The Log Vol. 12 No. 03

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

Full description

Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Champion Fibre Company;
Format: Text
Language:English
Published: Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723; 1929
Subjects:
Ner
Nes
Ari
Ure
Tay
Rua
Vay
UGL
Online Access:http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/3047
id ftwestcarolunidc:oai:cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org:p16232coll18/3047
record_format openpolar
institution Open Polar
collection Hunter Library Digital Collections (Western Carolina University)
op_collection_id ftwestcarolunidc
language English
topic Champion Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Champion Fibre Company -- Employees
Industrial safety -- North Carolina -- Canton
Employee motivation -- North Carolina -- Canton
Employees -- Training of
industry
events
spellingShingle Champion Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Champion Fibre Company -- Employees
Industrial safety -- North Carolina -- Canton
Employee motivation -- North Carolina -- Canton
Employees -- Training of
industry
events
Champion Fibre Company;
The Log Vol. 12 No. 03
topic_facet Champion Fibre Company -- Periodicals
Employees' magazines
newsletters
etc.
Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals
Champion Fibre Company -- Employees
Industrial safety -- North Carolina -- Canton
Employee motivation -- North Carolina -- Canton
Employees -- Training of
industry
events
description Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue. • I • 1 e e 1 I I 1 . I 1 • I I • • e 1 • • . _. . ._. . . ,._. .-, .• .,. e • •. ! I . I I I'I • : • I t • er • ,e ~· o.t • I i• ' ooQoo, t • ,. , . e . .,.,.,. ,. . ._ . , . . .- . e • e • I • I I ' - f t I • • ' f l •• • • i t' • t •• •'' i t • f t • •+ •• t • l ' f • i • t • •' ;• f •• t I • ==============-,~2=~==~====== '~-=-=-==========~=======· ==·== OL. Xll CANTON, N. C., APRIL, 1929 No. 3 =========================================~-- ~· -·~==== -- -- • • I • ' HE Sdfestl eleanest and 'JI)ost 'efficient Plant in the South TN THE S110KY MOUNTAJNS • • •• i i. • ' . t •'•• •- •t • + t t t ••-• t I I 't. • f • '• ' • • • i t I ''• ••• •i I • •• ;+ ' + • t I I t I I ' • • • t a a e I I • • . . • e • I • cl 1 t • . • . • • ' - e e e• e • e e I tl I I e· • .• • • ~. • .1 • I • • • e I • e • I . + t ,t ++ i '•. t ' • l t ' + i I • t ' ~ ~. t -• • J '• S it not the chief d·isgrace in the world not to be a Ynit, not to be reckoned one character, not to yield that peculiar fruit which each man was created to bear; but to be reckoned in the gross, in the hun­dred, or the thousand,. of the par­ty, the section, to which we be­long; and our 0pjnion predicted geographi€;ally1 as the North, or the· South? N @t so, brothers and friends · please God, ours ·shaH not be so. We will wafk on our own feet; we wi-H work with our O\VO hands; we witl speak our own minds. . . A nation of men 'viii for the first time exist, be­cause each believes himself in­spired by tbe Divine Soul \vhich also inspires all men. - Ralph Waldo Eru~rsO tl. • - VOL. XII APRIL, 1929 No. 3 • ' THE PAPER I<'OR THIS MAGAZINE IS MADE IN OUR PLANT OUT OF WOOD FROM THE FORESTS OF NORTH CAROLINA. WE MANUFACTURE MANY GRADES OF BLEACHED SULPHITE PA.PERS, MACHINE FINISH, AND SUPER-CALENDERED. i •••. +.+++~+ . "+ + i'IJ• . ++++ +++ -!• ~+++++++~ . ·1-!A+~'!!·+·t-~!·•!-!• ;.:.:.:. +·!••!. {•· !· .t••:.•:. .: . .: . •!•t!• •t-•:.tt•+ •Z. +!-!'!•"!• •!• ¥•!••:. tt~·:. .: •+•!••le.-!· ·:·.:·~··l· ~· -4~ ++ . •~ •+ CO "TENTS •+ •!• • • • + + + ++ ++ •.: . + F1:-.<»Hi p ie-ce- + •:• : ene 1n the Smol<y MoupU!ins : : .+. . • •lt l.mrPi t~Ativn-D:y Ral)\h 'Va:ldo 'Slnct·son + •!• +- It i~ }""ron t Cove-t· + •:• >'!.:. :::. CO-OPE. · RATION' i.· -<H>peTa"l.il)n ·--·····-····-··-. P~ge 1 + + •!• + General Paet. fa1· the Renunciation •:. • •lt b ~ ·J; of ,. 2·8 • ~ ' ~ "" ---·-·· . -. t ERBERT HOOVER said, "Peace :i.s n t made jn documents but in : Th.I"!Jk o · Th .e Thi.ll --- ··-- " 4 •lo + ·it the hearts of men,'' so, with co-opera tion. It is the result of a -:. + ' . • t + purpose within. · If the heart is wrong the att itude ·will not be .; +.:· r ight. Therefore, we cannot expect teamwork unless t here ·is a willing- ~+ . S.6 ++ :nes t0 pull together and a de:sire to see t hings move smoothly. •+ 8 + -I• ~ ~ n. ·o.,.!O_.rdl$ " 9 + (." J \ k + uepal'lmen~ ~ . --- . ,. •z. 'y.,-operation teamwor is essential to the success of every enterprise t +. ,. . * r-~ · u n . ~ 11111 ~ 1U {11 JY! $. 'lo.AU' Q V ~,. . _ . ., 10 :t ~.ing aid : ::. + )>f'lngtlme -~--··· - . . ~. . + ·~ ++ Trend of 1he Tim<¥~ . - . - + . ·:· •> l() + "Jt ain't the gunS DOl' al'l'nament, •!• ++ . .:. R. & A . Notes by L•. J>. P:re.J.ey. ·· " u + ' Nor the funds that they can pay, ·:• ++ + 1.• Book Mill N . ~li<>nl R •. ·. " 1a • 1 , But close co-operation ·~ ++ + . ~· Leather - + That makes thrun w iN the day. •:• w<)t)(j . . . " 13 : It ain't the individual, :I: em· Sick · --- . ·· · --- : . 14 % Ner the · army a a who~J e, :~ Cbii<lp n 's l'al!" ·--·~ --- . . ~ 13 +i But th ever la sting t l'i.nlWork ~ The Cabinet. . r 1 r ·i4<:fat J:IooveF. ·• J 6 ·~ Rea~t.h ·rw~< ·· --- · --- ·· - -··-·· . . 17 i Of every blooming soul." i Women·& P ~ " l + + F-ro n o ~ ~::::~-~::=.=:::~:::~ •• 19 i ~ :~:y -~::;~:~;~ . -.,.- ··-- ." ~0 ! . ' i + ' + * i ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++' rfHE LOG --- -·---.-~ --- ~ --- · ~ --- · --- .--_._"---"-~ --- "-' --- .,o-:.--~ --- .__---.-,_ EARL. CHARLES Ar\fl RCBY LEE hHdren of Mr. and Mrs . . \ rthur Hightower. • GE_ -ERAL PA T FOR THE AR.- JG ffiD AT PARI RENUNCIATION OF AUGUST 27, 1928 Thinking that the readers of The Log might be intet·­ested in reading the "KtUogg Treaty for the Renun­ciation of ~' d thf~ Par·t. "The Pre id .;nt of th • < ;(·nnan I:Pjtll, tJH . J-'J'<•:::,ideHt of tht United ~tate~ of Am(;~ rlh: I lii . rvrajc. t,\ thv Kiug t)f t}: f1 Bel i n.'\1 the p, c; •' t~nt t;( tLa'".l ~ H~· ud . J'c·puiJii,·, l:fis l ajtat y th<1 King ,Jf Ct. e, t Hti htin, Jr .land and tit • Bdti. h JJ(•rfJildorH:> iJr.-y tiJ)(] th~ Sp; 8, Ji;JIIJ u~J'~ r of l Jl(IIH. lHs laJt . blY 1ht· J(i JlV of lLdv, 111 · Jajt".'tl' lh" l•:u1 . p~rm . ()f Japan, tlH· Jtn~si d •nt ur Ch<' H!'\)JHhJit· (j J•,,_ lanr1, th ),·~r>!ll(l tt l of th" r %•· J,t, lh. r- J\ U puhlw . f;t (•pJy (-»flS ibtP of lJ1 ·ir Stll 1ll ln duLj• f ll j JI'( tlnhl.i · l ht~ Wf!l J ;.J t•c. fJf n a uk ind P(~ t sn:.til fl thnlll1n tinH· has r1,ut ·wl• n a lr:tuk • nun<·latir.m (Jf W:JJ a~ i lCJ in. tftJHH·IIt fr n·1tJ• nul polJ ' P}H,ulrl b(: Jnatk ll) 1ht PHtl t it 1 UF\ J • ~ ·etul uul fri ndly r Jatit)ll now .:xi tjng 1) tween thtdr p )j)le~ rna.v b., 11 rpetuatcrl Con vi need that nil change.; in their relation \ i l (me auoth er . houJd b, :ought ntlhF br pacific rnean: and he the result of a peaceful and ordcr1.v p ·l)e ·~ . nd that nn,\1 • ignatn•·.v Power \'<hich shall h~rt . after t k to pron1ote it-5 naUonaJ inlerest by reso~t t• war shou lrl lJe deuied the ht>nefrts furnishBd l,y thh; Tcrea y; .liop ~Ju I that, encouraged b.:· th~ir f!xample, alJ the other nations of the \ oriel wi ll joiH in this ltum;:tne en­deavor nnd 1)\· adhering to Lhe present Tt eat \. a. soon as it conu~. into force bring theh· peoples \ i•hin the sco p~ of it~ beneficent provi.~ ion s . thus uniting the ·iv­ilized nations of the world in a contmrm rennnciaL· on of war as au in s lrumen t of their national pohcy; Have decided to conclude a Treaty and fvr that pur­pose have appointed as their re ·vective Plenipcaten­tiaries : The President of the Gennan Reich: Dr Gustav tresemann, l\linister for Fo1 ei.gn A.tfairs · The P r e'" ident of the United Sta t e~ of America: The Honorable Frank B. Ke ll ogg. ~ ecr(~ta.ry of 'tate; I:-Hs lVIajesty the King of the Belgians: Mr. Patll Hymans, l\Iini ter for Foreign Affail , 1Vliniste1· of State; The President of the French Republic: :i\1r. Ar istide Briand, lVIinister for Foreign Affair;:, : His Nlajesty the IGng of Great Britain, Ireland and the British Dominions beyond the .,eas, En1peror of India.: For Great B1·itain and ror t hern Ireland and all parts of the British Empire 'v.hich a1·e not ~epa-r ate ~!embers of the League of _ ations: . The Right Honouraale Lo.rd C\lshendun. Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster , Acting ecretar) ot State for For eign Affairs; For t he Dominion of Canada: The Right Hono\n·able Willian1 Lyon 1\iackenzie King4 Prin1e 1\linist er and ~linister fo•· Extt1r n l . fTait·s; Fo1· th Con1monwealth of u . tralia: The llonourable Alexandet· J ohn ~fclJuchlan, l\J lHller of the Execut ive Federal Council : ~"o r the Dominion of lf' , . Z(\a lund: The Honou rablt" ~ir Ctu·is lopht r J~ul1(·s I an-. II i~h Con1n1 iS!'inn r for N~ w Zt~aland in ;r "\l Hl'itaiu Vor the l Jnion of South frica: rrh • J (Ol)(')lll'Ublt' .Jucuhu.· s tt~ ph fl llll~ ~n\it, I liA"h (' un-nd, ·innt·r fur t ht Uuioll of S •u th fri, a in l; t• a1 Ur ituin li'o r tht• I a· ish f a·•· Stull1 : l r . WtlliaaH Tlann l:\}l (,o. g t n Vt'• Prt'sidt\nl o th 1·~ . t' cutl t• ( 'ou uet l Ft r lud ir": 'I J~t. Hight llouout" &hll• Lotd ushtttd un, (•l uU\<'t llot" of t.h Du ·hy of. l 4Utca~ t,, r , . l;ting ~t·~ ·· tary of \. 't lt • 7 J • THE .LOG 3 . for ~oreign Atfaits; Hi · MaJe ty the King of Haly: Count Gaetano lian:z~mi, hi, Amba sa.dor E ·traor­dina. r and Plenipotentiar. at Pari . His Majesty the Emperor of J'apan: Count Uchida, Privy ·Cou1iloH1 r; The President. of the R public of Poland: Mr. A. Zale k~, Minister for Foreign Affair The Pl'i? ident of the Cz cho lovak Republic: D• Eduard Bene. , Minister for Fm-eign Affau·s i wh"O, ha'Ving cOlttmunicated t' one anothex tbeir full power f'eund in good nd due f_orm ·ha e agt· ed upon the foil wing a1'ticl ": ARTICLE 1 T e High Corttl·acting Parti . lenmly declan in th:e names ·of their respective peot'>le that they con­demn recours to a.r .for the s luti'on of inter-national controver ie and renounc it a an instrument of na- , tlonal poliey in their relations ·with one another. ARTIC!JE a The High Contracting Parties agree that the settle­ment o-r olution of a!U dispute or conflicts of what­e er natUl"e '(lr of 'vhate er origin they !\nay be, which may ari e among thero1. shall never be sought except by paeine mean . ARTICLE 3 The present Tr aty ~hall be ratified by th_e High G~ntracti.ng Parti~.,., named in the' Preamble in accord:­aace with heir respective constitutional requifements, nd sl1~11 take effect a -between them as soon as' all their ev:eral instruments of 1·atmcatioR hall have h zen depo ited at Washington. . . This Treaty . hall, ~hen it has come into effect as pre9cn'bed. in the p:reeedin:g paragraph, r001ain open as long: may be nece sary for adhel'ence by all the oth- _ er Powers of the world. Ever}! instru:ment evidencing the adherence of a. Power hall be deposited at Wash- . ' ingt~n and the 'kreaty ha:ll immedi~t~y upon such depo 't become effect-ive a between t,he .Power thus adhering and the other Powers parties' her.ete. It hall be the duty of the Government· of. the 1Jnited tates to furni h each Government n.amed . in the Preamble and every Governrneh.t subsequently. adhel'­ing to this Treaty with a certified copy of the Treaty .and of -every in trument of ratification or adherence, It shatl also be the duty of the Government of the Unjted State telegraphically to n.otify such Govern. ments im.mediately upon the deposit with. it of ach instrument of ratification or adherence. In. faith whereof the re peetiv.e P1enipotentiari a signed thi.s Treaty in the Fl'ench and Engli h both text having equal faTe , and hereunto their seal . Done at Paris, the twenty-sevm1th day of August in the year one thousand run hundred and t.weniy­eight. Germany United States of · .AJ:nerica Belgium France Great Britaill • (s AL) U TAV STRESEMANN (s AL) FRA. K B. Kii t L o (SE .· ) FA Lri- H YMANS · ( stAL) A1u; BJUAND ( EAL) CUSJ:lENDUN (sEAL) W. L. M ACKENZ1E K rNo (SEAT. ) . }. 1l CL ACHI,A . ( ~E L) C. J. P ARR (SEAL) J. S. SMrr (SBAL) Lvuvf T . M AcCoscAI.R (sn L) C u sHJJN lJON (SEAt.) G. MANzoNr (SEAL) CHIDA (sEAb) Aucus;r ZALESKI (sEAL) DR EnuARo BE, ns Original Sig.natories Canada India Australia Japan New Zealand Italy South Africa Poland Irish Free State ·Czechoslovakia Ratifications by Original Signatories . - ftedeeted . United States of Great Britain Canada Australia New Zealand India • > America Gzechoslov;a,kia Italy South Africa. Irish F1·ee State Poland Germany Perfected Adherence Deposited in the Department • • Afghanistan . Spain Croats and Albania Ethiopia Slo-venes Austria Don'Linican Liberia • Egypt Repqblic Panama Cuba King<,iom of the Russia Serbs Siam Adherences Perfected Except for Formal Deposit Haiti Paraguay Rumania Lithuania Portugal Tm·key Norway Adherences Approved by Legislative Body~ A waiting China Estonia Greece Ratification by Head of State. Hondura · ·Latvia Denmark Nether land Countries Sigllifyin.g Their Intention to Adhe1·e Bolivia Finland Persia Balga:ria Ciuaetemala Peru. Colombia Hangary weden -Costa Rica Iceland Switzerland Chile Lux :mburg Urugua Eeuador Me. ico V ne.zu la El Salvador Niearagu.a • THE LOG ' . Co:unt 'l 1ot HaYing Yet Signified ~rheir Intention .Arooentina Brazil SUlUMARY • ~tatus in respect of ratification. Ratification b3 origh1al signa.torje.-. . ·-··-·--···-- 12 Original signatorie not ha,ling ratified . ~· ---·-·· ·-····· 3 Perfected adherences deposited in the Department 13 Adherence perfected e . cept for fornu,l deposit . 7 Adherences approved by legislative body awaiting ratification by head of state_·--·--~--· ·· --- ········ 7 Countries . ignifying their intention to adhe.fe . 20 Countrie not having signified intention to adhere 2 Total_ . _____ ---·-··--·---· --- _____. _ . _________. . _"->: _ _ . __ . --. ,.,. . __ 64 THINK ON THESE THI-NGS T is said, "A hint to the wise is sufficient," which is perhaps true but, remember the ernphasis is on THE WISE. Cansequently a hint is not sufficient to the unwise, the1·efcH·e, the fol­lowing exa.mpl~es of unsafe practices are related, for the purpose of impressing upon all of us the impof't­anee of closer observance of the rule of Safety in the performance of our work. Several v eeks ag·o, an employee whose · duties JJe­quire the most of his tim.e in the Board 1\fill, went to the Sulphite Bleaching room for a sample of pulp. As he tore off a sample from. tl1e sheet of pulp on the Oliver filter, it slipped out of hjs hand he grabbed for it as it slid down past the slitter into the eonveyot·. Fortunately the .Slitter did not catch his hand and he was uninjured but, his hand might have. been torn off. The operator who saw the performance sai-d to the man ctLet me get a sample fol" you." When the sam­pie had been pr{)eu.red, the operator said, 14didn't you know that a man was seriousl)r injured on this Ina­chine while taking a sample?" He replied, .uyes I know." Wouldn't it be .fine if we should caution ouT fellow~ workers against unsafe practices and, w:hen pos~ iltle, show them the safe way? SLIGH'r EYE INJ RY An en1pJoyee in th ~ R. & A. de.purtrrH·nt wu · w ~rt~ . ing on a pump- diec(,unecting a ru1 liH£l. 'Ph• re w ~ caustic liquor jJre. ent aud he g(;)t som,• io hi ~ ~)r :l. Jt\· B-ul t : e ,, b u t·n ~d . 0 Could the 1njury ha'l · b ll Ju ·~vc ntc·tl ? v.,J). it r:ems oo. G11ggle. 1· ~ provi.d d hy t h<' r,.;oul t~au :v fua that }:,U~pos . J~ut, if the for rnun dot. n 't 1n ·i:s1 rm th•. men .prot c1i ng t11 :ir <y s bv tht tt~fi of goggles when needed, we can not expect the e:mpl~yee~ t(J be cautious. DtTring the past eighteen years~ the 1nen operatinJ! chippe.t·s and barkers have IJeen requjred to wear gng­gles while on dui.v, and without an exception, the rule is a.dhet~ed tg £.reely by the employees jn these depart­ments. CoJJ.seque-ntJy they have no e_·e injuries. If, then~ som& men can wear goggles aJl the time while on dutyJ others should be willin·g to wear them \\'hen there is danger of a:n eye injtu-y. MINUTES OF THE POWER PLANT SAFETY MEETING By Glenn Howell Date: March 20, 1929. Place: W. W. ~Iitchell·s Offiee. Wednesday, March 20, 1929, a meeting of the men representing the differel)t jobs in the Stearn Plant was ca.Hed by W. W. Mitehel1 for the purpose of organizing for department Safety \Vor:k. Presiding ~· ·"·u---·--· . ~--~-- --- · --- ~-··· ··-W. W. ! Iitchell Me11 Present CaRtains Eleeted J. C. Ryder . ~ H. Elansen R~ A. Gragg R M. G:reen M. S. Stamey Burgin Fore E. A. Thompson C. ~1. :Blythe A! lex Jackson J. D. J"ohnson J. C. Johns0n Glenn Howell To Serve the Fir t Wk. R. A . Gragg E. M. Green C. M. Bl~the A. Jackson J. S. Johnson A. H. High towel"' Tom Justice R. L. Gant J. C~ Johusu.n J. D. Jolm on Troy Sn1itn E. A. Thompson J. K. Downs G. R,. Davis It was decided at the above 1ne-eting th<1t ther€ should be . i.x buttons v o:rn, ef.lch r~pre €'.nti.ug a safe­ty Booster in the Steam Plant. They ·will b~ di~ tribu­ter! over the j ol> ~s follovn:;: Q:ne btd tton \Vill be is'Sued to the op 1rrators of lhe b ct. Turbine, .\:{oGl\ ~ill Engine-~ tUHi b1achinf Roon1 fh "fltent Engine~. Thi, butt on will s t.~\.Y at on . of Uu sC' jobs and be \\ 0rn by the op· l 'ii.d'-w of t:'U:-l1 .t; hift for Olll. w ).d\, th n, it. ·will btJ \ $ ·e l to nnr! of t-ln1 other job~ tnld the sarn thing will be t••p uh:'(l. 1'hiR wa~ t.h button will t·otnl l L' r ) thr · :. '"'ef'k." on th . ~t· parf.kuhn· JOlh;. on~ Dl1\tt.)n ·will b ~ i ·su• rl tu t h opl•ra.t :1fl'-> of t.he (~ lnct·atnr Rnon~, J?il l ' t' Puou! nud th · Ct'O(·ralt.n· Hut tu Bas''H'l •nt. 't'h ' r~nl­tillP •Jf thP Jn1tlon \\ill \.>t• tht' ~tUll \:! a~ dc)~cribt'd in th }il' • ioug Juln,. Onl\ hullc•u will ht i~sth:d l(>) thr ot.wt:nt.o-r~ uf th~ ~tirhng g,.l)1 ·r Hnu ~ ~. Tla) JJnnl~l . Liuit · 11'-)u . ~ a11d th • THE LOG 5 F RED, JR. Son of fr. a.Rd Mr ·. Fred Whitted. Roll Ro. ·ce I.:n in Room. 1 h routint~ of the button ou the. ~ job wiJJ lp . arne as previ-ou · on ~s . On · button will be i ued to the op~·.:.l~e>rs of Big d M.aiu Uoiler Hous . The butt;,on .will tay in boil~r hou.:c~:; one we .k and will I e worn by the :tto:r of •ach .iliift. One button wiU lJ i :.;ued to E. M. Gr n and Crew, .,u man of the ci·e , ~ill wen the button on week. uutt n ·jJ] l otate ea ·h ninE w eks. . . One butt n ill be L "<1 to th repair men of the H'~ job : Pipe Fitting, Doil Repair and Gen· Repair Work. This button ill · worn ~lY a mem­of eacl1 1· pair r~t' on. ' e k and then will b to a member of one of lh gther repair crews it ha. b en ·orn b each m mber of ach reJ)air . Unsafe practice ~ being ob"erved or danger o kind xi~ ting wiH be repor·te ~en. ht:ard . a nci felt, <:'\: . ery,,·herc. ~ut onh i11 all the ddlcrflnt .nc -;, in the Labot a tor~·. 1n the Y. l. ". A. tHJd all 11art of the n1ill. but ~:tl~o in tht hmllt.•:-- of e\ en· l n . Tn thP ~ pa­ciou . · nnd !u~ul'ious hnn1e of :'In t');.CCnli -~ as \v el!' «1S in the hun1hle on.) of a lahor "r. lt j . <1 ~piril that brcerls contentn1ent and proifuce results. lt pays fina11<'ial1~ th ~ en1 plo~·e r as well as tht: enl­p1oyce It h~ largely due t) ·uch a fin ~ 2Jlidt that the l\Iills of the Ch 1n1pion Fibre Con1pan~· are tocta~r op­el ·ating lCO'. c in tim~ and equipn1ent, when other n1ills haYe to be satt;:,tied \Yith a 6 -70"c operation, meaning a lay off of 1nany n1en and a great reductjon in U1.e pay enYelope for those that are fortunate enough to be kept at work. It pay'"' eYery on~ to keep and to foster thai pir it of loyalty, co-operation and good fellow hip. \ ho is primarily and principally 1·espon sible for the existance of such a fine pirit? Let u give fu ll credit to whon1 credit belongs. It i. fir~t of all due to the policy of tht! C01npauy as laid do~-n by l\h•. Peter G. Thomson, the ftrst Presi­dent of the CQmpan y. It " ·as n1. · great p1eGlSUl'e to be present at a meeting held in the old 1\Iears' Hotel in June, 1907, I believe it ,,~as, \:vhen l\1r. 'fhomson out­Hued the policy of the Con1pany. It was a policy of justice, libe1·alism and fail play to all. and has been can·ied out so admi1·abl ~7 by the General l\fanager J\ir. R. B. Robertson the present Pre~ident, 'vl.o g uides the affairs of the con1pany. It w~ a polic) of "fleart and Soul'' and that an1e polic.r j <) th~ policy of the Con1pany today and ·why·? Because thP Champion Fibre Com pany is 1nost fortu­nate in hav·ing O~itjons of Pr . 1tle11t anti G··nc, aJ . 1 tJ twft;l' (Jr such a huge Com}J:lny '> far < xtPJ dt d in the opel a Linn qf it~ various l}J anche~. ~1H ntJ rnattc_-t h •JW gr nt ~d., ,,uali-ty no mati.e1· h'1'K J ~ n.~ fula :nld } ow \ ell 1 il tu1 (T 1 i · quaHt;,.s ~,lre, ht . r· JU!d uot h:.tV de ue h alo1 . In l.h carr inJ.~ 11.1t uf u·,(l {' ll ~:n't aJt< £, uf l'(llif·vJJ ll., h s • b~en rnf•:s «hly a . .si· l tJ • :l t:•.if ,f ·• 11 p t•. lt 11l •·n in 'tfJ of :vhieh h• pJa td,c d !')( • d. of tfll '( ,fUJ,a nv J' Ji.·y. Aud ,, th .r or. . pt'OgrPS uJ, a llttJ• .11t · t ' 1 l cl 8no1 h(,r on(· tl)(·i·e, u.d lil t1 ' uv 1.} ''h 11 (rtH whe it prc)ul ii rold gr \ . I.H til t ~; J • \ 1 r . _.,_ • p)(J.}1 t:!e · h~, .' .-d llse f.nth vf' it; tJJ f 1 IUt I ilU fl ;& lh •· Clu. r11 pier. hi} JJ it. . :t) . lt.A r L Y. lH 1 • L 1. 'rht re • a. · w · •Lf s : l!J k . in v, •1i • ,·ch l,ut the~ rnu JJ Jn r> ( o L :{l . llhd Hll t t. • I had an opport unity of seeing a fine example of the Spirit of Co-operation and efficiency in the mechc:Lnical departn1ent. The vacuum pump and n1otor in the Hi . Density Bleach Plan t harl to be changed. T he )!ill­wrights under Ben Fi her, the Pipefitter · under Clyde Hildebrand, the Crane Cre·w under \Vade Hill and the laboret·s under Charlie . 'etz.er, worked togethe.r like clock woTk under the supet\isiou of Charlie \Vestnlor­land Assistant l\1aster 1\!lechanic. No confu.jon, work­ing smoothly, guided by the "Cha1npion Spirit . into high efficiency - congratulations to the Ma . ter )le­chanic, Billy Battison. It is a spirit ,,r cll ,\·orth culti:\·ating and one of the be, t and most influential mediun1s to do sv is your • Plant ~[agazine. Do you realize that? ~o -,·ou don't. lf you did. you ,,·ouJd avail yourself n1ore of the plen-did opportunity. it stands now you l~a \·e ver\­thing to thf\ Editol--, "Let Phillip:s do it. · 'I'hat is n~t right •. rou :o;houlrl be ju t a . pronrl or ~ ou1· nlag<\tin as you al' of any other product of yout· ~·o1np~1ny anct should tal,(\ a hand in n1aking it the 1 rid of the ('c.)m­pnny a11d your fPilo,vmen. I dn not 00\\ or '\11.\ ('tJTllP'lflY tb:lt h·t.· ns fUil ! \\' ducat ~d n1 n. (•t)ntt (ltt"\nl nntl ('~:tpable of wt·iting fot tltf' tnagazittt• fu~ the ( . hatnpjon Fibt·e ~ornp n~ ~ ud ~ c•t, '' ht•n lo<.JI\ing through ··Tho Log.·· it l o\ ~ lihf'• a ~ ·u•w n1an tHagaziiH .·· It i~ h' lht' shnnu . ~ of hundrt"d' of iutdH~·· nt , nd c tlucat,·d 'ntpl,lyct's t hc.tl ~ ll('h ~hPuld be the t a a11cl thl'l'(• i but ""'l') li t tle PX~U~ for it. 1 ~: 't•y t ng in ·e.;t·~ , ·~ •·.v t•hprui ~ t. P\ t'l'.' c:la -. in ~ t J'U~hH·. \ 7 L' r)' (,trw rn. 11 and nutn) 111t·n t h r-.•u~:hout tltt.' tllill Nlt a}Mll . 'f wrating oHtt·thiug of int ' l't':4 fur ' ·'Ph I •g." Thut i HlP pint·,• \\h(·tt• the l h unpinn 'pil'it 1 lu\\ uui liP ·d u vue l lJ« ust. Th ,,if, r ha h~ ·n (' t)llJt'('tt d \\' i th a c(lflli}Hil~ where it~ ·a eornpul 'Or · for every membe-r of the · taff to ontFibute au article to the Plant MagazLn very often. ln a:n:oth~r Mit!, th~ oml)an. gave a prize of :Rve do1lar (!) . 'fY month, not for the. be t a~rti ) no, that otdd ne>t he fair, as orne peopl possess th gift of \J riting jn a high .r deg,~:• e tha;11. othe1'S, but the p.r·~e ·v a drawn fo1· and e''~r one who had con:t1·ibu~ ted no matte.~.· how li.ttl \ .had an QQtial hanc" for the Jiiy do!flu:~. No doub sorne will say ~ ''Wh t'.S tller to · rite about'?" A :rath r '\>Vet.1k xcuse. - omethlng · going on e ·et·y da.: whi h, if properly "ttinu~ned up," would molm go0d reading. R m rn.ber that in reading mat~ ter our tast . i::s not atil e and something you don't Mt fot is of gre t inter -s t to y cu; felJOVi·'man. With a little. inter-st ~h wn and contx-i.bution- from those t1iat a,r q:uati11e<l nough mat rial shonr-G. come iJil eaeh month tO fitl a: m ga:zine twi-ce the size of "The Log." The :proper reporting of all the activities in the Y. l\-1. C. A . i.luring a month would fill a page or two. r ven-ure . to state that th~ xy amusing show put GH by the R. & A. dep~trtmen on 'the occasit;>n tio:r their· fourth ann~ part. will recei e but a shod mention 0r perhaps none at all. Let 's see, 1 hope I am wrong. ·Nothing to write about" a:nd et I 1\ave n;ever. seen an opeP. letter in '·The U:>g," giving your Y.iews on mat­ter o:f g-,peat interest to you and your f€11ow.rman. That is what your Plant Ma(lr,azlne is for a:nd I am s uJ:·~ t.h:e ;BdiJ;Qr \'\lill wekome ucl1 -eontributi@n ~ . It is hard for_ him to get tip a good number, unless he h« . your eo-operatiolll: Am I right? Is ne.t this a " p~e wh:~re the. good Champion Spirit could gi-ve ,a - helping hand_'! D& . o, and then 3 ou can fulJy expect . that "The J.A)g" - h~:>uld come out ·on a certain day and it will. There aheuld be 1·eaily no excuse fo-r not do~ ~ so. B o t ''The Log/' boost the intere 't of yoUl· fellow­men a_pd the interest 'elf . y:our Company everywhen~, " ev~rytime and every chance ou ha:ve and 1·emember th-at by doincg so you are bofl . tin-g your own interest. _Let ~ and all ernp n 'ees foS't-~r -tl~e Spirit 9f the Champion Fami1y at all tjmes lfke "Lindy' cli.d the · Spirit of St. Lon-is'J and th.e time nii2Y eome when a - . large WE wiN be written acros~ the -entra11ce of the ()ompany'g pnJpecrt,y. Jt iS Up to . Oll and pJease re­member, "You ean not -Bx.peet that the ompany should adv-ance your inte--rest unless YQU fp~: t afivan.ce the intere t of the Company ow. are Werking for." Therefor you1• o:wn interest i in yput own baqd$! MAYBE She. "''Is it dangerous to drive with on, hand ?J' H · "You bet! More than one fellc?w has run iJ')to -a chureh doing it." - ' • 7 A. J. RENO. JR. Son of M;r. and Mrs. A.lbe'rt J. Reno. MODERN ISM Colonel (to stranger at golf elnb): "I hate these :r:nodern girls. Look at that creature over there! Fan­cy her pa rents let-ting :her go rbout in plus-fours and an Eton crop. Bah!" Stranger: "That, sir, is my daughter." £(i)lonel: "Oh-er, sorry! I didn't 1 mow you were her father." Stranger: ''I'm not. I'm her rnotl'le.r." REGRETFUL ew Otfice Boy: "A 1nan calle<.l h re to thrash • ou ~ ·fe lULnt.J,t .s ago." Edito1·: · "What did ou Sit· to him?'' N w Offi J 11; "1 told him I as ·· ny you w-ere not ·n." 8 THE LOG • A.PRIL, 1929 No. 3 Published by "The Champion F amily'' as a Symbol of the Co­operation and Good Fellowship Existine at the Plant of the Champion Fibre Company, Cant on, North Carolina. Editon G. W. PBII.LIPS R. W. G RIFFITB REPORTERS M.A1'TIE LEATHERWOOD . -. Main Office and Labora tory FRANK BYERS . - ·-·····················-····-···· . Wood Yard N. D. PRESSLEY . ········-··········· . R. & A. HORACE REX ············· --- ·-·-·······--·························Finishing Room GLENN HOWELL . PoweT GI .ADYS MORROW . u . Car toonist A (;OOI> LE . 'SON 1n one of Ae~ov's Fabl ~s there i~ an inter Pst­ing story vf ·t. dog tl at \Ha not d fo r his . "'1 t,.d and endurance in 1u1 ling· gaJTH'. fL . had the t·t put;.H Jon of 1JeiTig th<~ best l1unt ,r in the nei ld,nJ laoorl }JJH1 usu;all,Y got what he went n rt 1'. ( n ! da v lt•• went olll ltt g'Pt a rabl it fv1· his d 1 n flr·r. p,., . ~ l . r s tJn 111 sew r . d up on , ntl aVt_ •h;: '( - o, r tlt t) hill Ltfld tt11 ,,ugh lh · ruA~ld<Jws 1 IH· ndJIJj J Jd th d• - (j f t • l\\ o-r h tt ·~· ft)Ut'" five . ix n1il; (J nlfJJ'e. 'J h J• h , ·1 J Yt·t· ' (1. ",i tflP. d sr \\';l t.rit-1< d ' IJ( tl h J'~ ltJ I d, ' ifl,ilJ) the old dolf. JJ,·c mdhg- \ , . u ·,\~ J!~s vn 11p l tf' <rna • und r· . tunu~rJ home hun r . .r ti1c-d. Wh . l his C'JII1 l ilUio1.s h g:•"'" co 1n t c fun t ~ i · J ill • and huntsn1anship, h \ rPplic<:l, "Don't forget the ha was running f f>r his life, ,,.hjlf; 1 ,·as only run inO" for n1y dinner.'' The dog was right. t here L~ a big ditfeJ·er•C(-. rhe rabbit. rea1iz(-td that he only had one life and he coLtldn't afl'ord to lo~e~ so he used bis head as ' ell as his feet to save his Ji fe. • If' human beings would use their head more. there v.rould be le::;::; acc-idents. RenH.:tnher. · ~the rabbit \.\as running for his life1 \\1hile t he dog wa·· (Jnt running for his dinne.r." ( ~LA I)\ ~ IOURO\V \\'._ ant t iitfrutuc,• .\(lll tu Mis:\ t, i l\l~s ~l·ar- " · Th . 1 "'~ d .t:.;t. ln f h) 11ktur' abn\ ' I i ·~ ,\l,)I'fuw viJi b ·'• "n dn,·~ . d in u,.,., tll ~ .uul p• ·t ·h l UJ n tt Ltutt· 111 tJt, rni, ldlt )f ,t ntonutaiu t re uu. ~h . qn to ht· h PI>.\ anl uh )r ugl d ~ l 'll h\.\ 1ng h •·::,; l f. 'I'IJ, l'lt · 11 1. ntil ·wlt \·h 1\(h 111 h r fat'\' is {he ·u - lorn 1'\ ttl ttH1 l' vf gl"t' t."'l.i ll ' • ~ ht \1\\~ \ · llh'l' l ~ Oll \\ ith • • ,., 111i1 , ~ ( H'lh r . h i el Jik,, il ' r unl , it as r th ' t~ din it u1 nt lin1 s it i t •u ·, hut, tl 't: i 1wrh•"tp ·, nH n · THE LOG , . 9 truth in the old saying, "'Laugh and the world laughs with 'OU1 weep and you weep alone ,,. t han we reali;z:e. Each month we hope to be able to publish at least ~me e.artoon., fronl the pen 0f Mi- :s Morr&w. On this pag . t't' ate publis)lin-g her flr:st contribution. BOOK MlLL The xn:-oduc"tibn f-or "C'' ana "D" machitie for Feb~ ruary ' a 111.6 ton~. A:n av rage .~f L6 tons increase over tlle Janu.ary record. Th cutt r Pl'oduction was also inal'eased 2. 7 tons. A plendid pirit of c<rop~ration seems to exist l:a-ougho.ut the Book Mill. The employee are st riv­! ng, no -only, to teadiJ.y incr-e.as the production of the variou: depa.rtmentc, but al o make a perfect sMe­t~' cm·e for 1929. We knu . that the arne spirit that increa 'es p1"oducti011 can also p;revent accidents. We are a.nxi<m to ee what the 1929 record wi:ll be. REWINDER ROOM RECORD The .Pl'oduetion of the Rewinders during th>e week endi:t.\lg Maroh 24. wa the best dm·ing any p1·evious week;. 'Those deser\'ting e pedal menti0n are, E. M. Lee, crew laader; Ro~7 Crisp, operator No. 2 Rewinder; Q . •. . Donaldson, opecrator N<>. 4 Rewinder and M . . Mol·gan, helper · Proouction on No. 2 Rewinder was 6:56,857 yards 0t an averag of 169,471 yal'd.s per day. The production of No. 3 was 692,991 jrards or an average of 115,498 ya:rQs per day. ·~umber 4 rewound 840,436 yardS or an average of 122,59{) yard per day. You will note that Number 4 with J. L. Donaldson, operator, made the best record. Mr: J . L. DoRaldson alg() rewound 48 sets of Po tag.e Stamp paper or 199,- . . ~ 466 vard in 12 hours. · ~ . ' ' • E. B. PLANT I The employee o! the E. B. Plant are proud pf their February .l'ecord. 63.6 ton of chloti.ne per day for the mooth. It i:S the highest ton.n.a.ge made l;>y the Elec" troJ.v tic Bleach Plant, and tney deserve a word of . }ttaise. The production for one da wa.s 66.5 tens­The E. B. Plant has also put on a safety prograro whicb. win ao doubt, aecomplish splendid results. Mr. 'York, superintendent T. L. Jamison, F'loyd Hbs shift foremen and Vin.son Reuo foreman of repair' are behind the movement whole~heartedly. • -.-. ' f R --- -~-· ,•, 6 -· ~--- . - ·- _ _.__ -' ·-_._ - . . ·-·- __ , ___ ·- - - . --·- . . . . - . . -- · . . . -· . ' '1 ;;. ' / ~ . . LORETTA MACKEY AND GASTON DUCKETT Loretta Mackey, one of the fastest counters in the Finishing room, was counting pape1· for Gaston Duck­ett, who is a very rapid finishex. Knowing that she would be kept very blisy, and in order to encourage her, the following eonversation ensued : Gaston: Loretta, 1 am sure you will like counting paper for me. Why, it will be j ust like wor'King in front of an electxic fan . Loretta: Perhaps so, but, I don't like too much hot air. 11D0es a galfer ever tell the truth ?'1 ''Oh, certainly he ometimes ealls another golfeT ~ liar." Jack HWhat i the first thing w shoulli do at th party?'' Jill "Crack the iee." • 10 THE LOG • PRI. GTIAttE ,.,.olomon the ~ts-e ~el.n"e \v said nLo, the ~inter is past, the rain is ove.r a n-d gorte : the t1ow-cr~ appear 0 11 earth; the tinH~ of the singing of bl·rds is. cotne and the voice 0f t he turtle L heard in oul' land the fig­tre~ putteth fo1·th he.r green .f.igs ~tnd t he vines 'Nith the tender g!'ape give a good sn1eU.'' The mo t popular season of th year is springt in1e. Pa:rtl)~ perhaps becau . e V\·e have been sl\ut -it1 during the ~l.nter months, and a1'e glad to get out and enjoy the o~t-d oors . . Al . o. because all nat ure i · taking <;>n ne\V life pu tt1ng on her new d re~s of many col()l'.S. T~e buds bursting fol't h. t he f]o\\le t· fHling the a,ir \Ylth s,~·eet fragr ance) the birds sing1ug S\1\:eet love songs the green f ields blush ing ~vi th the colot·s of the rainbo,v, the forest sn1iling and evel:'y hea.rt .beating \\ith joy. Spring begins lYlarch 21, when the sun enters the sign of the Arie and ends June 21, at the tin1e of the summer solstice. Lasting for a per iod of 90 days. The changing of the posi t.ion of the equator and ~liptic in relation to the sun, and the turning of t he earth around the sun causes the changes in the "ea­sons. PO\-VER PEP ARTMENT The Power department boys, under the leader ship of W. VI. MiteheJl, are fully organiz.ed fo:r a great bat­tle against "Old l1a.n Carelessness,. 11 Their s lo"'an is 11N o A cc1. d.e nts During 1929 Cau:sing Lost T·i me.o J ~ ' We believe that they are in earnest and t)hat a goocl record will be the result . We are anxious to see then1 make a clean record during 1929. It ean be done. Recently Mr# Mitchell, the superintendent, called a meeting of his foremen and key~men~ and organi:ted committees an.d they arG "'-'"Orking ha1~d to nutke the best record yet. Bobl;je (b1·oke but .r~HOtH"~·cful} "V'aggy~ do yon krww the difl'eA1Ctlt:e b£·twnG ~ t irhup j11 ~ t'l rn GE l~ ~tnct in f.L tax1 ?'' Pegg.r--HPm afraid r don'l.'' .Bobbie-*""flu~n we :rr1uy ;·us «-.·. 11 4 ;u 1 J,;u, f\-".· ' t1 a rn car.'1 Pas~iTJ g Show. ~REND OF TliE TIMES • We oft~n hear the question ask(ed, ''Arc the people of tke wo.rla beco,r;ning mor~ wicked ·!" . Dtm1t you thh\k we are pa -sing through the most evil period_ of Lhe history of hutnan life ?'' \Yell, it is bad enot1gh1 IJ~tt perha!)s not quite so bad as we some,titnes think. lt depends altogethe-r upon the angle f rom which \ve see tbirngs. Two men see a fight and then· testimony n1ay be em­tixely different. We look upon a great pieture but each of us ai'e ilnpressed in a diffeTent wa"' . Unfort1mateJy the ne,~spapers pt·-esent the wor s t ··i:de of a bad pictuxe. lVIurders, robberies and all dis­graceful acts of life are feature stories in our da ily papers. All of the bad things aPe emphas i2ed and stalld dut most promi\nently on th~ front page, while good ·deeds are relegated to the jnsi~e page. One thing, h0\veve1·, in pQ\rticular, that in1pr esseC1 us deeply, is the f~t that Ex-l',resident Coolidge sen :-­ed two te~:m s in the White H<>use, and reUred to pri­. va.te life ·with a good name, r espected anrl honored by the people of the United Sta~t~s. Perhap not beeau . e .he ~'~S a bettmt man or .n1ade a better p1·esident than ltis pJed~eessor, but beeause, we berieve, the people . a:re begmniug te I'ealize that ugly crjticis1n and sland­erous talk about our ch.lef executive i-s undigpified, un­_ g.entlananly and unpatriotic. in· fact there isn:t as mll:ch Qf it d(}ne to:day as there was a few years ago~ Po1iticjan$ are · moTe considerate, moTe cha ~tab1e and l~ss .a0usive. We are surpris-ed, so1netimes., at the young people of today. We can not understand why they engage in eertain things me-rely because of a thz-ill, when they know that the inevitable result is sorrow and sufiei'­i. ng. Yet, ·we "vonde1· if our present-day n1 hod of enl­phasizing the bad and saying so· little about the good things of life, doesn't corrupt otrr 1nJnds to a lar~ extent. We know that what \Ve see, hear and think has its effect upon our actions. Still \Ye belie e . that the world is not all baa and in spite of Ute evil t~lld~tt· cia:; there are evidences of a leavt'ning pu·it. ·which in time will have a whole ·un1e efl'ect upon the soeiru o:tder of lhe day. \Vhy b\u.tne the L)ung people? The life \\"e \iYtj~ ti~e things we do and say " ·ill infiY. ~nc't! thcu\ fo1: good or eviL - TR l~ E JJl~ ~""· p a ~t.U S-·l ' lJ.at bEi:lJy 0 r Y•)U t';-, nnl d,, perG ·~(.' t i UH:\ g {l ufl hi dnt.ld v.-' '"' llu!ilH - ··Ht:. ShlU\h nn.rt. ll~ UlU n l't'g,lal' C~\f "''·"·.-. CbJJ}'." ~- • • ' THE LOG 11 --~--~ --- --- ~ --- ~ --- PIPEFITTE R'S CLASS . The above picture hows C. A. Hildebrand's class 0f pipefitters. Mr. Hildebrand has a fine class and they are doing plendid work. You will note that safety is one of the important features of the class. The men are taught to "·ear g~ggles when doing any kind of work where there is danger of an eye injury . R. AND A. NOTES. Br N. D. Presley. On Saturday night, March 16th, the R. and A. Department held it's f-ourth annual pa1·ty at the Y. M. C. A. The pt0gram wa as fol-low. : · - 1lu.,ic selection by Hudson's tring Band.' Introduction Thoma Furne , Jr. Addre. of Welcome l\ir . Batti­son. Musi:c by band. . Colored Wedding. (C. C. Smith) Parson G oxge Wa h.ington Johnson. {F. C. Holland) Flowex girl. (0. L. Brown) Flower g1rl. · (Will Boyd) Hambone, Gro m. • (Bob Higgins). Dinah Sylvester Brown, Bride. (0. R. Stroup) Train bearer. (B. M. Stamey) Ring bearer. (F. A. Smith) Colonel Charles St. Patrick. (C. A : Hildebrand) Chic Ching Chow Chinese butler to the Col- . one!. · (W. T, Morrow) Uriah Deutel·o­nomy Wingate, Col. Valet to the Colonel. (W, M. Battison) Hiawaiiah las . (T. C. Allen) Hiawaiian lass. (W. R. Erown) Hiawaii n lass. (F. Smathers) Hiawaii4n la s. (G. W. Wise) Hiawuiitm lass. (C. A. Holtzclaw) Hiawaii:iJ.n lass (K. CJal'k) Sp.auish dane r. (Myrtl, Allen) , 1 ni. h dane r, (P. D. D w e · ) Rolle1· 'k te Acrobat The spacious gymna iwn room and stage was artistically decora­t ed with a profusion of evergreens and artificial shamrocks, symboliz­ing St. Patrick' Day with R. and A. There was a better attendance than at either of th previous par­ties, and at promptly :15 P. lVl. the w •dding party entered the room, led b.y the aged pm'son, tot­ter ·ing falt ringly n hls cane, but with agile inten , to the ~ trains of that b autjful old ·wedding mareh Mend J·"oLln, played by Mi Nan­cy Killian. The paxty Pl'OC eel d to the st Te wher an altar had b en arrang cl, th decoration and col­ot · ch me Hll of which ' er in 1 ping ' it.h th combination o ~ a ·ion. In an unst ady but di - Linctl audible vole the par n 12 THE LOG . --~ --- ~ --- ~ --- ~ --- ,--~ --- ~- ~--~--~--~-- Our ln.~d Employees are enti.ded 10 the \~ting Nurse Service of the Metropofita.n Life Iosumnce Cn When Sick Don.'t mtit Call Your Friend the Nurse eloquently pronounced the wedding rites. uniting l\1r. and ~Irs. Ham­bone in the holy boJlds of w:edJock. After the 1narriage ceren1ony the parson recejved a telegratn from Colonel Charles t. Patrick inviting him and the entire ~Ted­ding pat·ty to his mansion fm· a marriage festival. The invitation wa gladbr accepted uy the party who found an elabo1·ate celebration a·waiting them. After each n1en1- ber of the party bejug prope1·ly in­troduced to the Colonel the festivi­ties began. .1 Iusic, plays, the I-Ion­olula rag dance by six Haiwaiian lasses in full native costumes, a Spani-sh dance, dancing and stunts bv the Roller Skate Acrobat, a ll • of ·which heJd the color<Jd t roupe spc!J bound for n1ol'e lhan half an hou1· and staJted tht n ~'v l r tnar­lied couple on t},eir way in I>Hss anrl happin~sR. 'fh(! en tertai m ~nt was u s u~'e(.,~ in ev~ry 1 <:. JJPCL, and whi le ju ·1 ~tn an1ainr0 c h<,w, it afftJrrted H::; ruuch antus_mcnt CiS~ l •l Oft! . i<,Hal (JJI ·• A.fte•· a coUt\ · uf d J iciou~ J ·~;~ frcshill (~nts, :erv ·d u nrle• LJ w di . r ect,i(;n of ~ 1 i s Nanry KiiJ ia rt ~tl1d ·1 iss j Irtrg-:.ret Haly lJUl t <Jtt , a grt-i;Jt pa>·L of th r-ro\ d aUt!nd()d the . r>eciaJ l>.arn t la nl~( n l 1 he •.u·m .~1 ·y hall put un bJ ;r; 1 , . C. 0. S1ni h. 1\tle , rs. C. A. }JjJ1lebrand. r:. C. Sn1ith. C. L. \Vestn1oreland, T. Fur-ne and I en Fisher were the ch ief pron1oter of the ent ;)rtain­ment and surelv did lhe1n ·elves • cr:1dii for the hort period of time in malting preparations. The R. and A. as a whole wishes to thank Ivlr. VI. R. BTown and l\r1iss Nancy Killian fo1· their efficient and un­tiring efforts in helping put lhis program across. Nothing )s qoite so provoking as to hurry when one is late for an appointment and find the other person is not there. Dayton Ne,v-s: A Jiebre\\.' . teppt:d up to the raih·oad t i cl<eL-c:~ffice ·window and .-.;aid •·1\Ice . .;lc r, I \\ant a tick t tu .:;prin~f)c lJ . , " \~' hid . "'-' p1·ingli(>ld ?" as ~L·d lhe t i d <et S{:' I h.) r. ·• S pl i ug·fi ') ld, 111. : • 'pringfii·)d, Ol1 w, or ·p.-ingf, ·Jd, ~]H :-lS. '!· TJ, . trt-JVdt r lvnl\ t·d t hnug hlilll for· a tal1 HtJ tr•, H ill~ { h L' ll ·~ l\t\d tO l t'­pi Y. "Vich i. 1 he· c·lt t•iq ~ t, M le lt·J' "~ ·~-- I•,,•flldti N '\\S. c ' a ·- t I t hi1 1\ if ~ Ollf .,. u~· tds c.ll'• g ut rl NOT I CE WliA'r ABOU1 1\JJA(;AZI ~E: '! WOULD YOU LlKE TO see­SCRIBE FOR TiiREE OU FOUR GOOD lN'rgRESTING Or\ES? YOU 0 LY l1AVE TO PAY HALF CA~H AND THE REST WfiEN THE 1\-IAGAZll'fE ' ARE DELIVEUED. TfiEREFORE, IF YOU DO . "'T GET TI-IE l\IAGA­ZINES YOt; D01 'T HAVE TO ~lAKE Till~ LAST PAYME~T. IF YOU ARE I T'PERESTED EE WEL~PERHAP ~ WE HAD BE,.fTER ~ ~ OT AY ANY MORE. BUT \\THY -1-IOULD vVE \VORRY. THE PLEASt:RE OF CHATfiNG \Vl'IH A PI-:ET­TY SALE LADY Ir' WORTH SOl\tlETI-11 TG ISN'T IT'? .LONESOlUE ··~Iother, do liar go to heaven ?'' ·'Why, no, dear," replied the mother in ~ome .: urprise. '·certainty not.'' There \Ya::; quite a pause. Finall,\' tht! boy said quietly : u\Vell. it n1ust be ntighty lone-some up there with only God and ,eol'ge Washington.'' E~changc . • BOOK MILL NEWS By Horace Rex. R. J. M. · Cavanaugh ha been in :?v!obile, Ala., for a few da s on bu ine s. is t l land ef coon ong and nigger mourning . Jack refused to tell v·hat he did f or r ecr ation while away. Mi s Ethel Smith and Bonnie 11ill spent the week-end in Green­ville. That's enou h to sp:end in Green ille. Mr. Dan Mills i the proud father of a bouncing boy, born March 25. we· are glad to see Ray Pie s back on the job again. Mi s aUie Mae Myers spent the week end in A heville with her mother who is at Norburn Ho - pi tal. We hear Ramelle about to be married. Rarrlelle. wangeT I' S Good luck If any one should happen to in­quire (which t hey won't) the Re~ ·wL'tder crew on No. 2, 3, and 4 de­- erve a lot of credit for the reco1·ds thte.y are making. Keep it up boys! We hear t hat Bonnie fell for a cer tain young man a few days ago. We are orry she hut·t her knee's in doing . o. George : Mr. Cavanaugh do you appreve of tbe five day week. Jaek: Yeh and the five day week end. Here is a tory of a pair of tights in two words. Two Scotch~ men. A concrete example of how to attain success is pave your way from the bottom. • THE LOG A-/MILE !.5 rHE. ONE THIN<{­THAT 15 WOitrH MORE IF IT 15 CRAvKE.O • LABORATORY NOTES By Mattie Leatherwood. C. N. Stinnett who has been in Chattanooga f o:r a few weeks bas 1:·eturned and i at his old job of testing strength of pulp. Charlie says that the high waters caused a shut down, and he just came hom~ but we believe that he had a severe ca e of homesickness, any way he seems mighty glad to be ba.ck. • • · We are glad to report that Bert Cagle who was sick · for several months is sufficiently recovered to be on the job again. MI·s. L. K Gates and little daughter, Caroline, are visiting -home folks in Bradenton, Fla. ' R. W. Haywood, who has been with us about a year has resigned his position, and has accepted work with the State Department at Ra­leigh . Roy Roge1·s, of Clyde, has joined our forces recently having been employed to fill vacancy caused by R. W. Haywood's resignation. The classes in · elementary and paper making chemistt·y taught by Messrs. F. V. Doutt and L. E. Gates have been well attended du- , 13 ring the pTing term. The follow­ing men who have been enrolled in the class in elementary chemis­tr ' have recentl taken an exami­nation and will be given certifi­cates for having completed the prescribed course. Wayne Robin­son, H. J . Matheson, Harmon Trull and T d Rhodes. Wayne Robinson who is attend­ing school at Georgia Tech under the cooperative plan will return to his chool at the end of this week. His alternate, F. O'C. Fletcher is expected to be here and begin the work on Monday. THE STORK. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Medford January 29, a daughter, Betty Louise. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Moore are r ejoicing over the arrival of a son. An old J ew was sinking fast. In feeble tones he spoke to his family gathered round the bedside. "Is Rachel there? he' asked. "Yes, dear, I'm here," replied his wife. "Is my son· Solomon there ?" "Yes, father." "Is Hyman there ?" · "Yes father." "Is little Abie there?" "Yes father." "Is my daughter Leah there?" "Yes, father." "Are you all there, every one of you ?'' "Yes, father," came the chorus. "Then who in thunder is looking after the hop ?" London Tit- Bits. . 'PLAY ~l>.fE FOR. Tt-IE. OTHER FELLOW'~ SAKE, EVEN IF I • t DON'T GIVE , ' GOL·DANG fOR 'I'OU~ OWN SAFETY 14 THE LOG --- ~ --- ~ --- · --- ~ --- ~-~ --- ~ 1\fiss Leola . chenck, ~rillie Justice. Hilda Sc1·ogg~ . Addie Stont· and Glydt. :ingleton, Choru · Girls in the Book l\iill Indoor eniertai nment :\'hich wa held at the •·y·· during February. ============~==~===========================·-=-============== OUR SICK ,J. If. \ 7h i te ·who has been in the ho. }Jital f 01. ::orne time ~U (feting front an ot-~eJ ation, has r~turned h on-1~ mucn impJ o' ed. Arthur Cod ~r . en1ploy ·tl jn t11e tor t'oom h . r tut ned horn " fr 111l t,h ft1 pita) "hu J1 :J \\a u dr . J· tt eahf! l~ nt f J veral 11 ~nth . \ ~ ~ ,. ;) lad to k liJ\.y tlh:tt he ill ')l'l) b \\ en gai . l . ll. B ·o vn h!l. l;t en "' 1 . icJ i t f I . zv;Jral day Ulf • ft m n att ' f IJt' nr!hitj . . ~ . L• \ i al 1 to c)J • .,,u ni ,(: t on ·ihtt . 1J '' • . . ' I . lo ~ . • } • • Jn ) 1I 1 1n t1t I lit j • rtn, Ul • I 1 . Jackie, the little sun of )lr. and -'Ir:. Grad~ \Villinms. i::; recover­ing fron1 a barlly burn d hand. Tlenrr Hnbj nson, \\ ho ha . b •t•n under the care of a ph ~ ~ ician for . . evl'ral week::;, has ret lu·ned fl' . D~Hl 't tnl 11pl0 on the f ·eling.:- of vuur feliO\\' man. becau . e v u find ' ~ lhetn Jle" · ill.(}n, Ohio; lJ -\\U aud po li t j~. hw A~ . j r ~nr Seer ta ry of C<Jrn­TOt'rr~ c.:jnr e !'Ju •, 2, 1927, ( t ,llet.:~, 1 r n, yx,m, !lnd de­l i•,rcf'b mail. h:u; c·barK( of p•J f I'Jffil.eJS, P.v L.Jr Savin~. n .IIJit:, pare I rrr L } r ru, ruuJ :qr 1 1~il • t rVIt e. Srotltlry fJ/ (.,,11111111ft"t }{t>flf ~ J 1". J. MfJ • I Bnr u J 1 J). r ttHt. : , 1; ·h., P1 ( J, • 1 81ii ~ 1 lant,d;H·rurr•r · p r • "· \ ul- ,.,j au , 1 r fl tllld r i ( ' hi· . g•11 ·iurc I'JJ2; <httl tw Arrrwttr ·tucf fun t~·, mr r' \'l•rd • C' 11. I ,rk~ Fedt r1 l ,~ n u vr.,-y tt 11 }"4:,,r~. },, ••lr4J f (; " f lip,lJt hoo~t , li l•cri ~. Hu11·au ,,f • 1im :.:, unvigativn, a\ i.tli'm, t • , , . tiuc•t!! P .r t• 11t c,jf,,. , t (, llt·c t l. u~­dnt: t 0 1 tYI rWfat' I UCl: • 11d & If ,i!J• P') 1'1 d t Jt)ll. • ~ r crrlary of L/11· Trca.wry A:--oREW \~· . M t L I-0 ~ Born in Vi n :-burgh, Pa., T\la rch 24. J 8 5 ~; hanker Secre­t: t rY of the Trea ~ un· !- ince t 921. Dra ft - the budget. collects Fccleral taxe . , pays bilL , make' c urrency, ~ upe rvi se fl ea hh Ser· vic-e, ecret Serv ice :Jnd Coa'l.t G u.a rd, enfo rce ~ P rohi bi tiuu. St r r r tarJ• of tht J\'11q_•y C' li ARl.f\S F. AtJA.M. Burn Aug. 2, 1866, at Quincy. !vf a · . t h<: grC"at, gre:tt grand-.nn of j tJhn Adam-.; l ow~ ~r : offi(•t<r 11 JJl31l~ c:o rp Jf'l. fiun -. tr e a ~u rer t)f JI<H\'ard ( n lltge C'orporn ­tit ~; ~li ppa C!H ~ac ht " Rt:- o­lul ·~ '" iuuer rJJ i ntt"rrt :tti•HHll r :1 C::f'". 1 920. J L. dt:~r;.r~ vt the c:o1 "" uc­titm, cttui-pmenr, aud rqrai r ut ·" r V\ rl t1 if(;( t "P ' 11 ion-. of , . tf, tfld rtltll of the u. ~t ~I \;, 'IJJ'C'r , i• C:S lht " \ 't" ~\' ,lf ( 4JIJ ge, tl11! A· .,d ' rD.\ , , \ n· ,, ,p,.Ji , ,ncJ rhr • ',1val c ,.,,~ , - \ oat••r} t f'Cfdnry of Jf/ ar J·' ~' r \V. Gooo Born in Cedar Rapid 1 Iowa, Sl' pl. 24-, 1866; I:Jwy·er Repre­~ ent at i vc in Congres-., 1900- 1923. A ppointed h om Jllinoi . ll a~ ch ~trgt> of the t;. S. Army and (he ~Jilitary Acatlfmy at Y\' e. l P<>int , direc t ~ ri,•a and h:u hor imp rrn·c m~nt~ aud coa . r fo nificttt ion~. a dministers the Panama Canal Zont>. Surl'ltlry of If,, lulrrio-r R \\' L \ M .\ , . \\. U.B L. R Horn ju Jloo t'll~bo ro, Jn., April J 3, t8i5; educator; pr<lt. medi­cim ·. tanford l ' n i,er ity, Cali ­f( ltoia. prt . ideut ~ i nt' t> 1916; ('hid ol con:-.en :11ion divio.ion, 1_1, S. f< od i\ dmin i ~ t ratiMt, 19 l 7; de- lq {:.t tt', ro P .m .\ rnerican Clln-h. rfnCc at H a' ~ 11:1, 1928. f . , tlt'' ptHt· n t -. alld cup r rigbt~. t!ll p~ n 1-.t . fHahli • llnd . and Na-t ioll:t l P c.~ rk . Jrr i~ ~·t . u·itlJ:t n,J . h:1" \~ b .r rgr ui 1h~ l n,fi .tll ' , . f.l, . ku . ' " 'l lJ .1\\ .tit, f' n lJ t , '" tl ,tta fnl' ,~·hs ••I . < r 11 r. n, t•R• . , "' &tl J' 'I II'H f llt f C, l ltl • Ill• r 1, tr.d I ixn h3 \ lttn t t~tlc· d i ht~ the p 1 gr vI • J, t\• 1 . t f' rc: t•l• l tf t.tl u ·~ J •)H lit I kh.) l llnNJ.r y Grn.-rol \Vu.r.t.u . t D. 'Vflr t:Hf.Ll. Born Sept. '9, 187+, at \-\'in,na Min11.; Jaw ~·er Solic itor C . n­cral t>f ( . S . . Jnce June 4 , t•,z-. (A P cmocrat. ) Legal advj:;er to ••-.e Pre. idena and orber e xec u rin~ offv:,.l <>. pro ecute:- off(!tH.Ier . agai n-.r ~ ed­e- ral la\\l'1 ha. charge ,,f Fcdl.'ral pn~tOnt-. ct ular)' of .qgrit ulturL .'\RIU( K . f. H\lll! H.orn in Princeton. ~to., .I u!y 12, I l i; J:t ,,.Hr: C o . of 1\li:-· l-nnri. 192 1-2'. 1 . ut' daih " c<lther au,t rr'>l' report:-, ha . f'h.trg · nf Wte t rC' . - f'n :utous, iu~pt'Ct" rfl.(·Jt int~'Hd~td f·~r int~r't \lt( :;hipmt:nt, ::-(ck' t • improw· aop!; nnd h~ td o t ~t••fk, (' 11 h•r c' l l nll .trtd Pru .\ ,·r ot t <JOo. ] AMh J. P .\\ I, HM n .lt I~ rt>d c: ;!!l t, $il ut 'h \Vdr . , Pn. 2', l S7 1; to ,\mt" ri · • .a lh I ~ ~ : , . ,,, .uui ''n•l \\ttrk-r r . ~c·n t i ~H \ elf l .th·• i ll\' M.aid'\ • l !»i? l. .\ ptJ!•rntnl fr~tm P c·tHI"\ I" tni11 Eulo1n t"!o. immigrclrt• ln • ui.l n.u · Ul lil :Ha . ll l.t ' ', ··ollt't"l' l.ahnr r tti,tic :-, mt~ cli ~ t l.lh ,. lli-. p tll t";c, in t•st ig lh' hrnhh 3 Jhl .,. 'upations (•f ' omcm and l·hil,t­r< Jn • UNITED ~T TE. P TBLIC HEALTH SERVICE STUDIES PHYSIC L DEVELOPMENT HAT y ·t matic phy ical e ~ erei e ryi}1 incr~ -e the height ' ·eight, and ital ca cit ' of ch ol bo. i , ho\.,.·.n . in a pe ial experim nt undertak~ en by t \e -nit d State' Public Health ervice and repo1 ted r - centl.· in Public Health Bulletin No. 179. PerhaP~' the mo ·t inte.re ting re­. ult \ 'a the slight, but igniftcant, gain in heiO'ht. Growing boys may be e peeled to how increa e in height il the cour e of a few mouth . Thu . the group who were not given the peci l exercise and who were request d to take a lit­tle exerei e as po sibJe gained on the average about two-thirds of an inch. But the "experimental" group gained nearly a whole inch during the four months of the tudy. Out of 50 b6 s in the 1(con­trql" group only 4 gain~d a much a an inch and a half during the perJ.od; oui of 6 in the <~expexi­mental'' g oup 18 gained that much. Vhile it is recognized that thi r te of increase could not be carried on indefinitely it probably wouJd be a considerable factor over a pe1--iod o time. In ?; eight. the boys given the ex:­erc, i es bowed an average gain of 3.3 pound , where a the "control 1 ' group showed a gain of 2.0. In the form r , 26 children . gained five pound o1· mor , in the latter onl five. Vital ca:pacity (the amount of air hieh can be expelled fron1 the lung. ) al o . howed igni:ticant- 1 · greater increa e tn the "ex:p r­imen tal" group~ The · tudy a· carried on pri- THE LOG marily to a rtain whether gym­na i m ,.orl ;: ould have a definit effect on the p stur of boy: . An • impr vement in muscular tone Re ms unqu stionable, inc a srer­ies of str~ngth tests taken before and .after the exp :riments indicat­ed that the boys in the speciaJ clas es increa ed more rapidly than other boys of th · same ages. How­ever, aU measures of posture, in~ clud~ng those made on photographs taken before and after the experi­mental period, indicated no differ­ences in po. ture, from whatever point of view considered. The bodily growth of boys ·and men from three to fifty years of age is shown in considerable de­tail in the same bulletin (Public Health Bulletin No. 179), based on a study of 2,2GO persons on whom detailed physical · examinations were made toge,ther with front, bacl<, and profile photographs of the body. The results of each measure­ment a1·e given in the report, so that am excellent idea is obtainable as to how growth proceeds, its re­lation to puberty, and the changes ' auring adult life. Special atten­tiQn is given to the va1·iability of the rne~surements from person to per. on nt different ages. The measurements divide t.h em- ·s.elve into two rather hm·ply con-trasting groups. Weight, vital capacity, and strength begin at very low values and ri e with amazing rapid't during adol.e - cence. The other meastn·ements show a mod rate .increase through­out childhood: th y ar in g neral, linear m. a. l.lr ment on the body. All , ~':tow r markable in ·r ases ut the time f puberty. 17 Certain measl1remen ts reach a maximum in early adult life and tb reafter decline (strength, vital capacity, chest expansions ). Oth­er · ar still rising more or less at 50 years (chest measurements, ab­dominal circumference, weight). Record of tests of strength on one thousand boys and men f1·om fourteen to fifty years of age are also give•n in this health bulletin. The te ts made included: pull (strength of pulling the bands apart, recorded with a dynamome­ter); push (pressing the hands to­gether) lift (lifting from floor) hand grip; lung force (height to which a column of mercury can be · sent by blowing into a tube) and lung fatigue ("holding one's breath" length of time the col­umn of mercury can be maintained at 40 millimeters on a single breath) . Outside of the last measurement (which shows little variat ion with age), we find that all the strength tests rise during adolescence in much the same manner, spurt up­ward at puberty, reach a maxi­mwn about 30 years, and then de­cline slightly. At any one age, a height and weight increase, strength increa - es; but it is of particular interest that for persons of the same weight strength deer a es with h ight. For persons of the same height, strength increase' marked­ly with weight. All of the t sts how great va­riabil: ity from p rson to peT on at an one age, ~p ially lung fore& ~md lung fatjgue, and there wa no indication that an of them could be tak n a reliabl indice of phy - ical condition. . 1 CORRE T -IT_ MI1 ENGLI:'\H 1 ~\IDED B - PROPER L. 1TRO­Dl! Tl . - TO THF COO • ~ sh11ple lesson in spelling· \Vhicb n1any .-\n1ericans \\·i ll ·welco1ne i being broadcast by Dr. R. Adam Dutcher of the Penn rlvania tate College. The original of the \~ord crvHa­nun,. "·hich has received various interpretations, i& given by Dr. Dutcher as a con1bination oJ the ,~·ord ·'vita'' meaning "life''. and "amlnes". The final "e" was latel' dropped from tl1e 'vord ('vitanune" to show that the:e substances did not belong to the chemical group whose nan1es end of •fine '. Nor does it connect them "-jth such dis­reputable members of the chen1ical famil} al) ~trychnine. Names with "in H endjngs have be~u given by the scientist;; to products of un­kno,, ·n or Yetriou.o chemical consti­tuents such as jnsulin and th pro­teins. 11 But,'~ t'!omn1ents Mh:>f'> Eleanor Enri7ht of the _ "-attcJJia) Dair~· Coun<'i]) "it is n<;t "30 lnjl.Jf)t1.Hut how we bpcJI tJ.e VJ atnin,, a~-; thut we really g("t :tcquajntPd with the1n, knrJ\\ witt r~ they :: h01 nd, and whc.t th ev. · can do fr>r us." To trrfJ·.,(]uee the ( <.>f,J. t•J v i b.unh, A, 1\'lis:) Et1ri~ L t ugg·~sh~ a l ' ~d- pt riels in butt ' J'. Vit( min B Vhtdd } te w~leomc at tht r~lrrlil.v t~thl e t-t J ou:t d iu ht~le gl; ln ('( r'f•· ls HJJrl vita•rHl r. C, ~·hie 1 shon1<1 ;11 o be-: ·:t daily callP.r, i fvurJd iu 1\'li-:;s Ln· r-Jght · thi l·,J recjp, featurinr r'"!;h fndt THE LOG . •: -. DRIED FRUITS PROVE CHEAP AND HEALTHFUL Fruits can be enjoyed in the winter as rnueh as summer and those who are watching the health of the fan1ily will see that oranges, grapefr uit, apples and well-ripened bananas are always at hand. Dried f:ruj t, such as raisins, figs, dates, prunes, apricots, a1·e an eco:­nomical 'vay of bringing variety to the winter table. Wash well, t·e­move all stems before putting to soak, and let stand in water over night. Fruit should he cooked in the same water to retain all the mineral eon tent. Two recipes featu1·ing tnese dried fr uits are sugg·ested by lVliss Lenna Tho1nas of the National Dairy Council. Prune Whip (Serves twelve) 1 lb. prunes1 0 cup sugar, lfa cup gelatin, 1;._1' cup cold 'vater, 1/a tsp. salt, 1 tbsp. lera1on j uice~ 2 egg white . , 1 cup whipped cream, }~ eup chopped nut 1neats. Chipped Beef in Whole Grain Cereal Uan,ekin 1 cup chipped beef, 2 tb . 11. b ut­ter, i cup Jnj iJ , 2 level tu~lJ. f1our. 13roil 1) ~ef for few minu les in buti<.•r unUl crjbp. Adtl 1n ilk and thick l fl with the flour. 1 f iht b -ef is (•ry !Sa l t.' it l1ou ld Lc snaked f'or 10 (Jf"' 15 Jrduu( . in enlrl wat ' r J . 1 r re Cl)tJJ· inv. ( ) JH' oft th - tu w whol . Krain " " 1' al pro lu t i .~ n1uf1 •f. • Otad•. in thv Rt 11 u fa cin·k ,.f'uk out tlw , .• nt ·r altfl ( !t.er cJ::t 1ifl1' the tnuf­f st, llJI \ i1lt t_•H•nrncd dJil•P ·d htlP t'. Orau c anti (~nl:pt·fruit S alnd lj,., or n~Yfl8 &nd ~rap a uit. :AJ range on cri ~lJ ll!ttuce leaves and serve with French dl·e sing. Winter Short Cake "Even though fre~h fruit· lik~ stl'awberries are not ava.il.(thle for ihe winter table, there j~ no rca.:on why we should feel that 've must give up that deliciou-, fluickly made dessert known a hort cake. For instance, banana shortcake can be enjoyed all througn the "vinter n1onths," says lvli·· · Grace Pollock of tne ""ationa} Dairy Council. Let'a try: this r ecipe to­day: Banana Short Cake 14 cup butter, y; cup sugar. 1 egg. lj_. cup milk, 1 cup, flour. 2 t ~p. baking poy~rder, 14 t . p. salt. Cream the butter, add uga.r gradually, and egg well beaten. ~1jx and sift flou-r, bttl\ing powder. and saJt, adding aJtenul.tel · " rith milk to fir" t n1ixtu re. Beat thor­oughly, and bake in a buttered r ound tin. Cut ripe banana in fah·ly thick licos. and put on top of the shortcake. Baked Egg in Ham -·a$es To 1 mcasu.r of crurnhs ~dd · 1 rnea~ ure scalded n1ilk :l.ntl 1 mEM;'\­urc of finel y-c ho ppt~d, c oked hru-11. Line gr a~t·d cu.lard eupb ;vith n1ixlur ::-., Brt:ak eggs into h0 <'· n­t.- r~ nnd Utlk ~ until ~Ct. S t'VL 'ith while ~UCt. ~Ia~ h •d pot.nto ll\~n· lu• U~t,>)t{ in ~t all of the hrNlrl • ~u1d nlilk n1ixture;'. "hec~c n 1a~ bt.· llsP I i w~tcad of luuu . Nut t·: Ha lH'd ('gg:s rna) h r ) · tU'('d with hult~ t·,:-.cl bn•ad rnlnlb~. 1 :gg. nta.v h" h, l,t'tl in ltlntat • ·hlo\lls. ,. EWS OF FASHION FROM E FIRD'S DEPT. STORE A. heville, N. C. Begjnning of each eason the mart d e · ed women ;md misse a re alway interested in the new­est tyle ~ that are foreca t ed by th world' foremost stylist and now tbat the new summer season i , appl'oaching and the summer day are here, the women are once more looking forward fo1· the new­est fa hion notes. The . ummer fashions that ar from aiJroad from the Par­i designers are showing the now popular sleeveless modes. The Georgette dresses are being J J THE LOG hown in pl;1in and printed de­sjgns 'rhe popular Chiffon dres~ s m·e mad of plain oft shad · as well as th bold de i:gn prints. Th umm r En embles arc ver~ popular mad , in George tl<~ . The nav · blu _ i., the predominating color for Dr '· w ar. Neverthe- 1 ~k . one the popular tan shades. Then lh popular Cotton Pique Eu ·emhl with th eir bright pdnt­ed J.latt rn.' are hown for the wall b ' th eashore. The model pictured is taken from our fir st showing of the sport · rnost fa orite color, black and white. Paris is showing many new fashionable costume ln black and whit . And now Efird's show th m to you in a most elaborate di play of one and two piece tyle . _row t hat the sweet girl gradu­a te js oon wonder ing what types of dress is suitable for h er, the tyle t ha again stepped forwa1·d v ith those sweet dainty white Georgette, so soft and shee.r, made with pretty ruffles, Then the pop­ulat · white taffeta is seen in their Bouffant -styles, their 1·uffled styles and their styles of simplicity. With these da' inty graduation styles are shown the white Flannel Coats of equal length which forms the evening wrap. There is also the now popular Felt coats more elaborate than eve.r, fashioned in many contrasting colors. The modes for the Summer Coats are the Black and White Silk Coat made of heavy Faille Silks trimmed with White Ermine. A son born to Mr. and Mrs. D. V. King on Easter morn. Mother and son are doing floe. The amount of heat generat d by one tallow <;andle can be accu­rately measured three mil s away. 1'he Whit House at Washington ~ s considered the mo t valuabl r sidence property in the world. • 19 A WOMAN'S LOGIC Mt· . Jone · cast an entir ly new 1\gh nd it may be a who1ly r easonabl one on the problem of \ oman's dr ss the other n ight. She and :Mr. Jon s were awaiting call rs, anrl Mr. Jon s ::; Ul~veyed her new gown rather critically. "Isn't i t a lit tle extr n '?'' he suggested. "A lit-tl short and .lowcut ?" "Well, I don't know,'' said Mrs. J ones. "They're coming to see me, aren't they not the dress?·­Argonaut. Only a Comma But! A pupil was having h·ouble with punctuation and was being called down by the teacher. ·• ever mind, sonny," said a chool visitor, consolingly, "It's foolish to bother about commas. They don't amount to much, any­way." "Don't they ?" replied the teach­er, turning to the pr esident. Then calling to one of the pupils she or­dered the boy to write on the board this entence : "The presi­dent of the Board says the t eache1· is a fool." "Now," she continued, "put a comma after 'Board' and another after 'teacher'." If we wish to acquire neighbors we must first be neighborly our ­selves. • It' alright to couple patience with speed if it's low g ar speed. Don't allow our elf to boil too ha. tily, you may evapor ate befor.e attaining enough pressur to ex­plode. England, - cotltmd and Ir ], nd, tak n together, a1 ~mall r than the State of New M- 'ico. • THE LOG --- ~ --- ~ --- ~--~--~--~ --- ~·~ --- Joe l\IcGo" n and J. C. ITipps . ON THE AIR • L \ • ~I\~RSAL Safety'· js ~f j ·oon to be carried direct­=~ ly into n1i llions of Amer­ican homes, through a series of thirteen con.,ecuti\·e 'veekly radio add1 es-es. to be broadca t br out- • standing leaders in American life. The Xational Broadcastjng Com­pany. in co-operation with the Na­tional .~afet.'· Council, announces Charles .1\1. Sch,,ab as the first SP£aker of the 13 \\ eeJ< progran1 fo•· Satur.da~ t verling, ApYil 2(1, at 7 :(JC .P. ~1. , Ea~tern Standard lin1e. The frJJiow:ing notables have al­l"(;: ud.v definitely ag1 ecd to talk: CIIAJ'LI.: . 1\1 . . Crl\~7 A ~ Chair­man of t.he Hrnlrd, Bethlehem Sted Cvlnpany: ' ,'-\af(:ty 8S a Factor in luflu try.,' 110 . I~OBEHT P. LA 10. 'T, Beeret.a.t·v 'Jf COJnm . l'Cf . ":'aft!ty a ~ ati<JnaJ Problern." HO ~ . J \ J:.S J. IJA\1 I , c l~ tary <,f LaLu t "Saf~· . ( and th(~ \'v"(J rk , . ~· . " iAll. l .;C'HU . lAN 1 -li J4~ J :tK, \ ' CJ, ld-fun'lc US '<lllc ~, t. :n d <.1 ·~J·, iir• sttt1'; . Safely in the J [t.J1l!Y', '' 1J H. :M I L J ' · r. ~ • L L , TO . V, ]Jh·ef!t'~ ·, IJJ£? rt.: J n ·, II l:!~r!S l in • Bun~a'J 1)f ~trt •·t T res and nhey"U f9 llow you. The · diligettt. Spinner Has a : . large Shift a.aa . now I ,have a Sheep and a Cow, every Body bids me Good morrow, a:ll which is . , 'Well said by Poor Ri,chard. . . ' ~- : I • ' • ' • - • -Benjami-n: P:r.ftnk.tin- . (8a.1ings of Poor Ricltard) ' "'· . . • ' ' . ' ' • f t i '. I i . I • . . l ~ - . I '-• 11. ;I .• I • .• A. I · ·"I I I I JI I I • . • ¥1 I ,.-. _., • :I • 1·'>1 I .• j•••e& ···11: e-e 'I • ••---•• ,. 1 4 :It I • , ., , ,_. . . . tl ;I -. H • ' • ' . . ' ' ' • • l I , •
format Text
author Champion Fibre Company;
author_facet Champion Fibre Company;
author_sort Champion Fibre Company;
title The Log Vol. 12 No. 03
title_short The Log Vol. 12 No. 03
title_full The Log Vol. 12 No. 03
title_fullStr The Log Vol. 12 No. 03
title_full_unstemmed The Log Vol. 12 No. 03
title_sort log vol. 12 no. 03
publisher Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723;
publishDate 1929
url http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/3047
op_coverage 1920s; Haywood County (N.C.);
long_lat ENVELOPE(-112.453,-112.453,57.591,57.591)
ENVELOPE(6.622,6.622,62.612,62.612)
ENVELOPE(11.982,11.982,65.105,65.105)
ENVELOPE(170.033,170.033,-72.117,-72.117)
ENVELOPE(-68.933,-68.933,-67.750,-67.750)
ENVELOPE(-60.283,-60.283,-63.900,-63.900)
ENVELOPE(130.717,130.717,-66.117,-66.117)
ENVELOPE(-81.566,-81.566,50.550,50.550)
ENVELOPE(7.634,7.634,62.795,62.795)
ENVELOPE(44.681,44.681,66.600,66.600)
ENVELOPE(-64.264,-64.264,-65.244,-65.244)
ENVELOPE(-99.050,-99.050,-72.233,-72.233)
ENVELOPE(-146.667,-146.667,-76.850,-76.850)
ENVELOPE(147.813,147.813,59.810,59.810)
ENVELOPE(13.733,13.733,68.100,68.100)
ENVELOPE(-65.916,-65.916,-66.033,-66.033)
ENVELOPE(-68.333,-68.333,-67.566,-67.566)
ENVELOPE(-158.683,-158.683,-85.733,-85.733)
ENVELOPE(-62.461,-62.461,-74.320,-74.320)
ENVELOPE(132.800,132.800,59.667,59.667)
ENVELOPE(36.866,36.866,63.158,63.158)
ENVELOPE(24.179,24.179,65.691,65.691)
ENVELOPE(-55.750,-55.750,-63.367,-63.367)
ENVELOPE(65.783,65.783,-70.417,-70.417)
ENVELOPE(172.200,172.200,-84.617,-84.617)
ENVELOPE(151.050,151.050,61.917,61.917)
ENVELOPE(140.951,140.951,72.498,72.498)
ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-64.633,-64.633)
ENVELOPE(-72.167,-72.167,-75.088,-75.088)
ENVELOPE(-64.925,-64.925,-65.512,-65.512)
ENVELOPE(93.533,93.533,68.317,68.317)
ENVELOPE(14.750,14.750,64.583,64.583)
ENVELOPE(-62.600,-62.600,-62.267,-62.267)
ENVELOPE(-13.688,-13.688,65.101,65.101)
ENVELOPE(-110.919,-110.919,55.834,55.834)
ENVELOPE(-60.314,-60.314,-62.464,-62.464)
ENVELOPE(-58.950,-58.950,-62.233,-62.233)
ENVELOPE(-63.017,-63.017,-65.017,-65.017)
ENVELOPE(9.401,9.401,63.127,63.127)
ENVELOPE(-82.463,-82.463,-79.723,-79.723)
ENVELOPE(18.660,18.660,70.160,70.160)
ENVELOPE(147.800,147.800,59.593,59.593)
ENVELOPE(-117.003,-117.003,56.000,56.000)
geographic Canada
Pacific
Norway
New Zealand
The ''Y''
Ner
Lone
Myers
Patience
Byers
Carr
Morrow
Nes
Nes’
Buttons
Howell
Dane
Ari
Ure
Whit
Ryder
Dayton
Rath
Stal’
Peta
Posi
Tay
Gaston
Donaldson
Valet
Ular
Orne
Matheson
Lorn
Neral
Rua
Vay
Hult
Chard
Blythe
Pique
Briand
Engli
UGL
Sarn
Uyes
Reno
geographic_facet Canada
Pacific
Norway
New Zealand
The ''Y''
Ner
Lone
Myers
Patience
Byers
Carr
Morrow
Nes
Nes’
Buttons
Howell
Dane
Ari
Ure
Whit
Ryder
Dayton
Rath
Stal’
Peta
Posi
Tay
Gaston
Donaldson
Valet
Ular
Orne
Matheson
Lorn
Neral
Rua
Vay
Hult
Chard
Blythe
Pique
Briand
Engli
UGL
Sarn
Uyes
Reno
genre Iceland
genre_facet Iceland
op_relation Canton Area Historical Museum; Canton Area Historical Museum; Champion_TheLog_1929-04_Vol12_No03
http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/3047
op_rights All rights reserved. For permissions, contact the Canton Area Historical Museum, 36 Park St, Canton, NC 28716;
_version_ 1766044173926924288
spelling ftwestcarolunidc:oai:cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org:p16232coll18/3047 2023-05-15T16:53:35+02:00 The Log Vol. 12 No. 03 Champion Fibre Company; 1920s; Haywood County (N.C.); 1929-04; newsletters; 11.75" x 8.75"; 24 pages pdf; http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/3047 eng; eng Hunter Library Digital Collections, Western Carolina University, Cullowhee, NC 28723; Canton Area Historical Museum; Canton Area Historical Museum; Champion_TheLog_1929-04_Vol12_No03 http://cdm16232.contentdm.oclc.org/cdm/ref/collection/p16232coll18/id/3047 All rights reserved. For permissions, contact the Canton Area Historical Museum, 36 Park St, Canton, NC 28716; Champion Fibre Company -- Periodicals Employees' magazines newsletters etc. Industries -- North Carolina -- Canton -- Periodicals Champion Fibre Company -- Employees Industrial safety -- North Carolina -- Canton Employee motivation -- North Carolina -- Canton Employees -- Training of industry events Text; 1929 ftwestcarolunidc 2019-01-22T18:26:20Z Between 1914 and the late 1960s, the Champion Fibre Company published an internal newsletter, called The Log, to share news about the Canton mill, the community, and its employees. After 1940, news from the entire “Champion Family,” which included mills in Hamilton, Ohio; Houston, Texas and Sandersville, Georgia, was featured in each issue. • I • 1 e e 1 I I 1 . I 1 • I I • • e 1 • • . _. . ._. . . ,._. .-, .• .,. e • •. ! I . I I I'I • : • I t • er • ,e ~· o.t • I i• ' ooQoo, t • ,. , . e . .,.,.,. ,. . ._ . , . . .- . e • e • I • I I ' - f t I • • ' f l •• • • i t' • t •• •'' i t • f t • •+ •• t • l ' f • i • t • •' ;• f •• t I • ==============-,~2=~==~====== '~-=-=-==========~=======· ==·== OL. Xll CANTON, N. C., APRIL, 1929 No. 3 =========================================~-- ~· -·~==== -- -- • • I • ' HE Sdfestl eleanest and 'JI)ost 'efficient Plant in the South TN THE S110KY MOUNTAJNS • • •• i i. • ' . t •'•• •- •t • + t t t ••-• t I I 't. • f • '• ' • • • i t I ''• ••• •i I • •• ;+ ' + • t I I t I I ' • • • t a a e I I • • . . • e • I • cl 1 t • . • . • • ' - e e e• e • e e I tl I I e· • .• • • ~. • .1 • I • • • e I • e • I . + t ,t ++ i '•. t ' • l t ' + i I • t ' ~ ~. t -• • J '• S it not the chief d·isgrace in the world not to be a Ynit, not to be reckoned one character, not to yield that peculiar fruit which each man was created to bear; but to be reckoned in the gross, in the hun­dred, or the thousand,. of the par­ty, the section, to which we be­long; and our 0pjnion predicted geographi€;ally1 as the North, or the· South? N @t so, brothers and friends · please God, ours ·shaH not be so. We will wafk on our own feet; we wi-H work with our O\VO hands; we witl speak our own minds. . . A nation of men 'viii for the first time exist, be­cause each believes himself in­spired by tbe Divine Soul \vhich also inspires all men. - Ralph Waldo Eru~rsO tl. • - VOL. XII APRIL, 1929 No. 3 • ' THE PAPER I<'OR THIS MAGAZINE IS MADE IN OUR PLANT OUT OF WOOD FROM THE FORESTS OF NORTH CAROLINA. WE MANUFACTURE MANY GRADES OF BLEACHED SULPHITE PA.PERS, MACHINE FINISH, AND SUPER-CALENDERED. i •••. +.+++~+ . "+ + i'IJ• . ++++ +++ -!• ~+++++++~ . ·1-!A+~'!!·+·t-~!·•!-!• ;.:.:.:. +·!••!. {•· !· .t••:.•:. .: . .: . •!•t!• •t-•:.tt•+ •Z. +!-!'!•"!• •!• ¥•!••:. tt~·:. .: •+•!••le.-!· ·:·.:·~··l· ~· -4~ ++ . •~ •+ CO "TENTS •+ •!• • • • + + + ++ ++ •.: . + F1:-.<»Hi p ie-ce- + •:• : ene 1n the Smol<y MoupU!ins : : .+. . • •lt l.mrPi t~Ativn-D:y Ral)\h 'Va:ldo 'Slnct·son + •!• +- It i~ }""ron t Cove-t· + •:• >'!.:. :::. CO-OPE. · RATION' i.· -<H>peTa"l.il)n ·--·····-····-··-. P~ge 1 + + •!• + General Paet. fa1· the Renunciation •:. • •lt b ~ ·J; of ,. 2·8 • ~ ' ~ "" ---·-·· . -. t ERBERT HOOVER said, "Peace :i.s n t made jn documents but in : Th.I"!Jk o · Th .e Thi.ll --- ··-- " 4 •lo + ·it the hearts of men,'' so, with co-opera tion. It is the result of a -:. + ' . • t + purpose within. · If the heart is wrong the att itude ·will not be .; +.:· r ight. Therefore, we cannot expect teamwork unless t here ·is a willing- ~+ . S.6 ++ :nes t0 pull together and a de:sire to see t hings move smoothly. •+ 8 + -I• ~ ~ n. ·o.,.!O_.rdl$ " 9 + (." J \ k + uepal'lmen~ ~ . --- . ,. •z. 'y.,-operation teamwor is essential to the success of every enterprise t +. ,. . * r-~ · u n . ~ 11111 ~ 1U {11 JY! $. 'lo.AU' Q V ~,. . _ . ., 10 :t ~.ing aid : ::. + )>f'lngtlme -~--··· - . . ~. . + ·~ ++ Trend of 1he Tim<¥~ . - . - + . ·:· •> l() + "Jt ain't the gunS DOl' al'l'nament, •!• ++ . .:. R. & A . Notes by L•. J>. P:re.J.ey. ·· " u + ' Nor the funds that they can pay, ·:• ++ + 1.• Book Mill N . ~li<>nl R •. ·. " 1a • 1 , But close co-operation ·~ ++ + . ~· Leather - + That makes thrun w iN the day. •:• w<)t)(j . . . " 13 : It ain't the individual, :I: em· Sick · --- . ·· · --- : . 14 % Ner the · army a a who~J e, :~ Cbii<lp n 's l'al!" ·--·~ --- . . ~ 13 +i But th ever la sting t l'i.nlWork ~ The Cabinet. . r 1 r ·i4<:fat J:IooveF. ·• J 6 ·~ Rea~t.h ·rw~< ·· --- · --- ·· - -··-·· . . 17 i Of every blooming soul." i Women·& P ~ " l + + F-ro n o ~ ~::::~-~::=.=:::~:::~ •• 19 i ~ :~:y -~::;~:~;~ . -.,.- ··-- ." ~0 ! . ' i + ' + * i ++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++++' rfHE LOG --- -·---.-~ --- ~ --- · ~ --- · --- .--_._"---"-~ --- "-' --- .,o-:.--~ --- .__---.-,_ EARL. CHARLES Ar\fl RCBY LEE hHdren of Mr. and Mrs . . \ rthur Hightower. • GE_ -ERAL PA T FOR THE AR.- JG ffiD AT PARI RENUNCIATION OF AUGUST 27, 1928 Thinking that the readers of The Log might be intet·­ested in reading the "KtUogg Treaty for the Renun­ciation of ~' d thf~ Par·t. "The Pre id .;nt of th • < ;(·nnan I:Pjtll, tJH . J-'J'<•:::,ideHt of tht United ~tate~ of Am(;~ rlh: I lii . rvrajc. t,\ thv Kiug t)f t}: f1 Bel i n.'\1 the p, c; •' t~nt t;( tLa'".l ~ H~· ud . J'c·puiJii,·, l:fis l ajtat y th<1 King ,Jf Ct. e, t Hti htin, Jr .land and tit • Bdti. h JJ(•rfJildorH:> iJr.-y tiJ)(] th~ Sp; 8, Ji;JIIJ u~J'~ r of l Jl(IIH. lHs laJt . blY 1ht· J(i JlV of lLdv, 111 · Jajt".'tl' lh" l•:u1 . p~rm . ()f Japan, tlH· Jtn~si d •nt ur Ch<' H!'\)JHhJit· (j J•,,_ lanr1, th ),·~r>!ll(l tt l of th" r %•· J,t, lh. r- J\ U puhlw . f;t (•pJy (-»flS ibtP of lJ1 ·ir Stll 1ll ln duLj• f ll j JI'( tlnhl.i · l ht~ Wf!l J ;.J t•c. fJf n a uk ind P(~ t sn:.til fl thnlll1n tinH· has r1,ut ·wl• n a lr:tuk • nun<·latir.m (Jf W:JJ a~ i lCJ in. tftJHH·IIt fr n·1tJ• nul polJ ' P}H,ulrl b(: Jnatk ll) 1ht PHtl t it 1 UF\ J • ~ ·etul uul fri ndly r Jatit)ll now .:xi tjng 1) tween thtdr p )j)le~ rna.v b., 11 rpetuatcrl Con vi need that nil change.; in their relation \ i l (me auoth er . houJd b, :ought ntlhF br pacific rnean: and he the result of a peaceful and ordcr1.v p ·l)e ·~ . nd that nn,\1 • ignatn•·.v Power \'<hich shall h~rt . after t k to pron1ote it-5 naUonaJ inlerest by reso~t t• war shou lrl lJe deuied the ht>nefrts furnishBd l,y thh; Tcrea y; .liop ~Ju I that, encouraged b.:· th~ir f!xample, alJ the other nations of the \ oriel wi ll joiH in this ltum;:tne en­deavor nnd 1)\· adhering to Lhe present Tt eat \. a. soon as it conu~. into force bring theh· peoples \ i•hin the sco p~ of it~ beneficent provi.~ ion s . thus uniting the ·iv­ilized nations of the world in a contmrm rennnciaL· on of war as au in s lrumen t of their national pohcy; Have decided to conclude a Treaty and fvr that pur­pose have appointed as their re ·vective Plenipcaten­tiaries : The President of the Gennan Reich: Dr Gustav tresemann, l\linister for Fo1 ei.gn A.tfairs · The P r e'" ident of the United Sta t e~ of America: The Honorable Frank B. Ke ll ogg. ~ ecr(~ta.ry of 'tate; I:-Hs lVIajesty the King of the Belgians: Mr. Patll Hymans, l\Iini ter for Foreign Affail , 1Vliniste1· of State; The President of the French Republic: :i\1r. Ar istide Briand, lVIinister for Foreign Affair;:, : His Nlajesty the IGng of Great Britain, Ireland and the British Dominions beyond the .,eas, En1peror of India.: For Great B1·itain and ror t hern Ireland and all parts of the British Empire 'v.hich a1·e not ~epa-r ate ~!embers of the League of _ ations: . The Right Honouraale Lo.rd C\lshendun. Chancellor of the Duchy of Lancaster , Acting ecretar) ot State for For eign Affairs; For t he Dominion of Canada: The Right Hono\n·able Willian1 Lyon 1\iackenzie King4 Prin1e 1\linist er and ~linister fo•· Extt1r n l . fTait·s; Fo1· th Con1monwealth of u . tralia: The llonourable Alexandet· J ohn ~fclJuchlan, l\J lHller of the Execut ive Federal Council : ~"o r the Dominion of lf' , . Z(\a lund: The Honou rablt" ~ir Ctu·is lopht r J~ul1(·s I an-. II i~h Con1n1 iS!'inn r for N~ w Zt~aland in ;r "\l Hl'itaiu Vor the l Jnion of South frica: rrh • J (Ol)(')lll'Ublt' .Jucuhu.· s tt~ ph fl llll~ ~n\it, I liA"h (' un-nd, ·innt·r fur t ht Uuioll of S •u th fri, a in l; t• a1 Ur ituin li'o r tht• I a· ish f a·•· Stull1 : l r . WtlliaaH Tlann l:\}l (,o. g t n Vt'• Prt'sidt\nl o th 1·~ . t' cutl t• ( 'ou uet l Ft r lud ir": 'I J~t. Hight llouout" &hll• Lotd ushtttd un, (•l uU\<'t llot" of t.h Du ·hy of. l 4Utca~ t,, r , . l;ting ~t·~ ·· tary of \. 't lt • 7 J • THE .LOG 3 . for ~oreign Atfaits; Hi · MaJe ty the King of Haly: Count Gaetano lian:z~mi, hi, Amba sa.dor E ·traor­dina. r and Plenipotentiar. at Pari . His Majesty the Emperor of J'apan: Count Uchida, Privy ·Cou1iloH1 r; The President. of the R public of Poland: Mr. A. Zale k~, Minister for Foreign Affair The Pl'i? ident of the Cz cho lovak Republic: D• Eduard Bene. , Minister for Fm-eign Affau·s i wh"O, ha'Ving cOlttmunicated t' one anothex tbeir full power f'eund in good nd due f_orm ·ha e agt· ed upon the foil wing a1'ticl ": ARTICLE 1 T e High Corttl·acting Parti . lenmly declan in th:e names ·of their respective peot'>le that they con­demn recours to a.r .for the s luti'on of inter-national controver ie and renounc it a an instrument of na- , tlonal poliey in their relations ·with one another. ARTIC!JE a The High Contracting Parties agree that the settle­ment o-r olution of a!U dispute or conflicts of what­e er natUl"e '(lr of 'vhate er origin they !\nay be, which may ari e among thero1. shall never be sought except by paeine mean . ARTICLE 3 The present Tr aty ~hall be ratified by th_e High G~ntracti.ng Parti~.,., named in the' Preamble in accord:­aace with heir respective constitutional requifements, nd sl1~11 take effect a -between them as soon as' all their ev:eral instruments of 1·atmcatioR hall have h zen depo ited at Washington. . . This Treaty . hall, ~hen it has come into effect as pre9cn'bed. in the p:reeedin:g paragraph, r001ain open as long: may be nece sary for adhel'ence by all the oth- _ er Powers of the world. Ever}! instru:ment evidencing the adherence of a. Power hall be deposited at Wash- . ' ingt~n and the 'kreaty ha:ll immedi~t~y upon such depo 't become effect-ive a between t,he .Power thus adhering and the other Powers parties' her.ete. It hall be the duty of the Government· of. the 1Jnited tates to furni h each Government n.amed . in the Preamble and every Governrneh.t subsequently. adhel'­ing to this Treaty with a certified copy of the Treaty .and of -every in trument of ratification or adherence, It shatl also be the duty of the Government of the Unjted State telegraphically to n.otify such Govern. ments im.mediately upon the deposit with. it of ach instrument of ratification or adherence. In. faith whereof the re peetiv.e P1enipotentiari a signed thi.s Treaty in the Fl'ench and Engli h both text having equal faTe , and hereunto their seal . Done at Paris, the twenty-sevm1th day of August in the year one thousand run hundred and t.weniy­eight. Germany United States of · .AJ:nerica Belgium France Great Britaill • (s AL) U TAV STRESEMANN (s AL) FRA. K B. Kii t L o (SE .· ) FA Lri- H YMANS · ( stAL) A1u; BJUAND ( EAL) CUSJ:lENDUN (sEAL) W. L. M ACKENZ1E K rNo (SEAT. ) . }. 1l CL ACHI,A . ( ~E L) C. J. P ARR (SEAL) J. S. SMrr (SBAL) Lvuvf T . M AcCoscAI.R (sn L) C u sHJJN lJON (SEAt.) G. MANzoNr (SEAL) CHIDA (sEAb) Aucus;r ZALESKI (sEAL) DR EnuARo BE, ns Original Sig.natories Canada India Australia Japan New Zealand Italy South Africa Poland Irish Free State ·Czechoslovakia Ratifications by Original Signatories . - ftedeeted . United States of Great Britain Canada Australia New Zealand India • > America Gzechoslov;a,kia Italy South Africa. Irish F1·ee State Poland Germany Perfected Adherence Deposited in the Department • • Afghanistan . Spain Croats and Albania Ethiopia Slo-venes Austria Don'Linican Liberia • Egypt Repqblic Panama Cuba King<,iom of the Russia Serbs Siam Adherences Perfected Except for Formal Deposit Haiti Paraguay Rumania Lithuania Portugal Tm·key Norway Adherences Approved by Legislative Body~ A waiting China Estonia Greece Ratification by Head of State. Hondura · ·Latvia Denmark Nether land Countries Sigllifyin.g Their Intention to Adhe1·e Bolivia Finland Persia Balga:ria Ciuaetemala Peru. Colombia Hangary weden -Costa Rica Iceland Switzerland Chile Lux :mburg Urugua Eeuador Me. ico V ne.zu la El Salvador Niearagu.a • THE LOG ' . Co:unt 'l 1ot HaYing Yet Signified ~rheir Intention .Arooentina Brazil SUlUMARY • ~tatus in respect of ratification. Ratification b3 origh1al signa.torje.-. . ·-··-·--···-- 12 Original signatorie not ha,ling ratified . ~· ---·-·· ·-····· 3 Perfected adherences deposited in the Department 13 Adherence perfected e . cept for fornu,l deposit . 7 Adherences approved by legislative body awaiting ratification by head of state_·--·--~--· ·· --- ········ 7 Countries . ignifying their intention to adhe.fe . 20 Countrie not having signified intention to adhere 2 Total_ . _____ ---·-··--·---· --- _____. _ . _________. . _"->: _ _ . __ . --. ,.,. . __ 64 THINK ON THESE THI-NGS T is said, "A hint to the wise is sufficient," which is perhaps true but, remember the ernphasis is on THE WISE. Cansequently a hint is not sufficient to the unwise, the1·efcH·e, the fol­lowing exa.mpl~es of unsafe practices are related, for the purpose of impressing upon all of us the impof't­anee of closer observance of the rule of Safety in the performance of our work. Several v eeks ag·o, an employee whose · duties JJe­quire the most of his tim.e in the Board 1\fill, went to the Sulphite Bleaching room for a sample of pulp. As he tore off a sample from. tl1e sheet of pulp on the Oliver filter, it slipped out of hjs hand he grabbed for it as it slid down past the slitter into the eonveyot·. Fortunately the .Slitter did not catch his hand and he was uninjured but, his hand might have. been torn off. The operator who saw the performance sai-d to the man ctLet me get a sample fol" you." When the sam­pie had been pr{)eu.red, the operator said, 14didn't you know that a man was seriousl)r injured on this Ina­chine while taking a sample?" He replied, .uyes I know." Wouldn't it be .fine if we should caution ouT fellow~ workers against unsafe practices and, w:hen pos~ iltle, show them the safe way? SLIGH'r EYE INJ RY An en1pJoyee in th ~ R. & A. de.purtrrH·nt wu · w ~rt~ . ing on a pump- diec(,unecting a ru1 liH£l. 'Ph• re w ~ caustic liquor jJre. ent aud he g(;)t som,• io hi ~ ~)r :l. Jt\· B-ul t : e ,, b u t·n ~d . 0 Could the 1njury ha'l · b ll Ju ·~vc ntc·tl ? v.,J). it r:ems oo. G11ggle. 1· ~ provi.d d hy t h<' r,.;oul t~au :v fua that }:,U~pos . J~ut, if the for rnun dot. n 't 1n ·i:s1 rm th•. men .prot c1i ng t11 :ir <y s bv tht tt~fi of goggles when needed, we can not expect the e:mpl~yee~ t(J be cautious. DtTring the past eighteen years~ the 1nen operatinJ! chippe.t·s and barkers have IJeen requjred to wear gng­gles while on dui.v, and without an exception, the rule is a.dhet~ed tg £.reely by the employees jn these depart­ments. CoJJ.seque-ntJy they have no e_·e injuries. If, then~ som& men can wear goggles aJl the time while on dutyJ others should be willin·g to wear them \\'hen there is danger of a:n eye injtu-y. MINUTES OF THE POWER PLANT SAFETY MEETING By Glenn Howell Date: March 20, 1929. Place: W. W. ~Iitchell·s Offiee. Wednesday, March 20, 1929, a meeting of the men representing the differel)t jobs in the Stearn Plant was ca.Hed by W. W. Mitehel1 for the purpose of organizing for department Safety \Vor:k. Presiding ~· ·"·u---·--· . ~--~-- --- · --- ~-··· ··-W. W. ! Iitchell Me11 Present CaRtains Eleeted J. C. Ryder . ~ H. Elansen R~ A. Gragg R M. G:reen M. S. Stamey Burgin Fore E. A. Thompson C. ~1. :Blythe A! lex Jackson J. D. J"ohnson J. C. Johns0n Glenn Howell To Serve the Fir t Wk. R. A . Gragg E. M. Green C. M. Bl~the A. Jackson J. S. Johnson A. H. High towel"' Tom Justice R. L. Gant J. C~ Johusu.n J. D. Jolm on Troy Sn1itn E. A. Thompson J. K. Downs G. R,. Davis It was decided at the above 1ne-eting th<1t ther€ should be . i.x buttons v o:rn, ef.lch r~pre €'.nti.ug a safe­ty Booster in the Steam Plant. They ·will b~ di~ tribu­ter! over the j ol> ~s follovn:;: Q:ne btd tton \Vill be is'Sued to the op 1rrators of lhe b ct. Turbine, .\:{oGl\ ~ill Engine-~ tUHi b1achinf Roon1 fh "fltent Engine~. Thi, butt on will s t.~\.Y at on . of Uu sC' jobs and be \\ 0rn by the op· l 'ii.d'-w of t:'U:-l1 .t; hift for Olll. w ).d\, th n, it. ·will btJ \ $ ·e l to nnr! of t-ln1 other job~ tnld the sarn thing will be t••p uh:'(l. 1'hiR wa~ t.h button will t·otnl l L' r ) thr · :. '"'ef'k." on th . ~t· parf.kuhn· JOlh;. on~ Dl1\tt.)n ·will b ~ i ·su• rl tu t h opl•ra.t :1fl'-> of t.he (~ lnct·atnr Rnon~, J?il l ' t' Puou! nud th · Ct'O(·ralt.n· Hut tu Bas''H'l •nt. 't'h ' r~nl­tillP •Jf thP Jn1tlon \\ill \.>t• tht' ~tUll \:! a~ dc)~cribt'd in th }il' • ioug Juln,. Onl\ hullc•u will ht i~sth:d l(>) thr ot.wt:nt.o-r~ uf th~ ~tirhng g,.l)1 ·r Hnu ~ ~. Tla) JJnnl~l . Liuit · 11'-)u . ~ a11d th • THE LOG 5 F RED, JR. Son of fr. a.Rd Mr ·. Fred Whitted. Roll Ro. ·ce I.:n in Room. 1 h routint~ of the button ou the. ~ job wiJJ lp . arne as previ-ou · on ~s . On · button will be i ued to the op~·.:.l~e>rs of Big d M.aiu Uoiler Hous . The butt;,on .will tay in boil~r hou.:c~:; one we .k and will I e worn by the :tto:r of •ach .iliift. One button wiU lJ i :.;ued to E. M. Gr n and Crew, .,u man of the ci·e , ~ill wen the button on week. uutt n ·jJ] l otate ea ·h ninE w eks. . . One butt n ill be L "<1 to th repair men of the H'~ job : Pipe Fitting, Doil Repair and Gen· Repair Work. This button ill · worn ~lY a mem­of eacl1 1· pair r~t' on. ' e k and then will b to a member of one of lh gther repair crews it ha. b en ·orn b each m mber of ach reJ)air . Unsafe practice ~ being ob"erved or danger o kind xi~ ting wiH be repor·te ~en. ht:ard . a nci felt, <:'\: . ery,,·herc. ~ut onh i11 all the ddlcrflnt .nc -;, in the Labot a tor~·. 1n the Y. l. ". A. tHJd all 11art of the n1ill. but ~:tl~o in tht hmllt.•:-- of e\ en· l n . Tn thP ~ pa­ciou . · nnd !u~ul'ious hnn1e of :'In t');.CCnli -~ as \v el!' «1S in the hun1hle on.) of a lahor "r. lt j . <1 ~piril that brcerls contentn1ent and proifuce results. lt pays fina11<'ial1~ th ~ en1 plo~·e r as well as tht: enl­p1oyce It h~ largely due t) ·uch a fin ~ 2Jlidt that the l\Iills of the Ch 1n1pion Fibre Con1pan~· are tocta~r op­el ·ating lCO'. c in tim~ and equipn1ent, when other n1ills haYe to be satt;:,tied \Yith a 6 -70"c operation, meaning a lay off of 1nany n1en and a great reductjon in U1.e pay enYelope for those that are fortunate enough to be kept at work. It pay'"' eYery on~ to keep and to foster thai pir it of loyalty, co-operation and good fellow hip. \ ho is primarily and principally 1·espon sible for the existance of such a fine pirit? Let u give fu ll credit to whon1 credit belongs. It i. fir~t of all due to the policy of tht! C01npauy as laid do~-n by l\h•. Peter G. Thomson, the ftrst Presi­dent of the CQmpan y. It " ·as n1. · great p1eGlSUl'e to be present at a meeting held in the old 1\Iears' Hotel in June, 1907, I believe it ,,~as, \:vhen l\1r. 'fhomson out­Hued the policy of the Con1pany. It was a policy of justice, libe1·alism and fail play to all. and has been can·ied out so admi1·abl ~7 by the General l\fanager J\ir. R. B. Robertson the present Pre~ident, 'vl.o g uides the affairs of the con1pany. It w~ a polic) of "fleart and Soul'' and that an1e polic.r j <) th~ policy of the Con1pany today and ·why·? Because thP Champion Fibre Com pany is 1nost fortu­nate in hav·ing O~itjons of Pr . 1tle11t anti G··nc, aJ . 1 tJ twft;l' (Jr such a huge Com}J:lny '> far < xtPJ dt d in the opel a Linn qf it~ various l}J anche~. ~1H ntJ rnattc_-t h •JW gr nt ~d., ,,uali-ty no mati.e1· h'1'K J ~ n.~ fula :nld } ow \ ell 1 il tu1 (T 1 i · quaHt;,.s ~,lre, ht . r· JU!d uot h:.tV de ue h alo1 . In l.h carr inJ.~ 11.1t uf u·,(l {' ll ~:n't aJt< £, uf l'(llif·vJJ ll., h s • b~en rnf•:s «hly a . .si· l tJ • :l t:•.if ,f ·• 11 p t•. lt 11l •·n in 'tfJ of :vhieh h• pJa td,c d !')( • d. of tfll '( ,fUJ,a nv J' Ji.·y. Aud ,, th .r or. . pt'OgrPS uJ, a llttJ• .11t · t ' 1 l cl 8no1 h(,r on(· tl)(·i·e, u.d lil t1 ' uv 1.} ''h 11 (rtH whe it prc)ul ii rold gr \ . I.H til t ~; J • \ 1 r . _.,_ • p)(J.}1 t:!e · h~, .' .-d llse f.nth vf' it; tJJ f 1 IUt I ilU fl ;& lh •· Clu. r11 pier. hi} JJ it. . :t) . lt.A r L Y. lH 1 • L 1. 'rht re • a. · w · •Lf s : l!J k . in v, •1i • ,·ch l,ut the~ rnu JJ Jn r> ( o L :{l . llhd Hll t t. • I had an opport unity of seeing a fine example of the Spirit of Co-operation and efficiency in the mechc:Lnical departn1ent. The vacuum pump and n1otor in the Hi . Density Bleach Plan t harl to be changed. T he )!ill­wrights under Ben Fi her, the Pipefitter · under Clyde Hildebrand, the Crane Cre·w under \Vade Hill and the laboret·s under Charlie . 'etz.er, worked togethe.r like clock woTk under the supet\isiou of Charlie \Vestnlor­land Assistant l\1aster 1\!lechanic. No confu.jon, work­ing smoothly, guided by the "Cha1npion Spirit . into high efficiency - congratulations to the Ma . ter )le­chanic, Billy Battison. It is a spirit ,,r cll ,\·orth culti:\·ating and one of the be, t and most influential mediun1s to do sv is your • Plant ~[agazine. Do you realize that? ~o -,·ou don't. lf you did. you ,,·ouJd avail yourself n1ore of the plen-did opportunity. it stands now you l~a \·e ver\­thing to thf\ Editol--, "Let Phillip:s do it. · 'I'hat is n~t right •. rou :o;houlrl be ju t a . pronrl or ~ ou1· nlag<\tin as you al' of any other product of yout· ~·o1np~1ny anct should tal,(\ a hand in n1aking it the 1 rid of the ('c.)m­pnny a11d your fPilo,vmen. I dn not 00\\ or '\11.\ ('tJTllP'lflY tb:lt h·t.· ns fUil ! \\' ducat ~d n1 n. (•t)ntt (ltt"\nl nntl ('~:tpable of wt·iting fot tltf' tnagazittt• fu~ the ( . hatnpjon Fibt·e ~ornp n~ ~ ud ~ c•t, '' ht•n lo<.JI\ing through ··Tho Log.·· it l o\ ~ lihf'• a ~ ·u•w n1an tHagaziiH .·· It i~ h' lht' shnnu . ~ of hundrt"d' of iutdH~·· nt , nd c tlucat,·d 'ntpl,lyct's t hc.tl ~ ll('h ~hPuld be the t a a11cl thl'l'(• i but ""'l') li t tle PX~U~ for it. 1 ~: 't•y t ng in ·e.;t·~ , ·~ •·.v t•hprui ~ t. P\ t'l'.' c:la -. in ~ t J'U~hH·. \ 7 L' r)' (,trw rn. 11 and nutn) 111t·n t h r-.•u~:hout tltt.' tllill Nlt a}Mll . 'f wrating oHtt·thiug of int ' l't':4 fur ' ·'Ph I •g." Thut i HlP pint·,• \\h(·tt• the l h unpinn 'pil'it 1 lu\\ uui liP ·d u vue l lJ« ust. Th ,,if, r ha h~ ·n (' t)llJt'('tt d \\' i th a c(lflli}Hil~ where it~ ·a eornpul 'Or · for every membe-r of the · taff to ontFibute au article to the Plant MagazLn very often. ln a:n:oth~r Mit!, th~ oml)an. gave a prize of :Rve do1lar (!) . 'fY month, not for the. be t a~rti ) no, that otdd ne>t he fair, as orne peopl possess th gift of \J riting jn a high .r deg,~:• e tha;11. othe1'S, but the p.r·~e ·v a drawn fo1· and e''~r one who had con:t1·ibu~ ted no matte.~.· how li.ttl \ .had an QQtial hanc" for the Jiiy do!flu:~. No doub sorne will say ~ ''Wh t'.S tller to · rite about'?" A :rath r '\>Vet.1k xcuse. - omethlng · going on e ·et·y da.: whi h, if properly "ttinu~ned up," would molm go0d reading. R m rn.ber that in reading mat~ ter our tast . i::s not atil e and something you don't Mt fot is of gre t inter -s t to y cu; felJOVi·'man. With a little. inter-st ~h wn and contx-i.bution- from those t1iat a,r q:uati11e<l nough mat rial shonr-G. come iJil eaeh month tO fitl a: m ga:zine twi-ce the size of "The Log." The :proper reporting of all the activities in the Y. l\-1. C. A . i.luring a month would fill a page or two. r ven-ure . to state that th~ xy amusing show put GH by the R. & A. dep~trtmen on 'the occasit;>n tio:r their· fourth ann~ part. will recei e but a shod mention 0r perhaps none at all. Let 's see, 1 hope I am wrong. ·Nothing to write about" a:nd et I 1\ave n;ever. seen an opeP. letter in '·The U:>g," giving your Y.iews on mat­ter o:f g-,peat interest to you and your f€11ow.rman. That is what your Plant Ma(lr,azlne is for a:nd I am s uJ:·~ t.h:e ;BdiJ;Qr \'\lill wekome ucl1 -eontributi@n ~ . It is hard for_ him to get tip a good number, unless he h« . your eo-operatiolll: Am I right? Is ne.t this a " p~e wh:~re the. good Champion Spirit could gi-ve ,a - helping hand_'! D& . o, and then 3 ou can fulJy expect . that "The J.A)g" - h~:>uld come out ·on a certain day and it will. There aheuld be 1·eaily no excuse fo-r not do~ ~ so. B o t ''The Log/' boost the intere 't of yoUl· fellow­men a_pd the interest 'elf . y:our Company everywhen~, " ev~rytime and every chance ou ha:ve and 1·emember th-at by doincg so you are bofl . tin-g your own interest. _Let ~ and all ernp n 'ees foS't-~r -tl~e Spirit 9f the Champion Fami1y at all tjmes lfke "Lindy' cli.d the · Spirit of St. Lon-is'J and th.e time nii2Y eome when a - . large WE wiN be written acros~ the -entra11ce of the ()ompany'g pnJpecrt,y. Jt iS Up to . Oll and pJease re­member, "You ean not -Bx.peet that the ompany should adv-ance your inte--rest unless YQU fp~: t afivan.ce the intere t of the Company ow. are Werking for." Therefor you1• o:wn interest i in yput own baqd$! MAYBE She. "''Is it dangerous to drive with on, hand ?J' H · "You bet! More than one fellc?w has run iJ')to -a chureh doing it." - ' • 7 A. J. RENO. JR. Son of M;r. and Mrs. A.lbe'rt J. Reno. MODERN ISM Colonel (to stranger at golf elnb): "I hate these :r:nodern girls. Look at that creature over there! Fan­cy her pa rents let-ting :her go rbout in plus-fours and an Eton crop. Bah!" Stranger: "That, sir, is my daughter." £(i)lonel: "Oh-er, sorry! I didn't 1 mow you were her father." Stranger: ''I'm not. I'm her rnotl'le.r." REGRETFUL ew Otfice Boy: "A 1nan calle<.l h re to thrash • ou ~ ·fe lULnt.J,t .s ago." Edito1·: · "What did ou Sit· to him?'' N w Offi J 11; "1 told him I as ·· ny you w-ere not ·n." 8 THE LOG • A.PRIL, 1929 No. 3 Published by "The Champion F amily'' as a Symbol of the Co­operation and Good Fellowship Existine at the Plant of the Champion Fibre Company, Cant on, North Carolina. Editon G. W. PBII.LIPS R. W. G RIFFITB REPORTERS M.A1'TIE LEATHERWOOD . -. Main Office and Labora tory FRANK BYERS . - ·-·····················-····-···· . Wood Yard N. D. PRESSLEY . ········-··········· . R. & A. HORACE REX ············· --- ·-·-·······--·························Finishing Room GLENN HOWELL . PoweT GI .ADYS MORROW . u . Car toonist A (;OOI> LE . 'SON 1n one of Ae~ov's Fabl ~s there i~ an inter Pst­ing story vf ·t. dog tl at \Ha not d fo r his . "'1 t,.d and endurance in 1u1 ling· gaJTH'. fL . had the t·t put;.H Jon of 1JeiTig th<~ best l1unt ,r in the nei ld,nJ laoorl }JJH1 usu;all,Y got what he went n rt 1'. ( n ! da v lt•• went olll ltt g'Pt a rabl it fv1· his d 1 n flr·r. p,., . ~ l . r s tJn 111 sew r . d up on , ntl aVt_ •h;: '( - o, r tlt t) hill Ltfld tt11 ,,ugh lh · ruA~ld<Jws 1 IH· ndJIJj J Jd th d• - (j f t • l\\ o-r h tt ·~· ft)Ut'" five . ix n1il; (J nlfJJ'e. 'J h J• h , ·1 J Yt·t· ' (1. ",i tflP. d sr \\';l t.rit-1< d ' IJ( tl h J'~ ltJ I d, ' ifl,ilJ) the old dolf. JJ,·c mdhg- \ , . u ·,\~ J!~s vn 11p l tf' <rna • und r· . tunu~rJ home hun r . .r ti1c-d. Wh . l his C'JII1 l ilUio1.s h g:•"'" co 1n t c fun t ~ i · J ill • and huntsn1anship, h \ rPplic<:l, "Don't forget the ha was running f f>r his life, ,,.hjlf; 1 ,·as only run inO" for n1y dinner.'' The dog was right. t here L~ a big ditfeJ·er•C(-. rhe rabbit. rea1iz(-td that he only had one life and he coLtldn't afl'ord to lo~e~ so he used bis head as ' ell as his feet to save his Ji fe. • If' human beings would use their head more. there v.rould be le::;::; acc-idents. RenH.:tnher. · ~the rabbit \.\as running for his life1 \\1hile t he dog wa·· (Jnt running for his dinne.r." ( ~LA I)\ ~ IOURO\V \\'._ ant t iitfrutuc,• .\(lll tu Mis:\ t, i l\l~s ~l·ar- " · Th . 1 "'~ d .t:.;t. ln f h) 11ktur' abn\ ' I i ·~ ,\l,)I'fuw viJi b ·'• "n dn,·~ . d in u,.,., tll ~ .uul p• ·t ·h l UJ n tt Ltutt· 111 tJt, rni, ldlt )f ,t ntonutaiu t re uu. ~h . qn to ht· h PI>.\ anl uh )r ugl d ~ l 'll h\.\ 1ng h •·::,; l f. 'I'IJ, l'lt · 11 1. ntil ·wlt \·h 1\(h 111 h r fat'\' is {he ·u - lorn 1'\ ttl ttH1 l' vf gl"t' t."'l.i ll ' • ~ ht \1\\~ \ · llh'l' l ~ Oll \\ ith • • ,., 111i1 , ~ ( H'lh r . h i el Jik,, il ' r unl , it as r th ' t~ din it u1 nt lin1 s it i t •u ·, hut, tl 't: i 1wrh•"tp ·, nH n · THE LOG , . 9 truth in the old saying, "'Laugh and the world laughs with 'OU1 weep and you weep alone ,,. t han we reali;z:e. Each month we hope to be able to publish at least ~me e.artoon., fronl the pen 0f Mi- :s Morr&w. On this pag . t't' ate publis)lin-g her flr:st contribution. BOOK MlLL The xn:-oduc"tibn f-or "C'' ana "D" machitie for Feb~ ruary ' a 111.6 ton~. A:n av rage .~f L6 tons increase over tlle Janu.ary record. Th cutt r Pl'oduction was also inal'eased 2. 7 tons. A plendid pirit of c<rop~ration seems to exist l:a-ougho.ut the Book Mill. The employee are st riv­! ng, no -only, to teadiJ.y incr-e.as the production of the variou: depa.rtmentc, but al o make a perfect sMe­t~' cm·e for 1929. We knu . that the arne spirit that increa 'es p1"oducti011 can also p;revent accidents. We are a.nxi<m to ee what the 1929 record wi:ll be. REWINDER ROOM RECORD The .Pl'oduetion of the Rewinders during th>e week endi:t.\lg Maroh 24. wa the best dm·ing any p1·evious week;. 'Those deser\'ting e pedal menti0n are, E. M. Lee, crew laader; Ro~7 Crisp, operator No. 2 Rewinder; Q . •. . Donaldson, opecrator N<>. 4 Rewinder and M . . Mol·gan, helper · Proouction on No. 2 Rewinder was 6:56,857 yards 0t an averag of 169,471 yal'd.s per day. The production of No. 3 was 692,991 jrards or an average of 115,498 ya:rQs per day. ·~umber 4 rewound 840,436 yardS or an average of 122,59{) yard per day. You will note that Number 4 with J. L. Donaldson, operator, made the best record. Mr: J . L. DoRaldson alg() rewound 48 sets of Po tag.e Stamp paper or 199,- . . ~ 466 vard in 12 hours. · ~ . ' ' • E. B. PLANT I The employee o! the E. B. Plant are proud pf their February .l'ecord. 63.6 ton of chloti.ne per day for the mooth. It i:S the highest ton.n.a.ge made l;>y the Elec" troJ.v tic Bleach Plant, and tney deserve a word of . }ttaise. The production for one da wa.s 66.5 tens­The E. B. Plant has also put on a safety prograro whicb. win ao doubt, aecomplish splendid results. Mr. 'York, superintendent T. L. Jamison, F'loyd Hbs shift foremen and Vin.son Reuo foreman of repair' are behind the movement whole~heartedly. • -.-. ' f R --- -~-· ,•, 6 -· ~--- . - ·- _ _.__ -' ·-_._ - . . ·-·- __ , ___ ·- - - . --·- . . . . - . . -- · . . . -· . ' '1 ;;. ' / ~ . . LORETTA MACKEY AND GASTON DUCKETT Loretta Mackey, one of the fastest counters in the Finishing room, was counting pape1· for Gaston Duck­ett, who is a very rapid finishex. Knowing that she would be kept very blisy, and in order to encourage her, the following eonversation ensued : Gaston: Loretta, 1 am sure you will like counting paper for me. Why, it will be j ust like wor'King in front of an electxic fan . Loretta: Perhaps so, but, I don't like too much hot air. 11D0es a galfer ever tell the truth ?'1 ''Oh, certainly he ometimes ealls another golfeT ~ liar." Jack HWhat i the first thing w shoulli do at th party?'' Jill "Crack the iee." • 10 THE LOG • PRI. GTIAttE ,.,.olomon the ~ts-e ~el.n"e \v said nLo, the ~inter is past, the rain is ove.r a n-d gorte : the t1ow-cr~ appear 0 11 earth; the tinH~ of the singing of bl·rds is. cotne and the voice 0f t he turtle L heard in oul' land the fig­tre~ putteth fo1·th he.r green .f.igs ~tnd t he vines 'Nith the tender g!'ape give a good sn1eU.'' The mo t popular season of th year is springt in1e. Pa:rtl)~ perhaps becau . e V\·e have been sl\ut -it1 during the ~l.nter months, and a1'e glad to get out and enjoy the o~t-d oors . . Al . o. because all nat ure i · taking <;>n ne\V life pu tt1ng on her new d re~s of many col()l'.S. T~e buds bursting fol't h. t he f]o\\le t· fHling the a,ir \Ylth s,~·eet fragr ance) the birds sing1ug S\1\:eet love songs the green f ields blush ing ~vi th the colot·s of the rainbo,v, the forest sn1iling and evel:'y hea.rt .beating \\ith joy. Spring begins lYlarch 21, when the sun enters the sign of the Arie and ends June 21, at the tin1e of the summer solstice. Lasting for a per iod of 90 days. The changing of the posi t.ion of the equator and ~liptic in relation to the sun, and the turning of t he earth around the sun causes the changes in the "ea­sons. PO\-VER PEP ARTMENT The Power department boys, under the leader ship of W. VI. MiteheJl, are fully organiz.ed fo:r a great bat­tle against "Old l1a.n Carelessness,. 11 Their s lo"'an is 11N o A cc1. d.e nts During 1929 Cau:sing Lost T·i me.o J ~ ' We believe that they are in earnest and t)hat a goocl record will be the result . We are anxious to see then1 make a clean record during 1929. It ean be done. Recently Mr# Mitchell, the superintendent, called a meeting of his foremen and key~men~ and organi:ted committees an.d they arG "'-'"Orking ha1~d to nutke the best record yet. Bobl;je (b1·oke but .r~HOtH"~·cful} "V'aggy~ do yon krww the difl'eA1Ctlt:e b£·twnG ~ t irhup j11 ~ t'l rn GE l~ ~tnct in f.L tax1 ?'' Pegg.r--HPm afraid r don'l.'' .Bobbie-*""flu~n we :rr1uy ;·us «-.·. 11 4 ;u 1 J,;u, f\-".· ' t1 a rn car.'1 Pas~iTJ g Show. ~REND OF TliE TIMES • We oft~n hear the question ask(ed, ''Arc the people of tke wo.rla beco,r;ning mor~ wicked ·!" . Dtm1t you thh\k we are pa -sing through the most evil period_ of Lhe history of hutnan life ?'' \Yell, it is bad enot1gh1 IJ~tt perha!)s not quite so bad as we some,titnes think. lt depends altogethe-r upon the angle f rom which \ve see tbirngs. Two men see a fight and then· testimony n1ay be em­tixely different. We look upon a great pieture but each of us ai'e ilnpressed in a diffeTent wa"' . Unfort1mateJy the ne,~spapers pt·-esent the wor s t ··i:de of a bad pictuxe. lVIurders, robberies and all dis­graceful acts of life are feature stories in our da ily papers. All of the bad things aPe emphas i2ed and stalld dut most promi\nently on th~ front page, while good ·deeds are relegated to the jnsi~e page. One thing, h0\veve1·, in pQ\rticular, that in1pr esseC1 us deeply, is the f~t that Ex-l',resident Coolidge sen :-­ed two te~:m s in the White H<>use, and reUred to pri­. va.te life ·with a good name, r espected anrl honored by the people of the United Sta~t~s. Perhap not beeau . e .he ~'~S a bettmt man or .n1ade a better p1·esident than ltis pJed~eessor, but beeause, we berieve, the people . a:re begmniug te I'ealize that ugly crjticis1n and sland­erous talk about our ch.lef executive i-s undigpified, un­_ g.entlananly and unpatriotic. in· fact there isn:t as mll:ch Qf it d(}ne to:day as there was a few years ago~ Po1iticjan$ are · moTe considerate, moTe cha ~tab1e and l~ss .a0usive. We are surpris-ed, so1netimes., at the young people of today. We can not understand why they engage in eertain things me-rely because of a thz-ill, when they know that the inevitable result is sorrow and sufiei'­i. ng. Yet, ·we "vonde1· if our present-day n1 hod of enl­phasizing the bad and saying so· little about the good things of life, doesn't corrupt otrr 1nJnds to a lar~ extent. We know that what \Ve see, hear and think has its effect upon our actions. Still \Ye belie e . that the world is not all baa and in spite of Ute evil t~lld~tt· cia:; there are evidences of a leavt'ning pu·it. ·which in time will have a whole ·un1e efl'ect upon the soeiru o:tder of lhe day. \Vhy b\u.tne the L)ung people? The life \\"e \iYtj~ ti~e things we do and say " ·ill infiY. ~nc't! thcu\ fo1: good or eviL - TR l~ E JJl~ ~""· p a ~t.U S-·l ' lJ.at bEi:lJy 0 r Y•)U t';-, nnl d,, perG ·~(.' t i UH:\ g {l ufl hi dnt.ld v.-' '"' llu!ilH - ··Ht:. ShlU\h nn.rt. ll~ UlU n l't'g,lal' C~\f "''·"·.-. CbJJ}'." ~- • • ' THE LOG 11 --~--~ --- --- ~ --- ~ --- PIPEFITTE R'S CLASS . The above picture hows C. A. Hildebrand's class 0f pipefitters. Mr. Hildebrand has a fine class and they are doing plendid work. You will note that safety is one of the important features of the class. The men are taught to "·ear g~ggles when doing any kind of work where there is danger of an eye injury . R. AND A. NOTES. Br N. D. Presley. On Saturday night, March 16th, the R. and A. Department held it's f-ourth annual pa1·ty at the Y. M. C. A. The pt0gram wa as fol-low. : · - 1lu.,ic selection by Hudson's tring Band.' Introduction Thoma Furne , Jr. Addre. of Welcome l\ir . Batti­son. Musi:c by band. . Colored Wedding. (C. C. Smith) Parson G oxge Wa h.ington Johnson. {F. C. Holland) Flowex girl. (0. L. Brown) Flower g1rl. · (Will Boyd) Hambone, Gro m. • (Bob Higgins). Dinah Sylvester Brown, Bride. (0. R. Stroup) Train bearer. (B. M. Stamey) Ring bearer. (F. A. Smith) Colonel Charles St. Patrick. (C. A : Hildebrand) Chic Ching Chow Chinese butler to the Col- . one!. · (W. T, Morrow) Uriah Deutel·o­nomy Wingate, Col. Valet to the Colonel. (W, M. Battison) Hiawaiiah las . (T. C. Allen) Hiawaiian lass. (W. R. Erown) Hiawaii n lass. (F. Smathers) Hiawaii4n la s. (G. W. Wise) Hiawuiitm lass. (C. A. Holtzclaw) Hiawaii:iJ.n lass (K. CJal'k) Sp.auish dane r. (Myrtl, Allen) , 1 ni. h dane r, (P. D. D w e · ) Rolle1· 'k te Acrobat The spacious gymna iwn room and stage was artistically decora­t ed with a profusion of evergreens and artificial shamrocks, symboliz­ing St. Patrick' Day with R. and A. There was a better attendance than at either of th previous par­ties, and at promptly :15 P. lVl. the w •dding party entered the room, led b.y the aged pm'son, tot­ter ·ing falt ringly n hls cane, but with agile inten , to the ~ trains of that b autjful old ·wedding mareh Mend J·"oLln, played by Mi Nan­cy Killian. The paxty Pl'OC eel d to the st Te wher an altar had b en arrang cl, th decoration and col­ot · ch me Hll of which ' er in 1 ping ' it.h th combination o ~ a ·ion. In an unst ady but di - Linctl audible vole the par n 12 THE LOG . --~ --- ~ --- ~ --- ~ --- ,--~ --- ~- ~--~--~--~-- Our ln.~d Employees are enti.ded 10 the \~ting Nurse Service of the Metropofita.n Life Iosumnce Cn When Sick Don.'t mtit Call Your Friend the Nurse eloquently pronounced the wedding rites. uniting l\1r. and ~Irs. Ham­bone in the holy boJlds of w:edJock. After the 1narriage ceren1ony the parson recejved a telegratn from Colonel Charles t. Patrick inviting him and the entire ~Ted­ding pat·ty to his mansion fm· a marriage festival. The invitation wa gladbr accepted uy the party who found an elabo1·ate celebration a·waiting them. After each n1en1- ber of the party bejug prope1·ly in­troduced to the Colonel the festivi­ties began. .1 Iusic, plays, the I-Ion­olula rag dance by six Haiwaiian lasses in full native costumes, a Spani-sh dance, dancing and stunts bv the Roller Skate Acrobat, a ll • of ·which heJd the color<Jd t roupe spc!J bound for n1ol'e lhan half an hou1· and staJted tht n ~'v l r tnar­lied couple on t},eir way in I>Hss anrl happin~sR. 'fh(! en tertai m ~nt was u s u~'e(.,~ in ev~ry 1 <:. JJPCL, and whi le ju ·1 ~tn an1ainr0 c h<,w, it afftJrrted H::; ruuch antus_mcnt CiS~ l •l Oft! . i<,Hal (JJI ·• A.fte•· a coUt\ · uf d J iciou~ J ·~;~ frcshill (~nts, :erv ·d u nrle• LJ w di . r ect,i(;n of ~ 1 i s Nanry KiiJ ia rt ~tl1d ·1 iss j Irtrg-:.ret Haly lJUl t <Jtt , a grt-i;Jt pa>·L of th r-ro\ d aUt!nd()d the . r>eciaJ l>.arn t la nl~( n l 1 he •.u·m .~1 ·y hall put un bJ ;r; 1 , . C. 0. S1ni h. 1\tle , rs. C. A. }JjJ1lebrand. r:. C. Sn1ith. C. L. \Vestn1oreland, T. Fur-ne and I en Fisher were the ch ief pron1oter of the ent ;)rtain­ment and surelv did lhe1n ·elves • cr:1dii for the hort period of time in malting preparations. The R. and A. as a whole wishes to thank Ivlr. VI. R. BTown and l\r1iss Nancy Killian fo1· their efficient and un­tiring efforts in helping put lhis program across. Nothing )s qoite so provoking as to hurry when one is late for an appointment and find the other person is not there. Dayton Ne,v-s: A Jiebre\\.' . teppt:d up to the raih·oad t i cl<eL-c:~ffice ·window and .-.;aid •·1\Ice . .;lc r, I \\ant a tick t tu .:;prin~f)c lJ . , " \~' hid . "'-' p1·ingli(>ld ?" as ~L·d lhe t i d <et S{:' I h.) r. ·• S pl i ug·fi ') ld, 111. : • 'pringfii·)d, Ol1 w, or ·p.-ingf, ·Jd, ~]H :-lS. '!· TJ, . trt-JVdt r lvnl\ t·d t hnug hlilll for· a tal1 HtJ tr•, H ill~ { h L' ll ·~ l\t\d tO l t'­pi Y. "Vich i. 1 he· c·lt t•iq ~ t, M le lt·J' "~ ·~-- I•,,•flldti N '\\S. c ' a ·- t I t hi1 1\ if ~ Ollf .,. u~· tds c.ll'• g ut rl NOT I CE WliA'r ABOU1 1\JJA(;AZI ~E: '! WOULD YOU LlKE TO see­SCRIBE FOR TiiREE OU FOUR GOOD lN'rgRESTING Or\ES? YOU 0 LY l1AVE TO PAY HALF CA~H AND THE REST WfiEN THE 1\-IAGAZll'fE ' ARE DELIVEUED. TfiEREFORE, IF YOU DO . "'T GET TI-IE l\IAGA­ZINES YOt; D01 'T HAVE TO ~lAKE Till~ LAST PAYME~T. IF YOU ARE I T'PERESTED EE WEL~PERHAP ~ WE HAD BE,.fTER ~ ~ OT AY ANY MORE. BUT \\THY -1-IOULD vVE \VORRY. THE PLEASt:RE OF CHATfiNG \Vl'IH A PI-:ET­TY SALE LADY Ir' WORTH SOl\tlETI-11 TG ISN'T IT'? .LONESOlUE ··~Iother, do liar go to heaven ?'' ·'Why, no, dear," replied the mother in ~ome .: urprise. '·certainty not.'' There \Ya::; quite a pause. Finall,\' tht! boy said quietly : u\Vell. it n1ust be ntighty lone-some up there with only God and ,eol'ge Washington.'' E~changc . • BOOK MILL NEWS By Horace Rex. R. J. M. · Cavanaugh ha been in :?v!obile, Ala., for a few da s on bu ine s. is t l land ef coon ong and nigger mourning . Jack refused to tell v·hat he did f or r ecr ation while away. Mi s Ethel Smith and Bonnie 11ill spent the week-end in Green­ville. That's enou h to sp:end in Green ille. Mr. Dan Mills i the proud father of a bouncing boy, born March 25. we· are glad to see Ray Pie s back on the job again. Mi s aUie Mae Myers spent the week end in A heville with her mother who is at Norburn Ho - pi tal. We hear Ramelle about to be married. Rarrlelle. wangeT I' S Good luck If any one should happen to in­quire (which t hey won't) the Re~ ·wL'tder crew on No. 2, 3, and 4 de­- erve a lot of credit for the reco1·ds thte.y are making. Keep it up boys! We hear t hat Bonnie fell for a cer tain young man a few days ago. We are orry she hut·t her knee's in doing . o. George : Mr. Cavanaugh do you appreve of tbe five day week. Jaek: Yeh and the five day week end. Here is a tory of a pair of tights in two words. Two Scotch~ men. A concrete example of how to attain success is pave your way from the bottom. • THE LOG A-/MILE !.5 rHE. ONE THIN<{­THAT 15 WOitrH MORE IF IT 15 CRAvKE.O • LABORATORY NOTES By Mattie Leatherwood. C. N. Stinnett who has been in Chattanooga f o:r a few weeks bas 1:·eturned and i at his old job of testing strength of pulp. Charlie says that the high waters caused a shut down, and he just came hom~ but we believe that he had a severe ca e of homesickness, any way he seems mighty glad to be ba.ck. • • · We are glad to report that Bert Cagle who was sick · for several months is sufficiently recovered to be on the job again. MI·s. L. K Gates and little daughter, Caroline, are visiting -home folks in Bradenton, Fla. ' R. W. Haywood, who has been with us about a year has resigned his position, and has accepted work with the State Department at Ra­leigh . Roy Roge1·s, of Clyde, has joined our forces recently having been employed to fill vacancy caused by R. W. Haywood's resignation. The classes in · elementary and paper making chemistt·y taught by Messrs. F. V. Doutt and L. E. Gates have been well attended du- , 13 ring the pTing term. The follow­ing men who have been enrolled in the class in elementary chemis­tr ' have recentl taken an exami­nation and will be given certifi­cates for having completed the prescribed course. Wayne Robin­son, H. J . Matheson, Harmon Trull and T d Rhodes. Wayne Robinson who is attend­ing school at Georgia Tech under the cooperative plan will return to his chool at the end of this week. His alternate, F. O'C. Fletcher is expected to be here and begin the work on Monday. THE STORK. Born to Mr. and Mrs. Wesley Medford January 29, a daughter, Betty Louise. Mr. and Mrs. Homer Moore are r ejoicing over the arrival of a son. An old J ew was sinking fast. In feeble tones he spoke to his family gathered round the bedside. "Is Rachel there? he' asked. "Yes, dear, I'm here," replied his wife. "Is my son· Solomon there ?" "Yes, father." "Is Hyman there ?" · "Yes father." "Is little Abie there?" "Yes father." "Is my daughter Leah there?" "Yes, father." "Are you all there, every one of you ?'' "Yes, father," came the chorus. "Then who in thunder is looking after the hop ?" London Tit- Bits. . 'PLAY ~l>.fE FOR. Tt-IE. OTHER FELLOW'~ SAKE, EVEN IF I • t DON'T GIVE , ' GOL·DANG fOR 'I'OU~ OWN SAFETY 14 THE LOG --- ~ --- ~ --- · --- ~ --- ~-~ --- ~ 1\fiss Leola . chenck, ~rillie Justice. Hilda Sc1·ogg~ . Addie Stont· and Glydt. :ingleton, Choru · Girls in the Book l\iill Indoor eniertai nment :\'hich wa held at the •·y·· during February. ============~==~===========================·-=-============== OUR SICK ,J. If. \ 7h i te ·who has been in the ho. }Jital f 01. ::orne time ~U (feting front an ot-~eJ ation, has r~turned h on-1~ mucn impJ o' ed. Arthur Cod ~r . en1ploy ·tl jn t11e tor t'oom h . r tut ned horn " fr 111l t,h ft1 pita) "hu J1 :J \\a u dr . J· tt eahf! l~ nt f J veral 11 ~nth . \ ~ ~ ,. ;) lad to k liJ\.y tlh:tt he ill ')l'l) b \\ en gai . l . ll. B ·o vn h!l. l;t en "' 1 . icJ i t f I . zv;Jral day Ulf • ft m n att ' f IJt' nr!hitj . . ~ . L• \ i al 1 to c)J • .,,u ni ,(: t on ·ihtt . 1J '' • . . ' I . lo ~ . • } • • Jn ) 1I 1 1n t1t I lit j • rtn, Ul • I 1 . Jackie, the little sun of )lr. and -'Ir:. Grad~ \Villinms. i::; recover­ing fron1 a barlly burn d hand. Tlenrr Hnbj nson, \\ ho ha . b •t•n under the care of a ph ~ ~ ician for . . evl'ral week::;, has ret lu·ned fl' . D~Hl 't tnl 11pl0 on the f ·eling.:- of vuur feliO\\' man. becau . e v u find ' ~ lhetn Jle" · ill.(}n, Ohio; lJ -\\U aud po li t j~. hw A~ . j r ~nr Seer ta ry of C<Jrn­TOt'rr~ c.:jnr e !'Ju •, 2, 1927, ( t ,llet.:~, 1 r n, yx,m, !lnd de­l i•,rcf'b mail. h:u; c·barK( of p•J f I'Jffil.eJS, P.v L.Jr Savin~. n .IIJit:, pare I rrr L } r ru, ruuJ :qr 1 1~il • t rVIt e. Srotltlry fJ/ (.,,11111111ft"t }{t>flf ~ J 1". J. MfJ • I Bnr u J 1 J). r ttHt. : , 1; ·h., P1 ( J, • 1 81ii ~ 1 lant,d;H·rurr•r · p r • "· \ ul- ,.,j au , 1 r fl tllld r i ( ' hi· . g•11 ·iurc I'JJ2; <httl tw Arrrwttr ·tucf fun t~·, mr r' \'l•rd • C' 11. I ,rk~ Fedt r1 l ,~ n u vr.,-y tt 11 }"4:,,r~. },, ••lr4J f (; " f lip,lJt hoo~t , li l•cri ~. Hu11·au ,,f • 1im :.:, unvigativn, a\ i.tli'm, t • , , . tiuc•t!! P .r t• 11t c,jf,,. , t (, llt·c t l. u~­dnt: t 0 1 tYI rWfat' I UCl: • 11d & If ,i!J• P') 1'1 d t Jt)ll. • ~ r crrlary of L/11· Trca.wry A:--oREW \~· . M t L I-0 ~ Born in Vi n :-burgh, Pa., T\la rch 24. J 8 5 ~; hanker Secre­t: t rY of the Trea ~ un· !- ince t 921. Dra ft - the budget. collects Fccleral taxe . , pays bilL , make' c urrency, ~ upe rvi se fl ea hh Ser· vic-e, ecret Serv ice :Jnd Coa'l.t G u.a rd, enfo rce ~ P rohi bi tiuu. St r r r tarJ• of tht J\'11q_•y C' li ARl.f\S F. AtJA.M. Burn Aug. 2, 1866, at Quincy. !vf a · . t h<: grC"at, gre:tt grand-.nn of j tJhn Adam-.; l ow~ ~r : offi(•t<r 11 JJl31l~ c:o rp Jf'l. fiun -. tr e a ~u rer t)f JI<H\'ard ( n lltge C'orporn ­tit ~; ~li ppa C!H ~ac ht " Rt:- o­lul ·~ '" iuuer rJJ i ntt"rrt :tti•HHll r :1 C::f'". 1 920. J L. dt:~r;.r~ vt the c:o1 "" uc­titm, cttui-pmenr, aud rqrai r ut ·" r V\ rl t1 if(;( t "P ' 11 ion-. of , . tf, tfld rtltll of the u. ~t ~I \;, 'IJJ'C'r , i• C:S lht " \ 't" ~\' ,lf ( 4JIJ ge, tl11! A· .,d ' rD.\ , , \ n· ,, ,p,.Ji , ,ncJ rhr • ',1val c ,.,,~ , - \ oat••r} t f'Cfdnry of Jf/ ar J·' ~' r \V. Gooo Born in Cedar Rapid 1 Iowa, Sl' pl. 24-, 1866; I:Jwy·er Repre­~ ent at i vc in Congres-., 1900- 1923. A ppointed h om Jllinoi . ll a~ ch ~trgt> of the t;. S. Army and (he ~Jilitary Acatlfmy at Y\' e. l P<>int , direc t ~ ri,•a and h:u hor imp rrn·c m~nt~ aud coa . r fo nificttt ion~. a dministers the Panama Canal Zont>. Surl'ltlry of If,, lulrrio-r R \\' L \ M .\ , . \\. U.B L. R Horn ju Jloo t'll~bo ro, Jn., April J 3, t8i5; educator; pr<lt. medi­cim ·. tanford l ' n i,er ity, Cali ­f( ltoia. prt . ideut ~ i nt' t> 1916; ('hid ol con:-.en :11ion divio.ion, 1_1, S. f< od i\ dmin i ~ t ratiMt, 19 l 7; de- lq {:.t tt', ro P .m .\ rnerican Clln-h. rfnCc at H a' ~ 11:1, 1928. f . , tlt'' ptHt· n t -. alld cup r rigbt~. t!ll p~ n 1-.t . fHahli • llnd . and Na-t ioll:t l P c.~ rk . Jrr i~ ~·t . u·itlJ:t n,J . h:1" \~ b .r rgr ui 1h~ l n,fi .tll ' , . f.l, . ku . ' " 'l lJ .1\\ .tit, f' n lJ t , '" tl ,tta fnl' ,~·hs ••I . < r 11 r. n, t•R• . , "' &tl J' 'I II'H f llt f C, l ltl • Ill• r 1, tr.d I ixn h3 \ lttn t t~tlc· d i ht~ the p 1 gr vI • J, t\• 1 . t f' rc: t•l• l tf t.tl u ·~ J •)H lit I kh.) l llnNJ.r y Grn.-rol \Vu.r.t.u . t D. 'Vflr t:Hf.Ll. Born Sept. '9, 187+, at \-\'in,na Min11.; Jaw ~·er Solic itor C . n­cral t>f ( . S . . Jnce June 4 , t•,z-. (A P cmocrat. ) Legal advj:;er to ••-.e Pre. idena and orber e xec u rin~ offv:,.l <>. pro ecute:- off(!tH.Ier . agai n-.r ~ ed­e- ral la\\l'1 ha. charge ,,f Fcdl.'ral pn~tOnt-. ct ular)' of .qgrit ulturL .'\RIU( K . f. H\lll! H.orn in Princeton. ~to., .I u!y 12, I l i; J:t ,,.Hr: C o . of 1\li:-· l-nnri. 192 1-2'. 1 . ut' daih " c<lther au,t rr'>l' report:-, ha . f'h.trg · nf Wte t rC' . - f'n :utous, iu~pt'Ct" rfl.(·Jt int~'Hd~td f·~r int~r't \lt( :;hipmt:nt, ::-(ck' t • improw· aop!; nnd h~ td o t ~t••fk, (' 11 h•r c' l l nll .trtd Pru .\ ,·r ot t <JOo. ] AMh J. P .\\ I, HM n .lt I~ rt>d c: ;!!l t, $il ut 'h \Vdr . , Pn. 2', l S7 1; to ,\mt" ri · • .a lh I ~ ~ : , . ,,, .uui ''n•l \\ttrk-r r . ~c·n t i ~H \ elf l .th·• i ll\' M.aid'\ • l !»i? l. .\ ptJ!•rntnl fr~tm P c·tHI"\ I" tni11 Eulo1n t"!o. immigrclrt• ln • ui.l n.u · Ul lil :Ha . ll l.t ' ', ··ollt't"l' l.ahnr r tti,tic :-, mt~ cli ~ t l.lh ,. lli-. p tll t";c, in t•st ig lh' hrnhh 3 Jhl .,. 'upations (•f ' omcm and l·hil,t­r< Jn • UNITED ~T TE. P TBLIC HEALTH SERVICE STUDIES PHYSIC L DEVELOPMENT HAT y ·t matic phy ical e ~ erei e ryi}1 incr~ -e the height ' ·eight, and ital ca cit ' of ch ol bo. i , ho\.,.·.n . in a pe ial experim nt undertak~ en by t \e -nit d State' Public Health ervice and repo1 ted r - centl.· in Public Health Bulletin No. 179. PerhaP~' the mo ·t inte.re ting re­. ult \ 'a the slight, but igniftcant, gain in heiO'ht. Growing boys may be e peeled to how increa e in height il the cour e of a few mouth . Thu . the group who were not given the peci l exercise and who were request d to take a lit­tle exerei e as po sibJe gained on the average about two-thirds of an inch. But the "experimental" group gained nearly a whole inch during the four months of the tudy. Out of 50 b6 s in the 1(con­trql" group only 4 gain~d a much a an inch and a half during the perJ.od; oui of 6 in the <~expexi­mental'' g oup 18 gained that much. Vhile it is recognized that thi r te of increase could not be carried on indefinitely it probably wouJd be a considerable factor over a pe1--iod o time. In ?; eight. the boys given the ex:­erc, i es bowed an average gain of 3.3 pound , where a the "control 1 ' group showed a gain of 2.0. In the form r , 26 children . gained five pound o1· mor , in the latter onl five. Vital ca:pacity (the amount of air hieh can be expelled fron1 the lung. ) al o . howed igni:ticant- 1 · greater increa e tn the "ex:p r­imen tal" group~ The · tudy a· carried on pri- THE LOG marily to a rtain whether gym­na i m ,.orl ;: ould have a definit effect on the p stur of boy: . An • impr vement in muscular tone Re ms unqu stionable, inc a srer­ies of str~ngth tests taken before and .after the exp :riments indicat­ed that the boys in the speciaJ clas es increa ed more rapidly than other boys of th · same ages. How­ever, aU measures of posture, in~ clud~ng those made on photographs taken before and after the experi­mental period, indicated no differ­ences in po. ture, from whatever point of view considered. The bodily growth of boys ·and men from three to fifty years of age is shown in considerable de­tail in the same bulletin (Public Health Bulletin No. 179), based on a study of 2,2GO persons on whom detailed physical · examinations were made toge,ther with front, bacl<, and profile photographs of the body. The results of each measure­ment a1·e given in the report, so that am excellent idea is obtainable as to how growth proceeds, its re­lation to puberty, and the changes ' auring adult life. Special atten­tiQn is given to the va1·iability of the rne~surements from person to per. on nt different ages. The measurements divide t.h em- ·s.elve into two rather hm·ply con-trasting groups. Weight, vital capacity, and strength begin at very low values and ri e with amazing rapid't during adol.e - cence. The other meastn·ements show a mod rate .increase through­out childhood: th y ar in g neral, linear m. a. l.lr ment on the body. All , ~':tow r markable in ·r ases ut the time f puberty. 17 Certain measl1remen ts reach a maximum in early adult life and tb reafter decline (strength, vital capacity, chest expansions ). Oth­er · ar still rising more or less at 50 years (chest measurements, ab­dominal circumference, weight). Record of tests of strength on one thousand boys and men f1·om fourteen to fifty years of age are also give•n in this health bulletin. The te ts made included: pull (strength of pulling the bands apart, recorded with a dynamome­ter); push (pressing the hands to­gether) lift (lifting from floor) hand grip; lung force (height to which a column of mercury can be · sent by blowing into a tube) and lung fatigue ("holding one's breath" length of time the col­umn of mercury can be maintained at 40 millimeters on a single breath) . Outside of the last measurement (which shows little variat ion with age), we find that all the strength tests rise during adolescence in much the same manner, spurt up­ward at puberty, reach a maxi­mwn about 30 years, and then de­cline slightly. At any one age, a height and weight increase, strength increa - es; but it is of particular interest that for persons of the same weight strength deer a es with h ight. For persons of the same height, strength increase' marked­ly with weight. All of the t sts how great va­riabil: ity from p rson to peT on at an one age, ~p ially lung fore& ~md lung fatjgue, and there wa no indication that an of them could be tak n a reliabl indice of phy - ical condition. . 1 CORRE T -IT_ MI1 ENGLI:'\H 1 ~\IDED B - PROPER L. 1TRO­Dl! Tl . - TO THF COO • ~ sh11ple lesson in spelling· \Vhicb n1any .-\n1ericans \\·i ll ·welco1ne i being broadcast by Dr. R. Adam Dutcher of the Penn rlvania tate College. The original of the \~ord crvHa­nun,. "·hich has received various interpretations, i& given by Dr. Dutcher as a con1bination oJ the ,~·ord ·'vita'' meaning "life''. and "amlnes". The final "e" was latel' dropped from tl1e 'vord ('vitanune" to show that the:e substances did not belong to the chemical group whose nan1es end of •fine '. Nor does it connect them "-jth such dis­reputable members of the chen1ical famil} al) ~trychnine. Names with "in H endjngs have be~u given by the scientist;; to products of un­kno,, ·n or Yetriou.o chemical consti­tuents such as jnsulin and th pro­teins. 11 But,'~ t'!omn1ents Mh:>f'> Eleanor Enri7ht of the _ "-attcJJia) Dair~· Coun<'i]) "it is n<;t "30 lnjl.Jf)t1.Hut how we bpcJI tJ.e VJ atnin,, a~-; thut we really g("t :tcquajntPd with the1n, knrJ\\ witt r~ they :: h01 nd, and whc.t th ev. · can do fr>r us." To trrfJ·.,(]uee the ( <.>f,J. t•J v i b.unh, A, 1\'lis:) Et1ri~ L t ugg·~sh~ a l ' ~d- pt riels in butt ' J'. Vit( min B Vhtdd } te w~leomc at tht r~lrrlil.v t~thl e t-t J ou:t d iu ht~le gl; ln ('( r'f•· ls HJJrl vita•rHl r. C, ~·hie 1 shon1<1 ;11 o be-: ·:t daily callP.r, i fvurJd iu 1\'li-:;s Ln· r-Jght · thi l·,J recjp, featurinr r'"!;h fndt THE LOG . •: -. DRIED FRUITS PROVE CHEAP AND HEALTHFUL Fruits can be enjoyed in the winter as rnueh as summer and those who are watching the health of the fan1ily will see that oranges, grapefr uit, apples and well-ripened bananas are always at hand. Dried f:ruj t, such as raisins, figs, dates, prunes, apricots, a1·e an eco:­nomical 'vay of bringing variety to the winter table. Wash well, t·e­move all stems before putting to soak, and let stand in water over night. Fruit should he cooked in the same water to retain all the mineral eon tent. Two recipes featu1·ing tnese dried fr uits are sugg·ested by lVliss Lenna Tho1nas of the National Dairy Council. Prune Whip (Serves twelve) 1 lb. prunes1 0 cup sugar, lfa cup gelatin, 1;._1' cup cold 'vater, 1/a tsp. salt, 1 tbsp. lera1on j uice~ 2 egg white . , 1 cup whipped cream, }~ eup chopped nut 1neats. Chipped Beef in Whole Grain Cereal Uan,ekin 1 cup chipped beef, 2 tb . 11. b ut­ter, i cup Jnj iJ , 2 level tu~lJ. f1our. 13roil 1) ~ef for few minu les in buti<.•r unUl crjbp. Adtl 1n ilk and thick l fl with the flour. 1 f iht b -ef is (•ry !Sa l t.' it l1ou ld Lc snaked f'or 10 (Jf"' 15 Jrduu( . in enlrl wat ' r J . 1 r re Cl)tJJ· inv. ( ) JH' oft th - tu w whol . Krain " " 1' al pro lu t i .~ n1uf1 •f. • Otad•. in thv Rt 11 u fa cin·k ,.f'uk out tlw , .• nt ·r altfl ( !t.er cJ::t 1ifl1' the tnuf­f st, llJI \ i1lt t_•H•nrncd dJil•P ·d htlP t'. Orau c anti (~nl:pt·fruit S alnd lj,., or n~Yfl8 &nd ~rap a uit. :AJ range on cri ~lJ ll!ttuce leaves and serve with French dl·e sing. Winter Short Cake "Even though fre~h fruit· lik~ stl'awberries are not ava.il.(thle for ihe winter table, there j~ no rca.:on why we should feel that 've must give up that deliciou-, fluickly made dessert known a hort cake. For instance, banana shortcake can be enjoyed all througn the "vinter n1onths," says lvli·· · Grace Pollock of tne ""ationa} Dairy Council. Let'a try: this r ecipe to­day: Banana Short Cake 14 cup butter, y; cup sugar. 1 egg. lj_. cup milk, 1 cup, flour. 2 t ~p. baking poy~rder, 14 t . p. salt. Cream the butter, add uga.r gradually, and egg well beaten. ~1jx and sift flou-r, bttl\ing powder. and saJt, adding aJtenul.tel · " rith milk to fir" t n1ixtu re. Beat thor­oughly, and bake in a buttered r ound tin. Cut ripe banana in fah·ly thick licos. and put on top of the shortcake. Baked Egg in Ham -·a$es To 1 mcasu.r of crurnhs ~dd · 1 rnea~ ure scalded n1ilk :l.ntl 1 mEM;'\­urc of finel y-c ho ppt~d, c oked hru-11. Line gr a~t·d cu.lard eupb ;vith n1ixlur ::-., Brt:ak eggs into h0 <'· n­t.- r~ nnd Utlk ~ until ~Ct. S t'VL 'ith while ~UCt. ~Ia~ h •d pot.nto ll\~n· lu• U~t,>)t{ in ~t all of the hrNlrl • ~u1d nlilk n1ixture;'. "hec~c n 1a~ bt.· llsP I i w~tcad of luuu . Nut t·: Ha lH'd ('gg:s rna) h r ) · tU'('d with hult~ t·,:-.cl bn•ad rnlnlb~. 1 :gg. nta.v h" h, l,t'tl in ltlntat • ·hlo\lls. ,. EWS OF FASHION FROM E FIRD'S DEPT. STORE A. heville, N. C. Begjnning of each eason the mart d e · ed women ;md misse a re alway interested in the new­est tyle ~ that are foreca t ed by th world' foremost stylist and now tbat the new summer season i , appl'oaching and the summer day are here, the women are once more looking forward fo1· the new­est fa hion notes. The . ummer fashions that ar from aiJroad from the Par­i designers are showing the now popular sleeveless modes. The Georgette dresses are being J J THE LOG hown in pl;1in and printed de­sjgns 'rhe popular Chiffon dres~ s m·e mad of plain oft shad · as well as th bold de i:gn prints. Th umm r En embles arc ver~ popular mad , in George tl<~ . The nav · blu _ i., the predominating color for Dr '· w ar. Neverthe- 1 ~k . one the popular tan shades. Then lh popular Cotton Pique Eu ·emhl with th eir bright pdnt­ed J.latt rn.' are hown for the wall b ' th eashore. The model pictured is taken from our fir st showing of the sport · rnost fa orite color, black and white. Paris is showing many new fashionable costume ln black and whit . And now Efird's show th m to you in a most elaborate di play of one and two piece tyle . _row t hat the sweet girl gradu­a te js oon wonder ing what types of dress is suitable for h er, the tyle t ha again stepped forwa1·d v ith those sweet dainty white Georgette, so soft and shee.r, made with pretty ruffles, Then the pop­ulat · white taffeta is seen in their Bouffant -styles, their 1·uffled styles and their styles of simplicity. With these da' inty graduation styles are shown the white Flannel Coats of equal length which forms the evening wrap. There is also the now popular Felt coats more elaborate than eve.r, fashioned in many contrasting colors. The modes for the Summer Coats are the Black and White Silk Coat made of heavy Faille Silks trimmed with White Ermine. A son born to Mr. and Mrs. D. V. King on Easter morn. Mother and son are doing floe. The amount of heat generat d by one tallow <;andle can be accu­rately measured three mil s away. 1'he Whit House at Washington ~ s considered the mo t valuabl r sidence property in the world. • 19 A WOMAN'S LOGIC Mt· . Jone · cast an entir ly new 1\gh nd it may be a who1ly r easonabl one on the problem of \ oman's dr ss the other n ight. She and :Mr. Jon s were awaiting call rs, anrl Mr. Jon s ::; Ul~veyed her new gown rather critically. "Isn't i t a lit tle extr n '?'' he suggested. "A lit-tl short and .lowcut ?" "Well, I don't know,'' said Mrs. J ones. "They're coming to see me, aren't they not the dress?·­Argonaut. Only a Comma But! A pupil was having h·ouble with punctuation and was being called down by the teacher. ·• ever mind, sonny," said a chool visitor, consolingly, "It's foolish to bother about commas. They don't amount to much, any­way." "Don't they ?" replied the teach­er, turning to the pr esident. Then calling to one of the pupils she or­dered the boy to write on the board this entence : "The presi­dent of the Board says the t eache1· is a fool." "Now," she continued, "put a comma after 'Board' and another after 'teacher'." If we wish to acquire neighbors we must first be neighborly our ­selves. • It' alright to couple patience with speed if it's low g ar speed. Don't allow our elf to boil too ha. tily, you may evapor ate befor.e attaining enough pressur to ex­plode. England, - cotltmd and Ir ], nd, tak n together, a1 ~mall r than the State of New M- 'ico. • THE LOG --- ~ --- ~ --- ~--~--~--~ --- ~·~ --- Joe l\IcGo" n and J. C. ITipps . ON THE AIR • L \ • ~I\~RSAL Safety'· js ~f j ·oon to be carried direct­=~ ly into n1i llions of Amer­ican homes, through a series of thirteen con.,ecuti\·e 'veekly radio add1 es-es. to be broadca t br out- • standing leaders in American life. The Xational Broadcastjng Com­pany. in co-operation with the Na­tional .~afet.'· Council, announces Charles .1\1. Sch,,ab as the first SP£aker of the 13 \\ eeJ< progran1 fo•· Satur.da~ t verling, ApYil 2(1, at 7 :(JC .P. ~1. , Ea~tern Standard lin1e. The frJJiow:ing notables have al­l"(;: ud.v definitely ag1 ecd to talk: CIIAJ'LI.: . 1\1 . . Crl\~7 A ~ Chair­man of t.he Hrnlrd, Bethlehem Sted Cvlnpany: ' ,'-\af(:ty 8S a Factor in luflu try.,' 110 . I~OBEHT P. LA 10. 'T, Beeret.a.t·v 'Jf COJnm . l'Cf . ":'aft!ty a ~ ati<JnaJ Problern." HO ~ . J \ J:.S J. IJA\1 I , c l~ tary <,f LaLu t "Saf~· . ( and th(~ \'v"(J rk , . ~· . " iAll. l .;C'HU . lAN 1 -li J4~ J :tK, \ ' CJ, ld-fun'lc US '<lllc ~, t. :n d <.1 ·~J·, iir• sttt1'; . Safely in the J [t.J1l!Y', '' 1J H. :M I L J ' · r. ~ • L L , TO . V, ]Jh·ef!t'~ ·, IJJ£? rt.: J n ·, II l:!~r!S l in • Bun~a'J 1)f ~trt •·t T res and nhey"U f9 llow you. The · diligettt. Spinner Has a : . large Shift a.aa . now I ,have a Sheep and a Cow, every Body bids me Good morrow, a:ll which is . , 'Well said by Poor Ri,chard. . . ' ~- : I • ' • ' • - • -Benjami-n: P:r.ftnk.tin- . (8a.1ings of Poor Ricltard) ' "'· . . • ' ' . ' ' • f t i '. I i . I • . . l ~ - . I '-• 11. ;I .• I • .• A. I · ·"I I I I JI I I • . • ¥1 I ,.-. _., • :I • 1·'>1 I .• j•••e& ···11: e-e 'I • ••---•• ,. 1 4 :It I • , ., , ,_. . . . tl ;I -. H • ' • ' . . ' ' ' • • l I , • Text Iceland Hunter Library Digital Collections (Western Carolina University) Canada Pacific Norway New Zealand The ''Y'' ENVELOPE(-112.453,-112.453,57.591,57.591) Ner ENVELOPE(6.622,6.622,62.612,62.612) Lone ENVELOPE(11.982,11.982,65.105,65.105) Myers ENVELOPE(170.033,170.033,-72.117,-72.117) Patience ENVELOPE(-68.933,-68.933,-67.750,-67.750) Byers ENVELOPE(-60.283,-60.283,-63.900,-63.900) Carr ENVELOPE(130.717,130.717,-66.117,-66.117) Morrow ENVELOPE(-81.566,-81.566,50.550,50.550) Nes ENVELOPE(7.634,7.634,62.795,62.795) Nes’ ENVELOPE(44.681,44.681,66.600,66.600) Buttons ENVELOPE(-64.264,-64.264,-65.244,-65.244) Howell ENVELOPE(-99.050,-99.050,-72.233,-72.233) Dane ENVELOPE(-146.667,-146.667,-76.850,-76.850) Ari ENVELOPE(147.813,147.813,59.810,59.810) Ure ENVELOPE(13.733,13.733,68.100,68.100) Whit ENVELOPE(-65.916,-65.916,-66.033,-66.033) Ryder ENVELOPE(-68.333,-68.333,-67.566,-67.566) Dayton ENVELOPE(-158.683,-158.683,-85.733,-85.733) Rath ENVELOPE(-62.461,-62.461,-74.320,-74.320) Stal’ ENVELOPE(132.800,132.800,59.667,59.667) Peta ENVELOPE(36.866,36.866,63.158,63.158) Posi ENVELOPE(24.179,24.179,65.691,65.691) Tay ENVELOPE(-55.750,-55.750,-63.367,-63.367) Gaston ENVELOPE(65.783,65.783,-70.417,-70.417) Donaldson ENVELOPE(172.200,172.200,-84.617,-84.617) Valet ENVELOPE(151.050,151.050,61.917,61.917) Ular ENVELOPE(140.951,140.951,72.498,72.498) Orne ENVELOPE(-62.533,-62.533,-64.633,-64.633) Matheson ENVELOPE(-72.167,-72.167,-75.088,-75.088) Lorn ENVELOPE(-64.925,-64.925,-65.512,-65.512) Neral ENVELOPE(93.533,93.533,68.317,68.317) Rua ENVELOPE(14.750,14.750,64.583,64.583) Vay ENVELOPE(-62.600,-62.600,-62.267,-62.267) Hult ENVELOPE(-13.688,-13.688,65.101,65.101) Chard ENVELOPE(-110.919,-110.919,55.834,55.834) Blythe ENVELOPE(-60.314,-60.314,-62.464,-62.464) Pique ENVELOPE(-58.950,-58.950,-62.233,-62.233) Briand ENVELOPE(-63.017,-63.017,-65.017,-65.017) Engli ENVELOPE(9.401,9.401,63.127,63.127) UGL ENVELOPE(-82.463,-82.463,-79.723,-79.723) Sarn ENVELOPE(18.660,18.660,70.160,70.160) Uyes ENVELOPE(147.800,147.800,59.593,59.593) Reno ENVELOPE(-117.003,-117.003,56.000,56.000)