University of South Carolina Libraries
2 -1 I ?mssiflasa Clot -ft.? .. j Published 1 P[ *1 for emplo> 1 c* I and Lydia r*-?U Clinton, S. I ' L "* direction ... . ? Crocker, I Member of South _ Atlantic Council of lions Industrial Kditors Calvin Cooper E. C. Huffstetler The publishers of Th< items of interest from to your departme perso tup r.nnn * ?v wv Would we be better off it competition? Some people view of competition, it may ever so often it causes a bus resulting in lost jobs and lo; Yet competition is really has operated throughout all the world if the lowly forms seas had not had to compel food, sunlight, and air ? to I and environment?resulted i gaining footholds on the lam selves in good competitive j ing. The poor competitors. In our own lives, compet only for better products, bt for more kinds of products, petcd among themselves, bu U ~ 11 1 1 ^ - * mtry ct 11 nau iu compete aga both ran into tough compet lamp. Now, fluorescent lig against conventional electrii As competition multiplie the rapidly changing conditi has economic competition g variety of industrial marve and our enjoyment of life. Competition has created obsolete. It has opened up businesses, new opportunitie down. Every employee is a connot. He is in competition v other companies. Frequently he doesn't know are alive?{ perhaps, but one which ma company and his job. All of us want security build a security wall betwt panies which are competin security above everything e security. The only practica be a good competitor. CHECK UP Perhaps you have heard orcd man, who walked into ' Hello, is dat you. Mr. J( in de papah two weeks ago the man you got? . .. You is "It's too bad someone h Mose. "Dat's all rieht Rns? V job two weeks ago an' was Mose had an eye for bus once in a while. GESUNDHEIT! During the next 31 days if per chance you meet a f several additional pocket 1 isn't due to bereavement, bu .... caused bv airborne giar Your friend is but one of who arc victims to this pecu old and as mysterious of ori Since hay fever is more ) other due to the thousands is permitted to flourish, the from our nation's number < tirely on the shoulders of Ar some time ago that the Anti long sought after "satisfact that they made some people gerous to those who spent 1 Hay Fever sufferers ? T is your pocket handkerchief will filter out the dreaded { nggnsfc wmM rom rtonlhly by and <fT 'ees of Clinton { Cotton Mills, C., under the of Claude A. "V ndustrial Rela- ? . # A , t\- Memlier of American Director. Association of Industrial Editors Editor .. Staff Artist e Clothmaker will welcome i its readers. Turn them in ntal reporters or to the nnel office. COMPETITOR we had no such thing as business think so. If you take a narrow seem to be undesirable, because ;iness to sell out, or to close up? st investments, a great creative force of life. It nature, through all time. Imagine ; of life that first came out of the e! The necessity to compete for De adaptable to changes in climate n higher and higher forms of life d. Those which established themjositions are still here, and thrivlike the giant reptiles, are gone, ition has been the inspiration not it for entirely new products, and Makers of oil lamps first comt then there came the time when inst gas lamps. Gas and oil light ition in the incandescent electric nt is very much in the running c bulbs. d plant and animal forms during ons in the early ages of Earth, so iven us an immense number and ?ls?for our comfort, our health, far more things than it has made a vastly greater number of new s, and new jobs, than it has closed ipetitor, whether he realizes it or vith people doing similar jobs in j he is in competition with people people making a different product y become a new challenge to his But no company can possibly ?en itself and all the other comg in the same market. Putting Ise is often the surest way to lose ble way of gaining security is to ON YOURSELF the story about Mose, the old cola drug store to use the telephone: mes? ... I see youah ad for a man ... I see! ... Is you satisfied with i? .. . All right, thank you, Sir." as the job," the druggist said to ou see, I'se do man what got the just checkin' up on myself." ;iness. It pays to check ourselves -"To Your Health" do not become unduly alarmed riend with water filled eyes and landkerchiefs. Most probably it it to his annual seige of hav fever it ragweed pollen, more than five million Americans liar allergy, which seems to be as gin as man himself, prevalent in our country than any of unfilled acres where ragweed burden to find satisfactory relief ino alergv has fallen almost ennerican Medical Men. It appeared histamines would prove to be the ory relief". The drawback was sleepy and were potentially danong hours driving. 'ake this tip .... Your best friend and an air conditioner unit which pollen. THE CLOTHMAKER Service Awards (Continued from Page 1) E. E. Heaton Spinning J. H. Hughes Weaving F. H. Jacks Weaving Willie Kinard Weaving W. L. Lancaster Carding w. a. L.uiieion weaving Cleo Lusk Carding Roy Lydia Carding Victor Mattox Carding Carol Samples .. Spinning Grover Sanders Spinning T. A. Sanders Shop Melvin Seay Spinning P. G. Smith ... Carding R. L. Snelgrove Shop Ott Thomas Shop Mary Terry Weaving Berry Trammell Spinning Colic Turner Carding W. C. Wallenzine Weaving Clinton West Office Robert Whitsel Spinning Cecil Wooten Weaving Grace Wooten Weaving Milford Wright Carding Cleveland Young Warehouse (Col.) 15 Years Robert Adams Weaving Marcell Barker Weaving Clyde Bigbec Shop L. A. Boyette _. Carding W. P. Burdette Office Elbert Butler Spinning Louis Butler Weaving Louis Butler, Jr. Weaving Carl Campbell Weaving Raymond Cash Carding Janet Cauble Weaving Mayfield Copeland Carding Pauline Creswell Spinning Rene Crotts Spinning Arthur Davis Weaving W. H Dunaway Carding Roy Ginn Spinning Willie Gooch Spinning Horace Grogan . Cloth Andy Hamcs Spinning Fred Haynie Spinning Sallie Haynie .... Spinning Leo Heatherly Spinning C. C. Heaton Shop Virginia Holtzclaw Spinning Kelly M. King Spinning Giles Lawson Spinning Dora Leopard ... Weaving Hubert Leopard Spinning iiuiiiun L>eopara weaving Ethel Lever Weaving Evans Lever Weaving Costell Little (Col.) Carding George Lydia Weaving Lowell McCall Carding C. E. Motes Shop Edith Neal Weaving Carlisle Neely Office Walker Osborne Spinning R. C. Oxner Cloth Ruth Oxner Weaving Fannie Parrish /~"oth J. B. Patterson Cloth Sara Powers Weaving George Price Shop Elmer Queen Spinning I. O. Ray Shop Leo Riser Weaving Eula M. Rushton Spinning Jessie Samples Spinning Jones B. Samples Spinning Nannie Samples Spinning L. D. Simpson Shop Joe P. Terry Shop Dorsey Turner Cloth Luther Turner Spinning Robert Vance Office F^. C. Vincent Carding Marie Weir Office 10 Years Everette Allman Carding Lon Allen Spinning Ronald Amiek Carding Mamie Banks Spinning Claude A. Barker Weaving F'li/.abeth Barnette Weaving James (5. Barnett Weaving Gertrude Beckham Weaving Wade Beckham, Sr. Weaving Ruby King Bigham Spinning Russell Bigham Spinning Inez Black well Weaving Roy Blackwell Carding Sarah Blakely Weaving Banna Braswell Weaving J. E. Braswell Cloth Willie Braswell Weaving Lillie Brazillc ... . Spinning Polly Brazille . Weaving Wm. H. Brewer Carding Newell Brewington Weaving Clarence Brookshire Weaving Mary Brookshire Spinning Lois Boyctte Weaving Nell Canfield Bozard Weaving James Burnside (Col ) Village Inez Byrum Weaving Carl Campbell Weaving Mildred Campbell . Weaving Lois Carley Weaving James E. Caugi. nan Spinning Thomas Corley Cloth James N. Creswell Weaving Elloree Cunningham Spinning Edward Davenport Shop Dot Davis Cloth Dock Dover .. Village Cleo E. Dunnaway Spinning Emma Dunnaway Spinning Sarah F. Dunnaway Spinning Mnrv F;ilv Sninnino ^ ^ "o Robert Edge Spinning Collie Edmonds Spinning H. C. English Cloth Vandy Fallow Weaving Pearl Foster Spinning Ray Fulmcr Carding Fred Galloway Weaving Ola Galloway Spinning Joe Gibbs Weaving Otis Graham Shop James Gregory Weaving Algie Griffin Spinning George Gossett Carding Rufus Handback Cloth Charlie Harper Carding Mary G. Harris Spinning William E. Harris Carding William O. Harris Carding L. C. Heaton Spinning Larry Hedspeth Spinning Robert Holden Spinning John Holder . Carding Mell Huey . Weaving Ar/.o Ivester Cloth Lessie Jackson (Col.) Shop Leila Johnson Office Sallie Johnson Spinning Fred King Spinning Alice Kuykcndall Weaving Ruth Lancaster Weaving Aline Lanford Weaving Arthur Lawson Weaving Cecil Lawson Spinning Edna Lawson Spinning Elbert Lawson Weaving J. C. Lawson Weaving LET THE FIRST AID -JffL 1 Hfll -1 Jj^ fl f. 'Wttff^m v i '*MP i BH Benny Sinclair, Jr.. an em[ the first shift at Lydia Mills i: Department, as Mrs. Dorcus < moves a foreign body from equipped with a magnifying 1< moving wooden splinters and ] bodies, and the nurse is especi these objects. Unfortunately, employees who think they ca: get a co-worker to do the joh times, that the splinter will be nas to be made by a doctor to the foreign body is not remo\ First Aid for all minor injurii AUGUST, 1957 Jessie Lawson Weaving Lanham Lawson Weaving Miles Lawson Weaving Henry Lewis Weaving Geneva Lowery Spinning Elizabeth Lynch Spinning Walt McAlister Shop Ethel McGinnis Spinning Ruth McGinnis Spinning Ola Meadors Weaving Douglas Medlock Carding Annie Milam Spinning Marion Mitchell Cloth John P. Moore Spinning Annie Murphy ^ Spinning Herman Murphy Spinning Augustus Nelson Carding Bob Nelson Carding Daniel Osborne Spinning Mary Osborne Spinning Nellie Osborne Weaving G. J. Owens Shop James Parkman Spinning Hubert Phillips Weaving William Phillips Weaving Elmira Pitts Office Bessie Queen Weaving Paul Quinton Shop Janie Reeder (C??l.) . Shop Alta Riser Weaving Estelle Roland Weaving Marshall Samples Spinning Nannie Samples Spinning Laney Satterfield Spinning Evelyn B. Simmons Weaving Charles Sipes, Jr. Weaving Alvin G. Smith Weaving J. W. Smith Village T. P. Smith Carding Walter Smith Spinning Smantha Stone Spinning B. B. Stroud Carding Willie Suber (Col.) Shop Loyd Taylor Weaving Modesti Thibodeau Weaving Jim Tinsley Spinning Ray Tucker Weaving Lillian Wallenzine Cloth Cally G. Watson (Col.) Carding H. B. Watts . . Weaving L. T. Watts . Village James D. Wertz (Col.) Village D. C. Whitman Shop L. F. Wilson Weaving Donnie Womble Carding Lillie Womble . Spinning Ben Woodward, Jr. Carding Jeanette Woodward Spinning (Continued on Page 4) DEPARTMENT DO IT jloyee in the Machine Shop on i shown above in the First Aid Copeland, registered nurse, rehis finger. The First Aid is imp and special forceps for repieces of steel, or other foreign ially trained in how to remove there are still a great many n remove any foreign body or >. The net result is. numerous broken off and then an incision remove it. Infection sets in if red quickly and properly. Get es.