Description
Summary: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. • • • AUGUST·l952 THE EDITORS L t m nth we quot i a k of tbt· \ OlupHn nt' wr r ' t i · d a ·ult ol a n·('('nt lll<Hhn1• li't rl\t k·up. ' p11t 1.· wtll Wlt { tlr it u . to p ·int ~ll of h " k,in t r m;n k ' I onr rh OG, Ut h I L are a f w lUG : "'ou lQ a J'H rcmfiem j.oJ l f ) r.tt .fer !~ U dt a t t l'• }tm~ em rp,·i e, ant1 laurel.' to ~- m fm ·U nc it tl tt phuwmg • lHt ~rfon11;;UlH'," - • hk r.tigg. H iHh Poult, t • C. ''TJ e G i:. an L' • .:clknt lu!JJi, ·t~ ion I j u · tandarrl ·11 Hmp ri:< n.''- '\'inumt . . \\•at r. ·· liter, .·vuth ·'I r J>ulp ~ PojJer .:i1a1 11 ·(lt twe1, .r\tla1 t., · ,.;~_ · ··1 wi b t~ c lJ' ,. ~ my he~t t.h nL r,)r Lh ·~ ·ic.:w nll1· Lnc: R"' r e inlo t 1e hum, t\ 1 ;!arion· a1 Champ.i n." -- J. L .l r . \.A'In ul.ting ~ u ir - T. Zurich. "I Jwtttdn"t likt? t ( mi~s this lk Chad R. M •tller, Publi nu ~ rnwnlwldt. mauui-n "~ ltd· fion Cnn:-. d tant, '1'id rw, viuerl nJ. "\ours iii. a Hl< t e. lJ m hou c >rg:ut. '' - G. J' . Saxon. 'wt k­h~ t 1.1 Branch Y, iG\. B.irmin Jwm, .\la. ··:ur cnjo · rcadino Th LOG. Jongrt.ttulation on a wel l j 1b.''- E. Dutd er, Sa et. E ·i11e r, Piouc r Divi ion , T he l7lint-k )ll: ~.>., Lc - Ang . t , Calii. "I Lhink ·ow· LOG is reall outstanding." - H. F. Wrei<.lt, \ '\'a hit ton, D. C. "I like it n~J: much. \Ve use it a lot!' - f.lbhdg-e Colb , Dc­pa. rtment f Journali r:n. creorg \ Va.shington Univ rsiry, \l\7as hing­ton. D. C. "It' afwa ·. a pJ a ·ure to how my LOG to sev~ra l customers." - H cnva.rd Cars.-on. Th. e ·whitaker Paper Co., Atla n ta, Ga. . " he LOG i widely read by patient and . myself." - ·Dr. \1\l'iJ. liam E. '.mith, Hamilton Ohio. . . The Champion Paper and Fibre Company G~ne-ra1 Offkes • . . HAMit:r.ON, OHIO • Mi./1• at . . HAMILTOtol , QHHl> e CANT·ON, ~O.IITH CAI!Olf.Nt. e HOUStON, T£XA5 • SANOf RSVIUE, GEORGIA fdltor, STEWART JONES 6r:t)iorlol .Advi,on, lt. 8. ROSI;RTSON, JR. D. J. THOMSON CAL S KIL ~MAN · . AMILfON- OI'Vi-sion Editor, Stc:mt~n " 'Bud" Newkirk J(oe Hki'Uit., w,.,,f!)' (;o llb, JHCI\. ~hJI I I' II , J>o rorh l'llf,j'h , Otto R (•[cl , ~·ht: Ru~l k ~, f_,. ·of'~; · ';tdncr, )'.ill J ho1upco.o 11. C'ANTON- bfvlfiO.n Editor, Jqmu Oeoton ·l'wtl Ull l l)n. J.Hd t i ~HMl ll 1 Ol )d • J;l ;lllrldt , !) dr K . ll l1C~ , Jt . \·\ :~ l t.e l IJ•Jitrm , l~1 nt t Nfr .,.~•·o~., H1un• '\!1!1nH· ·, J. I•. WH! i;tl'tlS.HL ' H(i.i)USTON - l;liv:ision Edito(, Vern Deloploln .S>ln1 J: lli., h( d Fur11c ~. ihkll'c (;u~ ll y. SPECIAl REPOR-TfiiS Clad )' M u r it' l IL llodge:>i . r.;!l 11d(~ 1 w il It- · !Je ll, (:;• · r o t·, ~ l U l lin·. If' • OU R C 0 V E R 1"he August ''dug rf· y •· are ttp•;~u u.s and w.dl can we ~rov" tb. • porcly genrlern:m ta1dn~ .hi'> ease b<:nealh th(: ~!'!· Gl tree o 1 vuf! cover. .Yto1•e of us mighl follow h i;; ex<WJple- icf nn lr dle­htubs around the boo ct':! a ljHI;e higher: Crt t r of thi original LOG i D n-. rat if, n ill Dustf Rhoades. ChlCinmai. Ohttt l n k(: ·pi t l{ 11·• iil1, ( ' h am p ic 11 (t,n•:<fn P' :tnk1·.: . tl\i -; 'lt l'l tlth l t n ·~· i ~ " t;tg-1.1-c·ll" to bt.• lt·f1 ,.f.1 tt d ing LC\ ~pr ad Sl '(•d r(tl ll l ( f nr:d n•l t llT~ ! n l ~O ii . ~rioted In U.S.A, VOl. XXXV NO. 8 I What is a Shut Down? Hou ·wn has an answer. Lik. the fable of the blind men Tnd Lhe lephanL, it aU d p nds on ho you " e " it. To one Pulp Mill operator it may mean mu h : a new pi c of egujpment that h lps efficienc · ncl product qualit ·· replacement of a u·ouble om pump; elimination of a line pre ure los alteration of a flow sy tem to open up a boulencck; a gener al clean -up that " clea rs the decks·' for a relatively long and trouble-free opera ting ch edule. To another operator it may mean little except a l 'mporar chano·e of d \,ttie while the shut down lasts. 'here rna ' have b en a p esky leaking val ve or two that needed fixing but other·w.ise, his equipment was stil1 running moderately ·well. Operators handle most of the clean-up wo rk. T hey HlC.ESJ"EI S ARE T H()ROU flLY CH E ;KED and vcrhaul d dmin~ th shut down. T qublc h r rne.a11-; lO"t prodm ti on. 0pf;r ­: ll CJ1 0 . I . (,,,,, i~ sh01111 dca11ing the !tol :; i11 Lh • cir u l <.~t i11 ~ h~md n ar the wi1~dle of , 'o, j Dioc.,rcr. I :-. T H W O< l Y .\ 10 >, '' 1 <']J'' '' jul > vn a b<:p ti ng dt q~1 iJ., on • o{ tlJ big 1 ~ k. onJ.lih·<l ft>r this »hut dtJ\1 •1. Millwri •h1 ·tifhlid Carl Jll >UJPn i · ·-. .the loh erinR of tl te 1h-tnn a. \I'Cx:d f1i:l11Lllcr~ ' P.ozk J · nkin ~. I fL anJ \\'i llic ( h<wdn- rl>, tcrlf•-r, at.tl ithJJ cwr ugu~ t ar , opera£ £he j r J. E. Simp on shows his skill with the brush. ' PR E-SHUT DO·W'N CONfER­ENCE (left) of upervisors an,d tech nical men determines job to be done and coord i nales tbc work. Around the table: Ralph Joh nso n, . rlie h1Httners, E. G. Smiih , \\la n R h .in ~o n , Momo' Griffin , J. K. K, irkp qtti l' • 1 web .\' in crnn1.ped qu :m·e~-. in t h · Illig b iJ r s. l.tm . ·1. V. :Pa •ne , f 'ft. · ml V u~ Ro;s. .:t r:a.n th boi l("r ttll whiJ.e fi1 m n J l1\. ' math h l'ks t il t lila iLion of tuh ~,. l· 2. t: ~: 7· #5 ~mel t;.er Repairs ror Qper~tors !ll'a1n t.1ael< li 'll"''r from flY ash tank and re-fi 11 with water. C:tooe, gas valve on gao line neador goil\S to gao burners. Clee.n boiler. CClleeea.nn bouret eecansincagd bee. tween cascades and I. D. ran. Wash fail tMroughl1 whl.l• burning down unit with gas . Inspect and eleon, if necessal'1, 1· D. fan secti on of s t a ck 8. above ~an flat section of staol< and bOttom of main stack· Barore rl.ring ll.P remove ash awoy rrom parts and dumP ash er.no Js.:pu et i eotn afnrdo mc 1f•l ayn .as1hf tn aet clke s• sal'1 , primacy air ducts. Cleln out 10" equalizing lin• bot•een #') precipitator aCnlde awn ebs·tO. idl~erP atoa nmku•c h a• going do'lffi to a asb and smelt. to .go Check to .# · P· ART OF A PA· GE. fro ·h lS shown above ~ m l . e Pulp Mill ·h is brief, but it .tak~:ny_ routine _jobs are n~ t~s~own work chedule to make up this scl~ej~1 te. agcs JU-~t to li st the 'J-~,~ -anodp er~t ae towros rhdeinlpg aWlwAa yHs E.R lR Od OM, . shu t dO\In me u cs a th dcaning of the . orough He - -- . entIre svsteru ·h I e Operator Manu1;1 i Ve . c ·CT lakes , n in ._ r ­from a blo . . · ~ct10n plate ~.~ d ' tank to get · e and inspect l l1 e agH- atoJ.rlsl-. - · STI .rzr , G I . 'aB nrner H . k · . • tt1 c 00· er l:-la 11 inserts liq<r~eo ," "Let\ go . . . " has bccorw;.' I he byword or Alll ·r1cn. J t· ha-,n ' t been lt)() ma11 'l:• r.~ ag-1 Lllat· the home wa. th ~cntt· r of all iamll • acLivilics. ()u 1110-t.h . s . nd gra nurnotb · ~ talk of 1 LH; 1 old winte1 e 1 ·ning., sittin g· n -t,und tl . fin ·: Lltc pop. orn, bnnW· IH:t-d<: w·rqwjuil e, na ltllttlll' l' nigbh, be lmy i·vith tlw . n ·nt or ~\\'Cl ' t dtn'CI' in tl l' robably clone years befo:rc. :From g ·n ,rati0n to gtnera lion and from oJd time fiddl Ts lik.c LowelJ Stokes am.l Riley Pl:t t.kc tt, th · e Am ri an fnlk­~ o.nt:;s ha vc staycJ a1 i v . Dvvigi.H Riley, macbin " Lt n ler n No. ~. i~; arwllt ·r who J'~ ic:ks out rhe oJd on ~ on. a 11 Ste Hri ng banjo. Dwi lu brok a strir g tuning up, but "'e ,<;tu -k QtOlct.nd to ltea r him fini:J) pichng out tit swry o.f. ''Old John Helu·y. the s.t. 1 dri v in· man." - John H enry, ~) the story g Jes, w~s h-ug· ja _k -ha.n~rrt r man wllC> work ~d hfru sdf to d<;ath whil r tunneling 1h.r0uJ;fh a mountain. Thos · wer · 1hc day!!> wht•t:J. · th(; · rajlroads w ·.re firsl ~trt: r hul a -ross th.e we-stern 1 laios and J'rt utHain . Dwight pi. ·ked ouc s ·vcral ~quaro dane~ LUJICII, lik~ "Gri ppi ~ Cn:ek'' and "Cuntb :rlapd Gap.'' • -· • ·' • "Deacon" Begley knows some of the old ones too. · He picked and sang them on his guitar just as th. y had been. played down in Grey I-:lawk, Ky., many years ago . Dea 'Gil played his favorite (or u , "Pb iJippi.no Bab /' an.d then his . Ltitar took OJJ a d.iffer nt tone as he ang "\t\fandering Boy." Jt was the tory of a bo ' w.h.o had left hi.s l'Lome in the mountains with·'_ . . no one co guide him." The yea m:ing · o.t a mother for her ~on was c:c.:ho ' cl rn th • wo.tdS '~0tt t in th · Hallwa ' Stands a Va 11 th · more than J !50 gu 'S t~ reprcst:ntiJW ~uau, o( th sou th ern sta t u· L k Logan ha.s long been n.'COfp'lized as a p la<.e where nne can take r fu rre from a rel entless sumrn r sun. Cool bttezes alway~ app a l. to the guc ts, and this J une wa · no exce ption. Fac d with the hotte t weather ever •xperien ced in t} is ar .a in J un . the gue ' ts found ev "ry thi ng to their likinu - ool nights and fJJeuy of ttp) etizing Eood . \IVood procuren1ent m n a nd Forest rs frorn Virginia, Tenne .~c·e, Georgia, and North and So uth Carolina gather d th. r to ha:ve fun and (rolic aro und . \ t\Th en the Tennessee delegation vis ited. Lake Logan J une 26 they brought their wives and children along .for an oveLnigh t party. T h ese Tennessee shippers loeked over Champion's mill and were luncheon gues ts of Champion in the plant cafeteria. These shi ppe:r:s furnish Champion a lot of wood. They h ave b ·en doing this for many years. Many of their sons are following in their clad's footsteps, and are doing a good job of it. C:HAi\·1PION'S H OUSTON DIVISION was repre· senred by Ca rl H ilton , cen ter, who is in cl1arge of wood procurement there, and George Powell, his a. •istant, rlgh t. They are sh own Wi t h H . L. "Dick" Seuer, coordinator of Canton 's shipp er -to·.::hipper v ood flow. I I H. E. BRl NCKERHOfF, left. uecutive ec­re rar · of the American P nlpwood Assoch­tion , "dropp d e,·er ·thin " to attend th annual part ·. H is pict nred wi th Ed A he, of the North Ca rol ina :r ~ll p Company, V!y­mou th, N. C. ' TROOP '11 F'ASA DENt I . Boys of Pa s ~dena ' s Troop 91 prove their merit by winning top honors in com p.e t ition with other campers c HA ,\LPJ , -. PONSORED Scout Tro<;>p 91 wa lked off with t\~·o top honors during th eir w ~e k' amping trip at Camp Strake in June. The troop rec ·ived the PioDeer ward and Scout 'Master Ju ·tin T ha) er was nomina1ed for J:ltembeJ"hip in the Order of the Arrow. Although the tr op ha had only on " year of training since its r e­organ i:za tion last year, it won · a top C C:HAIR.ME ' me' l tli th T11m }ef rey. cunkr nt 1~ dr r, n> • dis.cu ~s rg::wizatiuu detai Js. Shown _ !rom l fr to rigb t a roln,J rite rab'le att·: Gorge Hill. Clcrut ribb, 'I orn ,Jeffrv ·, Gc ~ ~ · tilk~. Hamid (H.tnk • nd Ralph Da\·i~. &eeent poli< ' di;· us ion hav i11 hJCled VUotii• n~. (! i_sci plin::n') :tNion and planr vhtzr tions. 8 I SUPERV J.~DR JlM '\·VT T tn, ke · w ~l f his aun11. 1 to J(l 1\CI' L t jll C~i i 111 involvltH~· cornp,i~ ny pt~l.iC"y. \\'iH ~ :J rn · ~tib r of .n of the confe1·cn e gr }tlp h 1 ping with th j b of compiling rl e m n.u 1. ' S 1)ER.VT ORY CONFERENCE GROUPS at the Houston Division . re bta:) n(')K wi lh an assignment to help formulate and crysta lize poTici-s a nd. procedure at this Divi ·ion . Each group includes ap- . -- p roximately 20 upervisor , and each elects its own chairman . Ralph Davis i the chairman of this group. The re pective chair­men ca ll regula1· monthly meetings. Houston Supervisory Conference Groups in Monthly Sessions C A.-"1 CATJONS be accumulated? If you must be absent from r "gularly s h ed ulcd w ,rk, what is the proper procedur for reporLi.ng? What is the minimum age for youngsters visiting the mill? These <l ue<;tions a ncl dozen, of other ques­tions along the same line, both large and smalt arc b ing discu sed by th Houston Divi ·ion Super isf rs' Conferen ce Groups. They are working to get a fair ansv.rer for each question. Those answers are helping to larify company 1 c:.>l ic , the "rul s of the game" for a company. Through these onfercn ·es, the Policy Ad­\' isor Commitl ·e (top manage1.uent memb rs of th.e Houston Di vi sion) utilize · the ski ll a n J. ex pe1 it:n · 1i Ll1t <:n.t if' mana~emcn t group . AL tbe -same time the supervisor. ar · digging deeper jnw Lhc policies whi ·!) ar' llPir respon­sibilit to administer. After formal approval, the poli ci s ar mim­eographed aml distributed to all aper i or . The supervisors keep the~u in personal ring binders which were given to them to be u eel as policy manuals. 1: he polic manual •;vill provide an wers to pollc C{uestion . If the sopervisor keeps hi manual hand ', hen e l not r ely on guesswork or a faculty m m.or . The r~ ult should be more uniformity and fairness in policy admi1 i. ·rration. T h ree g OCJ'al policy questions- va arion ', disciplinary action and 1lant vi it.ation, - al ­ready have b een di~: c u s · d by the upervisor 1 Conference Grcn.tps. Each o[ th fi e group ' JflCets on e a month and th l1ave work d out lhcir own scbedu l for ousidcration. o[ poli ·~y q·ucst.ions. H the ti.tnc they fini b this task, Lh ·y " .ill tmd.ou bte ll r h;:1 v <mother quail import'lllt i , ue awaitjng attention. • 9 \YE R A~ I. 70 JOE Mr: t: EJ::, . N . l l achine Room. while we were at \V lf Cre k. :tar nee Ste hnan. on the J [l. holds up a string J( fish that Joe prObed ly aught. t KIPPER ELMER W. RRE , ppl ie~< hi' na utical kno leclge l tl e motor d utin lull . 111bil tl r.rew t:<kes it ea,,-. T hat's th oew Fi"h ing Creek Bridge in the bad;.ground. ans AT ' - •·rt HT I.' LlVl ",'' ·:H~ Bun \Vinvr hulter (belm.t') 'o n lh IJ01 of th . •·_s. n ~he ., \\ hi! ~ nc(~ under f t1ll aH. COFFEE [or the c t·e~ . : Cla ren ee -teelma11 hoi .~ th e "joe-pot," ,,. hi I e chief c0ek and t>ottle­wa her \V in t e r h a 1 1 e r starts meal -tir:ne prepa­ration . WOLF CREEK !>clv · t.horOtlghly. \virH> rnip:g and fishing dur ing lulh. And tl1e "Ban :she " carri es a motor ·o th a t '"' could get -.1mm~ cl. wJ·n l or 11@ wind. Camping ont" as ::~. loL of fun. too. """' ooked e,-- fY nF·aJ a nd ate sum · wi th no appare.nt ill cJf-f _ ·t ·. T he fresh b~ss we cau ~rh t w r a ' d('(>n't · treat, b licv me;. Jnci­c: l ntally, amp i:ng f~1 il.it.ie ar fi.He. T he lan.d i govern­m ·'J1t m ned aul pi nt of ca nt rlsile$ ttre ava ilah l . A ter rc t d in ~ pumphl ·ts . aud fold -rs bt ut \1\.'oH Creek 11 wintrr, v:c found that it w~ts r all ' fu1t Lo s tll · p ldes w«.:'d read ab u t. T l.1 ''Uanshe ·· took us to rh . hngc datn bdow J u~m ·.rown, and we vi. ited L esf rd Dock, J :t.mestown Dock, Pumpkin Cr ek, and the l3 un t­::. idt· D(Kk,. fak uur 'h'0·Hl for it bo}. \•Volf Greek i'i a vvond r~ ful place! \'\'EARl e • .tUG MILES, these f iye Feminine members of: th 10-)ear group Slrtl k an informa l po-e h efo~<e the dinner ho11r. LetL to right :n Geneva H • le. Ro·wcna Morris. lfary Robe r$011. and ister, Florence Swanger, and Virgiuia Hill. PROGR. M \'\'. . BRJEF and w the point, and these tbree Chatttpio.Fls pl ayed Leading roJes. Left LO right are Morris \litchell . · ' tllities Departmlj!nt, H. A. Held·er, Canton Division mar~ager and Dwi"'ht J. Thomson, vice-president aod direcun of General lnclu -tria l and Public RelaLion. PARTY l\H~ '\IBLRS (''€Ire thnrvttghl ~ pi a~>ed "' ith lh nt •ni-J111 - 111Cllt fl.lruioh d by • nr1 J i!.l!UO , Louisv ille, K} ., 'l'lltri lilqui l . • - ear Attracts 200 guests at Canton D zsr•ITE ,, 92-m~CRI-:'E tempera Lure, the more th an 200 g uests attending the twelfth annual m.ecting o f 10-year Canto·n Champions at Camp Hope June 19 had a BIG time; Appetites tor a fried <::h icken dinner wer2 whetted by an a(Lernoon program of recreation including sohba11, shu(fleboard, horseshoe pitching, bingo and table tennis. Reuben B. Robertson , Jr., Champion's president, was principal speaker. A majority oi the 165 incoming members h eard H. A. Helder, Canwn Division manager, welcome them into the 10-year group. Morris Mitchell, Utilities D partment, responded. Dwigl1t J. Thorn on, vice-p resident and directar oL General Industrial and Public R ela tions, presided. Norrna J a rboe Loui viU e, Ky. popular ventriloquist, furn is b ed afte r dinner en tenainment. . rft~n · oJ Uw appL4l ' itltll ·1 wer • bttf tiflg with l::tught r : • • 2Ut} .hampiow att mting th.e parry ''b.eq thi pi t!Ul' was stu~ppl'fd. 11 . .\ LOST llOY p1 . ented . problem for Production ?lfana ­ger Ste' e Chase. he boy sajd hi~ name was Bobby :\olan. It W:lS. Only he neglected to say his rut] Ham u as Bobb: ''obn Allen. ReTe his mother. Mr . R alph .\l!en muk«.>. the intToduction furrna l a~ Larry JOe \VHt h s. TWO UNLUCKY NUMBERS add up to one lu cky number each for H. F. Neal and V. ]. John on. Bot.h guessed 1,313 as U1e number of beans in the jar. The a<:tual mnnber was 1,327. Duplicate prizes (toasters) were awarded. -· EATING A H T t>OG off a u-ing wiUuwc tdng ;our hands ;~ a tri~k · procCS tJ1 " lt.! Tirners" trJpp d off t-h ir aft rnoon o( fun ·wi.th a tt tbe bar l ccu d~c:.:y 4-ouJd eat. ,\ T A'I3LE L0.\1:) O'F l'RfJ: 'S (left) made Lhe Hinoo Carne ::t f::tloriLc­atu ·aclion for t b ' "Old 1 imcrs· ., ~ · i.\ •·. t·•nu::LicaJ.I cveqcme \dro p~· r ­tl ·ipated n1anaged to Wa lk :JW~t }' with a price. WAS IT THE REO "HAIR'" or the "Come Hi ther" ~rnile lhat ,,·on the ma le beaut coute t ~ /;e lmo) for Martin Ca,eoe~i l\ J;lStcr o( cercntOnieo OtLo Wager caU · for a nother r01md of t•p pliwse so J u.d.ges A. M. Kouq. W. R. Cru te and I. D. W U· (lefl to right, foreground) can make Lbe decision. ontestants, left Lo riglH, Henm~n tile ·, Lee Do1·art. ca, enc:.r. and B. J. Pa trick . T HIS IS A CASE (belotu) o£ eati ng your pie and having it. too. All of the· boys got pl'ize and t.he win ner of this pie eating contest collected . . an ex t.ra prue. • A llALLOON nL0\-\1 RACE (be!Orl') for boy. Teqtlires . p-ceu and lung power. After th balloons are inflated to lhe r eq uir d diameter. th boys scamper back to the poin t they started hem. l3 ' - , IN SPORTS . IN INDUSTRY IREr £ M'eJ NT Y.lH:, fir t l·oa~tnd-tr · -a1 4 H. 1•1 .11\.t>J ' r:thlp as ll< • tli ~;lt. Po· l·n , C}l~ ))J 11oph ic·;; 1>0 il'tdt idu~d s i'Lll I WatU ;If tnin s. Ch:w.rpto-11 .1'1 ·-i.clnl l Rt· uh~·q l:l, .R oJ ll' r tsu 1-1 • J' ., I 1,1 H k lll t tu Ott u c, ah<l m w r u Jl ri n r. i p ~ l •a.k<!l . ON A w RM .rGHT m June, award we c presented ro the stan of the H amUton Di, i­si. on and Gen eral Office a t the Seventh Annual All-Sport · l3a:nquet. 01,1tstanding in the eye. of their feHow workers wen~ the girl and boy athlete o{ the year, l}nth Knodel and D0-n · chultz. Don Hardebeck · wa · Yoted top ·contributor to Champion· sports during 19":' I. Hand ome trophies were pr'esented to them b ' J ohn Zimmerman, Division Manager. ap Stubh , in turn, presented to · the c mpan, tror hies won by the Green vVavt:. Irene Mcintyre, f.ir·t t('!i'Urni tr , at an Cb·tmpion sports hm tio11, pn~ nt ·'d a group of speakers which prove I to b _ very . .nt r­lainit'lg to th on.H.:: Lhrc · lnmdre'd Chat.nrion sponsnaen . Otto Grah<n11. pas ·.ing sp ' ci, list a-nd quar­l~' r back for the C1e \ eJnnd Brown {'>'ro fo tball team, w ·t~ rbc prindp. I sp aR.t,:.r. .F-lc .»tr.e ·~ •d f1ow ~tthl ' tics iFd'lu e<nce t amwork in un i l~­tlu, t.r':ia I (:on cern. fn agn.'tlllenL with ''AllLOrfla ti · Otro's'· cnn­cc:' l t wa Reuben B. R.ob rt~n ll . J r ., Ch«tn· pion'::; prcsi<lt:nt, :-;peakin l ' Oil kf:W subj t rt of "Sports 'f1·on1 M ~t.n agelllcnt' , \ ' it wpui.nt :· lVJa Lawtc•tH'e ttt kl' soFt hall co n,nli.%itlt l(:'r, pnLf•d thr to: port ' JH ;;u.t.like c(HHht t olt b .-r · n \Vavt:, lwfon ' he n:tm ·d Churl s ··Cttp" Stuhb ttmn agt· r· of t·he El52 Ohio r\ 11-Star , nl'tbaH tvan.1. fr. Lawn•nct· ·tlsn nanw 1 H avt• rtt v lll 11( '1:-., Bill Lhmlap, \\ ~HI "Dn11b lr - 'u+Jit" Faltllill, ClareJHc ··.Fat" ThLl lllil , , uud (, 'urgt' Young- as tn_Clnht-Ts nl Ohio's A!I .Sutte lt :uu l.or J 95 I. H :n ·irk P<d"n, Prl''\ iden.l ol CEAA, p1· - s :Jltc ·d i\war<J~ fn tii OJ<' Lh n at work, Lo~ge<l omt ifr safely cluthin!$-. I -• • } • Champion mechanics know . . and prove --- • • • PICTURED ABOVE are, B'ud • le<K­A. oder, Bin Cupps, Charles '"'hit and John Alder, all Boiler Plant men. that the best safety device is a safe worker ' - By G em·rre leiner· EvER v SPR1 1G th rc ~ a house-cleaning job dolle in Hamilwn' Boiler Plant that pl.lt<> 110w l if , ioto the throbbing ancrjes of Champion machiu . After runnin almosl (Hltinuou ly for 50 w cks out of the year, ro. 10 Boiler is shllt do•,vn for compl i in pection a.nc'l repair . . T he bo ilc·r is a 2 700 H.l'. writ, c p -rating; at 620 pound. press ure p r square in eh and ·. 750 degrees Fah rcnh ·it. Little wonder that tn n. rnust wo·rk 24- hours a day for two weeks to ''house-dean" No. 10! Wh:ik she'. rlown. auxi liary boil r do the job. The best safety device lS a saf workt:r - the amwal boiler shut-down ertainl y pr ves it. Hard hat and sa:fcty sit es wer ' ·in evidence while wo.rk w ecam the 8Cene for the (irsr major "shooting" in ChaJlpion's produ ing of tl r " new all -color movi ·s. tarti' g the initial fi])Jling in telling 'hampj n \ forel>try s tory, th . cnrn1 any's indwHri~d -connnunity . ·Ia· lions a d p aper rnakjng .,tori s will I, filmed siruul· rUJ eou'> l )' on lo ·ations at S-aud -r.,v iJI ·, Canton, Hamilto.11, I iiU Ston and Wilding Prod tu.;tio'll s' ( ;J, i( ago " tudin~ . ' ' n t· ti d y, tlre Eon4 ">t y s1or will ( arry thr lit I ' o l " l 'P Roots." 'J he indu ~ IJ . ia l-co mnlllnity J ~ lation s pirtur has b . ·t itlcd "Cood Busin , ." r' vi5< d : nd rrwder.o ited v ·nion of Cham pi . n 's only filtn t.o d, tc. "Pap ·r Com ·s lo Uf ·," will IJ<· t.itkd " l'ap r w., k.'' In · s ll(C, "De p Hoot !l", writ t.P il by S;.tflt Jk:dl. ckpi l.s tbc 'ltor y ot C hampi on ·~ fiJte 'l ll )' pra liu ·~. roliries and timhcdaJ d lll ;;l llag ' H)CllL "U J()d Bu inci>s", wriu ·n _b}1 John .o~v ., _,por~, i5 ,a story ol Chan1pi~n :~nd hampwns parunpa.uon JJI ChaulFHC>ll ( tJllm.tulnLy lrf •. "Pap r \t\fork," writt e11 hy Mr. B ·aU, d ·al<> with tit · rontan e of pap ·1· n1aki1Jg-. · 16 Fr llnw ing th . filn1ing of :1 { w ,( ·n · in \\' ild.inf;;_'·· ChiGtgn tud ios, bri er '' t::tk '{ . w re m. d ill the Grt':lt Smoky Mountai.ns lwfor the for st.r l i tl1r "s'l.1ooting'· got und •rw ·r ·in Smrth Carolin nth f Aug-mt , with ll11ntsv ill<: and 1-hll.t ·ton cPrniug into focus lm ing- Scptcmbt:r. T hen >111 ''l I inal st an'(: W(.)rk. in l h • pt'od11c Ts .hie. go ::. lucli s anLl :tnt iripa • I n· l :ill'>(' of the tht"C l'iltns some t:inh· in , arlv l!F '. I ctmtl " hoo1i11g" thne for llw ··ntir ' tlw ·t'·t >i nt prngram b •s t.itna t(·tl nt fi,.e lll<lJtLI 'h~ - be:ginninJ in eat! ' Jt.HH' and liui•dting ~nnt lillie' in O r lnl tr, · villt pm( ,~o. i.ona l ~• c tor'i u rst i.n k :ul role · ami n nmllb 't r 'h:.uopitlll: <;t lH;'t.ltded JrH.· s 1pporting V" ts ;u; r Ia ted w the jobs the nct.tt~dl l l'l'lorm. Premk r 11howi ng'> arc pl.tnJivd in a ll Cltampit tl < m nlllnitic<;, alrcr which all tlrre filnts will h • rnadc a, ai l. able to publ.ir and pdval 'g roup:-, throng hot1t rlt couuu· , r SL · T I:-\G T HE T UAL "TA KE,'' Champion Forester Lee Smallw od ~erve momentaril as a slate man. s­si tam \ \' ilding Camet·aman ;Pat Burke j . shown on the extreme right. Prior ro each " lake," the sla te i . p hoto­gri'\ phed for recoxd put'p oses - giving complete identifi­crHion to the scene !)eing " hoL" ·La ter in vVil d ing'· Ch i ca~o studios, the film is pieced togetl1er. l .~ ] .rE. F'QJ'E T JNT'rE". 1 R D ' G 1 . " ' f '). _ ' L "'- • • Hector · fa)Iil 0 11 ca n1era · Tames a ~-ped fi c sceoe. Standi-ng in rhe Coregrou nd - Bob Coleman, m::J nager of Gt1ampion ' Fa.i1·field Forest J>mdu ct~ office in Newberry. S. C.; Lee Small wQod, a Charnpiun Corcster a11d ted lll ical rep resen ta t ive of til ~ ~oJnpa n y in t he p1·oduct ion of the n •w fi lm; Cla)l H um pb tBy, \ lichng cre~\'nla lt , <lJl I \ ViJ d iJT!{ Came ramlln VCTn Hlakel )'· Thi ~ · · ;,~ c ­tjon '' totJk place 11ear Cl·iJ ton, 8. Q. ·ncn~ FIARRTSQN F RM HOMEST AD is s ·n in this actual fno-dvct ion "sb;ot" with Sa l! a nd j u.dcl HarTi·son playing lead role . A ban dolled s \r>nd ."lUS ago, \·Vilding . :wnwn tee ns.LnKtGel a p0nion o£ t his o. cl Jog ho,rne in t])e bean of .ll<.llllpiot, ' · SmHh. Car6ll na f~ r ·try hoi(Ungs. (lep' ·t ir g the H, rrison l1ome of J9Hl. Lat .r th e kttd 1e1 1-a t:Ho seen on the ex t rero > 1 'h W<'IS tra nst~ l :f l 1ted a t an th r ICJC'a tlQn Lo port ra · a pre;;ent-dlil y $GC I1tt, T HE J lM \ V.'\ LLE;\l'ZINC STOR£, locate l in the heart of' Ch r11npion 's Fores try area 11ear li nton and Newberry, S. C., was the sce ne of pointed filming. H ere, ' Vilcting Productions ct'ewm.en and actors p rep a re for an exterior " take." Wilding, p roducer of many ranking industrial motion pictures, is making all three of Champion 's new color movies, directed by Eel C ra bi ll . . . --" • • • ' A PPR OXJ.MA TELY 40 MEMBERS of the C:uolinas-Virginia Purcha ing Agent · A ociation visited t he Canton Division during their annual com·ention a t Lhe Grove Park Inn , sheville, Jun 13- 14. H all \ hitwo-rth. Canton purcha ing agent w. s host for the m-ill tonr. The visito-rs were l umcheon g·v ests at the Champion Cafetecia , where Divi ion Manager H. A H e:'lder welcomed them. I \ . - VICE COU iSUL OF SWEDEN Ivan Rodberg, fourth from l ft in the photo below, inspects a pu lp ­wood scick at the Housto11 Divi ion during a recent vi i t. Left to righL: I. D. \!\Tells, mill rna rnager; a sistan r Claes lllom, Swedish exchange -tu ­dent; Consul Rodberg; S. L :Swase , assistant LO rhe technical ervi e director; and Jcrq• Mayer, techni­cal director. 18 ' • • ~ - Ll _. . _ . _J_ '--'-·--~ TWO PROL'D FOP are mo' n (abr'JVI'f \·irh rhdr arrracthe dau h1.e1 at ors A, sociatio-n at June meetir<_g, Tho.mson Park. Pictorially Presenting Champion and Champions TOP HO ORS for ex.ce l!enc itl ad er tising wer awarded to hamplon in the D troit rt in everyday happenings Directors' 19.?2 comp Lition. Ex· hibi ted in the LT de paper color p hotograph class, the winning ad was an actu al four-color dem· onstration of the printing per· in and around the Mill. forma nee of cast coa t d KROM I£· C.I 'RLI: \ ROBJ.' 0 1 of lb.e C:wron Divi­\ loJl 'Wood an] is on oi th mo~t acthr n1emb r { th Ifa ,-nod f.oum Hull!i11 and i hin~ Clul.l. ' eu rar~ and uea l.IH:r \in1.e the org Jtjlatiou was for mcd, n obin Mr anu >\1 rs. Jim tcpb n; . on ( tiarnilton Gf rro Yu .\U, r, r ft . tcllc J •tt l • re, LJamilton i\ i ·ion, uve .1 rc.·iLal r<·ccntly t th /ion Bapti t Cl111rdl i 11 L -k land, t 1hio. 1L _ 'ate hold~ a U. J gt" from ' ucinJ,.lti lJ. :'Ill l tudicd i c und r t ri 11 1\ nderson. llct pro 1 am inchlu l : J · tio11s b !{awl .1, Str:lll. · aml :; h uiJ •tl. l\l rs. l .tl ph agg 11 r of llatnill \11 au: mp:tni d her at th pi::tn . 9 • M A·o.l· A:r'fE n1 'G rh annual a.55embl of th Cr::mcl Coun il of Ro a! and Select Ma ·r n of 1orth C m.lina climax d. Lh<:ir dtrec·day onventicm ' ith a t >ur of 'auton CJ1ampion lat 1n June. Jt wa. th fir t trip through J1ampion' plant [or uan~ of th c:<;e 1a ·ons, their wiv ·s and rn ., 1bers of thL'ir I milie . Th y wee i.mpre :cd \\itll 1he magnitude ot the o1 el a­tions, and many lab •l "'d Lhe 'harupion Lnnr '''~'lC o£ the higlt­J. ight" of thcirthree-d,y pr gran) in rhe \Va 'ne.' "ill • an,. The ' kft Champion for <111lp Hope foHo ,•in: rh~._• 111ill 10ur and ·njo d ' t pimi su1 per t ' p.rn. pr ·pared by ·as tern "t.ar Hl<' Jllbt:r . fxom amon, Bethel, A dt: . n:d Wa\' Jl ' ville i . During th ·ir ·ta · jn. tl is area th . v i ~i tcd x;n. n ol .rlte hi"h mounta in p ak and tlH::r . c 'nic attraction:. 20 FULL Of CUROSlTY ( lefl ), 1l1e · Maron ic gur ·t: at Cantnn Cham l'.ljom g-azed in amaz.em<:• t a ~ o. I J l'ape1: }fa ·hin wen t "in tf1e hole" duri.ng their mill low . 'fh y OIN !-rved \'cry move of mac hine rncn a~ they got the pap t " back on the Jed." Thi ~ p ier u1·c wa, snapp d IJetlreen , · o~. J l ami 12 ~ l u r hines. NO. 17 BOARD M \.CH1 ' E ( below) drew the attenlion of these M<L'oni.c ue rs a heaVJ container board passes from the reel ro the wiuders. Guest.· were sho.wn Champion opera ­tions f·rorn the Jack Pine chi - pers to shipping functions . \'lSI"l'ri'\G T I-re FINISH[NG AREA (belou1), 1hese gH'st· l) bscrve fe-atHres poimed out by Gu.ide '\Valter Cvw::.t't of the Che mical Lal oralory staff. O~m H NOREn l~LY.v 7 HousLon Division colored Champions will complete fi v · or more year o[ corHinuou -. laval service • I thi . year, a di tin tion '"'hi h q. .u alified them and their families for the annna l ·'Old Timer'" picnic. A feVI', fo;r various r asons, could not be there. But 'OU wottlcl never have g;ue ·sed that a'ny were nli sing i( you look­ed at the rowd at th Charnpion Recrea­tion Grounds on the da o£ the picnic. Man of the "Old Timers" spent a o-oncl part of their time just watching the children ha ·e fcm. Everv contest for the J '' y()ungsters had a crowd of rooter J urging the contestants on wiLh shou.ts of advice an!l erfcouragement. Winners rc eived the acclaim from adults that every yo-un g­ster values greatly. A softball game, shuffleboard, bingo, horseshoes and numerous competiLive game also kept many of the "Old Timers" themselves ocw pied. By the time the dinner bell rau.g, every­one, young and old, had worked up a good appetite and the "chuck wagon" crew bad to work fast to take care of the long lines of hungry picnickers. SOME PEOPLE at water­melon with a fw-k. Ot1 ers use a spoon. These boys show how the t:xperts handle it - Only beginners u~e their hands! . ' P.ERCY GRAY'S "Torna­does," ' inners of the an­nual softball game. pose for a pjcture. The score, subject to cen rderabJe discu. sion, was some beTe around 18 to 8. Homli! nm hilters coUectecl sil ver doll rs . . \S ffl lLTO. ll VI$10 ' ·•()lJ') Tl ifi>.R •· iC"iH red il't ·their ann tli~ l p i c n i (: t h y w re ,;iv u the opp(Jrttmity ln 1vit1 <1 hug ~ ham. The Los st g 11 " ;1t th - !llllifl ber of b''<lns in lhi~ j."r won th ham. 21 ' . HOT \ •C\. TER (9i:i degr · ') f,·om the condensers flow· through this line into dislri­l ntion tra> on tOp uf the No. l Cooling Tower. From here it f1 ws over hufflc plates to the bottom of the to1wr. Bill Hor•r.ton. ·water Treatment I'lant operfllor, regul tes ~he flow ln this picture. ' The millions of gallons. of water that are re-used at Champion's Houston Division amount to big saving-s in ' . .,.,., • _.,.,., . -- •" ' r m - r.'1' Z' - d~ .-. TH:E \>\'Al; 'R SAV:ED h1 t)l~e!'e ~o cooling rowet. at the He~rt "TKlV Is hown (below) of one of t.he huge;! turbine condensers in the P er Plant. Coeliug water fluws thro ug·h it and condenses rb-e steam that ha · b-e n ~1 - d to tm·n th · ltlctric get~e.rators. The cGndcnsed sueam goes to tl1e boiJe:r . T b-e cooling water goes to tbe cooling towers. Here Operator Earl . Hamrr,~ ons che ~ tbe temperature of the outgoing water. 'lH • .E 12JH : M 1:Arl.S ( II lor») f>111l ail· through Ut 10II11CJ' d id of Lh.e C( o~ ­. in}!; tower . , the water fl.ew~ down ewer the baffle plat · jn U:w tower, ulus "" reaiD !), cool. a iJ: low rs the tcm.1 .r atu re o lhe wa ter niJoul 1(1- lO p; d gr€ s. S cARCELY A NY co 1MomTY us >d by Lhe m.i.U is chea1.cr tlt<m one of its mos t impor· taru raw materials . . . water. BuLin s1 ite of i ts low cns t, Champion goes to grea t lengths to conser · e water. VVhy? For OH reason, water ceases to be "cheap" when large quantities are u.cd . Most large industries. 1 ike Chan pio n, pay "water bills" Lhat oft ·u add up to a tho u· sand dollars or rr ore a day. It is good busi· ness Lo save water. T here is another, almost equally .impo r­tant, reason for saving water : coopera tion in conservation helps to ass ure an ad qna tc upply for everyone. Naturally, Champion persot':lnel are en­cou raged to promote conservation and pre­vent waste. In addition, intelligent plan­ning and mechanical methods arc used to help save water. One of Champion's big mechanical water savers is the c(,)Oling ten er at the sou thea t corner o:f the milL AcLually, there are t.wo cooling towers, close together but operating as independent unit . T ogether, they :.a' e 15,000 gallons of 1.1/ater per minu te. The water they save i chemically " pu re" a nd. ready for re-use an whet•e in the regu lar mill water system w.ithout further. treat­men t. The cooling towers lo k like large buildings witJ1 ove rsize venetian btind from top to bottom OI'l all side ·. Squat, fat ~tack projecr fr m the · top. Their purpos is to remove heat from cooling ,\·a tet· •vh U:h is circulat d through the turbine con· dens •rs in the Po• 1· Hou e. Steam u . ed to gen etate po"ver is con­d n.secl and u d again as boi:ter v\'<ller. T b · water t~ ·ed to conden ·e th i.s .t •am i ' the water that go s to Lh · co lin · to"' r~. Th.ere, th. rempetatur i · lrYPered lO to 15 degrees aud i.t is th n rewL·n d t the mill water s stem. Th h t water ( ppro. imat ely 90 dcgr c-s) go s first to li ' t.ribmion Lra on tPp of the towct;s. fr m ther it drop ov. r haffl , plate t IJt bottom oi rhe wweT. As it fa lls, hu ·c fan in the, t< k on, t p pull etJDl a lr .th rott.gh lh lot ;veted sid s across lh , fa Iii ng w te1· spra '· . he co J W . ~Cr runS OU t th · b tWQ.l tO th null r · ·arvoir. Fr< 10 ther ' it may go t il pap t· ma . hi nc, th Pulp Jill, or b ck through th · 0ndem~ s and r.hc co hrlo· to a ,,.,,. a •r rl . 23 ' • Fr.iendship Across the Sea By GeOJ·ue Steiner "Friend -hip i enduring, .A_11 e,:erla ting part 0( e\'erything that brightens And '"'arm the human h eart." Ruth Mary Carn.pbell Durin · the years we have played checkers by mail we have made fri ends in many parts of the world. \rVhile -.omt of these friend hip · were only fleeting, a good n umber o( them have been enduring. Am-ong tho e with whom we became finn friends is a litt le girl J o.'ephine Primrose Vincer, of England. Whil playing her father right after ·world War U, we learn ed that the little girl had -spen t a horrible night in a bo rn b shelt r during the "Blitz." To h elp her forget the hon-or of war we sent her a doll that could say ''Mama" and lose its eyes - a well as some~" ee ts which ·wer hard to get in England . Our delightful r ward ' '"'as a friendship that lasted , and her 1 tters arc rendering li.fc doubly pleasant. The following exc rpt. from a recent letter From her will giv a good pi tu e of thi hild's make-up: "1 am ~Ut y in g home bcca1.1s of a :nasty oldr but 1 do hop to go to !!> hero) t01110rrow . J have been absent for n early a week, and I n vcr Celt so miserabl · h ·Cor ·. l !lid not. think that l ·would mills school ,~o m H !1. 1 t·hin:k it i.· l> c.au I mis all my frie.nd~. " W · h<lve '>CIH Joseph in" J)rimmsc: a opy of Th<: LOC wh ~ n ev er we could ohtl:l i'Jl a spare one.:, and 'She round it., wnt Ill so int.er sting sh • e en qtwtnl jn her ltuen; lo us r ·marks mack ''at t.hc 1,-.Ainnlug,," · nd sh ' call ~ Stew J ont:s ' ''Frorn the Editor)" culum n. 01 Th · LOG ~ he has thi li to ~ ay : "Th · LOC is lo •d y. Yo11 do Hlakt such ni ce .1 apcr in OJ1io, f 1 nic~J tlta11 Engli <;h pap ·r. I uppos it· i IJ · .au . t· ou hav · got • • , t more tr , ·s lt1 ,, menca. flc:it g a gent.ll.:rrtan we should agn~ (· wil11 lh(· littk lady and let h J?;O at that; but sh · is of " h ol ge and must learn t.hc facts. '"' • politely inform htr lhat lr •t.:~o~ do not ntak. ''Jin · ·pap r," n.ciLIH' I' do q{K"• flour t11il.k., and th other nee ·sar ' ingr ·di nts mak ·1 good ('. kt 9- j ). f'.J~ Jlli\if:. J' r iiJII O~C \'i ur •r of Hampshir , l~ngl ud, .tands wiLh her two b r o l h e t . Craig and Jet n1 y. Jm· cphi ne ili a pen pal o[ G •org Steine r . when mixed by an unskilled cook. Ye ·, tr - give their fibre, but what people do with it is 'dtat counts. To produce the fine Champion quality paper) Cham­pion employees are putting forth t11e b t that i . in them. They are not satisfied witl1 le.s than the ve ry be t th eir equipment and ability can produce. lt i · remarkable how adept they get on their job , for there are no ·hort · cuts for them to complete knowledge and p rfect comp e­tence. Practice is the only way of attaining it. Over 700,000 u ses for paper hav been li ted, and markets for i)aper are ever increasing. Fift year a, o every American .used 58 pound · of paper product pc · year; but today every American use 350 pound · < f paper. The paper industry is assured from the tand­point of both u sefulness and modern nee · it • c ns - quently it offers the best security for tho ·e who seck ~ mployment with it. A good example for thi wa shown durin~· the d e­pression: while the fine t med1anic and killed labor of various industries were walking th treels, we work r~ o( the paper industry built hom , bought automobil ·s, a.ncl put money away for th (uture. This i ' ell W( rth rentembering. It ·hould pl ase our littl friend in Erwland t learn that her cotlntrytnen v.i r la1·g ly r pon ible £01' the d velopm:eut. of Loui Ruben-· .Uw nti n f th pap r ­nutk. ing machine. Tb first such machine. , uc sfnll • op 'rated w::ts started in. 180 ~ in Fropnorr, England. Th • first Eng-lish patent wa grant tl to John Gamble ' ·JeH' making- pap r tw lv t t and upwards wid . and l)IJC to forty-fj e rt('l and lApWaldS in Jength ." ~[he mod n1 ma hin lin produc a h ' ·t ~0 f C'('L wi le and 300 miles long in 2-1 hours. ln prai ing he LO and Chanq ion pap •r, Jo . e-phine .Primrose joins an al'm of prinlcn;, papers, ie 'ul ·n, ·clilnt'", and layru n who l'rais d Champion quality paper th pas year ·. None how er, pr;,i scd : h ~1111pinn p;~r? r Cl'l ·lotlu etH.l · a~ th · hit ' h ead ot th<: Hald ·m n· jullu:-. 1'1 inrinf{ Hou'it', who. in off ·ring his ,, Her th · fin ~t '>LIJ , k that ((lJ~ be tnrnt:d inro superfine pu tcards on wlt 1te Ch:unpa)n '::tM nate.cl KPomckOLc, A l\ JA. J.'R­PIFC~; 01- 'r.tH' PAl'F.RMAKr-:R'S CRAFT. IT IS 13 7Al l'fTft11, Rl H; LU CTO S. R,hTOCRATlC - IN SHORT, PtRF ." RL,' HU S. millwright wpervisor, i Lhe man on the other end of the lin '. whencYcr 1u ec_h;Jni al trouble develops in t he mill. Rus and Jus m n get the JOb done qtuckly and eUiciently. Meet The Boss . . . By ]ach Nlullen _The backbone oi an paper mill is the maintenance of 1t production mach.inery, and the man who shou lders 1his responsibility at the Hamilton Division is Russe1l P. Hu1:, upcrvi ·or of millwrights . . lt:n _started his career a · a millwright with Cham­pwn_ m September, 1933, and three years later was made JOb for man o( the No. 2 Paper Mill. lu 19'-.l/ he became assistant supervi ·or and in 1949 was promoted to hi· present po ition. ~L sell believe. that no other firm offers the oppor ­rumtJe!> for ~dv an ce ment to working men on the job that Champwn . doe . C~amp ion he says, has kept ahrcaq ot the tm1~ by mtroducing mployce benefit plans t~lat o_Lbcr mills have - plus some ot their own. ~unng.h1 ye~.rs a · a .upenisor, Ru ·s has cl \" loped '11 mterc.,tmg ph1losophy. In· his own words: · . "_It is a duty of a upervi ·o to look after the interests ol Ius n~en, t~ m~ their jobs a pleasant and interesting as pos:1Lle. h1s l l> o ne reason why Champion enjoys splendid t:ntployce-management relation . ·'It. has been my ob crvation that any w e ess that a -.upervr or enjoys is in uirect ratio to th amount o( 1.oop ·ration he receive · frout th - men under hinl.' ' Mr. HuJ is a ve te an o( the F.irst Vorld War and t tr sine- ' then h as been a tively intercstt:d in all \·cteran' , affairs. He belongs to the n .cri an L egion a nrl V ·terans of Fo eign 'Van, "'erving as comtmtndcr of th · Joral VF\:V post for two Loose tllivt.: t rms. During this p c:rjod the nc'\o\7 po)-t home wa · acquired. lldi ·\'ing in lhc _importance: o l gra.,., root po lir ics to our_ '~t:Uau.: .as a natJon, . {r. H1tls 11<-b l!ladc a hobby ,,[ pulJtJcal a ttvJty over the )' ::tr!>. For HI } ·ars he was s u ·tary and tn.: t JS. Rw.s i~ a lo\(:r of tl1C outdours anJ ha ~ lJecn iut ·r­cstt: d i ,tJ amp~ n ~ an~l fi~hing <,iuc<· he w4~ a small hoy. Ht a d IHS w1k nUillllam a camp c n rhe . tiatni Riv.t:f, w l ere th ·y 1}ptnd the ntjre sornm(T. "I hci r ·ity r -.,jd cuu. j., at 6 Hl llcat,.on ,_ tn: ·t. "JH I r· E.\VKIR K is the 11cw dh isiou edit or of The LOG at H ~un ­ilton. An F:oglisb maj()r in collcg , he has a WUJ 1d back­g rou nd in wri ting and ecti lin g. New Hamilton Division Editor A new name appears on The LOG masthead th.i!> mo nth - that of Stan Newkirk, Jr., n t:w Hamilton Divi-sion cdjtor. · Stan, Jr., or "Bud," as he is better known to hjs fellow workers in the n1ill , repJaccs Lee Dodlman, divi­-~ ion e li tor o( Lhc magazine for more than a year who has progressed to th · Hamilton Di ision Scbululing Department. A native of Hamiltou, Bud graduated from Hamilton Public High School in l 942. H e has attended Ohio Sta~e U_niversity, . the_ Un_ivers_it of Missis'>ippi, . Ohio Uruverslty and M1amr UnrversJty. In 191!8 he graduated from Miami U. with a B.A. derrrec in I)Ctch En1Ylish ~ , ;-, and psychology. - J?uring World War U. Uncle Sam required .Bud's services (or three and a half year s, during which timt: he spem 19 moll ths aboard the U .S.S. Horuc:t a. an Aviation Ordnance Man, Serond CJa ·s. · As a Champion shipmate, Ray Brockman (an avia­tion machini 't's mate aboard the H ornet) can veri!). Bud saw his sh are of action in the Pacitic. ' 'Vhile he was aboard tl1e aircraft carri •r, Bud participated in the fi1. t and second batlles o( tb Philippine ea. anJ the in­vasions of formosa, Guam, lwo Jima and Saipan. Upon rctul'ning to civilian life Bud c01npleted his colkge stud.ies then joined the Hamilton Di,·i;,ion i11 June, 1948. Sin ·e that time he has work (l in cali1w and Packing, No. 2 J Iill Trimming. \V t End ConlnJ an l th <.: Insp ction D partmcnt. In 1947 Bud ltlarried th :former Bettv fichad of ' Hamilton . They h<ne nne child . l\ like, \dlO is {our year.-. old . fhe N ·wkirks r ,· ide a t :?~l We yne .-\\·t.nue. CI~H./\l . .D HEISER , a gradu~llt" ol b u lllam ·o ff g ·, i~ !he on o Ralph fl t: iser, Ua111ilton l':t.'­toll. Gl·t:iltl is n w t:lllpiO\Cd with an a 1ul itiug- firm , Prt'HJ . Whitt· nd H;ut ~r pf Dct •·oi t, di h. 25 Sammy s Doing Fine . . . • hou rl t for the month . It v . . welt ring h t d a in .A. u rn- t · m .year · a 1"> D. ut "i cl Lh i t · o [ i lt I ' Roc ·, rk., a rew of 111 u wer la:ing a 1 ir din . The ml.'n w rkt i h Hheart dl t , tit· heat n th ·r un h.a '·ilting their cncq:,ie . B{_\ ide ·, th r w r ·av­ino tht:ir I e. t Jirks for th eli ·u·i t up, ritll mlt'nt du · ~ ,. w make an irupc Lion trip that ,. ·ry attern . n . . . ln a wirl of Pd dn t the grea t man <rrtt v ,d w ln)\ < hauff red limousine. The first thing- he iicl wa lo l.tilthe men out of cbe dit :he~ , . nd oif Lit ·ir Call'l'l illars, and into the had of th ncarb tree . The obe ' d , npt'n-mou th d. . . . . I'h ec ud tbm,; h dtcl wa · to 1 a ·s o ut old dnnk to en 'T) man pre·eut. Au l r "mark. "Yo u're doing o gi . t job consid rin .· th \<\' ather." Tlie third L11in · he did was to . it on a p ile of planks and motion one o( the m n t it and talk. At fict th · men an~wered hi que tion h ,l ,: be fore lo n.g a grottp ·were gathered about him talking freely and earnc tly. An hour later tl1ere \\'a an thet S\ irl of red du t and the BlG man·wa o· n e. Them n returned to the ditches and the controls of their Caterpillar . And the sun beat down r.elcntl s ly in the open fi eld. The men were quiet for a pell, thinking. Then they talk d, ·whistled, at1g a they worked. And Big Ike said to Ned \Vilbul", " I doi1't know the guy's nam~, or how many grand he makes~ and I ~lon't care. But ~s long as he' · siLting in that front ch along to all the fellows jn the Cast Coat Depart-ment our appreciation tor everything they have done during Samm) 'S recent illness. Especially I ·want to say thank·)'OU for the blood donations and the visits. Every­one was o nice." - Mrs. Sam Barre tt. (For eyeral week, the main topic o f onversation amund th drum wa the condition of smiling Sammy, ·who underwent a deli ate operation in Cincinnati dur­ing the mon th o f June. After bejng m: Good Samaritan's "critical" list for some time, Sammy 1s well on the road lO rtco cry.) Carre 'lion Dep't . . (My, my!) . Our apologi s w .Eirn r Thomp ·o r1 of Colorcast, and ,_ c: hast n to _jn­form you &hat he has a brood of FOUR chattcnng young ·te-rs, not five . . . And Elru r r ightfully -ay, ''Let me grow them b fore yotl Jisl th rn" . And th Bill Ct'e ch ·& a re due for a sikut . alaam incc tf ·i l ' nt newborn i., indeed a boy am.l '1. pro1ip ectiv " cag · scar . (G e, h( w wrong an ~t guy bd . . . ad Link ri ng with tl1 swrk's bu iucss at tll tH!) . . . * '* . * fi'ufl'ing 1 h • dwm'J . . Leonard Downey ]Jab n.pen I up lli.s new " Dtjv ·- In" lunch pla ' t , l>O i[ you ' 1· · o ttL d iv­illg ncar Overpc 'k som • ·v ,ning-, ~ lOp iu and giv · him 4. t.O>t 011 yrn1r horn . . . 'fJ1 · ' ' I) WJW Empltjum" i ~ located ju ~t outside 0 1 puk (,,, th · Ove1 p eck-'1 renton RoaJ . . . Co11grt1tul atiou, to Pen- Fren ·It and (;nnil ()11 th · arri.vaJ of a J'l w bab gir·J . Amon," onr H:c w old.ier-boy visi Lors w ·r l)a 1 • H orwb (who a s u can be too tall fo.1 rhe anny) and Bob Haldern, a_n oi the Air F0r t: . . . t last r~port, yol1ng P ul N w it k. o ( tlw Marine was on a 55-day unrcli ved sw ( h in th K ;;e· n front lines . • •· II ( 1 SY '\ fil•: f-." 1 hat' ~ l\"iiJi ;nu fhll.>· !)· Hl. B mniltt'n D ivi­' liou g;n d 11 ·r, nursing a ·warm o( b 1.! Qltl ­~ i dc rh · .:: felc>t ia . Hill ano Roy s n rn e, r - Ill (>\ •d r.lt <,w, rnt ron1 th sn ' Cl a fler tit ·y had li CCC' ! U i 11 !!lOW· ing u· ffi f a h ,,.t tim . Roy Sa ro s took th ~wa rrn of bec.­llome with him . RebuHing the drums . . . \<Ve v . nl~re the opinio!1 Lhat " lke" Jsaacs will be swamped '\VHh auto ~ p~lr busines now that his new ement blo k. garage 1s VIr­tually comple ted . . H rb Ittel is back from a trip to the cowboy lallCl ot Wyoming and the fam:ou Cheyenne Rodeo . And yes, sir, 1 .e stopped at Little America and found it to be everything we said i l wa. . . . Paul Kirk and his wife are s till crazy about Boxers; that on litter sold them on the breed . . . They are about lO complete n egotiations for the purcha, e. of a new Bo':-er .rnatron, daughter of two famous champ10n . . H you re interested in a Boxer pup come n ex t ·pring, h ere' your chance to get a reservation in . Glad to see Retd Owens back on t11e job after a recent ick F "il . . . You know, we have a warm feeling in our heart for that boy after naming him as one of the Ca t oat'" mo t handsome gu·ys and stining up uch a borne l . ne t o( aro·ument . (Say, come o er in the corner, girl , and w~U whisper the mime of anoth er buckeroo who has "matinee idol'-' written all over him . . ~on e o ther than George True who work on rolor control O ltl in Co lor cast . . . * * * * Powerbuf[ing the drums . Charle ' .McCracken i · proud as a p eacock of hi nc 1952 auLOmobile, and for just · cause ' . . . . It' · a beaut ! . . Nt' if the Reds vvould suddenly do an about-fa e and fini h in th fir t <.livision, Charley vmuld di · happy . . . The Peter · f<nnil) . Bob and son Paul, ju t about e tab.lished their claint as Champion's o. 1 fishino· outCit aft r a l G-day tr iJ l > \Visconsin . . The caught 150 bass and t\ i e ·:ts ma.n ' p::m ii h . . . Broth r L1.11h r sta ed at horne to wait the ·p·r iyal of hi ' cond child, ·whidt at pre n.t writino· is days o crduc . vVallace ' th p neil and bru,h . If roune·d atl ' signs painted , h e' yom hoy . . . Ralr h SLurgiU 's favorite summer 1 ort is l"ishtng . . H ·'s a fr qu ' 1\t ·i:;itoJ' ut lh , ll ·w \!\ i.lson puoi . B l'Oil rl a lt T ' tud i ,d th l. · t· book last (al.l. on. how 1 o tr.im raspb IT ' bush es . . This ' UTnffi f h ' pi k d 0 cr 50 lJ,LI Hl' IS fron his f 'W 1'0'\1 S . . Th - W ody WhiL (' a rch n e pa l 1'111 111. The Research Reporter • • • By ] oe B le-uens In the fir. t pa.rt tA Ma of th is year, it '\vas decid ed by El Knapp. a i, ttt n t di rector of R esearch lha t an in(onnal n wsJetler of .·om type would be a good m.ean. o( kcq ing lhe members ( Resear h 1 os tecl on events within the dep artment. It was hoped by this rncdium to introduce n ew employees, giving their edu­ ·alional background and experien ce, and a lso to make announcements o£ ch ange or du ti s and personnel. Tbe letter al·o was planned to an i tem o f person al in ter est concerniJ]o- memb rs of the d epartrnent. Dave \Yeiser became the bu.,iness manager or co­ordinator of the publication and Joe Blevens agreed to be the editor. The name '·Research R eporter'' was clw· n . and with no mall amo u n t of h elp from the Public Relation and LOG offices the first issu e was ·ompleted on fay 15 th. The Reseank Repo'l"le1· does n o t h ave a regLt lar d ate of issu , but i printed a an a va'il able amount of news warrant: . A special is u dealing with pla ns for the Research Department' a o nLLa~ p icn ic was printed on lune 11th. Li ia Porrazzo does a fi ne job of typing the co py £or tht lctt.e • a d it i prirued by the Multi lith proce ·s in the HamiltOn Divi ·j.on P1int hop. Th R epm·ter has e ·11 ' ' ll received o far. SWU:::~ liule L, n Ra1. ornf:tl is IIJ . d ughtc:r u( C.:(' l l ({IJO tl, l'o~>, t·t l'l ;lllL I 'n s g ,ql(lf.tdH·r. t{ ,J, Liuu. a-'i't <Jf uf ".tl q nrrd 'a t~it;'l t itJn, i~ f1Uitt~ prourl of h<·t roo. ' JHI RL·.Y LY, .· .JOH \J I,O N. •n11 ul au· .J o1J n-,on, C!\1 ~or t ­ing. ••11cl l .h.o, lit· J t•l.lll on, o. ~ J'iui l lillg. J<• • Cad!< •IWII , . I 1'1 imm 'I'·· a11d ( H il J< bJ• Oll, Lh :tnk::tl Jtlclg- [JI g 1 and£ ther . J.ZON.\LD H ALDEl J\ 1,\ , 1, ~0 11 of ~.Jr~ . \Vf argarc ~ B ra111 . H <\ lll · i I ton Accoll nting is a Ha milton High School gradu ate . His a tb ­le ti a bil i ties nrc man . Hamilton J EH.R Me Ri\ llC'K, son of 1\ lr. and 1\JJ q . .f. 1~ . i\hCv,l11id., i . a 1 r .l2 A' .Lduale or Fair[ic ld lligh Sci oul. I l is lllothcr IVOJI.s 111 llarn iiLon cco ll n(ll•g. CA RRJE DOELL 1 • of CM oning h, s been a Ch11mpion fo• · 7 y o. rs. TraveLing aud an oc('a.d nnl galll of bing·o ate her hief pac tim es. Meet The Ladies • • • By Dorothy Ptl._ h On of th runst (· n1i li a r (ac a long th ' ,""or ti n ~ L ine p( 1o. 2 D< ll rnan. l" j l l ee on is 1 hat t ur walk ol ··arrie Cant ·· st, rt d <H ··han1piou 11 0 tober l !"1, 19l !>, o n th . Sorting Line. Du ring th {ir->t \ Vorld \ '\'ar h ' rC' pla ed a Jlla n , :wd h ·r jub wa tt1 lak · p·tp r I rom th ·Cutters on ~n w ll t r u c k s tn ~t· ck cr t,h e Son T'i. At or e litU ' Carri coli • ted ::unpl· · for the S:unpl • l k p:.ti llll c n t. L ;.~. Le l' 'lhC' ~v:t ;; t r:tn sl'e n c I tn ! h : I n 'pc · t~< 11 Hfi ·<:, " lwr -;h · n : 1 Wi ll d lor J() >r I ! ·ear ·; dunuo· thi time Sh ( lK'U)lllC he: td ( r the Office. Wit n Jam ~ Simp-.nn !Jt'l (nne SU[It T\' isor of I\: 1. ~ Sorting. 'arrie JllUY d to a n w j r[J a~ fllll>rl · dy on tlw Sorting Lin . Rt·., idi ng a t 8():.! L re ·nwoml A' ' till , Ca rrie sp ·rH1 11H t< It ol ll vt t i 111 1' ir;nt:li11g and ph.t ) inR ' n ot r::t ~ t o n. · t oa 111t v i bingo . t'u dau· :a1 r i · ll ns r:tt ll·d li iJ ?17 1 ·ar~ 7,t -,en j< • w i t iJ C h<.t ntpiPn :w 1 lwn \ ho piu?· )h i · \ · i th us tor y~·. r~ to omc. • FR ,n Btl ER. Ra­~ t·a t ch , is cuncnll dut: r ngr.Jtlll,tt on.· upon hi. nvrni.na ti n to a third tenn as di lor of the Ull ited 't te Tra l · M'ark 1\ 'li:Kia · II ( 1\. Bo er Earns U. S. Recognition B)J j oe Blet.,t' lls The Re.ean:h D I artment is proud and pleased with the national reco(}'nition ' ·hich has been awarded_ Fred BO\cr bx· hi .~ nomination to erve a thir d term as a dir. tor 'o( the ' nited late T rade :Mark Associa tion . Thi . a ·. ociation i a na tional o rganiza tion of ma nu­facwrct who produce trade-marked good s. It pro tects bo th maker · and u er of tr ad e-marked goods by suppo rt­ing- uitable tate and t1ational legi slature and J:;ly giving it ' members n eeded trade-mark informa tion . Alter obtainin · two degree in arts and cien ces and a prole sional degree in mecha n ical engineering at Ohio · State. FJ~ed ·tan d at Ch ampion in R esearch in Decem­ber, 1929. H e had previousl y worked a t the Bates Valve Bag Corporation and tbe Dayton Scale Company as a sp ciali ·t on cale and w ighing. H e did gen eral research work here until 1935 wh en h e s tarted devoting his entire rime to patent Jaw ·work. Freel i · a t present a first vice-presiden t of the Dayton Patent La·w Association , an organization of which he ha been an active member since 1939; he also has been chairman of its t rade-mark commi t tee since 1947. In addition he repre ents this asso.ciation on the National Trade Mark Co-ordin ating Committee which d rafted the hill amen l illg the T rade-Mark Law. Fred l1as t~·o sons: Do n, who is now atten d ing· Ohio Sta le niv r ity study ing ommer ial art, an d Bill, who i . ., Laking gradua te wotk at the Univers ity of New York Culleg-e of For 'SO)' a t Syracu!>c. 13il1, a ~ radua! c of the M ·r han t Marine A ademy, scn ·ed d uri ng the war in the Sou th Pa ifi · wi th the M rchant Madnes a11<l h a ~ a l'i b nan oHi ·tr on , v raJ of t iP Grac ' Li n · steam-ships. · Frtd is pla nning- to an nd the vVod 1 Co uf ~ t-e n • of tb · S c it t y c f Fri od& whi ch i <> 10 he h ld tl1j · l. Ul llHWr iu ( }x !ord , England . lJ is ~l ni v in rite wurk of th i.s soc iety haYi ng sp •nt 15 month(, du ing lU ~ 0 - 2 1 in Ruro l c di ~ trih tting food ;:wd drxthi. n ~. Fr d IT .:~ J h th ai in V i,~ nn a, , th tria, tTl .rc were at ( n tim · IJO,UOO child ren of p rc-se:h oo l age who w '1C c •nifil'cl to b · und ·rr•ow ­ish ·d and w G taken ca r(· of by th<• h iC'11d" Rel it'! 1 i-;sion , li id d by rh Red 'ru-,s; and rh · ';( u · rll t• Chit­clr en Fund. Fred 's as~oo i:-u iotJ wi 1 h ;til thes • va ri.om )l'g":l ll i n ll iiln, J ave h i1 1 l i uh: tin tc for o th -r inter ·sts t '" hob! i(·~. IJII1 h do s 11 joy IL' r. O li \ cr Sl\'a l1t1!'1', hold ­ing tiW h IHT ' \ilh T r tl ( .nrlin and R u b< rt Pi pet lno.king on. • • Reporting on Reporters By Otto lteid Tb:e Gin in.i:lat.i Industria] EditoTs bav lt;ul their early m · tit~g. and Ch.a_mpiOI:t reporters ar a part ()f the .rc_ ord o( · that rn 'ctmg. g:ain 1 shall attempt to trace lor ·ou tch · ' ·anderiJ"'.l'S of the babe i11 the woods - that title being con ferred on our Char11pion cr \V' - the . cr· w that paddl ~ ~ th ir own canoe down th€ r i v~r o£ g-O'ld n dream:. T he lit de s id e't~alk game of hl)ps and sco·~C~'l \ a' r 'Y i n -: l with amazing a lacrity. lbat alle ,-tntcat la . vyer, Jack Mullen, may learn the hard way, but he Learns fox keeps. T his year he pa5sed up the gamble of riding- with L e Dc>el1m:m, and t }0R a d Jance ou Wes Cobb. Came a glorious and mellow mood in the silence lh-at c;ou ld haye been penetratin-g, exGept rbat J 0 -of us wer taLki:i:l". With a cha llen ge in my eye. I looked at red-h:ecarled Mullen and unloaded a mas terful observati0n . d d icated to the as urnption that we Ii ule peas from the P?d are prophet- on the crisis's of history. \1\hth the aplo.tnb of pouter pigeon, and the bone of ~ h ~ a l over ~1 oscillating mind, I gave :forth this gem ot pluiosophy: vVhy was the Second vVorld War fotl.ght. anyb?"'· A.ll id al for its purpose were sacrificed at MurHch." l\tJuU n d an~d his throat, took the bit in his teeth, a1~d .'.'that' . all she wrote." For the second time in my ltfe I ·d ta lked too r11uch . even to my own conviction-. (1 , lipped u,p many years ago _ . already celebrated (?) m · twenty-fifth wedding annihilation). He said : "Let' s not d1ew on the abstract." I hmnbJy agreed . . like to know what I'n1 eating. * * * * On rhis trip Lee_ Doe_llman was to pay all expenses. He began panhandlmg ~1gantt t es from the start, leaving man o£ us . to wonder if he represented the company. (\Vel!, he d1d; b:ut. when he's bu~11111ing smokes he rep-re ents Doelhnan- a good representative he has there, too.) . ~enny Snyder tried hard tp make the trip but his '1mmg. was too good. ·He had another meeting at the .same t1rn,e. George · tein ~r wo_uld c mbine busi11ess wid1 pleasure. He h_a~ u ·top u1 Cmcy ala radio score while he got a lev1 wn. tube. A beallltj.flal y0nng lady yoked him at t:b do01: and spun h is l1at half way a.mund when she ki;; l h1m. }o :Bl.eH:n ighed and· made a belated at- A NE\V W · T H, pres e~_ted to her by fdends. ca uses a broad s1ilile on the face 0f "anie CrlOlrQ, retir-ing nJatron of the No. 2 MHI O.h·.ls' Lounf$e· . C;lnie was gue t of honor at a part in the loung on· rhe li(.St day of her 43 · cal's witt Champion , l•Ji zn ­beth Koeh fer, a r tired emplo yee who wa. ~ with Charnpi0n a fo JO ·t 18 ye ar~. helps Ca rrie - str k tl m hol'V J ar~proaeh d the fir. l la; ol' !,la ture: ~ U­prt ·enatiun. ~ lnld h:iln h)' th . ilt'Jl '>C: uf lugic - that b jng tl!i , idea to tJ,jnh - 1:1se ynur t~eatl to %1 ·c yo ur neck. . . 'can. • you h0d i t~ bonk ' 1 to both . • What's in a Picture 7 H)' Ur11 fltwhs \ ' h ,tl d(l \IHI . t' ·. in lhi. picturt'? I it jw.l a tree on ''H.' I .wl. of ,\ '-lr ·am! L, c k. , g~lin .tnd ~ u' ll 't' • tlwt th t pi( turc hohh much _mnte th.m t!1,tt. . , ·o ti e tl l:t t thl 11 l't 1::. age old '~ nh . LOrn1 ·loud 111 th • d i t 3 n cr. that the ,,-;l.U.:' I is not just a 11.1all , tr a111. bt l ,\n mlct fwm the mip;hq . \tlantic. .1 '( tire ton thar the bra ncbc ha\l I etJl twistHI and br ken from the tluu l o l llw lrl't'- .t tl'Cl' that ha.-; no d1m t wilh :-~ tood 111an' .t ~ lt. ,~hilc the ,·ild i' y ding)\ t 1 ib ·torm-lasl1 d lim h. l!w )it tur · wa. made bv \\'i lliam P. Ta;1nr, and a: , c look~ d at it w wotHkr{·d vdlv Ill' hal cho. ·en hi -, • • • one a' hi. £a1 orit pt int. \trcly it must hold :-;ont' sp ·t tal 'H~Il il ic ill(' for hi Ill. . . . Smt_h tm a ll of tL l.no' · o{ ~ ome p t stmtlar to thi~ )JW~ pt>rhat a pla(e where ' ""'e lik to go now to It• alone . .\b, be m:- drin:- for m_il then park the ca r au l w.tlk tlw IT. t nl the '"ay. Vpon reaching the pot " 'i t do·wn in the tall gra s, and just fea, t our e es on the bea Ut\ al out us. lmo t aut< matically we fold ou · hands bel1ind ur h ad nd lie ba k and look straight up imo t.h heaven . \\'e lon·t ever remember_ the sky o blue, broken only by white litt le powder puH clouds. \ s Ke lie there our ca re and worries seem to fade a wa\ . \\'e think of tl)e past and dream of th!= future, a rJ ed ·o quickl ·, remembering too that we have doz~ns oi thing to do. \'\re start back to the parked car wlth our tep a little lighter, our heart a little closer to God and man. \\'e 'ow '"'e '·vill do this more often - and then nnce again we are lo t in hu tle and bu tie of every day 1 i fe. I 0 \1 .\1\ LIC\ H .IC\f I 1 r:f f•i ~· •d l"!lf41:ll td :tli (JJlS fl<!IIJ IIi \ lllfJ IIW l , ('!( 1:1 Cr:.t11 J:dl . \o. ' .'>nrli,,g :111d hi .; d.1d, 1{, lwn C r a ye~ :Jf1 , lr . ·1 i t1 ""'Jj), upon ~ l a du ;ttin g l'rr111t I l :ll ni lrun lligh Sd wol t hi ~ j!llh·. I (lltllll) \ glitmlta rlwr i ~ Robct r Cr ;, c rafL, 'i1 . o l (lw (:en· f' flllrlt N. •l tlll l . 30 1\HSS CAROL JEAN JORG was a june graduate of Notre D ame H l.gh Srhool. .a rol ' · fath r is L11rry J org. Boiler Plnnt em­p !O) e . . . I OLATED TREE on the Allan tic c.oa t line provided amp! suiJje t matter (or Wil liam P. 1 aylor's l;,vorite pirture. His print is snffi ·ien t .1 roof tha l 11 bject mauer in nttture is HOt diffirult to fi od. The camera an r ord almost every in id.cnt in tire tifc of a human being in such a way that he can relive the joys and happiness many time ovc:. Bi.ll Taylor can u sually be found m the Re~ear h Department. H e ha · been with Champion 13 year, an! a Shutterbug Camera Club member ome l\ ·o aJ:d a hall years. He has dabbled in photograph ever since school days. * :10 * * Print of the Month honors went to H erbert T. Ran-dall, with a picture of his daughter and grand on. Herb titled his print " Ecstasy ." * • * * Frank Harmon, electrician, is credited with elling rnore tickets for the picnic than any other Shutterbug metnber. He is b lieved to be highest mill-l\'ide ""'·ith 231 o ld, to dat . L \ ' ERYO E'S 1-'RIE D, .u D ;ts) ch.1i1 i! IIU lli!l ft hi. ' ' ' ·~"· . ~fWO (, R,\DF A.TJ?.S o.t 1 90~ aFe l';m'l CGok, lek of tb,e General T raffic Dcpa1 true-nt , and };[o:odv Sw a l·ingen a reti red H ~ nJiJH:Jn Bivision Madune Sh~o>p enplove-e. P~u1J mnt< lu ated h tn Central Higl1 School in Hatnihon; M ~>d ) i: a .)ro luce Ctl' M.onroe High School. Cl~ssm~tes OLD CENTRAL HJ G I{ CHOOL wa .> razed in ~be summer of )9'10. Jt _tood at the com er of Sewn-! and Ludlow s treet. and is tJ1e All na •fa ter of lilari) Ha miltotJhw s. Those \l'cre the clays ~\·hen the Model T wa Lh last word in a ntomobi les, . . - ' By Bill Thompson W LTZI1 G A ROtt D tile turn of Lhe cenwry, we learn tlnt burJesq ue aod n3 .i D tre.lsy -''vere changing the se nti.­ll lental t en1:po to a great degree. Let's pause at 1903 when two of our ~randest Champions graduated. Paul Cook ·was a H.amil ton Central High "dandy," and , foody Swearingen, a l\fo-oroe.High ''s-harpi e." Farm c!Hn ~ predomjnated at the time, and as a r esult th ere w--ere abm.tt f<)llt' giYls w each boy fortunate enough to con1pt te the econdary ed t.tcat ion . Paul's da;; · .iflcludcd 39 gir ls and J 3 }Joys, with gradu­:'. tlon e~er .i c~. heirJ,fi 1~ ld it) the oJd J ef~erso n Tbearre • ud1Lonum . 1 he Jdferwn \vas located midway between Ccmrt and Lttdlow on the wetit ide of Second SL1:'ee t. T h:tL building was leJ-.J.royecl by lire 11bottt 25 years a1;o. J:\ flHHd.y really ltad jl '·made" ov:er at :rvfonrde. lie wa: the oF~.!)' boy in a ch.I'>S oJ l ivt:;. T heor.· wer fewe r thHfl 30 s twtent~ in a ll four <JI: the M(>JJ roe H igh las~es <H 1 hat tim ~. •~r i th but one pwfost>or dcri ng .all the l(;.a chin g. 1 uody rode hi<; bi yu th ·• three-m i It j au n l in fajr ,,·c nh rand U)lild a l1 orse ~,nd bu?,gy duri11g foul wea i'J1er. You •fa n name ihC year r:tnd we wn l <;L S ur(~ you .tbat great h·i!>lOJ y ~r ::t:~ l)eing m <~dc . Th · yea:r JI) O ~ was not ~l) 'X ep t i HI. Smll lnv ·~tel n OhLo (a ·-raclle of crta ti<lllJ played rb!> pa1 t, w ha t with lm)tiwrs ()r,.· illc :11arl \V-ii bur \Vr ig-ht k ~:H· in g lh >it· Da}llO J1 bi(.:y< 1' rq ~ ir ~lH>p to male the fi rst ;,uccet'-'irul f.llght~ in a heavicr-th<m-ai J.· 111edJ ani~ ;;dl y J:H'< '1> · Jl ·d a iq J~ a ne. 0 n ti 11 c· flew hnsr - a di.,~an. c · of' 120ft> t in 14 '!> ·umd::. Lau. : r in the s-anH" day Wi lb ur fl l'w - ~ :.! in !l9 t. · t.on d ~. T ire fl ights Wl!.' l' · lrum Kill D evi'l Hill ;ncl:lr KiHy H awk, N. C. n,-. H . Nelson J<H.bon and Sewall Crr cker rnade tlu· ri:r 'it <;uUe,:.luJ antonmbi!'C trip at:J c).'>S tl1c 1 -1m th Ameri. (I JI tn.n tincnt, f1011l. 'Fril)((J to New Yo1'k City in 0 I day:-,, Henry ·Ford, tl<e Firs-t. w.i(hdr ew from the De t:ro.i t Au to­mobi le Club to organize the Fo:rtl Motor Con1pany. Teddy Roo, cvelt wa · America':· h ead man and pai 1 the n ewly Tecognized nation of Panama ;, JO 000.000 in gold and an annual ren tal )f 250,000 for the isthmu.s o nnecting the s ton11 .Atlantic with he mighty Pacific. The tragic iroqHois T h eatre [ire occurre 1 in Chicago with 609 fataliti es . . Enrico Caruso ntade his 1 'letru­politan debut . tbe R ed Sox defeated the Pirne five ga;rn es to three in 'baseball's first ' '\Toild Serie:; . . King Ale .andria and Queen Draga o( SedJ ia were a ·sas:inated . . di scoveries included. th depth tomb and a rnedi al seda tive called Barbitol . li g hter~ like J irn J d[eries, Bob FinsirnnJ (J J1S, Tornm R, an , Lhe o.rigi nal Joe \ Tal­cott, Joe Cans, Yonng Corbett, and Frankie N eil were dHunpions of tbci'r res] ect:i\'e di vi:>ions . . . "Judge H im ~s ' ' won t:~e Kent ~ ck De1;by . . Dan Jones. '\v," howlmg's rLB.C. b r Wlth 683 . Victor .H 'rb n ~th e Qn] · nw ri ·an eompos r whn nevt:~- wrmc a techn ica lly bad pier· ) pres- T t ted •· .Ba hes in l'ovland ." ' . Mu ical orne(li "s, mln~ tn.: l slw". s, and barht,:r. h t)p qut.~.rtets \v .·r · intro(hl ·.in g- numbers su l t <J.S ''Swt.:ct Ade­line."