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2 <BMSfir?S9 CLo$ IL > _ Published rrn *or emp'?ye : fx and Lydia ^7~T Clinton, S. ' Cjl1'' direction ol .. , ... Crocker, Ini Member <>f South ? Atlantic Council of uons Industrial Kdttors Calvin Cooper E. C. Huffstetler The publishers of The items of interest from to your departmenl persom This Is Customers are buying mo demanding a lot more for thei] is keener this year than ever at the lowest possible price, quality. The encouraging thin for those companies which put their present customers and t WHAT CA FTP ST T nur ir\K en ntnll 4-1 ? i-'v/ v/lii |\.;u ou \\ t'll li cloth, if he were to workmanship. SECOND?Do our best to a waste, to help keep 01 who are also trying THIRD?Do everything we ca with those with whor production up. FOURTH?Do our best to schedules by workin tardiness and absenc< Communil We have a feeling of gre; contemplate the community employees. Many of our fel communities?and thus their piatinn with anH <1.11 miu UV. UVC ^01 HL civic and community clubs, other school groups, youth g Not only are they doing munities a good service, but t satisfaction in their work. The need for volunteers i munitv activities never cease part because of some feeling is wrong. Wrong because ev< in some capacity by some cm seem a small part, but it take ones successful, and those w as important as those who 1< We repeat that the one v making his community a bet better neighbor and a better else?something hard to exp can only come from actual sei faction which warms the hea and strain of everyday livini darkness, love where there i: despair. It brings a feeling o liness. It is a wonderful way to 1 IAfLi*'~ I vviici: ? ill Unquestioning obedience i appearing from the human s It may indicate a higher common in bygone years. It highly competitive civilizatic unduly suspicious and fearfi others. The oft repeated "why" cc ask. "Why must I drink my m do I have to be home by c comes the query, "Why shou The most perplexing "wh spoken aloud. If we are to ju< entlv does exist in the minds dustrv today: "Why should I must be accompanied by anotl It seems almost absurb tha answer. You work safely? To stay alive, To keep yourself from pai To avoid the financial hai For the sake of your lovei Because your carelessness It might be well to recall look at one of the signs post reads. "Think Safety, Work S Sfito " * onthly by and n es of Clinton Cotton Mills, L C., under the Claude A. ~ "\J dustrial Rela- ... , . . r^- . Member of American Director. Association of Industrial Editors Editor Staff Artist Clothmaker will welcome its readers. Turn them in :al reporters or to the lei office. The Year! re carefully in 1958 ? and arc r money. Competition for order* before. The customer is buying but he is also insisting on toj: g is that 1958 can be a good veai forth their best efforts to satisf\ o win new ones as well. N WE DO? lat the customer would buy oui judge its quality solely on oui void every bit of spoilage anc ir prices competitive with others to sell our customers, n to keep things going smoothh n we work, thus helping to keep avoia interrupting productior g SAFELY and by eliminating a ty Service at pride and pleasure when we activities of Clinton and LydU low workers are serving then fellow men?through their asso ipation in programs of churches parent-teacher associations anc roups, and many others, their neighbors and their com hev are finding a great persona n these humanitarian and com s. Some may hesitate to take i of lack of talent. Such thinking ?rv man or woman can be usee ammunity organization. It ma> s the small jobs to make the bij ho serve in small capacities an ?ad. /ho serves in these capacities i 1 1 1 * - r 11 u-i picujt hiiu nis ienow man < citizen. But it does somethinj lain in mere words and whicl vice. This is the feeling of satis rt, the soul. It lessens the stres I. it brings light where there i 5 hate, and hope where there i f belonging where there is lone live. If you haven't tried it?do It For Me? s a trait which is gradually dis cene. degree of intelligence than wa may be the effect of living in >n, so that we all have becom il lest we be imposed upon b; >mes from all ages. The toddler ilk?'' The adolescents ask, "Wh; leven?" From the middle-age< Id I eat less?" v" of all is one that is seldon Ige by accident reports, it appar of many people in the textile in work safely?" And this questioi ler?"What's in it for me if I do? t anyone should fail to know tin in and misery, dships that accidents bring, :1 ones, may endanger your co-workers these reasons the next time yoi ed throughout the plants which iafely." THE CLOTHMAKER Care Of Outboard Motors Many of our employees have outboard motors and for their information we are reprinting the following instruc- ! tions on spring care of motors, with this preliminary bit of advice: Always have at least one life jacket for each person ' in your boat; come back safely from each fishing trip. "When you pulled your outhoard hoatinn ri)? out of tho water last fall it seemed a long time until spring, but that time is here and it is time to tune up that outboard motor. : "A simple check of your ; motor takes little time, little r special skill and no special set ) of tools. 'The entire job is very simple if you follow a basic set of recommendations as set forth bv Harry Ewald, chief engineer of Evinrude Motors. Milwaukee. "The first spot to check is | the ignition system. The use ; of an oil-and-gas mixture for lubrication is frequently hard on spark plugs, so take a look > at them. If they are pitted or carbonized, they should be i replaced. r "Spark plug connectors should be checked for corrosion, especially if you used your outboard in salt water. Replace cracked or torn insulators. The spark gap should be cheeked and adinsteH fro quentlv. "The carburetor sediment : bowl, which protects the carburetor from Rummy deposits present in fuel, should be ' cleaned. A few turns of a thumb screw will release the bowl, which can then be removed for cleaning. "The carburetor can be kept ? in condition by squirting a few drops of thin lubricating oil through the air silencer 3 while the motor is operating. "The throttle linkage, the set of movable parts between s throttle and carburetor and magneto, should receive a b check and be kept lubricated. "An examination of the pro^ peller and entire lower unit is ~ a 'must' item to check. Cotter pins should be removed and checked for wear. In those motors still using shear pins. ( thev should also be checked for nicks or wear and replaced if necessary. "The propeller should be looked over carefully for cracks and warp and the lower s unit should always be well a lubricated with outboard gear e oil, available at any store y handling marine lubricants. "Ewald recommends that s fuel lines be checked for v cracks and leaks and replaced :i immediately if they show damage. The hose line on each t portable tank should be included in the check and also replaced if cracked or leaking, i "Make certain when you " place portable tanks aboard e that the fuel lines run free. The best way to protect fuel lines is to keep them short. Coil them around the top of the tank and make certain the tanks are stowed in such a ;. position as to prevent the l lines from being stepped on i and out of the way of loose gear which might cut or Its Later Tha Everything is farther than it used to be. It's twice as far from my place to the bus line now, anct mev nave aaaea a hi ill that I've just noticed. The buses leave sooner too but I've given up running for them because they go faster than they used to Seems to me they are making staircases steeper than in the old days. The risers seem higher, and there are more of them because I've noticed it's harder for me to make them two at a time. It's all one can do to make one step at a time. Have you noticed the small print they are using lately? Newspapers are getting farther awav when I hold them, and I have to squint to make out the news. Now it's ridiculous to suggest that a person of my age needs glasses, but it's the onlv wav 1 can line! out what's going on without someone reading aloud to me, and that isn't much help because everyone seems to speak in such a low voice that I can scarcely hear them. Times are surely changing. It's going colder in the winter, and the summers are hotter than the good old days. Snow is much heavier too, when I WASTE NOT 111 TB t frl LiLt' 4; *5* M lr^%l -^H idB^ | i?fl ^ _ i. I - .- ? W^^H^iQk S '^^Hl ' ^1 Bp I. ^55^? Waste Control?Elbert Lawson weights to get proper tension on s< a slasher tender can reduce waste is applied the section beams wil necessary waste. smother the lines. "If you left gasoline in your portable tank last fall, it's a good idea to drain it out and start the season with a fresh fuel supply. "For a final touch, just before launching, Ewald recommends that an application of a thin coat of light oil be ap APRIL. 1958 n You Think attempt to shovel it. Rain is so much wetter that I have to wear rubbers. I ^uess the way they build windows now makes drafts more severe. The material in my clothes, I notice, shrinks in certain places, like around the waist or in the seat. Shoe laces are shorter, and next to impossible to reach. People are chaneine too. for one thing, they are younger than they used to be when I was their age. On the other hand, people of my age are so much older than I am. I realize my generation is approaching middle age, but there is no reason for my friends to be tottering into senility. I ran into a friend the other night, and she had changed so much that she didn't recognize me. "You've put on a little weight," I said. "It's this modern food." she replied. "It seems to be more fattening." I got to thinking about her this morning while I was dressing. I looked at my own reflection in the mirror. Seems they don't use the same kind of glass in mirrors any more. - WANT NOT! wm of Clinton Cotton Mills, adjusts ection beams, one of the best ways on his job. Unless correct tension II run out unevenly, causing unified to the exterior nortions of the motor with a soft, clean cloth. This brings out the luster of the enamel and helps seal off the motor from the extremes of the elements. "With this completed, you're ready for launching and a trouble-free season of boating fun."