntait rlain pulp hl'i~ltt · tH :s \ tthitt th <I ' l i 111i lli wh i 1 ~h ··so c-• -·an qa ll lish . ~ r i · th 1n.adt ·wati( al method hv whi ·h the::.e ' on nul limits >H.'t: det nnine 1 tbat giv to rhi · n w l<?thniqu(' the nan'l.c "Stati. tical'' Quality C T;ttroL Any q11alit, :whi h an b m a ured and expre se.d in figure. u h a basjs : eight brighlne , Mull n, ·tc.: or o unted, uch. a JHtmber of d ( ctive sheeLS in a kid of paper, or ven. the nurnbe of err rs made in a 1Jil1i110· operation. ·ao be :t.atisticall c aluated and recorded on a Control Chart. '"!'he purprn - and th . re ·ult ar always the:' sam . \'\fe l1aYe a bctt :r knowledg·c oi hnw m.uch \ aria ti n j ' too much. that is when non­nonnal cau ·e · are a t work . . \ ·li-gbtl, dilf rent application now· in u . e i.n lhe f h11ical S :rvice · Labrawry is the u ce of a Control Chart On a " tandard' paper to control the calibration of the l\-l u llen t tc ·. It i e.-'-p cted that in the r JOnth tc come, more and more Champions will be ome faruiliar with Cornrol Chart - and the working of " QC." Already, th &e charts ar" at work in man ' departments of Lhe company, reducing to a ,·maHer ::~nd smaller degree ·variation in the products ·we make, a ·suring our ClltitOmers of unfailing hi ·h quality in ou1· paper and board. - J ~ RR\ MOYER. . . tanding, a.11d Frank Win.ter, , eated, ll.oth of the 't'ex::ls Div i ·ion'. T<: hr\iOJ I S rv.ices D parnn nt, dis.ctt ·s the ba is lq:igbt control o [ the pre\i u · da y's run of board on :No. _6 "Nla.d1ine. '( nlitll.tOII, st(ltisl'j al qualit} control wiJJ help U'> to i.n ur lti.gher . tal datds o[ qu alil~ in the produ ct~ ' '€ se ll Lo our cu 1om rs . - . •. • . ~. - BLE .CH CHE..M IS Carl • Acun. T ' ai!' Divl i n , wod.:; au the Bkr.t }1 Ph:vl-lt ell art 1 lJ, JfC bright.t)<:1>S t Sf · ar n ;:cord --d. If t11 1, sh v;.~r · 1 q ud the dose limit of c BtJ'Ol , CJp.erators )U i<'k ly make rlt nece ·sa 1 ad j ustrn I'll H.> ln'ii:Jg tb system back in t: habncc. 3 .. . n\1:: ~ r\' -rf\"1·: , "01' HO_:\IOR FS o I :1 ltn n High , chuoJ H 1- th<> full ho111e nursing c 111 \' l' u11tle1 the di re tiNt o f :\li · ~ -n, •t liai l ·v. f:t(ui!i me nd e r . ' ll0 \11 ft•om . lefl 10 right a1e l\Jnrt lla Ha ll. \I iss 'Baile\. · 1111. "\1,ui .'ihulc;r ;.~n I I ilJie (. r iflith . H t l\ S;;, J n s i\ the " pat ilnl." Through their training programs, members of the Canton Red Cross are ' 'T' \ . .l. AKJ:-<G A DVJ\NTI\GE of every opportunity to increase thei r overall. service program, memb er s o£ the Canton . merican R ed Cros chapter have recently completed courses jn h ori1e service and home nursing. Home ·en ·ice o:urse · were conducted at the Canton First Baptist Church under the d irection of Mrs. John \ right, of \!Veavervil.le. H azel Ramse ', Carolina Champio n's assistant sa fety supervisor, is chairman of the C<r~nton Red Cross chapter and was active in p romoting the home service classes. !\·frs. Thorna, P. Rice, ex cuti•;e secretar of the Cant<'m R I·.D C RO.S. \·VOl KE..R'i ;ne pit tt •wd li(' Tt · folh>\dng th ·il <Ortl · 1!1 t ion ol rh l' h<IHJ C: s ni((' 11 .1i11ing M'IWdll le. Ldt to tight: \1, , B~tt g iu .B.ti l .. M • ~- J. R. ' ed t~ . 1, J r ~ '1.1,. ll;( t t \l' ' tt , '\ lr•. I h t11ll.t-< . ' chapter a sis tecl by arranging for the da · · work and con­tracting interes ted member . Some ?5 SOf,)homores at Canton Hiuh School have completed home 11LLI'Siao· course under the guiclino- hand of Miss Ethel · Bailey, facuJ.t. . n1. ernbe r. Red Cross fir ·t ajd cla .'e are n ovr being taught youthful school bus driver.· at Bethel Hi h School under the leadership of R a lph Cra,xford, qualified instructor. Thi.s " bus driver" salety pr gram i · expe ted to spread to o.t her ·drools in Beaverdam town hip b e­fore the schdnle is com 1 letecl. I' .Nit e, ,~,r~ 111ilt• S{'\t:t' l <Jr) of th C.aHton Red Cr.•ss ch aplet , H ne·l R. 111' . , , ~ h ;.q•tf·r d 1<titnt <tll, \It·, . J ack S r<l'').\~· Mr~ . J~)hn \~' ri o'ht , iu..;tttHinl , \lt .,. Co1dllll R,t)tlg~· t o.nd ,\•)r);. R. E. Os ba m e . I ' • ---- - - - - ·. '(JW, LOCH{, YOU GUYS," says quaru~rbadc Bilfy ta nifer, on of John Stanifer. From. l.dr to right, tanding. ar Fourth Ward Liot~s Larry .Hacker, son of Ed Hack r; Ch uck Lemp, lnother of Wilma Lernp; and Tom O'Hant. Front ro~v-. Jerry Graham; Robert Gadd, brother of Champions Bill, Carl and B ank; "Jot: Hibbard, grandson Clf Bev :Hibbard; and T erry Co ge h all, son of ·vva lter Coggeshall . Q ·T BEHl n \Vilson Jnnior Bigh S hool in H amilton , there· a r eo-ulation- izcd footl">all field where p int-iz:ed profe . i naE are g ·tt.i::ng their (int taste of a nnn-sized ame. Th _y'r l arning t pta , fooLball sensibly 1md safel y, t hr(Yu;.,h Hamilwn's Little Pro League. T hey aren't act­uaJiy paid to pla , b:t;tt that' · jtist ab<)ut the on! · depaT,­nne Li t:tle I ro take from the b ig time. On Sa tutda y and unc.la , afternoons du in.o- the (all, spectator' rernark time after rjrr~.e, "Say, th ~ ·e ki-ds look like pro's." :nMnk. · to the dreams );f Harnilton Bu ine m.an T orn Kar h, Little Pro football wa organized severa l :ear) a o. And thanks to men like Gordon ·Chatnb · .r , J. D. MiJ and Ray Brofkman wbo c a h t ;arns, aNd dads like .Frank. B:olcer and :p ul Jllnei·, who tak acti'l'e in ter · l, six littl Pro teams haC:l s~:1 ces fu l s a.-: on this ear. Tr out are u ~ 11 l1 held in ~e 1.>t t-1nb. ~ r anHJI g ycmnw­sten up to 13 y a:t~ of ag . T iter<' are weight :r ·g~..th lion <; ,,, hich. sa · that a boy mu~t b .h ·tw en ~(J and J I 0 • pounds; and of course, there are rigid ph sical require­ments for ho · s ,.vho hope to b come members of the Lions or the 4:9er's, ot the Eagle: . Uniform.s are issued to ucce sful aspirant - not ju ·r l'ielm.et and j rsey-, but omple te unifon 1· . Yom1g ten; are -fitted out with sttud · houlder pads, pants with hip ~md lci{;lney pads, and trong pb tic h. lmet-, m.an .~ conJ.aioing face gu ard ·. 1 n teacl of cleats, th y w ar umu is ·hoes . . Thi ear, •'3,200 wa' rais l. by league oHi · als fr m l;:n; ines ' and industry in Hamilton to equip sL teams. , nd it h.a paid off in .injury-fr e game for the pa ·t two sea ons. Jnst iu ase, though. there' a registered nurse pre ent at ever arne. Through L ittk Pr) Football , mnplet ~ with exp rt coachin)?l, ft1Jl quipwent, stri ·t ofhcialing, and <Org -n ­izecl pranice ~Cs15 i on s. oungswr. ar' learning th es l) ­da. Js of LC~nn work. . nd it's onl)~ natMr, 1 that among t h .nJ , a sp(;ctator ' i1! fi11d th ;;uns >E Cbam1 i n - pb ing like ChampioJb. ~ CONTINUED ON NliXT PAGE 0 ' CONTINUED • \'H T. \ \"_-\IT I. · , PI \ Y in the tL<.md .unc ot a und ' . tten )Ott rlonble h ader. th Litn• ,,·;1rm Uf . BHh anit 1 , '- o. 13. t< a p .· ll End Jell\ ,r, har11. he ht'ld. h-om •••<~l- 1 •·£ '" ~o .. l J'l<.' t , 1 10 : mighL~ ltmo- to 1:?-\C.l · ll lm" i11 Lhc 1 Htlc l'll Lt·J"II . ' I· R011.-U ,D J UDD and H erl Helton, both on of Champion , work om in the ba kfie l<.l f their Little Pro team. Bm · ar allowed three es:ion a ,,·eek, which ' u : t~ a ll y m ean · ~wo ' L! pervised pranicc and a '<llne. :\ lost team us a T-forrna tioo. • > .PAUL 1 LLN.ER, at right, '''a tche tb g::rm in­tenth• 1 •i(b hi ann. on hi .. on' hou lder. The coa h _·i" Bl.aine H nrm. Littl pro te ms emplo) off n tve a nd lef n lv · strategy just like th ir cmu1terpan. in the <• bi•Y Lim ." A number of: -dad g;ive <L. istan e to a bes on Sa tn rday and , \.mday aften1.ooos . o( A GAl\ fE BETWE.EN the First \ a rd l'ackers and the F ifth " ' ard 1\rowo. is typical of L ittle Pro play. Evidence of training in blocking and tackli ng mav he seen dm'ing tlie .fi ve-mim 1te "'q uarter . . " The bo •s p ia on a regul a t ion 100- vard fi.eld . • RAY BRO K, fA. , G<)rdon Chainber · ancl,]. ?· Mill are ·ot-·nt on Lh ga n~e <I. tb.e.J.r chat·<• · score a. fir~ !. uu1••n. J. D . .\!.ills co;,tcb s the 49'cr , aJ;td .Rca' .Bro · ·ma11 serve · as t:~n ns,si. r;wr ad1. Gordon, whose son has pla ·eJ Little Pro hal! f01~ tt"o se.1sons, i · wantman . A WORD of: _ "n _o u rag~nt n t anJ a pa l n he ly k ~~ gwen h ts son by Cham­picJIJ ', Fr:allk Ho le r as t h ' bo , leave, rhe , ~iddi n c~; ' to •o into th g~1 u,r. A w ll·known s p o.rl:SJ'tta n in 11 is 0 1 .11 1::ig,h t, Frank c. ident1y is rui~ i ng a "chip o l·f t:l1 old bh~ck ." PRE· ,.'\ME P R ACTICE fi nds Do, le Abnn:u , son of Leon ard Abram, cli\6ng on a ball . L i ttle pros rnu t weigh betw · n 80 and 110 p ou n d ' at t he stan. -wi th al low;mces for gaining five p ot1 nds du ri ng Lht!: cason. BoYs 1 h ro 1gh 12 ;ear· of :.tgc a re eligibl . • 7 • • • • If you don' t, you probably need one - - for it may be essential to your family's future WILL 1 s b f< n \I. f OJ \t'f\' f:JJn j h . • w hm ith' ,j\ Tllrth r more, it sh ulrl IJe l'r ·p:nNl 111 ll \ll'\' ·tf r.: ,I ll ,,u rot}· ''' ill.,lttc th:o 1 it is kg.lh culrtf l . HL·l • ( l;trewt \!Jtt.JI..., \'''" h er11ph"<·d 8 tn th c• , ., Dnhilln hurnc Bl nch D j} . nm 111 , and hL~ l · fuu:ntc r ,; ., tlte ptO\I ~ions ol' ~hm.: ur •'s 11ill ''ith ,llitltl'!l'l iu il l':t i ld<'1•:l L 111 u lf irt.' . "ifc, t h ir ' utm:N E. sits with bated breath, all · c ' e, fix d on. the stao·e. \'Vith dramatic effe t the lawyer o,pen- the aled enve1oJ e ·ontainin.g the will of the . ri, h u Jcle who ha ju: t died in South America. It i· a ten e tu.ome.m in the play. Each spectator i. s,ilend r a king, 'Did he know that John was a scoundrel and shouldn't get a penn r?" " Is little Cousin Margie ·. ing to 0' t her fair sha1·e?'" i t i tihat \tiB . have captured the imagination • of the public, . i ·ine· to tories aRd play auras of dra:ma, ·· 1 pen e, and i"ion of 'reat wealth. S rnetime , t o, the e documents o directly associated . itm death even provid~ a laugh- as jn the case of h · ntence in the wi!l on~e probated in Fredericks­burg, 'Te ·a , wl11.kh · read: "To my no-good hruther, .\dolph, 1¢. H ah1 I gu s dat fix Ad~lph!" But though will are familiar ro · almost e~eryone it1 fa t and ficti n, the averag" per. on knows little about th rn a 1d doe not realize. that even the person o£ rnodest n"tea . hould· go to ltis attorney and have a will drawn. An indi r1on 0f the average p er · n' lack o'f concern with the imp rtan e of having ttl r ill wa shown by a q1;1i k, infen}lal u.rv~)' mad among a sampi · of Texa. Divlsi(Yl"l Champion hi h rev -aled that a large 13e:r~ c nt?g had no wills. Tb:e o1w who i~tad wills had drawn th ·w them eh ·~, au.d none b~d b ~ 'n che k l by an . attorn J, whfc:h. i :vt:ry imp rtanL - ypi :al rei:t tim w t , ' "\ -'\ hy should I Ita a will? I don't have much - of anything l) ] ·.ave."·· fy ' f would get ev rytlrin ·, anyw ~ , uJ n' t slre?" and ''I'n not . ·v n matri d , ' o ldn't my mo Lher g · t what 1 J ave without - ny troub (" Th· mswtr w L1 ·que lions ar that: every.on ha-. "Om ~ thing . to kav , and wid1 'l..lt ·will \..·hat([ <:r i l It c1.na , no.( . o tO rh.e l sm1 · d at mac · 'oul.d Jmos . 'l ll lav,· ol the \ 'll:t1oul> ~ tal · t:hal~ g ~;h situatiOl'- ~ 6 ... - - • PLANN I G AHE}J), H. . Ferrell, R - co very Departrnen t. discu sses his Will wiLh his wife - a nd rev iews tbeir insur­ance poli "h:s and a vings accoll nts a.~ we ll. Fo1· . irrht of ~bi s sort ma avert complications lat r on. ' . . in many ca es; bvt in Texas, if .J 00 fath ers, having no property excep-t $20,000 cash, ~hould die without a will , their money wm1ld be distributed e actly the ame way to their wives and children - e en though it i highly possible that no two of therQ. would ha e actually wanted it divided in the same wa . One · may have wanted his wife to have hi . entire es,tate. Another might have put some condition on her inheritance~ for example, to the children if he re- . 'married. Another may have wanted his aging parents to have a part of what he left. Nearly every one would hav€· preferred to name an executor of his own choosing tO distribute his estate according to ·rhe in truct ions in his will. Each Will l.s an Individual Problem Stare laws provide ndes fot the distribution of pcrop­erty of individuals who die without a wilL H owever, these rules are ba eel on ·what the legisla tors think an "average rnan" might want done with h is prop n y, and they may nob fit , 11 cases. In individual si tuation , th~ clivi ion of property might not b what th de eas d would prefer. T he lack 0£ a will can cause particular trou ble foi· -a widow with minor · l1ildren. For exarnpl , if -,h found it im.pera r.i ve to sell the hou e, d\l to the los ! h er lu:;~;s b and 's earn. d in 001 , it would be n c ~ ary Jor h er to ha \re fonual guardi. w hip , t up for the chilcb:· p, and to obtain court approval of the ··tle. Ev o th "n, th cl ilJ ren's interest in ·th 'al would have t b in d ·und ··r the ·u)_)J rvi. ion of t1 ourt. ·o attJ mpt is rtl:;td h 1 , of . otarse, t t H .. 11 ' n 11ow lo ' rlt a . ilL Li-ke m di, --al advi.e, wt1at ·uit on person do o t n' ariiy fit au th but it is o d advi.c · to g& t 'J · llr tt rney and h a . a wm .lr, wn ­f r it's . all ' Hot n ·ce · <try to lea · 'hr ah .t: A Jolph" ~"'" ' lil on p nny if yUtl 1·ea.lly ·wan.t t "El:x him." 9 ~J . \RI ' l:'-G TR ' L _' to be nll, \1 · CJO\It:ll. 1\00cllot owner, JcH: l" 3.} n. Caruli11a. Di1 i.-.i n., chief c\n"enation fur . r r. ccntc1: and \ fad; lluwell of Chnmpiun' con~enalion ~t<Jfl ~elect ttel" in a ordant, with goc.d forc~tn· pta.cth . C'ro\ ell was am<mg the Cir~l' llt1't 11 T .· in the Cuut Hl area to he Olllt';:! Cntified rr(•e FartliCJ . • Western. North Carolina tree farmers and t ruck wood haulers prove that today there's . . .. ' '' • ! IF You'RE th " least hit dtnd tful Lhat truck wood haulin , t the Carolina Divi sion is rapid! , be­coming b i.g L.Ju,-.iness, ou hould by a ll means talk -with .J. H enrh eJ 1 e -ner. woods manag x. about the " t"lew l ook'' in J ttlpwood operations aro ttnd rl e a nton mill. H ersch el's the dnq who sc ·s to it tha t Carn;lina Cha.rnpion recej e.s the n eces!-.a ry l GOO -ords oJ l ml1 pjne awl harch. ood for it. · 2'1-h our da ily op r a tion s-. 1-'Ie 11 t 11 you Lhat chn-jng th · pas t 10 y ars Lru k wood d li.verie · to t he ·aro lina plant ha -•xperiencecl - phcn.om 'nal jlllup Jrom 7,000 to 160 .. 000 cords a y ai. '\VlHlt's ni:ore, H rschel says, Champion d.i5tribute <·mnualJ mor · than . 2 million alll 111g · Hne r;i50 wood truckers in Lh \1\TesLern 1 orth 'arolina area . Timber growers alon will rece ive more Lhan :·soO,OOO annually rront Champion F(n· · p·ulpwoocl har­ve ' ted by Ll'Lt k rs on th eir lands. '\.s a r esult of this rapid postwar trend, . . r.b. Div i ion. now receive a little more than 2.~ per cent o( its total wood r equirements from tru ck. -wood hau1ers. Tru ·k d eliveries aventge be tter than 200 loads daily, and as many as 384 loads have been r ecei eel in a single day. The averag . di Lan e tru k wood is hauled runs around 22 miles but sorne of it reaches ChampioJ~ front as far as 70 mil es aw·ay . "Hard Work, bot it Pays!" Adam Scott, a 41-year-old -woodman who' been work­ing with pulpv,:ood for nearly 15 ears, is typi al of many small pulpwood dealer· who s.upply Champion. It's hard -work, Ada n1. .:ays, but it pays well. .. l.Jn til about three years ago, .t-\.clam labored fo "the other fellow." T hen he decided to s tart producing "on his own." Today. he's glad he made that mo e . . . iil . fact, he's been enjoying the venture ev r sjnce he bought his first truck on credit and m ade ·hjs urst haul to th Ca.roli na ' 'Voodyard. Yes, Adam Scott is doing " ell for himself- an t Champion-along 1.vith the more than ~50 o ther ,rood trucker who've found Cha n'l.pi m a good ornpany t< tlo business with. FeeLing that Adam' · exp rience i much lik that of many other trucker who've been doing- busine-~ wi th CJumpion for years Th LOG sp nt ever a11 otu " with hi ru rc ently in: onler to porti·a · a typ ical cla ' of th truck.. wood h:a.nler. -- So thjs i:' ·the Olub..i.t'l<ecl story of the ' \ r-expand.iog tru k v ood indu tr in vV '. t rn North Carohna ... and of ~.damS ·ott, who's proud h -·s in busines ~; f(>r hints If ~od ay and \•\ Orking with a ompan ' th. t tt 'at birn right, da itl 'lild da, ou . . D M S 'OTT, a rortl Ca n.,Jhul tn"k \oo ~ ha:Hler, i me r>f nwr • Ll an !J50 c·>p<H:LL01';s wlH; lit: lp to . lJif.~)l · th Car Jill'l <t D i1 isjon with jL, chi f t <•W •va. te ri ;!l. J h~ t-e l.l. ,-<t:t ncL h t.he cab of his tlLwk. '~i t b :t lo,..d of nturl 3a 1 n>r 1· uf ,.,.nlt w tl•l forth -· ;11\l n. mill. In r.h • IJ~% 1.{1 ·ut~ tru k .II.'H.d cl('lil' ·i '" l l'h ' ". ro-liua l)i,·i~lon h 1\ e So<H('d ftO IU /.OtiO tn I(Jt.J.00t) cop \. <Hl •lll, _ll ' . ll CONTINUED • I 12 A HEARTY BREAKFAST gets .\dam otf LO an early tart for the dav. His wile, Lizab th, pa ks lunch which be will eat at Lhe loggin"' site ir.1 the wood~. Accorclin.,. to Adam, pulpwood tntcking is hard work but it pav well. He ... rarted hi. own h\l i­ness three yeats ago. o( Sl ="tG A POv .ER SAW, George Roland, a member of Adam Scott 's cre·w, fen a tree for pulpwood. Throuoh truck w od haulers. th.e Carolina Divis.ion r eceh . . more than 25 1 er cent (~( its annual pulp­~ vood t·eq uirement. . )' A.RRlVl :'\iG \T THE WOODY .\ R D (right), Adam ScoLt a si:t \ <tnice oe bee. C hampion wood mensur r, in calcu~ating the load . i\Io,·t hauler" are op ranve m Lhi respect, and :\ clam i · n< .·ception. S:-\ ;\KI N ~ .'\ L() , u t r tb t: w >Od' l" hor: t. foe Rol ;tnd handl e · t il re iu:. This log wil.·1 ) pikd witlt l.)t hcts :u then arC'st road , tlH'U .11t itt to ri,·e-fno t lengths anti load ·d ourn li t· tnt ck . ,, LOADI.\"C· THF. T RUC , :\dam Scott u es a wood pick to drag 1 he logs into place while George and Joe Rola nrl keep IIi rn supplied . U. 11 all ~, the loading sta ts in the morn ing, bu1 tltc C;:nolina Divi ~ion \ Voodyard . tays open until 9 p.rn. to accommodate late a rri\a) s. JOB J IEARL DO. TJ!., the tru ck is fi lled with better-than­a eragc pine, freshly cu t and ready for tl 1e Carolina Woodyard. Some of. the truck wood is brought into Clwton from a di stance of 70 miles, hut the average haul is a bou t 22 miles. . .. ONTINUEO ON NEXl PAGE 13 ' I • • CONTINUED l'AYD,\ C0~1E .. ad1 atu,·duy. J:Ier . dam Sc tt re i ·s hi:: d1eck from Irene D:n·id. un, . ectetal')r to W. J. Par'ks, c nter. an .'\ ~heYi lJ e "·o0d dea ler. J>a ,·b bas worked cl o. cl · with Champion [ r man ' } a r~ . JO'l:RNEY' END fox the truck wood hauler is at the wood com :or, 1\'here be sees hi . truck unloaded ·mecbanically, swiftly and ' Lfel y. · U truckers help to place ·teel ca bles aronnd tl1e wood rieL tor handling by un ne. • ' \ I I \ '' \ AT '1·'\'ACHO A BA, iK ht heville, Mrs. Gretta J ohn ton, teller, ca hes . ott's check. Champion pays out more than 2 million a year to $Orne 550 "''ood trucker in W€Stern North Caroli11a. _; R'ET ' R. 'L ·c f-10M w'ith a profi t to &I ow - ,.,.. ........ --· a t -th enq -of a we 'k 's '1- ork \'el1 don hn· his dfo l , dam d isp s ·. w ek- n Q. HIS CHECK CASH ED, Adam cott, seated , di sh es out the "cool g1·een" to hi men - for it's payday for them, too! Quite often , Sco tt pay them off on the street outside tbe bank. ~ v ith that his w rr. . .han tpion f \ . ' . ' - '+/! • IMI' • ·· ' Proud t0 b in busine fo r himself, Adam "i ~ a good .omi n11, to do bt.~ s ine s with .'' • feel 15 .. • • { Th e following rJrt£cle is adapted from re­mmks by Dwight f. Thomson, Vif'e-Pn:sideJtl, Industrial and PubLic R e /r:ttion s, gi en before Champion supenJiso·ts at Cltfl.jJ rtco Couw·il this fHJSl .~unm er. It is Ll1 r' serond in a serie. of slid ' - illu ~ tral e d l nllo, deLi·oeted at the Council, .uhic!t will be 1·rruiewe rl in The LOD.) • • • • \ ]; • Dwi hi {. Tf,cmr on r. 1 H I- J'H'lR J m· no· Lr" a rich h~rit·•.; upnn wltid1 lo b 11 ld. ( Ul in IJ '- l'l' k lrHW be •n Oil( nl be <n tl~ t a'ntl y 'l'O ving, ~ta bk indu lri:.. in oHr \m ·ri an ecHn­OiiJ )'. It is to la th ' tifth ittrg · l tndu~tf) in th na ion. It mplu · 13'/,0llO p ·r r>n , an I tln(ruKh the ~ ar ha e-..;p -ri- ' IH.· d r 1 latk<thl • littl · labo1 rife . l'hl· ,olktti vt· a rtiw ks nl Clwnq i ns ind icat · " mnttrll lttl \ t and rL•!.p en and confidrnc in on ~uwth 'r th• 1 i~ ~Olll w h ~tl iltlit~•tal in btt · itl l' '~ e 11 ·rpri t •. Sontl' 1f rhc l;tct lt:­t. lt.tt f think lt a ' e l'dlltrilmt ed 10 our st ·a I ' g-ru Yt.h an·d gl KI human IT I:u inll\ arc: our sr 'ild 1 j ll•~ . our sc ·tnit ·. our p ))j y nl k T ping p< ·oplc ird ornif'\ 1, ou1 o ppor(lii)LI ) lor grnwtl1 , our too p t'LitiH: t':trnin~"'· ;1nd nnw, ottr P~t~f'it Skniug l'\au . 0 The deroan(l for 1 aper product!-t is int: reasing . t adjly. In 1920, ll . c . pa) r anJ pa1 er boanl uHJ.'Lt lnption . a ·er g 'd 100 1 ound. p~r 1 rwn e<.trh ·'ear; wcla r.h lit;ure has jumped Lo n arl · •WO pounds a car - and our population ha:\ in .. a.· d h 50 million . Pal r COTisurnp­tinn also i.· an .indc. to our .-ta nclard of livin g; th U nited l' i.ngdow use,· onl a t out J ~; !) pounds p r ca pita . and (~ nn· n 7 ~) pounds. The world average, c,· chJding the U . .. is o uly 20 p tmds oJ paper a ar. WKAr Q..t 1JtFP PERPERIIJN • 200 1920 1930 . .,. Yme I 1950 1953 -' • MACHINE NQJ2 ....... • k • • ~ • • • • t• ' . ' '• ~ • \Ve have jn our traditi(m ignifi ant miles ton s Lha.t s, mbo liL vi-:.io.n , crJura¥;e, ko d work and t ' <llltWt)l'k . \ .!> R ub ·n B. Rohet tso-o p.oin nl our in his arlid ·, ... hen and ; ·0\ ," last month, Champion ha pion · ·d many n w pnxbi .., in the paper i.ndu5t y. \1\'h n om~ u ril}' W' s threatened 1 y <li ·a l)(Ht'> -tire~, b the los < J r.iml .rl~ n d u, the ~l1 J ('J , ·1 oullt<~,in . 'ation<tl Park . by the blight ' hidl de troycd om· ch ·. ~nut w0od, we low d ' wa,s to o vercum tj r diffinllli : and w cmwrg d . ~ ·h Litn , tnmg r lhan I d .1 c . • Tlrrougbout its hi:-; tor , Cl1aJupion has been a pac ' ­l:> e l'l:cr. It ha · grown fal'l tcr tJmn n 1w ;t ot!P rs in the in d ustr · 'llld at the sa1ne tin 1e:: it h as maintaiJ ed .st ::tcly mployrnent LIWough difricu lt conornic p Jrimh. f t d oes 1nore for ' IJ ampi. on ~ in terms o f steady jobs, good w::tge. , gnH th oppo;rtunili es ~wd sh a r ing re ·ul ts. ("Gross National Product" is the tota l d ol lcilr value of all the- goods and se rvice s produced or rend ered du ri ng the year.) IKE PREDICTS GRO~S NATIONAl PR{)OUCT OF • ~· Rltt what lies ah ead? \r\ her are we g-o ing? , \ dynan ­lC, ·xpamJing CCUJ Otll)' i" foreGlSL for lh n •.· t '(( ~car . Pre.-.id nt Eis 1 hm,re ri~ ·upport d by man' of th.e coU tl· tt , ' , l a< lin <;.:conomi t, in h.i ~ 1 r dic::Lion th.n,c our g rn. 1 a l iOI a l pwdttcl \eV il! it rras • fr0m :'3 f ( 1 i lli m to $50D billion by 19G.). r v rl.h l 'S ·, w are < onstantl • lac d vith th . dwllE'i gc or hun.gl' ' COJnp li tot''. Oth •r pnper C\ l11lpanjtil ~l rt '<!")·wing rapid! ' um; tb(· ' tou an: finding .n '\ RrH.l b ·tt r W" '. rc ntak. wd nvr­cha lldis hi •h qu Hlil;)' 1 odu ·ts. • CONfiNUfiO ON NE'X.f PJ\Gt 17 ' CONTINUED • \ •-o •... ' \ • ·• • • - Our purpose is to keep Champion a p .ce etter. \ 7e do not want to g:row simply for the ake of b i11g bigger. \'\! c want to be suxe that Champion contributes it share to the econon1y, and particularly to the people who are Champion: Champions and their famili es, our sbarehc>l ders, our custo­mer , and our neighbor . . Improve EHicieney .! . - Brot?t:h out info new li'eltk ' DEVELOP . ITt ,........ .. ln order to fiucl th amwer, ,. e mu ·t pain ·Lakingl_ rev.ie·w our obje ·riv ··~. -ur prob tem, our plan and our potentials. \Te l'lnrl. -;eck co d ,-elop our weak points and capitalize on our r;ren(,.th.s. \'e n1u t e t~ bli ·h a contiHuing progr. m for {h future. Two wa; to attain th.ese oal ar : fir: t, b , oHe in., further uainin,;r and du a riOt.,l to all Champi( n - th .. ·t tb- · may prep re them el e:, fm· the job ahead; and ~e ond, U} uti.lizin Chapa co Cou n.ci I, • hich give membet~~ o manaa m 11 "n pporn,.tnity ro utd and evl 1Lta te ou.r 1: v-r 1 0"' nl tr ,_ h: r · An,' bu ines. ca n h~l\ -e a IT1mbcr of things if it has th n oney to buy t hem. It an have bu.ildin : and equipm n . it an produ ce a pr Jdu ·t, it ·an have cu.:­tomer ·. Rut all of th things a1'e ·impl " tool " that people use; p p le mu ·t put th m to " ork in order for a bu jnes: to pro. per. T he thing th a t eli tincrui h one b u.-ine .- enterpri e from another i. lar l the caliber n[ its penple and how "'e11 they "'rork w · ther. UE '/NOURTRY is people our points • Keep looking dheod - • ..a 4 • • • \ ·Ve d not have to paL h up a weak stru cture, but rather, n1ake a . trong one even trong r . s I 1nentiuned b f 1re, \VC an trength n uu r weak poi n L and " t nd our trong points. Funhe1·, we can k. ~ep looking ahead t) avoid the ol tad s that may he in ou r way. n.cl we can practic what w preach - living g od oq orat citi7en ·hip a · well a talking about it. ' 1 J ·ontinue our gro·wtb, ma intain our security, and har in th pro fit , we mtt t plan now (or the d ecade ahead - the 10 y an; between 19:J!} and 1965. H ere are ·om o( lh imr ortan t que tions which \·ill be facing us during tho c 1ear : How many 1 eople will , ..,e need? \Vhat" ill they do? H ow will they do it? • nd what ne' tool · and n"l.ateriai will the ne d? It's important that we: get tb an wer to the, e questions ·o that we can plan int lligentl , and move ah ad 1·ap!d l , , n amta ining our positi <;:>n as a leader in the industry . • ' • E . . • ' •.. . .. . .. Seeing· +he .:problems through the. eyes . Of ~~ose with major ·re5porisibility for- ' a· Tn order to study the job whicJ1 li · ahead of u and to properly evaluate our proble n1s hr. t we n e d per pective. To help us gain thi. per pective, we had at Chapaco a panel of Ch ~w1pio11 spea kers who d i;­cussed Finan e, Re earch, P ·oduction and Sales. B· taking a clo er look at these jmportant areas of Cham­pion's operation ·, we ma h able to s our problem · mor dearly. The ·e will be th ubj ts of fumre article in The LOG. 19 • 20 ' IN"TALLED AS PR ESll>£1 T of the Maggie Va lley L' iwanis Club, 'am ;\lr n11-y. left-, rece ived the 140ng and g·avel tr ro Dr. RobeH H. Owen , p r .·ident of r.he Canton Kiw::111 is Clu b, in recent cercJnc nic, . , arne is a \ ·elder in the C<Jrolina Divi i0n P lant Engin e1.ing Deparuuent. Dr. Owt'n is scheduled to become lieoLenam-governor of the Fir. l K.iwan is Discri(·t on Jaouax:· l , k956. "1 fu.e " 1'a, te Va lleT grotJp, boastiJ:Ig 25 member . wa~ the fifth ne .v chrlil [.>On~or ct tl.urin.,. the past year by th·c Can ton. Klwan i, - :an a ll -time r cord lor the :rou1. THIS 100-I'OUND .B UCK ANTELOPE "Vvas the pri1e li1i Cor ~: im r !\d, m ' . .0:'o. li! T rimmers at the Ohio Divi ·io n, (luring a September ·acatr 11 in \'yomi.ng H e lping E lmer eli play tbe animal is Dorothy Hall, owner of the Iauch lm;ated between Rock River and Cheyenne ·where E lmer pent his vacation time. The ,antelo pe is l'II1LI u aJ in that his antlers a1-e identica lly m'ttcbe<l. \ FIFTY T£ACH.ER $ \.VER E CHAi.VfP !O~ G U£S'TS la ·t October fo Hom.ilron· A.nnua l Bu.siness-Indu try-Educa li.on Day. He re H <:1n .· Neal escort, how, the touring educat0rs a sheet of pnlp. 1o adeljt[vu to th t.our, gue.s ·\'isirecl mjiJ superinten(ter:us in th eir work areas, tate .lunch in th Cafet ria, and were " bired .. by the Ohio Div isio n Industrial R -el a tiOL!i> .Department. Pictorially bringing you highlights in the Champion story • .. its p·eopl.e. its friends, and its good neighbors F\ I\' Fll·,( ll)) 01-ll .L K'i ol rtw \ a vp'·"ilk \tl.t' tna ' l l'ts ~ ltth include thtt·<· (;uol ina ( lt .illlpiollt' . S' lllll\tt IH'J t ' l o tlo\lltt )l. tltt·it <'IIi• i.d in t,dl.otiun att·, ftt)llt ldr to t ig h 1: l\uh 11 <111 , '-<lwdnltng. tctiti ltg I'IV~idct11 : lt·d '\t; ~o · kpole, <t d111ini:-l 1.tlh l' 1ic c pt idc111: Ch.ttltv l ' ndnll••wl. 't' l'gcanl ·;tt :t tnt : l:t•k h ·ln tt·l . l ttlttH''· ptt''tdLill. (.Ill \ \ilti~lth , Ch t 'tHi<,tl I ~til , :\ I t' .[ g t>l t.' lll flt; ;md .\. Jl lltmr, Ftt!.!illl'Ciil t,'. cdu•ation:tl 11 c·pre,id 'Ill - Ill \[-«, I HI.I c. I \IR I'L\. 1h · Oh io l> i,i,i•o n \!ill \Ji·•ht de< HI• d ll•al J,.tl,, h<JI r It" ''omtn ''''" ''C t t .1 ril i ng ol II J•c' 1. Ill• Lad ul up tl.tit d•·• i'i"n IJ~ gi\ ing a 'l•ollet -­'"'"' ,. ,t,;d II·- tot Jitn fl.td.t't a pH''J>t"Uilt' lailwr l it•· t·\t' lll .,, <ou I' u• <I ll!cl •lull .• ud lt-.. Hac l..t·l «li t t· tl11o11gh );\ rk- 1\ Ill'!" aH lh <•I l1alJ\ IK•\ !lit Jollr•11111g dJ\ \[0 (. til.', '\'{ ' \ 11· 1{01 "> "i i'E \1"1:\f. ll \ II· "· K;t tl Hetu l• ·t ,<·ll, Iii I' )II ·, idt' lll :11td g tt H't: tl tll ;t tl :t;.;c t id Llt;111tpiu 11 '' I (' '" (lj;j i1111 . tll <t<lc ~~ 1n •·nt :tppc<t t att«' l•do1 tiH· lbt ll' C.o" "' ' (.qn11cil ol tltc· l'att'III ·· J \' ~ 1< It '1 \. ,\ "clf i,11i 011 i ll l' :t~<ll kll;t . J)j , ( li "il l).; l ilt' \ lli>j< 1[ "Cond <.it it ' ll ' ltip .. i11 tlti ' <· ll g.tgntH' tlt, \ l 1 nt·tHII "''" told 11ic I' I .\ gtOII J• d111 i11g tlw l ;dk : · \VI•c·11 lltlll(' 11>< '11 Jli •H lic e gr"'d < ili/(' ltSitip, )('WCI \1 ill Jt;l\ t' lo di ' 1<11 iL'' 110:\1 FCO:\IJ ,,(, Q l n · :--; lot 1 Li nliltllll Hi,..,h :,dl• "' thi- IL'll "" lkttic- 1-ln,,ard . d a11gl11u ol ~; li tal>c t l\ llo'"''d. ~~ lllt:'ll!IJ< 't of th<c CIJ 310 Crcd il l11ill11 .tt Oiliu. ll t'tl' l]ll· attl.tttilt. .' llH>lll lw.lltb 11itlt ptidc •• , l1 ct h11d; d:wglttc1 ac . epr.. tht' qtH'Cil" cH>IItt ,111,! I t'd tmc,. Hettie', d,tll' tnt tlw l'\t llitt ~. ,,JJitlt liHlwlul :t t.Lttt<t' ""' ( ,t ' l l(' htf!,:llt', <u 11 nl \1 ,1< It ill<" I (' tHil'l joh11 h1g..tlt' l·JR-.1 I'RI/1 Ill tltt· Blhllll 111'1'-hlll .ll tlw \ .tiJ..•1 (tlllllll 1-.nr l'.nad\ ''•" '""''" il•i~ I,. ·" Pt\1-1<>11 \ '''"'' Uq. ttlllutt 11<>.11 h• 111 ellt tl 111 llltth•·l publ~<it< tl11 l1n L111t1 l'ro·"t.llll 111 I c· ,J, tit< llnJI '·'' lt·•d ill IIIII\' < \Jllllll l.111 p.iidtic . I II\' pl.lll 1<11 l'.tdt ltU' l ;tii!Hl Ill tilt' IIHillll ,IJ'fl t ,\1 toll tllt' 'l•lt• ol tht. II<• It 11111 Ill \·.llh ithl.llllt, 1 lot d ~ltl tltl• 1\ o .ttnh It! tltl' ltddt<ll ll,lldttll. till !'·"'•"'' )> BUTLER. CO! ·c;u:.T O-:\ , fi rst· class elcclri ·ian, h:u1d I c.· Ch:nn pi01 1's h igh ­ll'llsion lin· \ntrk. T hat ill tude Olll · door powCJ- line~. lighu'J ing protect inn equipment. ;wd the :.?,300-Htll pO\'('f Sliiletn. \"dl F;mnin. {) low, h ao; bceu ' adYanccd to secon l -da:s t>kCI ricinn inrc the 1 iclure " 'as taken sf,nh.: mNHhs ~~ g·o. JU\1 B. UER and . l Wisen.1.an make up Storeroom requi sition . Jim has recen.tly been transferred to t he I nstrn­ment Shop . In. trumentation is a p a rt of the Electric DepaJ·tr nent u nd er tbe supervision of .E:-1rl J)rio ce. BOB \.R USE, le<·tdcLJ n lr I per . ::wd Arl Hn) l n, f'irs l -class clec tri ian, change a uau ry in H11 d tr ic t ruck. One of Lb 1·e~ p on ibi li t ies o f the Elenrir De· J Hl l' l fll .n t. i.~ 1.0 m i~Ha in 1ll e lh 1 l~n ~ia ti c.m, k ·eving the p o i\'Cr pl n n t~ lo;­th e:. ll'll t ks frc. hly cll:1rgc-d. 22 . -. • ,_ . ....._ '. - "-•, I • - \ ' " ' .. " -- .... -. ~ ... ""'- . . . . FRA~ K H ARl\•fON, a first-cl as­electri cia n, is hown wiring a jord an starl er pa nel. Frank atso works on maintena nce and CO nst nt C'l. ion . \ • + N 0 l M . L J Y '0 K dis 111 :-.11.t Jc:s ;J n I • ·u it. -m 1 u r for 1t-pa ir in ih J.op. lto •c-th ·1. rh.eH; (!lC !) , II ) J)W LOJ S in the mill , in <.l~t di ~t g a nta"ll nulllh r or ~par£·•,_ Utlt <>t 11 ru r • pro­• idNI by L)!t' l h: p ;ntlllctJI htm that ll'.J1 11 t<tl li~~;hl h n lh t l '<'-'f/. · arnout"!l!•d LI.J ll ,OOO r<· p i ~H -I'I Il ~' flL i 11 <,c; p u;-rn I;(; r. 1 I ' ·' ',_ l l fAG I• E T HE JOLT that the owner of a Jjvc:-room h o use would g t if he were to suddenly come race to fac with th Ohio Divis io n's electric bill inst ad of his own. lnste-1d of being charged ror a normal usage of 20 to ~0 kilowa tt hou rs per d ay, h e'd be looking .. at a bill for about 450,000 kil watt hours. Roughly, that s the load (or the Hamilton mill d uring a clay' - time- e no ugh ·to upply a city f 65,000. It takes a lot o t fnen with a lot of skill to handle that kind of Joad, too- 63 persons to _Ge e,· act. A new ma n u suall y starts o ut a a ut ili ty helph, th low job in the Electric Department. He' · ass igned to an elec­trician, a nd after a p eriod of .time, plu s a beginning in apprentice training, he becom es an electrician' helper. As su ch, he might work. in the ·h o1 cleani11g motOrs. Along the wa y, h e's p ermanen tly assignc I to a n:ajn­tenance electrician, and gets more than acquainted with such spo ts as the Ba ttery Station, where · elcctTic tru cks and batteries arc main ta ined. There's a 1natter of some I 0,000 light sock ets of a ll kinds to be looked after, too. Last September, for i nstan ce omc 3,000 light bulbs \Vere replaced a t Champion . . After a few years time, wh en experien ~ e and .niorit are tucked under a m an 's b el t, h e's ready to be ome a third-cla s elec trician. Advancement to oncl- and Cirst-cla s foliow. There's More to it Than Maintenance The respon ·ibilities o f the E lectri · Shop, a~ a d epart­ment, are as e ndl ess a · the mile· of wire to b fonncl in the mill. T h er 's n e'..v equipment to be des igned, pur­ch a ed and install ed. T heTe a re alt rati<: ns and repair. to be made on th · old equipmen t. T h r -· are power ·'require1H · 11L fur the vario u d r ives to b- figured . Jns tr um ··nta tion , too. is a function o t the E l ctric Depa r t 111 J1t, wid Earl P r.in SUJ .r ,i ·ing th ' ·ork f th · lll s~ rum cnt .Sh:Op . Con!'id r ing- Lh · fact tltat there an! .~ I G cl >O> ·tric tttowr in th n1 i ll to b , cared for, it c rw L lmost mirac.ulo ns th::tt th ~e , p lus a ll the ~od>, t', · vi1- h ·, wires, a nd o l11 r ·J tri _ paraph ,nHtli a. hould op rat 'lO Jnflf;> th} • It' no 111 irallc to H owa rd ..._\ thlll l\ an I hi -· gang 'hough - it's ul I i 11 a <..h ,, s work.. And j u lc;ing fr rn p r­fm n1 :;1n c, i ~\ ;l d·'l. rh (l good da , · ~ .,·o rk, bv a darned fj1 e gau0 ~c~f C h~ 1n pio n e lectric ians. CONTINUHi ON NEXT PAG-E 93 "-· CONTINUED _\ T I:'\if CLO , K_ :~p ­peat. to he <1 H~n 1 )Ill · plicate J gMig 1. um t Elcuridan ~ 1 on John­~ on and :'.1 el\ ·in \ ate1 - son. lock re-pa·ll· is all in a da" · · \'ork. llo 11 • is a thi1 d-dJ · ele tri - cinn ,,-hile ;\l ei h1ld . . 1 ~e( nel-da~· ra l lll)::. ELECTRICAL Engi­neer :\or:rn He berer, at left, and Electric Sbop u p e r vi o r H<n ard , dam look 0\·er elec­trical pecifica Lions_ on equipment being p ur ­ch e d. T be depan ­ment j, re p on. i ble for specjfying, ' in , ta il i n g , n1.ainLaining a 11 d re ­paiting a ll ele-eLri cal eq u ipn1 n l in the mill. • TOB ,\ SSlGN l\J •1'T . OR T:Hl'~ UA Y .ue gi \· ia ro.s, <1 ' i~ lar~ t Ji lot- ~ it J) ' !J"lfllwnt :up n- i-..o t ' \ Le 1ur 1 '" i 11 - a tlcpan H 111, t>:l 11\''1) ' , n' put 1 '' ' t· ' SE((J ' 0 - (:[ \'i. 1:.1 u ri .ian J~ h O'Dell \ ·;t photogrr•pnc(! SC\'CI'<Il I'ROUlh'> agl • tlnderoH­tiug an annaJun: i11 tb Eicv t rica] Rep-ai.r: ,· l~op . Men in the ~hop als0 re-wind , rc on· n ct and repair the 111 a tt) type 0[ ele Lric tnOtot:. 11 d fo the rni.IJ. F .\l E .B l ' R :'\ .. . lef.t. a.n l :'\Iacguerite '\ i e Pill YOI.tch for the fact that · ·her e·" a lot of paper work iuvoh·ed in .Electric , bop bu ·in Marcrltetite hand1es cm­re: pondeHc , t pe: or­der ·, hand! - telephone work. Faye ttl 1;. care of motor and work or­ler recon;L.. • • • • <: to it tha i •bO,\lUt) k i iL>W:;t il ood tt ~c · ;11 :lwt:~ t ~inn . lav • • R U.'S ' \'l l.LSEY. lt sc rviccm·ln iu No. !? P:Jp •r Mill. cJ a i.ms t hat " u ntha tched rue n' a re d i ~- rimin at ' d against." - an I thou ­sands of o th er ag-ree with him . R u. s h as h en a't ham pion .a litLl ov er f nr years. for · ' t h ~ second rime." What Will They Think of Next? By Merle Bnyne The niy r ity of 'Mich igan Conver ati n Depart-ment ha · h i1·ed three p ·s h o logi · t · to teach fish to be hard r to .atch. T he trick j , to train ~~archery -raised trout to look for food on the· bo·ttom @f the stream. T he · learn to a \·oid those thing:s calJ;€d fli es which lloat on a tr in w · a man on r.he o tb.er endl T hey may u cceed, but 'd1at they <:tb in the case of m. "Fir po" Wallace, who ha been t a bing h is bi rd do bow to catch fi -b? · I couldn' t help but overhear tobacco-chew ing Walter Bau r telling the boy how much he mis. eel the cuspidor jn the Beater oom offi ce .·ince it \.vas gone. · "T h a t's Lhe re a~Jll it':. gene ·· H enry Car penter told h im. "You mi!> a it _u manv time_." • It's Lhe fi. ·ed opinion of a la dy cle 1~k- who work at th c > meti , count r in a local clepar tme•-IL ·LOr th a t the .-\rmy doc~ n ' t know th rneaning of -real ch mi ·al warfare. H ou ofl iciah at the J> n Lagon wiinH th low­d \ '11 , ;,he ;l!oi'> LI.r 1 ' fa r Puma. c Jating Iill Sorting Lin , they ~h uuld hst n in on what th ' girl cu 5torn r::; a r the p C;;'rfum co unter . a . Millwr.ght To Tu-rn Buggy Whip Ma ker? . l Slush · a w r -notl• millwright, 1l11s an ·xpcr.t r L h o 'l[ to ta · ra.r · ,f VtJUJ'S·lf duri 11g a hu rr iu tll ', ' ' can11ot 1 a ke up h i~ m ind · :, tCJ wh c·1e ~u <l h nw h wil1 '>}F t d lti !) r tir ·wen da -, , 01 e day it\ Ll 1(.: F lcn-ida 'i:l lld , in ;,pite o f a l1 the r r Ill h u-ri( an~ . Th ~ r rb · n ·x t da ' i t '. ~ood o ld Vi r­gin ia ~ · I ·-r h u ould "P 1 d h i ho ur" of Lo(l' fing I i-urc mak ilJ J.) lnt gg~· whip , in -, pit "' rJl til · R ·id d a n . \ 'I en J a~ k e d ldm wl1 }. I · w ]d .• ,,'L' tha L 1 11 a kiu ~ I ugg '" bip!> '"·ould p rE-,1 abl. k(' p h im \vitl• a-> l itLI · t ) drJ as an _: t11itJg b c Hl ld tlti nk u l. < • )[ you'r ,c k ing the fountain of m tth 1\l. . pend yom' day · in good old r ~ nt u ck y . Jt rna , be the r . S - en te<:n per so ns in th a t sw t · ha vc pas~ ·d tl1 · J 00-year mark and prol abl tn any lll O r e are j ust a · nhl, bu t-ha ve h ad no pu blici ty. A fellow with a P c<::ding hairline who works in li t ivhchine Room (a t.td vv ho mak··:. quite a joke. a ll in fun of cnur e. of 11 1 t\o\'tJ-toJJe I air), sa "' that unthatch <1 men a1·c di .'icri ntinat ·d a g a i n ~·t. H e says tJi a t a f ·w e ~lf · ago he paid th · barucr on lv nne-thi rd as much to do thrC'e ti •nes as much wor k. r I gue:s you 're r ig h t., Rw;sel I , , ills'}', and a lso r igh t when yrn.t :.ay that a rn~Ln is just like a worv in th du:-,L. He comes along, wiggles aro und a 'vvhiJe, and finally so rn chick<".. JJ g·ets b im. * * * * . [ di clu ' t get to ·cc my n ltl friend, J ohn 13 utc Brown , rt . i)aper making hud{ly from clown ' [ exas way, -wh n h ' wa. here on a ·ation but o ne or th e· fellows was telling me abo ut John . He tri c1 to gC't r iel of ·1 cat d •cp in the h ea rt of Houston on three diHe rent occasions. · ~ I:.ach time h e drove tartb . r away l·rom · .h o rne b [on: dr<'ipping tbc an ima l. T he cat a lways came back. F in a Uy he took it so far away fro.m home tha t be got lost him ·e lf a nd got home on ly by following the cat. t Je \'er dreamed it < o uld happen to a Texan John. CAN D l D L'a' l'lCT R ED a t home a rc j ;:J net a nd Jimm Willis, ell i ldi·en of Lake Willis, Co lo..- CasL, a nd gnJnclcb-il clren of Willi am Wise, Roll Grind er . J anet is 8 yea rs o ld a tid J immy i 4. ' ! I--l ESE f'\VO ll .tpp 'llltllg \ tt'-t ' : t H : the ~0 11. of l·.a r l ~ .,. .-,, Ln : pt ·tlion . 1'\ ,m , 1 iglu _ i.:. ·I \ t ill '' t d<l aud Ct ·gt n·,,, J i> ' nHm t h . l l tl! \' re~ id (· 1\i th th e ir ' P·" ' ttL :u 11 0.' \ t t:l .\ ~ ' llll<' in llUIIt i'lw .. . ll oba t't \ \ ' ;t ' r , C:1~ 1 Co a t·, .i~ tlw · IJH>liC I . t• -p g-t a lld l ;lth ··. • • . •' ' • ... 'a DAVID LLOYD ' A."DLl -:\ , on o ( Dave Sa nd lin . C1H Caleod r , ..:elcbrat d his . cond. hi rth d ::n ' ( 111 Octob r \.13. H i" dad stated aUcrti o naL ly tl1ot n a,·id is "o.m ­er a. a corn ' r ed raLt lesnnk :· and th a t he' al ready clirnbing t r ·e . 2 • P .\l.'L KIRK 'S priz. -winninO' " Kepp. ·K,'' i · Lh on of Domino. who a! ·o w k her share [ l1lu ribbons. Kepp i sho\ n here ,,·ith , eorge R ood. hand ler. an I Mrs. Hugh o·Brian. judge, as he tool hr, l place in rh.c Gr::lllcl Pri1e l'up1 y Derby at Louisville on cwber 31 . " hi~ a II' a rd is consid reel th Kentll k )' Derl)y for Boxer J li t> and th winner recei1es a blanket of roses. Pa 11l '' ork in th , a ·t Coat D parunenr at til Ohio Divi ion . tt No Char-ge-- No Arguments" By H es Cobb T houo·h t for the month .. . This is the sort of story • that renew- one' , faith in the "milk of human kindness." In this day of mechanized greed, it i the sort of thing tha t proYes again tha t the friendliness of people and their thought · for o ne another are the only true and everlast­ino- value in life. Just as the Good Book and the Golden Rule are a much a breath of li£e today as they were in the ao·es gone bv. b ' ' And the beauty of this story is that it is true. vVe :aw the dinner check with our e. ·es- carefully folded and laid av,•ay in a b illfold, much as a red-gold maple leaf i. pre. sed bet ween the pages of a book. Last month a party of four bunter s, Don Pierce, 'ing Poynter , George Young and Gene \1\lalters made their annual pi lgrimag into the pheasant country of ) uth Dakota. They 111.ade their headquarters deep among the prairie land . in a spa_rsely-se ttled Dakota srnaJJ to'wn. The Boys Re-hunted Each Evening Th hunting wa never b tter. Each afternoon the boy combed the h igh grass and brought down their lirnit of bi1·ds. And ea ·h evening, tired and hungr y, they gath r d irr the town 's lone resta urant to r ehash the da y's experience:; and khl ach oth er about runfting lo' n wow d d birds on fool. Georg Young, b tt r nown a~ champion HndepohJ\ I lcet-f ol d enter fie lder, one ran a cri ppl d ph asan t a good q uaner o l a mil lwl'ore turnb.ling birll to can h. · To ruak t.h C'ir trip umiplct , the food was ne cr b t: ll r. Th trim littl 'onwn who UJ Cli.ll '·d th' din r, a Mr!-.. LeGrand , "''a · ;1 m: slerftd <o )k . Or p rhap'i it was L caus -· Ire tri d to 'iuit ·<.l.lh lt1 \ indi\'i lual ta..,Lc. An w<~y, th l,nys likc·d I r Ju d and th · ' cold h r 90. A:.. th ·y ldt at noon Jor Lh ' l· I da" of lwntillg Mr . L · Grand ugg · l<.;d that lh!'y ::. t< (Hit .mtil d:11!... and that sh wotd I !rave a spt'('i·tl dimwr fnr tlt.tm :u 7 / lo k.. Th n· [o llowc 1 a11oth cr w Ide n altu no,m nf huming and n du:.k C' tt.l cd mer rhc pt~ irie thr I o troop d inw rhe 'lestauraut o th lnut. To their ttrpri. c. their l~t bl ~·a '(' t il'l ban 1utt ·tyle. E" rything lhar go '"''ith , full-cour-.: · ph a'\allt 2G dinner 'tnd all th trimming. wa: { n hand . . \nd onn <d t.c1 they were : ·at<.:d, in came ~ n1ili ng ~ lr . . L Cr rHle wi th a hpg · piau •rful of tend t (f wl (' t 1 ~ t th 1 u II birds) that remiu 1 tl the boy of b celebrated f •a ·ts _ f Robin Honrl and hi · • 1 err.ie Men. ~1 he four hunters ate a., they n r ate h fot e. \Vhen the platter w- mpty, anoth r rook .it · place and the f ast <.: mtiuued un int() the night. Th v J·ol...in<dv r ·- , ' ' marked that lh meal would cnilt them a ">mall fortune but it wa worth .i t. , t last Mr . LeGrand ·am · ove and laid t.h check on the tabl ··, fa e down. On f the boys l ifted a corner of th - tab an 1 glanc cl furtively at the figuie . look ot puzzlement ros ed hi fac followed by a . low rrn.ile. Without a word he pa sed the ·lip around the table . On th ~ check, written in a firm, neat handwriting. were these word : " FOUR DINNERS- ="10 HARGE -NO ARGUMENTS!" So end d perfect hunting trip, deep in th.e prairie country ot o uth Dakota. And to Mr . LeGrande aud all of your loved ones - A Merry Christmas and a Happy · 'ew Year! T u here at Hamilton and Champion, you ha,-e proved that Dakota is a paracli ·e of phea ·ants and a 1· nd of kind h earts and gen tle people. "Keppy-K" Runs for the Roses Nothing succeeds like ·ucce s .. . .. Paul Kirk and his wife Ethel have their head in the cloud~· the e day· . Their great young boxer, Keppy-K, son of their winning female, Domino, scored two rna hing Yictorie chninu the fall campaign. At the Fourth Annual Boxer ' pecialty how in Indianapolis on ' Oqober 22, Kepp wa Best Puppy in Show and was nosed out in the Futurity b r a dog he had beaten in the classes. He came ri ht ba k_ n the following week end at Louisville t weep the Grand Prize Puppy Derby and take home the blanket of roses. This show is the equivalent of the Kentucky Derby for Boxer ·, attract the cream of the year· . pupp ' crop from all over the country, an l i one of the m t sought-after win in all Boxerdom. Keppy-K celebrated hi fir t birthday n Nov rnber 18th, and he will now mo"·e int the Open Cia ~ a he campaigns for hi · chanlp"ionship. Styli h and - und in every way, with d aint 1 feet, bio- quare h ead an 1 an ex-e ptiona1ly deep che t, Kepl y i · con idered by th · e. perts to be o ne Q( the better pup- brought out durincr the pa t ear. Th bigbe t thr ill [M the Kirks i- that Kepp ,,.8 , produced i.n _ th ir first .litte:r· b 1 D tnino. ·nu.l It ' \':1 el et -J b them a · the m rt likely fut ure r h arn1 ioll 'vithout an ' o utside aid. Mrs. Kirk It >pe that K ppy will b , fir t in a long lirte o ( champions ' t · a rc nlt o[ JiHcbrecd int, o perations with. Dorn.ino. A Trip to the Buckeye-Duke Game Unffing tlr· drum · .. . ... ... ·\. party of a. t Cna lcr. 1 au) Blume, G m g T m , Hob V\1 av r, J ohn Pon tius. a n·d \rV s Cohb mot r ed to .o.lumbus on 0 to­ht: 1 I I) £o , .... aLch Lhe Ohir,) Sl<He Bn k y s Jose a great ball ga lll ro Duk<: . .... Aft ·r the g-~nn c th group njo I lun IH'Oir p ;rrt ) in d ow nto~"n ~o lu mbu · wj h Oav \ \'cav r, lorm r Hamilton High r ;lt who I la~' ngh t g-uard fo r t.h(• l~uck:. D< Vt.' h. ~ been d l)inA a grc:.H job for th · Bu ke ·e :Il l y ·ar <lnd re cnt.l ' w a ~ g·i ·tn 'J lull p;g spr ad in th ,u/rnl/hll\' Citi"'' u a.s ··i\tr. D"' p(·ntlahle" . . . . q~u ~ t , ·rii w clrap. Dave t.a Id es Ids "lull i. s ·with. th am trc­rn ndott'i drive h eli .play!> on t he cunr nt .\11 -Americ.- .n . choJa. ic coil ge team , . . . . . . boy of wh m lhe cit, ( f Han ilton nray ". 1l b proud! orre tion D p't . . ... On.. of our ummer college bov whom we o ' erlouk d i non oth er than Martin • horr, a quiet, lik. able 1oungster who is tudying to . be a doctor . . . .. Go d Ju k Martin! A tip for 1 s t-minute Xrna shopping . .... Al park ' fom make a yearl ' hobb of baking fruit­ca e and we an p r sonall vou h (or it that the are deliciou ·! . . . . . . . . You still ha e time to order 0 1 e by eeing I down on o. 1 Dr um, Cast Coat De­partmen t. Bud Evans Reaches the Golden Mark R buffin the drums ... ..... Eu ll "Bu 1 ' Evan '- had a. birthday the oth r day . hi fi(tieth, and we're all pr ud to a ' that he never looked better .. . .... . It is har l to .imagine that 'On-the-ball Bud," as he i. affectionate} knm,.,·n, wa Jighting for his life a few year aao a fter uffering a serio 1 "cmonary" . . . . . H i a real in piration for tho e fo lks who th ink tbal ~heir best year are behind them after pending a spell m an ox,gen tent. ympathie to H ank Gadd on the death of his mo[her during the llleekend in November . . . . . . . .t: nd a big '·get ·well" me sage for Carl Robbins, o ne of the mo t amiable f'·u ys in the whole department ... \Ve mis "Old Robbie's" comments on sport when be' off ...... Carl i · one of the shrewdest observers on amateur and profe ional athletics we've ever known ..... And he' a veritable encyclopedia on Indiana high ·chool ba ketball, b eing· a former Hoosier him.sel£. Sympathie to hand ome Galen Briscoe, whose Dad was , truck down in a fatal traffic accident late in October . . .. .. . . Hobe V\Tea er is wearing one of Champion' , beautiful diarnond-studded 30-year service pins, and in celebration his wife presented him ,.vith the expen. ive target p istol he'd wanted for years . . . .. 'Ne er had t'·'-'O things please me anymore in my whole 'life," drawled Robe. PowerbuHing the drum .. . In order to give credit where credit i · clue, and keep on speaking terms with eYerybod., we'd like to list the members of Cast Coats winning bowling team . . . They are Captain Cecil Jones, Don chulz, om Mc\1\Thorter, Earl Jones, Ed ·Smith, Carl Hou. e, Virgil Burns, and Geoxge Sams . .. The team wound. up in first place in the Summer Mill League . . . (Says the big bully boy George Sams, "The new a e lim it J1as ended my oftball days, but they can 't keep me fron< bowling!") Floyd Becknell 's ~on, J 3-year-olcl.Joey, is a young man ?f many talents .. . J oe is already a ·woodworking hobby- 1St, an "A" student in. Wilson Junior' S venth Grade, pia, :-- the clarinet in the band, is one of the I est tap dancer in town, and last (all when the hoys ran cross­country, J ey wa. taking a shower wh n the rest of the i.ds were panting across the finish line! . . . (That kid h.a. b en talking to Marvin McC llum - he ju t (loesn 't l dieve in fin ishing e ond!) Woody P.rize.s His Foreign "Smokes" 'Woody \IVhitaker, the " little man" among our ba k t(::I ders, had a rougl tim of it during his four yea rs in \cVorld \IVar Il ... . \Voody la nded with the infan.trym n ' t Casablanca and fm1gh t a ll tl e ·'\ -a a ro s northern . frica . . . Am<Jng hi · prized posses!> ions a-r J 5 packs of foreign-brand ciaar t t s ... re:;tl novelti es. Oltio \ Va hing out the pan ... . Again it'. ne\ car · and n w babie · . . . Among the [onner are happy owners Le Hightower, Al Shane, Walter \'\ ootcn and "Pea h ' B knell . . . m ng the latter ar even happier OW11Crs teve Crouc:her, J erry Hall, and Charley Logan . ... CongTatulatwns, on and a tl ! Belie,-e it or n ot, Galen Bri coe, onetim e bo ·er ·who ha · tried his hand a t many thing: during his short 28 y ; rs, _i a seri us r ader of S ·hop enbauer, S j ~in za .. and v\- til Durant ... From these Lhought-provoktng wnters, Galen ha dev loped h i own phi lo opby of Jif and thereby gained a grea1: deal of ati [ac tion. There i nothing hk th incentive of reward t , pur yo ungst ~ rs to a hievem nt . . . lex Delph told his ~ c ond grader Tom and his fourth grad er Mary Anna d they brought home n o thing lower than B Grade th v co uld have a bicycle a.nd a typewrite for Xma , : . '. P.S. ;\lex is paying off and very happy about it! Di ck \ rVillsey of Colorcast ac tually killed two squir­rel: " ith one shot last fall . . . The Dewey Schroths' famou traveling fox terri er, Lucky, added another 1,700 miles to h er to uring record last summer . · .. . She even had a boat ride throu gh the \i\fisc01 sin dells and loved every minute of it! . . . Cost Coat Basketball Undarwoy \IVa h up and Buff . . . 1ar in Kees is guiding another trong Cast Coat basketball tearn through the Mill L eague season, built around the tip-in and re­bounding kill of towering Dale Hornsby and the great o utside shooting of Mel Grolln us ... Best-dressed man outside the mill, worst-dressed man inside the m ill i Auvel Saylor, the big bug-ex terminator man . .. Are you li stening, Margel, or shall '"'·e send you a not her n~ te? H erb Ittel's son J ohnny, a sophomore a t Ro s, was one of the successful 4-H hoat exhibitors at the Fair last fall ... You ng Johnny mu t choose between a career of farming or music ... H e is making so much progress with his new baritone horn tha t his a '!visor is urging him to enter Cincinnati Conservatory of Music. "Davy Crockett" Willie Smith ·died hard on the Yankees last fall ... 'Willie shakes his h ead and says, " I don't see how those gu ys co ulcla' done like that!" .. . Cast Coat lost one of its youthful newcomers ·when Ron­nie Slater ·ignecl up for a four-year hit h in the Navy ... ' 'Vatch for the nan1e Browning in future Hamilton High football ... Bud Browning' boy J erry was shifted into the T-quarterback slot at \Nilson Junior last fall ... The boy's uncl e, Jack Brcn ning, is a former Big Blue grea t ... Lambs to Market- Wes to Doghouse P.S. Family Portraits .. . Everyth.ing seerns to happen on the day that: the lambs go to market. Thi year it was raining "cats and dogs'' when 1ve arose at 5:30 a.m. \'Ve pressed the " li ttle woman" into ser ice h e] ping to bring each lamb up (rom the barn to the garage (we '\ ere in. the "dogh ou ·.e" for a week a(ter that nightmarish. chore!) · We walk d to n e ighbor Harlan Miller ' in a driving rainstorm and (ound i.t l o muddy to get to hi · trail r with the car. One hour lc1.ter, plu one dead tractor bat­t ry plus o ne dr r gas tank, we load d 11 lambs into the trailer und r a tlry t rpaulin and lro tr.iumphantly to the lamb p ns. _ s O ld Pt· lro sa s, ''lf you EVER fiud ANYTHING that g-o s to snit you, or is run th way ou think. it o ught to, com around , nd let me kuow, willya?" 27 • Oltio • (. I Hl ll \PPY rHREE 0 . IF ltc lh<' gramlcbildr n of \V, It 'r Hon1nn, . G ner:d II ire tdcphon~· (t tentiOL Th ) a t . from 1 fl. \Jichad R;.~\ .Hubbard . . idnc . lwwn I 01 !lllng and Tel r~ Hrad onl ' tat 7Ct. Tern· , tbd i~ Don Stauer nl Clmmpiott 's J'ip .au g: Uucle Lorc11 hml..$ in ln ·perti••••: and .\unl June ,' mitll i · a m rnlJ·r of 1hc : \1 , 11Ling Linr. ~ • • 'Til the Stove Grows Cold B'v Ollo R icl Becau ·e of the re umpti on o[ the se ·i es, "Th at' · My Bo) ., in the forthcoming LOGS, I w.i b to co ngratulate all of u who are privileged to read the LOG. It is ct heart-wannino· :erie o( Ya. t potentialities, be~au .e it is abont real people, yc>ur frien ds and min . Jn the capable hand · o.f Devey :Minton , it prorllJises to be a hi(Tbli ·ht of every i su e. The boy is good, b e­cau e he writes as he li\'cs . . close to the people who e torv he tell . ' * * * * \~ re know the VVorlcl Serie is over, but like Bill Thomp~o n ays, th ubject ha · gotta last us till the pot-bellied stove grows cold in the spring. This was one of the mo. t colorful and interesting serie. of aU t.ime ... b eca use it wa · dose, replete with drama 011 every pitch, anJ beca use two great leaders o( men were matclling wit · at e ·ery move. They both had the horse . .. "'hich made th e ir rides so im­portant. " Smokey" Plays a Shrewd Game \<\falter "Smokf'y" Alston jlllnl eel th ·whole board and land d smack-dab it the king-row in the game that hrO<JghL Br<;okl)'ll .its rirst championship. j owher in the anual) c f bas<.:ha ll is Lher a re ·ord ol a smarter move d1an the one: ngincerc.:.d by Smok . In t;his bat­t! · oJ -rippl s it '"'a~> nee %·uy to improvi'i ' each in.J1in g-. Wh n lstnn pull·cl Gilliam f'rom I lt fj · lei u sec­ond ba:-.e, and ins · rt •d t l• · f- 'ltt~ l J.l\;ln on Brook lyn.·-; tC, fll into 1 f't .. _ btoth ·r, dJ 'll\ a l.l It · wrol, a nd 111 • Yan _ s J1ad had it. Oll Bro(Jkl)n pl ;tycr <I uld )la ,· ' pos.,i l1ly caugl1 L tq1 wi tlt thttt ~ li n·d lin •t', a nd Sut() kc h1::1 I .:\ JIJOrm whtr · h · wanlcd hiiJI , 1. 1 :Vvl' 1 <tVC .I s <'1 1. opjnir}l l mote di,·i I · I 1h an a l Ch;.u npinn (J il \·\'h a l t ltc Ji tt al fJUtc tllC 1vou l<l b ·. • lo r, l ]><'() jJl <' [ef t the Yan l cc·~ wntdd win, .ll(Jl wi !1 rvason~. bJ.l wi.LIH,ut th 111 ••• mostl y l> ·t u .. c tltv ~d way lntcl. F) nell Vnnl'i l.lion, wltu ha) walf l1t>d It hnuil' l'odn·., pi tl'lt f1>1' J-hti'ard , I{ y., aud , tHn · · IH· i ~oo I, ., till j>lll <• lot <Jf tt g;t t un t lw fotlll ·~ l• e ·t , wlii1 h dt ·rl \ll t ' tl tc Ya11k'i ar.· Lilli) '(lt.iJblc. Bttl , whf'lt J\IJtOHI' It e;t eel lo the coffin lOt ncr, ~tfu(k otll hi ~t Hnl' 'h illlll g~Jtlt : •'-~tl a hullclrt:cl tho11 ~1n d 10 hi. ltl<ttll I o 1111 , Fll·n1 h frowuuJ hi ., di a ppr ov;d •tnd lwg.n1 t , di <k' 'l)· .~t.· era l C h ' 1111 pion ') w l'C' wa i L i 11 ~ f< 11 hi 11 1 to c <, u g b u p. .ll lin 'oll in/) anu~dly ept tjlti<.:l ·~ 1HI I ,nk(·d kind ,t sn ~k y ... ' c-a~t h · 1-\'<Js lrull-dCJi' ·cl i.1no il ht w.tg r u11 28 the l..t r gartlf' H e u.U · u.d . . ncl. l';tu l Blume. a spoH all the w~'Y· ~a'> 1call. 1111-111h<lodh d . · f'j., h: td to blli '\' th~ l 111 t 1b '!:) ol t.he Ch, mpiou f;11nily (()Uld dq to e < h utb 'T ,,·hat '>(. \:raJ u1 ·<'m did tn Paul. 1 ;t d touk all the bl.tme for hi~ n ttd · rw~ .... 'i' yi g he l ;n·ned not a thing; from the 1ir ·t <.i, gam ... .,, He · na lyz ·rl th . .,it t lti)Jl, ancl \' 'tnt all out un the 'i('" .:nth gam ' . That rajniJu ·- Ll ike tl at Amoro. threw [rom th · outfiekl I ft Paul b eggiu~ lor (.rmnb-, at th ~e ln1 L of the rainbov•. H fquncl the p >l, hm it wa~ n 't a pot d e~ i g u ed Lo hold gold. Th · most remark<tbl thing about the . erie" \ ·as the !>lind faith of p ·nple in r l. ton. -hey plc) Cd him like a ra j t •g Can J~::~ ys a jo k y. 'hey lea red and tht:y trem­bled , but he. laid it n the line ... kn Ming that a ~enti man, a .schol r, and keen student o1 the game would gi e th em a ride for their dough. , nd, I thjnk he (li.ke the jo ·key) ·J-wull collect 10'1., of our winning-~ ~ .. Fr01 1 all ' ,'cCpt me . . . I'm still trying to pay . uy::. lik ' Tilden Thompson, Paul ..Blume. J ames ·ain, and Vennillion [or what they did to me in other ·eal"i. Sic. semper tyrann i , OT the woim ha · wiggled the other way. A word about thi-; Podres kid, and hi · rerlo·uhtab e receiver, Campanella. The gra ·iou youn~ster r,caled the heigbts of glory, but quick ly aid that 'ampy called every pitch exc pt the l~t jn the finale. That w·i 11 in ·nes · to share the glory add im m0rtali ty t the mortal he<:rrt that beat o readily when tbe old h ip was a-rockin·. "The Y cnkees Threw Ba ts at It" And that J ekyll and H yde chan c-up wa- the ' eat­est about-Eace since the a t gel fell from Hea,en for the explicit purpo e of rulin the pits o[ H ade . The Yankees thre·w bat · at i t, and l understand that i[ it had gone one more game, 0 ld Ca ey had mclered a bucket of ·a nd. Said it rnio-ht be hit if there wa_ a ood ltead -wind to scat ter a hand(ul of _and at it ~ 'i it came lirnping) stuttering. bobbino·, wea'\ in ~ , slitherin wrin - ling, hop- ·kip-and-jumping w the plate. (I'd hate to pick. my teeth with wh at li ttle " '0( d th Y ankee~ got on th a t pitch.) Louis Panncl and RaY ,\1inl!ua ha 1 a w r, not o( ' ~' mone ,, but mnetl1ing· that m n . '''ould buy. I no-ticed that fo r e,· raJ d ys luring the ·erie they pa- d each other wiLh a n arlll rai · d high and Lh . h rl lca.ned back, and , dam's appl qttiYerinh in an undu­lali ng motion. A.h r t il • se ri e!:i, Louis ·till rnil d. a~ h w nt thru tbe moLion, hut , crate hot o[ h mln k ,.:l · n mor bi.tt -r than t il wr r expr s::. io n or fingu~ . (Louis sntikd li . .ke mv unclt' ·when h had th SLuff rn ruakc hi · favoriLt: lll'i Xl'cl drinks : tlnt ··as <t 1uan ( f ··r Hlr roses. ' ' '-' b.i ·IJ ll <: wixed willt .. . :1 [U<lrt of " fuu · ro :~cs ." ) M tSS · l·~N F \ ' :\ . ll \ 11 T /. g t ·:~du : u e f•f , 1. St ·ph n ' i:; ,Jt ­le llll i 11g Sl. .Jos p h A ,J,d ~ m\ J n ~ll lt nlillll: , Ohio. H ·r p;-tfl'll l '-, llel e tt . ltttl ll, l' \1 ·, 11 ing, , nd IIUit , Con. rnl(titll, ll av tt wid 1 it'd · >( l'ril'nd at Ch. mpi<ul. .\nd G<' IIJ' I a's !-\' t ;lnd a the r . ".JI1111j)in'" J l ' Sh tt.l tl, ha b ~~~ a Clt :unpinu n tain ta • l 'r ttl•ll · I h ~ll\ ·II) l'H 1'~ . ' Our Future in Capable Hands By r~ o rge St ein er .Jam s L owe. \ l Enrl, who \' s an s nn wh en the S e ni~rr Cl::t- t·s ot Butler Conn .. v tollred th mill , aid : ' J udging Irorn the b h:::~vior ancl th quali ty of tfll-cstinns asked bv th ·w l nr · durino0 • their trit tl1rough the ruill. I L 1 l- • th ·ounger g-en eration i · R lono- 0 wav from '::?.oino· to ... ~ • J • • J 0 tb d '.' ' I lli ( u · eel with thcr \ wrt lht: <{Ll l's tion. ask ·cl l \ th stud n t., and w " e re all at nat.. d <tt Lhe inter ' SL ( they had slJOvm , and the higli 1uality of ·111 q_u e .' liOll:i tb h ncl as ked. ) ne :·tudent skccl. m \ h r 1 thou ·ht bu 'ing Chant­pion . to ·k \ a uld 1 c a ; )OCI inve tntefll. 1 told him that iL j - a ~ c od in ve ·u -ent be au o( th natur of our 1 rod­u t t, '"·hich is in ' -re~ d mand thro ughout th \VorkL Sound 11< na ·men t too. e nables our rnen and na hin e ~ to op rat 24 hou r a. da ·even day · a ·w -'k. .-\.1 -o, our stock i valu abl ecau · of re ' ar h and planning, ani the piJ:it at co peration that xists be­tw 'en m.p loyee and man ag·e n1 ·'nt ·whi h gi e· work rs :.u1 incenti .-e l pr<>d u-ce more and bett r pa] er for our cu totn 1" . The e are ju· t a few of the r a on that tn ake Champion , . oun l in estmc nt, ,, h e ther you bu tock or lo k [or em pJo men t. .-\.noth 'r question oncerned c nstruction. "D.icl 'h<~ mpjon e ngineer::; make a swd · of tb earth forma­i )11 b en ea th the huildin o·-- to d termine ' hether the foundation and fl oor · wo uld suppolt such hug ma­. hin ry ·· Tha r o u ld be an wer ed by sa ·ing that any bu ine ~ - mall or large, to be ucce" · ful must tudv ~> J nd pl· n eYen to t.he smallest J. tail ever; operation ft)r Lll prcent and t he future. Our bui ldings are stand­ing proof that our e ngineers di l a good job. O ne -LlJ.lent wan ted to know why a calender stack i: called a . al nder. That I couldn t ans.-wer , but a call ( L . ELY R f. L: ·r ·D ru ·eveHd Champion: i Rohert .. park;,, J ~ . a m ru l r of lh C. ·. Ai1 l-ot c _,t, Liont:d at , jmp on Ai.r Fore Base, , ' · '\'. H i. dad . A l '>park..' . 'r ., \ o r J,; On Lhe C. f 1 riunn rs, and l1i b rothe r , Al "'pal ·.-. Jr., is a ao;;r · •a1 De­pa: rtmcn t emp lo" . B I 1 i tPu the Air ore HI a (ter ar.adu ­.: u.ing fron- H a m ilton High 'ch ol. WH 1::.. ' COY l~,\ " LR h oa~ t··d r f IJi ~ Vci 'CII - ffiOt lld l l.OfJl ill ll p f illli S hi~( 5Ulfi11H·I , 'l. i; f t.:IIOIA W'• keJ ~l t! rL· 01 iu I li v i ~ i on £ d ~t d ~ll > i V tl "< g la nr· ~ - I' roof -ol l.n y' ~ 11 r·(.;, i 11 g;;nd nil lJ:l ·j sh 'J'" I) 11 (' 1 ~ . He di<.lu 't ,'1" ~1 • hLtl t he lt: ltJJhOtt l· p<~l<' ill lh t• hit(, ·gn •UncJ '' ill pn,.l,a bl \ lw - t) r· I !01 lf>llUlW ·ulc~ 11 •: 1 ' HILtnf:l. Oltio t' . ·tan N wkirk \ C(nnmunil Lttion ~ OU.i .e hrnuglt a promp1 an ,. e r. vVe wer .infunned it as call ::l a.l ­enrler be a.us the wnrd 'ca l · nd.t~ r' .i d eri d rrom the Fr nch w rd cal ·n lr , and that rrum th.c latin ·ylind.ru -. Bolh 1- ords, calcEJd cr and c Iind er are n•lated , with :alen d er .omiog· to mean a sta 'k ol cylinders . . \n J h e re a t t il ' ntill, to nlle1td er rn · ~lns t smooth an I shine. ln st1m111 ing UJ hi !-> r ·port. Jante · Lov e sa id, " l think ever on ' 'viii agr ·e LhaL wh en k.i Is lik e th ·tu· d en [ · '<q·o•v -u p' anll ' take-ovey' th i. cotll t try nf nu t!, is going to 1 e .in pr ~ tt , ·a1 a ble h: uds.' ' \1\!oulcl OLl like to hto" wh C ·orge V yatl, C l Shipping. is such a JPalthy ]or>king llC-Iltetn? V ell , it\ thi : · besjdcs a ll tl1 · otlwr goo !jc that Georg, st< ws <I'IWi)' at lunch time, he also cortsLLme 1 5,~ !)0 drups, a q u::trt, of milk. T'll a t', _ d '-._ ily babit ith our G 'orgie. * * * * Well , the ,' 1.50 baircut is J e r . .ln the good old days tlte had two pr ices for a 1 ,a1rc ul: 25¢ a ncl 50¢. The differen ce b .lw en tl1 _. 25- ;wd 0-cent . h a.ir T tL was thi : if you ask .d for a ~ 0- cc nt h a ir ut th :')' took your hat off ' hile cutting the hair. For 2t) ents tb y le ft th h a t on your head and just cut w ha t sho1vcd. * * * * Otto Reid wa · stancli11g on High , trcct tbc o tl er da-y, waiting [or hi wife . He was kanin .aga in ·t a liglu post, yawn ing and looking at the ourth b usc dock . A.. lad ~a. sed by, and , eeing Otto with his mou th wide open, dropped a I 'tter in iL) an l walk ed on . H you ge t imrnti ent ·with the uu , al eacl o f you lor being slow in "taning when the light turn gr 'en , think of the pQor fello·w who tri .s to cro ._. the George · Va,sh­ington Bridge in New York City, on a h olida ·. ur.ho 1- ties say that an average of 65,000 ·hide · ro s~ that bridge on holida, s, and 46,000 on we k d a , s. Cll \1\•ll'IO;\: FJ' I.Er 1DS o f l~ k . \\ 1111 l" n . "' oolen will It~ inter• L'd Ln l:;.n1 , - in l; th . t luc' ~ L:di On r! 1)(.) 11' i tr \ln ~k ::t . \'il ­llJ l 1\ 0t ~lrl in . ling iJdl!> tc l. ei n ~; in d.tHietl into lh rmy. li e' lll< SU!l Of Bill '\o\-' oll")tUL (; \ ;f ~ o ti t g; h J~ :1 Iiit · <.~ i> Co. ··c ' >:.h d Jill. R q.,"~ , .A I~ 9 l' , Se, ttlr'. ' Vasl t. A f ?C LOWELL T . ' PARk ', a _,bacnpion se vi em.a n, i ' st a­Li. onecl at pre ent jn London, Engl a11d. Low ll , whose .i b in Lhe A ir For ce .is rh, t of cl .rk ­t)' pt t, ·wou ld like to hear from hi' fr ien ls a t h.a m pion . His ad Ire ·· j ~ : 79th Figl1t r -Bomb t qdn., 13ol\. N . 4r;;8, APO 75 - , New \'oTk, t T . Y. 29 Ol..io l'I-U~ R OF .. \RRl < DO •LLM.\ . . ,_. f<wt · fir~ t cun ., .lltive • 'eaJ 1dth h, 111pi )JI ·s hio Divi~i o n was ju ~L Gtu :>e fol" a vl e br<:~tion iu the C 1 S 11in::-- Depanmcnr la~t October. Hi b li g ht ~ of the o t~ ion in ludell the tr ntati n o( a diamond ring by 'upt.: n isor Jillltl) imps-on. gift lle>m tlte o.irl. on her l.in e, a de li ciou · bom e­made < nui1e1 Jr~ cal-.e, icc n :tm and a large ·1 o uqu t of m nm: . A Paradox a'la Pandemonium By Otto R eid Unci hiloh was a card ... [rom a sta'cked deck. One of Lhe u ele cards discarcJed by the stacker. ·tHis latent talelll are aceptecl, but unknown. vVitnout a bud to flow r, they were bLtried with him. He go t hi name from the exploits of a famous uncle. Thi uncle wa nicknamed Shiloh. At dawn on the fiLt Jay at (Pitt burg Landing) Shiloh, he jumped O\'er the bluff and stoYe himself up considerable . . . landing ?0 feet bon of the Tennessee River. (Pitts­burg Landing i u ed in parenthe, is out of deference to Bruce Tarhe 1 Nanney and t.he Texas unbalanced line.) 1 ow, uncle wa · hemrned in the bend of the river and couldn ' t swim nary a drop of it. H e headed back on the second day looking for a hole in the Confederate line. Thousand · o£ U njon u·ao·uler thought he aw a hole and followed him. For Wont of Johnson, the Bottle Wos Lost Having lost th ir reat lben idne, Johnson , th Confederates wer di c uraged. \ h 'n th ·aw this rabble ·h eadii for tb barn, th y ould only u 1 e t a c urn -charge: b . trong rein for : m nts. Tb ConJ d 'ral ·l!> lost th haft! · to G am .. . thm. ma ing th brilliant !\'jlli £1 111 T cunv .. -h . lt nnan look ly l. Shennan wa nt.ed to qui t ail r th f.irst da . But Grant b lie vcrl i1 . i urn i s lti1 ~g tan t s. .., lo ng a. thf' 1.Hh r tt:arn llad a mmunition . I lo e r.h · JJlMIH ry of Cr ~l lll, and adtnin· hi•n s in­ ··1cly frJr the unmy 1hing'i h~ stu •I w<•s ... hut 'Jt ( t.bov L ·, 1 .1at ' llim th , IJe' t ;!, ·tH:ntl 1b Sou th h; d . ln l gri t i'i 01 I · 0 11 • ·s'\c·mi<d nf brilliauc .. . \11 r how, liiH I Shjl( h carri ·d r-,lt om nl' th i r :l djtion f b1:. illu, triuus n.:fali ·e'. 11'11 lfa.lir tl , St>t :1 bc: tr trap, and got in it. Inlet liott g>ne J,illl 'l )Jl'l"\-1 · .. ... lik · Long' John Sii\ (J , lk·inn , J!U IJ( llt.d ltillt'ntntcr he IJnd an ~tw ful lor cof bnliH'• witJr th( I · . \'qn 1- P ck ·J p •s tcrtd ltin lik!' fl j(> , .1 mllt JtltHI 1log. vcr ! JJOI too proud to lw t~ W:!, l' · c 1 flH· ,,Jd a d :t• l' o f ":t ' .' t•(lfl in a ~ rorm ." H n · \T r Ill an i ·d . 1 • 1 111:111 1 L • H l n 1.11 1 1 q . J l l <ouldn 't r ad .. . ~o the ttJall i11 tJlli <d It ~ ud "'\.' ridnt;·Oil­tbc- wa ll wa Cr·d. 10 him. · rt~ r · jut happvnl'd lo h • o o J n d i s a rn 1111 d a 'i ;u l . · in w. a;-; 0 I d B i II k1 i h• · ~-. ~\ i I c . • 30 J'hc ral , .. , t i.d ttr meal i k •t ... nc t a nnth r ti ct to · m ·a L l1 i v •' ' tc ,e \' ~r wntn ·n . . . bt~ t nJ <rl '' • '· T t'l1f' ptu m;mly G :'Unl . Lq t urni~h ld and d b · his Hi ·v n L Hll ·1 .. nwnt w,.., th<.: man· ·1 n1 the moun t< i• , awl l vi h it wu<.: conta inu'> disc· . 1 :ut in hs ntlr · y, but o a 'lr ifi ·d e. t nt. Onl, once <U 1 h • ou ' hiu •H and >. tially ari to an oltcncle l nc ca .i n. bully, on what in th nei hb rhr) d nf the ~at­U t" ti0n poin , u.;, ·d him rni hty p< o ly ... met uncle down y th hawg-walle on on ot th • 1 re o ·<as ion · h "anJ r ed lrom the h ty ya.u.L The bull) proceeded to ubj · -r him to inhumane indigniti~. Hoo cd Jtjm a round hk · a f 1tball, c 11 d him names that made hitn ulu:h, anu put a ro kin hi hat and thre\o it into th · mud of the hawg-waile . In tellinO' t th in 'tation: "You known ·omp n . .. a little m re of that tuft. and h · woulda had me to fi I t." Uncle Couldn't Prove He Wos Handsome l will not ay thal un lc wa ugly, becau beaut i of tl e p.i.rit. .But he did try w enter a mest f.or handsome men - the judge dismissed him for lac· of evidence. A people grow older they have a more abidin re-p ect tor the dignity of labo . ncle neYer seemed to grow older. H e ne ·er heard of the law of least re­i tance . . . and n ever needed to. H e wa as natural in his inclination a water. H e ouO'ht no lo·wer level . .. he lived there. Uncle Shiloh qu.it all forms of athletic endeavor at the age of 16. He pla 'ed a game of round-town in the cow pa ture. Trying to dodge an in ide pitch, he bloop d a T exas leaguer over fir t and balled-the-ja k. Ior econu. He slid tbru the bag, and wa called afe . . . But he wa · far from a e. \~\hen he ·went h me with econd ba e meared from head to foot, the fur bee-an to fly. And uncle gave him elf an uncondition 1 rele ·e ... so he wouldn' t be in that rr; condition again. He then tried a crack. at hurnan r lation . . . p akint. to eYer body, and aski.n the name of p ple he didn't knov r. Asked one -rnal't leek , "\ Vhat mout yore n, m be?" "Mout b · P t r-punkin-ea.t r; but it in't " " the our reply. o h quit h.i.s a piration: to b ' a 11 n-p liti ·. 1 p lj­tician. ln fa t, he wa · o ( ily di.· · untg ·d he ]Uit v r thing. H nly f il d nc at an ·tbing. No Miracle Drug for Snakebite Remedy n 1 u d . h ft . n rt f moon L :t lleviatc tl1 ' 1 ·otng of a copp ·rh.ead bit . \'n • k , 1 if me-eli ·in h 1 n t: c n• tq with a b ttc1· r cmecl ·. Opin-'d that in tl1:1 r .~ p<X t a n \ rent d · w n ld b 11 c..li in e· .. m >St unim­p t'l:Hlt pt>OJT 'SS. ··aid b . Llld II ' \ "€ bj ~ l Ctl th ' c 'PI'erh ad ' pri vill•g o[ I ' ing spi tdul ' lmJO' n · h h;:~l th · t.nca n" 1 ) puL the ki ck. back in hi 1 g. Sni l n ) man hnnld bt.· Lo J imp wta ut t t. ke th ' bitt t with the sw t. lit· Jlt~ \rc r cro~~ ·d hi~ gal lu st'S. and t it · Wt:r ' h r v l' lippin,_' o ft his rn nn.d d ~ h e nld 1':-.. l ddv · J into the lll st · .rinll~ rt•al tn of hi -, philnsophical thinking o (" wha his ll))4il amO'ltllt t'<l LU. 1l is H:a~onin o- ~·~- irr (tu. a hI , and h 1 s u n a" i t · a n ~ d j 1 r o u m n h uod . . . l h · 't r ' l•t• !-. IWrt. lO (TO. s. One L1 in"' that kt'pt un ·I ' quar:wtine l !rom th :lltt 1 iou wlwrc '"' wlll'l\ loolvd o er their prosp ·c · '"'a hi~ ill( liu ;tLion to eat ' t'll. Ht.• i-ohowe·d get~ uin ' s<lt bf::tt:· tio 11 "v r ·t 111f'al onl , if he cou ld hang hi.· hat 011 hi ~ b ·II -lnHIOtL • H · wade a tlnHlllll.Cr pmYcrful lll :td IJtlL "', b , g i.ving him f1 1nldled dir e -t:i ns. Told him how tt get t a L(JWJ1 , b\' oing tt• ' ' ]I T th road lorkecl. aid: " rJ ake the.: rigb t-h3J'Id fork and fdlc.Hv it I 0 mile. . \ tree i blm - d down a ro~t the road. Tbi pro s y ou h~v . l )K the \T( n ·· rofld. Com ' back m t.b forks a nrl lake the toth er road. 1t will t::tke ou th r ." A f w days l:lt r t:h 1..h-nnuncr . topp ·d to 1 awl bin'! o ut. H . , id: " \Vh)· 1 ot tell .IJlC how tn get on the right rort.d in th fir t pla ·e. l went ~.. 0 !Wiles outa m ' way, tn·in Lo follow )i ur dir rlions ... ' ' U n I f lt b:-~ 1 about be ing· bawl d Ott t , b11t h a tl the consolation o ( knovv j ~1g that h is direc tion w J'e a::.ked .. . the gu admitlcd th. t he got ·where he wa going, lha 1k, tn uncle' 1 ains.tJking di rection . ( ln g·n.~ti rudc is a i ~ • . e (rom which few r · ·<)ver. O f course u n ci . wa a. a r I I Ill onl ' a . light e,·agger­ation iu hi lllan 1 !oibJe -, o[ wl1at a ll of us are in a few. nd ve , hall m~Y r }j,· to e ottrsch·e, a.s "' itiJer see u ,'' unle ·: ' "' hav . a , en ·c oC huntor. \'\'h n ,·e laugh a t hunnn wcak.n ·ss and human na ­ture '"''. ar ad l ~ in e rror. \t\ e are as 'king in substance: \rhat H a th od \'t·ought? But, wl en w can laugh with th~; rorld ·w · ar ooing to find tha L we an be arnusecl by om· uwn short-rom in , . And -we can n ever feel clos t<:l the heartbeat of p eople unles ·w ' ha e a kindred b ar t . . . one th a t foll '''S inten . el ' t11.e problem and v.:orri of o ur ( Jlowmen. A Word from "Ole Mac" Powell Ju ·t t prov t ou that [ ain ' t forgot Ole M.ac PO\v 11, here's a mo rsel of go · ip on the present ant.i ·s of ~ fr. R C'pu Iican: H 's ·ruilino· and rubbino- his hands together like a man pjcklng up the ··none " to roll a natural. He's lookin fon · nl to ·56 and getting folks attuned to h i - ra ·uous battl -cry : ·'Everything's a-b ooming . . . but the aun ." · * * '* The unda .' ~d1 oo l la. ·was 'Ompo ·eel of three-year ­old . The tea h er a. ked "Do an of you rernember 1>vbo Sai11t , I a tthe'\. was?" No an. wer. . . "\rVell, do -· an yone r rnember who Sain t Mark was?" . 'tiD no ano.,wer. ·· 'mel o;;omeone '.ill rem m ber \Vho Saint PeteT was(" ' h Jj tt le faces wer fu ll o ( intere t, b 11 t the room. 1 emained qui L Finallv a l it 1 · 'oic came {rom the rear of the room, "I fink n wa. a ·wabbit." • ' n .\ ' '\ ' J) HU 1-. 'I: '( fH Li'. IU:J\'1' (, \1 1'\' I ight tfJ he jJJ 1llrl o f t'lteiJ lhll l <>liL r . R~n barn j , 12 ~uJ ... •••dt· llt a t 'IL. '>WJ lH:11'; a nd R ••I• i ; " IJilltl ···ad . >I IIII •1)( ;11 11I ft' n .. r.. O..tll \uJh s ilt liH· Co n - f' .fliltiou D~p:I I I JU• ·nt <~Hd lick" i <·lflfJfU)"d in C\1 ..,olli11g . T HRI~ E C H.\ .\.11'1( ~ HO f S"l OVERS h · _aw prcd ill •n d elll'o:c a t Lh d t>~c ol 1 he I J!l '>C IJall sc<• "<>ll. Fn\llk Cr ossley, Bill. ' ll• t>l n psoll :111d Bob Fli k lorccnM 1 h<.: I.H<Jok l yn i rittmph o; ·r th Yau1.ccs. The trio also pr diCLect th at in cinnali \I' (>U id -~ illd up in rilth p lace. ... little Did They Know Then • • • B Bi ll Thompson Little did Conrad Darr an l \1Vi l.li am Ogle l Penn ­sylvania know 'way back in 1802 thal thC)' were plcH ing sacred gTound when the ent -red the ;;irea destin ed to be known as Darrtown. The land was s lli.ng for SJ . ~~ per acr in those d a ,s. '\!\ hat about toda r? I 1at iv 'S ca n narne their price. L iule did Conrad Darr and vV.i.lliaru Ogle knt.rw that a guy named \brH~F Doubleday ""a · to i nvent a game called baseball. Little did they know that the afternoon of October 1L 1955, Darrtown, Ohio ·wo Ltlcl bemnte Lhe baseball capital of the world a, a Darrtown ]ad led his Brooklyn Dodger. Eo their first ·wo-rld' ChamjJ ionship! The lad, v\Talter "Smokey'' A1 ton, can be d eclared so u.noHicially. Little did 16 Champion Hot Stove League membe u realize early last spring that they \Vere gu ·sin:g orr ct­ly that Brooklyn would be this year' v\To rld' · Cham­pions. The 16 were: Ga.rland Munz, Bob Fli k, Harry Davish, Jim Cozad, Ji.nl l\iinter, , , alter John ·on. J ohn Reiff, Harry Vornbeder, Ra Seele ', ing Po nt r Ju.liw Harrison, Roy Allen, Bob Fre ber · Frank ro · - le y, "Si" V\Tile and your truly. Little did 11 Hot Sro,,ers know that their l tion of Brooklyn and New York would b the ' 1'i e. ron­tenders. Those v. ere: R o , Flanner , Jim Mi.oter, Bob F lick.> Dick Hamman, Frank ·tos ley, J ohn R il'f Ra, S le y, George Young, Juliu:;, Harri ·on, Ro · All n and your truly. Little I id an •yen do l en tOv ~ r be r that their u .s · on the Gincinna Li R cdl g's fifth p1a · ' fin i ·lt '''< u1d s tand 11p. T il ' du:;cn in cluded : Ken Swin g, ])ill Ay rs, Dotti IZi gp;l , Ma.r . in "\'\f ·nn, Sing- Po n 1 r, Bob F lj :k, ·Harry Vornh ·d r , Notnt H lxr r, !'rank CrLY':-l ,Y , Harry' l)ay . i'lh, Herb Sal;cr <md your: tnd '· · Six olh<.:r'> w J rig-hr ~tbou t th Yankee be-i ng Lh ' A1n ~ rj 'an f .!'agpe e ntr : Al htTlllll , .£ l '\' lsh. Ray L ·trH ,n , C ~ul Crop >nlnker, Ken Swiug and JL' t l' Cn­ha tn . Li ttl · would tll rcc -' l· r;tnk Crossl \', Boh l ' li.ck and I you • ·~ ll'lll -. h ~t vc ga mbkd 1 h;-t L onr iln l'(' - r,'.J' y j}flrltty ~'\I OU ld <om tllrnttgh! Hnt ~tov ·y., !tad fuu in '[>5 . \1 ' lt trv ut u<· runrc piclu; in ' f>G. 31 • 0/tio '}l\:\ 11' 1( , l\ ' dl ' l ~flo ll l , 11 j'(' l , is.,r Ti I f n l d "! 1 11 n1 h as , ,,Jt<..hccl \ ·ith p1 idt• <~ · his . 1111 .I owc ll hui.h n C tl T' frll hi ill . df in the •,IIIIC ot I ot lnll. ' I Hhh(.•d • f llu mlt>l .. during his '"t.iL' da1~ ar t he l niw1si t\ nl ( intinna l i , I " " ell 1\Ctll on lo h<'!Oil lc a • · is t ::~~ tt <o:J<h oi th • liS ' nw· les R.l!ll'. That's My Boy - - Lowell Storm 13'\' D ert't'\' ,\J inlO il J G ntl man, · 1 r e ·pert, upervisor and an as, et w .l.1ampion. Th word are mod - tin des rib ing t~1e abilitie and trait )[ Tilford Storm. He ha 41 ontm· uou ' a r, of f ithfu1. pr lucti e en·ice, 39 y ars a key man n the pTodu ti n line - a good clean record of which rrn .·ur J\lr. torm i justly proud. One of the b ri Jue t , tars in Tilford . Storm's life is hi · so n, Lowell. Lo'"vell has made quite a r~I utation lor him ·elf in the field of foo tball, as a player and a coa h. H e, like hi fath r, is a leader of men. Ac(tt· all) , it i n o t po ible to draw a sharp line betvveen lea ier and n on-leader and to p lace a ll persons in either one category or the other. • Lowell Emerged a Leader Every individual, ma con ceivably, under the proper i.rcum tance as, ume rhe role of leadership. Withont the p roper circumstances, you need education, train· ing and experience. These quali fications L9well has antl thi is why he i assi ·tant coach of the Los Angeles Ran . Lowell started his education at Madison Grade clwol, then Roosevelt J r . High and Hamilton Public High 'chool, wh ·re he won aU-state honors in footba ll un.d r Dana Kirw il! 1943. Aher graduation he joined th .1 avy. He was in th ~ ·1edical Corps. V\Then World Wa li was over, he was sent to Great Lake.., Naval Training Ba!-ie r.o a ·si ·t in the dis· char/e of Navy per ·onneL H e played lootball with Great Lakes un ·r Paul .llrown. H pla d a big part in ups ·ttiqg ~- 'o tre Dante !$9-7. Tb.at wa:-, th · ul_'>ser or the y ar. Till ml Stom t.c l1s us: ''\.Vh n L<J\ ell was tl is· d1arg · l f OJI'l th -a vy h . came home, ·tnd wll ile u11 pa k· ing his luggag lH:: g:" ·e l1is lll()thci l~ football uni(onn an.tl told. h r, ' ~tom put ~hi s aw•l)' as it is; don't wash it r d ean it up. Thi-; is the uni(ornt I ·wnl<• wlten W " ups t Nnr e Damt . P~tul T-\rown 1old n'> l.o uri11g ll 1ent hontt as 1->0U • n.1 s' ." On to U.C. Under Sid Gilmon Lcmrcl l th t· Jt enroll Ll trt tht l Jni' ,, . .,jc r1f Ci nd n­na. ti. lour ntor,·• y ar<> of tncl , trai ttin • i<iud loutba ll . l JrJd r t1 c coaching ()J .Ray Nult.in j;.)' · nd Sid Gilrnan . Low ll wa;; fa st lwc<Hnit Jg h.fl(JW.tl <~'i "m · 1l the bc-.t in tl 1 1~ footba ll bu in s." ft r •radwrdng fron l JC, L0\-vdl JH'llt l)ll l~ y(·, l as lJ ead wacl1 ;H. Lc ba11on, )IJio, I l l~ h S< Jwol. H • Lltf' ll spent two y <H~ a, a si Ltt.H coach u:nd r Jilll 4d)ona l l at. Spdngfi -ld, Ohio, Hig ll Sc huuL I h -,lt hilf'k 111 tlw ui c r:~ it y of Ci11 jm,~tli a'\ ru h ranL u a_ch under ~jd Gilman. · 32 \ \'lJcn ~ id Ci l m~Jn '<J((t:prcd th ~ }nb a he.l UYach ol a }JJok iuna l lootba ll ' ' JII. 1tw Jj,~ . JWcl tam. nf 'a !if( rni . ll" asked Lowell to go '" ·i tJ1 him a<; hi 1 Lant. Lc ~· ll wa~ undeci led at lh tim , be au. 1 f otJ cr n f to ro :1 f(J tbalL bu attcr rct ci ··ng a \.! ·k•hr~mt lmm Dan Re v , p <·sid ·nL )f the L. .· . 1 .am ~ . h · tuok th job as i t ot nach . Tilf{1r l Storm a li, and ri btl , n, ·' I am \ ery proud o r m, ·qn, Lowell , and l am v ·ry irnu • tc .in hi ~a1 cr. r aru very g a t f 1l tn Sj .l Gihuan and Da11 R e ·vc'S [or h aY.ing conflcl nc.e in rny boy. \Viu his in· · ·ha u ·tible upply ( pati 11ce , nd _ perience, 1 ar 1 sure tl.1a t h e will li ·e up to thei xp ctatiom.·• Tilfc nl Swrm star ted hi'> car r at Champifm in 19 18 a. a carpeot 'r\ help r . Thi-. "·a the :ear of the big flood , in wh ich th · 'oaLing Mill w <t de tro · d by fi r · and " at r. Vher1 the Coatin ~\lill wa:, rebuilt he w nt to woTk iu the 'o. 1 H ater R0om a'> bear ·r fu rni h er . H · held thi jol) until the e ight-hour da; wa · adopted by Champion in 191 '· He wa.-. then pro· moted to beattr engineer, a job he held for the next 22 year . In 19 8, he was promoted to supen i or in charge of No. 1 Beater R oom. "Two Events Are Outstanding'' "In ch ecking over the many intere!>ti 1 even that have happened during m , ~erv i ce here at 'hampion," ays 1r. Storm, " two are o ut tandinv. fir ·t, l hal th< plea ·ure of seeing Mr. Pe ter G. Thom!.>OO our founder, many times as he would walk pa' t the uth end o he mill and over w th r i ver bank. takin a short-cut uptown for lun h . He alwa y-'> had a ,mile and a nod for his employee . In 1939, ( had the ho r of having Reuben B. Robeh. on, Jr., past pr sident of CJ1amp.ion and now Deputy e ~etar ' of Defense, wo k for me { r a clay and a halL" Mr. Storm is a ch arter mem1 er of the Ch rupion Super isors' Association. H i · h obbies are fi hin · and all kinds of sports, e pecialJ)' football. In advi ing younger hamp.ion , Mr. wrm a) ·: "Show an active inter st in your work. put f n h an extra effort to maintain friendly, h a.rmo niou re lati n . with yo ur 1ellow emplo yee. Ge t all th ·o ·ational and on-the-job training you can. Your r 1·a rd will be worth the ffort . Alway · r n ernb r thi.:; - yo ur ' U} r· v.isor i definit ~l interes ted in 'Ou ." Our cmwratulat.ions to · u~;t, TiHonl Stonn, and to your on Lowe ll. B ' n aintainina high m ral and th i ·at ·tandarcl . o ur childhood dreams an 1 , rnbi ti ] 1 · haw rnater iali ~ d. VV ·' l.oO, art~ ptou I. f a. h mt £(nVll ho\· ·hat mad good .. . a son o f a . bam~ ion . · l.UV\ {<:l.l . STOR l w;, ~~ ~ " ' rd .I wr LIJoc..: I' ni · r ~i t : n I' C i lit i 11 m11 i Ht·~~~·lilf ' ' ltt'll rlti · l h <H11 w;t ~ Ulitcle in )'11 9. He had prt:vio lt. lv wt>n .\ I I ·SI:tl" Hi ~ h Sdit!C\l hnn i >l $ 1•hlk pLl ·in p. l'ur rt :ll t1ilt IJ I I:Ji h Sd 1<)(ll in nJ 13 Ulld \':1 a 1. t< ' trliltT <Jf l' :tu l Hrmv11 1'i ( • 1 \·ar 'L tkn> t '!lllt \h e ll l il f• Uf' lll' l, ·u lt o.: 'U:IIlll ln 19·1,1, ' I' da ' T .o\ el l h :J "is.c;n ll ·o ;1c l1 of l .lw ],,-; Ang l c ~ I :tm . H .md hi ~ w i 1 , · a 11d lil rn • d li.l d 1\ 11 1 i v · i" Sll ·>~ ; nut• c :ti..Jit, Calif. ROBERT L "PA 1'' HE. J ~' - EE, left front, listens a refu llv to ' John Barne :1 h rea th m · age from Pat' Lifetil))e Champion Ccrtifi ate. Pat r-etired on Octo ber: 1 aft r 31 :U" a ' a tnember o the Plant P:rol tion D p artm ut. Pat also r c. ivcd gift from th 11:1embet:- t f hi .. department who a r ·hown J king o n. Laying the Cornerstone By Freel B. Da y.ton ' - . T o oflen ,,-~ attempt t:o sca1e the h eights without fir. t rna ·tering the b nttmn. Life i ju.st one thing after another: noth inrr att ·mptetl, nothing done. _ fo:t "'Teat a nd irn portant building ar u sually Larted b lavinY a cornerstot e. uch i lif . Som.etin .res u·e wait a lit' tle late to lay thi corner tone, but u ·ually get ar und to i t. In the , r at 'equuia :1'\ ational For . t , long known for the wnrld' m() t famou_ r dwood , brtt h pit s erv · as a fire: hazard to uch 'aluable timber. In li£ ~ ·we bt1ild our own brush pile ·, a h azard to our own lives. If ouT hve are not va luahle why ar we thi mouth, ceJebratin?; th · binh of a ~ ian who was cnt in ­HI thi ·world, ufJered and diced that ·w n1. ight have life a1 'l ba"' e it ill'H . al undantl '· Th . Hhit ({ -o un a t.J-.. b. j to] J nl pam t r, wl Mi b !angelo, va '> a gr at '. orld. fa. mo u · UL p1rat10n to (Jn (flC o <..a i()n- ) OUH" a n ·H~'>pi aJ t hal, very pa inhdJy, tompl "t ·d a pa intia tg ol an an gel. ll h:Hl a fri " 11 I in ·ire t he rna t.·1 a r1 i) t UJ v ic\· it <OH ~i.\ · his nJ.J.ini Jll (J f1 it. r 1lt yo trng a Jl1 3t ·oneak 1...l htTIJ.CI! w l1 r ~ h ~ ( mJ h<:ar h OTt un ·n t . pcm ' i ·in& th , Vtinting;, ll.e: 1t at .,. a rli .">t l - 1 Ja tk.td tJwt it (rJ11v J· eked on· tbint;,. Upon h ·;ni.ng t i i tlv. OUJl • arti L bJqode: I, awl 1\"(J IJ d('l <'d ·" I1aL ()UC thi fl . ICJU)d h . Hi., f~ il'lltl. <: ·itJ~' I i <lilt-IIHJI't, itppt oadw I t11 · n ta ter .allLt to k wlH1t it '"1~ . 11<: rcrn ;-trkcil, " L ik. llta ·' <:~U ; jtbl We. 11 jt had lift' it n)uld uar }1\ :~ y £0 ta 'C it ~ pla ·e a t JiiHI ~ th l c·aH nl b<1di ' ." '\N ha\· quite a trai niu pr gram un 1 r w y in Lh vari u . d partments at Carolina Champion. Th · · are & vcral reason;" (or 1-his, probably. ' 1\ie, who bav born ' th borden in th h ·at of th da ' v ill, 11 b one, cro · o ~ r t > tbat undj~cnyetecl counLry f om w( _nc n tra ·el r xeturn., and tnu.sL hanct the r in. ov ·r tc more outhful f1auds t C'arr nt ~tn d w watit tJ1cm 1 be tr uJ · pr parcel. S nior v e ~k ha aga.it b · n oiJ ~ · ·r l. ' (II. "W >rthy wa the citem n t nd an i 1·y or cl1 sc oungs tcn who had nly a vague, if any, idea o( w hat tl1eir J. (J ar d moth r wcr doing fo th e c n1.fort of ]j fe. 1 ittle di l th , thin ,. h ·n th y op ·ned a mj lk ·;u-ton or i e cam ca tun that m ·n on · · o . 12, 16, and 17 [achin . Lartcd that pap to roll ing- toward th · finishing ar ea, loading ar a, and f ina lly, into their lH) lllCS. 11 • ,.. * Our ground area arou :td the mill proper ·i. care­fu lly clean.ed up at all tim " , but since . lippe1.. walks are sta1·ing us in the fa ce, let's coope at· fully ' ith our sa fety and a nitat.ion <leparlrn ·n t- in k" , iJin~ the'! in tip-top shape. It is a oll ctive job and not an individ­ual one. HILTON DOTSO('I; won the first turkey and bam shoot of the ea on early this fa ll. Taki ng stead · aim. (above), he cored a per[e t clover-leaf pattern with his .22 rifle . A m ember oi th P lant Engjn er.ing Dep artm n t at the ~ ar olin Dh•ision , b to k home ::1 !Jig, whiLe turke y. DJSP A YJ.'~G HlS PRIZE (belo a), Hilwn Dot< n i fLwk rl b' two reti.red Cha mpion:, Lon . n der, at l · Et, and frank o .llin ~ both witne s d Lhe p rk t parr.ern whi l Hilton tred r 111 a dis tan or 40 ~·ard . .. • T f · H TEN J . C BOLT.-;, -fa vi.n ' VeSt r p lac s the QU tiel 'OveT ()!) l ·o. 3 Au orb€r al ter cleani11g out settlings. \<Ia rvi11 ugge.· ted 1 he u of th ] ~- i n ' IJ 011li er whi ch made tbis joh much easier. ILLEC RIC HO · T re bein r mann b~ Bill ,nn n, left. <ll)U J. J Prop sL . hiS oper<t· Lion formerl · <~Ikd For chain f· Jl. ·, bu t today the job j easitT a tld quicker. E. B. Improvements Pa.y Off B ' Otis Co le lndustrial improvements, mech a nical and o,therwise, almo t invariably in rea,~e the overall e fficiency of any departrnent. And that's for sure! T wo n1:ajor improye­. m.en ts ha\'e recently taken place in Carolina Champion's EB Department .. and they're paying off . There wa · a time - and a long time - that sedirnent in the No. A b. orber was rernoved by h.a ncl over the top. That wa doing a cleaning job the hard way. But to tay, tbanks to a su ggestion by Marvin West, old 1 o. 3 can b e cleaned better and q uicker by removing an 18-inch oud e t G ver and removing the settlings through this 18-inch bole. Graciy S1·\'aHord and B ill Cann on were the f irst EB men to dra.w the d an ing assignment <:t.£ter the outlet c ver 1vas a<..lopled. T bey are unanimous in the belie( that this is a bjg and importanL improvernent. Then take tbe ca e o [ the n ew three-ton elec tric hoist used principan · jn changing cells in the Hooker Cell room. Goue arc the _clays of the old ch ain fal ls. Today it' · a n easy and fijci ent p ush -l n.ttton rlcal. It\ 11.0t a back- I ALR \1\ "\ IJR S I C I. . \ S~ H. T'. 1-H>Jno .. '<(\It ol 11. , H n H >!I , c ,,,, >]iii ;J. p~t ,fit1 ..'; n t;td ~~ ~- "Pi:toll<ll , 1\,h 11'11 '1111 ' ''"'"'" Jh• Ott ­o; t :ttt dit lg ult·mh•• r n l li t · !Jli' t l! \iJ< t .ilf CotJttol :.ttld '\'.1.1 tlilt" Stl' l i.tdiOII. \'\ 'iiJian ~ r . .tk <:, n.{ -· ( .w;t d J . \ tln(li<' l I Ilk p t i~.t• dt l;tl Gtll l • tu l11n·rcm tt: r·u tl \ 11 ;1 llti :. l )(· ,;tiiJ ful ,lliug oJ lt~h ,,]l itl l b and a bmlcly , .:.tlt ~l r in uc.J tl, \ .l.ak.c· ) 'iltllli. ,, J breaking job any more a nd the EB men an ace mpli l1 far be tter "changing" produ ction a a r ·ult of the ne v streamlined equipment. We'll g ive Su p er intendent P. B. York and A · ~i ran t Superintendent Bruce Nanney credit for tl1i · pha ·e of moderniza tion. Our .l1ats are off w rhcm and we'll be ex pecting oth. r rnodern improvements to appear on the horizon from time Lo time. * * * * vV. L. "Bill" Harris i · in the rnarket fc r a pony. vVon't someone ome to his re ~n1 e and make a sug e - rion a to wh ere h e n1igl.1t locate one. HiU h experi­enced a lo t of cliffiwlt in pinning one clown. You migh t h ave the ~Ln ·wer! *'Y.'** H e's wearin g a big grin these day - . ~ . ,\.£. B nne r, vve mean - 'cau c h e's our · income tax filjng n an, and h e': a w ocl o ne, too-. "1\hck," a" h ~:,:'s known in the .Ell Dej)ar tmcnt. can tru h' rLtak · vnu wc:mder 1.vhat vou did ' J I - J with your urnn1 r wage:. Airman Horton Receives Honor S •J ·ct ·d the rnns · ontstanclin g ·1.innan by hi · ;;quacli m 111 mbcrs .f.or the month 1[ AngusL. .\ lC Broadu · }<. L-furt111\ t't · ive 1 ~~ s p~.: c i a l dt:;ttion lrnm hi ~ ~-~)f'l l tH ~H'u.lin o­ofl ic l' r. Ca pta in Ra lpl' F. G cnl s. Young Honon is the :on of n . . \. Horton , P::t~Lin g :;\ Llrllin . t l f> I'; Jt o r fit the Camli na Di vision . .In a I tr ·r Ln 11lc I 'l orton:-. in Ca ll tt) ll C:lptain t>ntc~ poi nted n\ll tb :1t in order Ll rec i\T thi li uwar I. r\irn r. n 1-Jnnml w-a I'Cqttir d rn n m p te with more th an · I) other ainn n . , th.tt: ~~·(hy pas:o. and . Itt i11 Lt.-.·h w TC' 1h pr.i~o e .. gi, .. u {f) , itilll Oil f'O llSidcral ion of hi :-, ati Cl\liO!l tO dutV. i ll- • • • du ~ tl' r, pvl''\0 !1 <.11 :tppe; tran crt :tnd ('()''ll(]i t.:ion of his quart ' l"S :tt th ·. p(J 'i l a t \'jlli ~ttH' L:dzc, 1\ .C., Canada . . \ t ll l' lllhC' t ol the 9 17 111 . ~ir r r:tll Cnnl r(JI. ml \ ·\·al n­itw Squ:tdr<m in thar a 1· 'a , young HorLo11 might lsi) be \ Olcd <lit <.::-.:n.: lh..:tll fi :-;hcnna11 . H~· :1nd a bwJdy . u oh t • l:i'l ~~~~ t•xceptlon:d . ..;I r ing u[ -.,ped..l. ·d onut in nearb} Lake Pu t 11 1 i . .\HCL-L\ I C. ~L \'('}01> HAl DL N • OJ'>' Iato r ~ \-aughl th at-tention n( th ' S \ rVa) nc. ville High School \C niors as 1 hcv i it <'I the ' V'o<JJ >;Hd during a Jllill ' fOMr. The sLUd nv a. ked mar\ qtl stion~. and Cl ampiun guide' \·cr hat P. to :;u ppl ~ l h a mrw r~ . During H Senior Week,' the Carolina Division holds open house for the ·Leaders o Tomorrow vVeek on 0 • scnwr thi ' C. ROLL 'A HA~'V!PLON'S fifth at Cham1>i n" program wa a tober 2 -~7-2 . The more than ·who parti ipated .in the event 'tnnual "Senior definite uccess 5T graduating would agree tO The e enthusiastic e ni or~ repre emcd all the high d1ools in Haywood Count - plus the Enk.a High School in ad joinin Bun<'ombe Count '· T h y took a lo e look at indu try at work a they toured all majm~ depa_rtment of t.he Carolina Divi i n. Thev w re welcomed on their arrival receiYed' attractive OU\' n irs sa·w two ach morning, pecial movies, 'ilJRRO '• DED 'BY .;. lOR . f10-m '<mtcm H~11;lt S<ho(l l, f .. ! . l ~at 11cs, l !t. managf'l o f Jnd u~n ial nd .omtnunhy latiQI •'>. :11 d ,\. 'L F.airiJrnLh .·, :- IM:.t nl Gen ·1al . l <H•age (A tlw r<•lina 1 j , L jou, anM1er ·d Ill till) qu(.. li <Jt tw lo , r' Ill· p! ( •gJ 11 <Jj Wiwd , aud participated in career g uidance ~eS'i ton s in volv i 11f a dozen important subject . ' They were attentive as A. M. FairbroLher, as._istant general manager of the Carolina Divisio n, po ke to tb ern on "Champion's Effect on the Economy of the Area .. , They enjoyed J. M. Barnes, manager of Jnclustrial and Cornmunity R elations, as he eli cus:,ed " Planning Your Future." They "'vere then luncheon gues ts of Champion before launching the mill tour. · Champion's fifth annual "Senior \IVeek" is nO'\.\' p a. t histmy ... but hundreds of the gues ts ·will long remern­ber the jnteresting event. • .'(!l Jff] ,J;,\:C p(f.[ P, thC.'><' H 1hrl l hgh Scllo"l ' l'Jiior - fo11ntl the Hqard , f ill IJr<ikt• h ';'\ lt' l .'l C]llit t: i llll' r'esLillg :,s ill . IH'l<k tit mill tout ,Jnting " ~ nim· \V ck ." I, ft lu rigiH ;nc lfml 1 o••<.~, Hohbi(' J• ';lll Bl a1 lr,( k, , iiiJ ·n l\ l ;.~~~ i ' a ll<l l·,va lf. H fl . ll ' 'ln. ( ') Ol T · l' ~' LF R , :·ey a l mmub r f llP h· tnt p i n Y r ('gir nal ~ ftl.Jall d a:nupion hlp lt"am ;:~ . ~ ml.Jle o.r u nrl rl istricL. sLat<:: and Soulh.eP1 P egi nal h ;Jmpi<lmhip tro l~hi ~ wlti h "Cil l'fle th ir ·wa) dur iu!:r dw 19 -: se, ( >t l. < Loyal Fans Honor Champs \ \.,.hen. the Cham1 ion YMCA sQ ftbaU team 'Wvn the em· r d ~ outh ern R ebi · na.l · lHJUpionshi-p in Cleat­ ·water . F la ., Iurinn· Inid-Septexnber, th.ere were JnntdT ·ds of l-oyal hu1t' in C<'l n ton. \·vho iT cogn1zed t_he ou tstanding a 'Om pli 1111e n t . o th" Can on fan go-t together and decided to hon OT tl1 team wi th a banq u et. t onv y their thrnks and appl' ciation f r thi " achie'' m:ent. . ~fe u1ber of the chan1pion h ips sc1uad, their wives 4 11d childrert " ·ere the honored guests. H. A . Helder, vice-pre iden t and t;eneral manager of the Carolina, l)i yi ion , headed the list of peak.er.s. Hershel Keen er_, 1\ oods manager •vho accomp anied the team to Florida for aU the garnes, was a.tTother fan who prai eel thc:i:r championship u:::annvo:rk. A11.d Edv.:rrin H ayne Yice-pre id ent of the Champion YMCA, quickly :an ctioned ali the prai e that the rnembe·ts reoe.ived durLn the d:ir1ner honr . Team l\4Gt.nager ':F'lo, i ., Deweese ":tnd ssistant , 'la.nager Steve Sca:rb(}l'O'ogb. r es1 ond d briefly, but sin ­ ·erd y, to word .. o[ a nu:n endatian ,roiced by rnany fan . Canton :\l a , or lhuc . annev' assi . tant SU ])erintend- ' · n t of the EB Pl ant, x.pre ~sed the town's official appn:- d a tion for the t.oftl an tro plly and paid a gl ~ wi n g tri­b. u t t. t he: tean 1. . Ralph Goforth, ac tiv · Y i(C \ hr Os ter ~1nd cl air unn ()f h alh leti<: l nard. '"'fl.S lna . t~tr rJf cr ,monies. Toru ' . Ru::v • Cb::trlt pinn Y pre)i·(l nt, pr :sid •t.l. RLFR hS ti'l\'1 E ~n S '\' J,JH Ell\ :lll iq tlw Cb ~"JIP ' 111 ~. f( \ J1>h h1 :1 ~ tr1y td IJ IIIS ll ~ "· ndJ k•d Jt,r 1 h hanqql't httJ• n h1 • tl c 'li.J I J•jJ l uu~ l !i p H' altJ <Ht •l thch f.am i 'l icK, r ';Hlf :!!l1 t f.w ' ' ' '" ' p t c' St.-'111 36 ) f \H~ l R 'l'l · t . I' . I' I' tt I t f''lhibit d bY I I 1-'h ll'ti \ a ~~ ~ l . .Jl '( mulin ,l ( .IJ:;lnlpiri1J t'm · p i \«?d i t4 l •1 I ; 11 i "'bi nt~: U~ pa!! · ll tt Ill. Jl.t l ·.lid !w h~H ' •fa! of the f frl ·s on ~ l r ~ .~: l :~!.e u~ O\l: itdJ ·t 2. Man' n t F1~r ( .uolirlJ. Ch H vi o~l al! foHnd t l:!~i r tr b • I ill"' .1. lat • t l trp \ Ii i ~ trrru'> t·;u l ~ p1i1 / II e ; 'ft il (bt · ~C' ti 0 11 i · l, c f ' ev d to r h ' H' c w•··d tlt!.! d -h 1ed . r ~ " · Morrison Sees ·New Air Force By Clyde R . H (!r;y, Jr. Charlie Mor.ri on . quit bejng a water do r km. enough to spend two we _m acti t:: cluty a 'apt. Chule T. forri .,.on of t h.e Air !~ n :e R c: n e. Hi titTle was pent a t R .o. bb in Air Fon.c Ha a t fa on, G .. vvher e.: he vva5 brough t tq to da e on late tl<~ dn,prn 'nt in Lhe Ll ying bu. in cs . H·e r cpr tls a b usy and i n t eresr in~ t i u1e of it. du.rinq which h.e .sa':v so nte of the huge C-12 p1ane , c p~bl e o( carrying ? ')0 full y equipp d n1en a t one l n~u.l. The nose of' this plane an OJ en up, take un a tanl ur o and Uy r i?-ht off with it. Ch arli g:ot hi fi r t ride in a jet plane when he operated a T-33 for abom n h our and a half < r: l ced up to 550 mil per hour . H e s..ays this . type o£ pla ne j much .. 1noother and quieter in op~;ration than a p ropeller drh cn one. and when you put it in w a teep climb ar d look ha k ov r your shoulclet , the earth lo k.& like it i - fallincr avn __ E.rom you. The abin i · pr e.· u rizcd and, in addition . the inma tes wear ox ·get1 ma ·k all dur in .. · (iio·ht . One day was spent at Sha·w .-\ iT Ba ·e . u nter ,'. C . ,.vh re h underwent · te t in a chamber tha t orr·­sponclecl to Hyin · ut an alti tude )[ ~1·0 ,000 f · t. H 1 ··arned how much f a ne e sity an o. y ev.t "UpJ:.>l: really i..s, especia11 ' at the high r alti tud . Charlie avs th r .hav ' be i \:\" nd mv ·hang ·n J • rhe Air Force p lan and eqttipnlear. ·.ince lO , ear <~go. _P lanes two ·ear. ]d an· s f::rr b hind the tlUl , ar:; tc) be l ractt( ally obsol ' t ·. J'imes, :r ·~.t li 1 do cl :wr * Work. It lS btnun t 11. the job o f m r h, ulin • ll IJU . turbn-~en c:rawrs .in the C ent <If r P om. It i e ·­l' lldd tu to tHiu ue- 1\ lr .·t• ·end W<'cks. ''\!. It . \Vh.i t . o{ Rq x hnrt.:J, N. C., h ils b ·en as -.Lgn d to 1..1 ~ h, r h G n ,. l · h. h'd ,. ir 'om pan y tr) on ,.. t tlt · '". rk t)il · the fiv · m d o gt"nPr<t l• J)"-, purclwscx l frmn rh -m. · VVh .t~n th:b wo1'1-.. b fi11i b · 1 W' ;ou ·t> · 1·1 ;x ~ <..tin tl 1 . g t.t u ·:t ror ... t t l p ·rf nn lw tt:t. .'. l than n ,, on d basi.s of r ·n1a1 ks llt ndt· l> ~· C . L~. l?r •1.id ' 111 R~d ph Ctn'dit'l r l H'• ing hb v.isit r& our d t•p•tnment last r\u gn. t. _ flcl'l ert ]). Cow ut e, ]1 .. ha · come to . hi'\m { I 11 n'i an c ng'iuccr in th ' ln .~tr ntttl'll l Sh.up. Hi.s [m.:Yinu e ,· twr1cn~c with itH\Hll11tt''lli S i 1 ~ th(· _\lin · ( )r hnan ·e C 111 p-; t'IIJd :h :tl ('o;; <"n )in cr f111' ~~u it t trtttn l' l\1 . )tn p::tn , i>hm.dd h (· nl \'ahw. J k i · a nalivc t t· \'i:H'\) tl S'tL1, at'l 1 , 1 ; td~t.tled l'rlHrt V\'i sc •llhirt .S titll' ( ~o .ll q.!,e a t b a tt ~ lnir. 0 11 Nrnt' tJllwr ,), Itt· awl i\li-..« 'Jud · Fpne ob ~t ch r \IT · m ;111 i<:d in t.hc First P rvtlhy tfl.ri: tll Ch urrlt. (}f H ~11· tkf\,ll ll vllk. · l'h •y :-tre 1csjdi.r1g at the He\' r1 Apart ntf'Tl ~' · .\ sh ·\ il lc. • · HE Fl i'ST CH.'-M PJ O .' 1 mal,_c i1.td i\' id u :.t l cm11 r il>uti on to the . 'orth .trolina Stale Pu lp and Paper f 'quncl a tion \11a \'\lal.t cr J. Damtoft, left, :1-"~istalll s~·ct·eLar\ a nd director of 1h G ncr« l \ Voocls lkp rnn nt: :u Charn pi_ou . H ~ is . ·holl'n r ' cciving rhe cenifi caLc of mcutbersJup ll1 the t·outHl.a.u ou t.rom .\ . :\1. '· lln ck" J<a irhro th ·r, a.-;:istant g neral manager of the Carolit a Divi i o t~. who is ~tcttve in th Foumla cion mov melll . • \ to tal t 5 1 ~ indi,·idu :il m 111h '1'­shil s ar 1 eld in th l~onnda Lion hy C<~ rolin:) hampion . Walter Cowart Heads Y's Men \!\!alter m·,·art. juni r technician in Pulp Mills De­partment, has l een el cted p re i I nt of the Canton Y\ ~f en · Cluh. Eleucd .'ecret ry of th ' group was G . N at Fortn ey, senior l~ hni ·ian in Pulp Mi ll.s, while Carlton P e·yron , _\.ccounun/. and Tony J o n es. Ch emical L ab staff, were named t the board of directOr- . Other m embers of tl~ e board include Henr Micha l, Book M ill ; L ee M e· · lrath. Emplo 1lel1l; R a lp h Goforth , Scheduling; a nd. C. .. o~ ·en. Jr., Tr a m·er's D pa rtment. >ill * * * ~ I em.beJ" of botb the Canto n. and Pio·eon Valle)' ·r·o a tma - l c lub wer a tive durin g· b the "Finer Carolina" movement in th e Canton-Bethel-Clyde area of I-:fay·wood County. T he . " took to the air" over radio . tati n ' 7 ' TIT to r i11 i nd the folks to refrain from littering the street. and to o therwi e stri,;e lor the eneral impro' ement of the area general! . Champion taking their tu rn a t the mike included Jim Hurley, Bob Anton, Bob Patterson, Frank Vokes - lee Rickman, Cedric ton , \ 'Voodrow W.illian1 , Fred l outt, Da,·id \t\'rigbt, arl vVilliam s, Albert Harvey, En - ~t . 1es er, Jim . nder. un, E<l B 11 , Elm er l\Iiller, Gtnrg.c Edgerton , a nd H arold Hansen . Other Toa.-.tmasl rs P ll the program weJ-e Bill Schull, Dr. Car y \ Veil s, J r ., Louj Du ke. Ro Burch and Sher ­rill .Jim i· on. .Pm . ndcr.-on, Jim l~arl o w and Floycl Lowranc l ~ d Canton Bo> Scoub ~ t.h ey can vas.:.cd th.e · busine '> . ection of Canton di rr ib ,tt.i no· ··, nti-Litter' ' remm. d ers L() busine · · fin1 i> an d in d i,·nid u a l · through - out the cornn,uni t). The Haywoo I. County Wildli.i · Cluh, unde1 t b(; kaclership of A . f. Hutch.in . n .: tir •d '>u per.intcn clent nj th ' Ca nlOJ . ~ch( o l '>Y· t·'tn, 1:.. making ~ Lr.id c., in the di· · r-nion ul game and li ~ h L m c:rv;. Li1111 m1.d rt· ·~> l!>(. kill g. . Cu ley Robimon, \1\ oo lyanl, and Cl ar l ·l> .\. Smi th . Jr., ar• ac.tjv i11 beha l/ 1)) a oon 1. -slo king progra m, al( Jtl g, with .:.l<t~L m H a\<t li -, jJHi nL·r l<n ' I!J a tt , ~ ~~d ( J(h 1 ~. The Cl ampil)n l n -l'hnt nited Fu ud (h i\ • I :td r ·a li;. ~ d runre th an .. l2, 00 as uf ' c>VC illber 2 a11d Ll1c drive \ ' a. <,ell dukd t • tnd ~''"t·u d >u [). Payroll dcd11c tions will not b git n 1Li l :tl tu Jan lt al\ I. l)c partllt. 'l1ta] dl<lt l' l11 ''ll in CO!lll Ct LOil with th in ­p] ant clri\.' were rh r, P -ck , Hmva rd Setzer. Bill ,\Ji e n , H . nry Micha J, G ·o rge \1\ . Smlith rs, R ay E llis, G ll ·vvorl cy, 1>. E. !\ fo rgan. Fnmk etoc. H ow,trd Se Llen, Bnb Smtkeriberg, jubu Bramlcu , Ot.i,· Cole, Will l '{inz. CarlLnu Pey ton , Howard H emphill a ud C l de H amJe t L. Cedri S to ne and J. K. S chrex l, Jr. , w T C ccH h a i ·­lfi C'n of th dri ve, with Eel H yatt sc l·vi n1-{ ' LS secn: tar y­treas ul'er. * "' * <Ill Nan1 e<l l< ) oa h the C hampion Y':-. c n l y i11 the Di xi .:J.as k<.: tba ll L ~ag u · tltis fa ll a nd winter were \I P h ill i ps. Cantnn b m 1n · ma n, and R a lph FonL o f Caro li n ~1 C hampion 's S hcdtding s ta rf. Pre cn t indication!:> p i n t to a bc Lte r team th a n r eprese nted the Y last yea r . I rac­u C' got under " ay , ev r r1.l w ek a (ro. '*' • * "" Carolina Clt a 111p.ion again thi -, ye~ r 1s '> prmsorin g Lhre sep arate Junll)r Ach J ·vent , It t Cou'l t>anies. O ne con•1 a u y is composed of Ash cv ill · H igh Schoo l sttttlem ·, a n_d th,e otl1c:r two compan ies ar ma<.lt· up o[ Canton H1gh School youngs t -r ·. A<lv i. on; (or the: A "h ev- ill t.: comp an include .P;:ru l Johnso n , Ma nagement PJ an n .ing; Da id Ba ll, Ch ·n1ical L ab; an c~ H enr Ab:rc nltolcl of Pl a n t .E ngill eeri n g . ...\. dvJsmg th e two Cant on compani es are Tim And ··r­so n> Laborato r y.· G eorg·c H owey, Pla.nL Engin eering; Ed H yatt, lndu tnal and Communi ty Relations: Do ug­\ 1\Talker and R e/ Shuler, L a bor a.tory : ·u1cl R ill Roge1~ ot Purchasin g. ' * * ,, * . \Nith the pastor, the R ev. Cla ton L ime, perform­lr; g the cer e;1:on y, Cedric Stone, p lant engin eer, an l ~irs . Ethe l .. 1 hom_pson Mcln tosh , of \1\la ukegan, Il l .. formerly ol Lake l<orest, fll . wer married at the Can­~ on Fir t Presbyterian Chm h Saturclay, 0 tobq ?C a t ~ P.M. T h ey are .making . their h om e in Can ton fol lowing a wedc!Hl.g tnp to Tvl.assachusetr.s. * * * * N amed after his grandda d , Geo(ge 1vf. Tro~tel , n ill manager, George JVI. Tros tel, ll, ani ed at th home of ~eorg~ Howard and Janet Trostel Sunday, October 30. 1 he ~~ x- pouncl son ·w~s born in th Haywood Coun ry .Hospttal at \ ayne ·vdle. George H oward is a seni r techni ian in the Pulp r fill ; Janet "' as form r l 1 ent ­ployed in tbe lnclus tri al a ncl Com muni t R elat ions Departme nt. A. ROBER I A . f) C R:\ C L·: Bl O (' J.,.\f ;\"\ , 1f t lt r 01 jr, D 1d,ion F i 11i•l1io~ ll c·pall tn .c nr. p :~ i ~l t h e i1 lh'-.l j,i l 10 C:11o lina Ch nmpic) JI and .. l lw La lld nf till: ... ky " .,,rh in St•p len dJ '1'. r II ~ \ ;!l ' . hi •\ n lt1·1 · H'cl·i i 11g d J l:l (•I I C<JI< II i ll :t C l1 : m p ion\ up-l:ratioll' fnrn C(•fa i\Ju · l'hi lli p , h d c•1 l' :-larti c 1~ tll<'i r n•ill our. 7 - . L. ''CH h. ·· V\ I LJ_E, of the Color R oom, explains the new proj ct to T exas Divis i·on Achiever . Cbuck is chief advisor to Champion Enterprise J unior hievement Company; other advisors from Cl1an1pion ar Bob Koenig, G. L. Bashforth , Don Lippencott, Ed :\1arshall, and J ack Carroll. T be new product this year is a cart to can out gar bao-e can s; the compa ny is finding a ready market an1on~• brain , !Jut w ak-backed hu bands. Two letters to Santa Claus B)' ] olwn)' B 1yelle Everyone is fan 1i li ar with the story o[ Santa Claus th · sleigh, and the reindeer . W heard it when we w re ma.ll and we pass it on Lo our h1ldrcn. And n ow they w 1t l t t T tbc s <~ t:n as we did years ag·o, addressed t 'anta 'Jau , No rth Po le, North meri ca. ; l ow, <;c)me peopl say Santa C'lau ' ha · modernized. H useo a j 1. p lan to co ver mor · <li tanc • and rnak his deJiv ri rl)()rt; a curat ly. Tha t, too, is o ne r a.on Ch.ri5.>nua:s is '''ore expcmi now tl ·u'l it u. ·d to be, he a u ~, · i l La C'l nwr '· to .,,..~c ra l t' a jeL lhan it did th r illd > r and lc igJJ. ;\11d <: t'U Ll10ugh lt · ha:5 111(Jcl ' l JJ · iz "d, Lte\ the ~am · Santa a~ ye:n -. a gtJ . Aud ('VC il Llllll-lg iJ th · -; h; i ~ h i~ o bscrl lt a1 d tl .e n ind <:er lnw bc·t•u put ottl to p asture, I think Ill y wi ll alway<; .ttllla fn .irmnm I'll. Th iol.lowiug k tJ t•Js are ca rbon (i Jpi el). ·1 hl' origi mds hav • l:!.l cad h ·t·n lr)J ~, ckd to S:mr;1 Clat1.., . , . . a nta. (:l;ws North Pnk, >nh J\ arJ f' Jic .t Dear .Santa Cia w;: J a111 G y ar-; uJd aud o uld li · <~ lor you lo lnin ~ otc a La bl · and cha ir CL, a ~t · t of d ' h <'~<J, and a "mall n 11nc ra. I al.~ o lJa\C tWo :--.m 41 11 t·t -. i '~ '' r. , Shat< lft and hi I ·y, and w Juld you pl e>a ·c· l11 inn 1 h• 'ttt 'll 1ll1 • lO -. I on. 38 \ i h love, Caa nl ' Ll .Fa} , I uq>h 2G l hH n ing..,id · :\ IT fj 0 , nv. 'onua t \ l wph, L\ tll' l;.nh·r (~r f"t atold C~t ll l n l·a\ f tht· k t.er IJ·lo 1 · a [ian h·tic r>r ' in th · to ~ ol S;m ta ( .1- u u u til a Ie ~ ·;u) agu. ~ ~be 11 Inn '> tt ~t dt to< km t ;u ,, · oil lh · wark t and J e pu1 · dl t'il..'d • 1 dir l1 u r n r l · at Jui .tnnt., t(J han; \ ith the th ihlrcn·., ~tt<Jckien : . \i\fcll. it too .... o ru· ny W> li ~ ~ tr> I ill hi '> tl ' t• h ::. tork.ing, that hi ·i( . Rub), deci letl tn L 11 hi 111 ·h ' tlllth a ntl ,hrd.t:d h im ba into realit by ,Sh()wing 1 it11 tlw bill ( T the . p 1 c. an a ·1au orth 1 oL • Dear .SanL Clau : 1 am 7 year old and \T(.I dd Jik ' Jnr yo 1 to b in~ n- · a gir l's bic d t0 r ide o school and a bride d 11. I ha an oJd · r b:nnhe . J J n Blake, and a ycJtm. er s.i. t T , 'la1·ga1 · t. ould yo 1 p lease r m mb · them at Chri. tma ·, I. th ough they art ojng to writ · . eparatt le tters. .&JV" ) Carolyn " i sy'' ·weau-, Q'e 7 lll R ust ic Dri vc Bill Swea tt i~ lhe: father of ·b. y weatt f che tetter above. A co Ltple of year ago hi on, John Blah. re~ ce ived an ele tric train ( 'r Chri tma . ~·ow, after }eaT, his fa th e r is . till the encrineer and John .i~ tiU the fir - man. All of u know a fireman doe n't get to lf mudt on an elec tric tra in. John Blake i wi hing he would grow up fast. T h en h e ( uld have a train for Chri,t­rnas and be the engineer. Some times the expen e around C11risrma ~ eem heavy and our budget !·et out of kil ter. But on ChTi t­rnas morning wh en you look around a nd ~ · e :-o many smiLng faces, then Y.OU know the b ill · can be paid. For there is no other day o f the year when o mu h jo and happiness can b pu rch as d. for o littl . "Frenchy" Ander , general toreman of 'ookino aud \1\Tas hin.g, boas ts a fam.il of g od '· cou t ." Hi nun ·e t son, Robert . re ently receiv d th Ea It cou t b. lge (b elow)- an h on or alread ' ac orded tO R obert's older brother, Glen. Now G len ha br o ught anoth ·'r lcath •r w the cap of Champion' · Po l 9 l. H ha been n, med a" one of the two r presenta t.iY . fron1. [he ·an Ja into Distr.ict to carr· the r 'port on outm t th. · go ... n 1< r . ;\ IKS J.. (.; . '\ , JH'J{S pro11dl · pim l.lH· Eagk ~Wlll B t~t~ g · n li e1 t~ un ~:; • ·~l suu, Rul•e rr. fh b U' ll'IIIPilV <lltn.r,nl ,, dl .ttJ)u tic 1111.1 111111 ~ 11 d tt10llll' ttl lut tl'H' ,\lldl' l' f: ~tnil ~ . .l'twv now h11 \ 1 ~ t 1110 . • ' n ~ . . \.\110 ha ve f.t il lll ·d u11e ol <;;ltttll chtHI ' ~ lii )4 1H' ~ ( ·:1 1\.llih. l ' 1uU1 k it arr C.... il' ll t 111kr~ , It ::. •k Stout <tnd R,tiJ l' tt ' ~ (l[dl'r h11 rltt' l ; F. ~­•' l<t <' tHI \' " 1\ 11d · r~ ~l· tt ~ t ;:J I lo1 e m:tJ 1 1\l Cnnk i n ~ lltd \' a ~h i n ~; 1r.s. . \ u d"'' s: R ~>llJI: rt ; t111d BOll J{a.lsH.llt. •• ' WlLD '.R \:H\1 .l Ul.L RlOI 'i\-G aJI,;: fo r ~teel n rve' and a · o l head. He · a p ,. ·o, J;t1er :n 1he P-a~aden a t·odeo . tick:; to hi~ mourn, lmt nol for long - lire _ u:s most l \' tll • CQ I.VllQ r I• 'tJ l C IO l>e.l' . Annual Pasadena livestock Show and Rodeo features ... Auctions and Athletics - - Texas Style "R . o:oEo'' i a n1a1 ·ic word in Te:.:·a . Yotrng and. old from man n arb <::> areas turn out to see the ex.hibj ts and livest k, the bucking horses and tbe calf ' ropnw onte t • During the latter part of October a ro-deo am to Pa ·adena anJ several Cha:mpions were ' a part of it. P urcha ·ino- Agent, G. A. 'Jerry' Jack on, i th \-icc-preuiclen t of the Pasadena Li estock Show and Rodeo A. so .iation , and Glenn Cribbs of tbe Ac­counting D partment is a dire tor. . lets were available for tho,sc intere tecl 1· r1 k' no W l·l . .'.· br The show open d with a big parade through the downto'l<vn tr _ t and it wa e tim.ated that nwre than five thm.1 and peopl e saw the op ning rodeo perform-ance at the Fair Grounds. . · · hampion' booth in the inain exh.ibit hall drew prai. e from man q uart rs. The flo·w chart .arxangement of the colorful d isplay afford d the folks an opportunity to see and understand the papeT making process. Book-something about Charnpion·s .histor . The livest0ek. auction Glrew quite a crowd and the bidding was bvely. Top prices were paid for pou~try and livestock, with many of the buye:ts donating their purchases to various charitable agencies. · The month of October was filled with county fairs itt other areas too. The Texas Division vVoods Depart­ment actively participated in the Walker, an Jacinto, and Trinit . County Fairs. jLRRY J \ CK '() . ' , ri glll . Rod Vit t-'1 ~id ' l•t , ; , shown ' dtili t l}e J'~sa d ew Li\ COLk SbQw ;u ,rl Rodev %O t: i;tl~<•s r l r<i!\ideu L .J in•l:tl\ Roge~ s. a Lbl: pre - pare for t h · s ta ll. \.lf the l'Od v p~ornd ·. I b(~ tW~> " <,~ow ha11ds" k~.l a J • <lnt~l • tltro. ugh J':t Sf!eJ··na to t l1c d ·light of . oui'lgsk<:r and () ld · lilll, ·r.·. CH !Vfl'IOi · VIC~> J'RF.SlDf~"iT Kar l H ud t . en, !!.<"11 ral tn~uwg- r ot th 'f J. ~ · Hi vi lon, ulak es. il "b id ;'II the Ji vt:S' lotJ.; ~ILI !..'Itt lt flS j Crl' )' Ja k "OJ'l ld bitl<tS. Cll :lrJJt)itl ,., · ptll'dta ~ t; w.a · dGn ~•r ..:d ru 'Bc•Y<>' H rbor . 39 • - THE TLe..\ R-\ 'KE .B \ LL TE.. \ i\•l is set fo tiPs a:on . Oef nd ­mg ~h:Jo1pion of the B ou ·tnn J•r · e~" n TourH<U'Jtent·, ~>he _ . are: ho ttnm row , left . w righr: Hob H acke-r, t 'orris j oh11so n, Jatr)es Thomp:' n a tHI Bill Kethatl. Top ruw; lclen t') Jones. " Dub" Lee, Joe f lk • .JolJU l'l1iliJ ~- ,'hidey Frni<'l, lk>b O~<:nr.on and 'Tom Se1 a ll. The Knights Enter New Season The o~ampi.on Knig~hts Basketball Team is back in a ·ti o for th 19~ .- 6 ~ ea . on. \ 1\lirh . ix of last year's tah ·an retu:rnin - to the foSter and ·with Bjll Kethan, employment :..upen-i or, manag-irtg the group, the Knights are looking forward ro another big season in the P asa­dena Indwtrial Leagu e and the Houston :Major City Leagu . _ The Beginning of the year was SOfJ}eth.ing of a dis­appointment £or the team~ and j ts roo ters in the . loss of the Houston Pre-searon l'r:rvi tational Tournamen t. \iV in­ner: o( the tourney for the past two years, . the Knights lo t out this year Lo the hard-sh ooting ~quintet from Gilberts Builder ·. In p lay for third place, the Knights edged out a trcmg E lli ngton F ield team by a score of 8 to 78. \1\Tith their lree-top- ta)l h e ight - most o f the te<nn membe . are better than ::.ix foo t - and experience, cou­pled wjtb jlel'Jty of kn<nv-how, the Knights expect to 1 1ake a strong co·rne-ba k play now that the regular · J.'>0fl ha taTted. 'I HL I{ J'(.H ' I.'i I, \CI. IO'\ .rtt' ~ ht • lltl iJ • :1 lnt tllt -n J• dri ll <J I rlu• Pao,a cl , tt <J Hig-h .\lei Hull I() 111 h•JJt l} lw f,!l • OJ• · I ~ n :-: •:nmr ''P' n ~·rl. Ill e-s <: It <' ·· f) (' a lld iditl• ·~- IJllt lt ldt to liKl tt , o~1~·· u, ,J, Ort•tfOII . 'iorr is Joh tlSI'In, jol11J I'I Jjlip., .f<w l· .tit.. a.tJ <I ~ lrh I ') 1/!';t..; l<', . 40 IH 'llUY 8\ : l \.J- ol the '.\ . ct~ \<II !1 $J l'Jld h h 'JlllT tinH: . ' j,. 1ng ;Hid tt ,t it1ing H -:1gl h-our11'b. J hL· 1'\~· •• gf ' j, I)()[ 'U <IS a hnnf > antl l$udrh \ 1 h.Jtllf i1•h " \-'tlJ\ · dcrland 'I 111!~ •· h· .\ol! 1 rH•trgb niJbou. <ttHI tropht·, r•~ p o~· , it. lhrdd~ ha ah 1 •t l :J Rea I · iu trainiu "· lmul'ill ther.n i 11 a li.W{lt. "T' fl l' II tid 1l11f J 1'1111 i fl hi ' IJad<l'.trd. - Tony Wins the Gold Cup M ny T ·xa11 Di v i ~ion Cbam-pjons b li ·vc in the old sayi1 g that ''a dog i!) man', lP. t fri nd" but Buddy Byourrt has proof. in hi prize-winnino- Bea le, " "Wonder­land Tony." The first week end in 1nvemb r . ToHy t ok ir. t p lace in the San nton.:io Fi ld Trial , a r al honor to his bTeed and hi o.wner. T b t! gr,Jd cup be woa will be added to numerous other ribbon- and one troph . His owner, 11uddy, who ·work in the \Voodya1'd, ha ­a bout 15 Beagles in training. He hou .e the dngs · a mod ern k.ennd and. run in .hi. b· ckvan:l. . ' R. · P. "N auk y"' goodman, of the T cx , Di \·i0 n, also has a priz ·winnio~ dog in hi, hou ehold. Nank) and his 'wife have exh ibited thejr prize .·Hghan hound in show th roughout tbi·· section of the tate. I * * * "Oh, what a fu.nn · tooking cow," ·th 1..hk y<Jun[.J' thing lrom th·e city sa id ro the fa rmer. ·'Bttt '·by hasn't it any h orns?" "There are rnany reasom, ·· the farn\ler replied, '·, ·hy a cow does not h ave horns. Some do not have them m.uil late in life. Others are d hon1,ecl , whi le sLill other breeds are not su ppo··ed to ha\·e horn!!. Thi t'OW doe not have horns b. ec·w se it i · "t hu. r e .. , 1.1 .I I' U Lli H. t ' l•a{ 1\j l1 Col'l ­lilflll . il> 1 h.· ~o n of Clllto~t S. C(l f! th:l il . ' Ill'<' I 1 ~ ~ ~~a · ~~~ Ftll'e r \l:il : t ~;;(·tl t (·rll . 1\ i ll io.; a ' llhkrrl .1 1 IJt [ lll ~ • i il1• 1-:lt- t) ti.' tll: u v Stl!o11l. 0 . R. ' '.P ·\ I' P\ .. \'f.-ST. , -l'lla­dlini. t , ~s ttti ~ht1· pmml uf his brea l -!jr:Jndt>Ut~ . R.a~mo nd Keith J:Uwdes. .. H e- i. I·" m •nt hs Llld a nd . W{' ig h s 41 pnun ,, _.. ~I\~'\ l':q l \ . ''\t ~ exc\ting l _ _;.' tny:n~~t~~ C0\11~~~,\~\.::: THE WORLD PREMIERE of Champion's new movie, "Production 511 8,'' wa~ held in mid -November at the Pub- . \ \ _,M "" - -T'' ••'*- ..-.. !_.. ..,. ...... .. ~ ... ,.;l/11!' Uc Relations Society of America convention in tbe Ambassa­dor Hotel, Los Angeles. Shown here are Wilding picture • executives, a.ctors in the film, and Cha.mpions Cal Skillman (second from left), and D"\dght J. Thomwn (center).