CHAMPION—January 12, 2009

 

        The good news in Champion is that Louise and Wilburn Hutchison are great grandparents Again!  Hanna Rose McGuire was born at Logan Regional Medical Center (Logan, West Virginia) on January 1, 2009!  She weighed 8 pounds 9½ ounces and is doing just fine.  Hanna Rose is the eighth great-grandchild of these Champions and just one of the many reasons that Champions are looking on the bright side.  As the first baby of the New Year there in Logan, she was given a number of excellent gifts including gift certificates, savings bonds, newspaper subscriptions and a new car seat.  She is a lucky girl and that good fortune spills over to Champion with every smile she has caused.  Photographs of her with her lovely mother, Amy, are circulating through the internet spreading smiles wherever they go.

        Wilburn was grinning like a possum on Sunday when 40 or 50 people got together to celebrate his 75th birthday.  It was a joint celebration with Bobby Page of Ava whose birthday is coming up very soon.  Wilburn lives about 200 yards from the exact spot where he was born.  Highway WW was a gravel road about like a goat trail back then.  When he was a youngster he said that he and his Uncle Hubert used horses to pull many a car out of the clay bank in the curve of the road just up hill from his house.  He went to the Banner School and could probably be persuaded to spin some yarns about those days.  Ask him about his Grandma Margie’s little dog, Peggy, the next time you see him.  Wilburn is a Champion not just because he was born there as a descendant of original settlers, but because he has that Bright Side attitude.  A conversation with him concerning the economy and current events reveals optimism that comes from experience.  “Times like these bring out the best in people.”  He went on to say that in the old days people drew close together in troubled times and extended themselves to help each other and it will have to get back to that because “We’re all in the same boat!”  As to his newest great granddaughter, he says, “That third crop is fine!”

        The Skyline VFD Ladies’ Auxiliary will have met at Henson’s Store in Downtown Champion by the time this is in print.  They will have distributed quilt tickets among themselves for sale to family and friends and will have made commitments for the activities surrounding the annual chili supper.  Details of the quilt, the chili, the ham and beans, the cornbread, the chicken and noodles, the pies and cobblers, the music, the silent auction, and various surprises will all have been hashed out.  By the time February 28th gets here, cabin fever will the chief ailment of the area and folks will be ready for some fun.  That Auxiliary is a hardworking, well-organized, forward -looking group….on the Bright Side!

        Some Old Champions were very pleased to hear part of Charlie Haden’s new C.D. on the radio the other day.  He has had a sterling career as a jazz bassist and has won three Grammy awards and had many nominations.  Champion’s friend, Darrell Haden, from over in Tennessee has kept Champions informed about his cousin over the years.  This new ‘album’ is called “Rambling Boy.”  It finds him returning to songs made famous by the Carter Family, Hank Williams and other traditional country musicians.  Haden last performed these songs with his parents and siblings as the youngest member of the Haden Family band popular on the Midwest country circuit in the 1930s and 1940s.  Now he’s doing these songs with his wife, Ruth Cameron, son Josh, triplet daughters—Rachel, Petra and Tanya, and son-in-law actor Jack Black, as well as Elvis Costello, Vince Gill and Roseanne Cash.  Haden said, “I would consider it very authentic country music.  All the songs are extremely pure, and the arrangements are what I would consider very traditional.”  “Old Joe Clark” and “You Are My Sunshine” are a couple of tunes that deluged the Old Champions. Of course, Champions are generally music lovers.

        Many are also gardeners and are having to fight off the impulse to make too many purchases from the seed catalogues.  Those publications paint such a glorious picture of how things might be if the soil is right, the weather is right, and the right seeds are chosen.  Champions can just imagine themselves with such abundant produce that they have to give it away to keep it from going to waste.  They will have to make extra trips to town to get rid of it.

        More than 300,000 veterans from Iraq and Afghanistan are suffering traumatic brain injury (TBI), post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), severe depression and other conditions that could require a lifetime of care.  Champions join all citizens of the Grateful Loving Nation in standing up for the wounded by urging elected officials to act for their benefit.  “Stand Up For Veterans.  They Stood Up For Us” is the motto of the Disabled American Veterans organization.  Go to www.dav.org on the internet for more good information about them.  They are Champions!

        Champion is the seat of much joy, community spirit, aesthetic diversity, agrarian lore and patriotic fervor.  It is also a place of deep reflection and appreciation of its dear natives.  Tragedy and illness are no respecters of Champions.  People who don’t regularly pray are saying prayers; extending heart felt desires for the best possible outcome in sad times.

        Express joy at Champion Items, Rt. 2, Box 367, Norwood, MO 65717.  Predict bountiful harvests at Champion News.  Look in on Louise and her Champion thornless blackberries at www.championnews.us.  Stand around the stove at Henson’s Store in Downtown Champion where it is now possible to buy a stamped picture post card of Champion!  Even in distant and dreary places now there can be a view from Champion where they are forever Looking on the Bright Side!

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