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4 THE CLOT Published by and for CLINTON and LYC Clinton, South Calvin Cooper The publishers of The ( items of interest from its read reporters or to the personnel THIh Wherever you are working, ii far you may be from the top?an are just treading the mill, don't ? fill. For however little your job n portant as some little gear that m machine, that helps keep it going, TU u ' " xncy tuuia ao wunout yoi business keeps on even when the remember, my lad, if you can, th the man. So if you hope to stay your job than you do of yourself. Your job is important, and d give it the best that you've got. of little account, just remember y< If they didn't need you. you my lad, keep vour chin in the air. or clerk . . . Think well of your company, CHECK, DOUI We hear a lot these days abo constantly told that we must tun product and a quality service. Sometimes words by themse iess they are explained. We thin! "quality." Just what does it me; To put it very simply, we thi is done to the very best of our and clean work. It is work that from the person doing it. How can we make sure we a We believe the best way is to c you are doing regularly. Some f go at that, right or wrong, gooi themselves to make sure the jol best of their ability. Other folks make a point of c on themselves, to see that they ar These folks are building quality i employees who get ahead. Let's all aim for quality, w checking and double-checking, d sure it's right. Good Houseka (Cont'd, from Page 1) out by the company. But after 1 all of this is done, it still 1 comes back to the individual employee to maintain good 1 housekeeping all the time. It only takes a moment's care- 1 1 11 * lessness or mougntiessness? dropping a bottle or spitting 1 on the floor?and then a tragedy happens to someone's 1 family. 1 Check over some of these points made recently by your 1 safety committee. See how little time or trouble it would have taken to make better housekeeping for yourself o and your fellow employees: a 1. Trash, other than bottles, d in bottle rack. h 2. Spit on floors around c posts throughout room. tl 3. Water houses untidv. d 4. Coats and sweaters on a top of frames. a 5. Bobbins on floors. vv 6. Fruit jars and bottles on ir top of frames. It 7. Rags on oil drums. e1 8. Filling and quills on cj floor. pi i HMAKER the employees of >IA Cotton Mills Carolina Editor ""lfltlimalfPr urill ? 111 WC1V.U1IIC ers. Turn them in to your office. JK n office or shop, and however d though you may think you ?ver belittle the job that you lay appear, you're just as imeshes with others in some big , though it never is seen, l, we'll have to admit, but big fellows quit. And always e job is more important than off the shelf, think more of on't think it is not. So try to And don't ever think you're Du're part of the total amount, wouldn't be there, so always A dmuer of Hitrhpc yourself and your work. BLE- CHECK ut the word "quality." We're a out a quality job, a quality Ives do not mean much un: that is true about the word in? nk quality work is work that ability. It is careful, correct gets a little extra attention re turning out quality work? heck and double-check what oiks just do a job and let it d or bad. They never check d is really done to the very hecking and double-checking e doing the best possible job. nto the job. and they are the hatever our job may be, bv ay in and day out, to make epingy... 9. Repair areas untidy. 0 Bottles in window ioHrrp 1. Broken bottle under warp rack. 2. Empty bottles and waste on floor. 3. Strings, drop wires and heddles on floors. 4. Paper and clothes on benches. 5. Shop untidy. 6. Trash cans running over, should be emptied. 7. Condenser and pump room untidy. Water and trash on floor. Good housekeeping is one C il I * ' i me oesi ways to prevent ccidents. It takes one hunred per cent teamwork to ave good housekeeping, beause one person can spoil all ae good efforts of an entire epartment. Let's don't have nv bad apples in the barrel nd all work together so that re can have the cleanest mills 1 the state in which to work. ; will pay off to each and very single employee. We an do it but only if we all ull together. 'HE CLOTHMAKER The Stork Club Mr. and Mrs. Richard Watts, Clinton plant, announce the birth of a daughter, Wanda Lou, Sept. 13. Mrs. Watts is the former Martha Foster. Mr. and Mrs. Charles Shepard, Clinton, a daughter, Sandra Charlene. Mr. and Mrs. Alfred Allen, Ulinton, a daughter, Rhonda Joan, Sept, 6. Mrs. Allen is the former Vivian Medlock. Mr. and Mrs. William E. Heaton, Clinton mill, a son, Steven Mitchell, Aug. 31. Mr. and Mrs. William Mottes, Lydia, twin daughters, Sept. 27. They are named Linda Fay and Brenda Kay. Mr. and Mrs. Claude Lee Smith, Clinton weaving, a daughter, Sept. 29. Mrs. Smith before her marriage was Miss Mildred Nichols. Be Sure To Vote - Nov. 4 Lydia Teachers Are Entertained Providence school teachers at Lydia were entertained this past month by the Lydia Woman's Club at the school house. All mothers with children in the school also were invit ed. and had an opportunity to meet and talk with the teachers in their respective classrooms. Inviting the guests in were Mrs. Cecil McLendon and Mrs. Clyde Trammel. Miss Mary Johnson presided in the party room. Mrs. lone Wallace and George Fleming directed a fun program. An unusual radio program idea was used which included humorous announcements about each teacher. Delightful refreshments were served bv Mrs. David Word and the refreshment committee. Be Sure To Vote - Nov. 4 Bvli I I mi M SGT. WILLIE LAWSON has returned home after nine months of service in Korea. He is the brother of Mrs. Brooks Dunaway who works in the spinning department, Clinton Mill. Sgt. Lawson worked in the cloth room before entering service in 1940. i Be Sure to Vote . . . (Cont'd, from Page 1) (as they failed to do in the last general election), how can we have majority rule? Several important issues in our nation's history have been passed by one vote in the past. It could have been yours, or it might be yours November November 4. Thomas Jefferson, for instance, was elected president by one vote in the electoral 11 _ n _ i ^ uuiiege. est) was jonn yuincy Adams. Rutherford B. Hayes was 1 elected president by one vote. 1 His election was contested, and it was referred to an electoral commission. Again, he won bv a single vote. One vote gave statehood to ! California, Idaho, Oregon. Texas and Washington. Coming closer to the present, the draft act of World War II passed the House by one vote. Today many more important issues are nassed bv slim margins. But just four years ago in the 1948 presidential election less than one-half of the eligible voters in the country turned out to vote. This type of complacency can prove fatal to a country like ours, a country which has always had the right of free choice. Fortunately it looks as if there has been a greater interest in local, state and national government issue during the past four years. This enthusiasm should bring new millions to the polls. I It isn't the American way for us to try to tell you who to vote for, but it is the American way for us to insist ! that vou make it a point to , vote November 4 . . . and be sure to tell your friends and neighbors to do the same. One Of Our New 1 i You can't r r W Clinton-Lydia PRW CL< Because quality is first uith i von ' Call us first fur premium Broadcloths. Tobacco Cloths and Clinton Cottons.I? HI LMHiI JOHNNIE LEVER is shown here on his second birthday. Sept. b 21. He is the son of Evans and e Ethel Lever. No. 3 weaving, first 1^ shift, Clinton plant. J OCTOBER IS, 1952 ? 1* ~z"X . X GAYLE is the daughter of the Clarence Brookshires. Clinton Mill. She was seven August 28. Be Sure To Vote - Nov. 4 I - LE JUNE DUNAWAY is the ;ix months old daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Brooks Dunaway who work at the Clinton plant. Be Sure To Vote - Nov. 4 bfork Office Ads niss with Sr IT rtTue k# I 11^ is ? ICC should be first u till (/nalth cotton I'rint Cloths. I I mils (C. . -U) Worth Street. V. V. r*I I TERESA Foster recently celeirated her first birthday Septmber 3. She is the daughter of 4r. and Mrs. Harry Foster. 404 ack-on St., Clinton Mill.