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4 THE CLO Published by and CLINTON and L Clinton, So Calvin Cooper FRED GALLOWA E. C. HUFFSTE The publishers of Tt items of interest from its i reporters or tc the person] Age In Ma When an elderly codger ever and is as virile as he tolerantly and murmer me know that beyond a certain increase in mental wealth, tl prize fighter and baseball p] But an industry, such as something else. Each additi Mills is just a springboard fr year, with increased agility. Weakened muscles in m? gressive industry watches fo remedies them through rep new ideas, new developmer constantly underway at Clint why we run full-time wher and when some mills have profits were not plowed bac here in our plants. Wise management polici mills more modern, instead < more and more birthdays. Cooking i There is a sure-fire recip ness pie. Three ingredients be good without all of therr of one and less of the othei will have them mixed in i they are, and the order we tionship to their importance portance: First, the price of the pi petitive. This means that \ of efficiency which will resi make possible a reasonable ; Second, the pie must tasi it. The quality must be go< will want another one. Third, we must activel; promote the sale of the pie whose ability is second to We have to be in dead of these ingredients in our p success. Quality alone will promotional effort alone wo ing. Price, quality and proi that can't be beat. It is th< create the kind of profit wh Living With Our Neighbors Since time began man ha had a very serious probler ?that of learning to liv with his fellow man in hai mony. When he lived i caves he had to be very carc ful not to dig into his neigh bor's home or to drop rock into his neighbor's door vva; and so on until we hav reached our present civiliza tion. Although we hav THMAKER for the employees of fDIA Cotton Mills uth Carolina Editor Y"?Staff Photographer TLER?Staff Artist le Clothmaker will welcome eaders. Turn them in to your lei office. n, Industry boasts that he is as chipper as was in his twenties, we smile aningless congratulations. We point, however much they may nev weaken physically as every layer well knows. Clinton-Lvdia Mills ? that is onal birthday of Clinton-Lvdia om which to leap into the next strength and resourcefulness. m cannot be replaced, but ag i me weaK spots ana promptly lacement with new machinery, its. That is why changes are ton-Lvdia. It also is one reason i some mills are on part-time, fallen by the wayside because :k into revitalizing the mills as es at Clinton-Lydia make our Df older, as we continue to pass A Good Pie e for cooking a successful busiare necessary. The pie will not 1. Some cooks may favor more r. in our opinion, me nest pie exactly equal quantities. Here are listing them in has no rtla;. They are each of equal ime must be reasonable and comve must operate with a degree alt in a low unit cost and thus and competitive price, te good to the person who buys ad enough so that the customer y, intelligently and constantly a. We must have pie salesmen none. earnest about having all three ie. Price alone will never bring not save us. The best sales and n't keep the cash register ringnotion well mixed is the recipe 5 only recipe which is likely to ich mean job security. reached what we think to be the peak in our civilization today we still sometimes find this problem hard to solve not only in ourselves s but our nations as well. We n should always realize that e the Golden Rule suits us today and fits every occasion n just as well as in those early days of Christianity. i II7el come Back V Charles Shepard, Jr., Clin1 ton Community, has received his discharge from the sere vice and has returned home. THE CLOTHMAKER MOTHERS MARCH FOR DIME Woman's Club who collected more George Ellis, Jr. was chairman of MILL - PROVIDED BENEFITS MOST In the fraction of a second it takes a work accident to happen, the Workmen's Compensation Law of South Carolina may become the most important subject in the Mills. It may mean the world to any one of the employees of Clinton - Lydia Mills. It may mean the difference between getting the finest medical care and payment for his misfortune ai no cosi xo nimseu on tne one hand, or being forced to call upon his own resources and savings to meet the shock of the accident. Because it is so important it might be thought that every worker would make it his business to find out how the Workmen's Compensation Law affects him. It is strange but true that not very many employees have any exact knowledge about workmen's compensation at all. Workmen's compensation is a plan, set up by South Carolina law, which endeavors to award financial assistance to employees injured at work and financial assistance to dependents of employees killed while on the job. The idea behind workmen's compensation is to make the situation better for both the woiKer and the employer. In most on-the-job accidents in an industry, cov 11 it - i- * erea oy mc iaw, tne worKer gets compensation and medical care. Benefits under this law are paid either by private insurance companies to which the employers have paid premiums or by the employers themselves. Clinton-Lydia Mills fall into the latter group as a "selfinsurer." under a plan whereby the company's financial responsibility for compensation payments is established with the State Industrial Commission. W T^pBnB !S?Shown above are part of the than S200 in the Clinton Commu the committee. lAiADUMtyc re v V vf l\IXfVlLll J V\ BENEFICIAL WHE Benefits Clinton - Lydia employees are provided two forms of benefits in case they are injured at their work?prompt and proper medical care and monetary compensation. Our mills pay the entire cost of these benefits. The mill is responsible for providing adequate medical care immediately when an accident occurs and for continuing that care as long as the conditions warrant. The worker must accept the medical care offered and present himself for examination onrl f rnnttYionf onnnr/^ 1 n cf uiiu n v.a iiiiv.ii i av.v.vji uiu^ ww the physician's instructions. This service can prove to be the most valuable benefit an injured employee can receive under workmen's compensation. <<& p95 V M-d. 1 CAD Whi i C . | t . T?i gf c S3 V V (V FEBRUARY 15, 1956 36 members of the Clinton Mills nity for the March of Dimes. Mrs. )MPENSATION IN NEEDED If the injury is such that a specialist's attention is required, Clinton-Lydia Mills see that the worker gets this type of medical treatment. The company is charged by the law with the resnrmsihili ty of selecting and approving the physician who is furnishing treatment. Should the worker prefer to be treated by his own physician, the company must approve the selection. If a worker insists upon his own doctor without approval from the company or the Industrial Commission, the worker then assumes the responsibility for paying the doctor and for the type of treatment he receives. Conflicts over selection of a physician do not arise often (Continued on Page 8) i Miya 7 jpL ^ > A fc \?/J a rf