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4 THE CLOl Published by and f< CLINTON and LY Clinton, Sout Calvin Cooper i _ The publishers of The items of interest from its re; reporters or to the personne The Better The F Today our sales force at Clir everyone else's ? is meeting r Business is more difficult t< zation is working hard to sell The better the product we pi of our workmanship ? the betl competition. No one individual alone cai Quality depends upon the t one of us performs his or hei single job in our organization way or another to the quality o There is a pride in good wor always feels. But in today's si more important than pride. Doing our best on every jo products we make ? so that w Let Thrift Be Yoi Thrift is a habit. A habit is a thing you do l without thought. We are rule are young they are like lion-c some little animals. They grov rule you. Choose VP thic rtn\r VioVi' you. The habit of thrift is sii that you shall earn more thai thrift is the habit that provides you earn. Take your choice. If you are a thrifty person ; earning more than you spend, you consume, your life is a si courage, animation, ambition, beautiful, for the world is you Vou ai*f> rirrht \iritVi , v ?* a 1,11 y uuiouu ci i Double Takes THE WAY OF the transgres YESTERDAY IS gone, ton the dav. GOOD INTENTIONS are a on them. THE REALLY WISE men o sav thev are not. ' THE CHAP WHO merely far ahead. BLESSED ARE the poor. f< not bother them. rP T T IT* TT A A ' ' inn, nnnu rnni 01 Dein spending as much as the rich d< SOME PEOPLE are like a them in order to get anything o THE FIRST married couple couples have been quarreling e^ A MAN HAS asked the cc mother-in-law. Some people tl YOU CAN never tell. A life when it was found he didn't ha ONE WAY to become satis think how much worse off yoi served. WHENEVER YOU feel tern} sum icomings, you snoulcl remei know your own. COUNT YOUR BLESSING the advice of Dr. Norman Vint some paper . . . start writing d< be happy about . . . you will 1 really have a lot of things tha most of us are prone to think ? than the good things in life . . will find out that you have a lo You don't travel this way but minute . . . every second . . . Yo T_ rHMAKER 3r the employees of TNI A . t I 'II UMM V-OTTOn IV\IIIS ;h Carolina Editor Clothmaker will welcome aders. Turn them in to your (1 office. >roduct lton Cottons, Inc. ? and almost eal competition in the field, o obtain, and our sales organithe products we make. oduce ? the higher the quality :er their chance will be to meet ri build quality into a product, horoughness with which every particular job. There isn't a that doesn't contribute in one f the finished products, kmanship which a good worker tuation there's something even b helps our sales force sell the e can go on making them. ur Ruling Habit inconsciously or automatically, d by our habits. When habits ubs, soft, fluffy, funny, frolicv day by day. Eventually they it ye would have to rule over mply the habit which dictates n you spend In other words, ; that you shall spend less than cou arc happy. When you are when you produce more than iccess, and you are filled with goodwill. Then the wnrlH i? r view of the world, and when l's right with the world. ;sor is filled with speeders, norrow never comes, today is 11 right only 'f you make good f the ^ mmunity are those who tries to get by will never get or their income tax returns do g poor is trying to save while sponge: You have to squeeze Lit of them. raised Cain, and some married /cr since. nut for protection against his link the court can do anything. insurance man died hist week, ve a policy on his own life, fied with what you have is to fd be if you got what you de)ted to talk about other people's Tiber that there are people who S DAY BY DAY . . . Follow ent Pcale . . . get a pencil and >wn the things that you should ind out very quickly that you t should make you happy . . . ibout the bad things . . . rather . When you start checking you t of blessings to be counted . . . once . . . so enjoy every full u'll be a long time dead mister. HE CLOTHMAKE u BBS > 83 E IPMili TYPICAL SCENE EARLY TI either far or near, was a familiar summer vacation. This shows Lo Spooler Tender, as they prepared I Certifiedt J iLliis is tn (Certify, V lia$ been ii j GOC j? <T LYDIA COTTON Mil K CLINTON. S C l COV TED AWARD ? This i departments at Clinton Mills and i rating means a score of 90 or abo ployee inspecting committee each 7 TT vjuuci nousi "Almost everyone enjoys the best" is the current motto of a popular cold drink, and that saying holds true with employees at Clinton and Lydia Cotton Mills. That is why. when you have a choice, you would pick a "Grade A" Restaurant to eat in with your family rather than a "B" or "C" grade establishment. The same thought is true in the place where we work. Almost everyone would rather ~ -1 i? w wi i\ iii (i jjuin* \v 111 c r 1 11 c 1 .s good housekeeping, just as we'd rather live in a home with good housekeeping. Eight departments at Lydia Mills and nine at Clinton Mills last month earned Grade A certificates for good housekeeping with a score of 91) or above as judged and inspected by employee committees. We hope there will be a larger number to report next month. Lydia departments scoring R m Bi D i ? J ilS MONTH ? Yep. loading the ol( scene in the Clinton and Lydia co omfixer James Niffer Creswell and to lpflVP with Haiiflhtor Tnvro 023?3 le of Inspection of a LYDIA COTTON MILLS that the [y tifyA ispoctcil Ijv 4n authorizcil inspector * Ms < *S?3PL anil was awariloil lliis Certificate o >D HOUSEKEE 1 lor I lie month of h LLS 0 do* Authorized 1 uspecw>r_ \J f Signed by t IMAAA. ^ is Ihe sought-after "Grade A" award ?ight departments at Lvdia were awa ve in good housekeeping for the enti i month. ekeepin g?E ve "A" were Spinning No. 1. Spooler Room. Weavine No 2 Weaving No. ii. Slashing. Tvini?-In, Cloth Room and .Junk ? I -*f ** Mike Berry is the son of Mr. and Mrs. J. M. Berry, Jr., and grandson of Mr. and Mrs. F. A. Bodie, of Lydia Mills. He was two years old July 9. JULY IS, 19S5 iB Wm^MK ~> cvv O. ?~^H -?Jm i family buggy for a vacation trip, mmunities as the mills closed for I wife. Pauline, who is a Clinton vacation trip. spartment | ' \ Department J ' of tliis? mill X PING | IA/? 11)5 S" | I a hh4m< l- | I?IUaaaM ... 1 Mill Official O for Good Housekeeping which nine rded for the monih of June. An "A" ire department as judged by an emtry one's Job Wo rehouse. The average tor the entire mill was Ml. At Clinton Mills, these department.1 scored an "A": Open in.' an 1 Picking. Carding No. 1. Carding No. 'J. Spinning No. 1. Spinning No. H. Spool- * in : W<-a\ inn No. 1. Weaving ^ MI I ? rlMth l'.ll.rn n.,,1 ll... .. . ... ^ III IVi III*. Kit ( !ric;il Sh->p. Tin* mill ;i\ - . crape was M. ^ ff I K ," 9P MM Pamela Evonne is the daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Edward Carroll, of 208 Spruce Street, I.ydia Mills.