April 4, 2016

April 4, 2016

CHAMPION—April 4, 2016


Champion Deer

        Spring arrives in Champion with morels for breakfast.  The season has begun and the little bit of much needed rain last week and some mild nighttime temperatures have made it so.  The country lanes are lined with wild phlox, red buds, peach trees, wild plum and cherry trees and it is apple blossom time in Champion.  The dogwoods seem late, though every burgeoning, budding, booming thing has residents again awash with awe at the splendor of their natural environs.  A facebook message appeared in recent weeks that said before it was Champion, this community was Goose Nibble.  “Nibbling geese played an important role in weed control in the cotton fields before poisons and carcinogens became the norm.  Weeder geese were often used in strawberry fields to control grass,” commented J.c. Owsley.  Perhaps Goose Nibble was a contemporary name with Militia Spring.  Notes from Hunter Creek was full of some very interesting local Civil War history and also located a small park operated by the City of Ava north of the Douglas County Herald Building where a person can still visit Militia Spring.  Local history is a well, well worth the plumbing.

        Deward’s granddaughter discovered among family treasures a newspaper article which she shared at the Wednesday get-together.  It concerned an ancient canoe that had been found embedded in mud in a creek bank a number of years ago.  It was a dugout canoe, probably made from a pine tree.  It was said to have still been in excellent condition considering its age.  For a while it was on display in Mansfield, but its current whereabouts is unknown.  It happened that Wes Lambert was there around the Wednesday tables.  He said that it was he and his wife who had found the canoe when they were out on the creek.  Local history goes back to prehistory.  Cletis Upshaw is well remembered in Champion.  He was another of those great local treasures who knew the history of every hill and holler hereabouts.  Visitors to www.championnews.us can go to Champion Snapshots and find pictures of the Denlow Civil War Memorial at its dedication ceremony.  Cletis provided much of the historical information associated with the memorial.  His son, Mark Upshaw, and his wife joined the Wednesday bunch.  Mark said that his grandson, who is 19, had just undergone Marine training at Paris Island just as he had.  Cletis was a Korean War Veteran and Mark, a Viet Nam Veteran.  Veterans are plentiful in the Wednesday group.  One of them shoes mules and said he met a guy from Mule Shoe, Texas when he was in Viet Nam.  Another Vet claimed to have passed through Texas one time and sported a 40 gallon hat to prove it, but he just turned out to be a hot-head.  Friends from opposite ends of the county, out on a lark, had been earlier to the G.T. Tire Shop for breakfast and thought they would sashay by Champion to see what all the fuss is about.  Any day of the week is a fine one to enjoy a tour of the village.  The creek bed is overgrown with lush green grass sprinkled with purple flowers.  The Behemoth Bee Tree is buzzing with apian life.  The wide veranda of the Historic Emporium on the North Side of the Square invites a sit and a visit.

       Penmanship used to be a big deal.  Those of us lucky enough to have letters from our Mothers can see that they were taught to be precise.  One remembers a writing exercise required by her Mother in hopes of instilling some precision, was to copy the poem, “Rejected.”  It went, “A stranger stood at the gates of Hell.  The Devil himself had answered the bell.  He looked him over from head to toe and said, ‘My friend, I’d like to know what you have done in the line of sin that entitles you to come within?’  Then Franklin D., with his usual guile, stepped forth and flashed a toothy smile.  ‘When I took charge in ’33, a Nation’s fate was mine,’ said he. ‘I promised this and I promised that, and I calmed them down with fireside chat.’” The penmanship lesson did not have a great effect on the scrawl, but the poem persisted.  It went on and on to the conclusion that Franklin would not be allowed in Hell because the Devil was fearful of losing his own job.  The poet was not a fan of Roosevelt, though today he is often regarded with a benevolent eye, having shepherded the Country through the Great Depression and World War II, enough so that he was elected four times.  Some Old Champions are grateful for Social Security and say, “Thanks, Frank.”  His fireside chats were considered an effort to circumvent Congress as he took his messages directly to the public via the radio.  Today, hardly a breath is drawn by a politician or a want-to-be that is not reported in the press or on social media.  The world has changed.  Oddly enough, polite political conversation seems scarce, perhaps because it has just all become so bizarre.  It seems that it is hard for Republicans to talk about Democrats or Liberals to talk about Conservatives or Independents to talk about anybody without the added explicative “that so and so… whatever.”  It is sad to think that a difference of opinion in a democracy might require vitriol.  Who took the polite out of politics?  One reads that respect is earned.  Does a person who wins election by an overwhelming majority of the voters earn respect, or is the respect due to the Office itself?  Or is respect only due to people like ‘us’?  Must we be so polarized as to hate the ‘other’ when we are all in this together?  When the elections are over, we will still be neighbors and hopefully friends, Champions yet.

A Champion resident…

        They say whenever you see a pretty garden, there is someone in it.  Champions are getting excited for the season.  Some are pulling radishes already. Others are shoveling truckloads of good organic fertilizer.  The Champion News Almanac says that the 8th and 9th will be good days for planting aboveground crops.  It is not too early or too late for planting lettuce and leafy greens.  The 12th and 13th will be great for starting seedbeds.  Moles have been busy and it is advisable to be on the lookout for snakes.  A copperhead could be under that bale of straw left over from last fall.  Most of our local snakes are ‘good’ ones in that they eat rats and mice and other snakes.  Black snakes will eat eggs and chickens and baby bunnies, but if a person does not have any of those things, the big snakes are allies in rodent control.  It is a matter of perspective.  Add your perspective on garden lore, snakes, music, poetry, politics, and history at champion@championnews.us or The Champion News, Rt. 72 Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Take a sashay any day down to the wide, wild, wooly banks of Auld Fox Creek to see what it is all about in Champion—Looking on the Bright Side!

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March 28, 2016

March 28, 2016

CHAMPION—March 28, 2016


Off the pavement—headed home.

        Old people have a wonderful advantage in life.  We can close our eyes and wait a few moments, taking a few deep breaths, and open them again on a whole new perspective.  The ability to see life happening through the eyes of others is a gift.  It comes with experience and is called empathy.  Young Champion grandchildren are experiencing the fading of a dear grandmother, maybe some of their first experiences into sadness.  Oklahoma fathers are re-blossoming themselves as they watch sons bloom.  Suffering siblings are endeavoring to persevere. Texas sons and wives and grand-girls, nieces and great nieces and nephews are growing, thriving, striving and succeeding in their exciting eclectic lives.  Dear family in the Valley is keeping connected with reverence for the old folks, keeping their memories alive and pursuing the good lives the old folks hoped for us.  An epic journey ends with an appreciation for home that has far outshone all previous homecoming appreciations.  It is a Spring!—a Champion exaltation.

        The first week of April is always an exciting time of the year.  Skyline’s first grader, J.P Rhodes, will start the month off with a birthday celebration on the first.  Bud Hutchinson’s birthday is on the eighth of the month.  His friends here are always interested to know about his trail rides to come and stories of trail rides past.  It was reported in the Ozark County Times that Mr. Clifton Luna had recently celebrated his 91st birthday.  His Champion friends will be waiting for the wagon train to roll into town this fall—gala festivities are in the planning.  Meanwhile those wishing to send greetings to the Wagon Master can address them–2512 County Road 192, Dora, MO 65637.  Bud has an invitation to come home to party any day of the week and if he brings Wilma the fun will be assured.  The most reliable stringer from the Goose Nibble Gazette informs that last Wednesday’s Salon was unusually well attended perhaps due to a couple of no-shows.  The meeting is fluid.  How many conversations can be going on at once?  It was reported to have been a cacophony.

        Out in Oklahoma the redbuds and some of the dogwoods are already full blown.  It is beautiful to see.  That is a pretty part of the country and driving through the Seminole Nation brings to mind Will Rodgers who was a great humanitarian with Native blood and heart.  He said, “The money was all appropriated for the top in the hopes that it would trickle down to the needy.  Mr. Hoover didn’t know that money trickled up.  Give it to the people at the bottom and the people at the top will have it before night, anyhow.  But it will at least have passed through the poor fellow’s hands.”  Another adventurer, Carl Sagan, said, “We make our world significant by the courage of our questions and by the depth of our answers.”  Following that thought, though much beforehand, George Orwell said, “In war-propaganda, all the screaming and lies and hatred comes invariably from people who are not fighting.”  From “The Lakota Way” comes the statement: “When choosing a leader, we always kept in mind that humility provides clarity where arrogance makes a cloud.  The last thing we wanted was to be led by someone whose judgement and actions were clouded by arrogance.”


Champion hyacinths

        The internet is an innovation that has altered the nature of information available to anyone who cares to navigate it.  For example, there is currently a petition being circulated in Missouri called “Stop Rex.”  This refers to Rex Sinquefield whom Wikipedia describes as an American financial executive, active in Missouri politics.  He is a major funder of ALEC, which readers of TCN know to be the American Legislative Exchange Council which crafts the wording of state legislation to benefit private and corporate interests.  He supports an end to the income tax in Missouri and supported the group Kansans for No Income Tax which helped Governor Sam Brownback lower the state income tax significantly.  As a result, according to Wikipedia, Kansas had a 50 million dollar deficit and sales tax was raised, affecting disproportionately the poor.  While Champions do not, on the whole, consider themselves poor, old folks on fixed incomes spend their money on food and fuel, well taxed already.  Moreover his taxation proposals would necessitate cuts in the state’s provision of services many people take for granted as part of living in a modern, civil society:  public education, public libraries, and other public goods.  That being said, the election on Tuesday the 5th of April contains the provision that the Board of Education of the Skyline RII School District shall raise the operating tax levy by $.58 per hundred dollars of property evaluation.  That will bring the overall levy up to $3.43, which will then qualify the school for much needed matching funds from the State, unless Mr. Siquefield and his cronies can somehow pervert things to redirect or eliminate those matching funds.  To be fair, Wikipedia entries about his philanthropy and the scandals surrounding him take up about the same amount of cyber space.  There are good people running for two spots on the Skyline School Board and, with a small levy, there is an opportunity to make a difference in the survivability of the wonderful little rural school that ties the community together so well.  Vote April 5th.

        The GNG (Goose Nibble Gazette) stringer reports that there was a family from Coal Valley, Illinois at the Thursday night jam–Ollen and Sue Stephens.  Ollen is a cousin of Junior Firrell, Joy Ann Coonts Firrell’s husband.  The reporter indicated that they did not play or sing but that Ollen had with him a four pound banjo mute on a short handle.  It was an antique mallet shaped device not unlike one with which a certain Lady of Vanzant would like to address a local accordion.  Music does have great healing and comforting properties depending upon a great number of factors.  Send any music, poetry or prose of an up-lifting nature to The Champion News, Rt. 72 Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Go to www.championnews.us for the unedited versions of TCN going back a decade.  There are photographs there that show “…a land that is fairer than day, and by faith we can see it afar…”  Champion—Looking on the Bright Side!

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March 21, 2016

March 21, 2016

RIO BRAVO, TX—March 21, 2016


Texas Palms

        Along the Rio Bravo towering palm trees sway in tropical breezes to herald the arrival of spring.  Friends and families gather on patios to watch great flocks of red wing black birds alight in trees already full with fragrant blooms and boughs drooping with ripening oranges.  Family news is traded and, just like in Champion, political and social commentaries are rife.  It also seems that, like Champion, most everyone who speaks up believes the same things that the other people who speak up believe.  It is nice to know that, in both situations, people hold strong views, but also hold on to good relationships with people whose strongly held views are in opposition.  One particularly ornery bloke did have the grace to say that our wonderful National bird has two wings and both are necessary for survival of the bird and of the realm.  Elmer Banks once remarked that he had a teacher when he was a kid who made a brilliant statement with profound meaning.  The gist of it was that before you speak, your words should pass through three gates:  Is it true?  Is it necessary?  Is it kind?  It seems that most of politics has missed this profundity, but not so Champions.

Texas Redwings

        A trusted stringer for the Goose Nibble Gazette says that Kalyssa’s grandmother saw snow in Champion this morning.  The lady is a great appreciator of that form of precipitation and may often see it when others do not.  Incognito at the Wednesday gathering at the Historic Emporium on the North Side of the Square, this reporter said that a certain Mr. Banks had in years past been traveling out in Arizona when he observed some people around a wood fire somewhere out in the desert.  He registered bewilderment at a wood fire in the desert with no trees.  It seemed incongruous.  An unidentified know-it-all spoke up quickly to say that they were probably burning petrified wood which, according to him, burns for days in a variety of colors.  Mr. B is not so gullible.  Desert fuel is most likely cow or buffalo chips and cactus, all of which remind one of the man with all the answers.

        Mr. Gordon Reynolds, a fine musician who excels in a variety of genres, will celebrate his birthday in Edinburgh, Scotland, where he resides and frequently presides over bluegrass jams.  Mr. Troy Powell was a Champion, who was born on March 26, 1921 and passed away on that day in 2001.  He was a well-regarded gentleman with a great appreciation of bluegrass.  Over at Skyline, Mrs. Downs, who teaches there, has her birthday on the 27th.  Mr. Ted drives a school bus (as did Mr. Powell) and also celebrates that same day.  Joseph Fulk is a first grader with a birthday on the 28th.   Gavin Sartor is an eighth grader this year, celebrating on the 29th.  Back in Scotland, Bobby Nicholson, a fantastic musician will have his birth anniversary on the 29th.  Then the 31st will be given over to the celebration of dear Morag Edward on both sides of the ocean.  Happy Days all!

        An adventure out in the big world is a joy as dear family and friends are once again drawn close.  The halfway mark is thirteen hundred and twenty miles and on this end, it takes quite a tug to get a Valencia orange off a tree.  The Mexican food is authentic and the days pass in happy reunion.  On the homeward bound leg, precious memories will be mixed with a longing for a little mountain home and the homebody that makes it sweet and expectations of dogwoods, redbuds, and mushrooms.  For, “Now, the moon shines tonight on pretty Red Wing.  The breeze is sighing, the night bird’s crying.  Far afar ‘neat his star her brave is sleeping….”  In Champion—Looking on the Bright Side.


Texas Valencias
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March 14, 2016

March 14, 2016

ABILENE, TEXAS—March 14, 2016


Texan Wind Farm

        The Wednesday gathering at the Historic Emporium on the North Side of the Square in scenic downtown Champion was mild and jovial.  It was well attended but not rowdy, not overly stimulated.  Issues of red or blue were bandied about, but by and large, it was convivial, though as often happens when old people are together, conversations decay into issues of health.  Still, light hearted banter and stories of the distant past floated through the air with the enticing hint of something interesting in the works for the next assembly.  The General had made an internet posting showing the oldest building in Arkansas–the Rice-Upshaw house.  Local Upshaws are not direct descendants of the Arkansawyers but they are connected to that bunch through their fourth Great Grandad, Leroy Upshaw.  History is exciting.

        It was hard to leave home with the daffodils in glorious bloom and lilacs, elderberries, forsythia, flowering quince all starting to bud out.  Spring will happen quickly.  Going southwest through Oklahoma to West Texas was like driving into spring with dogwoods and redbuds already showing themselves in southern Oklahoma and bluebonnets beginning to make their beautiful presence known over the resting place of ancestors–mother, grandparents, great grandmother and many others.  The huge cedars surrounding the old cemetery rocked in the gentle wind and thousands of wind turbines whirled atop the mesas on the horizon.  West Texas has its own beauty, not at all like Champion, but beautiful for its rolling landscape and big, big skies.

        News from home is that the Skyline VFD Chili Supper was a most pleasant evening.  The food was wonderful, the pies were delicious, the music was delightful and the generosity of the bands is a gift that is much valued.  A good time was had by all.  Attendance was smaller than in previous years as there were a number of other functions going on in the area that night.  Nevertheless, some much needed funds were raised for the fire department that serves the community so well.  Auxiliary volunteers put in a lot of hard work to make it happen.  Among the many volunteers was Steve Moody, who always does a fine job as master of ceremonies.  Karen Griswold greeted people at the door.  Auxiliary President, Betty Dye, sold tickets for the Dobro.  Sami McCleary organized a great silent auction, as always.  Teresa Wrinkles used Esther’s receipt for her wonderful coconut cream pie that was auctioned off for a pretty penny.  Betty Elliot made a mean (marvelous) pot of chili with the help of Lisa Shephard, Sharon Sikes, and Fae Krider.  Diane and Xue Lynn Von Altendorf managed the desert table and Farrell Sikes was a Jim Dandy dishwasher.  He also made the phone call to the man, often referred to in The Champion News as “an Old Champion,” to inform him that he had won the amazing dobro that the lovely ladies of Downtown Pawn had so generously donated for the event.  (Most likely he will let his old Champion wife learn to play it.)  The funds raised at the chili supper will be used for necessary equipment for the fire department.  The community expression of recognition and appreciation of the men who put their own lives on hold at a moment’s notice to go out at any hour to battle the fires and to work the auto accidents and do the health checks that save lives are sentiments well expressed and well earned.  Champions all!

        Willow Townsend is a prekindergarten student at Skyline School with a birthday on March 15th.  That is known as the Ides of March and a number of charming people share the day with Willow.  Among them are Jacob Masters, now 13, and his dear Uncle Sam, 30 years older, and Sam’s friend Ursula, mother of Dominque.  Elizabeth Mastrangelo Brown was 23 in 2013, on the 16th of March.  That is also Skyline’s Ms. Helen’s birthday.  Myla Sarginson is a fourth grader celebrating on the 18th.  Happy birthday to all of you!  Have a Champion day!

        The primary election will have come and gone before this is in ink.  Hopes are that Missouri will have broken all records for voter turnout.  Historically, the nation over, only a small percentage of the eligible voters actually participate in their democracy.  So by not engaging, a person relinquishes his franchise to zealots with agendas.  Establish your own agenda with zeal down on the wide, wild, wooly banks of Auld Fox Creek.  Share your love of music and poetry there on the spacious veranda overlooking the Behemoth Bee Tree or with readers at champion@championnews.us.  Jimmy Rogers sang, “I had a home out in Texas, out where the bluebonnets grew.  I had the kindest old Mother.  How happy we were just we two.”  But now Mother is gone and home is in Champion—Looking on the Bright Side!


Texan Bluebonnets
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March 7, 2016

March 7, 2016

CHAMPION—March 7, 2016


Smoke-filled valleys…

        A Sunday afternoon drive home to Champion from an outing had an old couple remembering the Great Smoky Mountains.  The wind was stiff from the southwest.  They observed that from any high spot it was smoky as far as a person could see in every direction.  The predicted rains will be welcome.  Hopefully they will be gentle and building, rather than torrential and violent.  Until the rains come, Champions will observe all fire safety rules and will greet the showers with gratitude.

        Frances and Wayne Sutherland have celebrated 66 years of marriage.  They are an inspiration and have been since 1950.  Other inspiring people are Mrs. Vivod and Mrs. Casper.  They are teachers at Skyline School.  They have birthdays on March 10th and March 12th respectively.  Cadence Trimmer is a seventh grade student there celebrating on the 11th.  Second grader, Cason Evilsizer, celebrates with Ms. Casper on the 12th.  The students and staff at Skyline are enjoying spring break this week.  As old timers look back on their school days they often remember the good times, the significant times, their dear friends and sweethearts.  Most likely Frances and Wayne were school mates.  The hard work of being a teacher and of being a student is considerable.  Their little vacation is well earned and for a week they will all be released from the rigors of education.  Free range children sometimes get into mischief, but old timers can probably remember their own mischief making and give these youngsters a pass if they do not get too out of hand.

        The weather was wonderful, if a little cool, and cool was the world for the Wednesday Salon.  While there was not an actual ‘elephant in the room,’ the mood was pensive and somber.  With a room full of people, long moments would go by (you could count to twenty) before anybody would say anything.  A few old jokes were told and the one about the traveling preacher’s demonstration of the evils of alcohol was appropriated and changed on the spot.  There were stories about sending women to the lumber yard to get board-stretchers and Mr. Stone had some poor woman looking for a left front tire for a wheelbarrow.  Dailey Upshaw agreed to sell Dobro tickets at the Vanzant Bluegrass jam on Thursday and an interested party tentatively picked out the Wabash Cannonball on the beautiful instrument.  It was pleasant enough even with the awkward silences.  One must wonder what was on their minds on a Wednesday morning after Super Tuesday.  Reports were that some fashionably late arrivals picked up the mood.

        Dailey did a great job of Dobro ticket sales on Thursday evening at Vanzant and has agreed to do it again one last time.  The instrument is on display at Hensons Grocery and Gas on the North side of the Square in Downtown Champion.  It will be taken to the jam again on Thursday and then on Saturday night at the Skyline VFD chili supper, M.C. Steve Moody will officiate as the winning ticket is drawn.  He will, in all likelihood, ask those dear ladies from Downtown Pawn to stand up for a round of applause for donating the beautiful thing.  Some lucky music lover will have the pleasure of taking it home or of making arrangements to pick it up in the case of a distant granddaughter who might just let her grandmother keep it for a little while.  Who knows?  A person does not have to be present to win, but music lovers in attendance will be treated to a great show with Whetstone, The Lead Hill Players, Backyard Bluegrass and Stringed Union.  The hard working volunteers of the Skyline Auxiliary will be serving up that wonderful homemade chili and the membership will be donating pies.  Diane Wilbanks, (who has a great upright piano to give away–417-683-9239), is an excellent pie maker and a genuine appreciator of the Skyline Volunteer Fire Department.  She became a fan when their place was threatened by a grass fire that the volunteer firefighters were able to stop just in time.  Champion!

        Mushroom season is about to happen.  It will not be long.  Sometime toward the middle or the end of March, depending on weather conditions, those edible treasures will start to pop up and for a few weeks will be all the rage.  Spring turkey season will open for youth April 11th and 12th and the regular season will begin April 20th and go through May 10th.  Epicureans will be salivating.  That old saying about how thunder in February means frost in May may have a few gardeners second-guessing themselves as they get their cabbage and broccoli in the ground.  It was a joy and a relief to one old Champion to see bees in her garden the other day.  The resident swarm in the Behemoth Bee Tree on the South side of the Square seems to be doing well and gardeners are grateful as they depend heavily on those brilliant little pollinators.  Gardening is a gamble in the best of times and an abiding opportunity to express optimism amid the uncertainty of weather.

        Uncertainty is certainly the political situation these days and while many are tired of it all already with the presidential election still many months away, many are thinking this election will be a most critical one.  Ignoring it does not make it go away or happen any faster.  The cost of living, the cost of beans, of flour, of rent, of medicines all depend on political decisions.  If you plan to be out of pocket on March 15th, absentee voting is easy.  Just go to the County Clerk’s office.  The people are nice and the process is efficient.  In 1950, about the time Wayne and Frances were getting married, they could have gone to Norwood and boarded a train that would have taken them anywhere in the country.  We cannot do that now because public transportation in the United States is all but nonexistent for much of the country, other than expensive air travel.  This condition is the result of political decisions after World War II that encouraged the building of our wonderful interstate highway systems and our love of automobiles and of petroleum.  Who knows what the policies of the next administration will have on the future of generations to come?  Each of us is participating in the outcome whether or not we vote.

        Share your news and views, your history, your philosophy, your poetry and music with champion@championews.us online or send it via the wonderful socialist snail mail of the United States Postal Service:  The Champion News, Rt. 72 Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Come down to the wide, wild, wooly banks of Auld Fox Creek for a spring break from your troubles.  Sit out on the spacious veranda in the warm sunshine among friends and neighbors to sort out your politics or to get away from them for a spell.  St. Patrick’s Day is on the way next week and the Irish will be up to mischief and fun with The General, The Wild Rover, leading the parade with the fair Colleen Malone and Whiskey in the Jar.  He will probably be in his leprechaun (Robert-Hood) costume belting out “Oh! Danny Boy, the pipes, the pipes are calling from glen to glen and down the mountain side.”  He will undoubtedly be all right until he gets to the emotional part that says, “It’s you must go and I, I, I must bide…” (sniff) in Champion—Looking on the Bright Side!

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March 6, 2016

Hello world…

I’m here! — but for the nonce this is just a WP 2.9.2 testing blog.

Cheers!

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February 29, 2016

Leap Day February 29, 2016

CHAMPION—Leap Day—February 29, 2016

        Our moon has been wonderfully entertaining these past weeks as it has been waxing and waning and now riding high and pale in the morning sky.  It is there all the time but we only see it in the reflected light of the sun.  The same side of the moon always faces Earth and when the moon is full it is full for everyone on Earth.  It is easy to miss out on the spectacular romantic night lite–for the sake of cozy inside television time or the requirements of undistracted night driving.  The Snow Moon saw little snow in Champion this year.  Thunder in February, frost in May, they say.  Rich Heffern shared enlightening thoughts about the observing of lichen here in our winter wonderland.  Earth and sky, beauty and mystery are just here for the soaking in–in Champion.

        A special poem by Wordsworth from 1804, was copied in a beautiful hand, in part, by a distant lover of Champion, missing the Bright Side at this time of the year—“When on my couch I lie in vacant or in pensive mood, they flash upon that inward eye, which is the bliss of solitude.  And then my heart with pleasure fills and dances with the daffodils.”  Poetry is always welcome at The Champion News, Rt. 72 Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.

        The hills are alive with the sound of music!  Diane Wilbanks has an enormous upright piano to share with anyone who needs a piano.  Contact her at 417-683-9239.  It is a doozie.  Tickets for the beautiful dobro being raffled off by the Skyline VFD were being sold by the sixes at the Vanzant Bluegrass Jam on Thursday night.  Meanwhile, around the circle, Dave Thompson channeled George Jones, “I’ve had choices since the day that I was born.  There were voices that told me right from wrong.  If I had listened, no, I wouldn’t be here today, living and dying with the choices I made.”  Sue Murphy sang, “If I could I surely would stand on the rock where Moses stood.”  Then Jerry Wagner had everyone smiling that mysterious smile with “Mona Lisa.”  Sherry Bennett sang, “Come morning I‘ll walk by the river.  I’ll rest neath the evergreen tree.“  Ruth Collins asked the Rebel Soldier’s question, “Will my soul pass through the southland?”  “If tear drops were pennies and heartaches were gold, I’d have all the riches my pockets would hold,” declared the lovely Roberta.  David Richardson crooned, “I still miss someone.”  Sherry’s beautiful daughter, Neda, sang, “You say it best, when you say nothing at all.”  (aaaaaalllllllll) Candy the fiddler, passed her first turn but next time around shared the “Ashokan Farewell” and later “This world is not my home.”  J.R. Johnston declines the limelight, but provides support for everyone with his sweet ringing banjo.  The circle was completed when Sue Thompson took her melodic trip to Fantasy Island.  The music went around and around ending with an acapella question, “Is that you, Myrtle?”  It was indeed Myrtle Harris who was attending for the first time in a while after some serious ill health.  Her friends were glad to see her and hope she will be in regular attendance now that she is home.  Narvil Tetrick, (Rt. 1 Ava, 417-683-4289) was at the Jam enjoying the music and hob-knobbing with his very distant Upshaw cousin.  He would like to find pictures of Layfette Upshaw, his wife, Harriet Tetrick Upshaw, and her sister Mary Tetrick who married Morgan Reilly.

        Shaelyn Sarginson is a seventh grade student at Skyline School.  She shares her birthday, March 3rd, with teacher, Mrs. Barker.  Rylee Sartor is in the first grade with a birthday on the 6th.  Mallory Ludwig is a fourth grader with a birthday on the 7th of March.  The Skyline students and teachers are grateful to have such a wonderful little school way out in the country near home.  It is a vanishing treasure across the country.  Hopefully, the little tax levy will pass so our school will be more secure financially.  Linda Hetherington and Krenna Long, both of Norwood, celebrate birthdays on the 5th.  Linda and Krenna have known each other for a long time.  They will both be having a Champion birthday.  Linda will probably have some bridge mixed with hers.  Happy daze all!

        Leap Day is a devise concocted to keep human time-keeping up with celestial reality.  In 1288, Scotland began what is now called ‘Sadie Hawkins Day’ here, by passing a law permitting women to propose marriage on leap day and if refused, the man had to pay a fine.  That is a money making opportunity that modern ladies might have taken up if men were better at paying up.  It is too late now, anyway.  The notion will be tabled for four years, or a few weeks shy of four years from now.  They say that Julius Caesar introduced the whole idea of a leap day, but the math he used was not quite right.  His math created too many leap years.  It was probably not on account of bad math that he wound up the way he did (Et Tu, Brute?)  The ominous Ides of March is just around the corner.  The elections coming up in the weeks and months ahead will have consequences.  Participate.  Not voting is a vote.  Silence is speech.  “Sometimes people hold a core belief that is very strong.  When they are presented with evidence that works against that belief, the new evidence cannot be accepted.  It would create a feeling that is extremely uncomfortable.  That uncomfortable feeling is called cognitive dissonance.  And because it is so important to protect the core belief, they will rationalize, ignore and even deny anything that does not fit in with the core belief.”  These are words of Franz Fanon famous French philosopher and psychiatrist.  Then John Kenneth Galbraith says, “The modern conservative is engaged in one of man’s oldest exercises in moral philosophy; that is, the search for moral justification for selfishness.”  Listening to the radio the other day, a Champion heard about neo-liberals.  They are an interesting bunch with an approach to economics and social studies in which control of economic factors is shifted from the public sector to the private sector.  Privatizing the post office or social security could have some unforeseen consequences.  What a privilege it is to vote!  Some are thinking to endow the voter franchise upon every citizen automatically, perhaps at birth with their social security card.  With everyone’s life at stake, it ought to be easy to vote.  If you are not going to be home for the March 15th election, go vote absentee at the Court House.

        If you are anywhere near Skyline on March 12th go to the Skyline VFD Chili Supper to see if you are going to win that amazing dobro.  While you are at it you will be supporting the great volunteer fire department that gives us assistance when it is most needed.

        Look at the garden and talk about help needed!  Preparing garden beds is a chore that longs to be done this time of year.  Seed catalogues are weighing down the packs of postal carriers and the colorful pictures spawn daydreams of hot summer days shelling peas and canning beans and tomatoes with some good music on in the background to make the work lighter.  It will take some singing out in the garden before the harvest songs come along.  Pete Seeger’s Garden Song says, “Inch by inch, row by row, I’m gonna make this garden grow.  All it takes is a rake and a hoe and a piece of fertile ground.” in Champion—Looking on the Bright Side!

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February 22, 2016

February 22, 2016

CHAMPION—February 22, 2016

        An Old Champion was working out in his shop late Wednesday morning when he heard and then saw the largest flock of geese he had ever seen.  They filled the sky as far as he could see from south to north.  He suspects the open waters of the Lake of the Ozarks, and Truman Lake and the prospect of gleaning fields of grain have them on the move.  On Sunday morning February 21st (Happy Birthday Joanna!) there were daffodils already showing their beautiful butter hue.  In the weeks ahead the countryside is slated to be well buttered with daffodils and perhaps with snow, ice, and/or mud.  It will be what it will be in Champion.

        The big beautiful news for the Skyline Area Volunteer Fire Department comes because Marjorie Carter, Linda Keyes and Darlene Stigall of The Downtown Pawn Shop on the Square in Mountain Grove put their heads together and decided to make a generous and substantial donation to the Skyline VFD for its annual fund raiser.  The gift (Thank you, Dear Ladies.) is a dobro.  It is a gorgeous thing in a good case with a slide bar and a couple of finger picks, plus a book that tells a person how to teach him/herself to play the dobro.  The instrument made its debut at the Wednesday Salon in Downtown Champion where the first tickets sold were to The General Himself!  (He sets a fine example for his sister and nephews, Dailey and Dean, in attendance, as well as the rest of us.)  Thursday night the wonderful instrument was on display at the Vanzant Bluegrass Jam, where tickets sold like hot-cakes and from whence a call is going out for local dobro players to make it to the jam this Thursday to demonstrate the power, range, brilliance and lovely tone of the instrument.  It will be like that old song, “The Touch of the Master’s Hand,” where a disreputable looking fiddle was not getting bids at an auction until some old guy picked it up and played the daylights out of it.  ‘Johnson’ is the maker of the dobro, but the year is not known.  It is in lovely condition and can be inspected at Henson’s Grocery and Gas on the North Side of the Square in Downtown Champion as well as at the Recreation of the Historic Emporium.  The Skyline Auxiliary will be meeting there on the 1st of March as the particulars of the upcoming chili super are being finalized.  Everyone is welcome to participate in the good community effort to support the little volunteer fire department that provides us with help when we need it most.  The meeting starts at 6:30.  J.C. Owsley was the first to address an envelope “Dobro Tickets, c/o The Champion News, Rt. 72 Box 367, Norwood, MO.  65717.”  He has 12 chances to win for his ten bucks and his friends here wish him good luck.

        Birthday celebrations this week start with Drayson and Carson Cline’s dear Mom.  It was just 12 years ago that her friends and family gathered at Skyline School one Saturday night to celebrate her 21st birthday.   She is having all kinds of fun with those little guys.  She shares the day with Judi Pennington over on Tar Button Road who is already planning her morel mushroom holiday.  Ava’s Farmers’ Market guy, Arne Arhnstat, celebrates on the 24th.  Matty Hutsell is a kindergarten student at Skyline and her happy birthday song will get sung on the 27th.  One of Ruby’s boys, Frankie Proctor, will celebrate on the 29th.  The Champion News salutes you all!  Huzza!

        It was sweet to see young Drayson and Carson on Sunday.  They are growing quickly and will soon not be babies.  A new arrival to Champion is a nice young man named Chace.  He is around three years old and will walk right up to shake your hand.  There is some speculation that he will be a politician, but time will tell and no one will hold it against him.  He might be the good one that will show up at just the right time.  Old folks at a distance from their own grandchildren just love the little ones they are with.  It is hard to remember being young parents.  It was so long ago and recollections of the hectic business of making a living and ‘riding loose herd’ on a houseful of youngsters fade.  The day to day struggles seem not to play a big part in the memories of old folks.  Shala Clark and her husband have three children.  She says, “My oldest, Brylee, is 5.  She has been a great helper with the baby.  She is a little mother hen to any children younger than herself.  Kabela is 4.  She loves to play and cuddle her kitty.  Our newest is a little boy, Tucker.  He is 4 months old.”  Shala said that she would like to start offering a babysitting service here in the area, “…since I am home so much more now.”  She would like to keep children in the age range of her own and during regular business hours.  Her number is 417-259-7969.  Her Champion friends wish her good luck in this endeavor and are glad to remember those days of youth and vigor when a house full of children was a joy and no trouble at all.

        It is nice to be on a road that is traveled by horses.  Divots in the dirt give a clue to the direction of the travelers and occasional fragrant deposits of that good garden additive that horses make might give a clue as to when they passed that way.  Mysteries are abundant in Champion.  Gardeners can hardly contain themselves.  Some are hauling that soil additive from near and far.  Some have seedlings that they have started much too early for an early May frost.  Some are sensibly spending cold days in sharpening their shovels and hoes and oiling the handles.  They are removing last year’s debris from the garden and getting ready to turn pea vines back into the soil.  The Skyline School students will be busy in their greenhouse and soon their garden beds will be showing the rewards of their efforts.  Reports are that the archery tournament there Saturday was a great success.  An uninformed person drove by in the early afternoon and was impressed at the number of cars and the overflow parking at the church across the road, but did not snap to the fact that something marvelous was going on.  The mystery is revealed and soon the results of the tournament will be revealed for all those who somehow managed to miss it.  On April 5th voters in the Skyline R-II School District will have the opportunity to approve a 48 cent tax levy increase which may make all the difference in the survival of our great little school.  The raise in the levy will bring the amount up to $3.43, which is the minimum that would allow the district to receive additional state funding.  There will be another forum on Thursday, March 24th at 7 p.m. at the school that will more fully explain the need for the increase.  About 60 years ago ten little schools combined to make Skyline and it has served the area beautifully.  Steve Moody says, “We value our school, students, and their education.  We value our community and Skyline is the hub of the community.  A little extra money once a year will help save the school and the community.”  Well said!  Champion– Looking on the Bright Side!

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February 15, 2016

February 15, 2016

CHAMPION—February 15, 2016

        Valentine’s Day was a perfect day to stay in with a sweetheart.  It was icy and cold outside and warm and cozy inside.  Some old Champions say that once you get this old every day is a holiday and love stays in the air because old people, men and women alike, find themselves more sentimental as the years go by.  The rapid passage of time and hints of mortality bring all kinds of love into focus.  Champions just cannot get enough of it and hope that all their dear ones, near and distant ones have lives that are over-flowing with affection and appreciation.  There is a song appropriate to the sentiment, “What the world needs now, is love, sweet love.  That’s the only thing that there’s just too little of.”  Surely some of the world’s problems could be solved with a little compassion and understanding across religious, political and geographic lines.  It is the very nature of a Champion to make the effort.

        Shelby Ward had a birthday on Valentine’s Day.  She has deep ties to Champion with a great aunt living here and many second cousins and Mishbucha.  Madison Bradshaw, who is a second grade student at Skyline has her birthday on the 16th.  Trish Boring-Davis celebrates on the 17th, and Pete Proctor on the 18th.  Pete is busy doing helpful things for the Veterans of the area and his efforts are appreciated.  The 19th is a day we always remember for dear Ruby Proctor.  There never has been a sweeter lady.  Rebecca Macbeth Harvey, another dear lady, a childhood friend now growing old like her friend, celebrates that day too.  She is a Rose of Old San Antonio.

        State Representatives come up for election every two years and Senators serve terms of six years.  Senatorial elections are staggered so that only one third of the whole Senate comes up for election every two years.  Pete Proctor posted on the internet, “You can’t fix stupid but you can vote it out of office.”  An informed electorate is the hope of the Nation!  March the 15th will be here soon and it is exciting to be part of the process.

        A local gardener wants to go out on the same limb with the Hunter Creek sage and say, “Spring is likely to be early by two weeks.”  Looking forward to the growing season is a prime winter activity as seed catalogues get dog-eared and plans get drawn up.  February is a good time to start pepper plants since the seeds take a long time to germinate and peppers have a long growing season.  Cole crops, cabbage and kale can be started about this time as well.  The 27th and 28th of the month will be good days to start seed-beds according to The Champion Almanac.  Look for it on-line soon at www.championnews.us.   Linda, from over at The Plant Place in Norwood has sponsored the almanac for years and visitors to the website have grown to rely on it.  Linda has retired now and, except for a monthly sale there at The Gift Corner, will be enjoying some well earned leisure.  Maybe she will get in some extra bridge games.  The Almanac now will be sponsored by The Champion News and others and will soon be posted on the bulletin board at the Historic Emporium on the North Side of the Square as well as at Henson’s Downtown G & G.  Change is in the air.  “The greatest change we need to make is from consumption to production, even if only on a small scale, in our own gardens.  If only 10% of us do this, there is enough for everyone.  Hence the futility of revolutionaries who have no gardens, who depend on the very system they attack, and who produce words and bullets, not food and shelter.”  These are the sentiments of Australian professor, Bill Mollison.  He and his student, David Holmgren, coined the word ‘Permaculture’ back in 1978.  The idea of it is to utilize the patterns and features observed in natural ecosystems as a guide for our own agricultural pursuits.  Champions can do that.

        One of several interesting items brought for inspection at the Wednesday Salon was a mysterious little green metal contraption.  The fellow who brought it had acquired it in a box of junk and could not figure out what it was.  That proved to be the case with the whole assembly.  At last he revealed that John Webber had identified it for him as an egg scale.  Back before standardized chickens laid standardized eggs, it was a way to grade them for sale.  A local, much appreciated, breakfast cook is a great fan of the non-standardized egg.  According to him, while factory eggs can be relied on to break with the same amount of effort each time, and to break exactly the same way each time, they still do not match up to the flavor and wholesomeness of farm eggs.  It is a joy to live in the country.

        The Tree Shakers Genealogical Research outfit informed The General of the fate of Fate.  It says “Lafayette ‘Fate’ Upshaw was born in 1847, in Ozark County, the son of William Upshaw and his wife, Nicey Sweeten.  Fate married Harriet Tetrick soon after the Civil War, in 1866.  They made their home in Douglas County, becoming the parents of five children.  In the spring of 1884, (it is thought he was out hunting), Fate was sitting with his back to a tree, his shotgun standing by his shoulder, his horse’s bridle rein in his hand.  In the act of switching the gun to the other shoulder, he hit his horse with it, which startled and sprang back, and before Fate could disengage himself from the riddle rein, the gun got caught in it, lifting the hammer, and fired off into his knee.  He got home and Doctors Hubbard, Musick and Haynes were all sent for.  The decision was made that amputation was his only hope of survival, but he died anyway from the loss of blood and shock combined.  He was only 37 years old.  His family buried him in the Tetrick Cemetery in Douglas County.”  There is a picture on-line of his gravestone at the cemetery with the information that he was a private in the 46th Regiment of the Missouri Infantry during the war.  Canadian, Sue Thompson, has been studying the American Civil War and has a particular appreciation of the music of the era.  Not long ago she sang, “The Night They Drove Old Dixie Down” at the Vanzant Bluegrass Jam.  It is a soulful song from the Southern side.  Fate’s family is well represented at this gathering.  Perhaps they may have favorite Civil War songs to suggest to the talented singer.  The jam happens every Thursday—pot luck about six and then music until nine.  Everyone is welcome.

        The Skyline VFD chili supper committee has lined up a great list of musicians for the annual event.  This year David Richardson will again start the evening with his group, Whetstone.  He provides the sound equipment and generously operates it for the evening.  Back Yard Bluegrass and the Lead Hill Players will perform again and this year a group from Willow Springs, Stringed Union, will be on the stage supporting the wonderful little rural fire department that protects local lives and property.  It is the first event of a dazzling social season, set to be the most dazzling yet.  Champion!

        If you wish to understand the Universe, think of energy, frequency and vibration,” said Nikola Tesla.  When the weather warms up, think about those things out on the wide veranda of the Recreation of the Historic Emporium.  Until then, discuss them with civility around the ancient stove inside where optimism is captured in Champion– Looking on the Bright Side!

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February 8, 2016

February 8, 2016

CHAMPION—February 8, 2016


A typical scene…

        It was just a year ago that Champions were surprised to see the ancient tree that had served as home plate for ball players, now in their nineties, had been pruned down to a 35 foot tall stump.  It was thought to be a threat to the old Champion School building, now a church, because of its enormity and a slight list.  The bee colony that has occupied the tree for decades survived all the way through to the beginning of winter.  On a sunny day soon Champions will discover if the bees have wintered well and speculation will begin about whether or not the stately old tree will make another effort to live.

        One of the interesting items brought for inspection at a recent gathering was a flintlock pistol made in 1848.  It was said to have been picked up on the battlefield at Little Big Horn.  It was the property of an elderly lady who bequeathed it to a grandson who subsequently sold it to Rob.  Rob always has something interesting to share.  People unfamiliar with pistols in general are surprised to discover how heavy these old firearms are.  It would take a substantial person to wield such a weapon effectively.  Not to be outdone, The General came in brandishing two flintlock handguns.  One had a filigreed hatchet attached to the end balanced with an ominous hook.  Like Rob’s, the metal work was ornate and the stocks were a dark heavy wood.  Rob’s gunstock was probably American walnut.  The wood for the stocks of The General’s guns was probably harvested in the hills overlooking the Turkish town of Smyrna.  Most likely these antiques were manufactured as toys or as tourist baubles.  From Denlow to Smyrna and back—what an adventurer!  His nephews, Dailey and Dean Upshaw were among the crowd for the first time in a while and seemed to thoroughly enjoy themselves.  Reba Bishop came with Don and met up with old friends.  Hopes are that JoAnn Anderson might make a visit with them one of these days.  Her friends miss seeing her out and about.  Community is a gift to be enjoyed.

        Astrophysicist Neil deGrasse Tyson said, “There is a growing strain of anti-intellectualism in our country that may be the beginning of the end of our informed democracy.”  Champions consistently work toward maintaining an informed populace and to that end have begun to offer elocution and vocabulary lessons to wayward sojourners of the hinterlands and backwaters north of Romance.  The first step toward knowledge is a willingness to admit abject ignorance.  A gracious admission of that circumstance was followed by a recitation of the week’s lexicon which included the surprising discovery of a related word, ‘dogmatic,’ which seemed to excite the student.  An ancillary benefit of the interchange seemed to be in the realization that apologizing does not always mean you are wrong and the other person is right.  It means you value your relationship more than your ego.  The best apology is changed behavior.  Having embraced humility, the sojourner took his leave.  “There are no constraints on the human mind, no walls around the human spirit, no barriers to our progress except those we ourselves erect.”  Words of his hero, R. Reagan, pounded in his heart.

The Gipper

        The Champion News is pleased always to acknowledge birthdays.  Recent celebrants include Cowboy Jack, hopefully not flat on his back, on February 7th.  Aidan Acree is a preschool student at Skyline who celebrates on the 8th, and shares the day with Sarah Rucker, lovely mother of Champion granddaughters.  Joshua Garner, a third grader, shares his day with Sondra Powell, who is a grownup alumnus of Skyline School.  An impromptu birthday celebration for Ronald Reagan (his 105th) was held on Wednesday the 3rd of February.  It is figured that he was so well regarded in this area that he chose to come back from the grave for a Champion birthday.  His birthday was February 6, 1911, but knowing what a rocking place Champion is on Wednesday, he chose that day for his post mortem appearance to the amazement of all present.  Seizing the moment, your intrepid Champion News reporter posed the question, “Respectfully, sir, whom among the current contestants for the highest office do you recommend?”  He must not have been keeping up on contemporary events since his demise as he had no recommendations other than that the winner should be from his own party.  His idea was that the government could not solve the problems of society, because the government was the problem.  The upcoming election will be a referendum on that very dichotomy.  A local pundit suggests that Democrats generally believe that government can and should fix the problems of society, while Republicans believe that government is the cause of the problems.  President Reagan said, “We can’t help everyone but everyone can help someone.”  “Peace is not absence of conflict; it is the ability to handle conflict by peaceful means.”  “Freedom is never more than one generation away from extinction.  We didn’t pass it to our children in the bloodstream.  It must be fought for, protected, and handed on for them to do the same.”  By today’s standard, these are down-right centrist sentiments.  Champion!  This week there was a photograph of Susan B. Anthony circulating on the internet.  Her birthday is February 15, 1820.  In this photograph she had been knocked down in the street and beaten by a group of men in top hats.  She had been trying to vote.  It was 1872.  She was arrested may times in pursuit of women’s suffrage.  She lived until 1906.  It was not until 1920 that women won their right to vote.  February 17th is the last day to register to vote in order to participate in the important election coming up on March 15th.  In the primary election, while the actual ballot is secret, one must declare his party.  No intimidation is allowed at the polls, so, Ladies, everyone, vote your conscience.

        “Let me call you sweetheart.  I’m in love with you.  Let me hear you whisper that you love me too.”  Romance is in the air with Valentine’s Day on Sunday.  The Cowboy will be crooning to Joyce.  Bob will be flashing his winning smile at Ethel.  The Prominent Champion will woo the Prominent Champion Girlfriend, who will bat her big eyes at him and smile that sweet smile.  Elmer and Frances will exchange some pleasant words.  Wes and Pat of Champion West will have plans, and Louise and Wilburn up the hill always have something going on.  Then there is St. Janice nee Hill, who lives just north of Romance.  She is in for a raft of flowers, candy and jewelry from her narcissistic spouse who fears his remarks about her in public and behind her back may get back to her.  Well earned, dear Lady!  Dave and Sue will be harmonizing.  That is how they met—in a big hall, singing.  Their voices blended perfectly and they found each other.  They sing over in Vanzant on Thursday evenings at the Bluegrass jam, always a pleasant evening.  Pot luck at 6:00 then music.  Bring your voice and your instruments or just your appreciation of an old fashioned music party.

        Weather patterns have favored the area so far with a few warm and lovely days, a few bitter cold days, a little rain, more warm days, maybe a skiff of snow, a blast of artic wind and then a few more warm days.  Any complaint is short lived because the weather changes.  Gardeners are getting excited about the soil again, some wishing they had a good layer of manure and mulch over the whole thing just ready to be tilled in and planted again.  Gardeners are at least as optimistic as fishermen.  Come down to the wide, wild, wooly banks of Aulde Fox Creek for a step back in time.  You can buy a picture postcard to send to loved ones who languish out in the great elsewhere, longing to be back in Champion—Looking on the Bright Side!

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