The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, July 15, 1956, Page 6, Image 6

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6 me - ? ixp*^ JUNE. CLINTON Dorian B. Cauble?Carding Charlie Wyatt?Carding Juan Holder?Carding Ruby Waikins?Spinning Blanche B. Rochester?Spinning Julia Wilson?Sninnina Culila Owings?Spinning Gladys Rice?Spinning Christine Deadwyler?Spinning LYDIA 1 James Pearson?Carding James Bowling?Carding William Alexander?Carding Marchant Rice?Carding Otis Cuzzart?Carding Mary Patterson?Spinning (The Welcome Mat include month of June at. Clinton-Lydic Hot Time Tips There's nothing much you can do about hot weather except talk about it. But there are quite a few things you can do about yourself. First. nf all rplav Tint plenty of sleep. Don't worry about either the heat or the humidity. Don't even talk about it! Eat sensibly. Salads and fruit are all right, but they're not enough to keep you going. You still need proteins, carbohydrates, and fats for energy and for strength to get through the uncomfortable Swimming Pool Activity High Activities at the swimming pools are at their peak. Approximately two thousand swimmers each week are seeking enjoyment and relief from the heat by taking a cool dip in one of the pools. Approximately 150 youngsters are being taught to swim. The classes for children up to 7 years old begin at 9:00 A.M. each day with the classes for children over 7 years beginning at 9:30 A.M. Senior and Junior Life Savers Courses will begin soon. Woman's Club Picnic ' ^fl| >> * 1 ON THURSDAY NIGHT. Jun families. The lawn of Mr. and Mrs. the families enjoyed several stunts The group is pictured here as Ellis, Mr. and Mrs. Gus Blakely, Mrs. Tom Norris and Family. Ellei way, Mrs. Ella Harvey and Guests zer and Miss Ellen Frazer. 1956 MTT T C Lula B. King?Spinning Margie Rice?Weaving Vera Barneit?Weaving Mildred Barbee?Weaving Obe Thorneon?Weaving Sarah Madden?Cloth Dorothy Ballew?Laboratory Technician MILLS Paul Patterson?Spinning Frances Harrison?Spinning Allie Coggins?Weaving Ruth Ammons?Weaving William Pace?Weaving Annie Dallas?Cloth s employees employed during i Cotton Mills.) days. It is considered best to eat a good breakfast in the cool of the day and to go light on lunch. Cold foods are not actually cooling, but just seem to cool. It's not the food but the calories they contain that raise body temperature. We should drink plenty of water. Twelve to 15 glasses a day are recommended. They should be cool but not icy. Naturally during the summer months, we should wear light, loose, porous, lightcolored clothing and avoid exertion in the sun. Be glad if you perspire for that is the body's way of refrigeration inrougn evaporation. IT'S A TOUGH LIFE It takes a heap of doing to get by these days. A fellow is expected to keep his eye on the ball, his back to the wall, his chin up, his nose to the wheel and his feet on the grindstone, his shoulder to the eround. And all the while he is advised to look for the silver lining, before he leaps, take a stitch in time and cross no bridges without burning them behind him. No wonder we decide to snap-out of it, take it easy, get on th. ball and relax. ie 21st, the Woman's Club picnic J. V. Lowe was 4he site of the fei i and games, they begin to serve themselves. Mr. and Mrs. D. O. Freeman, Mr n Frazer. Mrs. Eva West, Mr. and . Mr. and Mrs. J. F. Davis, Mrs. ! THE CLOTHMAKER CHORAL CLUB il The Clinton-Lydia Choral Club, guests at Mrs. Land's piano recital, rendered the following numbers: We'll Go A Long, Long Way Together?by Fred Waring. No Man Is An Island?by Fred Waring. The Holy City?by Adams. Make America Proud of You?Fred Waring. One God?Fred Waring. This Is My Country?Fred Waring. The singers, reading from left to right, are: Front row? Joan Burgess, Miss Janet Poole, Mrs. Floyd Poole, Mrs. Charles, Gaffney, Mrs. Eva West, Miss Nellie Osborne; * M|P MRS. EVA LAND DIRECTS T! ciial held recently at Academy Sti Beware of covetousness, fo. a man's life consists not in the abundance of the thin;^> which he possesses.? (St. Luke 12, 15.) The greatest of all human possessions is within everyone's reach, the easiest to acquire, and the most lasting? for it is peace of soul and mind, gained through loving (iod with all one's heart, thus to receive 11i -Lin woplth is ashes. I ' m 3v" Mmm/J was held for the members and iheir stivities. After the delicious supper. They are: Mr. and Mrs. George R. . and Mrs. George Price and Family, Mrs. J. V. Lowe, Mr. Fred GalloEmma Cornelson, Mrs. Layton Fra ITERTAINS Second row?Mrs. Alvin Bagwell, Miss Polly Brazil, Miss Linda Stewart, Mrs. John Abercrombie, Miss Ellen Fraser, Miss Nell Canfield, Miss Mary Abercrombie; Third row?Clarence Brookshire, Alvin Bagwell, Charlie Foster, Frank Goss, A1 Lancaster, and Benny Hughey. Accompanists were Miss Mary Cunningham and Miss Beth Trammell; the Ensemble, led by Mr. Harry Bauknigln, were Miss Jean McDaniel, Robert Horton. Jimmy Young, Tommy Cooper, and Granville Webb. Mrs. Eva Land is the Director of the Clinton-Lvdia Choral Club. wr. j HE CHORUS in one of the fine ni reef School. You may have become "morally responsible" at the age of twelve, or even at the age of six. but you were in no wise to blame for what your early environment did to you. From the day of your birth until you were 16 or there abouts, every adult in your vicinity made assaults upon your personality and shaped and twisted it to match his own notion of perfection. Consciously by precept or unconsciously by example they provide the stuff to make your character, and you absorbed it like a sponge. If you were a genius or some other kind of freak, you ' ..rr?i? - ? wi itn i iiiuv.it aiifviru uy nuiside influences; but if you were an ordinary mill-run youngster, bright or dull, that early environment shaped you for life. But the effect of environment doesn't end at 16. Perhaps it never ends. In whatever kind of surroundings you find yourself, at 20 or 40 or any other age. you make use of the material within reach to continue building your pervr ~*:n -I 1 SUIKUU^. I l)U JSllll UOSlll'U what you touch. And although you may not realize what it is doing to you, the responsibility is yours alone, for you are free to leave it if you don't like it. vvmiMug among people JULY IS. 1956 IT ISN'T YOU, BUT 1 TIME'S HLM OM! | T?if Meet JERRY SNOBB ... A self-ceotered Rent who ignores all new "help".. . This snooty snooter has a short memory ? only five years ago he was a rookie himself! ambers presented at the piano reutd, Tfo... whose speech is foul, you pick up more or less verbal dirt; among those whose speech is clean, you unwittingly clean lin VAilr ntirn ifAAnKulortf w ** " v^auumijr, In a community where everybody is religious, you give some thought to your soul; in another environment, where nobody seems aware of religion, you also forget it. Unless you are watchful and consciously stubborn, your style of dress and work 1 I-**- i - * iuioiis ana opinions ana accent change to fit your background. It is a tendency inherited from the pick of our race, for only those survived who changed to match the environment. Noble companions can make you noble; a petty and quarrelsome companion can make you equally petty. You are "catching" your environment as you would the itch. If you don't wish to be like it, flee as from a plague. 1111 ?ii Mi*, and Mrs. Rnrdv Cannon announced the birth of a daughter, Teresa Joy, at Hays Hospital June 15th, weighing 8 lbs., 10 ozs.