Chath
am
Blanketeer
Vol. 2
APRIL 16, 1935
No. 20
efficiency is
VERY IMPORTANT
Means That A Job, To Be Done
Well and Successfully, Must Be
Done In Certain Time Limit
Scenes From Duke Game
Doubtless some of us wonder at
times about those yellow slips of
paper on which records of lost
time are kept in the various de
partments. Perhaps fewer of us
lealize that the information re
corded on these tickets and
turned in to the foremen is one
the most accurate gauges of
how efficiently tha plant is being
operated. And, it might be added
here that this fact makes it all
the more important that the
number of hours and minutes
charged to a particrlar machine
nmst be as accurate as possible.
And just what do we mean by
“efficiency?” Any job or under
taking, to be done well and suc
cessfully, must be done efficiently,
^^d by that it means that the
job must be done accurately with-
a reasonable and prescribed
length of time. Thus, if excellent
Quality is obtained on a particu-
l^^r machine, but entirely too
p^uch time is required in doing
^t, then it goes without saying
that it was not done efficiently.
the same applies to a job
^^hich is done poorly but rapidly.
Therefore, the responsibility
^’hich rests on each and every-
one of us is that good quality and
^ JTiaximum of production must
maintained. Fortunately, ex-
l^crience has shown, in a large
^‘Umber of instances, that quality
better when each department
Is operating at top speed. We can
S&Uge the quality of our product
the way it looks and feels, and
®^r lost-time records tell us if it
been made efficiently.
The most important factor in
mill, or in any mill, can be
summed up in one word^—pro-
'^uction. To have good produc-
^’on, machinery must ope'^ate ef
ficiently. Most of us would be
Astounded to knov/ the cost in-
‘^urred by a machine being ifi"
operative for the space of even an
hour. We can readily see the
^ital part each of us play, be
cause if we are not operating ^
P^achine ourselves we are mak-
that job easier for the person
^‘0 does, by keeping the ma
chines in good condition, by haul-
materials to the machine, etc.
to those of us who do oper
ate machines, the watchwor^^
^hould be—“Efficient Productiin-
The mill and all its machinery is
for but one purpose, noth-
else— and that purpose is to
•oduce. That purpose can be fu ■
WAKE FOREST
TAKES SERIES
Chatham Puts Up Good Fight In
First But Are Unable to Hold
Invaders Saturday
Clarence Davis, Chatham centerfielder after fouling
Upper e • i « Gcugh, Chatham second baseman, scor-
out. Upper ^ series in the first innins. L«wer Lett:
ing first run o crossing the plate for a score in the first
L;,rr Ha.nes, Bbu-keteer bat b»y.
game.
Blanketeers To Battle
Tar Heels In Two Games
Which Holds Victory Over Wake Forest and Duke,
‘^“’’to"pr^ent Strong Team Here Friday and Saturday
The Chatham Blanketeers lost
two games to the strong Wake
Forest Varsity in their two-game
series here Fiiday and Saturday.
The game Friday was hard
fought and was scoreless until
the sixth inning when Haikradec
walked Mitchell and Wall hit a
homer to account for two runs.
Rhodes held the Blanketeers to
two hits while Harkrader held
the Wake Forest team to four
hits.
In Saturday’s game the Wake
Forest boys batted four Chatham
pitchers to all corners of the lot
to defeat the Blanketeers 14 to
5. Shepherd hit two homers,
Morris one. Wall one and Mitchell
one to account for ten of the
visitors’ runs.
Fred Hambright and Kermit
Mackie continued to lead the of
fensive work fof Chatham with
two hits out of four.
Line-up;
WAKE FOREST
ab r h po a
D. Morris, 3b 4 0 0 0 3
Gold, rf 3 0 0 0 0
Mitchell, 2b 3 2 12 3
Patton, lb 4 0 1 13 0
Wall, cf 4 1111
Chappel, ss 4 0 13 4
T. Morris. If 4 0 10 1
Hooks, c 3 0 0 6 0
Rhodes, p 3 0 0 2 3
-o-pfl’-n will bring
rZth Carolina Tav
his Elkin for a two-game
Heels to Elki Blanke-
series with t Saturday.
teers on , ^ave another
The Tar Hee s hav^^
strong team . David-
having been
con and D^ke^^he^ are p ^ ^
Big Five games to date,
Wa°Ke Forest, Davidson once
“1,rBran.eteers^wm present a
.—‘—'—■ ' ~1 n^V'pr ou.^
filled by norie resolution
selves, g to it that as
should be to are pro-
SrS lost-time reduced to
a minimum. j ^ g
University
Vick
Halitosis
breath at all.
no
good prospects of winning over
Carolina. Rob Robbins will again
piay shorstop and Southard will
likely draw one pitching assign
ment and Harkrader the other
0gainst the Carolina squad.
Line-up:
Blanketeers
of Davis cf
^"and 2b Robbins ss
Irwin ss F. Ha ht If
Strayhorn —■ c Mackie 3b
Tatum lb Gough 2b
jy[clver If Clodfelter c
Bullard 3b H. Ha’ht lb
Voliva Crater rf
Crouch P Harkrader p
; Southard p
Other Blanketeers who may see
action are H. Stockton, p; Max
well p: Parker, c; Hood, c; S.
Stockton, P; Mounce, 3b, and
Young, ss.
The Chatham team will play
the High Point Panthers in Elkin
on Easter Monday, April 22, at
4 o’clock p. ni.
32
CHATHAM
3
5
27
15
ab
r
h
po
a
H. Stockton, I'f
2
0
0
0
0
Gough, 2b
3
0
0
0
3
F. Hambright, If...
3
0
0
2
0
Mackie, 3b
4
0
1
2
3
Glodfelter, ss
3
1
0
0
3
Davis, cf
3
0
1
2
0
H. Hambright, lb
2
0
0
11
0
Hood, c
3
0
0
2
1
Harkrader, p
3
0
0
0
5
S. Stockton, p
0
0
0
0
1
Maxwell, lb
0
0
0
6
0
Parker
1
0
0
0
0
27
1
2
25
16
Score by innings; R H E
W. Forest 000 002 001—3 5 1
Chatham 000 000 100—1 2 1
Summary: Errors, Gold, Mack
ie. Runs batted in, Wall (2).
Patton. Home run. Wall. Two-
base hits. Mackie and Mitchell.
Double plays, Rhodes to Patton:
Wall to Chappel to Patton. Sac
rifice hit. Gold. Bases on ba^ls off
Harkrader, 1; Rhodes, 5. Struck
(Continued On Page Four)