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[page 1] SPEEDOMETER Volume VII JANUARY, 1955 Number XXVII AMONG OUR EMPLOYEES AND PENSIONERS [photograph] Walter Swartz Walter was born in Carr Township, near Bennettsville, September 24, 1999 [typo in newsletter]. He attended school at Bennettsville before moving to Speed, where he finished his education. Walter began his employment at the Louisville Cement Company in 1902 hooking on scrapers in the stripping department of the Quarry for Mr. Jess Hanger. In 1904, he was transferred to Mr. John Regan, Sr., who was in charge of a construction crew on the Portland Plant. In September of 1912 he went with the Pennsylvania Railroad as a fireman, and in February 1913 he came back to Speed. He started in the Babbitt shop and was later transferred to the welding shop, where he remained until his retirement, February 28, 1954. He was married to Ollie Mae Jenkins in 1909, and they became the parents of six children; Laura Mae, Charles, William, Dorothy, Jesse, and Earl. Walter has nine grandchildren. There has been four generations of Walter's family employed here. His father, himself, three sons, and a grandson. Walter is a member of the Methodist Church. His hobbies, baseball in his younger days, and now, televisioning. ANOTHER TREAT IN STORE Don't forget the date Monday night, January 31, at 8 p.m. The place is the Community House. It will be the second in the series of book reviews of the 1954-55 series. Mrs. Carl B. Hastes will be the story teller and the story will be one you will be sure to enjoy. There will also be some music by more of our talented young people. If you have a season ticket you are lucky, if you don't have a ticket for this particular program it can be purchased at the Community House for fifty cents or you can take your chance at the door. On November 23 Mrs. Van Wingen told the delightful story of the little English boy who went for a walk just before the bomb fell on his home demolishing the building and killing all of its occupants. The events that followed and the effect the little boy had on the lives he touched was a fascinating story and it was told in the inimitable way Mrs. Van Wingen always tells a story. M'isic for the evening was furnished by two talented High School pupils Miss Mary Gladden and Mr. Robert Holmes. The club rooms at the Community House were filled almost from wall to wall by enthusiastic listeners. THANKS Mr. and Mrs. Archie Pendygraft, Nancy Pendygraft, Lavina Sexton and Goldie Smithers-say thanks for the nice Christmas presents from the hotel patrons-But they still wonder how Ed Dietz-who bought the presents-knew what size panties to buy. [photograph] John Krajnak Mr. Krajnak was born at Cementville, Indiana, September 10, 1892. He attended the Belknap School, and after completing his education in 1907 he began working at the Clark County Cement Mill. His first job was driving a mule, and pulling rock out of a quarry. Six months later he went to work for the South Construction Company, getting stone for the inter-urban. He came to Speed in 1909 and pulled ashes in the old boiler room for one year. In 1910 he went back to Clark County as a Cement trucker. In 1912 he worked for the Standard Sanitary Company of Louisville, Kentucky. He went to Dayton, Ohio in 1913, and worked for the National Cash Register Company. He returned to Sellersburg in 1914 and worked for the Pennsylvania Railroad until 1916, when he came back to Speed for six months. He then went west and followed the wheat harvest in Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota. In the fall of 1916 he was employed by the Universal Cement Company at Bluffton, Indiana. In 1917 he worked for the Goodrich Steamship (Continued on Page 2)
Object Description
Title | Speedometer 1955 - Newsletter of the Louisville Cement Company, Speed, Indiana |
Description | The Speedometer was a monthly or sometimes bi-weekly newsletter of the Louisville Cement Company in Speed, Indiana. The newsletter was focused on safety issues at the plant but also included human interest stories. The Speedometer began publication in 1921 and continued through 1929. In 1937, the company created The Warning Star newsletter. It is unclear how many issues of this were produced. The Speedometer came back into publication in July 1941 and continuing publication until September 1956. The newsletter then became known as The Speed Way which was published through 1968. In 1969, the newsletter became the Louisville Cement Magazine which was published quarterly. |
Date.Original | 1955 |
Date.Digital | 2012-05-30 |
Subject | Louisville Cement Company (Speed, Ind.); The Speedometer (Louisville Cement Company employee newsletter); The Speed Way (Louisville Cement Company employee newsletter); The Warning Star (Louisville Cement Company employee newsletter); Speed, Ind.; Sellersburg, Ind.; Employees' magazines, newsletters |
Item Type | image |
Technical Metadata | Epson 10000XL, 24 bit color, 400 dpi |
Usage Statement | Charlestown-Clark County Public Library provides access to these materials for educational and research purposes and makes no warranty with regard to their use for other purposes. The written permission of the copyright owners and/or holders of other rights such as publicity and/or privacy rights is required for distribution, reproduction, or other use of protected items beyond that allowed by fair use or other statutory exemptions. There may be content that is protected as works for hire copyright held by the party that commissioned the original work and/or under the copyright or neighboring-rights laws of other nations. Responsibility for making an independent legal assessment of an item and securing any necessary permissions ultimately rests with persons desiring to use the item. |
Source | Charlestown-Clark County Public Library |
Language | en |
Collection Name | Clark County Collections |
Description
Title | January page 1 |
Source | Charlestown-Clark County Public Library |
Transcription | [page 1] SPEEDOMETER Volume VII JANUARY, 1955 Number XXVII AMONG OUR EMPLOYEES AND PENSIONERS [photograph] Walter Swartz Walter was born in Carr Township, near Bennettsville, September 24, 1999 [typo in newsletter]. He attended school at Bennettsville before moving to Speed, where he finished his education. Walter began his employment at the Louisville Cement Company in 1902 hooking on scrapers in the stripping department of the Quarry for Mr. Jess Hanger. In 1904, he was transferred to Mr. John Regan, Sr., who was in charge of a construction crew on the Portland Plant. In September of 1912 he went with the Pennsylvania Railroad as a fireman, and in February 1913 he came back to Speed. He started in the Babbitt shop and was later transferred to the welding shop, where he remained until his retirement, February 28, 1954. He was married to Ollie Mae Jenkins in 1909, and they became the parents of six children; Laura Mae, Charles, William, Dorothy, Jesse, and Earl. Walter has nine grandchildren. There has been four generations of Walter's family employed here. His father, himself, three sons, and a grandson. Walter is a member of the Methodist Church. His hobbies, baseball in his younger days, and now, televisioning. ANOTHER TREAT IN STORE Don't forget the date Monday night, January 31, at 8 p.m. The place is the Community House. It will be the second in the series of book reviews of the 1954-55 series. Mrs. Carl B. Hastes will be the story teller and the story will be one you will be sure to enjoy. There will also be some music by more of our talented young people. If you have a season ticket you are lucky, if you don't have a ticket for this particular program it can be purchased at the Community House for fifty cents or you can take your chance at the door. On November 23 Mrs. Van Wingen told the delightful story of the little English boy who went for a walk just before the bomb fell on his home demolishing the building and killing all of its occupants. The events that followed and the effect the little boy had on the lives he touched was a fascinating story and it was told in the inimitable way Mrs. Van Wingen always tells a story. M'isic for the evening was furnished by two talented High School pupils Miss Mary Gladden and Mr. Robert Holmes. The club rooms at the Community House were filled almost from wall to wall by enthusiastic listeners. THANKS Mr. and Mrs. Archie Pendygraft, Nancy Pendygraft, Lavina Sexton and Goldie Smithers-say thanks for the nice Christmas presents from the hotel patrons-But they still wonder how Ed Dietz-who bought the presents-knew what size panties to buy. [photograph] John Krajnak Mr. Krajnak was born at Cementville, Indiana, September 10, 1892. He attended the Belknap School, and after completing his education in 1907 he began working at the Clark County Cement Mill. His first job was driving a mule, and pulling rock out of a quarry. Six months later he went to work for the South Construction Company, getting stone for the inter-urban. He came to Speed in 1909 and pulled ashes in the old boiler room for one year. In 1910 he went back to Clark County as a Cement trucker. In 1912 he worked for the Standard Sanitary Company of Louisville, Kentucky. He went to Dayton, Ohio in 1913, and worked for the National Cash Register Company. He returned to Sellersburg in 1914 and worked for the Pennsylvania Railroad until 1916, when he came back to Speed for six months. He then went west and followed the wheat harvest in Kansas, Nebraska and South Dakota. In the fall of 1916 he was employed by the Universal Cement Company at Bluffton, Indiana. In 1917 he worked for the Goodrich Steamship (Continued on Page 2) |
Collection Name | Clark County Collections |