id ftwestcarolunidc:oai:cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org:p16232coll18/1840
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Hunter Library Digital Collections (Western Carolina University)
op_collection_id ftwestcarolunidc
language English
topic Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Employees
Parades -- North Carolina -- Haywood County
Hunting
Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- In motion pictures
Industrial equipment -- Maintenance and repair
Sports
Employees -- Recreation
Employees -- Charitable contributions
industry
events
community organizations
spellingShingle Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Employees
Parades -- North Carolina -- Haywood County
Hunting
Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- In motion pictures
Industrial equipment -- Maintenance and repair
Sports
Employees -- Recreation
Employees -- Charitable contributions
industry
events
community organizations
Champion Paper and Fibre Company;
The Log Vol. 36 No. 01
topic_facet Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Employees
Parades -- North Carolina -- Haywood County
Hunting
Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- In motion pictures
Industrial equipment -- Maintenance and repair
Sports
Employees -- Recreation
Employees -- Charitable contributions
industry
events
community organizations
description Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue. • JANUARY • I953 F R 0 M T H .E ·EDITORS "Old m ,l,_c, ·• (pa e ::s9) i 1 ot ju t a 1u. 11ine, d ·:-.pjl th' fact that he bum oil and :onclit c. ul~ itnv.· u a :-"\itth 1« 11 • To them who h.tv "Kn'n n her tlu· u~h Hi . ·, r-. ;.~l thl' Tcxa Di,·i.ion. llil i \t=nembl old lad · \ ·ith h whitn~ am] t'aprice of ' Ill ny n th r f 'U · h.:. And 1ik oth •r of h -r ~t x. h ha k pt a lo e t.: 1 ·t her c rrt·. \\ itl · ut :en'lino· t pt}'1 Tt: ··' ;lr l\tpi011S wo ld lik. • In k t llt her pa.'L -· wh r ' ·he c;u ' lrmu and '<\'h t :he h:.t~ dtm ·. "Old . 'mob.·\, '" Lr nsl rrccl from Cantuu t P :·dena in 19:t6. \\'e think il lik •ly that .~omc of tlw Caro, ' Hna ( ttl Tim I m~l~' rct"lll "Old Smok y's'' c. r l lite. lf Ml, w ' hup they'll }ht ,· th " · t , ll to Di\i. i n Editor J imm.' 1 catoll. • Just two '·a_r Ja k ~ l ulkn f th Ohio D i, ision Lc.:(ran 3 se6t.: -, ")! ct the lloh :· ttbou the .-up rvi or at H:a mi I ton. In 2+ i u .: ]a k l1a O\'er d most (l( th · dq artment in th · mi ll , outlini 1g the ·w rk. the p r:>onalitic an I eY n som of the } hil­o ph; of the m n who · > Lo it tllat the wheel· go r uud al 'h::un1 iuu. Faster than J -' can turn out hi articles, new men arc aJ.van d h) the s upcn· i~ory rank. H " fintl ' thaL he ha.~ taken upon him eU a ncv r- •nding assignment. "But i t's interesting," Ja k <l) . . "You get 10 know ,o many really nice guys." ,\.e ho1 c Jack. ·will continue to introduce u. to th ese " nice ou · . " Hi ~ law·r article, about the 1hl chine Room's "Pic" Wehr, L ' i - on pa )'e 29. • One of tll more popular covers to app~ar on The LOG i 11 1·cccnt montl wa the i\,fadonna and Child scen e, released iu December. .\ number of r eaders haw asked for extra. prints to be framed or mounted. Reprints are available upon request. The Champion Paper and Fibre Company General OH/ce . •. HAMilTON, CANTON, NORiTH C-AlOUN·A e OHIO e Mil/.s PASADENA, tE!I:AS at • • Editor; STfWARf JONES • HAMILTON, OHIO e SANDERSVILLE, GEORGIA fidiJo.rial AdviJors., R. B. ROBUTSON, JR. D. J. THOMSON CAL SKILLMAN Division E.ditots: STANTON NEWKIRK, Ohlo; JAMES DEATON, Carolina; VERN DElAPLAIN, T'e.Kos idi.fo.riol Asshtonl( JOAN MESSNER I EDI'TOlUAL SlAI!F OHIO DIVISION - Chark~ n a ldwit•t, i\ lt:tle H•o}tll · • .J<~ Hlcve11 , \-V e~ l y C< 11.1!, .P ck Mulle tt, HorolJJy 1'11:;;h. Olio Reid, M:t Rook . . ( •i'Orge SH·illt'•·· !\ill , CAROLINA DIVIstON -Fr ' l 1) ;~)'1 <•11 , .1) 11 llumkn , Cl dl' H. HI K' . Jr., W.dlrt llo ll Qu, Ernc~;t l\k~ile r , l~run: ;,, .Jill'), ;J . L. 'o.\ llli .lflt!.<Jll, TEX4S 'DIVISIOI'!I-A I!w (lo pd.nHI. )'i:tJl t l .llis, hnl foil c "· 1 \ . \V . ll a miii <:J II. SPECIAl:. REPORTERS- Mul'i<:l M . . \lln1, Gl·n. T.tl O ll itc; (btl)\ E. l!od ~r,, ~an J c r'ltx·j tl . • • 1 H r I r J ' ' OUR C 0 V E R South Cat olitH~, siLe of one a1 Champion ·a 1arg~Nt\ oodlartds o~ eration , is hoaored ()[} our co ver this mont'tt . Tlil' h the sixth in a seri-es devoted to -;t.ate in 1 •hich the eem.pany''> mi!h an<+ of£)ce a1·e 1ocat~L Copie~ fo-r fra11ling, with date lQlcl LOG title remQved, may he obtained by writing Genet:al PuMioc Ret_a­tions, Chiunpioo , Hamilton. Ohio. • • T his view shuws a pol'tlon m tlte Ct~ 't Co.tl D •pat'l mcnl, where 1\RuMt-.1\0tE b.nlllQ p ·y s are jn viLed to gath •r ' round m1d tak n ti CC'. 'Tain t so. Tb ' lad ies hav 1 b T pets tu o.ccupy th eir jdlc bm.lr'>. Ev lyn 1 -esc, CJf c ·M Sonin g, for cx ample, com 's horne f rorn bn work, and i~ greete(l hy Gmur.fl o, ;;1 bh1C'k 1 ~l'llltt.: f< ccd !'i ng't (' 11 '1" ,, ~ Ill HOlle\ , Jwr p . domino m:m~. (her Hon ha~ , t numbn o l ribLf >~ J' whi h '· r· t ~.t k en :n !un'< hm ~. cdf~i11 '{ . lt' ll f'lll tl!;rt. " th.d \ the I <'~ I doAAnuecl hor l {;\l"Cl . a".'' ' · h l . I grouchy, he fi~-rlH s iv j tl.t Sharn us, t.he cat. Here\ a UH.>S age to all the boys who talk trr Hlondie Cald we11 duri11g the c: urse ol a day at baliljJiou. Hlon­< lie·i> first rho tJS at hom · are fc-<:ding, Qtring f(Jr and ridiFig a palo:u~ino nJa.re, nam ·<1 "Huney." A( 1 tally, (-;~r­ing ror Honey isu't ill dlCHe for Blondie. Sbt: Lou;s r, T l or·se ~ arl'r, and ,.,·hen J.l G: rnar i bchaJ.- cs, monel! · re­war Iso her with a hcv.: of Mail Pottck ~o fofJliJ ·. Th , fran Turrt r, .Jr., family 1'1as a a m,t'l),) l::wr of the hott~ h old a y t: ng: p ·s quite a rumpus \.vheu .Judy • crt cs. l~ i v ·-yt:a -o ld L.intla B ·i~cr , daughter of 1 fr. "iin l Mrs. Art Bcisc·r, hasn'r a worry in tJ1e world when her pal }t: 0 [ cnoug:h fht l. m~tlallS o <"qnip s.even fire su.ttion.'i. And 1 iss Schn6der IHt£ anHmg lt ·r four footed fri en.d:s. . ·x aH ;.tnd t.wo d 'f?,l\. S-e en do.gs for It • 1clnt • re~ and eight. ;;t n im.a ts t the S hneid ·r resid n ee. That \vas the count iJ:J 1 rovemue r. How manv' now? . ' bo kno\\'s? 3 I I • A. - G Rl U T :R \L 17 0 lt nuit the theme, ''Le:llll Toll) nv I oitt);,"' \ 3 lilt I ·din tilt' lh.>Uh'l t •ll mg p;u ad-e. l h ' ti u. l da p1 1 ;tf d thi. tn lr . th<.·• tloak wer emen':d h tll D1. m.u ;, · lui-) n •t t h , llt: 1 f'dlll3tion ( luh. 10~ · 1 .'\ l l 'n ,·T t 'flf ''r .- t H' hu.v prq >•u in th h :uua the p.tr.ad· entt · ~<h~u tb i l ( {, pitn ~ ~ " ·'' 'll.t)'J >(i <>Tl h atht ti<.' field . 'LUl l ( Jl · ti na .hct mp ion~ ;Hucipat I m tht> Hom (_ \UI ing le~1 i'lll <-' ,., hH h rC' held Jl the ethel k th II fi iJ. ' ' • ' WHFN THL BliTH .L, . c., communi y undc . take. a special pr 1gram, they do it tJI'J in Fand style·. A ll ey staged the ir pe ial H omecomjng prograw at Bethel Hig11 School early in No rernb T , the {?\'1":: ( re embled a smaJl- cale Canton Labor Day celebratim Gaily decorated fl oats repre·· nt ing a:H majoT ctepart-· ments of the school, a football game which :Be hd wun over the Cherokee Indians 34 to 6, a petforman e by the new school band, a sizeable Parent-1 eacher meetin ao.d other features furnished a colo ful settln • for tn!' ' major occasion of the year in the Pigeon \alley e tion . All in all, the homecoming attraction Iefltcted the progress of the community itself . I HOMECOMl:\{G Q EEN and member: of her court are pi cr~t reil he-re j u~t before th • parade started around the footb:dl fi:eltl. The queen, 1ary June Ridule. 'taud" ;:n <enter. Leh to d ght aro und her are Cl<~ra H en n . Jo ArH1 Sheffield , :Barbara J ones, M tk Rod­ger , Jun Delley. Janha Russell. l'ats\ 'fore. Ava L e Bu111gam r, and D rorhy lT01 l)er. • ALL L r ERS POINT Lo Ro, Patton, left, ecr tar r of the Can ton Building ;md Loan ·sociation. ' ·ho mi sed , buck at 20 fee t on opening d ay. This pi ture w<ls made a top Beech Gap. Left ro r ig ht: Patton, Bi ll B rooks, Bill Co­ma11, McClain mathcL and Hngh M Cra .ken. \ "ITH PERFECT RH THM, thee deer bunters carry 183-pound buck .from the rugged area of l1erwood Fores t. Although the failed to make a kill, h.ampiom Hugh McCracken, rear. and McClain Smather , front , nea rest nu . ra, helped snoces ful hunters "rawhide" kilJs to car. Bill Coma n, o:mter, hr tber of Lo-w Coman. ha hunted deer for year , J1as ki ll ed several . ' • orne en1son Carolina Champions once more experience the joys and disappointrnents of deer hunting in the mountains MANY \ EST ERN NOR'l'H c ROLlNI NS, a ugmented by o u r.doorsmen from tl e eastern part of th stat , tr their luck at dee when the season opens . . . but r, w bring horne th . ' nison. Carolina Champions, who have been h un ting d er for y ar , find th pastim en­joyable but not too profitable. ' eav r Carver and Toby Jamison, both Champions, registered kills this fall, while a [ew others like Henry ''Chick" Farmer had th ir ch anc b1.1 t m tffcd it. Among those who hunted in Pisgal , Shcn ood Forest, Nantahala and other pro­te ted areas early this season are Ray Byer~ a nd hi son J oe, Alvin Miller, Earl Silver, Ralph Bryson, Boone Cagle, Frank Swafford, Bill H arkins, McClain Smathers, Hugh Mc­Cra ken, Wayne Smathers, Elwood Shook and Earl Pope. Others sought their quarry in the moun­tains and coves. They include Cbes.ter Mease, Marion Farmer, Henry Farmer, Micky Jus­ti ce, l\!Iutt Morgan and Chancey Byrd. Deer hunters take their stands early in the morning, sit quietly, smoke little if any, and look and look and look. A hunter may select an ideal location where the deer are re ported feedin g, si t quietly and view the surroundings all day wi thout glimpsing a deer. When he re turns for his second day's hunt, he may see just the buck he is looking for and immediately register a kill. Or h~ may go throughout the eason without get­ting a shot. That's the way with moun tain huming. VL'IU nu .lC ' 'HF.\1 , sting- ac1·nss hi · krli e. W a ·r (.an r, uf C !in;,·: -"•l d<l -SU lphn C" r . a, is h wn at t li. • Sh 'Hv)od F<JJ "c ·h · king st tiou . 'arver "as th<' n, o;r hun ' r t•> rt'gi vr kill in tbc :nerwo d, l' 1 t :11ea. t iJi ,ill, arvel' sl1''t th 120 -pountl l u k a t 11b ut '7 .1.1 • on 11w (•P ning tla . 5 • I GOI, G DOW . 1 into t:he Machi.ue Room , th~ teachers pau e on the steps to get a bird's-eve view oJ No . 25 and 26 1achine . uide Clyde Miller leads the way. Groups were kept small o that the ?iu ides .would be better able to a AS v r quesuon ·. GOIJ G P to the loading floor the Dige. ters,- the tea hers enjoy d th ,ir rid on the slow-moving fr -ighl cle­l'll tor. c~tide R JY M a~ . left, '"as wel! f[ u:1 lified to gi"e tl e rn a thoro11gh cxplaJ,;Hion of this ph::. ~· of ptodttC· tinn. \4 a i supcrinf<"nd nt of Pulp . 1anu f11ctur e. I CO!' C Lt' l>I N G til - p•r•~-;' :un (j(lr 1ip, h t), \' icc- 1'1 .·idr•JJI Dwight J. ' l llrH II• 'on tdls th t·ach .rs t ile r<'d n• Cll llil)g of ;til llw1' han: Joi(-:,•n artd h •ard . " Jt ,;, fr f'e Ci ll('t jJr i u, h I ping Cl. a ro pions and a ll -othe1 Atlleli ca n.~ t~· an t:\'(T lJi g-he1 standa1 d f Jiving," ' l'!wnt ·on Rit id. G eo e an olicies B-E Day tour gives teachers a close look at the problems and methods of a large industry N ovF.M n • 2 l was a holiday {o ·hoot hildr n in Houston and l'w,ad ' lla. but wllil their pup.ih tnok the t y <JH, . om<> 4,300 t 'H: he1 ~ were I u·y parti cipating in the n ation's 1- ge~ Sa. in , 'du a­lionla,. On the appointed da , tl1 t ~a h r deserted lh ir blackb an1 nd de ks for a Grst hat d look at tl e m ri an free emerp6 · sy cem in action t ~00 cooperating fjrm ·. The ·eacher gr up varied in lze fro two to 420. lift -thr e p -r ons vi it d Champion' ~lea Division. Th workshop isits by th teacher in luded trip to dairi , la\ finns, in urance compani es, bank, bakeri , bo. pita! ·, feed mills, tin can manufacturers, steel warchons s, radio station<;, contractors, a to­mobile dealers and many businesses. In most case. , conducted tour of phy ical fa.cilities were laken in tf ~ morning, with plant executive · playing ho t for luncheon. The afterno n was devoted to a cliscu ion period with question po ed by the tea(_her about what they had seen on the tour . Champion's Texas Divi ion conducted its program along imil r lines. Industrial Relations Manager and program Master of Ceremonie-:­A. M. Koury gave the teacher an over-all view of Champion people and poli cies . He then introduced the Texas Division's wa ·te control expert, Malcolm May, who told them ·what Champion i now doing to lick the problem of industrial odors and wastes. Technical Dir ctor Jeny Moyer follow ed May with a preview of what the teacher- would ee 0 11 their tour, plus a brief explanation of the proce e involved. After these talks the teacher went on a onducted tour of the mill and had dinner as Champion's guest. at the Clubhou e. Vice-Pre· id nt Dwight J. Thomson wound up the program with a talk on what the free enterprise system mean to all American . Th tea her thanked their hosts, collected an aTmload of souvenirs, an l d parted foT home. Dr. vV. E. Moreland, who served as chairman of thi huge Chamber of Commerce-sponsored undertaking, calle 1 it the m ·t sue -- EuJ in the three years the program ha been in operation. ILJCKERI G NDLE lend added solemn it}' to the a' 1ard reremotw a ."cout C h a rJ es I3raun, · aCCQUll an ied by hi. mother, recei\'e hi First Cla , out award. cout Commit ­t emen C. V. Brann, l Et, and Clyde fiUer, right, pre entcd rhe awards. ex as Parent support proves its worth as Troop 91 awards are made our S couTMASTERS SAY that the success of a Scout Troop and parent participation go hand in hand. Measured by the Scout­master's gauge, Champion-sponsored Troop 91 can be rated among the best. The parent-scout turnout for a recent Troop 91 Court of Honor at the Cham­pion Clubhouse was almost 100 per cent. Sixty-three Scouts and Scouter took part. From the invocation and dinneT to the closing Scoutmaster's Benediction, it was a solid two hours of dramatic ceremony and entertainment: the candle lighting on or ceremony with each Scout reciting one of the Scout laws, presentation of achieve­ment awards to the Scouts, and special stunts by the Scouts themselves. The Rattler Patrol proudly displayed its athletic ability in building a human pyramid. The Flaming Arrows demon-, strated the new method of artificial respir­ation. A "worst-aid" stunt by the Wild­cats, and the Adder Patrol's "old jalopy" earned many laughs. A reminder of "Good Turn Day," brought the evening to a fitting end. ro !MITTEEMA. MILLER look n as hi son, Clyde Miller .III, receiv· his award from Committ e:tnan Brann. Mrs. Miller, left, and. the otheT award-wi rwJng Scout·s mother teceived duplicate 1!11nratr1re awards. J tin ha yer, right, wa program chairman. STU TS by the four patrols of Troop 91 provided entertainment for the Scouts and their parents. Here the 'Vildcat Patrol demon­sLrates "worst aid" or "how not to treat an accident i tim." During the evening 1'0 Scouts from Troop 91 received awards. 7 • • T • • 8 rliHOl ( ;H 1,\(.,'\ilt-11:-.R Bill (;ulln HU~ th<: lll l httdl> lif;, <.irck P.d · <n i ~ kept rcm,t .tnth alilt' I J ~ th e.: ucking n{ lOIC of tim piC( . ., ·rh <l••r •n tlu· ~ro t tnd u~ quit e~ '' int.liug ju ~L Olll e a 1car; it j, a 00-l'h in tllltttut . I RFJ) ~ I LII RI· R I Ol)f,.-. into tlt C' inlllt<~lt' wotki ng' ul .1 tt•l •lt'itllt t.r Hi' 1 p.li1 \lfJJk , l.llt('d a' .r hohh~. <lltcl h~'' g1u\\n ttf:llll nd•HI 1\ 'i11t C tltt f11q 1 , . '·t t.tmt' LP ILun iltott itt flc< ll lllotl , l'II K. l~t · rl ;,<hi -e·' tl'lt \l ,inu oWllLl'. · ll'.l l' il tlw ll>ttth>l, l'l lOIII' . ·t . lllcl it( Ill ( '"" "'""' Itt>\\ ltl II"' lltt' lll ," M -Ill ny Ch wh1" h h mpion h s finds rt:st con tructive hobby dl.1W11Sl • IrS and rc:la 1,; lton ft r hours" pursu1ng "W OOD ARVl• ·c? \ b .nO, J }f , j ll.St sa)' thJ t J whittlc1" remarketl CarrolL \Vil on, Gene1·al,Oflicc, to a friend r ·utly. Tb.u he. lik. many anoth r mmpion, d cribe an 11~p' ·sing hobb ·. But rh matter what the avocaLion, or '"'hat name i apphccl, man • Ohio han .r inns use th -i.r lonr- winter evening con- tnlCLively in their ba em .nt workshops. Sune ar pare-time gunsmiths, om ti ~ ili ' , others work in· the le trotu<.: held. and a. few x pai-r watches nnd dock. . Th~ J]) ution of timepieces brin.g · to nind Bill G o­try. Bill i. · krto n a n good rnan to b.andl ·watch · and lolks lvh.en they ar in need of r pair. :Bill Uk s to a - C< rnl.ilOdate hi (ello~ · h.ampion , and he b.a found that keeping in ~ t p with •atl r Time i lor of tun . lL ta.rted , just a h bb ", ut ho:-tv "the bo " keep Bill t rdt lm · . Repa:iring tel v.i ·ion and radio set ha be .n a bobb ' -:,;vit.h Fred ' teurer. "\Nhen h :wa . weaxing Na y blue, FTed' j b wa t11-at o£ an electronics t<: chn.ician. After stowing hi eabag for o·ood, h found tha t b tinkering ' ith rad.i ' and then television ets he "kept his hand in' and w:r able to u e kill cha t the Navy had taught him, drereb)r ke ·pll:lg n p what he had a t ready learned. WORh.lXG 0 . - A HEAD o.£ hi f:tther, Carroll Wilson .re.lax.e. in hi work-hop b carYing wood. Op bi" bench are se,zeral of the Fred. ha . ome valuabl . advtce to I a,ss oh to owners of 1'V s ts. U lain ts tltat sw it bing channels is hard cn1 a set, and that the n1orc the sele t<Yr is turned and t.he harder it's t.Ul~n d. the · mor , trou.bl · an own r _js lik t · to ha ·e. Anoth ·r tip aimed at prev nting dir£i­Cll1ty i.s to hav the set leaned ev ·ry six tnoltths. Since hi h vo lta.ge attract dust, its a ·cumulation, plus damp­nes:, could easi ly caus<: ·the horizontal otttput tran. · forrn r to blow . In 1 he basem nt of Carroll Wilson's home there is a work b uch behind which be spcndii uncoumed hours. "j ust whittling." Like others, his is a le isur t ime a . tivity and be rnaintains that when he begins to c wnt the hours, he. n quit. . A visitor to the workshop cannot fail to notic the! Apach e head which Carroll ca.rv ·d from a pi c · of pop­lax. For a nwcle l he u ·ed only a photograph . side view at Lhat. Th.ere's th ·plaque ot his fath T, roo, which wa . also carved by using a photograpb. Mr. Wilson -vows thal nothing is needed except sharp tool , the desire and the patience, in otder to turn out carved -objec ts. \'Vba.tever the requirements, these men, like men ·with hobb.ies the world over firtd fun and -r-elaxation in their basement workshops. - • . I' objects he ·has "w,hittled," a p.laqu.e of his father, an Apache Ind ian .head, . a gnon1e at1d a ram.'s head carved on a pO\ der horn. • • .· J .· I ' ' I . ver '' Director winds up production as final scenes are made in Champion movies to be released this year. b-1 ~ A Mr:RA~ · have stopp -d rolllng, the sound t ack i · no longer r o ding, klcig Jigh1 s and ar s have be ·J• ' tk.ill d," S! t;;; and stag -: t0n1 down and a th us;:m·d au 1 nc prop.- r ·tumed to their a custom d uses. 'j rnontbs of 'sh oting" 011 'h, n1pion ' thre n . w color nwvi 's prognuH i ~> "wrapp d u1 :· After rno · than two y ·ars of r ·s(~ s ("D f'P Roell""), indu-.,­trial ;:u~cl ommunity rcl res1d nt .R ub n .B • .Rohert<;(m, Jr., L i11g int •rvit>w Ict by liarney O'Rou,:kc, a prO'fe sional actor wl o plays a tnaga­tine writ r, Martin Aker~. ·tre \'\liJd ­ing _ Lage . et · n h tCag J wa~ a ncar ntph a of Retd.Hm's office in Jhn·Jiltou. A NE-W EXf'F.R IENCE for two Cham­pion execu ·ives was being ''marJe-up" for the movies. President Reuben B. Rob rtson, J r. (immediately below), and Vice-President Dwight J. 1 hom-n (bottom) are seen with ;\·fake- p Artist Jack Dumont at Wilding's Clti­cago studio . Both the pre;id.ent and vice-pTesident went through the ordeal in traditional Hollywood . tyle, "'hile Mrs. Thoms0n lent moral support to the cause. Dumont b rt ogni1.ed a' a leading figure in b1s profession . wa . c n'lpleted d uring th early winter in vVilding Pic­tu e Productiom, Inc., tudi o.,. "'hooting" star ted la t prin . In th in terim, footage was sh ot in. vir ttt lly e,·ery J.r a of Cl ampion operation . At pre ent "'W:ilding techni ian ar bu il engaged in edi ting the thre film . It is e timated that the first pictur 'wi.ll b read for pre j ·w.ing some time in :March, vith th econ 1 and thir J. to f:o llow a t 60-d a , in.terval ·. Plan for "first h owiiJO's" ar in ompl' t , but will be annotJ nced in an carl ,· edition of h LOG. Professiona l actors ar c.L t in lead pa rt. , 1 ut the company fi lms will have a number o£ Champi ns in supporting role . Many indi idual from the Chan1pion milis and forestry commur1i ties ·will be ·een a,nd heard in the three picture . Each script pTesen ts a dramatic tory in film, with pointed ~bjectiv s a related to th title . However, each picrure also depjcts the over-all Champion ot~:gani­zation and the communities o£ which it is a part, and each i , a complete program in it el f. In e- enc , the films will serve Lo acquaint Cham­pion's neigJ1bor and cu tomer 'With its forestry effort of encourag1ng . ound woodland policies (or future pulp­wood and lumber suppl tb values of practical human :\ QV •R A.l.L vr ~·w sho vs Ll c V<!St lfLOIII I of !t.jttipnH'I)t rl! • rr~h ~£d l'or a . take" on \.~lilcl i rtg1s Gl.li<:llgc SOllfld !\W.).\C. T) i h an anual sccrr , with Vic, :· Pl' . idenl D 1~ight J. l'lwrmoa <.tnd 13 ·ut;:y <J'Rou k.e, a profe;;, icmitl act.or, on tare iiJ th bac;kg · u,nd. r elation in j ts inclustri 1-community relations policies; and i ts e earch and manufac turing methods in the pro­duction of fine paper . Final charactcrjza tion · .in Champion's three movies were played by President Reuben B. Rohertson. Jr., and Vice'-Prcsident D" ight J. T homson - ?a .h taking time from bu~ y scltcch.Il to fill their respect' ve roles in s·c n ~. £:Jlm -d on the ·w·lding sound stages in Chicago. T he two Ch ampion executives will be s · n ar cl heard .in "Good Busine; •"- each exp.rcs ing the company's views regarding human values in industry, and manage­ment's philosophy of b uilding a way of working and liv.ing· tha t answers al l of tl e fundamental needs of Champion people. T hey indicate tbat tltes practices result in loyaltie, kills and increasing productivity, higher pr ofits, bett r ·wages, improved working condi­tions and e p aneled employee benefits . .Each of the three films will be approximately 30 minutes long. "Deep R oots" and "Good Business" cany actual voices and sound. "Paper Work' will be a nar­rated film, with the sounds of the operations but without voices. Distribution will be sch eduled through the Pub­lic R e lations and Community Rela tions Departments. The potentia 1 awch ence nu :nbers in the mnlions. 10VI. 'C· tN CLOSfi. (T . • the c mer. ftlnt n, ig-ht Thomson an 1 HiH nev O' Rnurk.,t• ili rt ·ne hll " (;o I Jh1. it1<>~s." In Lhe mo' i Dwf.g·l · ~ .vnJu.at~:;s t b~ •o!np:~ny's !JU!ilitkln rmn the 'lall.dpoint of htUl,la t'l valu s and th it· r 1ati6oshlp to indtl trial atmony. l l • . . ei ' - • ' THIS TATE FJ H H T H ER\' in th I ine fore ' ls n a.r Ja:p r i · a boon to Lhousand of Texas ·portsmen. · l 0 V\' , J L r: F D AJ\ 1 ft)l tm J. I ~ I ,700 acr f, 1N ca pa it v rc •rvou· neat j a~1 er . • - • It wel'l deserves its nickname, H t h e j e w e I o f t h e f o r e s t'' ' \ I - --- 12 • • CARADINE P RK is one of several Line xecreation spots located near the city of ]a per. J PER, TEX has been nicknamed_ "J e·wel oJ th Forest" ' by Chamber of Comm rc pubhnty men. ncl th unu. ual thing about the publicity ni knan · i thar it j inacl qmn to d cribe tbi thriving little cit ' and it beautiful ·urroundings. · Shortly ft cr th vi llag £ Jasp r ' a · sti1bli he I on Sand)• ,r ck on hun lJocd thirt -odd ) ears ago, a visjLOr. G org \V . Sm ·th ·, wrote, '·] was r harn t l with the ,pptarancl' of the otnw . about Ja. p ·r. Th rich folia · - 1he cl n -' ne br:1ke - th.e p r n.nia] · tr 'lt1lS ;:, . 1 of w·at~:r - thc h€':altldnss of the CIDunt:-y-- apuvat<. r 1 and mad m beli vc Bevel' (J ohn H vel, f under of Ja ·per s ttl ement '\ a.s as n ar an .arllfl , paradise as · c- u]d l found." • • . , ' AJ>PR.0f'RJATE. SETTING o[ beautifu l p1ne this puhJic ~ll'irnming pool. in th commun ity . • nngs 'ARL HLL TO:-.:, lef t, manager of Champion's Jasper Pulpwood operations, p<l\I Se" Lo cha t wi th Charnber of ornmerc J'v.fa.nager, R. · <. . Housel. 'i 'ATER SlUL ;G oo tbe Nec;he.s River i a popular wq.rm woother sport among the citizens of J asper. owadavs~ Ja er, a city of ~pproximately five thou­sa nd~ is cited as a good place to live because o( th modern conv,eni nee it afford!>, su h a$ ele tricity, water, gas, telephon s, modern s h.oo'ls, church s, paved streets and ot.b. r conveniences. Tbe CC &: F Ra:ilway Fine s rv: s J a per .and two m i11 highways traver.· the county. It has a mod-em airport and nuruerou.s all· weathex fa m-to-mark t biglrwa)~· Jas-per Coun.y is one f the I ading, if not tl e 1 ading fo-req prodw:; t~ <ciunt, i th stat . S vemy-five 1 ·r elll o[ J.a P" ~( unty's incmn. · com s frmn ,~vo()ds op <Hious,, -;uch as: l\nnbe puip,vood, railroa.(! 'ics anrl fenc 1 c1sts. It ca ns approximately 12 p(:r .n.:nt ( t . lre 1rugc t<Wtl spent annuaHy b th ' Texa-<> Divisi n fo prdpw Ott. - -- • • Diversified fanning, stock ra.isi nb, and poultr · pro­d t<:tion are a ls-o important industri ' ol this ve ll­bl sscd ar ·a. Not th kast im1 ort.ant is its l'ri ndly and progr s.· i clti''Z OI)'· Almo. t <myo e " ilJ t ll ou that the p opl of Jasp r are ''g l ld folks." o rn,. of tho e good folk are hampion. . rnong them are C I Hilton, George Baldwin and G orw;e Osbun . Hall wit . .is a n1ember of e J,.ions 'lub and O.sbt:lrn OW!lS an in.t r st In a Jalipel' furniture . wr<.:. Hiltnu has be o haitm n of tl:t Lions Club Ji{ud •o and. Ji'FA ·Fa . rock .ShoP (or th 1. st ffv ear •. H is also " Roy l Ar h 1\fason and a Chat 1ber J . - I . of omm rr . di. ··cwt. Th .y an: Wl)r1dnt1; to brighten the lttster of ''Th J ("wcl of Th I<'m'c t. '' 13 - I Pl LPWOOD cut in the J:tspet ;u ca i, ship­ped to Champion bv raiL George 0 burn, right, as istant mana­ger _of the .fa per op­e. ratlOI~, say that fu ll cooperation fro m Agent \\r. L. R avin of CC &: SF Railway Company help get the wood out when needed. A TRE. -Ll , ED high w:1 y on the- mad t~l J aspr;:r iR tlt si te f this int r ·ring sign. 1 marks th bouwla t ' of the li! ba rn . and Cou h :Ht!l lndj an C!'> rvMion, the only Indian re rva tion i ll T a . 14 • r\ , 0 FH I R FAi\1fU. R ~ I , ff"T itt rh J 1. pet ;) rn~ i, Uli~ [Jt tlf)\ •.H)d tn lck. lu the b u kgromhl r 111 be ~n lh(· lt ujldi lt g'i awl fiJI] wOQd ·•or­age y::tt d of C'h :l)1tp ~ou's T "· '> Divisi n Jasp r he dqua r1 ' l '· - ,\ CLO 'GR nEW of rhe pwlp1 o tl . tor­age p rtl Ul j :t>p ·r ~h t w. h:1 111pion R . C. VVunrl : c: d illg' ;'1 loaJ tltHl hu.s hc .lt hr ught in by nn inllcp•:nrlelll prndn r. ' be pro lti C't: is h nr · Hadnot, I ft . ' \ I ~ - - - ~ - APPRoxrM TELY · THRF.E :nom~s' DRIVE from ' Pa.~adeua (l<'V road mile and J. 1. nitile-5 as the crow flie to the northeast i · the little city of Jasper, Texas. 1L i the hub 0f on:e of the Te. as Division's largest pulp­wood pr clueing ar as. Th a . tl:lt:lf c~nter of this extens ive operati-on is ·a .ompany-o~ n l tran of 32-1 acres just ouLide the c:ity limit of Jasper. [t i - the headquarters of the Jasper . Divi ·on o{ the Tcxa:' \Vooc.ls Department and ·erves as · a reo iYing and swrage 'ard foT m~Jl-bound ·p~tlpwood [r m rhat area. Carl Hilwn, manager of the Ja p er 0peration is alw ­as'li tan::. Texa Divi-ion wood~ 11:1ana~er and manager of T xa.s Fore ·t Fa.tn:1s. He dire t the activitjes o£ a p- • . I I • - • Busy offic€ serves as G. H. Q. for the company's woods operations over a wide area · proximately 50 company eropluyees, including a 35-man woods cre,w. . . Independent contraction and the Champion crews in the Jasper area produce almost one out of every six cords of pulpwood consumed. by the Texas Division. The c:tttting area is roughly J30.mi1es long and 75 miles wide. Jasp 1· js near the center and the approxima te bQtn'l:datie.s M"e Center on the nonh, Humtington on the wf,';st, B0'n Wier on the east, and Orange on the south. Four railroad line serve that area and trar;tsport the pulpwood w the mill at Pasad€ila. In addititm to producing, buying and toring wood, Hilton and the other Charupions at Jasper manage a peution of the con1pa.ny-owned forest lands. ' I l\ Ll\ . D 0\.\.;\.l:f.l , · ) . ]), :K n, right, go<~<; o Cl' a ~nu::t uf hi~> holdings l itl\ Gham­pi"" l'l Bnyer T•.uda l>e~u. J}e• n <)rtd Kc.!ll di.'ICll ·sed th pfJtU IJility of <W earl) p(1lp- 'Ji \1J}JQN' JA;S'f'ER FFi ~ is itJ · BOOKKE.EPING - ,Ml (!)th J> wol'l:; " t th J, . p<;r Oll'i · - ls t'ht:: t e~t,on sibilit f th rw ·OOd cut on th.i tl.act. proxhn. tel ): 1 J!) mite~ fr JJJ Pttsad l:l. bt t j-st,b .'nlli <111, Pbnt. ~Lmrdill,lb,_r of' t-'~llJ . " ' rl<J 1 1 rtu . 11 Trtl ' JJL, bow• 1it Jgi• L. u1:.k ·s lh • I rtp !t[ fr •tpl·f"l;rt ' nlef\· <~h . · C1t. fnj i n , G llf'••e fla1dwin · nd . 1:n'}c'"lrie Ht;tn H. . 1 0'' of the ol'f <'S . !.lrc ap1 r' 'I ri.t •tv pmH'I d in u L\r4,l · fin:i~b ,t~eld . 15 ·' I I ' Caroli na crews work as " I 1 ' • ' I 'iH.l ' RI·.LY HII U ·H.D llll --af lv Hw:I'•LIIC' (lii fJ, /(-jl_i, thl' ,,() 1011 dig 'L<'I is '' lu:~dc d i11 tc, llw vot '' hl'l v iL will IJc ir.,tall(·<l. It rtlc'~t. UJ ·~ 17 te ' I iu hughl and J(J ff't·L itt di.111t ·tc1. lll'WLA lN • CO:'\ I·Tf> l· . ·r e t· in 1 iJ;,rgiug nptipnwut and Ut.nnptutr ''"rkt11cu wlw make tlt t'. hiu)J ' • AI I\ ant' (/tm•e1 f, It ). in ur.Jtl< t IOI!lp;lll } I<")Jlt'.;(.' lli :J till ', ~t:tlld' fll: l11'alh tJt ' filtt'd di\.;t'l l JG a team to finish this j 0 b • • •• ' "'I If I IIICUFR l lltlliJ ~ '!he 100,000 1 ott lld nnit (tup, Ct'lll(' ' h 'f ne it i~ c·t int•' 1ft ~· ltnl ·a t ilw h 1t 1wn of di gt·srt'r. The llnlr 11ao; d11g )lli 'P"'I'il 10 gilt' tilt' di gr\l t' t h-;~rattl(~ llrt<kr h :till\, nO\\< 1 dy to b low€red into perman<:>~1l position. \\'E \R Y R 1 CCU G R "\. ( loll•r r ,.i14h l ), pa 1 rscs a t.t1p t ~te n e~" ~Jigester. ' h. .fob w s c,m'tlplet d (tui · ly a rt il :ddy dc·,p it. lu~;e workillg qttarLer&. Som 20 ottw.r ere' " aided in til nwvt:'. Wn IN CAROL.LNA t;HAMPLONS tackle a l:ougb assjgnmcnt - such as insta[]ing a 50-Lon li gestcr - they d monstrate that teamwork pays def.inj te c1 i videncl s. Installation of No. I u Digester late in Nov ·m ber posed a different problem. T he 1nam.moth unit had been bought at a cost of more th an $17,000 and it had to be installed qui ckly and safely_ It tipped the scales at 50 tons, was 4 7 feet high and measured I 0 feet in diame ter. There was Iiule clearance ­on l.y about five in ches here and th ere - ~vhich posed as another pro blem for the workmen, all of . whom had ~; n ccessfullv' ompleted many tough jobs during their Champion careers. . You an't "jerk" a heavy and dose job of rigging. Can ton Champion rig­gers know this . is so; they can nc:ver afford to d isregard the safety angle. Teamwork, mixed with an abundance of close ooperation among all working units, is the positive answer to compleL­ing a big, heavy job in record time. L 1- though. the task ·of r emoving and instal­ling digesters is primarily a job for Cham­pion r iggers, at least 20 other crews played a part in this operation. . T he job was completed without the sl ightest accident. T he whole task. was haza.rdou from start to finish, but all Champions -vvho con tributed to the job proved they were safety-minded all down the line. Al Kane, chief e ngineer of the me­chanical and e lectrica l div ision of the Mutual Boiler and 1ach.inery Insurance Company, Boston, said Carolina Cham­pion workmen were th.e sa fest, most de­pendable and rnost reliable of any he h.a ev r known. 1 a nc ohserve l the job cJos ly and h · h ·. be n known for years ru a " very c1 o se o b server. .· '\ irhin nine days a ft· r· th · old diges­t r stared mov.ing out the n w No. 16 had been pla.c: ~d on the lin " and w~ s in full production. Whil no dfort ,.vas mad Lo es tab­lish a record, as su h, in r lllO\ ing nd insta J ling rh hea )' dig ster, a iJ 'ham­! ion>:; in ol n.:d nr thankful th • a~si,.,n­h ·nt N"as t.m);)plc:L tl ac o ling lO sched­ule ~ aut a Jy. TJ t pi c ture~ on the~<' t vo p.geyshow . J1ow th. ~:: difficllll msk. wa · ~o <H tn· uetv . . lUI l af ·1 man ·uv ·n· l. ' ' i\1 A;\;Y LE ·. DER •. in Lhe 1J:i3 l\l atf'h of Dimes pr g13m in Lhc antou-Bt:Lh ·1 - Chde area oC Bli cwood ~)tmty arc pic­tured here a, the · left the Champinn \;\ICA to ,.i, it the Onh 1pedic Home- In A·he' illc, earh in Decnul rr. rhev , j, . iled tlle home to ,. t fin:t haut.l inr' nna ­ti< m that witl ai.d the'r work in J:mu.tn. J. l'aul ).furray, chairma'u of the' :mton Polio dri' e, .i · in tlle dght foregro und. IXTERL TED INDONE "V\~S nre shown a paper defect b) t:hc Ohio Di,ision· Hill Wright as the group loured Champi011 la t ~o,ember. . The visitors pent one w e-k in Hamilton - wh.i :h was chosen as a represem~ti\·e indu ttial city- tudying American !U.anufactllli ng methods. Pic­tured are So Tomuljono, Zulbkli, Tam­hunan, Hasan Basari and Santoso. SAFETY EDUCATION 1'ATERIAL fur nisl1ed to school in the Canton area by The Clli;lmpiol'l Paper and Fibre Compa ny is ex· ami.ned b · A. J. Hutchins, seated, sup rintendent of the Canton school 'iystem; '"'· L. Rikard, left, principal of Canton HighS hool: and Carlton B llaru y, J r., Carolina Champion's sa.fety supervisor. H t ttchins said: ·•1'he b est exp res ion of appreciation will be wise use of the ma tGrial within the ~>eh ool&. " - .'.·. . . THE NEW ME:\4BERS' DIN:'\ER at the Hamilton YH \ \l'as th occa ion fox this group picture. Left to r igh t: Dick Nein , Ohio Division Emj)lovm cnt; J c.- e Haiue·, •I.OIJ.t\.!Otnt'rv ountv .\u t!itor: I , _. J ~ and iVlel Fields, Ohio Wage dmini. Lrn~ io11 . 1\fr. H.tin s. fcirmerly a big league pitcheT wi rh the SL. Lou i al' !ina.!. w:-ts princit. J .p aker een a Texa · crab . This fact, O~ OHH'.e, makes The !>lOr · beli vable e\Cn withOIIl pi torial evidence. • FRO\.! O ' LO. ;'\!OR\\ .\\. toP;~ ·1dena. Te~· a. i~ a f~'>ng joulney. !au lhe change in lemper~tLUrc i · cH•n !neater. sa'' Bern l 1-os> t •rs. Tl1 1}1:. k lka s won 13-7, 20 -,;'IT . VV lN OR LOSE, the a n uual Turk y Day football conte . be-tween the Waynesville High chool Mountai:ne r and the Canton High Sch ool Black Bears is the "gan1e of til ~ear·· insofar as this immediate section of \ 1\'e cern 'ort!1 Carolina is concerned. T his year the Bears won the rrrid iron g· rne l · -7. But scores don't amount to m uch with th fans, so long- a · tlt\' two school bands furnish plen ty of a rion ar. h.al f ti l:h . It wa con ·ervative ly stimated tha l no k: than 4. ~ 00 r~ Ih crow l d e · r nook a,nd om er of th 1 a l a1h l tic fid 1 Thanksg.ivino· aftcrnoou. Ki k o ff w·ts r iaht on th button - 2:30p.m. The Wayn . ville-Cant n gnme h ew 1.000 more p T~ons chan saw th Optimist 13ov l ontest in .\ .;;h ,·illc ,.h. ·r' slig·hrly t'rlon' than ~ . 000 [at~s e:rt 011 hand for the fh. nk. - • • g' U1h progrn.m. id fro111 tb gab w lor _ >[ tlt ' 1 rogT~II ll . tht: gri lir0u on tcst pi'Oper w :~ s Ja.b •l •d one uf tht> bcs l o fft'r d in the ouuty in ye. r'i. Hot.h team<; w ' r<' at rheir bes t. Wayr1 s .ill 111a , be• 01 t )lt' wiunirt);!; si 1 _ nJ iht fc)u tba ll 1 dg . c ntc nc I T llallk'>gi iug-. lht t reg n rdk~- 'r how i.h' two t ·amr.; sracl up ne: l •t•ason, a ~ real , howling tttnltl lt wi ll wit ness r b · pl o-gram. Rq;a rllk -,~ o l the> .~C'o r a t haH-Lifl t(', tilt ' ll t·~· m; d n tt nse unti l U1 · fi n;d whi ~ tl · hring~ lb · high st ho 1 o-J·idirnll ·. ·em lo ;,t c leN•. Thl' : lw: ty" rlo. ' • • • •• T Fn r; ,\Rit: - IT "' ' ·n TONY l\U:.NZFR le ft Lhc Ohio I in ion/fiull Pl?n p11:hing a brok- box. bound for tb · Wet End of No. 2 . . -\s th ·y pa.s 'cl th Dog House, th 'y ran lnw Bud ]'.; al \vim w:.t · reportino· dandy Licks to rrll Hoskin Ente1·ing the }\Jachin Roorn on th eir . m, th iGtl trip T ·d and Tnn . ;;n\· that John Fugae h:u:L just stopped making h · nJ ·was pulli.ng the quirt ba ck to the front ide. t.\s }nhu '""enL back to adju ·t the jordan·, he saw Henry Cru·pentei' d1eck ing a furnish, on the way to the 1i ·ht hou ·c. "'e .rer 1 rnen pa eel any in;:>· spud sticks. Had thi. been th ir first day at Champion, Ted Garrett and Tony Menzer probab1 ' would have tried to jump inLO the Labor Pool , f r the lingo at Champion '·oulrl hase been too much for them. · 'om on.e could have explained to them that in a 1 aper mill broke box is merely a large box made to c [}tain t·va te paper, a:nd that hay is the accumulation of w·a-re pape (rom a paper machine after a break. A nRO E BO ' is nothin n · to John $ ump, No. 2 M iJ l Trirnrners. l t's u ·ed l1 e1 e tO w nta ill th sh. ving~ us paper ls l.r iHHtlcd. John 't. job entails b a n 1 · n g t.l e: uo · no the Be t. .r Ro n . They cou ld h ave been tcJltl Ll1at the Dog- Hou ~e in Nu. 2 M.ill i a romn in wbich the humidity is constant, and that iL's u ed to condition paper. They a lso could hav b -en L01d tha t dandy Jicb ;.trt rnadzs or imperfeC-­tions le ft on a h cet of paper by th dandy roll. Mo t new employees learn that a furnish is jw.t a recipe for pnpcr, and thaL Jigb t houses arc u ~ ua lJ y io und wherever there's a n eed to mat h a orad to its standard for likeness of shade. • Almo ·t e ery newcorncr to Charnr ion has found out aboHt the Labor Pool, and jn . hort order 1 lea n ll t nJeanings of rnany other terms which ar wed in the manufa~ ture o£ paper. .H guick.ty adds to 1 is vocabu­la; ry th.e jargon u eel by the Old T irn ersi because th · explanation of many processes is diHic dt without using paper mill lingo. The n ext t ime a youngster approache " you and a ks. «Hey, when~ 's the floppcr?" think back. t , our (irst day and th en tell h im. - - - -- --- 1.\1\l ( H\Y i-.,n<>l-<nl · lt !i itk ·. lwr ·;lsl •l' r ti r, ~" 1 ~trl Hk. -! I , 7 . f .Jt)1 iD•', I •JI1 J.(•IJ fJI.l \ OJW. [' J\ iS p-t Lilli.' '\' a" t :) k.{ II H~ ll !I i. 1l ·IIIH \\:~' il ·in,;; Jn,td • ,, ]<j_, h c pl .1 in~ au ;t,i I .full of " h;~ :· fll [\;t~l p.tp J,. - - - -- - --- ••• CONTINUED - --- . - -- - • - - • Jido doesn ' t live in - "'\-> ¥ the dog house , nor - \. .,., -- bulls - --- - - - - --. • ·THI:, ET LND of ;J p;rp 1 n,;,c-hiJ •C l i [h' r.~ "'ll !IH'III]!,Jt fn11ll 11hc r· ' el 'll:d . Atddt: " MLIIv" \1<:H:lr<>. 1:1 hin<' ' f'<•rt(!f·r• 011 Nq. ?, m-a c· a lr il rlW' iu th rkc· k edp;c· !, ~ r )rn\i t"J~; tlw squirt; it i-s j~' "l on (JI th.c t l ii•U ~and~ tTl dj,l.S llll . ,,t~ 1 rpdrnl oi a , i ll u pap .r !1iJaohine op nHM. 22 • • 1n the b u II pen I ' 'II IF li'l t.NO POOL, llll\re for rn,d l} ki1CI\I n "~ Lh!C (>tJn. l nw " . teri · 1 ('ut.d , j~ (<JIJ-lf'lh< -<1 o f' r i J~· o' h HI Illtji.J; ~ ' \lUl'l g l a dir ·~ . 1! 0 11' 11 in II C: picttllt: :d, JI •' . l ;ll:icl ir, . fruw k i t 1<1 Jig'l11 ::n· ha l J t\Jit·r1 . stq ·n ism o[ t l ,· ( ldiLil J'opl , l.•11 r·;dne Ln ••ll, ,\1i ld,,:cr Gugg r, :1'3 It · J ohc, lt.t·nc l'i 'lH', J\ H )<0 · ~ • illt rl Jo r(! j\1 tOr\'. • T HE DOG HO .E aL Cbam.J)oiOn has n oLhing lO de with dogs. In tead, it~ s. a t.el'm applied to a room in 1 o. 2 Mill which main­tain' a coo~tan.t h umidilv, and thereby imparts moistiJre to dry paper. Shown above, work ing in the dog h o use at Champion 's O hio Division, are four employees: Don Lincks, Bert Crouch er, Arch Bi s:h.op, rtnd Howard Knipper. T HE:R.E ARE ICHTHO · ·~E~ and li'gbt­J to uses. l1.i!S or~ iS h iag us~,: l!l 1 y Beiit "f En gineer lt es Lan wo ttn tl::l conl pin a ' luu.le o fY.:lper wiJ.h rh<: . . i a1:U:liii l tor U1l! l pan i ~11h1 r grade. TfH: HOl.L P,E.1' do 1· is being op ·n ·d hy. Jolllm} · ];) e!> 16 let th . Jl en , not bull ·. i-n!'i:d c. ·1 ht~ " llull 11eJ.l " i ~ rne r~:,:ly 21 nam g,iven ro tit R1 , ·ar h n ·part· Ol t::ll t .aH ~n<~ t J'iloL l'l.<J nL lin • •ying; ar l l ar vit\ s ,,,~t, Ralph Hani. and T ed · Carreu . -- -.,. - - • - - 23 LO 'l ALLE ' is , J1 u·n makiu a lahorato·r .; sheet f p;1 pe1.~. hc1lc b"e ' l~ are mad fr m tep · ntati \ e s:nnpl l' of our pulp, day and nth r mnt ·ials. B' tl1 test' made on the, . mall m­ples the pro lucti n deparlll.Km, wi tJ ha'e th ability t imrrox q11al itv in t e ma{;hine prodllctil w . LOtHS R - H ha u d r the mi wscupc a :. tllp-1 . or sr•ale • hi<.-11 opp 'd !lJJ in a par· lt tul~r grart ·. B · a. ca reful da ~i. fuati()n vf ~ l' h Tl!11tl'r ia 1.<. a the ·, i:mp4!tfe 1 ion om be tr 't'tl back lo ~cn n e p~ 1t icular ~ t p in the Qp r~' t.ion a ud he elirn ina L · 1- ' ( llYRON BERGER ( left) i exammwg a pulp ,olu tion from which he sep· ara tes tiny particles of sca le, wood sllives and other substances for a na] ­)' i s by the Lab's competent staff of chemists and technicians. These Hsuper sleuths" of science use their special skills to improue paper making in • I • By ] oe Blevens MAJ TAil'I c A coNSTANT check on the raw materials going into the manufacture of paper is, in itseJf, a very big job. Not only doe the Ohio Divi ion Chemi try Lab perform these du ties but it does numerous others as well. One of th big it ms used a l Champion but nor nee · ariJy part of our produ t h, C<JiiL The apptoximaLe dai.ly usc of c.oal at our mill is s en 1.0 eight caT loads. very arcful analysis is made n wc:~.mples or a h car as to its B. T. U. or heat content and also a" Lo Lbc a1 -Gunt o£ sulphur and other :mat r i a l !~ it Qt1taius. Eac.h lot of pulp rcc i,:ved from tlv fJth · r di is1on ·. as wt:Jl p-ulp olJLaiJ ed outside of Charnpi.on. i · carefu lly te<> t d by th , Ch m. La b. ~I'h i s is n c ···ary td ontrol fa t rs such d sample LO dtt rrttin ilJ.i tnak ·'· 1.;1 p ::tnd the ma Lcria Is nscd to pnxlu it. Com­[ la int o l a nature invol ing the stren gth and ma terhls in our owl papti!rs arc quit~ o(t ·n rderre 1 to onr La:b i.n ord ·r tQ correct (utu re !>hi pro en ts. Alf c f t l.1 . a h~H'!.:! prognnn ' a. we ll a .~ the supplyi ng nf t ·st sr1h1tio ns for o1bn dqxrrcm -,nt. in the mill, D J~ke up d \c wo k pcrfornwo by tht' H~11oilbm1 Di ision Chern J .al . All of he ]X )j>l . working her under the capable sup vi i 11 oi Glyde Nmcros tal« · ]Wide 111. OJll ribu t il b th '- outst::t>nding . et i our mill. • ' Beware the '~S panish Swindle" mysterious l •tt r Iron• M 'xico a rri.v d . re cutly on th , desk of G ~:trd n r vVri .·ht, presid en t o£ the · c:rne l'aper Company of St. Luuis . . . ·This 1 tt "r d c:ribcJ . the p light of ~ . "p ri on·( . in .1 ~ul for banhu p t·cy, who; tt tat rued, had $ ,8FJ,OOQ lucid · 1 jn a u·unk ~·. t a Cus LOlTtS, H ms · i-n The Uni t d State . h Jetiet oHcr<;d Wtjg'hl a on -LJijrcl sha re of the fort1 111c if h · would h ·Jp th . pri · n er to pay r t~un cx pc n ~;es rtecc 'sary to r ~cov er tli e lll011 -y. S , ~ 1'11e.~ prnsp ~ ct w <:~s yick e~ ou~ for th · old ~n d farnou 1pam:sh PtJ on T Sw111 ·11e. · It 1s nrren tJy l ·mg operat d by a gang- in Mex ico whi h pr ·ys o 1 unwary Americans i1 tbe h ope of ext.tHCling as much a.$ $10,000 from ea h of tl\cm. Cardn r Wright ptov ·cl unwilling to play th eir game;, how evei~, al d turned his J tl ·t ov r to th _ St. Ju is Pos · Office In 1 e tor. The insp crot irtfonned h·im that s or of th s" J tt<:: rs are b ein rna il d fJ'Om fcx ico; and that de plte I ost OfCice warning:;, ma ny 0 .S. citizens fa ll i tim of the gang. A re ent ani 1. in th . aturday Evening Post give, complet details n the o perational 1 1 tb9ds of th _ windl r, . Meanwhile, 't\Tright notified The OG of hh xperience. "I think it might prove intere . ting to your LOG reader s,'' he sa id. "e. p ·ciaJJy if i t sav,s tl1em some~ mon ey.' " ' \ IT .CC T , tER. GRO\ , :-.o ~rows Champion . . . Th . noingh;:tm Papn Com pan ' o.f .Birmingl1am , Ala. has re · entl) at JlUIJ n< -d th e. ·pans.ipn £if i ls I ctor • f. il i ti as hown in the pl .-Jto above. Th t uttiQ.g drum JO.ajo:r and the ~Y rd " · ift)"" ar tl.eir tegi!>t~l ,!fl trad -warl - ju t a the . a mpicrn Xnight and K•J,!F1l:t.n • are trade· roa~" ' h rnpion. ~ be Rirmingh am Pav Cnm • tl} hU}$ pape:r rr-m h;nuplon l) h RHODA { 'CL , RI, aro limt l)j i ion t JepJwne oper. tor, point" out the .anto · Offi to Lu ill 0.~ , General ffice reHef per­a t r. Rhoda \rLsit ·d Hamil on in Ocwb t . n 1 n tu(' f c w fafe it ·m a ~t.ati m ty, tahkt~ and b(J. with m; n. of t b . p ople sh l1a:d me t by phon . fHUt f \' \'J~ i\ RS AGO in n c ·wq ·r Vi e­P rct,;iGknt H etb Ranll 11 wn (JJ3era riur; tltfs ,.!J, r ( lrj l)) ut t it Ohio nivi;.ion. H · 11.::t th··n co upping at the Ur,i v>r. it • nl ··n· i!U> II/ ;,' •ht:1 1.t ~ in • P1 tirl '11 1. llidl r · . ld;il l liJ;'h t ;nd i t ;,rnt . ~•() t ' · tO.Ill Rr'"' 11 Bm . lr 11 . Thi, i~ th•· twt­dtl lll:' R 11 .•: u d {fl ' ' .tt> ll J1fn ld p! llfH" lfl • ' · I Texans, Eggs and Chewing Gum By George Steiner Johnny Bryan and Flo ·d "Fu zzy" H oskins frmn down Texa way dropped ii1 at the Safety Office , to say h Uo dq.ring th ir visit 'in July. Both look good, and we mu t sa · they look younger than when they shook off the du t of Hamilton several years ago. 'Fuzzy," being in a generous mood, passed out cigars r.o the hoys in the Safety Office. If Captain· Roy Hollis, ter's conten tion to "judge a man by the cigar he gives away, and not by the cigar he smokes," holds tru e, then our old pal, buddy and sidekick is a gentleman of the first ''rater. The brand of the cigar was "Black Peter/' no le . Ray Lynn wa forced to take a ·week 's vacation after he smoked one, the ,. eakling. Our first glance, when. J ohnny and Fu zzy droppecl in at the Safety Office, wa at their fee t. W'e looked for. T xas boots, l!lut no dice. vVe probably never will ee an_y of tho e hornlares from Houstotl wearing boots, for a man must own two head of cattle before he is en titled .to wear boots in Texa . H e must own three h ead of cattle before he om stuff th right pan ts -Ieg in, four head to stuff both pant<; leg·s in. Only the owner ot six b.ead can wear spurs and y 11, "Yipp ee! ' * * . The F rench ta-ugh t tbe world 685 ways to pr~ pare eggs fm' rh table, and one way is a good: as tJ:le other, as f.ar as ]0hnny Brehms of C.M. Cutt ·rs is. con ern cL He like th m that well. Egg~ are a st.ap le food, aud if 'l;v onsid ~r that a.n egg umsti.tute a day'. '"''ork for a h n, w • mqst ach1JiL rhat th · prjc of et{gs is ~ath ~.:r· lo·w. nd e m ig h t add tl .at compat ·d to what A<1am. paid (or one a p-ple, frui t · low at any price. A mn.,.,rs it ·m tell ~> o ( a p rop ri·tOr ol an it('·cr~m parlor in '\Vi hita, Kan s., who ort d nh tg c.tnd 1 ·pailiilg' bis tahle.~ found 1 ~5() wa_d. •>( cbnvi11g gnm ru·ck to their und ·rside. This bring to mind a i1Ailar place here in Ohio. On the tr:ip t Col uri1bu to a ttend th AU.-01. io . afc.-1y C~mgress two year ago, we stopped at a small (own 26 f r c n, ;;~nd dou "h.llll '. To get quLker rs ' rvi e the nt -'U pli int u::ral gro up~. Ffauked ,by Tiu 'bop 'ur c_>r · i~o Totti Ja ·olJi, and B / ' hn r tj up TV J l){)J' 1 a rtm H H he I heeL. 'We' ('J1l('l' >d • n ice:.rr arn alld d"rughn ut shop. ;vtarlin ha.pp ned to nm hn; hand tm ·tv th , ta ble wlnlc v.· w ·re waitinw leo be ~ rv cJ, and discover d that the und ·r· irle w 6 literally < ov red tn b ye . t~f h wing gttm. ·xanunation prnved tlt ' oth r tab! • 10 th .same 0;1chtion. N >ecl1 · o . ;:~ 1 111~ i t h T ue o l us tot1ch 1 the crlo ghn rt in that p l l:I:C(;, , len Baker, B r hop lllli.S t have been C. J1ing good Lhat dar h asked us ·what h o les in boards ar lf: the ·u·c k not hoi s. :13 fore we atl!>Wcr that question w would like tO ask a few our €lves: G len, di y u e er .see an apple turn o-ver? Or a hOT e flyi- • ' MR. AND MRS. Will· · ian1 .Butns, in celeb:rat­iHg their .?Oth wedding anni,<ersary la.st Octo­ber; cut a hu ge cake at a dirio er in honor of Lhe occasion. They are tl~e paren ts of JvJ ai·oo· u e-l'ite Burns, CM Sorting forelady. ENJOYISG lu ~chtime Dr e R 11 s sell Bu1·ger Sr., of ~o. 10 P<J'p ·r .\ I a-chi ue and his two-­month -.o 'ld grand­daughter. Karen L e Burger. K .ren Lee and mother P-anv, lcRiUi - can Burger: are making their home -with the Bl'l rge<s while Pn, Russe ll Burger, Jr., i. statiar·Jcll in Cermanv. ' Maude \!cKilJican o1 C;\•f ortiug i Karen L ee's other grand mother. 'F( • YFJ \ RS Of !1\RRI ED l.H.L wa. celebra te ! in the h ,· Cr," 11 lt . uw. No,·eJIIIH.: r 19. h It. :mtl 'i\·l rs. Cra l'll11 unvl th<'lr Jaa ori!}· r\ntl. J lfi~ alsu n1.11k ed a tull' tC il tltt") :1s a, Ch;~ .mpioa , f~r '\ !1. f.r.n 11 , a ~t• r ir I CillJ l.l ' Yf:l'. H e ,, :11d ot I he n11ll . I fmH1 I H. tn I>-• a w cr·11Jell 1tl ~l ace co wm k, n.nd. tlary ha l'(' 1 noci.('Tful lea l ·• '-hip. \f ' 1 ~ <1 \'l'l i .~ 1k a1 1•hc Lt•t• l will blcs · Gh.;.~ rupi n an I lt>t it I . JH O\ f i'l a I •·1 )' . • Ohio WITH EDDIE STOO P'S :tppearing to I~· a leep artd Ierli n Brifl ·s hand in tbe ail . Lhe camera nwght mcf11be-rs of tl1 cl a.->s f t920 a, the might have appeucd to th i . tc. ·c h(~rs in younger ) ear.s. From J •ft to r ighL r VinGe Laudetrn an, lre rl<: M lnl)'re, Franc s Stt tplten. Nurse l\.faJ' - nt.in.g and 1 yci or ro. . • . . . -as sma, te-s of esteryear - .19 2 B;v. Bill ThomtJson ! THE u Q,o RJl\' ' :rwENTI Es" we:re begi n11ing to roll into .an x ·iting decade of , merican History. Con­uttHional . menclm. nts 18 and 19 became effective; onne tinu and Rhro<le I -land were the only .states r e­fu .sin(>' to ratify the Prohri bitiou Act. T be "noble ex1 eri­rnent Ka5 de. tined to faih1re becan c community police , nati n-wide failed to cooperate ~1 ith federal enforcement ~en.t . ~f o t 1 cal police fore s were the 1 ootleggers' best friends;. . \ . hile W(Jmen w re gtv n their first chance to vote Ohio stepped downstage ' i1h Gmreroor Ja·mes Co.·· and ontol' \Varren Hardjng as th pre id cmial t andiclate --. .' . ure I et ·was a Bu J<_e , to wm. Hard in ~ 'I.VOtt \Vith an approxin:Hi l6 million votes to 11ine mill-ion {or Cox. Their grand total of 2~ miilion Wiiltl a tar cry fn"rt.o last ;· a.r's !'lear 60 million. \V'f>Jn{~ began to "r.noke, 1ri1Jk anti tell 'lhady ~o t.ori s. The '·flapper,'' '"gig0lo" and "cake- "atcr" w r · wi Ll1 t.t!>, n. 1t to meD tir;n the " -pe.t~ kca~ i. ·s." '·Ffam.inK yo u~h " and 11 ja.u: · g • bad aniv d. Can ;.ou f ,atm· coin ly Ja-<,-,1 · · lik lt ·n · IcJn yH·, .J dfer).On · 0H·n hip J:-Jjgh · hoot, . ·w Pa i 'i, )hj >; Ftam es , 1tph n, of Pa.x.t ;i1 ( flJin J.is) H ig lt ~ }J'r,, !, and :(\:far1e l{ ating .o.f: Hamj l. H.rn's ,_ ·(Jtr(' Da 1e H . . a:-. rltrce nf tf.1 · o iginal " flapJ ers?'' A H amilton High ~1uart · indudin§4 tf:nor Cal S~ill« Jnan and bi.isso Vince Laut-lel man m igltt h <n· · h , ·n 'ling· ing- «_\utlon,'' " .J <q>an ·-<,e Sartdmau," " Whi ~ l e1 ing,'' " fab Lind, Lou," um Lo nwntion i.JH.: tl. ·n j ()uth(rtl ~J Nl L wi ' ' '\ VII ·n ~ fy Baby <;liJtlc a1 fe.'~ . . A Pilt bLtrgh'. pion~ r Ra lio tatiun KDK · wa . giv ­ing lecti rr retun1s for t.lH~ Gr L Lim · _rqung Cly1l • N'or· e:r<;>ss an.d h ill classt:.1at.es of fara"''ay '\1\Ta ter bnry Vermont) High School " ere probably singing "The Lilac Tr e;_," "Tell Me Little Gypsy," "T:imbuctoo," ''Hone)de·w" and 'TJl Be '\1\Tith You in Apple Bios orn Time." · Hoosier Eddie Stoops of Connersville (In diana) High and l\llerlin Brill of T renton High were undoubtedly enjoying George ·white's first "Scandals" as well a: Gomedi:enne Fam'lie Brice's s.inging the fa.mmr "Rose of '\l\lashington Square." · Ot cour ·e, all classrnates of 1920 W' re singing or dancing tunes like ".Sally," "If I M t the Gu v\ ho Made this C<mntry Dry/' " \ ' ild Ro e," "Hjt hy Koo/ "Tick-Tack Toe," "Pa le Moon," "La Vee Ia," "'Tripoli " "Mary," "Chili Bean ," "Bob White," "Do You E,·er ~hink of Me?," "Hold lV[e" and "Se;cond Hand Ro ." Tl1c ye-ar 192.0, 1ik the ba l aJ1~&e of th ~.r wert Li ·, 1-vas 'ram rned wi h iHI.ercnin: " a nd · ' ci tiug YC'.fl.t · as w 11 'ts th dram ti· . G ' Orge G rs:ln 'in 's tun ·~ wer' c Jmnenc­j1; 1g tQ li k. . ou i-ja boards ' '"er' tlt. fa,d . . . Sa ·o a.r1d V,a rtzetti w T · onvi ct ·d o[ rnurd 'r, \Ncnt c: in · C'tll d rh · t.d ·phone cot1.d ens r rnicroph n and Lnd'ield thr t ch:p houe ' . ico, "t·\'a. a~;.assinal ed , . t\ l<n"l O ' VVar e,un lud ·d 1 · illu rio:n. ca rcc: by winn!n ~ II ooc (} l 1 I , rans . . Br ~oklyn [ 1a; •d Boston a on (;·W-o·ut tit> in 26 innings (d zu·ktt ·s, . . lt was tlJ l(Jn g'll'-)lf 1nilj oJ I agu : g·,ttl e in ht tol' by in­uing ). wi .th !'> t(ir-ing pit .h ·r-, T ,(.'on .:.t<.l ot . and J o<~ O!'>"t hger bo ti t gni ng till' 1 ou tC . . . Th •. Dt>f1 ~rs ~ibr wen· iu Lit(• Se1 it'<>. t:1ki ng 1 b "ir p ·riod i b eating - rlli. . riq1e b Ct • <.;l and . . . n-J sjnc it -i. n >-'-7 J . .h ut: R 0se .B() t ti ii't ·, Han·anl d ~ L f'4 t~ d ) r~•ero n 7 to fl for tb · o~e . 27 I I Meet the ladies • • • Bv Drnothv Pu•rh "" "' ~ 'I1li m<.nth we . sk ) OU to c 1H, ba t. H Lh . i.ttt · 1., "'·ith u~ nd me-et a fine:> .' ~unpl of a nwm l "'r of a CHA. tPIO" · famiJ ·- Mr . Etta Le ,.-i~ . \\'e -a ' thi- b cau Etta has be n workh1g here lor 31 year and f ur 11lCmher- of her imrnediatt' farni l ' arc Champion mplo.'e -, in ludi11g lH.'r lud.mH.~ Brad t y Lewi . a CM 'ortin · Lin trucker. En:~ Lc, •is t:nted at Champicm <m ~o t 1b "r JO. 192l. For four y a1 · during WorJ I '\'V·tr I I br was a crane operator. \\'henev r Etta l a rar ti1:J1C on h and , ·he ck'vot r.;; it to raisino· chi -ken.' and flt wers. She ho:w' partialj ty w·ward tulips in ller o·al' lens. ·w e belie e the chicken · are to rem.ind her f that fa1·m in Pike Coun t Lh a t she talked ab ut. Howen.'r, ·wh n the long winter m t>fi tb :->et in and sh.c is unabl to putter <rouu l outsi l , E tt;) \ hobbv turns to croch Lino-. I . -- It .i: inter ·tin l note that Etta i. one of a "fifth generation". fa rnily. Her moth er i 78 yea rs olc.l an l till does all her own h ou ework and canning. 1 row let .me introduce you to her CHAMPJO. family: we'ye already mentioned h r husband, Bradley Lewis then there are two daurrhter , Eva Miller of CM Sorting and \ inrinia Oberle of No. 2 Mill Sorting; Walter Oberle, down in Roll ~torage i her grandson . Etta is al:o 1 roud of · her two g1'ea t gi"ancldaughtersJ T erry · Post-Mortems on Election By 0 tto R eid 0£ cour e, the election is over, and all is fo rgiveil. Here in the United State we realize that campaigp or a­tory is de igned to needle the opponents. But are the repercussion damaging to p eople all over the ·world? They follow o ur progress. vVho cap tell th em) after this low-1 vel bombardment by ou r poLiticos, that we have a great idealism- one ,,.,.or th cop yin g? The whole pi ctu:re is enough -to make thern stutter . . . when they shudder at the du tter. In the words of \ t\TiUiam Wirsing: "' hat are we doing t:o sell Am rican ideals to the world?" Champion sur ives al1 elections and r etuTns to normal in a few day . . Th good will and sport rnanship exhib­ited h . e makes anyone proud to be a. Champion. E eople ask why the cam1 aign is al out one per n t issues, and 99 per . en t mud· linging~ '~V 11, p opJc are human, su bj ct to weakn ·sses <md mis take . One:, man , encased in t he h.obnails of >~0, St op$ OM tb 0th cr'~ bare fe t. T he o t1l r . leps ri gh t ha k - righr thru th fickl · sh ell of ego. Both men ~ lL "ou hi'' a t th sant , ti 'l e. From then un til the OL rs pull t1 em ~.t pa rL em lection da y, they bligbr · v ry limb on cad1 oth r' Camily tree, and 1 ou r salt bri ne OJ:J the TOOt ·. It ainr. no :t.v-on leT th at voters icken lo the t u1ach, and stay a' vay jn dro b. T he only va r Lo el•j • n ar-room brawl i ' Lo get jnlo th pi t ir. of ill · tlti ng . grt loaded to the gills, tAk : a bnttJ · in ·ach hand ~ rJtl . t . 1 t swit:Jging. Jt aint no fan to wH tch th . tl•inn f 11 tn >ntlt c;, then ·tep in and separat · the guY" i·:h lm e r' lly had all th fun 111 the knock·down·drag·o 11: affaj . 28 ETTA LEWIS, of the Gutter . is shown above with her crocheting -a cold weather paslh'ue. Her warm · wealhet hobby is gardening. Zecher and Judy Oberle, b tu it will be se\'eral year'> before they are old enough to come to work at the mill. Enough of our visi t with Etta for now. But if: you have a chance next spring, stop by her bou. e at 524 Puthoff Street and see her lovely garden . T his lesson . proves that men do spend a half-century building a reputation . . . and lose it all in one week­the week being , .,then the delegates thro·w the highe t h<;>not· of our tuition' into their laps. I think all nominee for president sh ould be pu t in the gas chan ber the day they are nomina ted. They would d ie ·wi th reputation intact . and millions of voteTS "muld be av d from partial asphyxiation. Eschal Smith told "Ole Mac'' to not get too happ ·. Said Esch al: " V\ e beat youse guys at the conven tion . got our man on both ticket . J nst ta ke your choic ." (Come to think of it, Eschal could l1av been right.) 'Course, my mind '~as not made up ·when I vo ted . . . just hadn' t talked abou t it to my wife. Mac Powell 's car broke dm'n in Gaucl rrown. at the time Truman wa speaking in Hatnilton . I:Ic was 30 minutes late for work . . ·wears he wa not ga ndering at the Truman whistle-flop tra in. Frank Laney was might dx:ipp r after t.ae le tion. He didn't mind the results. Frank ai l: "OK, bo 1 ', ~ · an't win 'em all. \Ve took t11e ham and g:ra\'' for 20 rear ' hile :\ R publican couldn ' t get a drink of " :Her a t tb ' Vhitc Hon . . '\1\'c don' t mind thro" ing •ou ::1 bon one iJ?I a whil '." Willi L If> :>fW'f .· ' th.er. You could ne · er b l.i ve th:u Ei enl1 v r ancl ' tcv ' D on were SHdl bums. They remind d 111 of a hound Cloer wori LJ.lp· a JJJ:'llL". Ev ry tirlile the dog nipped at th.e mules he Ls he du·ckcd back ami duwn. He kt"lt'W a s·tt o of hoof ' were omiJtg his way. H the had deb3ted i ·ues like they did each other all problem w mid h.::.tve be 'n . e ttJed Jor OJJ(~ thousand y ·ar::;. ll i the hi tor ' o,f ouT p ople that in troubled tit~ne s we nu·n to a , Lrong g ncral ratheT than to a ·trong poJidc.ai .H<:>·ure, ' 1\Ta hi11gt:on, Harri.sou, Grant and Jack­sonar€ a [ v.r · xa1npl s . . \!Vithour cohesion, our fl.'J.,i 10i'i­ti~ , (to which all Americans belon9) can ro.ak us th :t-v ake-t nation on earth. Ike has re cived the greatest mandate inc W< shingt n . His gr at st attribu.te is the abilit M get team\,vork and unit . from chaos. You gotta adroit · that '· e R pllblican were a sad sight when he pi ked up the pie es and put us together again. \ ou kn w om thing! J get o en thu ed. writing and di 'Clwing politics that 1 sorner.imes f el the l.Hp-e LO start a carn.pai.o·n for o£fice. l 'd just admire to be so convincing and fluent tl:tat ·I could hold gobs of 1 eople pellbound . hold 'em in the hollow . of my head. P. . v hat: hell eel .Ike most? It wa Mamie's theme song: "Thi· i m, p:tai , an l he aint done me wrong.'' American have always been the gTeate t marksmen in the world . not anymore, 25 million of thetu took pot-shot at an elephant on No e·rnber 4 and rnissecl him clean. Meet the B'Oss • • • By j ack M.ullen On ' aturd.ay rnorniog, November 1, Ch.arle "Pje" · \Vehr, n:igh.t bo" machine tender of the No. 2 Machine Roo.m., concluaed his la. t tour of ·duty, r eliring after a career of 3 years a a Champion papcrmaker. t that lime he wa pre enred with a lighter, a wrist watd and cigarette by the boys with whom he worked. A plaque with a m.es: age o£ .appreciation from the Com· pany b.e has s ·rved . so well w.as given w h itvl by Earl j one , cting Mm , bnage1~. . . ".Pie" made an 1rt1prompru "p e.ed'l in which he sa id, ·'vVeU, boys, e· re had a 10L of good time and a lot of had tim s. I tbr arene l many times to quit, bu.t jLI:sl wuJdn't do it. Tell the rest of the feHow to stick ith Charn.pion- it's a f,'Tand outfit." . Charlie \Vehr had ix years of ,'P 'ri •nc at Lhe Beckett Pape Company befor coming_ to Charnpion on :\1arch J 0, J 914. H e started in tbe No, 2 Machi.J c Rof>l.n and has ne er · ·orked anyw'he e el e. . On ~qJte mb r 15, 1927, he be an rutmir g a p .Q~:. -1 Rolf , to rSut bi1 ba ·k aod r Li vt: hitn of. tb . t pr.1t1 ibility f running. A! old hi~11 . w stiCk :t.vlth ll and t}!l;e l)uld mak ~ rn <W 01,1 t f>.( h ml, nr h. _ could lea. by tl.t d .r )H.! caroL' in. , Charh , :; u with it, an r weut on to h ·corn • a. bn.,~ rnacbine tend :r. This ~ as th rcsull of J l o1J ·, 'il· Oltio .,. G:E E EDWARD ROt-\RK, JR., left. and Robi,n Gail Roark are tl1e clti.ldrcn of Mr. itnd Mrs. Ccnc E. Roark. Their pi ·wr s r ­tai'l'l ly show a •vinning 1 a ir. Gene wol'.k!! in the Calender Room. VE lTE SHERRILL Louise Be iser give . gnu:tdpa Ralph Bei er every rcason" to be proud. Sh e's the daughter of Mr. and M.r. . Dale .Beiser , and her age is 1.4 m on t.hs. ' ' lingness to go along with a man so long as he had faith in himself. Pie has no definite plans for the .future, but one of the J.a.ds in the machine room was heard to remark tlP l , ~:tvd How· rd l (JJ ou·}l~. 29 Oltio . ._ A Well-Traveled Pooch Bv- T ·~es Cobb I. F I{ IE NO WA.LI< f'a 1\i "" ulCOA •r. AJo;tl 015 evii'll€0 tttA (T£ 1:>1! E , AI'I'Mfi\II'H, HM 'li',,._'E'N tiP -" N~W ~08tll N»T£ : Q'B" I<~<{ A ~M C I1' s"'""aw£o 1'>1~ PtN$ • • • T hought for the month . . . The longer we live, the mm '~e come to realize that the Golden Rule, "Do unto o thers . .'' is a Tule-ofthurnb that can be applied to en~ry pha~ e of uc e.sful living. The other da we' read an - article by Shennan Bi llingsley, the o-enial and world-famous host' of the tork Cluh in e'" York. He " as discussing supper club patron in general and giving advice as to how - th e folks hoold approach the problem of poor service and poG>r food. So often, write Shen11an, people merely ''com_plain." In o doing, they thr<?w their hosts on the defensive, and even though the mistake is corrected there is sel­dom a feeling of mutual atisfaction. How much better it would be, he goes on, if the guests would "confer" with ,rhe head waiter about the problem. Invariably, Lhe discussion will lead to a ol~ttion on the part of the host and a mutual fee lin_g· of goodwill. \V were struck by the contrast bel ween the words "'complain" and '' onfer" and how perfectly they fit the text of the Golden Rule. To "complain" is to state on ly one side o( the problem. our s1de, and blindly shu>~: our:;>elves off from any oth er pojnt of view. To "con.fer" i') to open ttl windows of our m.i!'lcl to both sides of a pn)bl-cm and r ·ach a solution in the light of discu:,sion. H.ow much better 1\.fould be our r elatiot lt> with on an ther if we always "confencd,'' never ··complain ed''? To show y()u hew a mer<.; clog an get '' tq> in [[l " 'o dd" as w<:::ll as '"gcr abf)~lt," f'd Jike lo l. ·ll you al (H,j.l Lucky, a fox l n i r <JW I}I;;d by c ~t l) i Coat't; 1k> I(' Schroth and his wife Margie. L11cky n t ot ly ha ~> be)· m 11 l ·d, with a sol t down tick Lo bc,ot, hvt u-pon ari -,i ng in th morn i.ng he in.­sisu; on h aviD,g uothiJJg b-ut WIH~'tti es ior bea kla~t. ·'§ wtts m ~ntj on ·d pl'C iously in 'lhr LOU, the Sch,rotb t rie'l· i , a w Jl -t rd.v(· le:.d y1HWg ~a L Sb ' h ~t s been in 26 sta w.s and Manitoba1 Can itch _ She !J ilt:. s0 ·n tlte AthunL.c Ocean as w ·11 a. all (i e C 1 <Zit Lake~ . She hat> w:;tded in 1)1 GuH of M x iro u l h <11j · drink ftoHl the Niagara R.iveL curdinR to t1 c.;, 8 hrGJllu;, .Lucky's only coJ 1plr~int about trave hn.g i a roo~ read d.ict t)f hamburgers. 30 And w1 ~ n th y di us. next year' trip n k for 1.11g stion 'r h j u t v·t vn and . ttks down in he pi11cnv aud • )'S. ".f-In: hum, you just y wh n and twre nd l'H b th r ;• • 11' • • ~uffing the d 11t,;1s • •. When r po ting . n the br m c 11 ge boy · who work •d un the rewinders last · lllh~ntr . "' e ove~ lo k d young Eddie 1\lloritz, Jr. . . . Ed lte w1U ~ - Ius Ph. D. (rorn ·vvi :comin :rh:is coming .I un . . . I h ra • o s ate runnmg aga.m, and the b >y who s nd .the nights with dogs, pi 'tol ·, and Ian, terns a1· re1 ottmg me h 'a vy ca tche . . . At the I> sent wri t0g, 1 u ~oods~an de luxe . L(JU Hollid y a.· a total f 28 to h1s redtt ·. . . Lou is hunting this y ar v ithout his son H arold, who i a Veterinary S hoot fre hman a~ th_e University of Washington in Seattle. . Congratuiatwm to George Grafft, who has joined th benedi ts by marrying a lovely Hanl.ilton · girl, Jo ephine Puma . Arnong other things, even Mile has acquired anoth er fan, and ir looks as though George will really have something to cheer about this winter . The Panthers could go all the way to the State Class B cha~pionship . At last we've acquired a youngster w1th a chest comparable to iliat o( the bi bully boy, Jack Gillum . His name i Herschel Deaton, a 195-pound six-footer who is built like the Ro k. a£ Gibraltar, and he spends his Friday evening playing basketball with the Mechanical team in the Mill League. vVelcome to our new inspector, Garrett Woedl, bro­ther of the \1\T.ilson Junior High football coach, Al \1\1 oecll . ·. . Speaking of in. pee tors and the irrepressible Don Jenkins- there is only one thing that will side­. track Don from talking about Ca t Coat defect , a
format Text
author Champion Paper and Fibre Company;
author_facet Champion Paper and Fibre Company;
author_sort Champion Paper and Fibre Company;
title The Log Vol. 36 No. 01
title_short The Log Vol. 36 No. 01
title_full The Log Vol. 36 No. 01
title_fullStr The Log Vol. 36 No. 01
title_full_unstemmed The Log Vol. 36 No. 01
title_sort log vol. 36 no. 01
publisher Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723;
publishDate 1953
url http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/1840
op_coverage 1950s; Haywood County (N.C.);
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op_relation Canton Area Historical Museum; Canton Area Historical Museum; Champion_TheLog_1953-01_Vol36_No01
http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/1840
op_rights All rights reserved. For permissions, contact the Canton Area Historical Museum, 36 Park St, Canton, NC 28716;
_version_ 1766244393502638080
spelling ftwestcarolunidc:oai:cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org:p16232coll18/1840 2023-05-15T18:50:38+02:00 The Log Vol. 36 No. 01 Champion Paper and Fibre Company; 1950s; Haywood County (N.C.); 1953-01; newsletters; 11.75" x 8.75"; 43 pages pdf; http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/1840 eng; eng Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723; Canton Area Historical Museum; Canton Area Historical Museum; Champion_TheLog_1953-01_Vol36_No01 http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/1840 All rights reserved. For permissions, contact the Canton Area Historical Museum, 36 Park St, Canton, NC 28716; Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Periodicals Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals Employees' magazines newsletters etc. Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Employees Parades -- North Carolina -- Haywood County Hunting Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- In motion pictures Industrial equipment -- Maintenance and repair Sports Employees -- Recreation Employees -- Charitable contributions industry events community organizations Text; 1953 ftwestcarolunidc 2019-01-22T18:24:07Z Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue. • JANUARY • I953 F R 0 M T H .E ·EDITORS "Old m ,l,_c, ·• (pa e ::s9) i 1 ot ju t a 1u. 11ine, d ·:-.pjl th' fact that he bum oil and :onclit c. ul~ itnv.· u a :-"\itth 1« 11 • To them who h.tv "Kn'n n her tlu· u~h Hi . ·, r-. ;.~l thl' Tcxa Di,·i.ion. llil i \t=nembl old lad · \ ·ith h whitn~ am] t'aprice of ' Ill ny n th r f 'U · h.:. And 1ik oth •r of h -r ~t x. h ha k pt a lo e t.: 1 ·t her c rrt·. \\ itl · ut :en'lino· t pt}'1 Tt: ··' ;lr l\tpi011S wo ld lik. • In k t llt her pa.'L -· wh r ' ·he c;u ' lrmu and '<\'h t :he h:.t~ dtm ·. "Old . 'mob.·\, '" Lr nsl rrccl from Cantuu t P :·dena in 19:t6. \\'e think il lik •ly that .~omc of tlw Caro, ' Hna ( ttl Tim I m~l~' rct"lll "Old Smok y's'' c. r l lite. lf Ml, w ' hup they'll }ht ,· th " · t , ll to Di\i. i n Editor J imm.' 1 catoll. • Just two '·a_r Ja k ~ l ulkn f th Ohio D i, ision Lc.:(ran 3 se6t.: -, ")! ct the lloh :· ttbou the .-up rvi or at H:a mi I ton. In 2+ i u .: ]a k l1a O\'er d most (l( th · dq artment in th · mi ll , outlini 1g the ·w rk. the p r:>onalitic an I eY n som of the } hil­o ph; of the m n who · > Lo it tllat the wheel· go r uud al 'h::un1 iuu. Faster than J -' can turn out hi articles, new men arc aJ.van d h) the s upcn· i~ory rank. H " fintl ' thaL he ha.~ taken upon him eU a ncv r- •nding assignment. "But i t's interesting," Ja k <l) . . "You get 10 know ,o many really nice guys." ,\.e ho1 c Jack. ·will continue to introduce u. to th ese " nice ou · . " Hi ~ law·r article, about the 1hl chine Room's "Pic" Wehr, L ' i - on pa )'e 29. • One of tll more popular covers to app~ar on The LOG i 11 1·cccnt montl wa the i\,fadonna and Child scen e, released iu December. .\ number of r eaders haw asked for extra. prints to be framed or mounted. Reprints are available upon request. The Champion Paper and Fibre Company General OH/ce . •. HAMilTON, CANTON, NORiTH C-AlOUN·A e OHIO e Mil/.s PASADENA, tE!I:AS at • • Editor; STfWARf JONES • HAMILTON, OHIO e SANDERSVILLE, GEORGIA fidiJo.rial AdviJors., R. B. ROBUTSON, JR. D. J. THOMSON CAL SKILLMAN Division E.ditots: STANTON NEWKIRK, Ohlo; JAMES DEATON, Carolina; VERN DElAPLAIN, T'e.Kos idi.fo.riol Asshtonl( JOAN MESSNER I EDI'TOlUAL SlAI!F OHIO DIVISION - Chark~ n a ldwit•t, i\ lt:tle H•o}tll · • .J<~ Hlcve11 , \-V e~ l y C< 11.1!, .P ck Mulle tt, HorolJJy 1'11:;;h. Olio Reid, M:t Rook . . ( •i'Orge SH·illt'•·· !\ill , CAROLINA DIVIstON -Fr ' l 1) ;~)'1 <•11 , .1) 11 llumkn , Cl dl' H. HI K' . Jr., W.dlrt llo ll Qu, Ernc~;t l\k~ile r , l~run: ;,, .Jill'), ;J . L. 'o.\ llli .lflt!.<Jll, TEX4S 'DIVISIOI'!I-A I!w (lo pd.nHI. )'i:tJl t l .llis, hnl foil c "· 1 \ . \V . ll a miii <:J II. SPECIAl:. REPORTERS- Mul'i<:l M . . \lln1, Gl·n. T.tl O ll itc; (btl)\ E. l!od ~r,, ~an J c r'ltx·j tl . • • 1 H r I r J ' ' OUR C 0 V E R South Cat olitH~, siLe of one a1 Champion ·a 1arg~Nt\ oodlartds o~ eration , is hoaored ()[} our co ver this mont'tt . Tlil' h the sixth in a seri-es devoted to -;t.ate in 1 •hich the eem.pany''> mi!h an<+ of£)ce a1·e 1ocat~L Copie~ fo-r fra11ling, with date lQlcl LOG title remQved, may he obtained by writing Genet:al PuMioc Ret_a­tions, Chiunpioo , Hamilton. Ohio. • • T his view shuws a pol'tlon m tlte Ct~ 't Co.tl D •pat'l mcnl, where 1\RuMt-.1\0tE b.nlllQ p ·y s are jn viLed to gath •r ' round m1d tak n ti CC'. 'Tain t so. Tb ' lad ies hav 1 b T pets tu o.ccupy th eir jdlc bm.lr'>. Ev lyn 1 -esc, CJf c ·M Sonin g, for cx ample, com 's horne f rorn bn work, and i~ greete(l hy Gmur.fl o, ;;1 bh1C'k 1 ~l'llltt.: f< ccd !'i ng't (' 11 '1" ,, ~ Ill HOlle\ , Jwr p . domino m:m~. (her Hon ha~ , t numbn o l ribLf >~ J' whi h '· r· t ~.t k en :n !un'< hm ~. cdf~i11 '{ . lt' ll f'lll tl!;rt. " th.d \ the I <'~ I doAAnuecl hor l {;\l"Cl . a".'' ' · h l . I grouchy, he fi~-rlH s iv j tl.t Sharn us, t.he cat. Here\ a UH.>S age to all the boys who talk trr Hlondie Cald we11 duri11g the c: urse ol a day at baliljJiou. Hlon­< lie·i> first rho tJS at hom · are fc-<:ding, Qtring f(Jr and ridiFig a palo:u~ino nJa.re, nam ·<1 "Huney." A( 1 tally, (-;~r­ing ror Honey isu't ill dlCHe for Blondie. Sbt: Lou;s r, T l or·se ~ arl'r, and ,.,·hen J.l G: rnar i bchaJ.- cs, monel! · re­war Iso her with a hcv.: of Mail Pottck ~o fofJliJ ·. Th , fran Turrt r, .Jr., family 1'1as a a m,t'l),) l::wr of the hott~ h old a y t: ng: p ·s quite a rumpus \.vheu .Judy • crt cs. l~ i v ·-yt:a -o ld L.intla B ·i~cr , daughter of 1 fr. "iin l Mrs. Art Bcisc·r, hasn'r a worry in tJ1e world when her pal }t: 0 [ cnoug:h fht l. m~tlallS o <"qnip s.even fire su.ttion.'i. And 1 iss Schn6der IHt£ anHmg lt ·r four footed fri en.d:s. . ·x aH ;.tnd t.wo d 'f?,l\. S-e en do.gs for It • 1clnt • re~ and eight. ;;t n im.a ts t the S hneid ·r resid n ee. That \vas the count iJ:J 1 rovemue r. How manv' now? . ' bo kno\\'s? 3 I I • A. - G Rl U T :R \L 17 0 lt nuit the theme, ''Le:llll Toll) nv I oitt);,"' \ 3 lilt I ·din tilt' lh.>Uh'l t •ll mg p;u ad-e. l h ' ti u. l da p1 1 ;tf d thi. tn lr . th<.·• tloak wer emen':d h tll D1. m.u ;, · lui-) n •t t h , llt: 1 f'dlll3tion ( luh. 10~ · 1 .'\ l l 'n ,·T t 'flf ''r .- t H' hu.v prq >•u in th h :uua the p.tr.ad· entt · ~<h~u tb i l ( {, pitn ~ ~ " ·'' 'll.t)'J >(i <>Tl h atht ti<.' field . 'LUl l ( Jl · ti na .hct mp ion~ ;Hucipat I m tht> Hom (_ \UI ing le~1 i'lll <-' ,., hH h rC' held Jl the ethel k th II fi iJ. ' ' • ' WHFN THL BliTH .L, . c., communi y undc . take. a special pr 1gram, they do it tJI'J in Fand style·. A ll ey staged the ir pe ial H omecomjng prograw at Bethel Hig11 School early in No rernb T , the {?\'1":: ( re embled a smaJl- cale Canton Labor Day celebratim Gaily decorated fl oats repre·· nt ing a:H majoT ctepart-· ments of the school, a football game which :Be hd wun over the Cherokee Indians 34 to 6, a petforman e by the new school band, a sizeable Parent-1 eacher meetin ao.d other features furnished a colo ful settln • for tn!' ' major occasion of the year in the Pigeon \alley e tion . All in all, the homecoming attraction Iefltcted the progress of the community itself . I HOMECOMl:\{G Q EEN and member: of her court are pi cr~t reil he-re j u~t before th • parade started around the footb:dl fi:eltl. The queen, 1ary June Ridule. 'taud" ;:n <enter. Leh to d ght aro und her are Cl<~ra H en n . Jo ArH1 Sheffield , :Barbara J ones, M tk Rod­ger , Jun Delley. Janha Russell. l'ats\ 'fore. Ava L e Bu111gam r, and D rorhy lT01 l)er. • ALL L r ERS POINT Lo Ro, Patton, left, ecr tar r of the Can ton Building ;md Loan ·sociation. ' ·ho mi sed , buck at 20 fee t on opening d ay. This pi ture w<ls made a top Beech Gap. Left ro r ig ht: Patton, Bi ll B rooks, Bill Co­ma11, McClain mathcL and Hngh M Cra .ken. \ "ITH PERFECT RH THM, thee deer bunters carry 183-pound buck .from the rugged area of l1erwood Fores t. Although the failed to make a kill, h.ampiom Hugh McCracken, rear. and McClain Smather , front , nea rest nu . ra, helped snoces ful hunters "rawhide" kilJs to car. Bill Coma n, o:mter, hr tber of Lo-w Coman. ha hunted deer for year , J1as ki ll ed several . ' • orne en1son Carolina Champions once more experience the joys and disappointrnents of deer hunting in the mountains MANY \ EST ERN NOR'l'H c ROLlNI NS, a ugmented by o u r.doorsmen from tl e eastern part of th stat , tr their luck at dee when the season opens . . . but r, w bring horne th . ' nison. Carolina Champions, who have been h un ting d er for y ar , find th pastim en­joyable but not too profitable. ' eav r Carver and Toby Jamison, both Champions, registered kills this fall, while a [ew others like Henry ''Chick" Farmer had th ir ch anc b1.1 t m tffcd it. Among those who hunted in Pisgal , Shcn ood Forest, Nantahala and other pro­te ted areas early this season are Ray Byer~ a nd hi son J oe, Alvin Miller, Earl Silver, Ralph Bryson, Boone Cagle, Frank Swafford, Bill H arkins, McClain Smathers, Hugh Mc­Cra ken, Wayne Smathers, Elwood Shook and Earl Pope. Others sought their quarry in the moun­tains and coves. They include Cbes.ter Mease, Marion Farmer, Henry Farmer, Micky Jus­ti ce, l\!Iutt Morgan and Chancey Byrd. Deer hunters take their stands early in the morning, sit quietly, smoke little if any, and look and look and look. A hunter may select an ideal location where the deer are re ported feedin g, si t quietly and view the surroundings all day wi thout glimpsing a deer. When he re turns for his second day's hunt, he may see just the buck he is looking for and immediately register a kill. Or h~ may go throughout the eason without get­ting a shot. That's the way with moun tain huming. VL'IU nu .lC ' 'HF.\1 , sting- ac1·nss hi · krli e. W a ·r (.an r, uf C !in;,·: -"•l d<l -SU lphn C" r . a, is h wn at t li. • Sh 'Hv)od F<JJ "c ·h · king st tiou . 'arver "as th<' n, o;r hun ' r t•> rt'gi vr kill in tbc :nerwo d, l' 1 t :11ea. t iJi ,ill, arvel' sl1''t th 120 -pountl l u k a t 11b ut '7 .1.1 • on 11w (•P ning tla . 5 • I GOI, G DOW . 1 into t:he Machi.ue Room , th~ teachers pau e on the steps to get a bird's-eve view oJ No . 25 and 26 1achine . uide Clyde Miller leads the way. Groups were kept small o that the ?iu ides .would be better able to a AS v r quesuon ·. GOIJ G P to the loading floor the Dige. ters,- the tea hers enjoy d th ,ir rid on the slow-moving fr -ighl cle­l'll tor. c~tide R JY M a~ . left, '"as wel! f[ u:1 lified to gi"e tl e rn a thoro11gh cxplaJ,;Hion of this ph::. ~· of ptodttC· tinn. \4 a i supcrinf<"nd nt of Pulp . 1anu f11ctur e. I CO!' C Lt' l>I N G til - p•r•~-;' :un (j(lr 1ip, h t), \' icc- 1'1 .·idr•JJI Dwight J. ' l llrH II• 'on tdls th t·ach .rs t ile r<'d n• Cll llil)g of ;til llw1' han: Joi(-:,•n artd h •ard . " Jt ,;, fr f'e Ci ll('t jJr i u, h I ping Cl. a ro pions and a ll -othe1 Atlleli ca n.~ t~· an t:\'(T lJi g-he1 standa1 d f Jiving," ' l'!wnt ·on Rit id. G eo e an olicies B-E Day tour gives teachers a close look at the problems and methods of a large industry N ovF.M n • 2 l was a holiday {o ·hoot hildr n in Houston and l'w,ad ' lla. but wllil their pup.ih tnok the t y <JH, . om<> 4,300 t 'H: he1 ~ were I u·y parti cipating in the n ation's 1- ge~ Sa. in , 'du a­lionla,. On the appointed da , tl1 t ~a h r deserted lh ir blackb an1 nd de ks for a Grst hat d look at tl e m ri an free emerp6 · sy cem in action t ~00 cooperating fjrm ·. The ·eacher gr up varied in lze fro two to 420. lift -thr e p -r ons vi it d Champion' ~lea Division. Th workshop isits by th teacher in luded trip to dairi , la\ finns, in urance compani es, bank, bakeri , bo. pita! ·, feed mills, tin can manufacturers, steel warchons s, radio station<;, contractors, a to­mobile dealers and many businesses. In most case. , conducted tour of phy ical fa.cilities were laken in tf ~ morning, with plant executive · playing ho t for luncheon. The afterno n was devoted to a cliscu ion period with question po ed by the tea(_her about what they had seen on the tour . Champion's Texas Divi ion conducted its program along imil r lines. Industrial Relations Manager and program Master of Ceremonie-:­A. M. Koury gave the teacher an over-all view of Champion people and poli cies . He then introduced the Texas Division's wa ·te control expert, Malcolm May, who told them ·what Champion i now doing to lick the problem of industrial odors and wastes. Technical Dir ctor Jeny Moyer follow ed May with a preview of what the teacher- would ee 0 11 their tour, plus a brief explanation of the proce e involved. After these talks the teacher went on a onducted tour of the mill and had dinner as Champion's guest. at the Clubhou e. Vice-Pre· id nt Dwight J. Thomson wound up the program with a talk on what the free enterprise system mean to all American . Th tea her thanked their hosts, collected an aTmload of souvenirs, an l d parted foT home. Dr. vV. E. Moreland, who served as chairman of thi huge Chamber of Commerce-sponsored undertaking, calle 1 it the m ·t sue -- EuJ in the three years the program ha been in operation. ILJCKERI G NDLE lend added solemn it}' to the a' 1ard reremotw a ."cout C h a rJ es I3raun, · aCCQUll an ied by hi. mother, recei\'e hi First Cla , out award. cout Commit ­t emen C. V. Brann, l Et, and Clyde fiUer, right, pre entcd rhe awards. ex as Parent support proves its worth as Troop 91 awards are made our S couTMASTERS SAY that the success of a Scout Troop and parent participation go hand in hand. Measured by the Scout­master's gauge, Champion-sponsored Troop 91 can be rated among the best. The parent-scout turnout for a recent Troop 91 Court of Honor at the Cham­pion Clubhouse was almost 100 per cent. Sixty-three Scouts and Scouter took part. From the invocation and dinneT to the closing Scoutmaster's Benediction, it was a solid two hours of dramatic ceremony and entertainment: the candle lighting on or ceremony with each Scout reciting one of the Scout laws, presentation of achieve­ment awards to the Scouts, and special stunts by the Scouts themselves. The Rattler Patrol proudly displayed its athletic ability in building a human pyramid. The Flaming Arrows demon-, strated the new method of artificial respir­ation. A "worst-aid" stunt by the Wild­cats, and the Adder Patrol's "old jalopy" earned many laughs. A reminder of "Good Turn Day," brought the evening to a fitting end. ro !MITTEEMA. MILLER look n as hi son, Clyde Miller .III, receiv· his award from Committ e:tnan Brann. Mrs. Miller, left, and. the otheT award-wi rwJng Scout·s mother teceived duplicate 1!11nratr1re awards. J tin ha yer, right, wa program chairman. STU TS by the four patrols of Troop 91 provided entertainment for the Scouts and their parents. Here the 'Vildcat Patrol demon­sLrates "worst aid" or "how not to treat an accident i tim." During the evening 1'0 Scouts from Troop 91 received awards. 7 • • T • • 8 rliHOl ( ;H 1,\(.,'\ilt-11:-.R Bill (;ulln HU~ th<: lll l httdl> lif;, <.irck P.d · <n i ~ kept rcm,t .tnth alilt' I J ~ th e.: ucking n{ lOIC of tim piC( . ., ·rh <l••r •n tlu· ~ro t tnd u~ quit e~ '' int.liug ju ~L Olll e a 1car; it j, a 00-l'h in tllltttut . I RFJ) ~ I LII RI· R I Ol)f,.-. into tlt C' inlllt<~lt' wotki ng' ul .1 tt•l •lt'itllt t.r Hi' 1 p.li1 \lfJJk , l.llt('d a' .r hohh~. <lltcl h~'' g1u\\n ttf:llll nd•HI 1\ 'i11t C tltt f11q 1 , . '·t t.tmt' LP ILun iltott itt flc< ll lllotl , l'II K. l~t · rl ;,<hi -e·' tl'lt \l ,inu oWllLl'. · ll'.l l' il tlw ll>ttth>l, l'l lOIII' . ·t . lllcl it( Ill ( '"" "'""' Itt>\\ ltl II"' lltt' lll ," M -Ill ny Ch wh1" h h mpion h s finds rt:st con tructive hobby dl.1W11Sl • IrS and rc:la 1,; lton ft r hours" pursu1ng "W OOD ARVl• ·c? \ b .nO, J }f , j ll.St sa)' thJ t J whittlc1" remarketl CarrolL \Vil on, Gene1·al,Oflicc, to a friend r ·utly. Tb.u he. lik. many anoth r mmpion, d cribe an 11~p' ·sing hobb ·. But rh matter what the avocaLion, or '"'hat name i apphccl, man • Ohio han .r inns use th -i.r lonr- winter evening con- tnlCLively in their ba em .nt workshops. Sune ar pare-time gunsmiths, om ti ~ ili ' , others work in· the le trotu<.: held. and a. few x pai-r watches nnd dock. . Th~ J]) ution of timepieces brin.g · to nind Bill G o­try. Bill i. · krto n a n good rnan to b.andl ·watch · and lolks lvh.en they ar in need of r pair. :Bill Uk s to a - C< rnl.ilOdate hi (ello~ · h.ampion , and he b.a found that keeping in ~ t p with •atl r Time i lor of tun . lL ta.rted , just a h bb ", ut ho:-tv "the bo " keep Bill t rdt lm · . Repa:iring tel v.i ·ion and radio set ha be .n a bobb ' -:,;vit.h Fred ' teurer. "\Nhen h :wa . weaxing Na y blue, FTed' j b wa t11-at o£ an electronics t<: chn.ician. After stowing hi eabag for o·ood, h found tha t b tinkering ' ith rad.i ' and then television ets he "kept his hand in' and w:r able to u e kill cha t the Navy had taught him, drereb)r ke ·pll:lg n p what he had a t ready learned. WORh.lXG 0 . - A HEAD o.£ hi f:tther, Carroll Wilson .re.lax.e. in hi work-hop b carYing wood. Op bi" bench are se,zeral of the Fred. ha . ome valuabl . advtce to I a,ss oh to owners of 1'V s ts. U lain ts tltat sw it bing channels is hard cn1 a set, and that the n1orc the sele t<Yr is turned and t.he harder it's t.Ul~n d. the · mor , trou.bl · an own r _js lik t · to ha ·e. Anoth ·r tip aimed at prev nting dir£i­Cll1ty i.s to hav the set leaned ev ·ry six tnoltths. Since hi h vo lta.ge attract dust, its a ·cumulation, plus damp­nes:, could easi ly caus<: ·the horizontal otttput tran. · forrn r to blow . In 1 he basem nt of Carroll Wilson's home there is a work b uch behind which be spcndii uncoumed hours. "j ust whittling." Like others, his is a le isur t ime a . tivity and be rnaintains that when he begins to c wnt the hours, he. n quit. . A visitor to the workshop cannot fail to notic the! Apach e head which Carroll ca.rv ·d from a pi c · of pop­lax. For a nwcle l he u ·ed only a photograph . side view at Lhat. Th.ere's th ·plaque ot his fath T, roo, which wa . also carved by using a photograpb. Mr. Wilson -vows thal nothing is needed except sharp tool , the desire and the patience, in otder to turn out carved -objec ts. \'Vba.tever the requirements, these men, like men ·with hobb.ies the world over firtd fun and -r-elaxation in their basement workshops. - • . I' objects he ·has "w,hittled," a p.laqu.e of his father, an Apache Ind ian .head, . a gnon1e at1d a ram.'s head carved on a pO\ der horn. • • .· J .· I ' ' I . ver '' Director winds up production as final scenes are made in Champion movies to be released this year. b-1 ~ A Mr:RA~ · have stopp -d rolllng, the sound t ack i · no longer r o ding, klcig Jigh1 s and ar s have be ·J• ' tk.ill d," S! t;;; and stag -: t0n1 down and a th us;:m·d au 1 nc prop.- r ·tumed to their a custom d uses. 'j rnontbs of 'sh oting" 011 'h, n1pion ' thre n . w color nwvi 's prognuH i ~> "wrapp d u1 :· After rno · than two y ·ars of r ·s(~ s ("D f'P Roell""), indu-.,­trial ;:u~cl ommunity rcl res1d nt .R ub n .B • .Rohert<;(m, Jr., L i11g int •rvit>w Ict by liarney O'Rou,:kc, a prO'fe sional actor wl o plays a tnaga­tine writ r, Martin Aker~. ·tre \'\liJd ­ing _ Lage . et · n h tCag J wa~ a ncar ntph a of Retd.Hm's office in Jhn·Jiltou. A NE-W EXf'F.R IENCE for two Cham­pion execu ·ives was being ''marJe-up" for the movies. President Reuben B. Rob rtson, J r. (immediately below), and Vice-President Dwight J. 1 hom-n (bottom) are seen with ;\·fake- p Artist Jack Dumont at Wilding's Clti­cago studio . Both the pre;id.ent and vice-pTesident went through the ordeal in traditional Hollywood . tyle, "'hile Mrs. Thoms0n lent moral support to the cause. Dumont b rt ogni1.ed a' a leading figure in b1s profession . wa . c n'lpleted d uring th early winter in vVilding Pic­tu e Productiom, Inc., tudi o.,. "'hooting" star ted la t prin . In th in terim, footage was sh ot in. vir ttt lly e,·ery J.r a of Cl ampion operation . At pre ent "'W:ilding techni ian ar bu il engaged in edi ting the thre film . It is e timated that the first pictur 'wi.ll b read for pre j ·w.ing some time in :March, vith th econ 1 and thir J. to f:o llow a t 60-d a , in.terval ·. Plan for "first h owiiJO's" ar in ompl' t , but will be annotJ nced in an carl ,· edition of h LOG. Professiona l actors ar c.L t in lead pa rt. , 1 ut the company fi lms will have a number o£ Champi ns in supporting role . Many indi idual from the Chan1pion milis and forestry commur1i ties ·will be ·een a,nd heard in the three picture . Each script pTesen ts a dramatic tory in film, with pointed ~bjectiv s a related to th title . However, each picrure also depjcts the over-all Champion ot~:gani­zation and the communities o£ which it is a part, and each i , a complete program in it el f. In e- enc , the films will serve Lo acquaint Cham­pion's neigJ1bor and cu tomer 'With its forestry effort of encourag1ng . ound woodland policies (or future pulp­wood and lumber suppl tb values of practical human :\ QV •R A.l.L vr ~·w sho vs Ll c V<!St lfLOIII I of !t.jttipnH'I)t rl! • rr~h ~£d l'or a . take" on \.~lilcl i rtg1s Gl.li<:llgc SOllfld !\W.).\C. T) i h an anual sccrr , with Vic, :· Pl' . idenl D 1~ight J. l'lwrmoa <.tnd 13 ·ut;:y <J'Rou k.e, a profe;;, icmitl act.or, on tare iiJ th bac;kg · u,nd. r elation in j ts inclustri 1-community relations policies; and i ts e earch and manufac turing methods in the pro­duction of fine paper . Final charactcrjza tion · .in Champion's three movies were played by President Reuben B. Rohertson. Jr., and Vice'-Prcsident D" ight J. T homson - ?a .h taking time from bu~ y scltcch.Il to fill their respect' ve roles in s·c n ~. £:Jlm -d on the ·w·lding sound stages in Chicago. T he two Ch ampion executives will be s · n ar cl heard .in "Good Busine; •"- each exp.rcs ing the company's views regarding human values in industry, and manage­ment's philosophy of b uilding a way of working and liv.ing· tha t answers al l of tl e fundamental needs of Champion people. T hey indicate tbat tltes practices result in loyaltie, kills and increasing productivity, higher pr ofits, bett r ·wages, improved working condi­tions and e p aneled employee benefits . .Each of the three films will be approximately 30 minutes long. "Deep R oots" and "Good Business" cany actual voices and sound. "Paper Work' will be a nar­rated film, with the sounds of the operations but without voices. Distribution will be sch eduled through the Pub­lic R e lations and Community Rela tions Departments. The potentia 1 awch ence nu :nbers in the mnlions. 10VI. 'C· tN CLOSfi. (T . • the c mer. ftlnt n, ig-ht Thomson an 1 HiH nev O' Rnurk.,t• ili rt ·ne hll " (;o I Jh1. it1<>~s." In Lhe mo' i Dwf.g·l · ~ .vnJu.at~:;s t b~ •o!np:~ny's !JU!ilitkln rmn the 'lall.dpoint of htUl,la t'l valu s and th it· r 1ati6oshlp to indtl trial atmony. l l • . . ei ' - • ' THIS TATE FJ H H T H ER\' in th I ine fore ' ls n a.r Ja:p r i · a boon to Lhousand of Texas ·portsmen. · l 0 V\' , J L r: F D AJ\ 1 ft)l tm J. I ~ I ,700 acr f, 1N ca pa it v rc •rvou· neat j a~1 er . • - • It wel'l deserves its nickname, H t h e j e w e I o f t h e f o r e s t'' ' \ I - --- 12 • • CARADINE P RK is one of several Line xecreation spots located near the city of ]a per. J PER, TEX has been nicknamed_ "J e·wel oJ th Forest" ' by Chamber of Comm rc pubhnty men. ncl th unu. ual thing about the publicity ni knan · i thar it j inacl qmn to d cribe tbi thriving little cit ' and it beautiful ·urroundings. · Shortly ft cr th vi llag £ Jasp r ' a · sti1bli he I on Sand)• ,r ck on hun lJocd thirt -odd ) ears ago, a visjLOr. G org \V . Sm ·th ·, wrote, '·] was r harn t l with the ,pptarancl' of the otnw . about Ja. p ·r. Th rich folia · - 1he cl n -' ne br:1ke - th.e p r n.nia] · tr 'lt1lS ;:, . 1 of w·at~:r - thc h€':altldnss of the CIDunt:-y-- apuvat<. r 1 and mad m beli vc Bevel' (J ohn H vel, f under of Ja ·per s ttl ement '\ a.s as n ar an .arllfl , paradise as · c- u]d l found." • • . , ' AJ>PR.0f'RJATE. SETTING o[ beautifu l p1ne this puhJic ~ll'irnming pool. in th commun ity . • nngs 'ARL HLL TO:-.:, lef t, manager of Champion's Jasper Pulpwood operations, p<l\I Se" Lo cha t wi th Charnber of ornmerc J'v.fa.nager, R. · <. . Housel. 'i 'ATER SlUL ;G oo tbe Nec;he.s River i a popular wq.rm woother sport among the citizens of J asper. owadavs~ Ja er, a city of ~pproximately five thou­sa nd~ is cited as a good place to live because o( th modern conv,eni nee it afford!>, su h a$ ele tricity, water, gas, telephon s, modern s h.oo'ls, church s, paved streets and ot.b. r conveniences. Tbe CC &: F Ra:ilway Fine s rv: s J a per .and two m i11 highways traver.· the county. It has a mod-em airport and nuruerou.s all· weathex fa m-to-mark t biglrwa)~· Jas-per Coun.y is one f the I ading, if not tl e 1 ading fo-req prodw:; t~ <ciunt, i th stat . S vemy-five 1 ·r elll o[ J.a P" ~( unty's incmn. · com s frmn ,~vo()ds op <Hious,, -;uch as: l\nnbe puip,vood, railroa.(! 'ics anrl fenc 1 c1sts. It ca ns approximately 12 p(:r .n.:nt ( t . lre 1rugc t<Wtl spent annuaHy b th ' Texa-<> Divisi n fo prdpw Ott. - -- • • Diversified fanning, stock ra.isi nb, and poultr · pro­d t<:tion are a ls-o important industri ' ol this ve ll­bl sscd ar ·a. Not th kast im1 ort.ant is its l'ri ndly and progr s.· i clti''Z OI)'· Almo. t <myo e " ilJ t ll ou that the p opl of Jasp r are ''g l ld folks." o rn,. of tho e good folk are hampion. . rnong them are C I Hilton, George Baldwin and G orw;e Osbun . Hall wit . .is a n1ember of e J,.ions 'lub and O.sbt:lrn OW!lS an in.t r st In a Jalipel' furniture . wr<.:. Hiltnu has be o haitm n of tl:t Lions Club Ji{ud •o and. Ji'FA ·Fa . rock .ShoP (or th 1. st ffv ear •. H is also " Roy l Ar h 1\fason and a Chat 1ber J . - I . of omm rr . di. ··cwt. Th .y an: Wl)r1dnt1; to brighten the lttster of ''Th J ("wcl of Th I<'m'c t. '' 13 - I Pl LPWOOD cut in the J:tspet ;u ca i, ship­ped to Champion bv raiL George 0 burn, right, as istant mana­ger _of the .fa per op­e. ratlOI~, say that fu ll cooperation fro m Agent \\r. L. R avin of CC &: SF Railway Company help get the wood out when needed. A TRE. -Ll , ED high w:1 y on the- mad t~l J aspr;:r iR tlt si te f this int r ·ring sign. 1 marks th bouwla t ' of the li! ba rn . and Cou h :Ht!l lndj an C!'> rvMion, the only Indian re rva tion i ll T a . 14 • r\ , 0 FH I R FAi\1fU. R ~ I , ff"T itt rh J 1. pet ;) rn~ i, Uli~ [Jt tlf)\ •.H)d tn lck. lu the b u kgromhl r 111 be ~n lh(· lt ujldi lt g'i awl fiJI] wOQd ·•or­age y::tt d of C'h :l)1tp ~ou's T "· '> Divisi n Jasp r he dqua r1 ' l '· - ,\ CLO 'GR nEW of rhe pwlp1 o tl . tor­age p rtl Ul j :t>p ·r ~h t w. h:1 111pion R . C. VVunrl : c: d illg' ;'1 loaJ tltHl hu.s hc .lt hr ught in by nn inllcp•:nrlelll prndn r. ' be pro lti C't: is h nr · Hadnot, I ft . ' \ I ~ - - - ~ - APPRoxrM TELY · THRF.E :nom~s' DRIVE from ' Pa.~adeua (l<'V road mile and J. 1. nitile-5 as the crow flie to the northeast i · the little city of Jasper, Texas. 1L i the hub 0f on:e of the Te. as Division's largest pulp­wood pr clueing ar as. Th a . tl:lt:lf c~nter of this extens ive operati-on is ·a .ompany-o~ n l tran of 32-1 acres just ouLide the c:ity limit of Jasper. [t i - the headquarters of the Jasper . Divi ·on o{ the Tcxa:' \Vooc.ls Department and ·erves as · a reo iYing and swrage 'ard foT m~Jl-bound ·p~tlpwood [r m rhat area. Carl Hilwn, manager of the Ja p er 0peration is alw ­as'li tan::. Texa Divi-ion wood~ 11:1ana~er and manager of T xa.s Fore ·t Fa.tn:1s. He dire t the activitjes o£ a p- • . I I • - • Busy offic€ serves as G. H. Q. for the company's woods operations over a wide area · proximately 50 company eropluyees, including a 35-man woods cre,w. . . Independent contraction and the Champion crews in the Jasper area produce almost one out of every six cords of pulpwood consumed. by the Texas Division. The c:tttting area is roughly J30.mi1es long and 75 miles wide. Jasp 1· js near the center and the approxima te bQtn'l:datie.s M"e Center on the nonh, Humtington on the wf,';st, B0'n Wier on the east, and Orange on the south. Four railroad line serve that area and trar;tsport the pulpwood w the mill at Pasad€ila. In addititm to producing, buying and toring wood, Hilton and the other Charupions at Jasper manage a peution of the con1pa.ny-owned forest lands. ' I l\ Ll\ . D 0\.\.;\.l:f.l , · ) . ]), :K n, right, go<~<; o Cl' a ~nu::t uf hi~> holdings l itl\ Gham­pi"" l'l Bnyer T•.uda l>e~u. J}e• n <)rtd Kc.!ll di.'ICll ·sed th pfJtU IJility of <W earl) p(1lp- 'Ji \1J}JQN' JA;S'f'ER FFi ~ is itJ · BOOKKE.EPING - ,Ml (!)th J> wol'l:; " t th J, . p<;r Oll'i · - ls t'ht:: t e~t,on sibilit f th rw ·OOd cut on th.i tl.act. proxhn. tel ): 1 J!) mite~ fr JJJ Pttsad l:l. bt t j-st,b .'nlli <111, Pbnt. ~Lmrdill,lb,_r of' t-'~llJ . " ' rl<J 1 1 rtu . 11 Trtl ' JJL, bow• 1it Jgi• L. u1:.k ·s lh • I rtp !t[ fr •tpl·f"l;rt ' nlef\· <~h . · C1t. fnj i n , G llf'••e fla1dwin · nd . 1:n'}c'"lrie Ht;tn H. . 1 0'' of the ol'f <'S . !.lrc ap1 r' 'I ri.t •tv pmH'I d in u L\r4,l · fin:i~b ,t~eld . 15 ·' I I ' Caroli na crews work as " I 1 ' • ' I 'iH.l ' RI·.LY HII U ·H.D llll --af lv Hw:I'•LIIC' (lii fJ, /(-jl_i, thl' ,,() 1011 dig 'L<'I is '' lu:~dc d i11 tc, llw vot '' hl'l v iL will IJc ir.,tall(·<l. It rtlc'~t. UJ ·~ 17 te ' I iu hughl and J(J ff't·L itt di.111t ·tc1. lll'WLA lN • CO:'\ I·Tf> l· . ·r e t· in 1 iJ;,rgiug nptipnwut and Ut.nnptutr ''"rkt11cu wlw make tlt t'. hiu)J ' • AI I\ ant' (/tm•e1 f, It ). in ur.Jtl< t IOI!lp;lll } I<")Jlt'.;(.' lli :J till ', ~t:tlld' fll: l11'alh tJt ' filtt'd di\.;t'l l JG a team to finish this j 0 b • • •• ' "'I If I IIICUFR l lltlliJ ~ '!he 100,000 1 ott lld nnit (tup, Ct'lll(' ' h 'f ne it i~ c·t int•' 1ft ~· ltnl ·a t ilw h 1t 1wn of di gt·srt'r. The llnlr 11ao; d11g )lli 'P"'I'il 10 gilt' tilt' di gr\l t' t h-;~rattl(~ llrt<kr h :till\, nO\\< 1 dy to b low€red into perman<:>~1l position. \\'E \R Y R 1 CCU G R "\. ( loll•r r ,.i14h l ), pa 1 rscs a t.t1p t ~te n e~" ~Jigester. ' h. .fob w s c,m'tlplet d (tui · ly a rt il :ddy dc·,p it. lu~;e workillg qttarLer&. Som 20 ottw.r ere' " aided in til nwvt:'. Wn IN CAROL.LNA t;HAMPLONS tackle a l:ougb assjgnmcnt - such as insta[]ing a 50-Lon li gestcr - they d monstrate that teamwork pays def.inj te c1 i videncl s. Installation of No. I u Digester late in Nov ·m ber posed a different problem. T he 1nam.moth unit had been bought at a cost of more th an $17,000 and it had to be installed qui ckly and safely_ It tipped the scales at 50 tons, was 4 7 feet high and measured I 0 feet in diame ter. There was Iiule clearance ­on l.y about five in ches here and th ere - ~vhich posed as another pro blem for the workmen, all of . whom had ~; n ccessfullv' ompleted many tough jobs during their Champion careers. . You an't "jerk" a heavy and dose job of rigging. Can ton Champion rig­gers know this . is so; they can nc:ver afford to d isregard the safety angle. Teamwork, mixed with an abundance of close ooperation among all working units, is the positive answer to compleL­ing a big, heavy job in record time. L 1- though. the task ·of r emoving and instal­ling digesters is primarily a job for Cham­pion r iggers, at least 20 other crews played a part in this operation. . T he job was completed without the sl ightest accident. T he whole task. was haza.rdou from start to finish, but all Champions -vvho con tributed to the job proved they were safety-minded all down the line. Al Kane, chief e ngineer of the me­chanical and e lectrica l div ision of the Mutual Boiler and 1ach.inery Insurance Company, Boston, said Carolina Cham­pion workmen were th.e sa fest, most de­pendable and rnost reliable of any he h.a ev r known. 1 a nc ohserve l the job cJos ly and h · h ·. be n known for years ru a " very c1 o se o b server. .· '\ irhin nine days a ft· r· th · old diges­t r stared mov.ing out the n w No. 16 had been pla.c: ~d on the lin " and w~ s in full production. Whil no dfort ,.vas mad Lo es tab­lish a record, as su h, in r lllO\ ing nd insta J ling rh hea )' dig ster, a iJ 'ham­! ion>:; in ol n.:d nr thankful th • a~si,.,n­h ·nt N"as t.m);)plc:L tl ac o ling lO sched­ule ~ aut a Jy. TJ t pi c ture~ on the~<' t vo p.geyshow . J1ow th. ~:: difficllll msk. wa · ~o <H tn· uetv . . lUI l af ·1 man ·uv ·n· l. ' ' i\1 A;\;Y LE ·. DER •. in Lhe 1J:i3 l\l atf'h of Dimes pr g13m in Lhc antou-Bt:Lh ·1 - Chde area oC Bli cwood ~)tmty arc pic­tured here a, the · left the Champinn \;\ICA to ,.i, it the Onh 1pedic Home- In A·he' illc, earh in Decnul rr. rhev , j, . iled tlle home to ,. t fin:t haut.l inr' nna ­ti< m that witl ai.d the'r work in J:mu.tn. J. l'aul ).furray, chairma'u of the' :mton Polio dri' e, .i · in tlle dght foregro und. IXTERL TED INDONE "V\~S nre shown a paper defect b) t:hc Ohio Di,ision· Hill Wright as the group loured Champi011 la t ~o,ember. . The visitors pent one w e-k in Hamilton - wh.i :h was chosen as a represem~ti\·e indu ttial city- tudying American !U.anufactllli ng methods. Pic­tured are So Tomuljono, Zulbkli, Tam­hunan, Hasan Basari and Santoso. SAFETY EDUCATION 1'ATERIAL fur nisl1ed to school in the Canton area by The Clli;lmpiol'l Paper and Fibre Compa ny is ex· ami.ned b · A. J. Hutchins, seated, sup rintendent of the Canton school 'iystem; '"'· L. Rikard, left, principal of Canton HighS hool: and Carlton B llaru y, J r., Carolina Champion's sa.fety supervisor. H t ttchins said: ·•1'he b est exp res ion of appreciation will be wise use of the ma tGrial within the ~>eh ool&. " - .'.·. . . THE NEW ME:\4BERS' DIN:'\ER at the Hamilton YH \ \l'as th occa ion fox this group picture. Left to r igh t: Dick Nein , Ohio Division Emj)lovm cnt; J c.- e Haiue·, •I.OIJ.t\.!Otnt'rv ountv .\u t!itor: I , _. J ~ and iVlel Fields, Ohio Wage dmini. Lrn~ io11 . 1\fr. H.tin s. fcirmerly a big league pitcheT wi rh the SL. Lou i al' !ina.!. w:-ts princit. J .p aker een a Texa · crab . This fact, O~ OHH'.e, makes The !>lOr · beli vable e\Cn withOIIl pi torial evidence. • FRO\.! O ' LO. ;'\!OR\\ .\\. toP;~ ·1dena. Te~· a. i~ a f~'>ng joulney. !au lhe change in lemper~tLUrc i · cH•n !neater. sa'' Bern l 1-os> t •rs. Tl1 1}1:. k lka s won 13-7, 20 -,;'IT . VV lN OR LOSE, the a n uual Turk y Day football conte . be-tween the Waynesville High chool Mountai:ne r and the Canton High Sch ool Black Bears is the "gan1e of til ~ear·· insofar as this immediate section of \ 1\'e cern 'ort!1 Carolina is concerned. T his year the Bears won the rrrid iron g· rne l · -7. But scores don't amount to m uch with th fans, so long- a · tlt\' two school bands furnish plen ty of a rion ar. h.al f ti l:h . It wa con ·ervative ly stimated tha l no k: than 4. ~ 00 r~ Ih crow l d e · r nook a,nd om er of th 1 a l a1h l tic fid 1 Thanksg.ivino· aftcrnoou. Ki k o ff w·ts r iaht on th button - 2:30p.m. The Wayn . ville-Cant n gnme h ew 1.000 more p T~ons chan saw th Optimist 13ov l ontest in .\ .;;h ,·illc ,.h. ·r' slig·hrly t'rlon' than ~ . 000 [at~s e:rt 011 hand for the fh. nk. - • • g' U1h progrn.m. id fro111 tb gab w lor _ >[ tlt ' 1 rogT~II ll . tht: gri lir0u on tcst pi'Oper w :~ s Ja.b •l •d one uf tht> bcs l o fft'r d in the ouuty in ye. r'i. Hot.h team<; w ' r<' at rheir bes t. Wayr1 s .ill 111a , be• 01 t )lt' wiunirt);!; si 1 _ nJ iht fc)u tba ll 1 dg . c ntc nc I T llallk'>gi iug-. lht t reg n rdk~- 'r how i.h' two t ·amr.; sracl up ne: l •t•ason, a ~ real , howling tttnltl lt wi ll wit ness r b · pl o-gram. Rq;a rllk -,~ o l the> .~C'o r a t haH-Lifl t(', tilt ' ll t·~· m; d n tt nse unti l U1 · fi n;d whi ~ tl · hring~ lb · high st ho 1 o-J·idirnll ·. ·em lo ;,t c leN•. Thl' : lw: ty" rlo. ' • • • •• T Fn r; ,\Rit: - IT "' ' ·n TONY l\U:.NZFR le ft Lhc Ohio I in ion/fiull Pl?n p11:hing a brok- box. bound for tb · Wet End of No. 2 . . -\s th ·y pa.s 'cl th Dog House, th 'y ran lnw Bud ]'.; al \vim w:.t · reportino· dandy Licks to rrll Hoskin Ente1·ing the }\Jachin Roorn on th eir . m, th iGtl trip T ·d and Tnn . ;;n\· that John Fugae h:u:L just stopped making h · nJ ·was pulli.ng the quirt ba ck to the front ide. t.\s }nhu '""enL back to adju ·t the jordan·, he saw Henry Cru·pentei' d1eck ing a furnish, on the way to the 1i ·ht hou ·c. "'e .rer 1 rnen pa eel any in;:>· spud sticks. Had thi. been th ir first day at Champion, Ted Garrett and Tony Menzer probab1 ' would have tried to jump inLO the Labor Pool , f r the lingo at Champion '·oulrl hase been too much for them. · 'om on.e could have explained to them that in a 1 aper mill broke box is merely a large box made to c [}tain t·va te paper, a:nd that hay is the accumulation of w·a-re pape (rom a paper machine after a break. A nRO E BO ' is nothin n · to John $ ump, No. 2 M iJ l Trirnrners. l t's u ·ed l1 e1 e tO w nta ill th sh. ving~ us paper ls l.r iHHtlcd. John 't. job entails b a n 1 · n g t.l e: uo · no the Be t. .r Ro n . They cou ld h ave been tcJltl Ll1at the Dog- Hou ~e in Nu. 2 M.ill i a romn in wbich the humidity is constant, and that iL's u ed to condition paper. They a lso could hav b -en L01d tha t dandy Jicb ;.trt rnadzs or imperfeC-­tions le ft on a h cet of paper by th dandy roll. Mo t new employees learn that a furnish is jw.t a recipe for pnpcr, and thaL Jigb t houses arc u ~ ua lJ y io und wherever there's a n eed to mat h a orad to its standard for likeness of shade. • Almo ·t e ery newcorncr to Charnr ion has found out aboHt the Labor Pool, and jn . hort order 1 lea n ll t nJeanings of rnany other terms which ar wed in the manufa~ ture o£ paper. .H guick.ty adds to 1 is vocabu­la; ry th.e jargon u eel by the Old T irn ersi because th · explanation of many processes is diHic dt without using paper mill lingo. The n ext t ime a youngster approache " you and a ks. «Hey, when~ 's the floppcr?" think back. t , our (irst day and th en tell h im. - - - -- --- 1.\1\l ( H\Y i-.,n<>l-<nl · lt !i itk ·. lwr ·;lsl •l' r ti r, ~" 1 ~trl Hk. -! I , 7 . f .Jt)1 iD•', I •JI1 J.(•IJ fJI.l \ OJW. [' J\ iS p-t Lilli.' '\' a" t :) k.{ II H~ ll !I i. 1l ·IIIH \\:~' il ·in,;; Jn,td • ,, ]<j_, h c pl .1 in~ au ;t,i I .full of " h;~ :· fll [\;t~l p.tp J,. - - - -- - --- ••• CONTINUED - --- . - -- - • - - • Jido doesn ' t live in - "'\-> ¥ the dog house , nor - \. .,., -- bulls - --- - - - - --. • ·THI:, ET LND of ;J p;rp 1 n,;,c-hiJ •C l i [h' r.~ "'ll !IH'III]!,Jt fn11ll 11hc r· ' el 'll:d . Atddt: " MLIIv" \1<:H:lr<>. 1:1 hin<' ' f'<•rt(!f·r• 011 Nq. ?, m-a c· a lr il rlW' iu th rkc· k edp;c· !, ~ r )rn\i t"J~; tlw squirt; it i-s j~' "l on (JI th.c t l ii•U ~and~ tTl dj,l.S llll . ,,t~ 1 rpdrnl oi a , i ll u pap .r !1iJaohine op nHM. 22 • • 1n the b u II pen I ' 'II IF li'l t.NO POOL, llll\re for rn,d l} ki1CI\I n "~ Lh!C (>tJn. l nw " . teri · 1 ('ut.d , j~ (<JIJ-lf'lh< -<1 o f' r i J~· o' h HI Illtji.J; ~ ' \lUl'l g l a dir ·~ . 1! 0 11' 11 in II C: picttllt: :d, JI •' . l ;ll:icl ir, . fruw k i t 1<1 Jig'l11 ::n· ha l J t\Jit·r1 . stq ·n ism o[ t l ,· ( ldiLil J'opl , l.•11 r·;dne Ln ••ll, ,\1i ld,,:cr Gugg r, :1'3 It · J ohc, lt.t·nc l'i 'lH', J\ H )<0 · ~ • illt rl Jo r(! j\1 tOr\'. • T HE DOG HO .E aL Cbam.J)oiOn has n oLhing lO de with dogs. In tead, it~ s. a t.el'm applied to a room in 1 o. 2 Mill which main­tain' a coo~tan.t h umidilv, and thereby imparts moistiJre to dry paper. Shown above, work ing in the dog h o use at Champion 's O hio Division, are four employees: Don Lincks, Bert Crouch er, Arch Bi s:h.op, rtnd Howard Knipper. T HE:R.E ARE ICHTHO · ·~E~ and li'gbt­J to uses. l1.i!S or~ iS h iag us~,: l!l 1 y Beiit "f En gineer lt es Lan wo ttn tl::l conl pin a ' luu.le o fY.:lper wiJ.h rh<: . . i a1:U:liii l tor U1l! l pan i ~11h1 r grade. TfH: HOl.L P,E.1' do 1· is being op ·n ·d hy. Jolllm} · ];) e!> 16 let th . Jl en , not bull ·. i-n!'i:d c. ·1 ht~ " llull 11eJ.l " i ~ rne r~:,:ly 21 nam g,iven ro tit R1 , ·ar h n ·part· Ol t::ll t .aH ~n<~ t J'iloL l'l.<J nL lin • •ying; ar l l ar vit\ s ,,,~t, Ralph Hani. and T ed · Carreu . -- -.,. - - • - - 23 LO 'l ALLE ' is , J1 u·n makiu a lahorato·r .; sheet f p;1 pe1.~. hc1lc b"e ' l~ are mad fr m tep · ntati \ e s:nnpl l' of our pulp, day and nth r mnt ·ials. B' tl1 test' made on the, . mall m­ples the pro lucti n deparlll.Km, wi tJ ha'e th ability t imrrox q11al itv in t e ma{;hine prodllctil w . LOtHS R - H ha u d r the mi wscupc a :. tllp-1 . or sr•ale • hi<.-11 opp 'd !lJJ in a par· lt tul~r grart ·. B · a. ca reful da ~i. fuati()n vf ~ l' h Tl!11tl'r ia 1.<. a the ·, i:mp4!tfe 1 ion om be tr 't'tl back lo ~cn n e p~ 1t icular ~ t p in the Qp r~' t.ion a ud he elirn ina L · 1- ' ( llYRON BERGER ( left) i exammwg a pulp ,olu tion from which he sep· ara tes tiny particles of sca le, wood sllives and other substances for a na] ­)' i s by the Lab's competent staff of chemists and technicians. These Hsuper sleuths" of science use their special skills to improue paper making in • I • By ] oe Blevens MAJ TAil'I c A coNSTANT check on the raw materials going into the manufacture of paper is, in itseJf, a very big job. Not only doe the Ohio Divi ion Chemi try Lab perform these du ties but it does numerous others as well. One of th big it ms used a l Champion but nor nee · ariJy part of our produ t h, C<JiiL The apptoximaLe dai.ly usc of c.oal at our mill is s en 1.0 eight caT loads. very arcful analysis is made n wc:~.mples or a h car as to its B. T. U. or heat content and also a" Lo Lbc a1 -Gunt o£ sulphur and other :mat r i a l !~ it Qt1taius. Eac.h lot of pulp rcc i,:ved from tlv fJth · r di is1on ·. as wt:Jl p-ulp olJLaiJ ed outside of Charnpi.on. i · carefu lly te<> t d by th , Ch m. La b. ~I'h i s is n c ···ary td ontrol fa t rs such d sample LO dtt rrttin ilJ.i tnak ·'· 1.;1 p ::tnd the ma Lcria Is nscd to pnxlu it. Com­[ la int o l a nature invol ing the stren gth and ma terhls in our owl papti!rs arc quit~ o(t ·n rderre 1 to onr La:b i.n ord ·r tQ correct (utu re !>hi pro en ts. Alf c f t l.1 . a h~H'!.:! prognnn ' a. we ll a .~ the supplyi ng nf t ·st sr1h1tio ns for o1bn dqxrrcm -,nt. in the mill, D J~ke up d \c wo k pcrfornwo by tht' H~11oilbm1 Di ision Chern J .al . All of he ]X )j>l . working her under the capable sup vi i 11 oi Glyde Nmcros tal« · ]Wide 111. OJll ribu t il b th '- outst::t>nding . et i our mill. • ' Beware the '~S panish Swindle" mysterious l •tt r Iron• M 'xico a rri.v d . re cutly on th , desk of G ~:trd n r vVri .·ht, presid en t o£ the · c:rne l'aper Company of St. Luuis . . . ·This 1 tt "r d c:ribcJ . the p light of ~ . "p ri on·( . in .1 ~ul for banhu p t·cy, who; tt tat rued, had $ ,8FJ,OOQ lucid · 1 jn a u·unk ~·. t a Cus LOlTtS, H ms · i-n The Uni t d State . h Jetiet oHcr<;d Wtjg'hl a on -LJijrcl sha re of the fort1 111c if h · would h ·Jp th . pri · n er to pay r t~un cx pc n ~;es rtecc 'sary to r ~cov er tli e lll011 -y. S , ~ 1'11e.~ prnsp ~ ct w <:~s yick e~ ou~ for th · old ~n d farnou 1pam:sh PtJ on T Sw111 ·11e. · It 1s nrren tJy l ·mg operat d by a gang- in Mex ico whi h pr ·ys o 1 unwary Americans i1 tbe h ope of ext.tHCling as much a.$ $10,000 from ea h of tl\cm. Cardn r Wright ptov ·cl unwilling to play th eir game;, how evei~, al d turned his J tl ·t ov r to th _ St. Ju is Pos · Office In 1 e tor. The insp crot irtfonned h·im that s or of th s" J tt<:: rs are b ein rna il d fJ'Om fcx ico; and that de plte I ost OfCice warning:;, ma ny 0 .S. citizens fa ll i tim of the gang. A re ent ani 1. in th . aturday Evening Post give, complet details n the o perational 1 1 tb9ds of th _ windl r, . Meanwhile, 't\Tright notified The OG of hh xperience. "I think it might prove intere . ting to your LOG reader s,'' he sa id. "e. p ·ciaJJy if i t sav,s tl1em some~ mon ey.' " ' \ IT .CC T , tER. GRO\ , :-.o ~rows Champion . . . Th . noingh;:tm Papn Com pan ' o.f .Birmingl1am , Ala. has re · entl) at JlUIJ n< -d th e. ·pans.ipn £if i ls I ctor • f. il i ti as hown in the pl .-Jto above. Th t uttiQ.g drum JO.ajo:r and the ~Y rd " · ift)"" ar tl.eir tegi!>t~l ,!fl trad -warl - ju t a the . a mpicrn Xnight and K•J,!F1l:t.n • are trade· roa~" ' h rnpion. ~ be Rirmingh am Pav Cnm • tl} hU}$ pape:r rr-m h;nuplon l) h RHODA { 'CL , RI, aro limt l)j i ion t JepJwne oper. tor, point" out the .anto · Offi to Lu ill 0.~ , General ffice reHef per­a t r. Rhoda \rLsit ·d Hamil on in Ocwb t . n 1 n tu(' f c w fafe it ·m a ~t.ati m ty, tahkt~ and b(J. with m; n. of t b . p ople sh l1a:d me t by phon . fHUt f \' \'J~ i\ RS AGO in n c ·wq ·r Vi e­P rct,;iGknt H etb Ranll 11 wn (JJ3era riur; tltfs ,.!J, r ( lrj l)) ut t it Ohio nivi;.ion. H · 11.::t th··n co upping at the Ur,i v>r. it • nl ··n· i!U> II/ ;,' •ht:1 1.t ~ in • P1 tirl '11 1. llidl r · . ld;il l liJ;'h t ;nd i t ;,rnt . ~•() t ' · tO.Ill Rr'"' 11 Bm . lr 11 . Thi, i~ th•· twt­dtl lll:' R 11 .•: u d {fl ' ' .tt> ll J1fn ld p! llfH" lfl • ' · I Texans, Eggs and Chewing Gum By George Steiner Johnny Bryan and Flo ·d "Fu zzy" H oskins frmn down Texa way dropped ii1 at the Safety Office , to say h Uo dq.ring th ir visit 'in July. Both look good, and we mu t sa · they look younger than when they shook off the du t of Hamilton several years ago. 'Fuzzy," being in a generous mood, passed out cigars r.o the hoys in the Safety Office. If Captain· Roy Hollis, ter's conten tion to "judge a man by the cigar he gives away, and not by the cigar he smokes," holds tru e, then our old pal, buddy and sidekick is a gentleman of the first ''rater. The brand of the cigar was "Black Peter/' no le . Ray Lynn wa forced to take a ·week 's vacation after he smoked one, the ,. eakling. Our first glance, when. J ohnny and Fu zzy droppecl in at the Safety Office, wa at their fee t. W'e looked for. T xas boots, l!lut no dice. vVe probably never will ee an_y of tho e hornlares from Houstotl wearing boots, for a man must own two head of cattle before he is en titled .to wear boots in Texa . H e must own three h ead of cattle before he om stuff th right pan ts -Ieg in, four head to stuff both pant<; leg·s in. Only the owner ot six b.ead can wear spurs and y 11, "Yipp ee! ' * * . The F rench ta-ugh t tbe world 685 ways to pr~ pare eggs fm' rh table, and one way is a good: as tJ:le other, as f.ar as ]0hnny Brehms of C.M. Cutt ·rs is. con ern cL He like th m that well. Egg~ are a st.ap le food, aud if 'l;v onsid ~r that a.n egg umsti.tute a day'. '"''ork for a h n, w • mqst ach1JiL rhat th · prjc of et{gs is ~ath ~.:r· lo·w. nd e m ig h t add tl .at compat ·d to what A<1am. paid (or one a p-ple, frui t · low at any price. A mn.,.,rs it ·m tell ~> o ( a p rop ri·tOr ol an it('·cr~m parlor in '\Vi hita, Kan s., who ort d nh tg c.tnd 1 ·pailiilg' bis tahle.~ found 1 ~5() wa_d. •>( cbnvi11g gnm ru·ck to their und ·rside. This bring to mind a i1Ailar place here in Ohio. On the tr:ip t Col uri1bu to a ttend th AU.-01. io . afc.-1y C~mgress two year ago, we stopped at a small (own 26 f r c n, ;;~nd dou "h.llll '. To get quLker rs ' rvi e the nt -'U pli int u::ral gro up~. Ffauked ,by Tiu 'bop 'ur c_>r · i~o Totti Ja ·olJi, and B / ' hn r tj up TV J l){)J' 1 a rtm H H he I heeL. 'We' ('J1l('l' >d • n ice:.rr arn alld d"rughn ut shop. ;vtarlin ha.pp ned to nm hn; hand tm ·tv th , ta ble wlnlc v.· w ·re waitinw leo be ~ rv cJ, and discover d that the und ·r· irle w 6 literally < ov red tn b ye . t~f h wing gttm. ·xanunation prnved tlt ' oth r tab! • 10 th .same 0;1chtion. N >ecl1 · o . ;:~ 1 111~ i t h T ue o l us tot1ch 1 the crlo ghn rt in that p l l:I:C(;, , len Baker, B r hop lllli.S t have been C. J1ing good Lhat dar h asked us ·what h o les in boards ar lf: the ·u·c k not hoi s. :13 fore we atl!>Wcr that question w would like tO ask a few our €lves: G len, di y u e er .see an apple turn o-ver? Or a hOT e flyi- • ' MR. AND MRS. Will· · ian1 .Butns, in celeb:rat­iHg their .?Oth wedding anni,<ersary la.st Octo­ber; cut a hu ge cake at a dirio er in honor of Lhe occasion. They are tl~e paren ts of JvJ ai·oo· u e-l'ite Burns, CM Sorting forelady. ENJOYISG lu ~chtime Dr e R 11 s sell Bu1·ger Sr., of ~o. 10 P<J'p ·r .\ I a-chi ue and his two-­month -.o 'ld grand­daughter. Karen L e Burger. K .ren Lee and mother P-anv, lcRiUi - can Burger: are making their home -with the Bl'l rge<s while Pn, Russe ll Burger, Jr., i. statiar·Jcll in Cermanv. ' Maude \!cKilJican o1 C;\•f ortiug i Karen L ee's other grand mother. 'F( • YFJ \ RS Of !1\RRI ED l.H.L wa. celebra te ! in the h ,· Cr," 11 lt . uw. No,·eJIIIH.: r 19. h It. :mtl 'i\·l rs. Cra l'll11 unvl th<'lr Jaa ori!}· r\ntl. J lfi~ alsu n1.11k ed a tull' tC il tltt") :1s a, Ch;~ .mpioa , f~r '\ !1. f.r.n 11 , a ~t• r ir I CillJ l.l ' Yf:l'. H e ,, :11d ot I he n11ll . I fmH1 I H. tn I>-• a w cr·11Jell 1tl ~l ace co wm k, n.nd. tlary ha l'(' 1 noci.('Tful lea l ·• '-hip. \f ' 1 ~ <1 \'l'l i .~ 1k a1 1•hc Lt•t• l will blcs · Gh.;.~ rupi n an I lt>t it I . JH O\ f i'l a I •·1 )' . • Ohio WITH EDDIE STOO P'S :tppearing to I~· a leep artd Ierli n Brifl ·s hand in tbe ail . Lhe camera nwght mcf11be-rs of tl1 cl a.->s f t920 a, the might have appeucd to th i . tc. ·c h(~rs in younger ) ear.s. From J •ft to r ighL r VinGe Laudetrn an, lre rl<: M lnl)'re, Franc s Stt tplten. Nurse l\.faJ' - nt.in.g and 1 yci or ro. . • . . . -as sma, te-s of esteryear - .19 2 B;v. Bill ThomtJson ! THE u Q,o RJl\' ' :rwENTI Es" we:re begi n11ing to roll into .an x ·iting decade of , merican History. Con­uttHional . menclm. nts 18 and 19 became effective; onne tinu and Rhro<le I -land were the only .states r e­fu .sin(>' to ratify the Prohri bitiou Act. T be "noble ex1 eri­rnent Ka5 de. tined to faih1re becan c community police , nati n-wide failed to cooperate ~1 ith federal enforcement ~en.t . ~f o t 1 cal police fore s were the 1 ootleggers' best friends;. . \ . hile W(Jmen w re gtv n their first chance to vote Ohio stepped downstage ' i1h Gmreroor Ja·mes Co.·· and ontol' \Varren Hardjng as th pre id cmial t andiclate --. .' . ure I et ·was a Bu J<_e , to wm. Hard in ~ 'I.VOtt \Vith an approxin:Hi l6 million votes to 11ine mill-ion {or Cox. Their grand total of 2~ miilion Wiiltl a tar cry fn"rt.o last ;· a.r's !'lear 60 million. \V'f>Jn{~ began to "r.noke, 1ri1Jk anti tell 'lhady ~o t.ori s. The '·flapper,'' '"gig0lo" and "cake- "atcr" w r · wi Ll1 t.t!>, n. 1t to meD tir;n the " -pe.t~ kca~ i. ·s." '·Ffam.inK yo u~h " and 11 ja.u: · g • bad aniv d. Can ;.ou f ,atm· coin ly Ja-<,-,1 · · lik lt ·n · IcJn yH·, .J dfer).On · 0H·n hip J:-Jjgh · hoot, . ·w Pa i 'i, )hj >; Ftam es , 1tph n, of Pa.x.t ;i1 ( flJin J.is) H ig lt ~ }J'r,, !, and :(\:far1e l{ ating .o.f: Hamj l. H.rn's ,_ ·(Jtr(' Da 1e H . . a:-. rltrce nf tf.1 · o iginal " flapJ ers?'' A H amilton High ~1uart · indudin§4 tf:nor Cal S~ill« Jnan and bi.isso Vince Laut-lel man m igltt h <n· · h , ·n 'ling· ing- «_\utlon,'' " .J <q>an ·-<,e Sartdmau," " Whi ~ l e1 ing,'' " fab Lind, Lou," um Lo nwntion i.JH.: tl. ·n j ()uth(rtl ~J Nl L wi ' ' '\ VII ·n ~ fy Baby <;liJtlc a1 fe.'~ . . A Pilt bLtrgh'. pion~ r Ra lio tatiun KDK · wa . giv ­ing lecti rr retun1s for t.lH~ Gr L Lim · _rqung Cly1l • N'or· e:r<;>ss an.d h ill classt:.1at.es of fara"''ay '\1\Ta ter bnry Vermont) High School " ere probably singing "The Lilac Tr e;_," "Tell Me Little Gypsy," "T:imbuctoo," ''Hone)de·w" and 'TJl Be '\1\Tith You in Apple Bios orn Time." · Hoosier Eddie Stoops of Connersville (In diana) High and l\llerlin Brill of T renton High were undoubtedly enjoying George ·white's first "Scandals" as well a: Gomedi:enne Fam'lie Brice's s.inging the fa.mmr "Rose of '\l\lashington Square." · Ot cour ·e, all classrnates of 1920 W' re singing or dancing tunes like ".Sally," "If I M t the Gu v\ ho Made this C<mntry Dry/' " \ ' ild Ro e," "Hjt hy Koo/ "Tick-Tack Toe," "Pa le Moon," "La Vee Ia," "'Tripoli " "Mary," "Chili Bean ," "Bob White," "Do You E,·er ~hink of Me?," "Hold lV[e" and "Se;cond Hand Ro ." Tl1c ye-ar 192.0, 1ik the ba l aJ1~&e of th ~.r wert Li ·, 1-vas 'ram rned wi h iHI.ercnin: " a nd · ' ci tiug YC'.fl.t · as w 11 'ts th dram ti· . G ' Orge G rs:ln 'in 's tun ·~ wer' c Jmnenc­j1; 1g tQ li k. . ou i-ja boards ' '"er' tlt. fa,d . . . Sa ·o a.r1d V,a rtzetti w T · onvi ct ·d o[ rnurd 'r, \Ncnt c: in · C'tll d rh · t.d ·phone cot1.d ens r rnicroph n and Lnd'ield thr t ch:p houe ' . ico, "t·\'a. a~;.assinal ed , . t\ l<n"l O ' VVar e,un lud ·d 1 · illu rio:n. ca rcc: by winn!n ~ II ooc (} l 1 I , rans . . Br ~oklyn [ 1a; •d Boston a on (;·W-o·ut tit> in 26 innings (d zu·ktt ·s, . . lt was tlJ l(Jn g'll'-)lf 1nilj oJ I agu : g·,ttl e in ht tol' by in­uing ). wi .th !'> t(ir-ing pit .h ·r-, T ,(.'on .:.t<.l ot . and J o<~ O!'>"t hger bo ti t gni ng till' 1 ou tC . . . Th •. Dt>f1 ~rs ~ibr wen· iu Lit(• Se1 it'<>. t:1ki ng 1 b "ir p ·riod i b eating - rlli. . riq1e b Ct • <.;l and . . . n-J sjnc it -i. n >-'-7 J . .h ut: R 0se .B() t ti ii't ·, Han·anl d ~ L f'4 t~ d ) r~•ero n 7 to fl for tb · o~e . 27 I I Meet the ladies • • • Bv Drnothv Pu•rh "" "' ~ 'I1li m<.nth we . sk ) OU to c 1H, ba t. H Lh . i.ttt · 1., "'·ith u~ nd me-et a fine:> .' ~unpl of a nwm l "'r of a CHA. tPIO" · famiJ ·- Mr . Etta Le ,.-i~ . \\'e -a ' thi- b cau Etta has be n workh1g here lor 31 year and f ur 11lCmher- of her imrnediatt' farni l ' arc Champion mplo.'e -, in ludi11g lH.'r lud.mH.~ Brad t y Lewi . a CM 'ortin · Lin trucker. En:~ Lc, •is t:nted at Champicm <m ~o t 1b "r JO. 192l. For four y a1 · during WorJ I '\'V·tr I I br was a crane operator. \\'henev r Etta l a rar ti1:J1C on h and , ·he ck'vot r.;; it to raisino· chi -ken.' and flt wers. She ho:w' partialj ty w·ward tulips in ller o·al' lens. ·w e belie e the chicken · are to rem.ind her f that fa1·m in Pike Coun t Lh a t she talked ab ut. Howen.'r, ·wh n the long winter m t>fi tb :->et in and sh.c is unabl to putter <rouu l outsi l , E tt;) \ hobbv turns to croch Lino-. I . -- It .i: inter ·tin l note that Etta i. one of a "fifth generation". fa rnily. Her moth er i 78 yea rs olc.l an l till does all her own h ou ework and canning. 1 row let .me introduce you to her CHAMPJO. family: we'ye already mentioned h r husband, Bradley Lewis then there are two daurrhter , Eva Miller of CM Sorting and \ inrinia Oberle of No. 2 Mill Sorting; Walter Oberle, down in Roll ~torage i her grandson . Etta is al:o 1 roud of · her two g1'ea t gi"ancldaughtersJ T erry · Post-Mortems on Election By 0 tto R eid 0£ cour e, the election is over, and all is fo rgiveil. Here in the United State we realize that campaigp or a­tory is de igned to needle the opponents. But are the repercussion damaging to p eople all over the ·world? They follow o ur progress. vVho cap tell th em) after this low-1 vel bombardment by ou r poLiticos, that we have a great idealism- one ,,.,.or th cop yin g? The whole pi ctu:re is enough -to make thern stutter . . . when they shudder at the du tter. In the words of \ t\TiUiam Wirsing: "' hat are we doing t:o sell Am rican ideals to the world?" Champion sur ives al1 elections and r etuTns to normal in a few day . . Th good will and sport rnanship exhib­ited h . e makes anyone proud to be a. Champion. E eople ask why the cam1 aign is al out one per n t issues, and 99 per . en t mud· linging~ '~V 11, p opJc are human, su bj ct to weakn ·sses <md mis take . One:, man , encased in t he h.obnails of >~0, St op$ OM tb 0th cr'~ bare fe t. T he o t1l r . leps ri gh t ha k - righr thru th fickl · sh ell of ego. Both men ~ lL "ou hi'' a t th sant , ti 'l e. From then un til the OL rs pull t1 em ~.t pa rL em lection da y, they bligbr · v ry limb on cad1 oth r' Camily tree, and 1 ou r salt bri ne OJ:J the TOOt ·. It ainr. no :t.v-on leT th at voters icken lo the t u1ach, and stay a' vay jn dro b. T he only va r Lo el•j • n ar-room brawl i ' Lo get jnlo th pi t ir. of ill · tlti ng . grt loaded to the gills, tAk : a bnttJ · in ·ach hand ~ rJtl . t . 1 t swit:Jging. Jt aint no fan to wH tch th . tl•inn f 11 tn >ntlt c;, then ·tep in and separat · the guY" i·:h lm e r' lly had all th fun 111 the knock·down·drag·o 11: affaj . 28 ETTA LEWIS, of the Gutter . is shown above with her crocheting -a cold weather paslh'ue. Her warm · wealhet hobby is gardening. Zecher and Judy Oberle, b tu it will be se\'eral year'> before they are old enough to come to work at the mill. Enough of our visi t with Etta for now. But if: you have a chance next spring, stop by her bou. e at 524 Puthoff Street and see her lovely garden . T his lesson . proves that men do spend a half-century building a reputation . . . and lose it all in one week­the week being , .,then the delegates thro·w the highe t h<;>not· of our tuition' into their laps. I think all nominee for president sh ould be pu t in the gas chan ber the day they are nomina ted. They would d ie ·wi th reputation intact . and millions of voteTS "muld be av d from partial asphyxiation. Eschal Smith told "Ole Mac'' to not get too happ ·. Said Esch al: " V\ e beat youse guys at the conven tion . got our man on both ticket . J nst ta ke your choic ." (Come to think of it, Eschal could l1av been right.) 'Course, my mind '~as not made up ·when I vo ted . . . just hadn' t talked abou t it to my wife. Mac Powell 's car broke dm'n in Gaucl rrown. at the time Truman wa speaking in Hatnilton . I:Ic was 30 minutes late for work . . ·wears he wa not ga ndering at the Truman whistle-flop tra in. Frank Laney was might dx:ipp r after t.ae le tion. He didn't mind the results. Frank ai l: "OK, bo 1 ', ~ · an't win 'em all. \Ve took t11e ham and g:ra\'' for 20 rear ' hile :\ R publican couldn ' t get a drink of " :Her a t tb ' Vhitc Hon . . '\1\'c don' t mind thro" ing •ou ::1 bon one iJ?I a whil '." Willi L If> :>fW'f .· ' th.er. You could ne · er b l.i ve th:u Ei enl1 v r ancl ' tcv ' D on were SHdl bums. They remind d 111 of a hound Cloer wori LJ.lp· a JJJ:'llL". Ev ry tirlile the dog nipped at th.e mules he Ls he du·ckcd back ami duwn. He kt"lt'W a s·tt o of hoof ' were omiJtg his way. H the had deb3ted i ·ues like they did each other all problem w mid h.::.tve be 'n . e ttJed Jor OJJ(~ thousand y ·ar::;. ll i the hi tor ' o,f ouT p ople that in troubled tit~ne s we nu·n to a , Lrong g ncral ratheT than to a ·trong poJidc.ai .H<:>·ure, ' 1\Ta hi11gt:on, Harri.sou, Grant and Jack­sonar€ a [ v.r · xa1npl s . . \!Vithour cohesion, our fl.'J.,i 10i'i­ti~ , (to which all Americans belon9) can ro.ak us th :t-v ake-t nation on earth. Ike has re cived the greatest mandate inc W< shingt n . His gr at st attribu.te is the abilit M get team\,vork and unit . from chaos. You gotta adroit · that '· e R pllblican were a sad sight when he pi ked up the pie es and put us together again. \ ou kn w om thing! J get o en thu ed. writing and di 'Clwing politics that 1 sorner.imes f el the l.Hp-e LO start a carn.pai.o·n for o£fice. l 'd just admire to be so convincing and fluent tl:tat ·I could hold gobs of 1 eople pellbound . hold 'em in the hollow . of my head. P. . v hat: hell eel .Ike most? It wa Mamie's theme song: "Thi· i m, p:tai , an l he aint done me wrong.'' American have always been the gTeate t marksmen in the world . not anymore, 25 million of thetu took pot-shot at an elephant on No e·rnber 4 and rnissecl him clean. Meet the B'Oss • • • By j ack M.ullen On ' aturd.ay rnorniog, November 1, Ch.arle "Pje" · \Vehr, n:igh.t bo" machine tender of the No. 2 Machine Roo.m., concluaed his la. t tour of ·duty, r eliring after a career of 3 years a a Champion papcrmaker. t that lime he wa pre enred with a lighter, a wrist watd and cigarette by the boys with whom he worked. A plaque with a m.es: age o£ .appreciation from the Com· pany b.e has s ·rved . so well w.as given w h itvl by Earl j one , cting Mm , bnage1~. . . ".Pie" made an 1rt1prompru "p e.ed'l in which he sa id, ·'vVeU, boys, e· re had a 10L of good time and a lot of had tim s. I tbr arene l many times to quit, bu.t jLI:sl wuJdn't do it. Tell the rest of the feHow to stick ith Charn.pion- it's a f,'Tand outfit." . Charlie \Vehr had ix years of ,'P 'ri •nc at Lhe Beckett Pape Company befor coming_ to Charnpion on :\1arch J 0, J 914. H e started in tbe No, 2 Machi.J c Rof>l.n and has ne er · ·orked anyw'he e el e. . On ~qJte mb r 15, 1927, he be an rutmir g a p .Q~:. -1 Rolf , to rSut bi1 ba ·k aod r Li vt: hitn of. tb . t pr.1t1 ibility f running. A! old hi~11 . w stiCk :t.vlth ll and t}!l;e l)uld mak ~ rn <W 01,1 t f>.( h ml, nr h. _ could lea. by tl.t d .r )H.! caroL' in. , Charh , :; u with it, an r weut on to h ·corn • a. bn.,~ rnacbine tend :r. This ~ as th rcsull of J l o1J ·, 'il· Oltio .,. G:E E EDWARD ROt-\RK, JR., left. and Robi,n Gail Roark are tl1e clti.ldrcn of Mr. itnd Mrs. Ccnc E. Roark. Their pi ·wr s r ­tai'l'l ly show a •vinning 1 a ir. Gene wol'.k!! in the Calender Room. VE lTE SHERRILL Louise Be iser give . gnu:tdpa Ralph Bei er every rcason" to be proud. Sh e's the daughter of Mr. and M.r. . Dale .Beiser , and her age is 1.4 m on t.hs. ' ' lingness to go along with a man so long as he had faith in himself. Pie has no definite plans for the .future, but one of the J.a.ds in the machine room was heard to remark tlP l , ~:tvd How· rd l (JJ ou·}l~. 29 Oltio . ._ A Well-Traveled Pooch Bv- T ·~es Cobb I. F I{ IE NO WA.LI< f'a 1\i "" ulCOA •r. AJo;tl 015 evii'll€0 tttA (T£ 1:>1! E , AI'I'Mfi\II'H, HM 'li',,._'E'N tiP -" N~W ~08tll N»T£ : Q'B" I<~<{ A ~M C I1' s"'""aw£o 1'>1~ PtN$ • • • T hought for the month . . . The longer we live, the mm '~e come to realize that the Golden Rule, "Do unto o thers . .'' is a Tule-ofthurnb that can be applied to en~ry pha~ e of uc e.sful living. The other da we' read an - article by Shennan Bi llingsley, the o-enial and world-famous host' of the tork Cluh in e'" York. He " as discussing supper club patron in general and giving advice as to how - th e folks hoold approach the problem of poor service and poG>r food. So often, write Shen11an, people merely ''com_plain." In o doing, they thr<?w their hosts on the defensive, and even though the mistake is corrected there is sel­dom a feeling of mutual atisfaction. How much better it would be, he goes on, if the guests would "confer" with ,rhe head waiter about the problem. Invariably, Lhe discussion will lead to a ol~ttion on the part of the host and a mutual fee lin_g· of goodwill. \V were struck by the contrast bel ween the words "'complain" and '' onfer" and how perfectly they fit the text of the Golden Rule. To "complain" is to state on ly one side o( the problem. our s1de, and blindly shu>~: our:;>elves off from any oth er pojnt of view. To "con.fer" i') to open ttl windows of our m.i!'lcl to both sides of a pn)bl-cm and r ·ach a solution in the light of discu:,sion. H.ow much better 1\.fould be our r elatiot lt> with on an ther if we always "confencd,'' never ··complain ed''? To show y()u hew a mer<.; clog an get '' tq> in [[l " 'o dd" as w<:::ll as '"gcr abf)~lt," f'd Jike lo l. ·ll you al (H,j.l Lucky, a fox l n i r <JW I}I;;d by c ~t l) i Coat't; 1k> I(' Schroth and his wife Margie. L11cky n t ot ly ha ~> be)· m 11 l ·d, with a sol t down tick Lo bc,ot, hvt u-pon ari -,i ng in th morn i.ng he in.­sisu; on h aviD,g uothiJJg b-ut WIH~'tti es ior bea kla~t. ·'§ wtts m ~ntj on ·d pl'C iously in 'lhr LOU, the Sch,rotb t rie'l· i , a w Jl -t rd.v(· le:.d y1HWg ~a L Sb ' h ~t s been in 26 sta w.s and Manitoba1 Can itch _ She !J ilt:. s0 ·n tlte AthunL.c Ocean as w ·11 a. all (i e C 1 <Zit Lake~ . She hat> w:;tded in 1)1 GuH of M x iro u l h <11j · drink ftoHl the Niagara R.iveL curdinR to t1 c.;, 8 hrGJllu;, .Lucky's only coJ 1plr~int about trave hn.g i a roo~ read d.ict t)f hamburgers. 30 And w1 ~ n th y di us. next year' trip n k for 1.11g stion 'r h j u t v·t vn and . ttks down in he pi11cnv aud • )'S. ".f-In: hum, you just y wh n and twre nd l'H b th r ;• • 11' • • ~uffing the d 11t,;1s • •. When r po ting . n the br m c 11 ge boy · who work •d un the rewinders last · lllh~ntr . "' e ove~ lo k d young Eddie 1\lloritz, Jr. . . . Ed lte w1U ~ - Ius Ph. D. (rorn ·vvi :comin :rh:is coming .I un . . . I h ra • o s ate runnmg aga.m, and the b >y who s nd .the nights with dogs, pi 'tol ·, and Ian, terns a1· re1 ottmg me h 'a vy ca tche . . . At the I> sent wri t0g, 1 u ~oods~an de luxe . L(JU Hollid y a.· a total f 28 to h1s redtt ·. . . Lou is hunting this y ar v ithout his son H arold, who i a Veterinary S hoot fre hman a~ th_e University of Washington in Seattle. . Congratuiatwm to George Grafft, who has joined th benedi ts by marrying a lovely Hanl.ilton · girl, Jo ephine Puma . Arnong other things, even Mile has acquired anoth er fan, and ir looks as though George will really have something to cheer about this winter . The Panthers could go all the way to the State Class B cha~pionship . At last we've acquired a youngster w1th a chest comparable to iliat o( the bi bully boy, Jack Gillum . His name i Herschel Deaton, a 195-pound six-footer who is built like the Ro k. a£ Gibraltar, and he spends his Friday evening playing basketball with the Mechanical team in the Mill League. vVelcome to our new inspector, Garrett Woedl, bro­ther of the \1\T.ilson Junior High football coach, Al \1\1 oecll . ·. . Speaking of in. pee tors and the irrepressible Don Jenkins- there is only one thing that will side­. track Don from talking about Ca t Coat defect , a Text Mite ren Hunter Library Digital Collections (Western Carolina University) Alf ENVELOPE(-86.117,-86.117,-77.917,-77.917) Almo ENVELOPE(15.306,15.306,66.954,66.954) Ari ENVELOPE(147.813,147.813,59.810,59.810) Awl ENVELOPE(-60.633,-60.633,-63.867,-63.867) Baldwin ENVELOPE(163.300,163.300,-72.250,-72.250) Brann ENVELOPE(17.031,17.031,68.850,68.850) Byrd Coman ENVELOPE(-64.296,-64.296,-73.818,-73.818) Crouch ENVELOPE(-69.067,-69.067,-67.683,-67.683) Dee ENVELOPE(-59.767,-59.767,-62.433,-62.433) Dy ENVELOPE(11.369,11.369,64.834,64.834) Fanning ENVELOPE(-60.632,-60.632,-72.404,-72.404) Fid ENVELOPE(-65.939,-65.939,-68.664,-68.664) Flop ENVELOPE(-56.753,-56.753,-61.028,-61.028) Hani ENVELOPE(-20.331,-20.331,63.441,63.441) Hilton ENVELOPE(-61.333,-61.333,-72.000,-72.000) Indian Kane ENVELOPE(-63.038,-63.038,-73.952,-73.952) Lent ENVELOPE(-66.783,-66.783,-66.867,-66.867) Mak ENVELOPE(162.381,162.381,56.401,56.401) Maude ENVELOPE(168.417,168.417,-83.150,-83.150) Nev ENVELOPE(-6.623,-6.623,62.108,62.108) Orne ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-64.633,-64.633) Paren’ ENVELOPE(163.156,163.156,62.416,62.416) Patience ENVELOPE(-68.933,-68.933,-67.750,-67.750) Pyramid ENVELOPE(157.300,157.300,-81.333,-81.333) Pyramid The ENVELOPE(163.500,163.500,-78.350,-78.350) Rho ENVELOPE(-63.000,-63.000,-64.300,-64.300) Roa ENVELOPE(14.869,14.869,68.446,68.446) Sav’ ENVELOPE(156.400,156.400,68.817,68.817) Sheffield Shennan ENVELOPE(65.567,65.567,-70.233,-70.233) Sion ENVELOPE(13.758,13.758,66.844,66.844) Stanton ENVELOPE(-128.689,-128.689,69.800,69.800) The ''Y'' ENVELOPE(-112.453,-112.453,57.591,57.591) Ure ENVELOPE(13.733,13.733,68.100,68.100) Vay ENVELOPE(-62.600,-62.600,-62.267,-62.267)