Page Four CHATHAM BLANKETEER April 1, 1940 New Home Home of Mr. and Mrs. Lee Neaves in Westover Park. The photo was made Easter Sunday during the snow. Mr. Neaves is assistant Shop Foreman. Chatham Blanketeer Claudia Austin Editor-In-Chief C. J. Hyslup Assistant Editor Leonard Shepherd...) Circulation Babe Poole ( Managers Words to the Wise ... “Our patent system has inspir ed inventions that have served the causes of arts, science, educa tion, better living. It gives prom ise of further and greater bene factions. It has made and kept this country stronger than any other in the world, and abler, ac cordingly, to resist any assault on our democracy, for we should never forget that in the preserva tion of moral rights, material might is indispensable.”—Conway P. Coe, U. S. Commissioner of Patents. “Pioneering is not so much any specific activity or enterprise as it is a state of mind, a state of mind which includes curiosity, an idealism which is dissatisfied with the restrictions and imper fections of the present, a great inward urge for discovery and an ability to translate this dissatis faction and this inward urge into constructive achievements. The age of the pioneer into new terri tories for farming or mining, while not wholly past, has cer tainly passed its peak of activity, but the age of pioneering into the new fields of opportunity and ap plied science and invention is now with us, and so far as we can see, will stay with us with undimin ished opportunity for years to come.”—Dr. Karl T. Compton, president, Massachusetts Insti tute of Technology. “Confident in American ability, reliant upon scientific guidance, grounded upon a bedrock of facts, industry will push on to new lev els of achievement and progress— through research to new hor izons.”—Alfred P. Sloan. MRS. LAWTON IS CLUB SPEAKER Mrs. Lawton, missionary to China, and mother of Mrs. Eph Whisenhunt, spoke to members of the Lucy Hanes Chatham Club No. 2 at their regular meeting Thursday, March 28. She brought pictures and interesting relics of China which the members en joyed very much. She spoke of the conditions in China today and the hardships she and her husband have had to undergo while livmg there. This is one of the many educa tional programs sponsored by the club this winter. Only the actual value of an in sured article sent by parcel post and lost will be paid by the gov ernment. SNOOPIN’ AROUND By The Scoop The time comes in our lives quite often when we have an urge to get out and kick up our heels, and that time should be Friday night at the T. C. U. club dance. Yes, chilluns, go on over to that gym and swing, sway and prittle to the music of Claude Little , . . A very, very ironic thing, that snow for Easter . . . Fi'om the an cient to the modern; Mr. Sher man Newman took a 76-year-old log house and converted it into a modern and attractive abode . . . We’ve heard of just about every kind of trouble with colds this winter but the latest one is about Mr. Hyslup who spent Easter Sunday in his basement attend ing his furnace which had coal trouble. That’s his story any way . . . Similarity: Spring brings the budding of the trees and also the budding of a few romances in our midst. For instance, the Bill Carter-Bill Pardue coalition and the Sherrill twins . . . We wonder what was the meaning of that owl Mr. Fred Neaves received the other day ... We understand that Mr. Chatham’s office is being finished with forest pine lumber that is over 100 years old . . . Tragedy; The young man’s father has just given him a $10,000 air plane and controlling interest in an airport and his girl friend who lives very near Elkin, ups and gives him the air. What does it take to satisfy these girls nowa days, anyhow? . . . After much deduction we have decided that Santa Claus is about the only one who can run around with a bag all night and not get talked about . . . Height of self-preservation; Claudia Austin bracing herself with her feet against the floor board of her car during a recent wreck and after the accident it was found that her ankles were the most seriously injured. Due to this fact she is maneuvering rather slowly these days . . . Some of our favorite likes: Wo men . . . Spring . . . The Moun tains . . . Good Food ... New automobiles . . . Dogs . . . Persian cats . . . Long and interesting trips (and I’ll probably get one for writing this column) . . . Modern homes . . . Doctors . . . Movies . . . Apples . . . Dances . . . Some of our favorite dislikes; Traffic light . . . Hitler . . . Snow for Easter . . . Mud . . . Cabbage . . . Long-winded speakers . . . War . . . Gossip . . . Reckless drivers . . . Cold . . . Pointless jokes . . . Columns like the one we just finished reading. Club Entertains At Bingo Party As a gesture of friendliness and welcome to the young men and women employees of the finishing plant, the T. C. U. club members entertained at a bingo party on Monday evening, March 18, at the clubhouse. The building was decorated with beautiful potted plants and cut flowers. The winners of the bingo games were awarded candy, soft drinks, doughnuts, credit slips, and many other attractive prizes. Preceding the last game of bingo the 125 guests who attend ed the party were served refresh ments. The two grand prizes of the ev ening, two all-wool Chatham blankets, were awarded the boy and girl winner of the la.st game of bingo. Remembering: the Inventor One year in this country’s one hundred and fifty is not too much to devote to honoring the in ventors of this land, and in re membering the benefits that the United States Patent System has bestowed upon us. This year—the 150th anniver sary of the founding of the Pat ent System—has already seen a lot of emphans laid on the “Mod ern Pioneers’ Celebrations” re cently held to honor industrial research workers who, through discovery of new products, have created new industries and new jobs where none existed before. But there can’t be to much em phasis of this sort, and Business Week, commenting on the pass ing industrial scene, has some new thoughts to offer that are worth recording. “Most American of all of us, if we read the national tradition aright,” this magazine declares, “is the inventor. His contribution to the national progress, more than any other, involves at the outset the exercise of that indivi dual initiative which we like to think of as the hallmark of Americanism to which we chiefly credit our progress.” It then goes on to discusse the appropriateness of calling today’s inventors “Modern Pioneers,” and comparing them with the Ameri cans who broke new ground in earlier days. “The comparison is, indeed, apt,” Business Week con tinues, “but it can also be said that the inventors, the machine- makers, have always been the real pioneers; that, unless they had come first with their new tools, the West would not have been won. For, in truth, we have always ridden on the shoulders of the inventors.” The editorial in question really gets to the heart of the whole patent question. It is right in emphasizing the fact that we have always depended upon the inventors for progress. Almost all of us who have jobs today have ultimately to thank in ventors for them. All who need jobs must depend upon the con tinued activity of inventors. And the American Patent System pro vides the most effective way yet devised to encourage individuals to undertake the hard work of industrial research, for it offers fair rewards for achievement. 1940 is a year when we honor particularly the men who have found for us new products, new industries, new jobs. And it is a good time to remember also how much these matters mean to the way of life we have in this coun try—a way which, though not perfect, has turned out to be far better than any other yet design ed by mankind. William Penn occupied the first brick house in America.