The Log Vol. 28 No. 11

Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Paper and Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas an...

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Main Author: Champion Paper and Fibre Company;
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723; 1945
Subjects:
Dee
Dy
Mak
Ner
Ora
Rae
Ure
ren
Online Access:http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/2330
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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
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Paper industry -- Employees -- Health and hygiene
Christmas
World War
1939-1945
Veterans
Employees -- Recreation
industry
health and wellness
events
spellingShingle Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Paper industry -- Employees -- Health and hygiene
Christmas
World War
1939-1945
Veterans
Employees -- Recreation
industry
health and wellness
events
Champion Paper and Fibre Company;
The Log Vol. 28 No. 11
topic_facet Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Paper industry -- Employees -- Health and hygiene
Christmas
World War
1939-1945
Veterans
Employees -- Recreation
industry
health and wellness
events
description Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Paper and Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue. PIO o/A' CTMTIES DECEMBER, 1945 IN THIS ISSUE (;ar.e of Industrial Solid Tues . __ . _ 2 Myths About Heart Di~rea;s:e _ 4 Paper and Printing _ _ _ _ _ _ _ S Editorials ____ . _____ ____ __ . _ . ___ . _ 6 U. 5. Presidents Small Town Folk .10 CHAMPION FAMILY NEWS Hamilton Division ___ __ __ ____ __ __ • 11 Canton Dil'ision _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 24 Houston DiviSion . __ . _. _. __ ___ . _ 33 Of tHAMP ~tON C I IV I Tl E S ECEMBER 19.45 VOL. XXVIII NUMBER 11 PUBLISHED BY ~'THE CHAMPION FAMILY" HAMILTON, OHIO CANTON. N. C. HOUSTON. TEXAS SANDERSVIt1.E. GA . Estah.lis.hed 1914 Thirty-firs:t Y ecu of Publication The paper for 'he cove),' of this maqazine Ia Champion JUoJilekote. and the paper Jor tbe i•s\de paqee is Champion White Satin Refold LCI"'Del. We mcmulacture many qrades of W.crdrac:l ~. Machine Finished. Super CuleDAered. c:u~d Coated. Our Cover Picture by Bartolomeo Esteban Murillo, Spanish School, 1616-1682 (The "Santiago Madonna") The theme of the Virgin and Child is almost as popular with Muri1lo as that of the Immaculate Conception. His earliest known version was painted while he was in his t\ enties. This was followed by a succession of others now familiar the world over through con­stant reproduction. The often repeated criticisln that ~furillo's Virgins are for the most part merely pretty girls or young Spanish women with their babies cannot be denied. Sotne are more pleasing than others, but ::til are convincing as real people whom the artist must have known. As Murillo made increasing use of the Virgin and Child in holy scenes and v isions, he developed a 1:nore pictorial composition by showing the mother turned slightly to the right with head, almost in profile, bent toward the Child and looking down at him instead of out at the spectator. This harmonious arrangement in the Santiago _painting is en­hanced by the simplicity of the composition and the sobriety and dignity of the Virgin's face and figure. Her calm repose is charm­ingly contrasted with the lively posture of the Child. The figures are solidly built and have no tendency to melt into the background. · But despite their realis1n they are freely and largely constructed · with almost careless competence. Such apparent simplicity, ,such ease, are the height of skill and reveal the artist in the ripeness of his development. - BARTOLOMEO ESTEBAN MURILLO· Born in Seville, Spain, J anuary 1, 1618, Bartolomeo Esteban :N1urillo received his first instructions in painting from his kinsman, Juan del Ca - tillo. Later, he went to Madrid, where Velasquez procured employment for him. · After three years, in 1645, ~furiilo returned to 1r1adrid, and the follm, ­ing year painted the Cloister of St. Franci and the manner in ' hich .he executed it, commanded the admiration of his countrymen~ In hi 1 aintings he showed himself a colorist equal to Vandyke, and a ri al of V la qu z. It is said, "he gradually perfected his manner by giving more boldne to h:s pencil, without abandoning that delica y of col rin ·which djs­tingui hed him from all his rivals, increa in it tr n ·th ·1nd o·ivinc, gre'lter freedom to his touch. . Murill enriched the hurcl1 ·s and c nv nt · < f e rill and oth r citi ' with numer iUS WOrks. vVbile at Cadiz, Spain, h paint d his "l·brat d pi ture th Ni arria of St. Catharine. 1' his merit as a historical pain r, Murill j ine l ~qu l excel1enc · in flowers. Hjs ori inality of t ~tl ·nt pla s him in th fi r: t r nk among th painter of every s hool. · The work. of l 1 Ul-jll ar num ·r us-many f th m ar ~ pr , ~ r · .d in hi nati e to n, where, b . i.J s h eli tribut d am n :r th hurche ~ COflVent , and hos .itals, an l the ath dral , th .•.rc i ~ gall r: l "a rin hi ' name. Mad on . as and C nc ti ns · cr am ng lti f' rit • subj ct ·. H ~ di d in eville, Spain , April ~ 1 82. .- • -'· \ • ''!""" i ':L' () Care of Industrial Solid Tires For Electr1c or Gas Power-Driven Trucks T'lw f 11lnwing •.· r c l'l f1 om n ·rtidc '' JI<J\ t (; 1 the '_1 ) ·. · nt ( ., . )li 1. 1 __ 1hb r 'Ti ~.:- ., I r 1 L . Delz it. Field Lu me ·r, _1u · l JVt;,1o ,, Th · B. F. C(>e lt ich Company Akr n, ( hH., •,houl l b' r 'ad , td f' ')nd 'r b" e1.1 T 'ham~ ptnn np ·ra ltn? ·oli tir · 1 ct ri :ras p ;v !:··driven r lck . . l r. D ·lz 11 ex1l_ains 1lcre arc t o v '11 al tn• ·.: () these tt r ·s, th ' l lf(;S ,-on ' ty . whiLh < r · \. lv nizcc.l t€1 ~ ~ e 1 a a ~ c li d b hyclr· ulic pr · trc tr1 ·h ·cl; ani.l the '' ·ulc mz d-on" ype, v l ·2mize 1 di r' l) to l1e wheeL The L rmer r · 1 ed nw ly · n power-driven industrial ruck · nd th la t r ort h d- p r· ed ruck'". . HTl~t: u, e ,of ynth.et ic rubber in both of hese type5 o tndu tnal . ohd t1r • tncrea e rolling resi3 ance and power - n umpt1 n; r duces the to 1 hnes and re i ~ ancc o c tt­ting, hippino·, and w ar; and le · en the adhe ion or br.md ben" en th tread and ·he base. . "The .increase in rolling resistance is quite seriou , par­t tcularly tn tbe ca e of battery-operated truck · in tha the additional p wer consumed by the tire re ult in a more rapid discharge of the batteries, and consequently more fre­qu ent recharges are required for a cr1ven period of time. This increased rolling re istance also reduces the peed of the vehicle. Tests have proved by the use of sy nthetic rubbe r, the rolling re i tance is increased approximately 40 per cent over the pre-war crude rubber tire; and at the same time, the resistance to chipping and cutting i reduced by ap­p roximately 10 per cent. "This mean that where a tractor on crude rubber tire could operate for ten hours without a battery rechar e it could only operate for six hour on nthetic tire and at reduced speed. By special compoundin cr, it ha been po - sible to produce rolling resi tanc in a 7nthetic indu trial solid tire to equal that of the standard pre-war rude rubber tire; but to accompli h thi , it is nece ary to r duce the toughne of the tread, so that the ynthetic tire wiU give only about 80 per cent of the er ice life. " Low rolling resi stance or p wer con umption f the tire u eel on battery operated truck , i o imp rtant that it h b n f und on mical t u e the low } ower c n umin~ tir s at a sacrifice of tou ohn ' in th tr ad and a reduction in ver-all servi lif . ·''Th e d fi i nci s, in man e can b ffse · L ·ub-tantial t nt by b tter car of th t ir ~ · Pr l al ly n • t1re ' a r · m r · abu , d than th indu ' trial lid. Th r at st ·a use of {a ilur' in th , " tir . .i fr 1 )ad; pr du e bn rmal deAections, rn over! ndin. ·. \' r­a usin th tir \1 bu lge 1. Croeainq railroad track is hard on tires and trucks. Should be avoided when possible. 2. Running over blocks o1 wood and other obiects should be avoided. 3. Do not o'ferload trucks. 4. No te conc lition of tire badly cut and broken. · _j, h, ,e ing Ufi y res~ and a rocalized flexing action ·~: . ,~ ~ · e . eel ba e r wheel. Thi re uJr in o~call ed · de cut in -~ which uitunately pre>duce either a chunking Oil in ~hi h a trip of tread circumferentia lly a round the . i e faU · out or i may re ult in c mplete epar ation of the tr ad from the ba e. ••orerloading wiH al o produce : eparation by increa ing i pact when unning ov~r ob. tructions. The e imp_act a re an~ mit ed to the ha e, mjunng the bond and tarting ep­aracion between the tread and ba e \l\ hich e\ entually re ·ult i e ~\rhole tread falling off. '-'Power consumption is aL o increased with overloads on • ,e tires. "fhe carrying capacities of indu trial solid tire have been s.et up on th'""'e ba. i_ of d efl ection un?er a iven l o~d for tire of the different ~ 1zes when ope ratmg at a maxmJ.um .;peed of miles per _ hour. J'he e rati?o-s _were ·established, f-rom experience, to grve maxrmum servr e hfe under average · operating conditions. If loads o r . pe~d. above the ·e !ecom­mendatio. n - are impo-ed on the ore, rt 1s at the sacnfice of tire fife. 'The next mo t important cause of indtl trial -solid tire failure i from operating the truck over imi?roperly kept 01· rou h .floors and runv;rays. "'Niechanical irregularitie · in trucks such a<:: prung axles, misaligned ca. ter , an~ bent tie .rods, will .cause more l?ad to be impo ed on one s1de of the trre, producmo- undercuttmg, · epa ration or uneven tread wear. " Sharp turns and quick tart ~ and ,tops will wear t he read rapidly and thrm strain. on the tire that may result in failure, or aggravate failure.'~ ~Ir. Delzell ugge ~ ts the foHowing rules which will help t<> obtain the o-reate$t · ervice life frorn industrial olid tires .: l. elect the proper type and ize of tire for the se.rvice . in ·hich it is to be u ed. • 2. Regulate the ize of payload · '"'O a not to overload Jre. J. . Center the payload on the truck to equal ize the load . on trres. 4, Avoid ~h arp turn . and quick · tarts and tops . - . Keep runwa . ~ clean and exerci se caution to avoid runn.in over harp article . , 6. Av'oid running tire over, or _parki.ng truck in, oil o · ea ~ . . In picking up loaded kid" m· pallets ee that opera­tor are careful to run platform or fork of truck completely under the load in order to di st ribute the tire load over all wh. cl . '. Check _tee ring. and: axle alignmen·t for mechan1ca1 irregularitie . 9~ Eliminate contact -with hot metal or o,perating for 1onf period · in hot room . 10 Do not operate trucks at speed over 8 mile. per . hour. 11. Avoid striklng ob truf:toins with sidewall or steel ba e af tire . 12. Do n'ot leave loaded vehide sta nd.ing idle f . r I ng eriod ,of {ime. 13. Lubricate all moving part properly, particularly · e power and brakin sy~ tems. l . Be ure there i - proper frame and platf tm dear- • ance o rttre~. 1 j_ Makf.! re ular inspections of t ire.:, temo e embedded o j€<;; ~, and cut off p iece of torn tread . 16. Exerci e care when pressing ti re .Qflto wheel to be tu· tire i·· G.entered and ~ tarted ev n:lv • • This is the . C.9\l, the new transport counterpart of the B-29. :whiah exceeds aU ~xisting Army Air Force transports in ra'n?e' payload and size. The big ship is HO feet 4 inches long.( has a wrnqspread of 141 feet 3 inches. an.d is capable of ccu;rying in its two deaks _more than lOB fully equipped troops ior long distances at exceptioncdly hiqh speeds~ What Is a Machinist? . ' . ' . B 'Y "B t' ll y )) B attu. on A machini t is the aristocrat of the trade classe . He is really a master craftsman. H e prides himself on his work­man hip. The old-time machinist wh served his ·apprenticeship prior to \'lorld vVar I and learned how _to op er~te and care for maeh,mes and get the most out of them 1s naturally ·inechalili"cal-minded. The full-fledo-ed machinist should be a man capable to operate a lathe~ shaper, planer, milling mach~ne, drill or boring machine. · He <;:an lay out work accordmg to blue­print and even make his own sketch or drawing from the information at hand. He can do any necessary b.enc_h or hand work, such as lapping, filing, scraping and assembling, setting and testing the complete machine . He has a fair knowledg~- of different metals and their properties: hardness, softness and wearing qualities. vVorld \Var 1 marked the machine operator era: very £ew all-around machinists have been made since then. It takes from six weeks to two years to make a competent operator, depending on the type of operation and on the individual. ' In the larger shops the n'lachine op-erator is trained in the running of one machine such as lathe planer, drill, boring machine, milling machine. A machini t usuall sets up the machine, grinds and positi ns the tools and directs the -v ork. _ ln job sh ps and general repair shops, L1 sually eve r_ man i a macbini t, capa8le of d ing any job that ·orne in. A young man who had comrleted his appr nti ceship in his home rown, ld horne and made appli at.ion in a la.rge sb p in Chicag , as a jo tr.neyman ma hini st. He was asked, 't\Vhat was his line?'' I'n machinist. "v hich to l do you spec1aliz on, etrc . ) U a drill hand, lath , planner, or fitter:'' I'm. a rna hinist, and it do ·sn't make any d ifference. Aft r a f w ~ · · eks tr.iat on m~ny t . ols- f e ' as made f r ·man f a di i ion of th e sh p. . . Tod::t · we n ak -5"pe ia li t . It us to be that hen, a man Bad served hi · a ppr 'nti ·eshi f , the bo.'S · mid ki k hirn :o:t1t, tell him to o ()fl'lewl ~r e.! · and L·arn t rc ud th n c rnc back. 1 I w we .n: .ak · p ·cial.ists v hon we ke p for ou r wt1 WOrK. . ''THERF IS N- S B5Trr ~T E FOP EXPE,RIE Thre~ -+ ~{' 23 . - . -- . :~-_:-. ·:-- :"""':­- ---::·._--: . . ~ •-:t•·· . . lLf. . -~--""-~ ~ . ,. _ . --- . . . "' .:. =--.-- -; -- ~ . . . . • 1o.o • • -- ., .,- \ , . ,? .:: d .;,:.;,-:-:- ~ Myths Are a Mile From the Truth . About Heart Disase r •• ~ ~ ~-.- ~ ~ • ~Iany myth and fa1 e belief have caused misunder­tandino- of the word, ·'Heart Disea e." Doctors say this result in nearly as much trouble a the di sease itself. Truth ba ed on modern medical ciences, replaces doubt with fact . brin inor new hope and comforting assurance to ali ' ho have been worried about their hearts . . lvf yth ~·{ o. 1- I .f you have the sy rnptoms you must have the disease. Tha ' not true. Such ymptom' a pain or a feeling of oppre sion in the che t, hortne of breath rapid or irregu­lar heartbeat, may be ign of heart trouble, but frequent ly come from other sou rces. Consult your doctor if the e mptom occur. His diao-- n.osi , aided when nece sa ry by the flouroscope and electro­cardioo- raph , may enable him to rea ·sure you that ou do not have heart trouble. M. yth No. 2-1f youjre. going to get it . you/re g0ing to get tt. Tha ' not true! Everyone, 1 a rticu la rly tho ov r 40, can do mud to forc!:>tall hea rt ·di a e b follmvino tb rule . 1. Eat re ularly, ut mod "ra ely. 2. I p y. ur wei rht dm n. If ov rwei ht, brina it down. 3. G 1lent. of l · p­ho r a n1 ht . r mo t . e; le. 4. Ea mr ra ·ly. Be moderate in u e f bac o r tim 1 t t ·. 5. 1--hn e a y • rl • ex minat in b your docto r. • Uo · hi · ad vic . ~ th r 0. 3-1 f you have heart di_rras you r.dll b per~ manent i11"1alid. That , n t rue! Thou and, <Jf peo lc ' 11 ) ha · · hea di ~e a - are l adin u ful and nearly n rm 1 Ji\· ~ b f l ~ lowinO' their d tor advic . Th r ' a lot of truth in th pre ion aT li ' lif tart takin care of a bad heart arly. ' l n - .V I etropolitan btJura1J.Ce Co mpa1z.y. Four "Liquid Heaf . Warms in Cool in Summer Winter )\·lo-t ~-evolu ion f)-' .m· t e1~al r> d v lored under the I' n ~ ·)r · J-up ( f "t!lc hou ·tng ~c11 -y i ''liq tid be t.'' K.n( ·r t · hill · H' . , ~ ua .resyl · ·m · te hi,. fluiJ lr ady ha c ·n pn cu ! 1 ll n r t[J · t r for lran fer o hta.t an~ culJ. \ t !. ·an x rae btl a ·mall fractic;n f the h a t f hre, _bec u _Jt becom cam and · ' a Jr;ra e" at 212 d·- '1 · ,s 1~ n~ renhc1 . T he Wqm.ler fluid deveh pcd b the Pier:e · ounc.l< ton tmd. r ovcmme_n a~ i., ho rv v ·r, can be hea , [ o d ~_,r ~ ' J• hr ·nhe1 t ·b: ut vapur· tim , Thi ~ JUld l e .~ ut w1ce ~ hot a , ~u1 ()Ven tem er~t re for rdit1ary kt1 r ro· tmr a 1d ho t ·r tfJ I an IH! in i , f · po or 1 h on tc of th stove. . . nd. i can be ransformed in o liquid ic a 'dl. ~o d. 't r e b) w_ z ro _al ren~eit, 2 degr •cs below fr ~zing f r wat ·r, Jt tdl r mams flu1cl . The .) 0-degr ·e "~i quid h at" can be ip ·d to the kitchen for 0 km. t and h atmr uch thin · a fla iron& percolator · t a ·ter nd chafing di ·hes. lt would elimina e' he ne ·d fo; gas or electricity to pr vide heat i11 the kitchen. The rest of the ( liquid heat" in he ba ement wouid warm water to ~e piped throu h ~he ho~s e for heat or tap wat_er. The flUJd _could not be piped directly o ordinary rad1ators becau e 1t "vould make the temperatUre too high and "cau e the radia tor to peel." . _Special r,ad i ~tor for_ holding the liquid fue nf.J'i are be!n de 1 gn~d. SpeCial cookmg tove and water heater al~ o are being made experimental1y. ~n sum1:ner the ltquid " 'ould be sent below freezi1 g b.­eqUipment ~ ri the .ba emem. It then could be piped throuo-h the hou e In radiator- for summer coolne . · nd it a1 o could be channeled to ice boxe (without ice) for food freez­ing or coolin g-thu ~ makino an jdeal refrigerant.-IVal/ StTeet Journal. Imprcved Artificial Hand For Soldiers The human hand i one of the mo t mar · elous and u eful in ·ention God or man ever conceived. In fact, its mechan­i m, d exterity ' Upplene s, and unu ual mobility i amazino-, and a a graspjn or an it ·urpa e~ anythin the human mind is able to c nc iv . man without two o-o d l1and- i e1~iou sly handicapped, and without orne ·pecial trai ning, he face · a rath r da rk futur e. · · n of th bi o- e t pr bl m fa ing the r habili·rati n de-pa rtm ,nt of the Gnited tat nny will be. perhap to tuip th, ldier \ ith u {ul anifi ia.l rtnn ., and hand . In th _a , artifi i·l han L ha ve. t · en m r ly f r I oks • nd tl h > k , whi h i. • fa irly u. ful but it i- un iuhdr an awkwa rd to u . \V und t" an that n. , rtiftcial h nd that lo T·s alm t lik th natural thing, an l "ry f:fi i nt, } a" b n inv ,nt.cd. 'of ii r' that ha'' b n unf rtunat ' r lu$e a hanJ rill b . ., uppl.ied ~t ,·oon as p . - l " ith fl of th' new trpc . • · a inf rmed that th n " hand i a m chani ·m of rn l 1. all l <! Juminum, n ld "d t 1 l < k lik · , fi ··h-a nd-blo d lr d nd it i difll u.lt t c -11 h diff ren " unl · · y u ob-en: I ely. Thi · ne' d ic is . tr pped t the ' houl?er with orJ runnit cr ver t tb oth r h uld . H m. v111 the od -houldcr f n~: rcl the rd i ti h en l and the a nifici 1 fin ' cr , . · nd thumb are pulled tocre l~ r. 'ddjer ar" aid to be enthu-i, bti' about this new invent10n. I I . f • ' 0 . t! ui 1r<: ' . I . ! . . . --- :-: --- Paper Problem . :ff-IEIR C \U t A. ·u CURE t.,.", "'•-1.f.t . ~-. . til lllf.iltrt.- "' · ~""'" . · ~,.,. . .,.,._. ",. -~ ---•- . ' . o I o - . ._ . , __ . ·- .•. ·- ,__ ___ ._, . ,. . -- .,. ' . .'. . --- "·~· •u ·-·- ~ . - --- • . ,. , . • • • THURSDAY E E lNG • APRllHl ••• a (sUS h lW ,._,.,.a~ ,,.~ (_ ~ ,. . "" I , . tl(JII;::tl)W,. R . AW J. ~1~ .tlt.--.11 I •"""-/• ~P.•f ~"~ttf•l#IJ¥1-rt,.,• • . H,. . ,.~t}tJ; . ~ . l'APf.lt PROBl h. tS / / I ,. * . •'- + i ~ ,,. ::r:; ~ c_; t I *j - ~- - ~ ._.-. - T ,.,~ •• - ,. ,-j . . -- -- ,._ . __. . . f'!!llr. ~- R.,.JJ I. ,._,. t. . . ,. ." - {. . . .,. ,J . Aif -. - - <Xtobcr 1 :-.r M,·crin!S PAPER 1rTGH1 I 1-i Ill \ I, I .1.\.1· II !A fO rH.Ji'.lkfO fHA l . .(; I'W >\DI•Ifr 't JH .- ,.,.o/ lilt ' •I . HI hi TJdl I ~ { l , f, ll.i'"(.l ~ ' f I I. 1') ( , 1 • ., ";f (J \~f(. ~ l 1 ' .IPI~ • ' ' '!i. h l • " f ) PAPER PROHL[M Tbur lalnr IIH.i Ti c· .u· lrrt ~ . t.,,., ~-- l ()f : And Ronald Drake, Field Man, Knows Both '\ hen the towering- frame of Rrmald I. Drake fills the o way of an~- prit ting office. all the f(Jlh look up, then get p t o greet him. ~or Ron i · a fan iliar figure in the large::- printerie ~ from : . oui_ o the ea~tern ~eaboanl, and he· a welcome c•ucst i ~ .l of them. ,\-here · r printer. g-a her, there you will find him . either .o <'~ ·i them in ~nme vf their printinrr pr blem-:> or, if a ,urn al cratherin?. on<.: rf the men at th ~ : peakcr:; table. I. ffici,JI:. he i li ted a~ the Field :erYicc Reprcsentatjve t.Le Champion Paper and Fibre Company. H re at home ,1e 1~ called t e trouble shr,(Jter. He -nO\· hi~ printing ju t a. ·well a !te knrJ\\· Champion • "'J er for of cour~ c he t \'u ~o hand ir1 hand. . f. 1 a11 \ omc i11 Cham ion rna e; f! ,ocJ pap~r anJ kn '1 . but paper_, ha e their peculiaritie o.11d en ain r;a]' ·r . . r reqUire Ct::rtam ~rradc · and typ (Jf in 1 •• cellain In: -l> adju t- . em 1 -l a lnt,r~f tbi nd that, ,,-hich. to the a\·crJ~e I apet 1, aker aIL" nr-t tlliJH.r" tc 1 \H1f1 r a brJltL . ? the: ml• ad thi-. job <Jll. Rc,na 1J \\ h() i: an ~ uthcJrit y on r unz a ~ rhe be~t m thcd of ·rettillL' th · ti11c.-:.t j(rb. on e;ery L( n l:.\·ahle L'rade (Jf ra cr. For in~tancc, a ClJarnpi()n mer h. ne- the ~rneral J1nces that he br;ur,.r. ltt a lr1r (jf ~ e ·, • 1 :.q•er hut an't for the tife of I im cre a · ati:-.fa,·­. :, r rintin~) _h }n his pre=- e: . . Rem in m~:dfcttcl) plth ()Jt u r 1f n happen. to be wmt r. and l!eh trJ th oltkc f t .t: c - c_n er .a _quickl. as po~ ibll" f(;f' ti1nc i - < n impor­i: ur m pnntlflf". ~ rriving at the plant, Ron "'·ill go into a huddle for a few minutes with an official and then hie himself to the pres room and talk to the boss nan in that depa rtrn nt. He learn what is being done makes a few suggestion - v\'atche tc ·ts and leaves, for the problem is olved. It mi ht be in the ink used or it might be in the pre ses. But Chamrion at horne can rest assured that when he does I ave, the final result will be a fir t class printin j< b. Printing and paper have been Ron's !if J ubt his qualift ations just read: work an l if vou • He was rraduat!.!d from the Pni\·e rsi v of \Vi:>c<.msin at J \fadi on wber, he majored in ch ·mic[l] en rineering. hn-mediately ht: \VcnL ·with th rc~•>arch department of the Kimberl y-Clark (JJnpauy, 1 up ·r n1anuf.:lcturrr., \\'h er· h W1t l1i., fir t pra ·tical trainin~ in paper tll<\kin ,., \ftcr a k\\ yl'an; with this cnmrany h ·went to tlw \V. F. Hall Printirw Cr>lnJ 'W\' r1f Chic,lf!O, ww uf dw nations larg­{;~ t. a-, t.hicf chet11i-,t. fJL \\[t:) with thi s firm fnr ·iaht yea.rs in d1~n g: c,f the tech ni ·a! d~j•.J nrne111 c' ,,, -ring ~\II printing-, inc! ,,cJint!' rutog1 '' \ un·. and tlw pup.·r ·ntd ink.~ u:-.t· l rhercon. Then he -.p•nr :i. \lcilr~ \\Jtlt lin: .\htr~tth, ,n Corporation, J :upetint ·nd< 111 o t!H· electJo 1)b i w founth·) ·md rwtn~g r <1f the art()JJ di\·i:-.irJn. \\.ith Lh i~ <1111pl tc hH1\\Icd.'t uf both l rinrin, ·and all of it. aw,Je , and l''lJ)< r. ltc came l<1 ChatllPiuu uri J:tnua y 13~ J<J1G, and tlttt. \\ill he ahk to celeht.1tL' hi tenth hampion anni • " an. in a :-:.bon time:. Fiv \ Publi hed b 'The Cham ion Famil a a mbol of the Cooperation and G?od Fell w hip • xi sting at th PI nts of The. hamp1?n Paper nd Fi re Com any Hamilton Oh10 ant n North _ a.r lina Hou ton Texa , and and r ille orgi . G. W. PHILLIPS __ - --- . --- . --- . Editor, Canton. North Caronna REUBEN B. ROBERTSON. ]R . - - -. - __ . _. _ . ___ . _ . _ . Auociate Editor DWIGHT J, THOMSON. - --- - - ---. --- ·--- __ . Auodate Editor EMERSON ROBINSON. --- - • . _- . Assistant Editor, Hamilton. Ohlo A.M. ' URY . -- - --- -- --- --- Assis tant Editor, Houston. Texq illl artie es i thiJ .n aaazi1le are written b. the editor except tl ose . htch carry the nanu of the aut hor. Tidings of Great Joy ~Ierr,' Chri~tma Santa Claus gift , holly) mi stletoe, Chri·tma tree~ _ plum pudding and all the things that mean Christma to u~ may be an ancient pagan custom, but they are no les intere ting becau e they come from the long ago. But. \Yithout the a, ociation of the birth of Christ the Savior, . with the Yuletide, these thi ng~ would not mean quite so much to us. . Chri stma i the name for the season t hat commemorates the birth of Chri t., therefore:- 'Oh: it i n't the holly, it i n't the snow, It i., n't the tree or the firel ight glow, It' the flames that goes from the hea rts of men When Christma love is abroad again." . \Vithout the Spirit of Chri t in the heart "Merry Chri st­mas" would not mean o much,-it's the spirit and not the word that count. No one knows when he fir st Ch ri tma \~· a s observed. Hov ever, it is known that centuries before Chri t a festival of rej oicing was held about this time of the year but it wa s not until abou the 4th or Stb century, that th observance of December 2~th in commemoration of the birth of Christ was first celebrated by th Chri tian Church. H wev r it so n became c mmon practice throu hout th Chri t ian world. · During the ChrL tma tide we greet ea h o h ·r vith th alutation, " lferry hri tmas ', bcc:au e th r i ' !10 o ~er words we a r familiar wi h that xprcs e ou r {c lJ ng quite o well. Back £ the f re ting i ~ th spirit ( f "g d will t men' ' and we wouldn't han e the gr tin if we uld- \\' 1ik i~- e don't . ant a new one. b ti ·tma i · till h i t­mas, and ma we, though l ivi ~ in a w rld ~ V:TY with changes, give thanks t: Go 1 Almt rhty for n ~ I re .1 u · p L-manency. What a fin thin r it i to meet a man ' ith he rt o bio-it ha no r om to rem mber a wron . • 1X The Story of Christ's Birth As Told by St Luke • 11 m o from .· as· it th ·day 1gus u ·, tha all lat h re w •nt out ·he wo-rld , hl"l lld b ~ ( nd this a ing w , fu rnad h n Cyrcniu w "OV- 'rnor of ~'yr i ·. 1 d ll w ~nt o be taxed, ·very vne into hi ow,1 ci y. nd J . ·ph a ls \>V n up from )alilee, out of the ci ·v f · zar th, 11 t ] ucla a, unt he ·ity of David, which i · c~H cl [ tl:lehem · (beca s h was of th hou e and lin a(re of D Vld :) I o be tax d with Mary his esp us d wife, being wit! child. rca And so it wa , that, while they were there the dav were a mpli heel that h should b delivered. ' ' . ~nd she b_ro~1 ght forth her ·firstborn son. and wrapped htm m wadcllmg clothe , and laid him in a man :rer · becau e there wa no ro m for them in the inn. ' · And there ~ere in the same country hepherds abidinc~ in the fi eld, keepmg watch over their flock by night. And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were so re afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for. behold, I bring you good tiding f great joy, which hall be to all people. For unto you is born thi day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord. And this shdll be a sign unto you; Ye hall find the babe wrapped in swaddling cloth es, lying in a mano-er. And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying, Glory to God in the hi ghest, and on earth peace, ood will toward men. And it came to pass, a the angel w re gone awa : from them into heaven, the shepherds aid one to another, Let u nmv go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thin whi · h is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known unto u~. And they came with has te, and f und 11 ry an ]<r ph and the babe lying in a manger. And when they had e n it th m de known abroad the ayino- whi h \ a told them con rnin thi child. nd all th y that h ard it wondered t th e things which Vi'ere t ld th m by th ' hepherd ' . But Mary kept all thes th ing and pond rc I th em in 1 er heart. nd the :h ph rds r t11rned glorif ing an prai " i n~ for all the thing that th had heard and s n, a, Jt told unto th m. . t. Lttk _:1-. 0. Th r i a d bt f r ic du fr m ' ry m n t untr,, pr p rti nal t t l1c bounti s whi h · ·raturc ro wne ha e m a-ur d t hi m.- Th J?na ] effer.ro11. d hi nd I ad it. n t b en for Am ~ ri c., ther would not hav . been su h a thing a fr ed m left throu hout th whole unr erse. -ThomaJ Paine. • --.- -- Jest 'fote Christmas B E·ug(ne Field Got a yeller dog named Sport, sick him on the cat; Fir t thing l1e knows he doesn't know where she is at! Got a dipper led a11' when us kids goes out to sljde, ~L ong co.mes the grocery cart, an' we a.H hook a ride . But mi{etime · when the grocery man is worrited an' cross, He n~a.che at us with hi whop) an' larrups up his ho An' then I laff an' holler, "Oh, ye never t:eched me!" ' But je ·t 'fore Christmas I'm as good a . I kin be! Gran·ma say he hopes that when I git to be a man. I111 be a mi sionarer like her oldest brother Dan ' _ .nA _ \\a et up by the . cannibal· that Eve ' in Ce' ylon's hle~ \\'here e ery prospeck rleases, an only man is vile! . ·But gr.an'ma he ha never been to . ee a \Vild \i\ e t s.bow Nor read the life of Daniel Boone, or else I guess ~he''d k.n~w That Btrff'lo Bill an' Co\ boys is good enough for me! · · · _Ex.cep' jent 'fore Chri tm.as, when I'm .a£ gm:id as I }(in be! - I A~d then old port he hangs areund, so ~aiemn-like a~' st1H . Hi- eyes they seem a-sayin': "What's the matter) little Bill?''~ The old cat sneaks down. off_ her perch an ' wond,ers what's 'become . -· Of them twG ene~es o,f hem. thatt used to make things hum! Dut I am o periite an tend o e·arne tly to biz · ~ ha.t. moth.er ays to father: "Haw improvecd ~u r '\Vil1ie is l" _ B!Jt .,a ~L~r, ,ha vm b:en a bo;; hisself, :uspicio~s me · \\lh n, }e fore Chn "'tnlas, I ro a go0d a I lnn be! . . . ·For Chri tmas, with its. lot an' lots _f .ca.n.<dies, c.akes an' toys, \~as made, they say for proper·~ kads an' not {or naughty boys, . · . . o Wa&h yer face an' bre ·h ·yer hair, -an' mind yer p's -and q 's, Aud don t bu · out y·er pantaloon , and don't wear out ver - ~· . . . ~ , . - . a Y, ••y um1 ' t.~ the ladies, and "Y essu r" to the men, An wh~n ~hey's con1pa.ny, den': p~ss yer plate for pie again; Bu , ,thmlnp ~lf the thmgs yerd hke to. see upon that Hee, Je t fore Cbn tmas be a good._ as yer ktn be! . ' . ""'··e should he in no hurry to establi sh communi. ations Wttli ~-far . They will p.roba bty, try to fl@a.t a loan wjth us. Hi tory may shDw that GermaFty,s: biggest - war -los-s he f tl'lre. . · wa . ' •' • - . Europ·ean and. Asia Vs. Ame·rican During the recent war. period, w:e are informed rnore than 125,000 ci ·1lians in the . United States k1"t an arm or · leg In an ·acctdent whi-le there wer slig;htly more than 15,000 amputation in · all of our armed forces. In - the. first four . days, after the Normandy ittv.asion, 11 ,000 men were WOll HQ- . ed 'em th·e \Vestern front, while 20,000 civiJi~H)ts in the l nited State · were inj.ured in autoinobife ac 1ctents cluring the am . peri od , acGording- to the records. If the above figur.es are atcutate, ana th y c ·me . from a reliable source it is certa inly a strong indictm ont of O~lf careles·s. attitude. In Eu rope and Asia when a .count:r;y be­comes overpopdlated, it is soon adjusted th rough the proe-ess of w~ r while here in America we let Oid Man CareJessne s handle thematter-and he is doinga real job of it too. ' ' e criticise our neighbors aero s the seasJ--cal1 theni barbarians, murderers; and warm.on(rers, when they start a ~rar. But, h ere· in the U.S.A., we hav;e adopted a rno·r ~ mod­ern, if not more humarie method of killing and · mairoin .,. human being .~It's a modifi'cation of the Japanese hari;.kari -tkle accident way. .·, While we are educating the J aps gtnd trying, to dev<elope a highest regard for · human lit:e among the Asiatics, we should make a greater effort to improve our accident record here in America. Killing a hund red thousand ·men, _women;. and . children in our factories, on the Highwa-y, and in the. . honte, in the good Qld U.S.A., and seriously xna i1ning more , than a half million during twelve months, through accidents; is a shameful record. . · '\ATh·en we r ealize that mote civilians were accidently kille-d in this country during thee years 'of vVorld vVar 2, than were killed in our armed ·forces during the same periQd, it seoe.ms that we would do something about it. : 'We talk about our secret weapons and modern -imple:. ments of warfare, but for killing and maiming human beings, our most deadly weapon. _ seems to be carelessness and thoughtlessness. . We are worried about coutrolling at<?mic energy-:-but, human ca-relessn.oess seems to be equally as difficult. Or is it because we are just playing at the game? Accidents don't just happen, they are caused and only human beings can do ~ omething about it. Remember, you have only one life. 'Better take good care of it. .-' ' ·P-erhaps If )TOU can d_riye a ,C<H When a ll about you The horneward rush is on at :five o'clock, And know xo.u're r'i !:tht wh n all th family doubt you,. And red ltghts fl ag yon dowu. at every block; I1 you .can tru t yOLo: i r1s.tinct to i.nfor:rn ymJ , \Vhtd1 way the guy 111· front mtends to turn .· Alth :ugh ~ e na n't. given a sign t w;ani yc u . . Exceptmg that -his stop li bt t&rts to b,urn · If youre content 110 lrive t he ' sp ·t thar's ·afe t Regardl.e ~ of th . p . cd by 1 w aBo:vv tr, · · ' · And, know.1.n you are g · d~ cr~n still .iv ·. cr dit · · T cr th~$e v ho ar with gre;tter kiH nd w d If YO'U can u, yo r h.· rn an.d n .t abu e .it , When tho · . in front ;i~;re cr ·epi .ng llke . n' il- 1he boulevard 1 yours t hav-e and u e i , A.nd, what i1;; ~ore, you ma k ~p out f jail. -:-Print p pic. Se:l()tn ,. ' Whole Family Wiped Out Accident • 1n . On. October 6, 194 • a car in which Leslie Garrett, his w1fe IX son and ~u h~er were ridin.g, collided with a Grey­hound bu D:ear Du;:on, Ky. and all e1ght were killed. At the time of the accident Pvt. William H. Garrett a ~on of Le _lie and J lr ". Garrett, was with the Headquart~rs Base erv1ce quad:on of the 37th Air Service Group in France. He '\Ya not1f1ed by the Red Cross and immediately ar rangement ~ were made by the War Department to fly Pvt. Jarrett borne by .plane_. T\~0 dars later he was sta nding by the open rave m wh1ch h1 entire family wa buried. A the ~a. ket were lowered, Pv~. \Villi am H. Garrett, the only ~urn 'mg member of the famtl y, slowly turned away to face the future alone. It pays to play safe ! With public sentiment, nothing can fai l; ith ut 1 ublic entim ent, nothin caJ su ceecL onse 10 • Jy, h who molds ublic entiment, O' deeper tban h whu e n~-t ts , tatur •. r ron unce d ci i ms.- A braham Lin oL1l. Tl c publi sp ·ak,r shmdd 11 v ·r sa ~ rifi · ·a ·n •'lr r. in ­divrdualiry and dire tn c~ s to gain li t rary ftni ·h. The "il!TH may be said of the writer and phil(JS pl t r. Y u can only becom · a '-rcat mast 'r l y fir t becoming <1 great ervant! He that ·can hav patience can have hat he wilL- Frank­lin~ Eight ManY Waste Ma erials Made 1 to Useful Product .· 1 n. th.1 ( . hr h ·n,, 'II£ -i 1· e:l \id l,' tre i• <lnv, aT ' Ill f lrfl . t m ' t qf ' I l II . '<! f l f1 a r l l Oft h t i I H .• ~} I i T nd in n1 n y· in : t· nt. · 1 1 • r nd c lf" r r 1 r t t 1 m tw · r 11 r · · nm 0 n • <. h . . f tl - "'• l m ·ual 1 ' n r · t'Ot 1 t· It• lH 1 1' ],J} forn ·dy , J. • r whi -. 1 \ t th 'u •I t tht: c· • n~) 11 ti u e - \" ila 1 . l . · 1 11 t h 11 I ·hi h g i v · n • , · ~ y , 1 r di c , • 1 f b . l u n 11"' 'ne 11 ' b ·inJ: u J i h t.n uf·c ur· f u thtn • a· . wn ·1' ~! lld b g mel' f lt J hat . 'i\, II rd flo 1 c r ·e nn~ ~ h 1r p~d h0c , f trni ur an l and m 1 ~ ut 1 r v· l ta 1 • p od c . 1 \\!. ) u11 e1 tan th t) eanu1 hull pr uct , ar u c p i-llc to dy · an c .-n · . 1 ad{· - y c 1 r. lr r c · in mad. I: 1 ~1 pean It h 11 1 · a1d tu be dura. le Y" yie din£" .~{JJrn sFm da to ·or . ~7 11 b ard man fac red frum tl ne ~ e~ n~t n d tct i , u dpr f, wa e rod nd fir proo". l\ I e~1 · h- t ' r ad·. fr m the ame m t ri· i loo ik he ~rJ.m.a r y f ·lt cr at10 . The ·e 1 ing and many t her, it ~ · l~tmed , can b _. made a a f rae ion of the c t o ma e ia tt \VJll r 1 lace. W wond.er if hi mat rial ould be u ed ucce f lly a a sh rt fibre m th manufacture of orne rade.· of paper~ .· T~ e peanut hu.ll ubstance is made, we. under and by gtmdmg; the h~ll 1nto a cour e owder. It 1s hen creeocd to the stze de tred and mixed with an adhesive b tance o form a ~ou ghy ma . The dough i then rolled in o hee or pressed mto moulds. In making wall boards or floor co 'er­II! g~, the pea_nut hulls are cooked or d.ige'Sted with a chemical ~Iro llar to. the method used in the production f wood ulp. fhe pulp 1s .then s~reacl over metal tables, rolled and pr sed to the reqmred thtckne s and then pa ~ed through dryin ovens. Lawson, Finney Plastic Eye Have you pretty good eye . Well, they are th be you will ever have and it miaht be a ood id a to t ke c rc f them for, we imagine, thi ~ would be dreary ld w rld t _ ~ through without light in our window . H w · ·cr, · f y u need artificial eyes here i · an intere tino· ·tory: In the September 2-' i sue f The Atlanta J t1rn 1 p-pearcd a story f the L v son, Finn y la ti E ·e. It i · aid, they make th m f clear cryli -a pla tic us t in rhc mal in of dentures, and th · r b tter th. n th , b ·.· t 1. ~ · eyes. Th y are individu ally ntt "J, h nd p int d nd h rd to br ak- an ordinary dr H th fl r w n t ·h tt r th' . B i1 g in livi lually fitt i , m 'an that tb r · i · m{ltion i1 the anift cial yc whi h mak s th ·m 1 )k iik ' re 1 one:. Bod :o ·r ti ns d > n t rou gl u them and · us it ·hing, \ hi h < f ·ours add t th · mf · r f tb v · . r r. '1'h · L·l\vs n and Finn y 1 Jl , l Hu piwl·' rtill i, ! pl;tsti laborat ri t:l arc lo ·at ·d in ·or ia--th L<rws. n. ( 1 n­r ral Hospifal i al til :-; j mil .s nc rth f A I, nta. ] t i ~-ti.d that t he arm has b ut thi rt ' pL sti ·y · hb rat ri ,. ~1ll t ld. 'Th . wotk ha i1 ')' be'n b :gun 'H YJ. ll<.' Fnr g~ ·ncra l H ~ pita l in 1944. ~1 h Laws n La\ or, t has t urn~ d Hi t n re th :m 5( ) artifH:ial 'VC8 in. ·stnt lish >d Octoh ·r . 3, 11)44. Fino " r ' L·lbo tt ur}' was L blishc I ah ut i, 1 LOnths '~ n. Pwm t r: '1,11 er· ar t o :s .l l e toe Pl' qu u. 11. " Pr T t: "Yc.j ani th ~rc r· two sides to a :h · t f fly paper- bu it makes a lot of difl' rene to the fly which sid • he investigates." • "• ' " " In e:resb.ng items .Gathered H~re And There ' • bo ~ inal w le who tia uri hed in America when Char­} marr w~ eenquerin,g Europe ate believed to have b:een d ~ ndan · of an A iatic trjbe. )) » . « « \,.<Jhlen pilo were first enrployed by the ferryi~g division of he a1 t an port cocimand, aqp.y ~ir 'forces in Septem-be, l:L~ " B" )) « « Tbe Chine e walking fish m·ove·s over dry land from one pool qf \'\'ater to another by twisting its pody in energetic l"ea "S. - " There .are 3 -oo -Boy Scout tro9ps sponsored by the " American Legion. · · • » « « · cotc.h and Irish -as la te as the end _of the 18th century .buried butter in peat bogs for :'agiag and flavoring." )) "» (( :c It" 1 e ti.n1ated that 200,.0 00 automoobiles are disappearing " from U. S. road& every month. . - " »))«C 'I'he fir~t veterans' hospital library on record in the U. S. was e·tabli "hed just after. the Civil War in the Soldiers' Borne at Togus, Me. )) )) « « The ring-necked pheasant is an importation from China. » )) « « The Hudson and Nlohawk rivers How in_ an ola valley; that · onii:e draine<l the Great Lakes centufies ago when the St. Lawrence river was choked with i'Ce. » » « « - That Boston. wa- once the capital of New Jersey . . » » « "« A . .mosquito boat is a fast motor boat used chiefly against \a~ e na'Val ve sels. )) » « « · l'h.e Great Banks of Newfoundland are one of the most pToducti e fishing grounds in the -wDrld . . » )) « « S gar, gold · and coffee in succession have dominated the economrc of .Brazil. - )). » « « T he first perinclical R.:J;Ibli hed in the United States, was Beftjcamin. Franklin's 4"General · Magazine an4 Historical Chr.onicle,' i ued iFl 17 14,- in Philadelphia. . » » fC « ' . Steel W-Orking and. hardening in a~n advanced stage was common. 3 ,GpO years- ago in Greece . . » » ·« « - .The 'fajg,a of S1berja , -one of the world's greatest forests, r 4,000 mile long·'and 1,000 to 2,000 rn.iles wide~ It is nearly a-s large a the entire Uwted States. Hindlll~tani is ecof:lnto English as t}1e,mo.st used hngoa.ge. - » » « « . Re ion iro:n ore deposits O:ear Caen. (in Norman.tly, Fr.a~ce) have been worked . ince Roman times. )) )) '(( . " " ' R~fdler Gent(:!r in New York City, is the 1'9-rgest priv- 11 ·ely owned bu ines. and entertainment cente·t~ in Ameri·ca. » » (( • At the dose 0£ th€: Rev~lutionary ·war, Co,ngn~s_s · ordered the df bandmert{. of the e9tire a''r.my, ex~:t.ept "25 privat~ to _ ~rd die ~tQre at Ft. -Pnt, and 55 to guard the stores a~ \V es1; Point}~ ·- The actual throne of Great Britain is Gothic de . ign in th:e hou e of .lords. an oaken chair of · )) » « « Beheading was introduced into -England Conquerer. )) .)) « « . by "'illiarn r:ne ·- The medi·cal depanment of th€ , Army: inth:1d~$ ab?ut , · 500,000. enli-sted personn-el and 117,000 officers, mdud1ng . commissioned nurses. .,, " (( « . . - - A Iarg~ oak tree at St. <Martinsburg, La., nut~ks the Jeg- - endary- spot where LGmgfellow's heroine; Evangelme, started her search for her lover. . . " ,, .,, (((( - · Afghani tan, a nation of 10,000,000 p eople., ha ~ no· rail­road. )) )) « (( First gold di scovered in Alaska was in the K~na:i river basin in 1850. . » )) « (( Camp Lejeu-ne, New River, North Carolina, is the largest rna nne corps training-base. ' ' I 1 Three Kings ' By Grace N all Crowell . United they kneel at the mange1· bed After their long trek over the sgnd: - , Three valiant-kings who \Vere strangely led By a silv.er light to a far-off land. " . '~'eighted w.ith , gifts of jewels and gold, The s.hine of the star still in their eyes, · · · Caspar, lVfekhior~ Balthazar hold In their hearts the wisdom of all th~ wise. Humbly before the Christ they. wait, Acknowledging Him, ·His gloqr, I-Iis power, There at His sid~ they subjugate Their will to His this radiant hour. Their .burd~ns lift from their hearts, they rise, 1·1en with a vision- they turi1, they go Back to their own far lands, these wise Earnest kings of the long ago. Oh, that earth's rulers today would t.ake The starlit road to the Christ, and tnere Seeking a cure -fo-r the wo,ild's heart-break, Find it_i s hnmble, united prayer! "' ' l - . J udge: _ aYou are accu ed of stealing a cbi~keri. Any­thing to say?" . · · Pri s.cmer: "Just took it for a lark, si:r.'' Judge : ''N resemblance whatever. Ten clays." Mrs. N l'-'ltpor~But isn't your son rather y ung: to join the armyr · :£\1r . Malapro:e~W e'll, J1e $s~ very y llng) but, th n _, you $·ee, he is only going to join the infantry. - . A ~i"s iomiTy :o iety member approached Henry. ~'W . · are havinv a raf~ l e l r .a i oor- widow," .h.e said. H\fVill ym1 buy .a ticke t?'~ · . "Nope," said Henr~, "my wife wouldn.'t -1 t me keep h er if ·I won.'' · •,· NiM ,• - ·-' ,. . . With But Three Exceptions United States Presidents Were Rural or Small Town Folk Despite humble oriqin they filled the highest office in the land with honor • Did you know that. with ut tl r · .~ c pti n all f b president of the · nit d t t , c me fr m farm a'nd vi llao- s -the gra~ roots f m ri a. Of ~the . pre--idenL who ha erv d er 1 an f 1 6 year ~ twenty-one \\- re maH-tov n ] ·~ w. r by rof sion. Four-T-ame2 Al ram Garfield. Ch . ter . Hen rthur. ,r r Cle,·eland, and \\-o dr VI' \ iL on ,. re tea h r as w 11 as attorney . at one t.im.e or an ther. !fillard Fillmor thir- • teenth pre~ iden comb in d tail ring \i'rith the ra tic · f law. Andrew Johnson f whom it i aid that h could neither read nor 1 ·rite bef re he ' a ma rri d Vira a tailor in the ~ity of Green ille. Tenne ee. Pr sident J hn on' v old tailor shop in Greenville Tenne e, is pre erved a a hrin ~ to his memory. Pre ident Hardin was a small-town news-paper man. . For his rural ba karound Abraham Lincoln is best knoVi·n. Born in a log cabin near Hodgensville Kentucky; of ver poor parentage. Lincoln attended school but a few month~, but he read and reread the Bible and the few othyr book which he could get hold of. He worked on the farm, clerked in a store tudied law and served in the Black Hawk Volar. After he began the practice of law he was elected to the Illinois legi lature and then to Congress. Another notable grass-roots president was Andre-w jack­son. Born in ~ axhaw settlement, North Carolina, near the South Carolina border, "Old Hickory", as he was called, studied law in an office in Salisbury, N. C., before he migrat­ed to Tenne~see. Other presidents born and bred in small towns include: Calvin Coolidge, William l\tfcKinley, Grover Cleveland, Rutherford Hays, Franklin Pierce, and Benjamin Harrison. Some of the small towns · in which American presidents first saw the light of day are: Port Conway, Va.; Summer­hill, N. Y.; Hillsborouah, N. H.; Delaware, 0. Plymouth , Vt.; Caldwell N. J.; Niles, 0.; and West Branch, Iowa. The only three chief executives who claimed cities as their birthplaces were William Taft, Theodore R?ose:rel~, an? Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Taft was born m Cmemnatt, Ohio and Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin D. Roosevelt in ew York City. T . n former presidents, George Washnigton, Andrew Jackson; .l\tfartin VanBuren, Zachariah Taylor, Minard Fill­mar braham Lincoln, Andrew John on, Grover Cleve­land, \Villiam McKinley, and Harry S. Truman did not have the advantage of complete col.le e education. . Harry S. Truman, ano~her ~rass-ro.ot pr l?ent, w~ born in Jacks n Count , .l\if1 sou n and hv ~ on h1 fath r' farm until the l nited tate entered the F1r t \ 1orld v\ ar. So n after the nited Stat ntered the v:ar h nt to France as a li utenant and lat r becam. cap in of artille y. At fir t it is said, he ~a very tmpopu1ar with hL m n but he gained th r spect of hi toua~ Iri h private~ in the b ttl · of St. ~fihiel and the Argonne dn• · . n th way back fr. m overse~ , his men bought him an enonnou t 'n- allon lo 1n up whi b to d four f et hi h. . . . He ha done farm dwre~, wa h d d1 he, tn a drug tore fer $3.00 a 'fi eek, '''rapped paper in the mailing ro m of the Kan~a Cit ' Star clerked in t r , and b · nk , and op- , erated a haberdashery. • Ttn Interdivision Scheduling Conference he- ;fir t In rdi i i n l l1 11lin~ onfer nee w " held at H mtlt n c . ·r 15 and 16 with . r'pr ', ent· ti • · fr ~ m th -ren -a.l Hamd n : nt n and H. u oz ·ched ling a11d .,a I '. 1 artm ·~1t a 1 en I mg. 1~ uben B. Rr er son, Jr., · ic pre kl Jn and g rr ral ro­du t1 n man . er, spok ~o ~ group on "Pr ducli n--Pa L Pre . nt .and Fut re , r v1 w:1r."' the p t hi ory of Ch mpion P iu t~ n t date and out1mm and e plal ing orne of the produ ·11on managem n~'. pi~ n. f r fu ure pr duction facili­ties an ·I pl . n f r all divlsJon . H. W. S.uter vice presiden and general sale mana rer, • 1 oke n "Sale - ] ast, Prese t and ut ue", cxplainin to the gr up orne .f .the les problems of the pa t, Ch mpion ~ pr ent sale · p ttl o r and what he expects to be om of he al s pr blem of the fut 1re. B t~ , 1r. Rober:t on and Mr. Suter mphas1zed that Ch· mp1on·s 1 r duct10n and ale program for the future must be based on the fundamental of coordination of the facilities and advantages of all Cham ion Divi~ions consid­ered as one unit. Harold Wri ght led the group in a discus ion of scheduling as related to divis ional and interdivisional production and sales problems. Mr. Wright gave a brief history of schedul­ing at Champion and pointed out some of the problems we might encounter in the future. An explanation and di scussion of the methods of handling · and the consideration to be given to interdivi ional grade transfers was led by R. L. Betts. Frank Thompson outlined the pulp and other raw materials situation for the foresee­. able future . A round table discussion of current scheduling problems was led by Mr. Wright at which several problems of both a divisional and interdivisional nature were advanced, and solutions for which several good suggestions were offered. It was the concensus of opinion of the part1cipatina in­dividuals that each derived a great deal of benefit from the conference in the form of better knowledge and under tand­ing of the interdivisional and divisional plan and problems. Each hoped to be able to pass along to hi co-worker a degree of this appreciation and thereby further the Champion program. Those participating in the conference were: H. W. Suter and R. B. Robertson, Jr., repre ntin gen­eral sales and production management; Harold\\ ri aht, R. L. Bett and Frank Thompson from the general cheduling de­partment; Cliff Rekers and Bob Hacker repre enting Hamil­ton mill scheduling, and Carl W. Noltina from Hamilton sa l e~; Paul Wheeler from Canton :rvlill ' chedulina, nd _ d .l\llcClure from Cant n sa le Glenn nivel , r pre ntino­the Houston Divi ion mill ch dulincr and sale d partm nt . The cretary for the conference· v a Patricia Hamm rle. H fir t er d a road ov r e r_. th n h wa l ct d county jud e. The offi f C u~qr Judg , it _i . aid. wa a pur ly admini trati po t r qum~g no tr;unmg tn lav . H \~r r, Truman d c1ded that a ltttle know] d · .f law v uldn't hun o h tudi d at a law hool f r two y r . H wa n xt ele t d t tb Unit d tat . n t in 19 4 nd r cl ted in 1 40. lt j ~ aid that r.tr. 1 ruman while in the enat vYa . ·ery uc "' ful a a war-graft .inve tigat r, no~t only.~ au ·e .of hi ~ natural 11 n . ty, but al o becaus of ht ' tradt.tl nRl_\It - uri re t for a dollar. He a in ·trumental m h~ ·vm a committee appointed to investiga~e war ontrac.t.,. H1, om­mittee is called today' The conscience of Y' a hmaton . • c: THE . am raton, HAMILTON DIVISION B) Bill Thompson Landed in the \\'indy City ju t as the De roit Ti<Yer were i·ving Ott Reid" Cub" tho e fini hi no- ouche . T o ad, Ott. but beinc an old Giant , . ., I can whole heartedly , mpatl iz.e lVith Y-OU. )) » {{ « ~\fe r 26 mon h in thi - monkey uit we ran into our fi r st Champion in the _,e_ ·1ee, except when home on leave, of - re. \Ya ~ at Chic a o' -:-· bus ~ ervice _ Ia 's Center and the party we met u·· ~ o-ood old Charlie Roemer, better known to . ou · all a HWhi tey1 ', ·• \~hit y '' ' a on bi ~ · ay home for a ~ hor vi<:;it a·fter 26 month - of ea dot"L ·' He ha 43 }'i point and about a week. o P ait for di 'd ar e '- < Inciden 1. ~ ~ -our truly i tatio-oed at t1 e . ~a \r • Pier in down tmvn Chi-a'"" 0 to . .:-,weat out> his o her point and (,ne ha!f. Eve ry afternoon and ni,zht 11· er ;· ·ith 4l:'- hour lveek-end llbenie, to oot- IaQd no duties exc~pt plain loa '" G2' and raking on more and more wei _ ht~ 1~h o::e old civies will never ~ t m n w. JJ » « {( e la ·ert !lift from Champion was a d v w J1et vrith name in cr:ibed. ~ ·er. fe~Y week: ve recei-ve some nice (,l~ en from the \fill which is the envy t: (I ' r buddic . Then when we men­tion th<" f c d at Champion ser iee men o-et a two-weeks vacation 'tvith pay on return and that their eniority grows aU the time they are in the uniform, the bo_rs really let out "~Nith orne amaz­ed tt·hi tling. l) )) (( (~ \\-bile home on a leave last week we dropped in at the Calender R oom and aw mo t of the old gang and found thina like olden days. Olah \rVa1ton 1) t ome ex pen ive wao-ers on the \Vorld -·erie and a quart of-urn coke - t L Yi Pannel. Lou remarked, "I ort of liate ·ro take the quart off poor \Valton . ut I ues he will learn ' . )) l) ({ (( And-for the b n fit of you guy· wh aid tbat old man P ann el co u.ldn t \-vrite, \\'e know better. Lou i · wrote you r tru ly a nic a letter a an ne could e · er expect. Th ank ~ > L uie. )} )) (( (( Our e perience has n that wh re ser ice men were found in (Yrcat num­bers like , aboa rd citi es, 1 i berty was oor, and that v:here men in unif rm were . c -hL'' Sgt. \Villiam R nt ch i r ~ rit that h ~ is ~tt a r '$~ amp at Luna, Lu , n, b nt XJ e ·t · t ) b , · a '" k in th - <H and at tb mill 1'loon nh r Janw:uy 1. J n any tb "f .I ' tt TS th 1 rit s.aiJ they · r b ·ing , nl hom", 1 ot t ,'end an mot· mail n l they had hi ·h h p s of bcj11g back in the mifl , many of th m l ef r • this is, ue of THE Lo ~ is published. Eleven Harr A T. Ratliff s Colden Champion's Traffic • nn1ver ar anager It'' ::._jt~:-t a lnlf n:ntur: a~c, lLt t•dn-. . !.t) ( <>\<'Ill b r . 1' 1 .) th:n thl' :tun~ J1Ltn -.hn\\11 ll'!n\ rn:rdc hi~ aprc.u nee .tt tlw Ln ''t infant indu:-trT t, ~tJlt 111 lbmilt(ln He ldt a t! )d jt.'l <1:-- ~.-hid d ·rl o1- the t h ·n ·. ll. dl1U j): I aih\ : C\ ml_< n; \nt '' th~._ _P: n _I .ultn.td ompany) to help h ndle :'hlf'f'lll~ fnr the ( h lllll'' )ll (. o.H cl Papt' J ~(l!ll­r n. -. Ted,) Har·\ T. R.Hiilf j'Ictur~_·J t::; hellO\\ i·, stand~ alon~ ,·" ~ht 't ~le 'h:tmpi )Jl h r -~ ) ~ t Jl~ f unintet nq t ·<J ~.: · ·r ·,. :- 1H m th.: lunJ~_•;:,:-- .md n >\\ ~-·nl'ral Tr.J !lie ~ bnJger ·f 11 L nt~ Clf th 'h·m1pion Pcq' ·r ~n1.d Fibre Cnmp, ny. HaT). u 1f1. rtunat~.·l. , dn ·~ not remini.;;.re ' ~rv mu !J , bnt there · rc ~ m ,f tb Old Timers '' h do. · \\'hen h fir:t cJme tL1 the mill h:1mpion was duinrr a - _i,,b ~_)f c ')~ning paper in a small n"' ' t n buildin r ab~nt t wht rt tlw Coating }Jill Calt:nder~ are n \L - ~ The: Wt I inbL und anJ outbound tonnage in 1 1 9'" was a matt~r of I "'.0(0 ton::: per :car as compa red with 2,742,600 on.:: m th~ year JQ+-t. ln 1 SlJ) all tonnage in ancl out had t be handleJ by hand or hL rsedra \\·n drays and taken ither to r from th railroad back f th ~ile - 1'ool \Vorks or to the boat' ,,·hich then plied the :\liami and Erie Canal from Cin ·innati to Hamil'::on. The Hamilton_ Iill startt:cl to grmv rapidly on the startin cr Mr. Ratliff when he came to Champion a Half Century ago Mr. Ratliff. as he is today of operations of the Hamilton Belt Line Railway Company in 1899. So Harry has v\·atched Champion ru\\in(l' for 50 ! ear:­and has seen the irnple problem- of 'hippincr in 1~95 become so complicated. and freight tariff' so varied, that the.· had to be controlled to a large extent by the Federal Government. l-Ie has the hcn8r of ·urervisina the freight rate structure of all divi ~ i o ns. The shippiner man of tho:Je days has become the traflic expert of today, who must kno\v rates on thou~anJ · of article: and must be able to detect 1•vhen that rate doe- not fit in with the product he i shippina or receiving. The Champion hirt~in g lcrk of 1 c95 with 10 tuns of coated paper a~ chy to look after, ha · b come the 1eneral Trafr1c .\Ianagcr of the gi nt Han ilton, Canton cHld IIou~ton mills ,,·here i'TI the year 19++ the va ri uu · di\ i~ions handlt>d an enormo us tonna ge. ·!os12 tu 3,000,000 t ns. Tunnag~ muvin!._!. t Jda\. ' b. ' train. twck and bar~'-t and on e\:ct: ton t which there i: cJrdul check as to r~ttcs. etc. .I1c alsn ha · tL) :u1en i:c th usands of tons of other fn:ight cuming to c\"t?t_T department )f th · Ch clmp i~m Plane and if )_- > >> « <« cd Con' face. I: re ·orne on of fcudin~ going o n Frn£sry and Ike; The oth"r ·.Fro~"',-; .!lVII Ike a vcrv b:1d ime abo~! · . r rpin!.!'' all day Jong. ft ~e tbar Frnt-'!.!~ ,.-a~ doing the am<.: I t •· didn't Gnd CJllt umillatrr. )) )} (( (( Beckelh,·mer came ru ·hino in • 1::' r11z t.p a few \'vC k- hack. H . ! • 't under,ta d \vhat hi- main 1 \ ., , until .\1 H rmann made tht: lig-l t. By he way. Bob i nc\ · "Da \'0 d" bmth l'r. )) (( (( C Il\'( ne tell me \ h\' Raleivh 1 ~·r ·a·: u tin_ hi litd~ jalop~ ·-in . her he tml<.l dri\' . trai :,.:-bt o 11: C .1ld it he th :lt he'. afraid to r · i.i b- kin2' abilin or mavbe h .ou! ·ell . _ L X\ ·ell.' - )) )) « r·1 y o 10d one· ar· h in' n l ere. Hav yon h ·ard th o R y _.,. al comino- throue-h a ein~ a man han2'irw from If 1 o_r H:r u rman he een that lherc w, a ~ 11 r tb · c her .,ide. U>> CCC< Yhat will you have Packard, Chev­HIIet. Jr F orJ ~ The be t car in the e part i., the '37 Pa kard that John _ff 1lJ 1h(Jn ha, . Y rJU couldn't believe it bur \\e kno \.it {r,r a fact that h can . '0 3t mile an hour \-vith only the small­c t amount .A rouble. )) )) (( (( The littl men with white coa ts ar corn in~ afte r one of our fellow . Did an) rme bappen to sec a J. articular I it­t! · ltcJrt fellow back in th · corn r alr1n ~' whrJ wa talkin" to hims ·If and ' makln.! ~JI kind of l'eculia r m) irm . » )) (( (( Plea c . omch d , tell me: what J h~ • Rc,\H' do o.; wi h hi'i Saturday aft r-nc;{ JIL be ide .~ , 1 an l <m the cc 1 n .r elf SelCJlld and Hi"h .'tr·er.;;. )) )) « (( Dy the time thi -:, i . u ~·r> ·. <• pr · we l oulcJ e . JJJ of uu r Pip Shr 'P scn1c m n bacl <•n til j(1l. II 'Ie' ·t lr 1 in nywa y. MRS. PYLES CONVALESCING :t\1rs. Della Pyles, Seven Mile, wife of Gilbert Pyle , Cl\1 Sorting, is con­valescing at her home following a major operation in :t\1ercy Hospital. HENRY GETS A SOAKIN' Henry Hopkin , Pnloadino-, went fi shing r cently and did his ca ting "'·ea ring those high top rubber boot . Unfortunately for him, there wa a • , t poff in the creek and Henry d rap-ped a foot or tvvo. just enouo-h to per­mit those boot to fill vvith \Vater. ' Vhat he aid , hould have not been sa id, cv n about a pair f bo t ·. ' ~To\ , n1y man , ~ "you know that tmd ju ·i, prud 'nee :you ar .tn n nt. '' :aid the jtl<.-l:re. r our s.v · tem of pr s tmed to be "Th ·n,'' r •pli d th lcf ndant, 'why all this elTon to om.i ·r ml· ?" Tin1 i th · cJn ·thing that l n nc\·er h' ret ri vc L )ne may ]use nud re<• in ~ frit·nd · n may Jo · • and reg in money; opp rtuuity nne· :-.purn d rna .' c m,e a rain; bm the h urs th ;tt arc lot in id letH'" · C lll n ., cr be lm 't<> Itt ba k to be. n-: c·d in l'< inful pur, 11it:. '1t k t ·at' ·r . <Hl' m, J( ur m ,tr'f d in the hour. a tc1 ,' upr)er.- t<"(' Y or!. TVorld. -- - " If \ old ~trc \'r,u mv !itt! m. n ?" '·f dou't knrJ\\ : ir. ~-fmh r W, l\ 26 '"hen 1 [t'> I)( t n. lna JlO\\ -h ':; on! ? ., • - . . 'Pvt.t. Ct d · • · e art. en of Thomas S e art, N~. ll B at rs, and Mrs. Stewart" and b-rother of Le.rr · e Ste. Fan an~ C~unt. He_ n-o i st<X.tioned in San Fernando, on Luzon in the P . PP · s . ' at Ste · rt llano e. Mi Patty Denni ~. a student at Httmilton High School. and rta Sue tewart two ye<m~ old. si ter- ot Clyde, and. Lor~;tine ttnd dauqhter of Tom and s rart. er an ·ews --- B Bud Dunlap Cha li · Bloo . u·ho ha~ been 'ill for • ~O e t1 "', i_ now repor ed com· ale c-in_ ra i - a hi home and \Ye -urely \-i11 be ~aid to ee him back on the job. )) » « « Gor an (P k) Chamber Vivian (Pee _ Ias -ie and Har -.- li her ha ~e e urned to heir o in the enera­or room. Punk and Harry have been in he se Tice more han four year and Ye. e in ser ·ice in Africa: Sicily . I al ·a d F rance. Pete ,.a i for three year.,. _ ll bo ·s are deli hted o be home and he old P m\'er bowlin team ·ill haYe orne dark ho- e \vhen P ete and Punk et in o heir uide. ) ))' « (( C\eral f the bo ~ a e ded he Ohio ·ate-\' i consin a me rerentlv . • They were La renee J r Gordon · ndrews Bill Derb , .\1 rae f, P aul hotlenbar er at1d Ted ~,ceman. orne of the hi 1 light of the trip included : Ted eeman being e cor· d aero a s reet by a poJrce 1an •ho held raffic: Lawr nee . orO' and Bill · erb i a ,1' i din co te · I .ra ff drink-in a 1 of coke · P a l ·al in a ou th~ i juicy eak at ayl _ at d o rdo _ ndr '' h He in ~· en1a "\ .'f time the ca e o a raiJr ad rack . -' rhe huck Hack r ha j i ed our rank ~ a{t r .a tr tch o · } r e y · r ' in . he ~ T a 7 r. H i a fin l ) kl no- bo , and beli \'e j o · ot i in~J · and in-eres ed in 11 kind f . or . \\' f-come. » ,. « • : 'AU 1 P arker ~ one m n who e, Fourteen lirnb'ln ~er cheee and ljke it. T he rouble i he never et" enou h. )) )) (( ({ The other da - i.n :\o. 1 Bojler plant~ a res ure te t wa. being run on a d ryer drum. II \•vere on needles and pins and all expected · omethin to happen. It did. Some one hit a piece of metal that made the darndest noi e and all thought the boiler had burst. There was a wild cramble, funny to ee, but unenjoyable to be in . )J. » (( <l It can happen to the bevt of bo\Yl r . Zeke • and1in made a Z02 and a 204 and final!; a 107! The funny art ab ut it be wa roundly core for lo in he la t ame but never c mpli ­meuted for vinnin the fir t two. _ furiel Bur key in h -ter ~\'1 n-nion office, ha taken up b v\J lin an.di doi g , i:rlu · ooda ito and if h · rurh~ '\' r · kno could pn b­a ly b ·a , m of the mcr1. H ,~: abo ut a. match era ~ R a . I ·· xon has · a h rJe . f h I by -and tha ' r, i ~ ing b<·c . H ha, nin . I i · )f rh · 1 Ct - an l to 40 th u-a d b in ' c Jo ~ . y t ~ n i a j . }w\ r mu h h \ } · • $ 10 ' . !-,"(JOd y , r. ~ l , d r e. r · d b r u 1 . m d f fJ(l e . ·, hu admi , r.hi w a b· d vcar. • )uit • ' Ho . · r charac . 1 • · !Oil 'f • 1 anJ · Jrki1 i-1' iu th I ar Jld d l d Bob l i., n. ar ci ~iJ.ian · f! in j ,. l • c I Ii - ) <1 Pip' .'l } I) Bob, b . e · Jn n~ lr li fi)!' nd 1 f Hi ) . { 1 r L 10ld in rizQruL hud . · t . Ill " alp 1 as dt ., V1-H, 1 ~ h a. to t··h t)c' rd hi 0 n : rtwr r Ju v h.:. . lim b't ( ff ·r tum 1 nnn ' ' (J .e pl·c ehe l (, · b<Jilt thi L. . ~ . • fl T~rl . ·em n has r u to iv" hi er vtc ·::. fr an: mor • ii . ~ 'n! p Ued ( ,, rd1 t , t'\_ndrevv. o ic :0ry i11 h • ·v · n - ·1de 'o!Jncil rae ·. Cordon th · nk d Ted and hank:) 11 o ~; wt ,1 u . oncd him. Bill B rre h.a ~ I, vvur truly do \"H re_cen ly on lJoi1er pl;n , J'":v i • • • o · Btll, eli£ de and di ·~· ·H: » • tv~e e TlFJma can ell o tall sH~ rie about any hin:. and an, lace . • · J o recen 'a . rA roin in o cove rn Kentucky and seein ome petdfied I ndians and onds 30 fce:t dee . » » « R }' . · !len i lorJkin forward o hat great day when he can ha e a family reunion. He has three on~ and a dau hter in ·he ~en·ice and the family ha not been to ether a a unit for more than three year . Ed inf(teton ·­son. Bob, also was discharged recentl and Ed. t?O is awaiting the day for~ reat famt!v et-to- ether. ~ )) )) « « Jack (One Ball) tewarr ha been havin~ bi, hand full tryin o beat Bud Alexander in that reat arne of bowlino-. A ~ thin ta'Od no"', B d ha a little the better of the ar ment - bu 'lratch out. f l) )) (( 11arion Hetterich, a blue and dream' blonde. ha been helping ou in th~ Pm ·er offic". ~he is a . tuden at l ? . and i, takin up bu ine~, corr ·p nd­ence. » . (( ol: ,,jib rt O\-\"n a art of lum~ l ll ~ {half) they t H me. In f, <.:t h i a real ·t e man up wrth. l ob if thi1:1 , t r ~ i · not rru , blame th fell'' ·h . ld m . i . t1'11 : f r " l ! r ~ t hrl · , I I • \\.ally Reed lo:r l1 u · ~ i. H h , e n h ·l in~ r ther '-- a d ha no fnrther f }) « ( H · m p r h y t B 1-d \ l , . an-d r in t t: re nt death of ·,is I thd. 11 P' or : 0 't 'UU kuO\ · • u ~ • s u li e • 'ltlut l • r t tn ur: 11 a lie n ? • , a! ·. m, n: ' 1 l:n w I 1\' ( n ' l Hint? an 1. bu t 1 didn't kn v th ., re n. • • • I 1n ews --- B-. II el n Pierson I • ' • 1 • ne &.1 · n • t~h he Fi 1i hin r . c nan .r n '\, ' bu ·-'""~, J • . h '\. ar • he v, r1 Ill~'' :rhr r, \ in freed m for tr . \r~ Ih· Fab rand Rai h . f b a C ) 1 • h ei [ j I I h . .J () h ll h lie <Jn a ~ Ja · furloue-h i: d i .~ hi" f 1rio 1~h. lohr ., I i di charve b\ h: fir-, • he yea aPd b., back \ ·i I; w a rain. . a1·1c \\-r n and Thr, 1a Hllndl '\ • l o are ack (Jfi h j Jb. Ray (,arn:.t i Er Baureric vi i 1 he d - 1 r me . he 1- a m n h and ~Xf cc ~ o · e bac. rj n. L' t. ,f luck ft:llow· . did a ··II jc,b in d c a rmcd f rce: nc •e n<' . 1 ill do a well job 0 e C an I ion. . Hard be · i · pcndinrr a two va atiOJ i l hi --on. 1 t L . B nner. Gc rgc p nt C\ Lral • c,. 1h in de Chinu.-Hurma ThC' trc o· \ · ar an i n( \' om n a . ._- dar r o !!l . • • D<Jra , 1 Kinne\·, S<·alin( I( ft on • c:t~,b ·r 2r,, Je i lin , . he ' an cJ w a. hr rnc J.tld k('C} hrJU · f ,r h t h11 - band\\ ho \ . · 1 t:tcllt h. di char!!cd fnm1 h , r ·ic('. \\ · really mi. you J )ora . ] yuu r. ~· II ;:J f '\\' lllOllt h a T(J r nld \' u c,i a cct 1 ., in r,mcun · ·he, \o\ <1 actiJ·, a littl diff·r ·n hr_re A l·tc. Y c . (,\11 ~uc. w·1s rioht. I It did at rive hurn ·an 1 it \\ < '' cddin" h ·II hr o11r Franu· . I 1 anc · Baker (f 1mit('d in m.t ti~tl!<.: to D•)il'' . ·dy (Jf the_ ·av . • ·• n tr; t !at ion.! .\nd we wi h y u the be-. uf Ju~.k and much happin · :) in the f a11re. ,. ) (( « \ ·ck m o \ irginia Burn a new em I It . .: •. lk· t (Jf luck Virginia. )} )) (( « C rlcy Jack >n had a birthday ju t r ·ccn Jy and \\hen a certain someone a. ked hrm ,,,, (Jid he wa. lte aid, ''he ·a ·et:t i. teen aml never been mi ed." B" J)r,~uard JfrElravr • · u ca dar~ r i~ \J! r ~o,.,, · ng: J) c · ·Ier he • ! ~ r x:l \ i e ( ( R · . · i r n : < )r • • e . r • Lr • a d · . n ''fcrcd u c) ir.1 2(J n a cit rame ir>r a "a~e:r, n' mlc . h· rct·lay t o c a core ()f 16(1 ' IJ: C!. d ra (J e ,. -. . R - • • • -~ ji.J ;· It I -! a trap ' c1 ' 0 • C.r1 1ld be: R e • : r t:: Date . q i e r ,ud o! Ler f c 1 i., r .au ~r<:q . A a- 1 e o • . . . n.1, . ! r, L · r } ·r """'"' . C d j 'I a Ur r f • 7. 1. ·ra.l J· i ·. l (). 'Cr • fc. ir. . laCJ rtt t.r an<.l • 4( ') ' B ' • • . r ~ tno- ea • • a t "( J o.r.dic- f ·r • • r 0 ' ' h r · (JJ "3 ITl<: • Rc - • •t•:7 ) • • fJ a I - ' ea , , • are t or 1 1 Jr .arne- and t <Jf e o climb out of he c ·liar. • I) « u 'J c n \' rrirl in the (Jffice, fellc;\'.), i
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. 28 No. 11
title_short The Log Vol. 28 No. 11
title_full The Log Vol. 28 No. 11
title_fullStr The Log Vol. 28 No. 11
title_full_unstemmed The Log Vol. 28 No. 11
title_sort log vol. 28 no. 11
publisher Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723;
publishDate 1945
url http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/2330
op_coverage 1940s; Haywood County (N.C.);
long_lat ENVELOPE(-13.417,-13.417,-73.050,-73.050)
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geographic Aboa
Andrew Jackson
Bad Heart
Burd
Caldwell
Calvin
Conway
Crowell
Dee
Dy
Emerson
Finn
Freed
Gar’
Horne
Huddle
Hudson
Kard
Kari
Lawrence River
Log Cabin
Luke
Mak
Manger
Marr
Ner
Olden
Ora
Orne
Paine
Patience
Rae
Rath
Reet
Rene
Salisbury
San Fernando
Sion
Theodore
Thumb
Ular
Ure
Zeke
geographic_facet Aboa
Andrew Jackson
Bad Heart
Burd
Caldwell
Calvin
Conway
Crowell
Dee
Dy
Emerson
Finn
Freed
Gar’
Horne
Huddle
Hudson
Kard
Kari
Lawrence River
Log Cabin
Luke
Mak
Manger
Marr
Ner
Olden
Ora
Orne
Paine
Patience
Rae
Rath
Reet
Rene
Salisbury
San Fernando
Sion
Theodore
Thumb
Ular
Ure
Zeke
genre Attu
Newfoundland
Alaska
ren
genre_facet Attu
Newfoundland
Alaska
ren
op_relation Canton Area Historical Museum; Canton Area Historical Museum; Champion_TheLog_1945-12_Vol28_No11
http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/2330
op_rights All rights reserved. For permissions, contact the Canton Area Historical Museum, 36 Park St, Canton, NC 28716;
_version_ 1766364120074944512
spelling ftwestcarolunidc:oai:cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org:p16232coll18/2330 2023-05-15T15:33:35+02:00 The Log Vol. 28 No. 11 The Log Champion of Activities Champion Paper and Fibre Company; 1940s; Haywood County (N.C.); 1945-12; newsletters; 11.75" x 8.75"; 37 pages pdf; http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/2330 eng; eng Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723; Canton Area Historical Museum; Canton Area Historical Museum; Champion_TheLog_1945-12_Vol28_No11 http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/2330 All rights reserved. For permissions, contact the Canton Area Historical Museum, 36 Park St, Canton, NC 28716; Champion Paper and Fibre Company -- Periodicals Employees' magazines newsletters etc. Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals Paper industry -- Employees -- Health and hygiene Christmas World War 1939-1945 Veterans Employees -- Recreation industry health and wellness events Text; 1945 ftwestcarolunidc 2019-01-22T18:25:07Z Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Paper and Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue. PIO o/A' CTMTIES DECEMBER, 1945 IN THIS ISSUE (;ar.e of Industrial Solid Tues . __ . _ 2 Myths About Heart Di~rea;s:e _ 4 Paper and Printing _ _ _ _ _ _ _ S Editorials ____ . _____ ____ __ . _ . ___ . _ 6 U. 5. Presidents Small Town Folk .10 CHAMPION FAMILY NEWS Hamilton Division ___ __ __ ____ __ __ • 11 Canton Dil'ision _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ _ 24 Houston DiviSion . __ . _. _. __ ___ . _ 33 Of tHAMP ~tON C I IV I Tl E S ECEMBER 19.45 VOL. XXVIII NUMBER 11 PUBLISHED BY ~'THE CHAMPION FAMILY" HAMILTON, OHIO CANTON. N. C. HOUSTON. TEXAS SANDERSVIt1.E. GA . Estah.lis.hed 1914 Thirty-firs:t Y ecu of Publication The paper for 'he cove),' of this maqazine Ia Champion JUoJilekote. and the paper Jor tbe i•s\de paqee is Champion White Satin Refold LCI"'Del. We mcmulacture many qrades of W.crdrac:l ~. Machine Finished. Super CuleDAered. c:u~d Coated. Our Cover Picture by Bartolomeo Esteban Murillo, Spanish School, 1616-1682 (The "Santiago Madonna") The theme of the Virgin and Child is almost as popular with Muri1lo as that of the Immaculate Conception. His earliest known version was painted while he was in his t\ enties. This was followed by a succession of others now familiar the world over through con­stant reproduction. The often repeated criticisln that ~furillo's Virgins are for the most part merely pretty girls or young Spanish women with their babies cannot be denied. Sotne are more pleasing than others, but ::til are convincing as real people whom the artist must have known. As Murillo made increasing use of the Virgin and Child in holy scenes and v isions, he developed a 1:nore pictorial composition by showing the mother turned slightly to the right with head, almost in profile, bent toward the Child and looking down at him instead of out at the spectator. This harmonious arrangement in the Santiago _painting is en­hanced by the simplicity of the composition and the sobriety and dignity of the Virgin's face and figure. Her calm repose is charm­ingly contrasted with the lively posture of the Child. The figures are solidly built and have no tendency to melt into the background. · But despite their realis1n they are freely and largely constructed · with almost careless competence. Such apparent simplicity, ,such ease, are the height of skill and reveal the artist in the ripeness of his development. - BARTOLOMEO ESTEBAN MURILLO· Born in Seville, Spain, J anuary 1, 1618, Bartolomeo Esteban :N1urillo received his first instructions in painting from his kinsman, Juan del Ca - tillo. Later, he went to Madrid, where Velasquez procured employment for him. · After three years, in 1645, ~furiilo returned to 1r1adrid, and the follm, ­ing year painted the Cloister of St. Franci and the manner in ' hich .he executed it, commanded the admiration of his countrymen~ In hi 1 aintings he showed himself a colorist equal to Vandyke, and a ri al of V la qu z. It is said, "he gradually perfected his manner by giving more boldne to h:s pencil, without abandoning that delica y of col rin ·which djs­tingui hed him from all his rivals, increa in it tr n ·th ·1nd o·ivinc, gre'lter freedom to his touch. . Murill enriched the hurcl1 ·s and c nv nt · < f e rill and oth r citi ' with numer iUS WOrks. vVbile at Cadiz, Spain, h paint d his "l·brat d pi ture th Ni arria of St. Catharine. 1' his merit as a historical pain r, Murill j ine l ~qu l excel1enc · in flowers. Hjs ori inality of t ~tl ·nt pla s him in th fi r: t r nk among th painter of every s hool. · The work. of l 1 Ul-jll ar num ·r us-many f th m ar ~ pr , ~ r · .d in hi nati e to n, where, b . i.J s h eli tribut d am n :r th hurche ~ COflVent , and hos .itals, an l the ath dral , th .•.rc i ~ gall r: l "a rin hi ' name. Mad on . as and C nc ti ns · cr am ng lti f' rit • subj ct ·. H ~ di d in eville, Spain , April ~ 1 82. .- • -'· \ • ''!""" i ':L' () Care of Industrial Solid Tires For Electr1c or Gas Power-Driven Trucks T'lw f 11lnwing •.· r c l'l f1 om n ·rtidc '' JI<J\ t (; 1 the '_1 ) ·. · nt ( ., . )li 1. 1 __ 1hb r 'Ti ~.:- ., I r 1 L . Delz it. Field Lu me ·r, _1u · l JVt;,1o ,, Th · B. F. C(>e lt ich Company Akr n, ( hH., •,houl l b' r 'ad , td f' ')nd 'r b" e1.1 T 'ham~ ptnn np ·ra ltn? ·oli tir · 1 ct ri :ras p ;v !:··driven r lck . . l r. D ·lz 11 ex1l_ains 1lcre arc t o v '11 al tn• ·.: () these tt r ·s, th ' l lf(;S ,-on ' ty . whiLh < r · \. lv nizcc.l t€1 ~ ~ e 1 a a ~ c li d b hyclr· ulic pr · trc tr1 ·h ·cl; ani.l the '' ·ulc mz d-on" ype, v l ·2mize 1 di r' l) to l1e wheeL The L rmer r · 1 ed nw ly · n power-driven industrial ruck · nd th la t r ort h d- p r· ed ruck'". . HTl~t: u, e ,of ynth.et ic rubber in both of hese type5 o tndu tnal . ohd t1r • tncrea e rolling resi3 ance and power - n umpt1 n; r duces the to 1 hnes and re i ~ ancc o c tt­ting, hippino·, and w ar; and le · en the adhe ion or br.md ben" en th tread and ·he base. . "The .increase in rolling resistance is quite seriou , par­t tcularly tn tbe ca e of battery-operated truck · in tha the additional p wer consumed by the tire re ult in a more rapid discharge of the batteries, and consequently more fre­qu ent recharges are required for a cr1ven period of time. This increased rolling re istance also reduces the peed of the vehicle. Tests have proved by the use of sy nthetic rubbe r, the rolling re i tance is increased approximately 40 per cent over the pre-war crude rubber tire; and at the same time, the resistance to chipping and cutting i reduced by ap­p roximately 10 per cent. "This mean that where a tractor on crude rubber tire could operate for ten hours without a battery rechar e it could only operate for six hour on nthetic tire and at reduced speed. By special compoundin cr, it ha been po - sible to produce rolling resi tanc in a 7nthetic indu trial solid tire to equal that of the standard pre-war rude rubber tire; but to accompli h thi , it is nece ary to r duce the toughne of the tread, so that the ynthetic tire wiU give only about 80 per cent of the er ice life. " Low rolling resi stance or p wer con umption f the tire u eel on battery operated truck , i o imp rtant that it h b n f und on mical t u e the low } ower c n umin~ tir s at a sacrifice of tou ohn ' in th tr ad and a reduction in ver-all servi lif . ·''Th e d fi i nci s, in man e can b ffse · L ·ub-tantial t nt by b tter car of th t ir ~ · Pr l al ly n • t1re ' a r · m r · abu , d than th indu ' trial lid. Th r at st ·a use of {a ilur' in th , " tir . .i fr 1 )ad; pr du e bn rmal deAections, rn over! ndin. ·. \' r­a usin th tir \1 bu lge 1. Croeainq railroad track is hard on tires and trucks. Should be avoided when possible. 2. Running over blocks o1 wood and other obiects should be avoided. 3. Do not o'ferload trucks. 4. No te conc lition of tire badly cut and broken. · _j, h, ,e ing Ufi y res~ and a rocalized flexing action ·~: . ,~ ~ · e . eel ba e r wheel. Thi re uJr in o~call ed · de cut in -~ which uitunately pre>duce either a chunking Oil in ~hi h a trip of tread circumferentia lly a round the . i e faU · out or i may re ult in c mplete epar ation of the tr ad from the ba e. ••orerloading wiH al o produce : eparation by increa ing i pact when unning ov~r ob. tructions. The e imp_act a re an~ mit ed to the ha e, mjunng the bond and tarting ep­aracion between the tread and ba e \l\ hich e\ entually re ·ult i e ~\rhole tread falling off. '-'Power consumption is aL o increased with overloads on • ,e tires. "fhe carrying capacities of indu trial solid tire have been s.et up on th'""'e ba. i_ of d efl ection un?er a iven l o~d for tire of the different ~ 1zes when ope ratmg at a maxmJ.um .;peed of miles per _ hour. J'he e rati?o-s _were ·established, f-rom experience, to grve maxrmum servr e hfe under average · operating conditions. If loads o r . pe~d. above the ·e !ecom­mendatio. n - are impo-ed on the ore, rt 1s at the sacnfice of tire fife. 'The next mo t important cause of indtl trial -solid tire failure i from operating the truck over imi?roperly kept 01· rou h .floors and runv;rays. "'Niechanical irregularitie · in trucks such a<:: prung axles, misaligned ca. ter , an~ bent tie .rods, will .cause more l?ad to be impo ed on one s1de of the trre, producmo- undercuttmg, · epa ration or uneven tread wear. " Sharp turns and quick tart ~ and ,tops will wear t he read rapidly and thrm strain. on the tire that may result in failure, or aggravate failure.'~ ~Ir. Delzell ugge ~ ts the foHowing rules which will help t<> obtain the o-reate$t · ervice life frorn industrial olid tires .: l. elect the proper type and ize of tire for the se.rvice . in ·hich it is to be u ed. • 2. Regulate the ize of payload · '"'O a not to overload Jre. J. . Center the payload on the truck to equal ize the load . on trres. 4, Avoid ~h arp turn . and quick · tarts and tops . - . Keep runwa . ~ clean and exerci se caution to avoid runn.in over harp article . , 6. Av'oid running tire over, or _parki.ng truck in, oil o · ea ~ . . In picking up loaded kid" m· pallets ee that opera­tor are careful to run platform or fork of truck completely under the load in order to di st ribute the tire load over all wh. cl . '. Check _tee ring. and: axle alignmen·t for mechan1ca1 irregularitie . 9~ Eliminate contact -with hot metal or o,perating for 1onf period · in hot room . 10 Do not operate trucks at speed over 8 mile. per . hour. 11. Avoid striklng ob truf:toins with sidewall or steel ba e af tire . 12. Do n'ot leave loaded vehide sta nd.ing idle f . r I ng eriod ,of {ime. 13. Lubricate all moving part properly, particularly · e power and brakin sy~ tems. l . Be ure there i - proper frame and platf tm dear- • ance o rttre~. 1 j_ Makf.! re ular inspections of t ire.:, temo e embedded o j€<;; ~, and cut off p iece of torn tread . 16. Exerci e care when pressing ti re .Qflto wheel to be tu· tire i·· G.entered and ~ tarted ev n:lv • • This is the . C.9\l, the new transport counterpart of the B-29. :whiah exceeds aU ~xisting Army Air Force transports in ra'n?e' payload and size. The big ship is HO feet 4 inches long.( has a wrnqspread of 141 feet 3 inches. an.d is capable of ccu;rying in its two deaks _more than lOB fully equipped troops ior long distances at exceptioncdly hiqh speeds~ What Is a Machinist? . ' . ' . B 'Y "B t' ll y )) B attu. on A machini t is the aristocrat of the trade classe . He is really a master craftsman. H e prides himself on his work­man hip. The old-time machinist wh served his ·apprenticeship prior to \'lorld vVar I and learned how _to op er~te and care for maeh,mes and get the most out of them 1s naturally ·inechalili"cal-minded. The full-fledo-ed machinist should be a man capable to operate a lathe~ shaper, planer, milling mach~ne, drill or boring machine. · He <;:an lay out work accordmg to blue­print and even make his own sketch or drawing from the information at hand. He can do any necessary b.enc_h or hand work, such as lapping, filing, scraping and assembling, setting and testing the complete machine . He has a fair knowledg~- of different metals and their properties: hardness, softness and wearing qualities. vVorld \Var 1 marked the machine operator era: very £ew all-around machinists have been made since then. It takes from six weeks to two years to make a competent operator, depending on the type of operation and on the individual. ' In the larger shops the n'lachine op-erator is trained in the running of one machine such as lathe planer, drill, boring machine, milling machine. A machini t usuall sets up the machine, grinds and positi ns the tools and directs the -v ork. _ ln job sh ps and general repair shops, L1 sually eve r_ man i a macbini t, capa8le of d ing any job that ·orne in. A young man who had comrleted his appr nti ceship in his home rown, ld horne and made appli at.ion in a la.rge sb p in Chicag , as a jo tr.neyman ma hini st. He was asked, 't\Vhat was his line?'' I'n machinist. "v hich to l do you spec1aliz on, etrc . ) U a drill hand, lath , planner, or fitter:'' I'm. a rna hinist, and it do ·sn't make any d ifference. Aft r a f w ~ · · eks tr.iat on m~ny t . ols- f e ' as made f r ·man f a di i ion of th e sh p. . . Tod::t · we n ak -5"pe ia li t . It us to be that hen, a man Bad served hi · a ppr 'nti ·eshi f , the bo.'S · mid ki k hirn :o:t1t, tell him to o ()fl'lewl ~r e.! · and L·arn t rc ud th n c rnc back. 1 I w we .n: .ak · p ·cial.ists v hon we ke p for ou r wt1 WOrK. . ''THERF IS N- S B5Trr ~T E FOP EXPE,RIE Thre~ -+ ~{' 23 . - . -- . :~-_:-. ·:-- :"""':­- ---::·._--: . . ~ •-:t•·· . . lLf. . -~--""-~ ~ . ,. _ . --- . . . "' .:. =--.-- -; -- ~ . . . . • 1o.o • • -- ., .,- \ , . ,? .:: d .;,:.;,-:-:- ~ Myths Are a Mile From the Truth . About Heart Disase r •• ~ ~ ~-.- ~ ~ • ~Iany myth and fa1 e belief have caused misunder­tandino- of the word, ·'Heart Disea e." Doctors say this result in nearly as much trouble a the di sease itself. Truth ba ed on modern medical ciences, replaces doubt with fact . brin inor new hope and comforting assurance to ali ' ho have been worried about their hearts . . lvf yth ~·{ o. 1- I .f you have the sy rnptoms you must have the disease. Tha ' not true. Such ymptom' a pain or a feeling of oppre sion in the che t, hortne of breath rapid or irregu­lar heartbeat, may be ign of heart trouble, but frequent ly come from other sou rces. Consult your doctor if the e mptom occur. His diao-- n.osi , aided when nece sa ry by the flouroscope and electro­cardioo- raph , may enable him to rea ·sure you that ou do not have heart trouble. M. yth No. 2-1f youjre. going to get it . you/re g0ing to get tt. Tha ' not true! Everyone, 1 a rticu la rly tho ov r 40, can do mud to forc!:>tall hea rt ·di a e b follmvino tb rule . 1. Eat re ularly, ut mod "ra ely. 2. I p y. ur wei rht dm n. If ov rwei ht, brina it down. 3. G 1lent. of l · p­ho r a n1 ht . r mo t . e; le. 4. Ea mr ra ·ly. Be moderate in u e f bac o r tim 1 t t ·. 5. 1--hn e a y • rl • ex minat in b your docto r. • Uo · hi · ad vic . ~ th r 0. 3-1 f you have heart di_rras you r.dll b per~ manent i11"1alid. That , n t rue! Thou and, <Jf peo lc ' 11 ) ha · · hea di ~e a - are l adin u ful and nearly n rm 1 Ji\· ~ b f l ~ lowinO' their d tor advic . Th r ' a lot of truth in th pre ion aT li ' lif tart takin care of a bad heart arly. ' l n - .V I etropolitan btJura1J.Ce Co mpa1z.y. Four "Liquid Heaf . Warms in Cool in Summer Winter )\·lo-t ~-evolu ion f)-' .m· t e1~al r> d v lored under the I' n ~ ·)r · J-up ( f "t!lc hou ·tng ~c11 -y i ''liq tid be t.'' K.n( ·r t · hill · H' . , ~ ua .resyl · ·m · te hi,. fluiJ lr ady ha c ·n pn cu ! 1 ll n r t[J · t r for lran fer o hta.t an~ culJ. \ t !. ·an x rae btl a ·mall fractic;n f the h a t f hre, _bec u _Jt becom cam and · ' a Jr;ra e" at 212 d·- '1 · ,s 1~ n~ renhc1 . T he Wqm.ler fluid deveh pcd b the Pier:e · ounc.l< ton tmd. r ovcmme_n a~ i., ho rv v ·r, can be hea , [ o d ~_,r ~ ' J• hr ·nhe1 t ·b: ut vapur· tim , Thi ~ JUld l e .~ ut w1ce ~ hot a , ~u1 ()Ven tem er~t re for rdit1ary kt1 r ro· tmr a 1d ho t ·r tfJ I an IH! in i , f · po or 1 h on tc of th stove. . . nd. i can be ransformed in o liquid ic a 'dl. ~o d. 't r e b) w_ z ro _al ren~eit, 2 degr •cs below fr ~zing f r wat ·r, Jt tdl r mams flu1cl . The .) 0-degr ·e "~i quid h at" can be ip ·d to the kitchen for 0 km. t and h atmr uch thin · a fla iron& percolator · t a ·ter nd chafing di ·hes. lt would elimina e' he ne ·d fo; gas or electricity to pr vide heat i11 the kitchen. The rest of the ( liquid heat" in he ba ement wouid warm water to ~e piped throu h ~he ho~s e for heat or tap wat_er. The flUJd _could not be piped directly o ordinary rad1ators becau e 1t "vould make the temperatUre too high and "cau e the radia tor to peel." . _Special r,ad i ~tor for_ holding the liquid fue nf.J'i are be!n de 1 gn~d. SpeCial cookmg tove and water heater al~ o are being made experimental1y. ~n sum1:ner the ltquid " 'ould be sent below freezi1 g b.­eqUipment ~ ri the .ba emem. It then could be piped throuo-h the hou e In radiator- for summer coolne . · nd it a1 o could be channeled to ice boxe (without ice) for food freez­ing or coolin g-thu ~ makino an jdeal refrigerant.-IVal/ StTeet Journal. Imprcved Artificial Hand For Soldiers The human hand i one of the mo t mar · elous and u eful in ·ention God or man ever conceived. In fact, its mechan­i m, d exterity ' Upplene s, and unu ual mobility i amazino-, and a a graspjn or an it ·urpa e~ anythin the human mind is able to c nc iv . man without two o-o d l1and- i e1~iou sly handicapped, and without orne ·pecial trai ning, he face · a rath r da rk futur e. · · n of th bi o- e t pr bl m fa ing the r habili·rati n de-pa rtm ,nt of the Gnited tat nny will be. perhap to tuip th, ldier \ ith u {ul anifi ia.l rtnn ., and hand . In th _a , artifi i·l han L ha ve. t · en m r ly f r I oks • nd tl h > k , whi h i. • fa irly u. ful but it i- un iuhdr an awkwa rd to u . \V und t" an that n. , rtiftcial h nd that lo T·s alm t lik th natural thing, an l "ry f:fi i nt, } a" b n inv ,nt.cd. 'of ii r' that ha'' b n unf rtunat ' r lu$e a hanJ rill b . ., uppl.ied ~t ,·oon as p . - l " ith fl of th' new trpc . • · a inf rmed that th n " hand i a m chani ·m of rn l 1. all l <! Juminum, n ld "d t 1 l < k lik · , fi ··h-a nd-blo d lr d nd it i difll u.lt t c -11 h diff ren " unl · · y u ob-en: I ely. Thi · ne' d ic is . tr pped t the ' houl?er with orJ runnit cr ver t tb oth r h uld . H m. v111 the od -houldcr f n~: rcl the rd i ti h en l and the a nifici 1 fin ' cr , . · nd thumb are pulled tocre l~ r. 'ddjer ar" aid to be enthu-i, bti' about this new invent10n. I I . f • ' 0 . t! ui 1r<: ' . I . ! . . . --- :-: --- Paper Problem . :ff-IEIR C \U t A. ·u CURE t.,.", "'•-1.f.t . ~-. . til lllf.iltrt.- "' · ~""'" . · ~,.,. . .,.,._. ",. -~ ---•- . ' . o I o - . ._ . , __ . ·- .•. ·- ,__ ___ ._, . ,. . -- .,. ' . .'. . --- "·~· •u ·-·- ~ . - --- • . ,. , . • • • THURSDAY E E lNG • APRllHl ••• a (sUS h lW ,._,.,.a~ ,,.~ (_ ~ ,. . "" I , . tl(JII;::tl)W,. R . AW J. ~1~ .tlt.--.11 I •"""-/• ~P.•f ~"~ttf•l#IJ¥1-rt,.,• • . H,. . ,.~t}tJ; . ~ . l'APf.lt PROBl h. tS / / I ,. * . •'- + i ~ ,,. ::r:; ~ c_; t I *j - ~- - ~ ._.-. - T ,.,~ •• - ,. ,-j . . -- -- ,._ . __. . . f'!!llr. ~- R.,.JJ I. ,._,. t. . . ,. ." - {. . . .,. ,J . Aif -. - - <Xtobcr 1 :-.r M,·crin!S PAPER 1rTGH1 I 1-i Ill \ I, I .1.\.1· II !A fO rH.Ji'.lkfO fHA l . .(; I'W >\DI•Ifr 't JH .- ,.,.o/ lilt ' •I . HI hi TJdl I ~ { l , f, ll.i'"(.l ~ ' f I I. 1') ( , 1 • ., ";f (J \~f(. ~ l 1 ' .IPI~ • ' ' '!i. h l • " f ) PAPER PROHL[M Tbur lalnr IIH.i Ti c· .u· lrrt ~ . t.,,., ~-- l ()f : And Ronald Drake, Field Man, Knows Both '\ hen the towering- frame of Rrmald I. Drake fills the o way of an~- prit ting office. all the f(Jlh look up, then get p t o greet him. ~or Ron i · a fan iliar figure in the large::- printerie ~ from : . oui_ o the ea~tern ~eaboanl, and he· a welcome c•ucst i ~ .l of them. ,\-here · r printer. g-a her, there you will find him . either .o <'~ ·i them in ~nme vf their printinrr pr blem-:> or, if a ,urn al cratherin?. on<.: rf the men at th ~ : peakcr:; table. I. ffici,JI:. he i li ted a~ the Field :erYicc Reprcsentatjve t.Le Champion Paper and Fibre Company. H re at home ,1e 1~ called t e trouble shr,(Jter. He -nO\· hi~ printing ju t a. ·well a !te knrJ\\· Champion • "'J er for of cour~ c he t \'u ~o hand ir1 hand. . f. 1 a11 \ omc i11 Cham ion rna e; f! ,ocJ pap~r anJ kn '1 . but paper_, ha e their peculiaritie o.11d en ain r;a]' ·r . . r reqUire Ct::rtam ~rradc · and typ (Jf in 1 •• cellain In: -l> adju t- . em 1 -l a lnt,r~f tbi nd that, ,,-hich. to the a\·crJ~e I apet 1, aker aIL" nr-t tlliJH.r" tc 1 \H1f1 r a brJltL . ? the: ml• ad thi-. job <Jll. Rc,na 1J \\ h() i: an ~ uthcJrit y on r unz a ~ rhe be~t m thcd of ·rettillL' th · ti11c.-:.t j(rb. on e;ery L( n l:.\·ahle L'rade (Jf ra cr. For in~tancc, a ClJarnpi()n mer h. ne- the ~rneral J1nces that he br;ur,.r. ltt a lr1r (jf ~ e ·, • 1 :.q•er hut an't for the tife of I im cre a · ati:-.fa,·­. :, r rintin~) _h }n his pre=- e: . . Rem in m~:dfcttcl) plth ()Jt u r 1f n happen. to be wmt r. and l!eh trJ th oltkc f t .t: c - c_n er .a _quickl. as po~ ibll" f(;f' ti1nc i - < n impor­i: ur m pnntlflf". ~ rriving at the plant, Ron "'·ill go into a huddle for a few minutes with an official and then hie himself to the pres room and talk to the boss nan in that depa rtrn nt. He learn what is being done makes a few suggestion - v\'atche tc ·ts and leaves, for the problem is olved. It mi ht be in the ink used or it might be in the pre ses. But Chamrion at horne can rest assured that when he does I ave, the final result will be a fir t class printin j< b. Printing and paper have been Ron's !if J ubt his qualift ations just read: work an l if vou • He was rraduat!.!d from the Pni\·e rsi v of \Vi:>c<.msin at J \fadi on wber, he majored in ch ·mic[l] en rineering. hn-mediately ht: \VcnL ·with th rc~•>arch department of the Kimberl y-Clark (JJnpauy, 1 up ·r n1anuf.:lcturrr., \\'h er· h W1t l1i., fir t pra ·tical trainin~ in paper tll<\kin ,., \ftcr a k\\ yl'an; with this cnmrany h ·went to tlw \V. F. Hall Printirw Cr>lnJ 'W\' r1f Chic,lf!O, ww uf dw nations larg­{;~ t. a-, t.hicf chet11i-,t. fJL \\[t:) with thi s firm fnr ·iaht yea.rs in d1~n g: c,f the tech ni ·a! d~j•.J nrne111 c' ,,, -ring ~\II printing-, inc! ,,cJint!' rutog1 '' \ un·. and tlw pup.·r ·ntd ink.~ u:-.t· l rhercon. Then he -.p•nr :i. \lcilr~ \\Jtlt lin: .\htr~tth, ,n Corporation, J :upetint ·nd< 111 o t!H· electJo 1)b i w founth·) ·md rwtn~g r <1f the art()JJ di\·i:-.irJn. \\.ith Lh i~ <1111pl tc hH1\\Icd.'t uf both l rinrin, ·and all of it. aw,Je , and l''lJ)< r. ltc came l<1 ChatllPiuu uri J:tnua y 13~ J<J1G, and tlttt. \\ill he ahk to celeht.1tL' hi tenth hampion anni • " an. in a :-:.bon time:. Fiv \ Publi hed b 'The Cham ion Famil a a mbol of the Cooperation and G?od Fell w hip • xi sting at th PI nts of The. hamp1?n Paper nd Fi re Com any Hamilton Oh10 ant n North _ a.r lina Hou ton Texa , and and r ille orgi . G. W. PHILLIPS __ - --- . --- . --- . Editor, Canton. North Caronna REUBEN B. ROBERTSON. ]R . - - -. - __ . _. _ . ___ . _ . _ . Auociate Editor DWIGHT J, THOMSON. - --- - - ---. --- ·--- __ . Auodate Editor EMERSON ROBINSON. --- - • . _- . Assistant Editor, Hamilton. Ohlo A.M. ' URY . -- - --- -- --- --- Assis tant Editor, Houston. Texq illl artie es i thiJ .n aaazi1le are written b. the editor except tl ose . htch carry the nanu of the aut hor. Tidings of Great Joy ~Ierr,' Chri~tma Santa Claus gift , holly) mi stletoe, Chri·tma tree~ _ plum pudding and all the things that mean Christma to u~ may be an ancient pagan custom, but they are no les intere ting becau e they come from the long ago. But. \Yithout the a, ociation of the birth of Christ the Savior, . with the Yuletide, these thi ng~ would not mean quite so much to us. . Chri stma i the name for the season t hat commemorates the birth of Chri t., therefore:- 'Oh: it i n't the holly, it i n't the snow, It i., n't the tree or the firel ight glow, It' the flames that goes from the hea rts of men When Christma love is abroad again." . \Vithout the Spirit of Chri t in the heart "Merry Chri st­mas" would not mean o much,-it's the spirit and not the word that count. No one knows when he fir st Ch ri tma \~· a s observed. Hov ever, it is known that centuries before Chri t a festival of rej oicing was held about this time of the year but it wa s not until abou the 4th or Stb century, that th observance of December 2~th in commemoration of the birth of Christ was first celebrated by th Chri tian Church. H wev r it so n became c mmon practice throu hout th Chri t ian world. · During the ChrL tma tide we greet ea h o h ·r vith th alutation, " lferry hri tmas ', bcc:au e th r i ' !10 o ~er words we a r familiar wi h that xprcs e ou r {c lJ ng quite o well. Back £ the f re ting i ~ th spirit ( f "g d will t men' ' and we wouldn't han e the gr tin if we uld- \\' 1ik i~- e don't . ant a new one. b ti ·tma i · till h i t­mas, and ma we, though l ivi ~ in a w rld ~ V:TY with changes, give thanks t: Go 1 Almt rhty for n ~ I re .1 u · p L-manency. What a fin thin r it i to meet a man ' ith he rt o bio-it ha no r om to rem mber a wron . • 1X The Story of Christ's Birth As Told by St Luke • 11 m o from .· as· it th ·day 1gus u ·, tha all lat h re w •nt out ·he wo-rld , hl"l lld b ~ ( nd this a ing w , fu rnad h n Cyrcniu w "OV- 'rnor of ~'yr i ·. 1 d ll w ~nt o be taxed, ·very vne into hi ow,1 ci y. nd J . ·ph a ls \>V n up from )alilee, out of the ci ·v f · zar th, 11 t ] ucla a, unt he ·ity of David, which i · c~H cl [ tl:lehem · (beca s h was of th hou e and lin a(re of D Vld :) I o be tax d with Mary his esp us d wife, being wit! child. rca And so it wa , that, while they were there the dav were a mpli heel that h should b delivered. ' ' . ~nd she b_ro~1 ght forth her ·firstborn son. and wrapped htm m wadcllmg clothe , and laid him in a man :rer · becau e there wa no ro m for them in the inn. ' · And there ~ere in the same country hepherds abidinc~ in the fi eld, keepmg watch over their flock by night. And lo, the angel of the Lord came upon them, and the glory of the Lord shone round about them: and they were so re afraid. And the angel said unto them, Fear not: for. behold, I bring you good tiding f great joy, which hall be to all people. For unto you is born thi day in the city of David a Savior, which is Christ the Lord. And this shdll be a sign unto you; Ye hall find the babe wrapped in swaddling cloth es, lying in a mano-er. And suddenly there was with the angel a multitude of the heavenly host praising God, and saying, Glory to God in the hi ghest, and on earth peace, ood will toward men. And it came to pass, a the angel w re gone awa : from them into heaven, the shepherds aid one to another, Let u nmv go even unto Bethlehem, and see this thin whi · h is come to pass, which the Lord hath made known unto u~. And they came with has te, and f und 11 ry an ]<r ph and the babe lying in a manger. And when they had e n it th m de known abroad the ayino- whi h \ a told them con rnin thi child. nd all th y that h ard it wondered t th e things which Vi'ere t ld th m by th ' hepherd ' . But Mary kept all thes th ing and pond rc I th em in 1 er heart. nd the :h ph rds r t11rned glorif ing an prai " i n~ for all the thing that th had heard and s n, a, Jt told unto th m. . t. Lttk _:1-. 0. Th r i a d bt f r ic du fr m ' ry m n t untr,, pr p rti nal t t l1c bounti s whi h · ·raturc ro wne ha e m a-ur d t hi m.- Th J?na ] effer.ro11. d hi nd I ad it. n t b en for Am ~ ri c., ther would not hav . been su h a thing a fr ed m left throu hout th whole unr erse. -ThomaJ Paine. • --.- -- Jest 'fote Christmas B E·ug(ne Field Got a yeller dog named Sport, sick him on the cat; Fir t thing l1e knows he doesn't know where she is at! Got a dipper led a11' when us kids goes out to sljde, ~L ong co.mes the grocery cart, an' we a.H hook a ride . But mi{etime · when the grocery man is worrited an' cross, He n~a.che at us with hi whop) an' larrups up his ho An' then I laff an' holler, "Oh, ye never t:eched me!" ' But je ·t 'fore Christmas I'm as good a . I kin be! Gran·ma say he hopes that when I git to be a man. I111 be a mi sionarer like her oldest brother Dan ' _ .nA _ \\a et up by the . cannibal· that Eve ' in Ce' ylon's hle~ \\'here e ery prospeck rleases, an only man is vile! . ·But gr.an'ma he ha never been to . ee a \Vild \i\ e t s.bow Nor read the life of Daniel Boone, or else I guess ~he''d k.n~w That Btrff'lo Bill an' Co\ boys is good enough for me! · · · _Ex.cep' jent 'fore Chri tm.as, when I'm .a£ gm:id as I }(in be! - I A~d then old port he hangs areund, so ~aiemn-like a~' st1H . Hi- eyes they seem a-sayin': "What's the matter) little Bill?''~ The old cat sneaks down. off_ her perch an ' wond,ers what's 'become . -· Of them twG ene~es o,f hem. thatt used to make things hum! Dut I am o periite an tend o e·arne tly to biz · ~ ha.t. moth.er ays to father: "Haw improvecd ~u r '\Vil1ie is l" _ B!Jt .,a ~L~r, ,ha vm b:en a bo;; hisself, :uspicio~s me · \\lh n, }e fore Chn "'tnlas, I ro a go0d a I lnn be! . . . ·For Chri tmas, with its. lot an' lots _f .ca.n.<dies, c.akes an' toys, \~as made, they say for proper·~ kads an' not {or naughty boys, . · . . o Wa&h yer face an' bre ·h ·yer hair, -an' mind yer p's -and q 's, Aud don t bu · out y·er pantaloon , and don't wear out ver - ~· . . . ~ , . - . a Y, ••y um1 ' t.~ the ladies, and "Y essu r" to the men, An wh~n ~hey's con1pa.ny, den': p~ss yer plate for pie again; Bu , ,thmlnp ~lf the thmgs yerd hke to. see upon that Hee, Je t fore Cbn tmas be a good._ as yer ktn be! . ' . ""'··e should he in no hurry to establi sh communi. ations Wttli ~-far . They will p.roba bty, try to fl@a.t a loan wjth us. Hi tory may shDw that GermaFty,s: biggest - war -los-s he f tl'lre. . · wa . ' •' • - . Europ·ean and. Asia Vs. Ame·rican During the recent war. period, w:e are informed rnore than 125,000 ci ·1lians in the . United States k1"t an arm or · leg In an ·acctdent whi-le there wer slig;htly more than 15,000 amputation in · all of our armed forces. In - the. first four . days, after the Normandy ittv.asion, 11 ,000 men were WOll HQ- . ed 'em th·e \Vestern front, while 20,000 civiJi~H)ts in the l nited State · were inj.ured in autoinobife ac 1ctents cluring the am . peri od , acGording- to the records. If the above figur.es are atcutate, ana th y c ·me . from a reliable source it is certa inly a strong indictm ont of O~lf careles·s. attitude. In Eu rope and Asia when a .count:r;y be­comes overpopdlated, it is soon adjusted th rough the proe-ess of w~ r while here in America we let Oid Man CareJessne s handle thematter-and he is doinga real job of it too. ' ' e criticise our neighbors aero s the seasJ--cal1 theni barbarians, murderers; and warm.on(rers, when they start a ~rar. But, h ere· in the U.S.A., we hav;e adopted a rno·r ~ mod­ern, if not more humarie method of killing and · mairoin .,. human being .~It's a modifi'cation of the Japanese hari;.kari -tkle accident way. .·, While we are educating the J aps gtnd trying, to dev<elope a highest regard for · human lit:e among the Asiatics, we should make a greater effort to improve our accident record here in America. Killing a hund red thousand ·men, _women;. and . children in our factories, on the Highwa-y, and in the. . honte, in the good Qld U.S.A., and seriously xna i1ning more , than a half million during twelve months, through accidents; is a shameful record. . · '\ATh·en we r ealize that mote civilians were accidently kille-d in this country during thee years 'of vVorld vVar 2, than were killed in our armed ·forces during the same periQd, it seoe.ms that we would do something about it. : 'We talk about our secret weapons and modern -imple:. ments of warfare, but for killing and maiming human beings, our most deadly weapon. _ seems to be carelessness and thoughtlessness. . We are worried about coutrolling at<?mic energy-:-but, human ca-relessn.oess seems to be equally as difficult. Or is it because we are just playing at the game? Accidents don't just happen, they are caused and only human beings can do ~ omething about it. Remember, you have only one life. 'Better take good care of it. .-' ' ·P-erhaps If )TOU can d_riye a ,C<H When a ll about you The horneward rush is on at :five o'clock, And know xo.u're r'i !:tht wh n all th family doubt you,. And red ltghts fl ag yon dowu. at every block; I1 you .can tru t yOLo: i r1s.tinct to i.nfor:rn ymJ , \Vhtd1 way the guy 111· front mtends to turn .· Alth :ugh ~ e na n't. given a sign t w;ani yc u . . Exceptmg that -his stop li bt t&rts to b,urn · If youre content 110 lrive t he ' sp ·t thar's ·afe t Regardl.e ~ of th . p . cd by 1 w aBo:vv tr, · · ' · And, know.1.n you are g · d~ cr~n still .iv ·. cr dit · · T cr th~$e v ho ar with gre;tter kiH nd w d If YO'U can u, yo r h.· rn an.d n .t abu e .it , When tho · . in front ;i~;re cr ·epi .ng llke . n' il- 1he boulevard 1 yours t hav-e and u e i , A.nd, what i1;; ~ore, you ma k ~p out f jail. -:-Print p pic. Se:l()tn ,. ' Whole Family Wiped Out Accident • 1n . On. October 6, 194 • a car in which Leslie Garrett, his w1fe IX son and ~u h~er were ridin.g, collided with a Grey­hound bu D:ear Du;:on, Ky. and all e1ght were killed. At the time of the accident Pvt. William H. Garrett a ~on of Le _lie and J lr ". Garrett, was with the Headquart~rs Base erv1ce quad:on of the 37th Air Service Group in France. He '\Ya not1f1ed by the Red Cross and immediately ar rangement ~ were made by the War Department to fly Pvt. Jarrett borne by .plane_. T\~0 dars later he was sta nding by the open rave m wh1ch h1 entire family wa buried. A the ~a. ket were lowered, Pv~. \Villi am H. Garrett, the only ~urn 'mg member of the famtl y, slowly turned away to face the future alone. It pays to play safe ! With public sentiment, nothing can fai l; ith ut 1 ublic entim ent, nothin caJ su ceecL onse 10 • Jy, h who molds ublic entiment, O' deeper tban h whu e n~-t ts , tatur •. r ron unce d ci i ms.- A braham Lin oL1l. Tl c publi sp ·ak,r shmdd 11 v ·r sa ~ rifi · ·a ·n •'lr r. in ­divrdualiry and dire tn c~ s to gain li t rary ftni ·h. The "il!TH may be said of the writer and phil(JS pl t r. Y u can only becom · a '-rcat mast 'r l y fir t becoming <1 great ervant! He that ·can hav patience can have hat he wilL- Frank­lin~ Eight ManY Waste Ma erials Made 1 to Useful Product .· 1 n. th.1 ( . hr h ·n,, 'II£ -i 1· e:l \id l,' tre i• <lnv, aT ' Ill f lrfl . t m ' t qf ' I l II . '<! f l f1 a r l l Oft h t i I H .• ~} I i T nd in n1 n y· in : t· nt. · 1 1 • r nd c lf" r r 1 r t t 1 m tw · r 11 r · · nm 0 n • <. h . . f tl - "'• l m ·ual 1 ' n r · t'Ot 1 t· It• lH 1 1' ],J} forn ·dy , J. • r whi -. 1 \ t th 'u •I t tht: c· • n~) 11 ti u e - \" ila 1 . l . · 1 11 t h 11 I ·hi h g i v · n • , · ~ y , 1 r di c , • 1 f b . l u n 11"' 'ne 11 ' b ·inJ: u J i h t.n uf·c ur· f u thtn • a· . wn ·1' ~! lld b g mel' f lt J hat . 'i\, II rd flo 1 c r ·e nn~ ~ h 1r p~d h0c , f trni ur an l and m 1 ~ ut 1 r v· l ta 1 • p od c . 1 \\!. ) u11 e1 tan th t) eanu1 hull pr uct , ar u c p i-llc to dy · an c .-n · . 1 ad{· - y c 1 r. lr r c · in mad. I: 1 ~1 pean It h 11 1 · a1d tu be dura. le Y" yie din£" .~{JJrn sFm da to ·or . ~7 11 b ard man fac red frum tl ne ~ e~ n~t n d tct i , u dpr f, wa e rod nd fir proo". l\ I e~1 · h- t ' r ad·. fr m the ame m t ri· i loo ik he ~rJ.m.a r y f ·lt cr at10 . The ·e 1 ing and many t her, it ~ · l~tmed , can b _. made a a f rae ion of the c t o ma e ia tt \VJll r 1 lace. W wond.er if hi mat rial ould be u ed ucce f lly a a sh rt fibre m th manufacture of orne rade.· of paper~ .· T~ e peanut hu.ll ubstance is made, we. under and by gtmdmg; the h~ll 1nto a cour e owder. It 1s hen creeocd to the stze de tred and mixed with an adhesive b tance o form a ~ou ghy ma . The dough i then rolled in o hee or pressed mto moulds. In making wall boards or floor co 'er­II! g~, the pea_nut hulls are cooked or d.ige'Sted with a chemical ~Iro llar to. the method used in the production f wood ulp. fhe pulp 1s .then s~reacl over metal tables, rolled and pr sed to the reqmred thtckne s and then pa ~ed through dryin ovens. Lawson, Finney Plastic Eye Have you pretty good eye . Well, they are th be you will ever have and it miaht be a ood id a to t ke c rc f them for, we imagine, thi ~ would be dreary ld w rld t _ ~ through without light in our window . H w · ·cr, · f y u need artificial eyes here i · an intere tino· ·tory: In the September 2-' i sue f The Atlanta J t1rn 1 p-pearcd a story f the L v son, Finn y la ti E ·e. It i · aid, they make th m f clear cryli -a pla tic us t in rhc mal in of dentures, and th · r b tter th. n th , b ·.· t 1. ~ · eyes. Th y are individu ally ntt "J, h nd p int d nd h rd to br ak- an ordinary dr H th fl r w n t ·h tt r th' . B i1 g in livi lually fitt i , m 'an that tb r · i · m{ltion i1 the anift cial yc whi h mak s th ·m 1 )k iik ' re 1 one:. Bod :o ·r ti ns d > n t rou gl u them and · us it ·hing, \ hi h < f ·ours add t th · mf · r f tb v · . r r. '1'h · L·l\vs n and Finn y 1 Jl , l Hu piwl·' rtill i, ! pl;tsti laborat ri t:l arc lo ·at ·d in ·or ia--th L<rws. n. ( 1 n­r ral Hospifal i al til :-; j mil .s nc rth f A I, nta. ] t i ~-ti.d that t he arm has b ut thi rt ' pL sti ·y · hb rat ri ,. ~1ll t ld. 'Th . wotk ha i1 ')' be'n b :gun 'H YJ. ll<.' Fnr g~ ·ncra l H ~ pita l in 1944. ~1 h Laws n La\ or, t has t urn~ d Hi t n re th :m 5( ) artifH:ial 'VC8 in. ·stnt lish >d Octoh ·r . 3, 11)44. Fino " r ' L·lbo tt ur}' was L blishc I ah ut i, 1 LOnths '~ n. Pwm t r: '1,11 er· ar t o :s .l l e toe Pl' qu u. 11. " Pr T t: "Yc.j ani th ~rc r· two sides to a :h · t f fly paper- bu it makes a lot of difl' rene to the fly which sid • he investigates." • "• ' " " In e:resb.ng items .Gathered H~re And There ' • bo ~ inal w le who tia uri hed in America when Char­} marr w~ eenquerin,g Europe ate believed to have b:een d ~ ndan · of an A iatic trjbe. )) » . « « \,.<Jhlen pilo were first enrployed by the ferryi~g division of he a1 t an port cocimand, aqp.y ~ir 'forces in Septem-be, l:L~ " B" )) « « Tbe Chine e walking fish m·ove·s over dry land from one pool qf \'\'ater to another by twisting its pody in energetic l"ea "S. - " There .are 3 -oo -Boy Scout tro9ps sponsored by the " American Legion. · · • » « « · cotc.h and Irish -as la te as the end _of the 18th century .buried butter in peat bogs for :'agiag and flavoring." )) "» (( :c It" 1 e ti.n1ated that 200,.0 00 automoobiles are disappearing " from U. S. road& every month. . - " »))«C 'I'he fir~t veterans' hospital library on record in the U. S. was e·tabli "hed just after. the Civil War in the Soldiers' Borne at Togus, Me. )) )) « « The ring-necked pheasant is an importation from China. » )) « « The Hudson and Nlohawk rivers How in_ an ola valley; that · onii:e draine<l the Great Lakes centufies ago when the St. Lawrence river was choked with i'Ce. » » « « - That Boston. wa- once the capital of New Jersey . . » » « "« A . .mosquito boat is a fast motor boat used chiefly against \a~ e na'Val ve sels. )) » « « · l'h.e Great Banks of Newfoundland are one of the most pToducti e fishing grounds in the -wDrld . . » )) « « S gar, gold · and coffee in succession have dominated the economrc of .Brazil. - )). » « « T he first perinclical R.:J;Ibli hed in the United States, was Beftjcamin. Franklin's 4"General · Magazine an4 Historical Chr.onicle,' i ued iFl 17 14,- in Philadelphia. . » » fC « ' . Steel W-Orking and. hardening in a~n advanced stage was common. 3 ,GpO years- ago in Greece . . » » ·« « - .The 'fajg,a of S1berja , -one of the world's greatest forests, r 4,000 mile long·'and 1,000 to 2,000 rn.iles wide~ It is nearly a-s large a the entire Uwted States. Hindlll~tani is ecof:lnto English as t}1e,mo.st used hngoa.ge. - » » « « . Re ion iro:n ore deposits O:ear Caen. (in Norman.tly, Fr.a~ce) have been worked . ince Roman times. )) )) '(( . " " ' R~fdler Gent(:!r in New York City, is the 1'9-rgest priv- 11 ·ely owned bu ines. and entertainment cente·t~ in Ameri·ca. » » (( • At the dose 0£ th€: Rev~lutionary ·war, Co,ngn~s_s · ordered the df bandmert{. of the e9tire a''r.my, ex~:t.ept "25 privat~ to _ ~rd die ~tQre at Ft. -Pnt, and 55 to guard the stores a~ \V es1; Point}~ ·- The actual throne of Great Britain is Gothic de . ign in th:e hou e of .lords. an oaken chair of · )) » « « Beheading was introduced into -England Conquerer. )) .)) « « . by "'illiarn r:ne ·- The medi·cal depanment of th€ , Army: inth:1d~$ ab?ut , · 500,000. enli-sted personn-el and 117,000 officers, mdud1ng . commissioned nurses. .,, " (( « . . - - A Iarg~ oak tree at St. <Martinsburg, La., nut~ks the Jeg- - endary- spot where LGmgfellow's heroine; Evangelme, started her search for her lover. . . " ,, .,, (((( - · Afghani tan, a nation of 10,000,000 p eople., ha ~ no· rail­road. )) )) « (( First gold di scovered in Alaska was in the K~na:i river basin in 1850. . » )) « (( Camp Lejeu-ne, New River, North Carolina, is the largest rna nne corps training-base. ' ' I 1 Three Kings ' By Grace N all Crowell . United they kneel at the mange1· bed After their long trek over the sgnd: - , Three valiant-kings who \Vere strangely led By a silv.er light to a far-off land. " . '~'eighted w.ith , gifts of jewels and gold, The s.hine of the star still in their eyes, · · · Caspar, lVfekhior~ Balthazar hold In their hearts the wisdom of all th~ wise. Humbly before the Christ they. wait, Acknowledging Him, ·His gloqr, I-Iis power, There at His sid~ they subjugate Their will to His this radiant hour. Their .burd~ns lift from their hearts, they rise, 1·1en with a vision- they turi1, they go Back to their own far lands, these wise Earnest kings of the long ago. Oh, that earth's rulers today would t.ake The starlit road to the Christ, and tnere Seeking a cure -fo-r the wo,ild's heart-break, Find it_i s hnmble, united prayer! "' ' l - . J udge: _ aYou are accu ed of stealing a cbi~keri. Any­thing to say?" . · · Pri s.cmer: "Just took it for a lark, si:r.'' Judge : ''N resemblance whatever. Ten clays." Mrs. N l'-'ltpor~But isn't your son rather y ung: to join the armyr · :£\1r . Malapro:e~W e'll, J1e $s~ very y llng) but, th n _, you $·ee, he is only going to join the infantry. - . A ~i"s iomiTy :o iety member approached Henry. ~'W . · are havinv a raf~ l e l r .a i oor- widow," .h.e said. H\fVill ym1 buy .a ticke t?'~ · . "Nope," said Henr~, "my wife wouldn.'t -1 t me keep h er if ·I won.'' · •,· NiM ,• - ·-' ,. . . With But Three Exceptions United States Presidents Were Rural or Small Town Folk Despite humble oriqin they filled the highest office in the land with honor • Did you know that. with ut tl r · .~ c pti n all f b president of the · nit d t t , c me fr m farm a'nd vi llao- s -the gra~ roots f m ri a. Of ~the . pre--idenL who ha erv d er 1 an f 1 6 year ~ twenty-one \\- re maH-tov n ] ·~ w. r by rof sion. Four-T-ame2 Al ram Garfield. Ch . ter . Hen rthur. ,r r Cle,·eland, and \\-o dr VI' \ iL on ,. re tea h r as w 11 as attorney . at one t.im.e or an ther. !fillard Fillmor thir- • teenth pre~ iden comb in d tail ring \i'rith the ra tic · f law. Andrew Johnson f whom it i aid that h could neither read nor 1 ·rite bef re he ' a ma rri d Vira a tailor in the ~ity of Green ille. Tenne ee. Pr sident J hn on' v old tailor shop in Greenville Tenne e, is pre erved a a hrin ~ to his memory. Pre ident Hardin was a small-town news-paper man. . For his rural ba karound Abraham Lincoln is best knoVi·n. Born in a log cabin near Hodgensville Kentucky; of ver poor parentage. Lincoln attended school but a few month~, but he read and reread the Bible and the few othyr book which he could get hold of. He worked on the farm, clerked in a store tudied law and served in the Black Hawk Volar. After he began the practice of law he was elected to the Illinois legi lature and then to Congress. Another notable grass-roots president was Andre-w jack­son. Born in ~ axhaw settlement, North Carolina, near the South Carolina border, "Old Hickory", as he was called, studied law in an office in Salisbury, N. C., before he migrat­ed to Tenne~see. Other presidents born and bred in small towns include: Calvin Coolidge, William l\tfcKinley, Grover Cleveland, Rutherford Hays, Franklin Pierce, and Benjamin Harrison. Some of the small towns · in which American presidents first saw the light of day are: Port Conway, Va.; Summer­hill, N. Y.; Hillsborouah, N. H.; Delaware, 0. Plymouth , Vt.; Caldwell N. J.; Niles, 0.; and West Branch, Iowa. The only three chief executives who claimed cities as their birthplaces were William Taft, Theodore R?ose:rel~, an? Franklin Delano Roosevelt. Taft was born m Cmemnatt, Ohio and Theodore Roosevelt and Franklin D. Roosevelt in ew York City. T . n former presidents, George Washnigton, Andrew Jackson; .l\tfartin VanBuren, Zachariah Taylor, Minard Fill­mar braham Lincoln, Andrew John on, Grover Cleve­land, \Villiam McKinley, and Harry S. Truman did not have the advantage of complete col.le e education. . Harry S. Truman, ano~her ~rass-ro.ot pr l?ent, w~ born in Jacks n Count , .l\if1 sou n and hv ~ on h1 fath r' farm until the l nited tate entered the F1r t \ 1orld v\ ar. So n after the nited Stat ntered the v:ar h nt to France as a li utenant and lat r becam. cap in of artille y. At fir t it is said, he ~a very tmpopu1ar with hL m n but he gained th r spect of hi toua~ Iri h private~ in the b ttl · of St. ~fihiel and the Argonne dn• · . n th way back fr. m overse~ , his men bought him an enonnou t 'n- allon lo 1n up whi b to d four f et hi h. . . . He ha done farm dwre~, wa h d d1 he, tn a drug tore fer $3.00 a 'fi eek, '''rapped paper in the mailing ro m of the Kan~a Cit ' Star clerked in t r , and b · nk , and op- , erated a haberdashery. • Ttn Interdivision Scheduling Conference he- ;fir t In rdi i i n l l1 11lin~ onfer nee w " held at H mtlt n c . ·r 15 and 16 with . r'pr ', ent· ti • · fr ~ m th -ren -a.l Hamd n : nt n and H. u oz ·ched ling a11d .,a I '. 1 artm ·~1t a 1 en I mg. 1~ uben B. Rr er son, Jr., · ic pre kl Jn and g rr ral ro­du t1 n man . er, spok ~o ~ group on "Pr ducli n--Pa L Pre . nt .and Fut re , r v1 w:1r."' the p t hi ory of Ch mpion P iu t~ n t date and out1mm and e plal ing orne of the produ ·11on managem n~'. pi~ n. f r fu ure pr duction facili­ties an ·I pl . n f r all divlsJon . H. W. S.uter vice presiden and general sale mana rer, • 1 oke n "Sale - ] ast, Prese t and ut ue", cxplainin to the gr up orne .f .the les problems of the pa t, Ch mpion ~ pr ent sale · p ttl o r and what he expects to be om of he al s pr blem of the fut 1re. B t~ , 1r. Rober:t on and Mr. Suter mphas1zed that Ch· mp1on·s 1 r duct10n and ale program for the future must be based on the fundamental of coordination of the facilities and advantages of all Cham ion Divi~ions consid­ered as one unit. Harold Wri ght led the group in a discus ion of scheduling as related to divis ional and interdivisional production and sales problems. Mr. Wright gave a brief history of schedul­ing at Champion and pointed out some of the problems we might encounter in the future. An explanation and di scussion of the methods of handling · and the consideration to be given to interdivi ional grade transfers was led by R. L. Betts. Frank Thompson outlined the pulp and other raw materials situation for the foresee­. able future . A round table discussion of current scheduling problems was led by Mr. Wright at which several problems of both a divisional and interdivisional nature were advanced, and solutions for which several good suggestions were offered. It was the concensus of opinion of the part1cipatina in­dividuals that each derived a great deal of benefit from the conference in the form of better knowledge and under tand­ing of the interdivisional and divisional plan and problems. Each hoped to be able to pass along to hi co-worker a degree of this appreciation and thereby further the Champion program. Those participating in the conference were: H. W. Suter and R. B. Robertson, Jr., repre ntin gen­eral sales and production management; Harold\\ ri aht, R. L. Bett and Frank Thompson from the general cheduling de­partment; Cliff Rekers and Bob Hacker repre enting Hamil­ton mill scheduling, and Carl W. Noltina from Hamilton sa l e~; Paul Wheeler from Canton :rvlill ' chedulina, nd _ d .l\llcClure from Cant n sa le Glenn nivel , r pre ntino­the Houston Divi ion mill ch dulincr and sale d partm nt . The cretary for the conference· v a Patricia Hamm rle. H fir t er d a road ov r e r_. th n h wa l ct d county jud e. The offi f C u~qr Judg , it _i . aid. wa a pur ly admini trati po t r qum~g no tr;unmg tn lav . H \~r r, Truman d c1ded that a ltttle know] d · .f law v uldn't hun o h tudi d at a law hool f r two y r . H wa n xt ele t d t tb Unit d tat . n t in 19 4 nd r cl ted in 1 40. lt j ~ aid that r.tr. 1 ruman while in the enat vYa . ·ery uc "' ful a a war-graft .inve tigat r, no~t only.~ au ·e .of hi ~ natural 11 n . ty, but al o becaus of ht ' tradt.tl nRl_\It - uri re t for a dollar. He a in ·trumental m h~ ·vm a committee appointed to investiga~e war ontrac.t.,. H1, om­mittee is called today' The conscience of Y' a hmaton . • c: THE . am raton, HAMILTON DIVISION B) Bill Thompson Landed in the \\'indy City ju t as the De roit Ti<Yer were i·ving Ott Reid" Cub" tho e fini hi no- ouche . T o ad, Ott. but beinc an old Giant , . ., I can whole heartedly , mpatl iz.e lVith Y-OU. )) » {{ « ~\fe r 26 mon h in thi - monkey uit we ran into our fi r st Champion in the _,e_ ·1ee, except when home on leave, of - re. \Ya ~ at Chic a o' -:-· bus ~ ervice _ Ia 's Center and the party we met u·· ~ o-ood old Charlie Roemer, better known to . ou · all a HWhi tey1 ', ·• \~hit y '' ' a on bi ~ · ay home for a ~ hor vi<:;it a·fter 26 month - of ea dot"L ·' He ha 43 }'i point and about a week. o P ait for di 'd ar e '- < Inciden 1. ~ ~ -our truly i tatio-oed at t1 e . ~a \r • Pier in down tmvn Chi-a'"" 0 to . .:-,weat out> his o her point and (,ne ha!f. Eve ry afternoon and ni,zht 11· er ;· ·ith 4l:'- hour lveek-end llbenie, to oot- IaQd no duties exc~pt plain loa '" G2' and raking on more and more wei _ ht~ 1~h o::e old civies will never ~ t m n w. JJ » « {( e la ·ert !lift from Champion was a d v w J1et vrith name in cr:ibed. ~ ·er. fe~Y week: ve recei-ve some nice (,l~ en from the \fill which is the envy t: (I ' r buddic . Then when we men­tion th<" f c d at Champion ser iee men o-et a two-weeks vacation 'tvith pay on return and that their eniority grows aU the time they are in the uniform, the bo_rs really let out "~Nith orne amaz­ed tt·hi tling. l) )) (( (~ \\-bile home on a leave last week we dropped in at the Calender R oom and aw mo t of the old gang and found thina like olden days. Olah \rVa1ton 1) t ome ex pen ive wao-ers on the \Vorld -·erie and a quart of-urn coke - t L Yi Pannel. Lou remarked, "I ort of liate ·ro take the quart off poor \Valton . ut I ues he will learn ' . )) l) ({ (( And-for the b n fit of you guy· wh aid tbat old man P ann el co u.ldn t \-vrite, \\'e know better. Lou i · wrote you r tru ly a nic a letter a an ne could e · er expect. Th ank ~ > L uie. )} )) (( (( Our e perience has n that wh re ser ice men were found in (Yrcat num­bers like , aboa rd citi es, 1 i berty was oor, and that v:here men in unif rm were . c -hL'' Sgt. \Villiam R nt ch i r ~ rit that h ~ is ~tt a r '$~ amp at Luna, Lu , n, b nt XJ e ·t · t ) b , · a '" k in th - <H and at tb mill 1'loon nh r Janw:uy 1. J n any tb "f .I ' tt TS th 1 rit s.aiJ they · r b ·ing , nl hom", 1 ot t ,'end an mot· mail n l they had hi ·h h p s of bcj11g back in the mifl , many of th m l ef r • this is, ue of THE Lo ~ is published. Eleven Harr A T. Ratliff s Colden Champion's Traffic • nn1ver ar anager It'' ::._jt~:-t a lnlf n:ntur: a~c, lLt t•dn-. . !.t) ( <>\<'Ill b r . 1' 1 .) th:n thl' :tun~ J1Ltn -.hn\\11 ll'!n\ rn:rdc hi~ aprc.u nee .tt tlw Ln ''t infant indu:-trT t, ~tJlt 111 lbmilt(ln He ldt a t! )d jt.'l <1:-- ~.-hid d ·rl o1- the t h ·n ·. ll. dl1U j): I aih\ : C\ ml_< n; \nt '' th~._ _P: n _I .ultn.td ompany) to help h ndle :'hlf'f'lll~ fnr the ( h lllll'' )ll (. o.H cl Papt' J ~(l!ll­r n. -. Ted,) Har·\ T. R.Hiilf j'Ictur~_·J t::; hellO\\ i·, stand~ alon~ ,·" ~ht 't ~le 'h:tmpi )Jl h r -~ ) ~ t Jl~ f unintet nq t ·<J ~.: · ·r ·,. :- 1H m th.: lunJ~_•;:,:-- .md n >\\ ~-·nl'ral Tr.J !lie ~ bnJger ·f 11 L nt~ Clf th 'h·m1pion Pcq' ·r ~n1.d Fibre Cnmp, ny. HaT). u 1f1. rtunat~.·l. , dn ·~ not remini.;;.re ' ~rv mu !J , bnt there · rc ~ m ,f tb Old Timers '' h do. · \\'hen h fir:t cJme tL1 the mill h:1mpion was duinrr a - _i,,b ~_)f c ')~ning paper in a small n"' ' t n buildin r ab~nt t wht rt tlw Coating }Jill Calt:nder~ are n \L - ~ The: Wt I inbL und anJ outbound tonnage in 1 1 9'" was a matt~r of I "'.0(0 ton::: per :car as compa red with 2,742,600 on.:: m th~ year JQ+-t. ln 1 SlJ) all tonnage in ancl out had t be handleJ by hand or hL rsedra \\·n drays and taken ither to r from th railroad back f th ~ile - 1'ool \Vorks or to the boat' ,,·hich then plied the :\liami and Erie Canal from Cin ·innati to Hamil'::on. The Hamilton_ Iill startt:cl to grmv rapidly on the startin cr Mr. Ratliff when he came to Champion a Half Century ago Mr. Ratliff. as he is today of operations of the Hamilton Belt Line Railway Company in 1899. So Harry has v\·atched Champion ru\\in(l' for 50 ! ear:­and has seen the irnple problem- of 'hippincr in 1~95 become so complicated. and freight tariff' so varied, that the.· had to be controlled to a large extent by the Federal Government. l-Ie has the hcn8r of ·urervisina the freight rate structure of all divi ~ i o ns. The shippiner man of tho:Je days has become the traflic expert of today, who must kno\v rates on thou~anJ · of article: and must be able to detect 1•vhen that rate doe- not fit in with the product he i shippina or receiving. The Champion hirt~in g lcrk of 1 c95 with 10 tuns of coated paper a~ chy to look after, ha · b come the 1eneral Trafr1c .\Ianagcr of the gi nt Han ilton, Canton cHld IIou~ton mills ,,·here i'TI the year 19++ the va ri uu · di\ i~ions handlt>d an enormo us tonna ge. ·!os12 tu 3,000,000 t ns. Tunnag~ muvin!._!. t Jda\. ' b. ' train. twck and bar~'-t and on e\:ct: ton t which there i: cJrdul check as to r~ttcs. etc. .I1c alsn ha · tL) :u1en i:c th usands of tons of other fn:ight cuming to c\"t?t_T department )f th · Ch clmp i~m Plane and if )_- > >> « <« cd Con' face. I: re ·orne on of fcudin~ going o n Frn£sry and Ike; The oth"r ·.Fro~"',-; .!lVII Ike a vcrv b:1d ime abo~! · . r rpin!.!'' all day Jong. ft ~e tbar Frnt-'!.!~ ,.-a~ doing the am<.: I t •· didn't Gnd CJllt umillatrr. )) )} (( (( Beckelh,·mer came ru ·hino in • 1::' r11z t.p a few \'vC k- hack. H . ! • 't under,ta d \vhat hi- main 1 \ ., , until .\1 H rmann made tht: lig-l t. By he way. Bob i nc\ · "Da \'0 d" bmth l'r. )) (( (( C Il\'( ne tell me \ h\' Raleivh 1 ~·r ·a·: u tin_ hi litd~ jalop~ ·-in . her he tml<.l dri\' . trai :,.:-bt o 11: C .1ld it he th :lt he'. afraid to r · i.i b- kin2' abilin or mavbe h .ou! ·ell . _ L X\ ·ell.' - )) )) « r·1 y o 10d one· ar· h in' n l ere. Hav yon h ·ard th o R y _.,. al comino- throue-h a ein~ a man han2'irw from If 1 o_r H:r u rman he een that lherc w, a ~ 11 r tb · c her .,ide. U>> CCC< Yhat will you have Packard, Chev­HIIet. Jr F orJ ~ The be t car in the e part i., the '37 Pa kard that John _ff 1lJ 1h(Jn ha, . Y rJU couldn't believe it bur \\e kno \.it {r,r a fact that h can . '0 3t mile an hour \-vith only the small­c t amount .A rouble. )) )) (( (( The littl men with white coa ts ar corn in~ afte r one of our fellow . Did an) rme bappen to sec a J. articular I it­t! · ltcJrt fellow back in th · corn r alr1n ~' whrJ wa talkin" to hims ·If and ' makln.! ~JI kind of l'eculia r m) irm . » )) (( (( Plea c . omch d , tell me: what J h~ • Rc,\H' do o.; wi h hi'i Saturday aft r-nc;{ JIL be ide .~ , 1 an l <m the cc 1 n .r elf SelCJlld and Hi"h .'tr·er.;;. )) )) « (( Dy the time thi -:, i . u ~·r> ·. <• pr · we l oulcJ e . JJJ of uu r Pip Shr 'P scn1c m n bacl <•n til j(1l. II 'Ie' ·t lr 1 in nywa y. MRS. PYLES CONVALESCING :t\1rs. Della Pyles, Seven Mile, wife of Gilbert Pyle , Cl\1 Sorting, is con­valescing at her home following a major operation in :t\1ercy Hospital. HENRY GETS A SOAKIN' Henry Hopkin , Pnloadino-, went fi shing r cently and did his ca ting "'·ea ring those high top rubber boot . Unfortunately for him, there wa a • , t poff in the creek and Henry d rap-ped a foot or tvvo. just enouo-h to per­mit those boot to fill vvith \Vater. ' Vhat he aid , hould have not been sa id, cv n about a pair f bo t ·. ' ~To\ , n1y man , ~ "you know that tmd ju ·i, prud 'nee :you ar .tn n nt. '' :aid the jtl<.-l:re. r our s.v · tem of pr s tmed to be "Th ·n,'' r •pli d th lcf ndant, 'why all this elTon to om.i ·r ml· ?" Tin1 i th · cJn ·thing that l n nc\·er h' ret ri vc L )ne may ]use nud re<• in ~ frit·nd · n may Jo · • and reg in money; opp rtuuity nne· :-.purn d rna .' c m,e a rain; bm the h urs th ;tt arc lot in id letH'" · C lll n ., cr be lm 't<> Itt ba k to be. n-: c·d in l'< inful pur, 11it:. '1t k t ·at' ·r . <Hl' m, J( ur m ,tr'f d in the hour. a tc1 ,' upr)er.- t<"(' Y or!. TVorld. -- - " If \ old ~trc \'r,u mv !itt! m. n ?" '·f dou't knrJ\\ : ir. ~-fmh r W, l\ 26 '"hen 1 [t'> I)( t n. lna JlO\\ -h ':; on! ? ., • - . . 'Pvt.t. Ct d · • · e art. en of Thomas S e art, N~. ll B at rs, and Mrs. Stewart" and b-rother of Le.rr · e Ste. Fan an~ C~unt. He_ n-o i st<X.tioned in San Fernando, on Luzon in the P . PP · s . ' at Ste · rt llano e. Mi Patty Denni ~. a student at Httmilton High School. and rta Sue tewart two ye<m~ old. si ter- ot Clyde, and. Lor~;tine ttnd dauqhter of Tom and s rart. er an ·ews --- B Bud Dunlap Cha li · Bloo . u·ho ha~ been 'ill for • ~O e t1 "', i_ now repor ed com· ale c-in_ ra i - a hi home and \Ye -urely \-i11 be ~aid to ee him back on the job. )) » « « Gor an (P k) Chamber Vivian (Pee _ Ias -ie and Har -.- li her ha ~e e urned to heir o in the enera­or room. Punk and Harry have been in he se Tice more han four year and Ye. e in ser ·ice in Africa: Sicily . I al ·a d F rance. Pete ,.a i for three year.,. _ ll bo ·s are deli hted o be home and he old P m\'er bowlin team ·ill haYe orne dark ho- e \vhen P ete and Punk et in o heir uide. ) ))' « (( C\eral f the bo ~ a e ded he Ohio ·ate-\' i consin a me rerentlv . • They were La renee J r Gordon · ndrews Bill Derb , .\1 rae f, P aul hotlenbar er at1d Ted ~,ceman. orne of the hi 1 light of the trip included : Ted eeman being e cor· d aero a s reet by a poJrce 1an •ho held raffic: Lawr nee . orO' and Bill · erb i a ,1' i din co te · I .ra ff drink-in a 1 of coke · P a l ·al in a ou th~ i juicy eak at ayl _ at d o rdo _ ndr '' h He in ~· en1a "\ .'f time the ca e o a raiJr ad rack . -' rhe huck Hack r ha j i ed our rank ~ a{t r .a tr tch o · } r e y · r ' in . he ~ T a 7 r. H i a fin l ) kl no- bo , and beli \'e j o · ot i in~J · and in-eres ed in 11 kind f . or . \\' f-come. » ,. « • : 'AU 1 P arker ~ one m n who e, Fourteen lirnb'ln ~er cheee and ljke it. T he rouble i he never et" enou h. )) )) (( ({ The other da - i.n :\o. 1 Bojler plant~ a res ure te t wa. being run on a d ryer drum. II \•vere on needles and pins and all expected · omethin to happen. It did. Some one hit a piece of metal that made the darndest noi e and all thought the boiler had burst. There was a wild cramble, funny to ee, but unenjoyable to be in . )J. » (( <l It can happen to the bevt of bo\Yl r . Zeke • and1in made a Z02 and a 204 and final!; a 107! The funny art ab ut it be wa roundly core for lo in he la t ame but never c mpli ­meuted for vinnin the fir t two. _ furiel Bur key in h -ter ~\'1 n-nion office, ha taken up b v\J lin an.di doi g , i:rlu · ooda ito and if h · rurh~ '\' r · kno could pn b­a ly b ·a , m of the mcr1. H ,~: abo ut a. match era ~ R a . I ·· xon has · a h rJe . f h I by -and tha ' r, i ~ ing b<·c . H ha, nin . I i · )f rh · 1 Ct - an l to 40 th u-a d b in ' c Jo ~ . y t ~ n i a j . }w\ r mu h h \ } · • $ 10 ' . !-,"(JOd y , r. ~ l , d r e. r · d b r u 1 . m d f fJ(l e . ·, hu admi , r.hi w a b· d vcar. • )uit • ' Ho . · r charac . 1 • · !Oil 'f • 1 anJ · Jrki1 i-1' iu th I ar Jld d l d Bob l i., n. ar ci ~iJ.ian · f! in j ,. l • c I Ii - ) <1 Pip' .'l } I) Bob, b . e · Jn n~ lr li fi)!' nd 1 f Hi ) . { 1 r L 10ld in rizQruL hud . · t . Ill " alp 1 as dt ., V1-H, 1 ~ h a. to t··h t)c' rd hi 0 n : rtwr r Ju v h.:. . lim b't ( ff ·r tum 1 nnn ' ' (J .e pl·c ehe l (, · b<Jilt thi L. . ~ . • fl T~rl . ·em n has r u to iv" hi er vtc ·::. fr an: mor • ii . ~ 'n! p Ued ( ,, rd1 t , t'\_ndrevv. o ic :0ry i11 h • ·v · n - ·1de 'o!Jncil rae ·. Cordon th · nk d Ted and hank:) 11 o ~; wt ,1 u . oncd him. Bill B rre h.a ~ I, vvur truly do \"H re_cen ly on lJoi1er pl;n , J'":v i • • • o · Btll, eli£ de and di ·~· ·H: » • tv~e e TlFJma can ell o tall sH~ rie about any hin:. and an, lace . • · J o recen 'a . rA roin in o cove rn Kentucky and seein ome petdfied I ndians and onds 30 fce:t dee . » » « R }' . · !len i lorJkin forward o hat great day when he can ha e a family reunion. He has three on~ and a dau hter in ·he ~en·ice and the family ha not been to ether a a unit for more than three year . Ed inf(teton ·­son. Bob, also was discharged recentl and Ed. t?O is awaiting the day for~ reat famt!v et-to- ether. ~ )) )) « « Jack (One Ball) tewarr ha been havin~ bi, hand full tryin o beat Bud Alexander in that reat arne of bowlino-. A ~ thin ta'Od no"', B d ha a little the better of the ar ment - bu 'lratch out. f l) )) (( 11arion Hetterich, a blue and dream' blonde. ha been helping ou in th~ Pm ·er offic". ~he is a . tuden at l ? . and i, takin up bu ine~, corr ·p nd­ence. » . (( ol: ,,jib rt O\-\"n a art of lum~ l ll ~ {half) they t H me. In f, <.:t h i a real ·t e man up wrth. l ob if thi1:1 , t r ~ i · not rru , blame th fell'' ·h . ld m . i . t1'11 : f r " l ! r ~ t hrl · , I I • \\.ally Reed lo:r l1 u · ~ i. H h , e n h ·l in~ r ther '-- a d ha no fnrther f }) « ( H · m p r h y t B 1-d \ l , . an-d r in t t: re nt death of ·,is I thd. 11 P' or : 0 't 'UU kuO\ · • u ~ • s u li e • 'ltlut l • r t tn ur: 11 a lie n ? • , a! ·. m, n: ' 1 l:n w I 1\' ( n ' l Hint? an 1. bu t 1 didn't kn v th ., re n. • • • I 1n ews --- B-. II el n Pierson I • ' • 1 • ne &.1 · n • t~h he Fi 1i hin r . c nan .r n '\, ' bu ·-'""~, J • . h '\. ar • he v, r1 Ill~'' :rhr r, \ in freed m for tr . \r~ Ih· Fab rand Rai h . f b a C ) 1 • h ei [ j I I h . .J () h ll h lie <Jn a ~ Ja · furloue-h i: d i .~ hi" f 1rio 1~h. lohr ., I i di charve b\ h: fir-, • he yea aPd b., back \ ·i I; w a rain. . a1·1c \\-r n and Thr, 1a Hllndl '\ • l o are ack (Jfi h j Jb. Ray (,arn:.t i Er Baureric vi i 1 he d - 1 r me . he 1- a m n h and ~Xf cc ~ o · e bac. rj n. L' t. ,f luck ft:llow· . did a ··II jc,b in d c a rmcd f rce: nc •e n<' . 1 ill do a well job 0 e C an I ion. . Hard be · i · pcndinrr a two va atiOJ i l hi --on. 1 t L . B nner. Gc rgc p nt C\ Lral • c,. 1h in de Chinu.-Hurma ThC' trc o· \ · ar an i n( \' om n a . ._- dar r o !!l . • • D<Jra , 1 Kinne\·, S<·alin( I( ft on • c:t~,b ·r 2r,, Je i lin , . he ' an cJ w a. hr rnc J.tld k('C} hrJU · f ,r h t h11 - band\\ ho \ . · 1 t:tcllt h. di char!!cd fnm1 h , r ·ic('. \\ · really mi. you J )ora . ] yuu r. ~· II ;:J f '\\' lllOllt h a T(J r nld \' u c,i a cct 1 ., in r,mcun · ·he, \o\ <1 actiJ·, a littl diff·r ·n hr_re A l·tc. Y c . (,\11 ~uc. w·1s rioht. I It did at rive hurn ·an 1 it \\ < '' cddin" h ·II hr o11r Franu· . I 1 anc · Baker (f 1mit('d in m.t ti~tl!<.: to D•)il'' . ·dy (Jf the_ ·av . • ·• n tr; t !at ion.! .\nd we wi h y u the be-. uf Ju~.k and much happin · :) in the f a11re. ,. ) (( « \ ·ck m o \ irginia Burn a new em I It . .: •. lk· t (Jf luck Virginia. )} )) (( « C rlcy Jack >n had a birthday ju t r ·ccn Jy and \\hen a certain someone a. ked hrm ,,,, (Jid he wa. lte aid, ''he ·a ·et:t i. teen aml never been mi ed." B" J)r,~uard JfrElravr • · u ca dar~ r i~ \J! r ~o,.,, · ng: J) c · ·Ier he • ! ~ r x:l \ i e ( ( R · . · i r n : < )r • • e . r • Lr • a d · . n ''fcrcd u c) ir.1 2(J n a cit rame ir>r a "a~e:r, n' mlc . h· rct·lay t o c a core ()f 16(1 ' IJ: C!. d ra (J e ,. -. . R - • • • -~ ji.J ;· It I -! a trap ' c1 ' 0 • C.r1 1ld be: R e • : r t:: Date . q i e r ,ud o! Ler f c 1 i., r .au ~r<:q . A a- 1 e o • . . . n.1, . ! r, L · r } ·r """'"' . C d j 'I a Ur r f • 7. 1. ·ra.l J· i ·. l (). 'Cr • fc. ir. . laCJ rtt t.r an<.l • 4( ') ' B ' • • . r ~ tno- ea • • a t "( J o.r.dic- f ·r • • r 0 ' ' h r · (JJ "3 ITl<: • Rc - • •t•:7 ) • • fJ a I - ' ea , , • are t or 1 1 Jr .arne- and t <Jf e o climb out of he c ·liar. • I) « u 'J c n \' rrirl in the (Jffice, fellc;\'.), i Text Attu Newfoundland Alaska ren Hunter Library Digital Collections (Western Carolina University) Aboa ENVELOPE(-13.417,-13.417,-73.050,-73.050) Andrew Jackson ENVELOPE(-63.333,-63.333,-71.467,-71.467) Bad Heart ENVELOPE(-118.303,-118.303,55.500,55.500) Burd ENVELOPE(-57.150,-57.150,-63.650,-63.650) Caldwell ENVELOPE(-101.500,-101.500,-72.083,-72.083) Calvin ENVELOPE(165.100,165.100,-71.283,-71.283) Conway ENVELOPE(-61.422,-61.422,-62.841,-62.841) Crowell ENVELOPE(-116.980,-116.980,55.819,55.819) Dee ENVELOPE(-59.767,-59.767,-62.433,-62.433) Dy ENVELOPE(11.369,11.369,64.834,64.834) Emerson ENVELOPE(168.733,168.733,-71.583,-71.583) Finn ENVELOPE(12.739,12.739,65.935,65.935) Freed ENVELOPE(164.333,164.333,-71.483,-71.483) Gar’ ENVELOPE(162.014,162.014,57.140,57.140) Horne ENVELOPE(8.098,8.098,62.640,62.640) Huddle ENVELOPE(-64.983,-64.983,-65.411,-65.411) Hudson Kard ENVELOPE(156.402,156.402,61.305,61.305) Kari ENVELOPE(28.979,28.979,66.201,66.201) Lawrence River ENVELOPE(-115.002,-115.002,58.384,58.384) Log Cabin ENVELOPE(-134.954,-134.954,59.766,59.766) Luke ENVELOPE(-94.855,-94.855,56.296,56.296) Mak ENVELOPE(162.381,162.381,56.401,56.401) Manger ENVELOPE(-153.250,-153.250,-77.483,-77.483) Marr ENVELOPE(52.117,52.117,-66.400,-66.400) Ner ENVELOPE(6.622,6.622,62.612,62.612) Olden ENVELOPE(9.933,9.933,63.871,63.871) Ora ENVELOPE(7.517,7.517,62.581,62.581) Orne ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-64.633,-64.633) Paine ENVELOPE(-147.533,-147.533,-86.767,-86.767) Patience ENVELOPE(-68.933,-68.933,-67.750,-67.750) Rae ENVELOPE(-116.053,-116.053,62.834,62.834) Rath ENVELOPE(-62.461,-62.461,-74.320,-74.320) Reet ENVELOPE(17.935,17.935,69.015,69.015) Rene ENVELOPE(-178.833,-178.833,65.967,65.967) Salisbury ENVELOPE(-153.617,-153.617,-85.633,-85.633) San Fernando ENVELOPE(-58.267,-58.267,-63.950,-63.950) Sion ENVELOPE(13.758,13.758,66.844,66.844) Theodore ENVELOPE(-62.450,-62.450,-64.933,-64.933) Thumb ENVELOPE(-64.259,-64.259,-65.247,-65.247) Ular ENVELOPE(140.951,140.951,72.498,72.498) Ure ENVELOPE(13.733,13.733,68.100,68.100) Zeke ENVELOPE(-121.470,-121.470,57.017,57.017)