The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, May 15, 1956, Page 8, Image 8
8
NEWS FRCtf
fC!nntirillPrl frr?rr? Patfo
from No. 3 Weaving, and Fred
Wilson, Jr., Hour Hand. We
hope you folks will just make
yourselves at home because
we're all just like home folks.
Sorry to report that Ralph
Stewart is still absent due to
illness.
Inabell Hooper also continues
ill at her home. Our sincere
best wishes are for both
their recoveries.
Little Sandra Lanford has
oeen ill with mumps. She is
the daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Harry Lanford.
Little Johnny Lever, son of
Mr. and Mrs. Evans Lever,
and Mike Campbell, son of
Mrs. Cleveland Campbell, are
recovering from tonsilectomies
at Hays hospital April
27.
We extend deepest sympathy
to Frank Jacks in the
recent loss of his sister, Mrs.
Beulah Stone; also to Max
Fortenberry in the loss of his
brother, Ed Fortenberry, and
to Charles Sipes, Jr., in the
death of his father, Charlie
Sipes. whose death was quite
sudden.
Birthdays: Miss Mary Cunningham,
daughter of the
Mac Cunninghams, celebrated
her 16th birthday May 4 . . .
Mrs. Mac Cunningham had a
birthday April 30 . . . Virgil
Automation ? A
Several news articles recei
dieted that the worker of the fi
nothing to do but rest, play ch
jokes. Such a prediction refer:
the much-heralded age of autoi
is to be the case, what a nation
we could turn out to be!
Naturally, the coming of r
should give man more time awa
labor. But what kind of worl
bo nil hnnrl nt nil limns t<? nnnvn
regardless of how infrequently
a dial or punch a button?
worker will repair them wh<
down or wear out? Who will i
and improved machinery? All c
a vast amount of knowledge (
workings of such master-ma
won't be learned while empli
swap jokes. (Just ask anvon
mechanized payroll office).
Many people have voiced
mation will create vast unemp
production workers. So it was
the industrial revolution, be
think that with the productive
methods of the 1850'l, it woulc
support the 165 million Americ
There are certainly more busir
mm ?i
DK3 R. C. WILKIE, son of Mr.
Missouri Wilkie, is shown at
work aboard the USS Catamount.
rte makes out the paychecks and
seems to be enjoying it.
A CLINTON
Webb, May 1 . . . Rudolph
Barker, April 17 . . . his wife,
Annie Ruth, April 14 . . . Gary
TT .1. n .1 r ii
nugn ^unningnam, son 01 tne
Jack Cunninghams, will be
five May 28; Micky Dover,
son of the Dock Dovers, was 8
years old May 10 ... J. E.
Braswell, Sr., 86 years old
May 12 (hope I can live that
long, don't you?) . . . Mrs. J.
H. Hughes, May 9.
Mr. and Mrs. Tolan Snelgrove
had a wedding anniversary
May 8 ... Mr. and Mrs.
Mac Cunningham will celebrate
an anniversary May 18
and Mr. and Mrs. J. H. Hughes
have an anniversarv Mav 15.
Happy anniversary to all of
you.
Trtnn"f<?r |
"I hinted to everybody we'd
rather have money!"
Natural Phenomena
itly have pre- and jobs now t
iture will have cry was popul
eckers and tell "technological
5. of course, to There are far
nation. If that Granted tin
i of dead-heads will have more
by machines,
nore machines man unless he
v from manual constructively'
cer is going to We hate to
to the machine, would be if t
he has to turn actual work t
What kind of play. Man fcn
they break whose ingenu
invent the new achievements?
>f this will take playing and
>f the intricate don't tha
chines, and it planned bro p
Dyees rest and busy
e in a highly There is no
r , of automationtear
that auto- A
loyment among en ' . e n
at the dawn of 8row ,n order
it can anyone lotion of the f
equipment and tunity for gr<
1 be possible to human energv
rans now alive? rest for thos<
less enterprises have with us, :
Did You Know
That . . .?
Thp mnn chute l-iic
eyes to his own shortcomings
is foolish? He is standing in
the way of his own success.
Good tools, equipment, machines,
and materials certainly
don't mean a quality product
always? It still takes a
good workman along with
these others to make a good
finished product.
Combined slices of orange
and grapefruit with rine ba
nanas and a scoop of lemon
THE CLOTHMAKE
w
* Si
. v <3
U WrJ2\-?*^ v J*
LIKE MOTHER. LIKE DAUGH
party April 25 in the Community C
awarded a prize for being the best
SEEMS LIKE SUMMER
IS THE SEASON
THAT COMES THE
CLOSEST TO PLEASIN'.
?O?
"It's not the size of the dog
in the fight . . .
"It's the size of the fight in
the dog."
As We Prepress
o
han there were then. The same
lar in the 1930's; then, it was
unemployment" they feared,
more jobs today than then,
it in the dim future the worker
? leisure time due to work done
will he be any better off as a
learns how to spend that time
)
think what kind of nation this
he majority of people had no
o perform, nothing to do but
yr nature, is a creative being
ity must lead him to higher
-not day - in - day - out checker
joke swapping. Even firemen
t anymore since their wellprevention
programs keep them
thing to fear in the coming age
?it is already here to some exlerican
enterprise is bound to
to accomodate the great popuuture,
offering plenty of oppornvth
and exertion of creative.
r Tltnrn \trill iniir
xuv.iv. V"V ill uu 1UW llclXUll^ U1
? non-entities we will always
seeking the amoebic existence.
ice cream make a delicious
salad?
Learning is like rowing a
boat upstream, not to advance
is to drop back?
Quality in a one stage operation
is easy? Where hundreds
of people handle a product,
it makes it tougher but
still a more interesting job.
The Veterans Administration,
although most of us be
ncvu it CtllllL.' CI1UI1J4 ill IL'I lilt*
second World War, was established
bv executive order of
July 21, 1930.
That second of extra care
R
k ^n ffi?iii
IS#W
1 ' Jr^m'
TER?The Busy Bee Blue Birds of <
enter, each girl coming dressed as h
dressed. Games were played and re
LYDIA SCHOOL CHILDREN e
Flag Day (below) in play sponsorc
taken on your job could well
mean the difference in quali
t r?l^t W
A safe method or pattern of
doing your job doesn't help
the fellow next door too
much, it helps you?
An industry today that has
a good team made up of fars
i g h t e d management and
quality workmen will always
succeed? We have that at
Clinton-Lvdia. Let's make it
work.
? O ?
FISHING CLUBBERS
A fisherman was hauled
into court for catching ton
more bass than the law
allowed.
"Guilty or not guilty." said
the judge.
Wtv r;..i
vi u 111. > , ? t * iv i in*.- iidiicti
MAY 15, 19SS
Clinton Mills enjoyed a dress-up
er mother. Sandy Leopard was
freshments served.
i i/K ;*9
^
nacl Columbus Day (above) and
fd by Lydia P.T.A.
3331333^ i II
man.
"Ten dollars and costs,"
said the judge.
After cheerfully paying the
line, the defendant asked:
"And now, your honor, I'd
like several copies of the
court order to show my
friends hi ?k at Clinton-Lvdia
Mills."
? O ?
Juvenile delinquency began
A 1 _ 1 - 1- It 1
me uay me wooasnea was replaced
by the garage.
? O ?
The grace of God is the
divine remedy which deals
with the human disease called
sin.
? O ?
Woman driver to friend:
"The part I don't like about
parking is that noisy crash."