The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, May 15, 1956, Page 3, Image 3
MAY 15. 1956
NEWS ITEMS
Cloth Room
Rw Annia T n
J ???*? u* WW UAAAiAlA V V,
Donald Jackson, USN, has a
returned to Treasure Island,
San Francisco, Calif., after f
spending a 14-day leave with r
his parents, Mr. and Mrs.
Curtis Jackson.
A-2-C Allen W. White, Jr., ?
has returned to Manhattan
Beach Air Base, New York,
after spending a 30-day leave R
with Mrs. White and other
relatives. Airman White will
leave New York shortly for
an 18-month tour of duty in
Germany.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Dickerson
fir anri rhilHrpn wpi-p ro.
cent guests of Rev. and Mrs.
B. E. Terrell of Fountain Inn.
Mr. and Mrs. Dickerson were
also guests of her parents, Mr.
and Mrs. W. P. Terrell in
Carnesville, Ga.
Roberta Chaney attended a
district E p w o r t h League
meeting in Batcsburg recently.
Mrs. Virginia Wilson and
daughter, Harriett, and Roberta
Chaney went shopping
in Abbeville.
Mrs. F ranees Blackstock
spent some time in Atlanta
with her mother, Mrs. P. A.
Ratteree, who is ill.
Mrs. Ralph Harbin and children
of Greenville were recent
guests of Mr. and Mrs.
Harold Blackstock.
Mr. and Mrs. Bob Yarborough
and son. Mike, of Woodruff.
were supper guests of
Mrs. Hallie Campbell. (
Mrs. Sybil Jackson has re- 1
turned to work after an ill- I
ness.
SPRINGTIME-AT HI
Elsewhere in this issue you J
will find the results of our 1
Clean-Up. Fix-Up contest ... 1
those who won prizes for doing
the best, in the opinion of I
impartial judges, in improv- 1
ing their yards. t
That reminds us that Spring <
has always been associated i
with house cleaning. 1
Most of us have undoubtedly
heard the popular song <
about how love and marriage s
go together like a horse and 1
carriage and that you can't
have one without the other, i
Well, the same is even more |
true about good housekeep- 1
ing and safety. You can't have <
1
1
\jg
A-2-C HAROLD Dean Meadors,
son of Mr. and Mrs. Thornton
MaaHrtrc ic nnur corvinn in F!no.
land with the Air Force.
AT LYDIA
Mrs. Eloise McElveen is
onfined to her home due to
n accident.
Mr. and Mrs. Major Craword
celebrated their 14th anliversary
May 8.
Birthdays: Shirley Barlowe,
flay 14 . . . Clara Gilstrap,
flay 16 . . . Bobby Bennett,
flay 5 . . . Curtis Jackson,
flay 2 and Richard Jackson,
flay 21.
A Dnilv Dozen
1. A little patience ? once
a day.
2. A bit of self-control ?
somewhere.
3. A minute of unselfishness.
4. A flash of generosity.
5. One kind word ? possibly
two.
G. A word of appreciation
to somebody.
7. An eager excuse ? for
someone else.
8. One good deed ? not
i ri i
icii unaone.
9. A little prayer for a
friend in need.
10. A noble thought ? perhaps
a text.
11. A sudden smile?where
it can do some good.
12. A snatch of song ? or
hum a tune.
?O?
NOTE OF APPRECIATION
We express our sincere and
leep appreciation to all the
riends and neighbors of Mr.
L.andv C. Heaton. Sr.
Matelida S. Heaton
OME, IN THE Mill
;afety without good housekeeping.
They go together
land in hand.
Other people often judge us
iy our housekeeping. When
visitors go through our mills,
he first thing they notice is
>ur general housekeeping. If
t is good, they immediately
:hink that this is a good mill,
rhey think it is a mill that
an make the best cloth in a
;afe and efficient way, and
they would be right, too.
If the housekeeping in our
nills is poor, visitors would
probably be so busy trying to
keep from falling over some
abject left lying in the aisle
that they would not be able
to notice much else. They
would want to get out of such
an unsafe place as rapidly as
r\r*CciKlo nn/^1 Ii'lan eon 1 /I
V...V. ' " ' V. W l? 1 VI
blame them?
Good housekeeping means
nothing more than cleanliness
and order. It means having a
place for everything and
keeping everything in its
place. By keeping rubbish off
the floor, by picking up and
cleaning up after every job,
we can keep the working
areas in our mills neat, clean,
and most important of all,
SAFE. One good way we can
ad actively participate in the
war against accidents is by
following good housekeeping
practices.
Remember, housekeeping is
not just the job of one person
or one department, it is the
THE CLOTHMAKER
SCHOOL NIGHT LEADERS?Large
Night, sponsored by the Clinton Mills
Miss Rose Lee, Miss Kate Milam, Mrs.
I | |
9
ENTERTAINERS?One of lhe nume
night was this duet given by Sara Sm
Kindergarten To
Graduate Fourteen ^
Graduation exercises for
the Lydia Kindergarten will TT
be held May 18 at 8 P.M. in
the Providence School audiIS
torium with candlelight serv- 1 ,
sel
ices.
Diplomas will be presented 1C'
bv Claude Crocker. Clinton- '
TI
Lydia Industrial Relations Director
and the public is in- mi
vited. Pa
The following will receive * ]
diplomas:
Sherrie Armstrong, Pamela cai
B r o w n. Gail Caughman, ot'
Frank Gaskins, Steven David vo
Grady, Kelline King. Leland
Nelson, Patricia Harvey. Shirley
Hinson, Charity Pollock, wl
Carolyn Rhodes, Randall to
Seav. A1 Webb. Jr.. Daniel th<
Whitmore. ox
TV T T.^V> TV !f.. w
i*i .iitiui ?J i > 111 ir>i > 11, ui 1*11. *> c
and Mrs. Bobby Johnson, will th
receive an attendance ccrtifi- pa
cate. 1
CI
job and responsibility of da
everyone of us. th
? O ? w<
Men still die with their ha
boots on?one of them on the ur
accelerator. wi
i .--j
t~v
v m
/
;ly responsible for the success of
Woman's Club, were these ieac
Gus Blakely and Miss Lindler.
M -TV
' m
rous entertaining acts presented c
ith and Furman Childers. The e>
Which Arc
'hy People Do . . .
I. SENSE OF OBLIGAON.
I want to do the right
ing, so I vote. It is my duty
a citizen. I owe it to my
f respect. I want to be a
il American.
1. SENSE OF PARTICIPAON.
I am part of the commity,
part of the country,
rt of the government when
,'ote.
3. SENSE OF POWER. I
n prove to myself and to
ners that I have power by
ting. It feels good to vote.
4. DESIRE TO BE POPUVR.
I want to conform to
lat my neighbors are doing.
the accepted standards of
e community. My children
pect me to vote. I don't
mt to be left out of some
ing everyone else is taking
rt in.
5. THE DISCOVERY OF A
iAMPION. Here is a candite
who represents me. He
inks like I do. He acts as I
mid want to act. And he
s a bigger voice, more state
than 1 have. Therefore I
ill vote for him.
3
QT
rHHMi
the recent Academy Street School
hers: Principal D. S. Templeton.
luring the Academy Street School
pent attracted a capacity audience.
/ On Voting?
Why People Don't
1. PERSONAL LAZINESS.
Too busy. Not interested.
Politics bore me. Or any
other feeble excuse, so why
bother to vote?
2. DISILLUSIONED. Has
feeling of personal inadequacy;
my vote won't count;
I have nothing to say. Guess
how many men have gone
into high office on ONE vote.
It could have been yours.
3. GUILT COMPLEX. I
have been told so often that
voting is my solemn duty that
I rebel against the whole idea.
4. THREAT OF DEFLATION.
Voting means making
up your mind, deciding. I
may not be capable of doing
this. Voting is a responsibility.
I may shun this. I don't want
to be responsible for the man
for whom I vote.
5. AN ODD CHARACTER.
Always on the opposite side
of the fence of anything. Most
people vote, so I won't. Most
people study issues and candidates
? not me. But wait until
after the election. Then I'll
tell you how to run things.