June 29, 2009

June 29, 2009

CHAMPION—June 29, 2009

        Champion is a relaxed and happy place where industrious people are ready to jump up and do what needs doing and they never tire of doing good.  Being always ready is the state of equipoise and Champion is full of it.  No one confuses being relaxed with idleness and a busybody has to put out a prohibitive amount of effort to work much mischief at all.

        A letter from Eva Henson Phillips of Oklahoma City says “The Ava, all school, high school Picnic was held at Lake Springfield on June 13th.  Champion school was well represented by:  Vivian Krider, Glenna Lambert, Eva Henson.  Pete Robertson, of Republic, MO. also attended.  His wife, Miss Vivian, taught at Champion in the 1940’s.  We had a good visit about the one room school we attended.”

        Correcting an error from last week, Prince William’s last name is Windsor, not Spenser.  Spencer was his mother’s maiden name.  He is Prince William Arthur Phillip Louis of Wales and while he is only about 27 he has accomplished a great deal in life already.  Of course, much is expected.

        It is expected that the Forth of July Celebration in Champion will be marked with much solemnity and humility this year.  Gratitude goes to the Founding Fathers and Mothers and to the previous patriotic generations who have defended the beautiful Constitution against all threats both external and internal since the United States of America was founded in 1776.  Other nations in both hemispheres are currently in turmoil with questions concerning the legitimacy of regime changes.  This country exemplifies democracy in the sweetest way.  If a person were in Washington DC over the Fourth of July he could meet up with other marchers at 7th Street on Constitution Avenue at 11:45 a.m. Eastern time and proceed all the way to 17th Street.  The National Parade features marching bands, military and specialty units, floats, and VIPs.  Champion VIPs will stroll down Lonnie Krider Memorial Way.  They will come in from the South down the portion of the thoroughfare that has previously been known as the “Old Road.”  It was the main road prior to the construction of the black top of WW some time back in the 50’s…It is the road that Lonnie and his siblings used to walk to school at Champion.  It is the road to everywhere.  It goes past the church that used to be the school, past Henson’s Store and out the East end of town without ever encountering a speck of pavement.  Champion marchers will carry Love and Gratitude in their hearts for all those who serve the Nation in and out of uniform.  Champions Love of their Country.

        Esther Wrinkles has been celebrating her birthday for a solid week.  Her friends Louise and Sharon with their spouses took her out to supper at the Cajun Kettle on Tuesday.  Sister, Irene, took her to the Golden Coral on Thursday.  On Friday, the Slagels treated her to supper at Plumbers and then Sunday there was a big lunch at church for her including a lovely cake made by daughter-in-law, Theresa.  Esther was surprised further when later on Sunday evening a planned small gathering turned into a house full of 15 family members to help her get her partying done.  There was three gallons of homemade ice cream and no small amount of fun and laughter as her 92 years were acknowledged!  Esther is a Champion!  Another Champion is commemorating 70 years on the planet!  What a guy!  A Champion fellow, if ever there was one!

        So much of gardening is observation.  A quick eye can spot an insect infestation before it gets out of hand.  One old Champion has found her first green tomato hornworm already.  She doesn’t have a tomato close to ripe yet, but the pests are already beginning to find their favorite foods.  Plants are being traded still out among friends and it is reckoned that corn can be planted as late as the 15th of the month with the expectation of a harvest.  Choosing the right variety is important to be sure there is enough growing time left in the season.  Linda’s Almanac from over at the Plant Place in Norwood shows that the first through the fourth will be excellent days for planting above ground crops.  By the 8th and 9th the signs will have changed and the crops that bear their yield below ground will be the favored ones to plant.  Sometimes a Champion is busy hoeing the corn and becomes aware of the shadow of a large bird passing overhead.  The brim of her hat or the dazzling sun or her own disorientation may obscure the bird and she may not ever know what bird caused the shadow that had passed over her.  It is an eerie feeling that goes to worldview and perspective.  Bill Pool from over in Tennessee has been sending pictures of his ripe tomatoes.  They are gorgeous.  Too bad, Bill.  While you are certainly a Champion by history, family ties, and sentiment, you simply don’t live here and your Nashville, TN tomatoes do not count toward the First Ripe Tomato in Champion Contest.  He said, “I grew up 7 miles south of Gentryville on Brushcreek & Bryant, a Cousin to Eva Powell, also you may know my mother, Esther Richmond.”  Ms. Powell began her own birthday celebration on Monday and was expected to be chasing around with daughter, Saundra, and various other loving family.  She smiled to hear about her cousin’s tomatoes and remarked that his mother is in a rest home in Mtn. Grove.  Eva is not growing tomatoes this year, but it is hoped that she has had a Champion Birthday.

        Norwood hosted the Fortnight Bridge group on Saturday and it was quite a close game.  A mere three hundred points separated the winner from the loser.  Norwood won with 4870 points, Champion 4770, Brushy Knob 4790 and Vera Cruz 4570.  There were several slams bid and unbidden and prizes for slams made in previous games were paid out.  The Champion player collected two dollars in old slams, paid in 50 cents for two unbid ones and then recovered those two quarters with another bid one.  Champion!  It was a close and interesting game punctuated with cherry cheese cake.  Champion indeed!

        The mail boxes have been full this week.  Betty Dye sent a lovely story that she has written about her Dad, called The Old Straw Hat.  She wrote it in 2007.  It is a touching tribute to a hardworking family man who taught good life lessons and set a good example.  Look for the story and pictures of Mr. Dye in his hat under Champion Friends at www.championnews.us.

        A Champion Reader, Michael Greengard wrote, “The words I learned from my father for ‘I’m Goin’ Back to Where I come From’ go like this:  ‘I’m goin’ back to where I come from Where the honeysuckle smell so sweet, it durn near makes you sick.  I used to think my life was humdrum But I sure have learned my lesson, and it’s bound to stick.  There ain’t no use in me pretendin’.  The city just ain’t no place for a guy like me to end in.  I’m going back to where come from Where the mocking bird is singing in the lilac bush.’” There are three more verses, each a little different from versions found earlier.  What a song!  Champions at Henson’s Store the other day were still talking about that guy who called himself “Disgruntled Elsewhere.”  It was noted that there is a lot of nice property in Champion for sale if he is so anxious to live here.  Then there was the idea that such a grouchy attitude might make him not the most pleasant neighbor.  Then someone said maybe if he can break free from his encumbrances for a while he aught to just come and rent for a spell to see if it is as wonderful as he thinks it must be and to see if he is a good fit for the community.  He better slip in sort of quiet and give his right name.  He may have predisposed some to be skeptical of him.

        Skeptics are free to write to Champion Items, Rt, 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  E-mail music, tomato pictures, examples of patriotism, and good works to Champion News.  Stand out on the veranda at Henson’s Store on the North Side of the Square in Downtown Champion.  Look up the hill to the South to see Lonnie Krider Memorial Way emerge from the forest and wind its grassy way down the hill, past the old school, past the old store, and all the way through the Heart of Champion—Look on the Bright Side!

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June 22, 2009

June 22, 2009

CHAMPION—June 22, 2009

 

        In Champion the verdant, voluptuous topography is a delight to the eyes.  For the ears, sound is captured in the folds and creases of the deep hollows and is wound among the steep hills in a mysterious way that obscures its origin.  So the humming drone of the big haymaking machinery is transported to distant places and the hearer may have no idea who is getting his hay in.  Some still early mornings the train whistle can be heard all the way from Norwood.  It is part of the magic of the place.

        Any number of Champions have taken exception to the note from Mr. Elsewhere impugning the qualities of their beloved home.  The inference seemed to be that a strong delusion was being perpetrated to cause readers to believe a lie.  As it turns out Mr. Elsewhere’s sarcasm was but an artful arrangement of words adapted to the purpose of expressing his great wish to live in Champion himself.  Marooned elsewhere with history, family ties, responsibilities and a job, he casts longing glances this way and sees green.  Envy is a brutal companion and jealousy’s green is drab and sad.

        Champion’s own Barbara Krider has been struggling with bad weather in Illinois and with the resultant power outages and all the inconveniences connected with the disruptions.  She may well be glad when her own Haymaker gets home.  The First day of Summer was Linda Krider Watt’s birthday!  She is old enough now to be President of the United States.  She shares her birthday with Prince William Spenser of England.  He will be King someday and he has had many advantages but when he goes home, as Linda often does, he is not in Champion.  It is, however, the Mark of a Champion to be able to be happy no matter what the circumstance, and Champions congratulate them both on their special day.  Another Summer Solstice baby is Kai Parsons, a. k. a. Coyote.  She is home with the folks out West of Ava visiting for a week or so from Portland, OR.  It may be that this is the first trip to the Ozarks for her husband and youngest child, but daughter Sierra has spent lots of time with grandparents Parsons out on the farm.  She will be living the grandchild’s perfect dream of getting to spend two months with the doting old folks.  There will be lots of trips to the creek and reacquainting with summertime friends.  It will add to her lexicon of precious childhood memories.  Champions know they are making memories every day.

        It is expected that somewhere between 75 and 100 people will be attending the Cooley Reunion which will be Saturday, the 27th.  Because of the fire at the Dora White Senior Center last January, the reunion will be held at the First Freewill Baptist Church this year.  Bob and Lily (Cooley) Conrad have fifth wheeled down from Washington State will be joined by others from Washington and some New Yorker family members as well as a mob of other Cooleys, Proctors, Hickses, Alsups, Upshaws, Sheltons and on an on….  It will be a bash.  Nacy Cooley may get to go if the physical therapist says she can.  She is currently in the Autumn Oaks Nursing Home in the rehabilitation wing.  She came for the Reunion, arriving on a Wednesday from her home in Henderson, NV.  On Saturday she broke her hip and has since had a hip replacement surgery, according to Arlene Cooley who is the source for this information.  She said that while Virginia (Proctor) Jacobs was visiting with Nacy in the hospital they talked about how the Cooley family was so well regulated.  That is, they kept regular hours for their meal times and bedtime.  The Proctor family, on the other hand, had twelve children and a much more free wheeling approach to life.  There was fun to be had at Howard and Lola Proctor’s house and Nacy liked to spend time there.  There will be plenty of that kind of visiting going on at the Reunion.  Arlene said that she figured that the General would try to slip in for a while.  He’s everywhere.

        A movie came out in 1955 called More Rivers to Cross.  It was kind of a wholesome, funny frontier story just suited to show in the drive-in for the whole family.  It had a great song, “Oh, the higher up the berry tree, the sweeter grows the berries.  The more you hug and kiss a gal, the more she wants to marry.”  It is true that those blueberries on top of the bushes get ripe first.  Lilly Ridge’s Linnie Ingram was talking last week about all the folks that had come down to Eckart’s Farm in Dora for their blueberries.  It is an outing that has become a tradition among many friends.  A Champion, who usually goes with a friend, made her first solitary trip this year.  The acres of blueberry bushes are laid out in long rows and the bushes are tall and thick so that in some parts of the field people can be as close together as three or four feet and not be able to see each other.  One person picking along quietly then becomes privy to a lot of anonymous conversation.  “He just sits in that recliner and complains about his arthritis.  If he’d get up and do a little something, he would feel a lot better.”  Her friend replied, “Well, Jack just sits on the couch with the remote in his hand by the hour.”  Some younger women were talking about a wedding when one was to have been a bridesmaid.  “It was two days before the wedding and my dress wasn’t ready.  I already had three fittings and it still was no good.  So the night before the wedding I went to Walmart and bought some material and a pattern.  I hadn’t made a garment probably in 17 years.  I was in a hurry so I wasn’t all that detailed about everything, and it was a lot of fun making it.  I didn’t get it finished but the woman finally did get my dress done, and it was OK, but I really liked sewing again.”  She went on to talk about how a little boy was to pedal a toy tractor down the isle, pulling a little girl in a wagon…the flower girl presumably.  The tractor was hard to pedal and there were a lot of people watching him so he wasn’t very happy, but they were both real cute.”  Some young folks about fifth grade age picked berries in a rush in an adjacent row.  They were speaking both English and German at the same time…maybe a half sentence of each.  The subject matter was about a lot of boy-girl stuff, sweet and naive in both languages.  A few rows over some young ladies were singing Amazing Grace and other religious songs in their high pure voices.  Occasionally a little burst of laughter would rise up from among the rows.  It is lovely to have friends to share these beautiful experiences, but also very nice to see the big picture some times.

        Many Champions are thinking about their military service families, sacrificing at home and in dangerous foreign fields.  Those left behind need those expressions of Love and Gratitude from their Nation.

        The Skyline Ladies Auxiliary had a very productive meeting at Esther Wrinkles house on Tuesday.  Groundwork was laid for the Auxiliary’s part in what will be another spectacular Skyline Volunteer Fire Department Picnic.  It will be on August 14th and 15th this year.  The ladies are planning a meeting at the Cook Shack on July 7th and then another at Henson’s Store in Downtown Champion on July 14th.  There is much to do and time is flying by!  What happy days for those who recognize the beauty of the present when it is happening.

        Great Happenings, compassion for the drab and sad, sweet stories of summertime friends and lazy wonderful days at Grandmother’s house are all welcome at Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Songs like, “Summertime, summertime, sum, sum summertime,” are welcome at Champion News.  Look around on the website at www.championnews.us to read what Peggy Hancock had to say about getting poison ivy while staying with grandparents Jim and Liza Hancock.  It seems that Ed Henson drove her to the doctor in Mt. Grove in his old grocery truck because her grandparents didn’t have a car.  She remembered that Ed was a nice man and that he gave her a grape soda.

        Find a grape soda in the refrigerator at Henson’s Store.  Sit around inside to hear random yarns being spun, or step out on the porch to see an example of Mr. Elsewhere’s BS.  In Champion it’s looking on the Bright Side!

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June 15, 2009

June 15, 2009

CHAMPION—June 15, 2009

 

        In Champion the ratio of the water vapor in the atmosphere to the amount required to saturate it at the same temperature is called relative humidity.  When concrete sweats even though it has just been lying there, there is humidity.  Some say the humidity is bad enough, “Do we need to have relatives too?”  It turns out they are a good thing.  Champions residing in Seymour have had a swarm of relatives helping them to get their roof back on after some storm damage that occurred recently.  Uncle Dusty did say he thought he was getting shingles on his behind and he had a number of other complaints, but none about his relatives.  Those relatives have not just been lying around but have been helping with the grocery bill and getting ready to do the haymaking finally.  They have also been busy with a nice variety of general farm work, including some generous favors for neighbors.  So on balance, relatives are preferable to humidity.  Neighbor’s relatives are some of the best kinds.

        “Hi [Champion].  The East Fairview School reunion was a great.  We had students from Oregon and Arkansas.  We are remembering the deceased students from two years ago and also the deceased veterans from the 22 vets that went to school there and 11 vets that lady students had married.  I called their names and asked veterans that were there to come up front.  We saluted the flag while taps was played.  We had door prizes and [recognition] for the oldest student, youngest student, and farthest distance traveled.  We had auction on the homemade quilt made by Ruby Proctor.  We are planning another one next year . The Proctor reunion was well attended–a lot of talking.  I saw some for the first time also since 1958.  I got a surprise of my life.  My buddy that was in boot camp with me in 1967, met me and my wife in Bass Pro the 3rd of June for the first time since Sept 1967, 42 year ago.  We had a great visit and dinner.  So, bye for now.  Pete”  Champions join Pete in support of all the troops serving everywhere with Love and Gratitude.

        “Dear Champion, Enough of this BS!  If you don’t know ‘BS’ stands for Bright Side.  Don’t you ever get tired of everything being so rosy and pleasant out there in the sticks?  You make the place sound like a roaring metropolis.  Well, I’ve been to Champion and I know that it is not even a wide space in the road.  It is a wide space beside a road and the pavement ends there.  Who are you trying to fool?  Sure, everybody would like to live in a place that is uncommonly beautiful and bountiful with eagles and bears, turkeys and blackberries and good neighbors, but you never mention the ticks and chiggers.  Why the only thing I ever read in your column about chiggers is that somebody said they lower cholesterol!  That’s just an out and out lie.  If you don’t know the rest of the world is out here suffering with a bad economy, corrupt government, crime, despotism, vandalism, tragedy, disease and heartbreak.  Where do you get off?  Disgruntled Elsewhere” This letter comes unbidden and Champions get off C Highway and turn east on WW and go all the way to the bottom of the hill.  Then they are home.  It is a shame that everyone can’t live in such a beautiful place, but then, as this reader points out, there are the ticks and chiggers and there is also the humidity to consider.

        Foster Wiseman has his 4th birthday this week.  The whole community is proud of him and pleased for him to be having such a lively celebration.  He has a whole mess of relatives who have been eating pie and cake in his honor for days!

        Friday and Saturday are designated as good days to plant root crops according to Linda’s Almanac from over at The Plant Place in Norwood.  The 17th and 18th are good days to cut hay if the weather cooperates.  Linda is as excited as any about the First Ripe Tomato in Champion Contest 2009.  She has signed a Congratulatory Gift Certificate for $10.00 to be presented to the winner.  That brings the total cash value of the prize to upwards of twenty dollars and an old fruit jar!  The catch is that the tomato must have been grown in Champion and for contest purposes Champion is defined as where a person casts his ballot.  Voting is not a requirement, but that defines the geographical area under consideration.  The winner must also be willing to share the tomato with the judges who vote if it’s ripe or not and to be photographed with the prize….the tomato will be gone by then.  This is the third annual event.  June 28, 2007 and July 12, 2008 are the dates of the previous wins.  Anticipation is mounting!

        “In the night when the moon is clear You my dear are very near and so warm Like a hot summer day late in June. Remember when we were so young?  We thought that everything was fun, But really life had just begun.  I never want to leave you.  I never want to go.  I just want to be beside you Everywhere you go.”  This song is called “Hot Summer Day” and was written by Danny Kirwan.  The nature of the melody might determine weather it is a sweet song or sort of creepy like a stalker might be singing it.  (Perhaps that note from Mr. Elsewhere is having an effect.)  For sure Summer will be here on Sunday.  Seasons are slipping by and it may happen that suddenly on a sultry summer Sunday someone will sing that song or another one that is sentimental and soothing.

        The Summer Solstice is June 21st.  It is the longest day of the year and it is Father’s Day this year!  The old guy will be fed his favorite pie and the phone will jangle off the hook as grateful sons and daughters make their customary “Gee, thanks, Dad” call.  Mail boxes will be full of cards and a few long overdue letters describing the successes of his children and how they could never have done it without him.  Others will be thinking of their own dear Father and how he worked for his family and the good example that he set.  They will be remembering fishing trips and funny songs and family stories that go way back.

        Examples of good neighboring and stories that go way back may be sent to Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Garden lore and salutes to sylvan summer are accepted at Champion News.  Sip a soda and sing a summer song on the porch at Henson’s Store.  It is on the North Side of the Square and looks across the broad expanse of Lonnie Krider Memorial Drive.  Check out the news from way back at www.championnews.us.  In Champion it’s not BS when you’re Looking on the Bright Side!

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June 8, 2009

June 8, 2009

CHAMPION—June 8, 2009

 

        Champions think Ella May Daugherty, of Gentryville, hit the nail on the head with her James Russell Lowell quote: “What is so rare as a day in June.”  He says, “There is no price set on the lavish summer, and June may be had by the poorest comer.”  Champions agree with that sentiment.

        Virginia Jacobs from Bryant Heights and former Champion, Esther Wrinkles, of Vanzant gave good first hand accounts of the Proctor Family Reunion and the Fieldstone Reunion last week.  People are still talking about the fun they had.

        Wally Hopper, now of Republic, MO, writes:  “This is the first time I have written, but I enjoy the Champion articles very much…..”  “The Denlow Reunion was outstanding this year.  Robert Upshaw should have been a stand up comedian.  He did a great job of keeping us laughing and we even had hula dancers.  Many thanks to him, Faye and Kaye and all the others who work so hard to make it a success.  Lots of work goes into this and I want you to know how much we appreciate you!  Also a big thanks to the ones who mow and tend to the graveyard.  It looked beautiful and the rain held off for just enough time to decorate.  For those who didn’t get to come, you missed out on a good time.  It was good to see Bob and Betty Upshaw who came from Iowa.  I spent lots of time with Bob in my young days and we got into a trouble now and then but it is nice to see folks make an effort to attend these things.  I’m afraid our young people do not put the importance on it that we do.  I went to school at Denlow in 1946-1948 and still have a love for this area.  Keep up the good work.  Wally Hopper.”  A Champion who occasionally drives by Denlow notes that the same Robert Upshaw is frequently out there riding or pushing a lawnmower or weed eater.  He seems to be everywhere.  He’ll be playing this Thursday evening with the Wild Bunch over at Gravy Corner.

        “Every clod feels a stir of might, an instinct within it that reaches and towers, and, grasping blindly above it for light, climbs to a soul in grass and flowers,” says Mr. Lowell and so it is in Champion.  A Champion clod ran into Louise Hutchison in Walmart the other day.  She had her sister, Gail Carson, visiting with her from Buffalo, Iowa.  Gail and her husband Dick Carson had arrived Friday in time to see the third sister, Doris Gillis and her husband George who were visiting from Oklahoma City.  They are all reported to much favor Henson’s Store in Downtown Champion over any Walmart.  When asked if she was going to be in contention for the “First Ripe Tomato in Champion Contest” again this year Louise replied that she already had a tomato ‘about this big,’ whereupon she indicated a circle with her thumb and forefinger that was about the size of a hen egg.  Later, on the phone, she described it as being about the size of a silver dollar.  Champions will remember the Contest Rules.  1,The Tomato must be Ripe.  2, The Tomato must have been grown in Champion.  3, Grower must be willing to Share the Tomato with judges present at Henson’s Store.  4, Winner must be willing to be photographed with the Prize.  The Prize this year includes A Gift Certificate from the Plant Place in Norwood, another Old Fruit Jar, 1 dozen each regular and wide mouth canning flats, and $5.00 worth of tickets (6 tickets) for chances on the Queen Size Quilt to be awarded at the Skyline Area Volunteer Fire Department Picnic on August 14th and 15th.

        The Best Things in Life are Free is a song written by B.G. DeSylva, Lew Brown, and Ray Henderson for the musical “Good News.” “The moon belongs to everyone.  The best things in life are free.  The stars belong to everyone, they gleam there for you and me.  The flowers in Spring, The robins that sing, The sunbeams that shine They’re yours, They’re mine!  And love can come to everyone, The best things in life are free.”  That song came out in 1927.  It is still true.

        The D Day memorial celebrations around the country and around the world remind Champions of the sacrifices made and being made by the people in Our Uniforms and the people who support them.  Of all the good reasons for war there are as many for peace.  “The foolish and the dead alone never change their opinions.”  That is another quote from James Russell Lowell.  The nature of conflict is to be in opposition or at a variance and Champions, like all Americans, are Grateful to live in a Nation that allows for differing views.  For those who put themselves in danger to protect the right to differing views, a Grateful Nation acknowledges their sacrifices with Love and Understanding.  Compassion is a Champion thing.

        “When you plant a seed, you learn patience.  You don’t dig it up to see how it’s growing.  You let marinate, You’ve got to let it mull and marinate.”  Mimi Baczewska wrote those lyrics many years ago and the melody accompanies many gardeners in their hearts still as they go about their productive tasks.  Mimi has a deep connection to the Ozarks which makes the Ozarks a more lovely place.  The re-release of her album, Turning Tide, invites old friends and new to join Mimi and her music.  Make the journey from grief to hope, from longing to exhilaration.  It is available from cdbaby.com and is described as heartfelt, reflective, loving, fun and expansive—a rich noveau-folk-jazz genre mix.  Back out in the garden, the 10th through the 12th will be good days to plant root crops according to Linda’s Almanac.  It says that June is the Strawberry Moon.  Lots of strawberries are going into freezers and the blueberry farms are in full swing now for people who like to pick their own.  Blueberries are always up at the top of the lists of healthy foods especially good for the Brain!

        Skyline Ladies Auxiliary members are gearing up for a meeting to get their part of the Annual Skyline VFD Picnic organized.  The picnic will be held August 14th and 15th this year and it promises to be another splendid affair.  As Mr. Hopper pointed out, there is always a lot of hard work that goes on to make these kinds of events so successful.  It’s part of living in such a Champion community!

        Champions celebrating wedding anniversaries in June are full of contented smiles and sighs.  “O, My Love is like a red red rose, that is newly sprung in June.  My love is like a melody. That is sweetly played in tune.”  Robert Burns wrote that poem that suits the occasion well.

        Ramble around on the website at www.championnews.us to find pictures of Champion Tomatoes and a tidy little Champion garden.  Express differing views at Champion News.  Send any kind of encouragements to Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Check out the complete selection of Champion picture postcards at Henson’s Store on the North Side of the Square in Downtown Champion.  Lowell said, “Joy comes, grief goes, we know not how;  Everything is happy now.”  In Champion they know it is because they’re Looking on the Bright Side!

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June 1, 2009

June 1, 2009

CHAMPION—June 1, 2009

 

        As is true in most parts of the world, it turns out that in Champion the flip side of adversity is opportunity.

        By all reports the Proctor Family Reunion was a big success, as was the Fair Grove School Reunion.  How pleasant to live in a part of the world where people still care enough about each other after all these years to want to renew their old acquaintances.  Memories must be sweet to pull them back from so far afield.

        Haymaking is going at a breakneck pace, but no broken necks have been reported.  Champions will keep it that way.  Harley is home for a spell catching up on the farm work and the tranquil surroundings of a country estate.  Barbara was left home in Illinois where she is planning a California adventure, perhaps a buying trip for her burgeoning handbag collection.

        Linda’s June Almanac is ready over at the Plant Place in Norwood.  It indicates that from the third all the way through the seventh will be advantageous for planting.  Late Champions will be getting things in finally so they can start concentrating on the weeding and watering.  It will be a busy season.  Some versions of the almanac went out indicating that June’s flower is the Lily of the Valley.  That is May’s flower.  June’s is the rose!  As temperatures rise and greens collide it is amazing that it is so fast upon us when the winter seemed so very long.  It still is a surprise to see how far the season has progressed.  Some are enjoying big beautiful heads of broccoli already and lots of sugar snap peas.

        Champions over west of Clever Creek were surprised to find a 6’1” snakeskin out in their yard.  The snake had cleverly slipped out of its skin leaving a perfect transparent image of itself, except perhaps a little smaller.  It was not known exactly what kind of snake he was, perhaps a black snake or a bull snake.  These Champions are also enjoying the entertainment of a dozen swooping martins picking mosquitoes out of the air.  Things are not very exciting over their way and that’s just the way they like it.

        Fortnight Bridge was quite an interesting game Saturday.  Hosted by Brushy Knob with Charlene Dupre sitting in for the distracted Champion player, the game belonged to the player from Vera Cruz.  She won six of the seven rubbers played.  All but one were 700 rubbers, meaning that the opposing partnership did not win a game.  There was one unbid slam made by Charlene and the Norwood player who wound up with the low score.  The game was over by 11:30 and with such unbalanced hands and distribution everyone was glad, with the possible exception of the Vera Cruz winner!

        Little Foster and Kalyssa Wiseman have taken their Mom on a trip over to Tennessee to spend time with cousins Dillon and Dakota.  They will have spent a week or more there before their return.  They will be taking in a singing school there in Murphysborough.  All these youngsters share musical talent passed down from their grandfathers.  With some good training perhaps they will pass the joy of music down to their own future grandchildren.  They will be able to stand on the porch at Henson’s Store in Downtown Champion and explain to their grandchildren that the broad expanse of Lonnie Krider Memorial Drive was named after their great grandfather.  Maybe one of them will be a mandolin player and another will remember “Sadie’s Got Her New Dress On.

        Ed Henson would have been 104 on his birthday, May 27th, this year.  He was a driving force in the community, setting the tone for good humor and good behavior.  He liked a practical joke better than most and pulled some good ones in his time.  Mostly what people remember about him was his good natured smile and his willingness to be a good neighbor.  He set a fine example.

        Dalton Trumbo wrote a novel and a screenplay called “Johnny Got His Gun.”  It is a disturbing story that chronicles the tragic fate of a World War I soldier.  He survived a land mine explosion only to have lost his arms, legs, ears, eyes, nose and mouth.  Initially, he doesn’t know if he’s dead, alive or dreaming.  Whatever a person’s stand on the current conflicts or military conflict in general this is a story that provokes thought.  Champions keep the U.S. Service people in their thoughts with Love and Gratitude for their service.

        Examples of opportunity or optimism can be sent to Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  (I’m looking over a four-leaf clover that I overlooked before!)  E-mail them or any distracting kind of sunny side song to Champion News.  Hang around down at Henson’s Store on the North Side of the Square in Historic Downtown Champion and wait for some old timer to come along with a story to tell about Ed Henson.  Stand out on the porch and soak in the spring to summer seasonal changes to the constant beauty of the place.  Look in every direction.  It’s Champion! And you are Looking on the Bright Side.

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May 25, 2009

May 25, 2009

CHAMPION—May 25, 2009

 

        Empathy and Compassion vie for prevalence with Love and Gratitude for the top spots in the vast lexicon of sentiment in Champion.  Bully!

        Arlene Cooley called as soon as the paper hit the stands and was gratified to learn that the information concerning the Proctor Reunion as reported here last week was completely erroneous.  She said, “Never have I been so glad to find out something was so wrong!”  It seems she has some interest and perhaps responsibility in that Reunion and she was sure that she had another week to get ready.  Sometimes people will make a mistake just to insure that the subject matter gets enough attention in the correcting of the error.  That is not the case here.  Hopefully every Proctor will be at the appointed place and time.  Wherever that is, they’ll be having a Champion good time!  Ruby could not be reached for comment.

        All families have their quirks—little idiosyncrasies that set them apart at the same time rendering them all the more loveable for their childishness and naiveté.  Sue Upshaw does not care for accordion music.  This is not news to the family and not even relevant except that her brother-in-law, The General, fancies himself quite the virtuoso on the accordion.  He has studied the bellows driven free reed aerophone instrument intermittently since last fall…thinking that his time in the Air Force would have given him the advantage.  Alas! In a protracted and unfortunate display of contempt for excellence in music he finally strung out enough notes in the right order that Sue was able to recognize “A Bicycle Built For Two,” and thus put the poor thing to rest.  This occurred at the Denlow School Reunion on Saturday.  Fortunately Phil Blazes quickly cleansed the aesthetic pallet.  His keyboard performance of the Hawaiian Wedding Song was interpreted in dance by Kaye-Hula Hula Upshaw Johnston, Peggy Hancock Hula Hula Somebody, and Cathy Hula Alsup Hula Riley Hula Hula.  Lavish costumes of custom fit grass skirts and exotic floral leis lent authenticity to the piece.  It was a tribute to the Den-aloha Aloha oy Interpretation of the Omens.  Sixty odd attendees at the Den Aloha Lou Ow tacitly agreed that it had been ominous that the big ancient tree had come down just the week before.  Fred Follis, Frank Proctor, Earl and Carol Spencer, Richard Johnston, Steve Kutz, Jimmy Schrader, Robert Upshaw, Pete Proactor and probably others participated in a rapid clean up of that event.  As is true in Champion, a small civic-minded percentage of the population usually justly takes credit for the majority of the accomplishments made.

        “The Armadillo has left the State.”  That is according to Robert Upshaw who officiated at the auction at the Denlow School Reunion.  He was referring to Champion Barbara Krider’s couture armadillo handbag, which she had generously donated to the cause of Denlow.  “I hated to part with it, but I was glad to see it get out of Missouri,” stated Upshaw.  The bidding was contentious and the final outcome was shrouded in secrecy in terms of who actually purchased the object and how much was paid.  An attractive young relative of the late Cletis Upshaw has taken the thing to Kentucky—Fulton, KY.  As more information becomes available concerning the disposition of the piece, determinations will be made about making it public.  An unofficial spokesperson for the Denlow Reunion observed that the attendees were, for the most part, convivial and decorous, in sharp contrast to the behavior of the bellicose mob of last year, which the General had likened to Irish Hillbillies.  Old acquaintances were renewed and people came from far away to remember their youth together.  Any official remembrances are welcome at Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.

        The up side of the dreary off and on rain and significant humidity is that it’s perfect Perfect weather for transplanting.  Those sturdy fragrant tomato plants with their long hairy stems and rich root balls just want to be planted deep and fed well.  Rita Krider suggested planting some paper matches with pepper plants so that the roots can get the phosphorous that they need.  Someone else thinks that a little powdered milk in the hole with the new tomato plants will help prevent the blossom end rot, which is thought to be a result of a calcium deficiency.  Whatever the method, good record keeping is a great gardening tool.  Relying on memory from one garden season to the next does not always maximize the use of the information.  Garden journals often get neglected about the time the hard work is really underway.  It is a matter of priorities.  Linda’s Almanac from over at the Plant Place in Norwood says that the 27th and 28th will be most favorable for corn, cotton, okra, beans, peppers, eggplant and other above-ground crops.  Plant seedbeds and flower gardens.  The next really good days for these crops will be the 3rd of June through the 5th.  Recently a patient asked her doctor, “Do you plant by the signs?”  He said, “Does that stuff really work?  Isn’t it just hocus-pocus?”  The gardener held her tongue about how could anyone belonging to the American Medical Association possibly accuse anybody else of ‘hocus pocus?’  Finally she returned that the garden lore found in almanacs and other sources is based on an accumulation of the knowledge of record keeping gardeners and astronomers over a period of centuries.  Modern medicine is much more recent.  In any event, Linda will be happy to discuss any garden lore, philosophies, procedures and successes and failures.  Just stop by.

        Over in the Arlington National Cemetery, Section Sixty is the saddest acre in America.  The Old Guard oversees the planting of the Veterans of the current conflicts in Iraq and Afghanistan there.  On Memorial Day twelve more names were added to the honor roll of fallen soldiers on the News Hour with Jim Lehrer.  The youngest was 19 years old and the oldest was a man from California named Hutchison who was 60.  A soldier named Brooks from Joplin, MO died there recently.  He was 38 years old.  Champions remember those who serve every day with Love and Gratitude.

        Tennessee boys are loose in Champion again.  They have been busy helping out on the farm, playing with the little cousins, continuing their good connection with their mother’s home place.  It is a nice tradition to carry on.  Champion spirits are always uplifted by their presence.

        “Where were you on the night of June the 3rd?  Where were you on the night of June the 3rd?  Did you meet a stranger?  Did you take a walk?  Was you heart in danger?  You better talk!  Just remember I heard every word.  ‘Cause we were together on the night of June the 3rd!”  That date is coming up so it will be a good time to take note.  It is a Fat’s Waller tune.  He played a great stride piano and sang, “Don’t let it bother you, if now and then castles tumble, never grumble, count from one to ten.  A smile is a frown upside down.  Turn that frown upside down and smile!  Sing!  La da da di da di zing zing zing!”

        E-mail examples of hocus pocus to Champion News.  Keep looking for pictures of the great Armadillo Handbag (couture) on the website www.championnews.us.  Step out on the porch at Henson’s Store in downtown Champion and freely express your views.  (Rush Limbaugh ‘earns’ $123,287.67 per day—including Sundays and holidays–$45 million a year, expressing his.)  Express your views, belt out a joyful song, or just let your gaze wander about the broad expanses of Lonnie Krider Memorial Drive where every step of the way is fraught with history and optimism.  Champion!  Looking on the Bright Side!

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May 18, 2009

May 18, 2009

CHAMPION—May 18, 2009

 

        If asked, “How do you like ‘em?” Champions will say, “Sunnyside Up, Please!”  Some might be talking about eggs, but this time of year almost every question relates to the weather.  The Boston Globe reported that Dr. David Mischoulon, a specialist in seasonal affective disorder (SAD), says that the addition sunlight exposure that comes from daylight savings time means potential cheerfulness for our souls.  Champions, like Paul, have learned in whatever state they are, to be content.  The additional sunlight that comes from the end of weeks of rain and gloom has, however, raised the contentment level in Champion to an unprecedented level.  The new week had not even begun when the hum of haymaking machinery was being echoed up and down valleys and lawn mowers were going at break neck speed.  Linda’s Almanac from over at the Plant Place in Norwood says that the 23rd will be good for planting root crops and the 24th will be favorable for planting beans, corn, cotton, tomatoes, peppers and other above ground crops.  Gardeners in low-lying areas are still a little concerned about an odd late frost.  Up on the ridges things are already in and growing to beat the band.

        Saturday saw a big clean up project at the Skyline VFD Picnic grounds.  The recent storms going all the way back to Hurricane Ike, a category 4 storm, last September have brought down a lot of trees in the picnic grounds.  Six firefighters and three or four auxiliary members spent the day up to about 1:30 in the afternoon hauling brush and cutting wood.  They brought in a backhoe to level out the ground where the root balls of the huge trees had been up ended by the big winds.  The same core group of hard workers that constitute the backbone of the fire department were there to accomplishe the task with the same good spirit of community service that makes Skyline a Champion kind of place!  There is more work to be done before the annual picnic which will be on the 14th and 15th of August so there will be time for the Johnny Come Latelys to get in on the action and the fun.

        Another big tree, one of the ancient ones, just inside the cemetery at Denlow came down in a storm the other night.  Some Proctors and Upshaws and others cleared the debris away in preparation for the 23rd Annual Denlow School Reunion, which will occur on Saturday the 23rd.  Students, teachers, board members and friends will gather at the old school with the festivities starting about 11 in the morning.  At two in the afternoon the much-anticipated Auction will occur.  One of the items on the block will be the famed couture armadillo handbag generously donated to the Denlow community by Champion Barbara Krider.  As a one of a kind object d art, the piece will be on display at Henson’s Store in Historic Downtown Champion until Thursday when a courier is expected to transport it to Vanzant where it will be placed in the custody of General Upshot for safekeeping until the auction.  While the efficacy of that move is debatable, the commitment has been made and Champions will simply hold their breaths and hope for the best.  A complete numbered set of Champion picture postcards has been pledged.  Fae (Upshaw) Krider-President of the Board was heard to say that she plans a trip over to The Gift Corner in Norwood to find some additional items for the auction.  She has a good eye for appealing things and Charlene has a good selection.  It will be worth the wait to see what all is brought forward and who walks away with what.

        There will be lots of Proctors in attendance, many from as far away as Oregon!  They will have their family reunion on Sunday and will use the Denlow School Reunion to get themselves in the mood for fun!

        Secretary of Defense Robert Gates refers to himself as the Secretary of War.  He said, “Every single person in combat today I sent there, and I never forget that for a second.”  As Memorial Day approaches it is good to know that the person in charge of the Military has deep respect, Love and Gratitude for all those serving.  He joins Champions in those sentiments.

        Mary Graham still has the little dog, Brownie, at her house.  She would sure like to find him a nice home.  She thinks the little dog needs a little boy!  Brownie is about a 20 pound dog, part healer and maybe a little Jack Russell.  He is about two years old and is a very loving and playful little fellow.  Mary is at 948-2755.  She grew up over in Florida and Alabama and has a lot of interesting stories to tell.  Her Daddy had bought a big Morgan horse that had started out to be a saddle horse.  Somewhere along the way the horse had been abused and mal-handled so she was too ornery to ride.  Mary’s Daddy got her at a good price to make a stock horse out of her to pull wagons and the like.  When Mary and her 3 brothers and sisters got home from school one day and found the horse there, they were very excited.  They had never had a horse before.  The four of them got busy and brushed her up and combed her tail.  Mary braided up her mane in lots of little braids and tied ribbons on them.  Their Daddy came in after dark and warned the kids to stay away from that mean horse, saying that she was a killer.  Wasn’t he surprised to find her all dolled up the next morning?  They named her Dolly and she proved out to be a gentle beast that never hurt a child or chicken.  That story was brought to Mary’s mind during a conversation about horse-trading in general.  It is a fine art practiced in these parts and one enters into the practice with the caveat:  “buyer beware!”

        May 18th marks the 97th birthday of Exer Hector.  She was born in Kaufman County, Texas and was an excellent horse trader.  She almost always got the better end of the deal, but always allowed her trading partner the dignity of saving face.  She never rubbed their noses in their losses.  She was an organic gardener before it was cool.  She was a talented artist with a keen eye for beauty, a sharp wit and sense of humor that showed up in surprising ways.  Her patients and gentle spirit were balanced nicely with her complete willingness to point out exactly where the coon crap was on the pump handle at any time.  Her youngest child has now lived longer than she did.  Champions always remember their Mother’s birthdays.  Her favorite songs were “In the Sweet Bye and Bye” and “Trouble in mind, I’m blue, but I won’t be blue always. You know the sun’s gonna shine in my back door someday!”

        Paul also said to meditate on whatever things are true, noble, just, pure, lovely and of good report, virtuous or praiseworthy.  Examples of any of that kind of thing or any kind of Sunnyside song are welcome at Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO. 65717 or at Champion News.  Go down to Henson’s Store on the North Side of the Square just off Lonnie Krider Memorial Drive to get a good look at Barbara’s couture object d art.  (There will be some good pictures of it posted on the website a at www.championnews.us.)  Then go out on the porch and shake your head.  Any way you look in Champion you’re Looking on the Bright Side!

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May 11, 2009

May 11, 2009

CHAMPION—May 11, 2009

 

        In Champion, as well as in many nations around the world, the second Sunday in May is celebrated as Mother’s Day.  A woman named Anna Jarvis trademarked the phrase in 1912, and Woodrow Wilson signed the Congressional Bill that made it a law.  Flowers and cards, phone calls and appropriate little gifts were the usual fair in Champion.  Mothers were touched at the thoughtfulness of the young ones while remembering their own good examples for the role.  Foster and Kalyssa Wiseman came to hang out with their Grammie and Ms. Powell’s grandson, Bryan, spent the day with her in Champion.  Another of her grandsons, Travis, had been to see her late last week together with his wife and their two little ones.  Children are wonderful, grandchildren are terrific, and great grandchildren are just amazing!  Champion!

        Friday’s storms caused damage all around the country.  The post office in Norwood lost some of its roof and there were many big trees blown down.  Some were broken but many were just blown out of the rain soaked ground.  There will be a lot of clean-up going on for a long time.  Champions will take it in stride and continue to be Grateful that it was not worse.  The broad expanse of Lonnie Krider Memorial Drive was only lightly sprinkled with debris and so when Bud Hutchison’s trail ride came trough on Saturday things appeared to be entirely orderly.  Only nine made the ride this year.  One was heard to make a remark about ‘fair weather cowboys’ indicating that threatening weather had caused some to stay home this time.  Some might have been dealing with storm damage.  The same amount of enjoyment that the forty or so riders had last year was concentrated on this year’s small group and they uniformly reported having had a delightful ride.  It is a 13 mile round trip from Champion to Drury and back.  “May your horse never stumble.  May your cinch never break.  May your belly never grumble or your heart ever ache.”  That’s a good cowboy sentiment.  Bob Heard makes this ride as often as he can.  He lives over forty miles west of Springfield, but gets down this way whenever Bud’s got a ride going on.  A couple of weeks ago the two of them and four others made a 40 mile trip from Emerson’s Trout Farm through Vera Cruz and then over to Champion and Cold Springs and back again.  Bob says that Bud knows all the roads.  It took the best part of a beautiful day and they had a good time.

        Let the Good Times Roll!  That was the sentiment earlier in the week when a couple of couples came to Champion to kick up their heels.  Galen and Angilee Neher and Wayne and Doris Moore chose Champion as the place to celebrate their 64th wedding anniversary.  They live in Mountain Grove but sought out Champion’s charm to commemorate their double wedding ceremony, which must have occurred in 1945!  Among the four of them there is a brother and sister, and the rest are all mischboucha (related but not blood kin) but Champions failed to find out which ones were which, though there are only a couple of possibilities.  Still, possibilities are always ripe for a good time in Champion.  Niagara Falls may have its spectacle, its honeymoon attraction, noise, commercial development and international border, but Champion has its Bright Side!

        Only 1360 points separated high and low at the Fortnight Bridge game hosted by Champion on Saturday.  Charlene Dupre sat in for the Vera Cruz player who was busy with the Audubon bird count.  She walked off with $1.50 as the low scorer.  Champion won $2.00 in nickels which means that during the course of the evening there were twenty unsuccessful contracts bid.  Sisters, Charlene and Linda, finished up their day with the bridge game after having had a busy day at the Plant Place and Gift Corner in Norwood.  The season is full blown for planting vegetable and flower gardens.  The 14th and 15th will be good days to plant late beets, potatoes, onions, carrots and other root crops.  That’s according to Linda’s Almanac.  May is called the Corn Planting Moon, but the ‘signs’ will not be favorable again for above ground crops until the 24th.  The wet weather has some running late getting things planted.  So far, Dustin’s Grandpa’s saying about rain on Easter Sunday means rain the next seven Sundays in a row…is turning out to be pretty close.  The first Sunday after Easter was dry until after midnight, but then it came a nice rain.  Champions will not complain about two or three more damp Sundays.  Champions don’t ever complain about the weather!

        An interesting article in a national newspaper talks about a 61 year-old Vietnam veteran who was drafted at age 19.  He went to the service willingly and did his duty.  He came home with a bullet in his head, a fairly useless left arm and a dragging foot.  He finished his education and became a civil engineer.  Now he teaches drafting at a high school in an economically depressed area.  He is a patient person, likes teaching and is well liked by the students.  His classroom is located on the hallway where the military recruiters meet with the students and where the Junior ROTC members meet.  When the No Child Left Behind law came into effect, the military services were given the same access to students as college recruiters.  The teacher loves his school and his students and said that in a way they have become his children.  He says that he recognizes the need for national defense, but that he feels that high schools students are too young and unformed to really question what they are told and that the intensity of the recruitment seems very like exploitation, particularly in low income areas of the country.  The teacher researched the law to determine to what extent the schools are required to assist the military and found that there is a good deal of latitude.  “I did a very good job for the military, but it’s torn me up for my whole life.”  He grew up in a small town and is content with his life as a good husband and grandfather, but he is still troubled by his military experience.  He wants the kids to know that it’s not a joke.  He has Love and Gratitude for those who serve and those who have served and for those who will.

        Guy Clark, popular song-writer of “Home Grown Tomatoes” and many other worth while songs wrote words to Soldiers Joy 1864:  “First I thought a snake had got me it happened dreadful quick.  T’was a bullet bit my leg, right off I got sick………..Gimme some of that Soldier’s Joy, you know what I mean.  I don’t want to hurt no more my leg is turning green.”  The words seem to fit into the well-known fiddle tune, though they are lengthy and gory.  A person might just have to sit on the porch at Henson’s Store and pat his foot to mental music sometimes.  Any other words to Soldiers Joy are welcome at Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717 or at Champion News.  Listen to a nice version of When Johnny Comes Marching Home at www.championnews.us.  Ramble around on that site to find a few more songs and lots of nice pictures of Champions—Looking on the Bright Side!

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May 4, 2009

May 4, 2009

CHAMPION—May 4, 2009

 

        Champions know that “The best thing one can do when it’s raining is to let it rain.”  That is another jewel of Champion wisdom from Longfellow who also said:  “Be still, sad heart, and cease repining; behind the cloud is the sun still shining; Thy fate is the common fate of all; Into each life some rain must fall, Some days must be dark and dreary.”  Champions are just grateful for the rain, knowing that the gentle way it has fallen this time is just a nice boost to the water table.  Undaunted by dark and dreary, between drops they are out watching the gardens growing and pulling weeds.  When the ground is so wet even a big old dandelion will sometimes just slip out of the mud with only a little pulling.  Sometimes the sound of the roots being torn from the ground puts thoughtful gardeners into thinking about the sodbusters when the prairies were being turned over for the first time.  Sodbuster generations later it is a wholesome and wonderful sound full good farming lore and family history.  Indigenous ears hear it differently and hearts still break at the taming of the earth.  Perspective is rife in Champion.  “What’s old Hanks wads worth anyway?”  One asks, “Wads of what?”

        This time last year Bud Hutchison’s Trail Ride was being arranged and riders from all around the area were getting ready for their annual outing.  It was a fine day for it and the ride went off ‘without a hitch.’  They are doing it again and this year the riders will congregate at Champion about 10 in the morning on Saturday and take a nice ride over to Drury.  They will get back to Champion about 1:30 or 2 in the afternoon, so it is a good chance for folks to join in the ride or just to enjoy the spectacle.  Forty or fifty people horseback, the squeaking of saddle leather, and general horse noises and smells make for some fine entertainment.  Probably somebody will be singing, “Old Paint’s a good pony.  He runs when he can.  Good morning, young lady.  My pony won’t stand.  Goodbye…”  Perhaps they will talk about that Kentucky Derby winner and wish they had had two dollars down on him…at 50 to one odds…a good investment.

        Several Champions spent the rainy week under the weather with various combinations of flu symptoms.  Most have made a good recovery or are, at least, well on their way to recovery.  The notion of a flu that spreads quickly around the world is a matter of no small concern in the crossroads of America.  Champion connections are far reaching and the truth of it is that no place is ‘safe.’  Champions drink a lot of good water; wash their hands often; get lots of wholesome exercise, and pay attention to their surroundings.  The Center for Disease Control has many smart, productive people working on problem.  President Obama said that under the administration of former President George W. Bush, a sophisticated system was set up that allows for the fast dissemination of information and material to the whole nation in a very short period of time.  Champions understand the importance of each doing his part.

        Swarming hummingbirds kept some of those ailing Champions entertained during the wet week.  It doesn’t take much for some.  Bird watching seems more productive than watching the news.  Senator Patrick Leahy wants to indict the former president and vice president on charges that amount to war crimes.  European activist want the International Criminal Court, which was established in 2002, to file on Bush and Cheney for crimes against humanity.  The current President does not seem to want to spend valuable time in punitive exercises, but rather seems intent on working on current critical problems.  The heirs of Apache chieftain Geronimo, however, are suing senior federal government officials, Yale University and Skull and Bones, Yale’s oldest secret society.  They are suing for the return of the old warrior’s skull, which is said to have spent most of the last century in the society’s High Street tomb on the campus of Yale in New Haven, Connecticut.  Geronimo died of pneumonia at Fort Sill, Oklahoma, but the suit alleges that members of the society exhumed the remains around 1918 and placed them in the society’s tomb.  It has long been suggested that Prescott Bush, father of the 41st president was among the group allegedly involved.  Membership rolls include George H.W. Bush, George W. Bush, John Kerry, and William F. Buckley and many other prominent, powerful and wealthy men,  If they win the suit, plaintiffs hope to re-inter Geronimo in a site close to his birthplace, in the Gila Wilderness of southwestern New Mexico.  Geronimo’s descendants are legally entitled to ownership of his remains and any funerary objects buried with him under the provisions of the 1990 Native American Graves Protection and Repatriation Act.  Champions would not like to see local cemeteries robbed of their Champion bones.  Even the General would stand guard at the Denlow Cemetery if it came to that.  Maybe that’s what he is doing when he is seen haunting the place any day of the week.

        The official death count of U.S. Service Personnel in the War in Iraq is now up to 4,283.  The most recent fatality was May 2nd.  Injures are estimated to be ‘over’ 100,000.  The total number of dead on all sides and the total number of injuries sustained is not a readily available figure.  What is available is the opportunity to express the Love and Gratitude that Champions share with the rest of the Nation when it comes to appreciating the efforts of those who serve.

        Manuel and Sue Hutchison were down from Iowa for a few days so that Manuel could go to his 50th high school class reunion.  Louise said they had a great time and about ten of the family went over to the Junction for fish on Friday.

        The official date for the Skyline Volunteer Fire Department Picnic is August 14th and 15th.  That is according to the Fire Chief and he should know.  May Day celebrations were rained out.  The next Big event after Saturday’s Trail Ride will be the Annual Denlow School Reunion.  There is time for that to come together well if certain influences can be managed.

        The long-range weather forecast does not seem to include a frost…though it did thunder in February.  By the time this issue of the paper hits mail boxes there will probably be dust blowing on the roads.  Linda’s Almanac from over at the Plant Place in Norwood shows that Thursday and Friday will be good days for planting above ground crops.  The next favorable time for above ground crops is on the 24th.  Meanwhile, the 9th-11th, the 14th and 15th, and the 19th and 20th will all be good for planting crops that have their yield below ground.  There is a lot of good information in the almanac and it is free.  Sometimes there is a copy at Henson’s Store, they are available at the Plant Place and on a link at the www.championnews.us website.  Champion website designer and administrator, Carol Cleveland, has made a beautiful e-newsletter for Linda.  What a technological savvy part of the world.  Champion!

        Some old Champion mothers are pulling a switch on their kids by sending them cards for Mother’s Day!  “Thanks for letting me be a Mother!” they say, and “You have improved my life!”  Very clever those old girls!  Champion notions.

        Interesting notions, and good sunny-side songs are welcome at Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Interesting stories about census takers, grave robbers or revenuers can be e-mailed to Champion News. Get out on the porch at Henson’s Store on Saturday and perhaps see “a cute little thing that lives by the spring in the Valley!  Every day she goes by with her head held up high, like a high-stepping filly.”  Watch for her among the mounted legions on Lonnie Krider Memorial Drive.  If you’re in Champion, you’re Looking on the Bright Side!

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April 27, 2009

April 27, 2009

CHAMPION—April 27, 2009

 

        May first, May Day, is a day designated to celebrate Spring.  It is a day of political protests.  It is a neo-pagan festival, a saint’s feast day, and a day for organized labor.  In many countries, it is a national holiday.  In Champion some like to make note of the number of different shades of green visible on that day, particularly in contrast with the still vibrant dogwood blossoms.  That can be a subjective number as green is often in the eye of the beholder.  It is easy to see that unfortunates living elsewhere might be jealous of the vistas—on the Bright Side.

        What a Champion!  Twelve year old Little League pitcher, Mackenzie Brown, of Bayonne, New Jersey threw a perfect game last week and was invited to throw out the first pitch at the Mets’ game against the Washington Nationals.  Anybody who attended school at Champion years ago can point out right where home plate and second base were…the other bases too.  They get a wistful look in their eyes and it is easy to see they are remembering wonderful days.

        National Volunteer Week festivities were wrapped up in Peoria, Illinois on Friday the 24th, at the Crittenton Center.  This is a multi-service, not-for-profit, child welfare organization.  Eight of the center’s top volunteers received the President’s Volunteer Service Award.  Peoria Mayor Jim Ardis gave out the awards to a group that has performed about 67 hundred hours of community service combined.  Volunteers at the center do everything from relieve the staff to play with the children.  And most of the recipients have been working at the center for several years.  There are about six hundred volunteers that work at the center throughout the year.  The President’s Volunteer Service Award was created in 2003 to inspire others to contribute to their communities through volunteering.  Champion’s own Barbara Krider was one of the recipients of this prestigious award and spoke to the media after the presentation.  She was very poised in her remarks and spoke to the value of the volunteer’s efforts in terms of giving the critical staff relief to do their important jobs.  Barbara wore a periwinkle lavender jacket with jewel neckline over a light blouse and skirt.  Champions are well represented by their stylish (if largely absentee) resident and are optimistic that her schedule will give her time to return home soon.

        She will be glad to have missed the Clampett-mobile.  The Clines, of Seymour, who have diverse interests in the auto-racing, auto-restoration, and all things auto made themselves quite the spectacle on Saturday.  The connection of Ms. Cline (whose interest is in Mr. Cline) to General Upshod could no longer be denied as she stood next to him as close as she would to an Uncle while watching her spouse and lovely cousin Elva roll by in a heap of hillbilly junk that would have embarrassed Ellie Mae and everyone knows that Ellie Mae is just about the most fun loving, gentle and non-judgmental person ever depicted as real.  Imagine plastic lawn chairs, wooden crates and benches, floor lamps and rusty wash tubs rattling down the road giving every appearance of impending complete collapse.  Cartoon like and as unbalanced as the General, the thing lumbered along with no clear origin or destination.  The vehicle, however, has a substantial drive-train, appropriate tires in good repair and all the pertinences required to make it go.  While roadworthy it is probably not legal and the Clines are enjoined not to try to take it on the open road.  It is noteworthy and delightful to know that Elva is making a good recovery from her broken foot or surely her Dear Mother would not have let her go off with the General!  It was noted last week that Barbara is the wife of the brother of the sister of the General, but in reality she is the wife of the brother married to the sister of the General.

        The Fortnight Bridge group was hosted by Norwood for its regular game on Saturday.  The Brushy Knob player was absent and his place taken by veteran player from Seven Springs.  Vera Cruz came in first place with a score of 4660, Champion was second with 4460, Norwood third with 3540 and Seven Springs low with 2640.  Low, however profited by $1.50, and high by $2.00.  It was a lively game including several slams bid and un-bid.  The whole southwest Missouri bridge community is still reeling from a hand that was dealt on April 4th when Charlene Durpre sat in for the Vera Cruz player at the Champion game.  Norwood dealt, with Brushy Knob as partner, and opened “one diamond.”  Champion was second to bid, with Charlene for partner.  Champion bid Six Spades!  It was amazing!  Pass.  Pass.  Pass.  Well she made it!  The hand dealt had nine spades including the top three and two singleton Aces!  A doubleton heart with the Queen was the only weak spot, but Charlene had the King!  What a partner!  It was fantastic!  The Ace of hearts was the only lost trick.  Twenty-two days later the Champion player is still on top of the world!  Bridge playing friends from around the area, however, are beginning to duck when they see her approach.  While everyone is glad for her it might be getting a little tiresome.  “Six Spades! What a deal!”

        May Day will be an excellent day for planting all the above-ground crops according to Linda’s Almanac from over at the Plant Place in Norwood.  The next good planting day will be the 7th, so there will be time to get all those farm chores done in the interim.  Gardens are going in all around the country and there is said to be a renewed interest in studying all the country living subjects that are now being called “sustainable.”  Gardening, wild-crafting, food preserving, herb-lore, recycling, composting, live-stock raising, and bartering are all things that are part of the fabric of this part of the world.  Champion has sustained itself through tough times with hard work, humor, music, and good neighboring.

        Mayday is an emergency code word used internationally as a distress signal in voice procedure radio communications.  It comes from a French word, which means “come help me,” and is used to signal a life-threatening emergency.  The call is always given three times in a row (“Mayday Mayday Mayday”) to prevent mistaking it for some similar-sounding phrase under noisy conditions, and to distinguish an actual Mayday from a message about a Mayday call.  Soldiers and sailors use it around the world and many of them are U.S. Service Personnel.  Champions all hope when the signal is used that help arrives promptly.  When those Veterans arrive home Champions hope they will be met with the Love and Gratitude of their Nation.

        How thrilling it must be to have a birthday on May Day!  The whole world celebrates with flowers and fun and light hearts.  Sing, “When Irish Eyes are Smiling sure it’s like a morning spring.  In the lilt of Irish laughter, you can hear the angles sing.  When Irish hearts are happy, all the world seems bright and gay.  And when Irish eyes are smiling, sure, they steal your heart away.”  Mailboxes at Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717, and at Champion News are receiving any kind of beautiful song, any kind of optimism, nostalgia, garden tips and bragging.  Look at www.championnews.us for the fun of it.  Sing any good song out on the porch at Henson’s Store, where many a fine singer has stood before.  Gaze down Lonnie Krider Memorial Drive and be swelled with pride, for when you are in Champion, your Looking on the Bright Side!

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