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2 Clo^ fr. j _ Published m f*-~5\ for employe 'I"' 1 ^ 1 and Lydia 4 I Clinton, S. direction ol , , Crocker, In Member of South , Atlantic Council of lions Industrial Killtora Calvin Cooper E. C. Huflstetler The publishers of The items of interest from to your departmen" person] What Is Coi Company loyalty is an int to explain. Personnel Publica with several common sense fa is it? Where does company lo Loyalty to your company c ing or moral obligation assoc Country or family. You are a loyal employee You give your employer i of your skill, interest and off You obey company rules a Keep confidential materia! You discuss your complair those directly concerned witl You enthusiastically talk u products, services, policies, in Providing you have the ne loyalty is an important factor your company. It will also wi work with you. It's an important thing, alt is important to you for the n clothing, shelter . . . pays yc children. Stand by your em better. Part of At the end of a football ga congratulate a halfback who touchdown of the day. As thi he ran over to the rest of the t lv two fellows who threw ke T.atf?r nn lio tallroz-l umiU 1 and told them it was a team on the part of his two blockei Most of us as employees f tators at the game .. . we car quality, safety and production alone. It not only takes 11 r teach the plays and a bench of pressure. You are important, whate> Lydia. You are a part of the 1 lose the game. One second o] Games are won because ; gained because each employ< and does a good job. Remen with a game. Both have t duties?and rewards. Round i When production costs am some STOP BUYING. When some stop buying, oth u/n nn cnmo c4r\?-v n^ll ?? nv.li ouuic oiujj owning, niirii When some stop making, the When some stop working, soi And when some stop earning Safety Successful accident preve one person or a handful of pc ing on the most hazardous jo the people?are not sufficien Accident prevention is a cl link. Everyone?individually tirely competent in the carrvi Each of us must look to we perform our own jobs as others in accident preventio "yes" to both of these que petence" has been attained 1 I I onthly by and n < es of Clinton (si nJv&Sj Cotton Mills, t C., under the . I Claude A. dustrial Rela- c nirpptnr Member of American JJirecior. Association of s Industrial Editors ^ Editor 1 Staff Artist Clothmaker will welcome j its readers. Turn them in I o 1 vor*rAr4r*t?c />?? 4 4 Vw\ iui lcuuucia ui iu me 1 nel office. I j mpany Loyalty? , angible thing and often difficult ' tions of New York has come up cts about company loyalty. What ! valtv start? Where does it stop? ioes not involve the intense feeliated with your loyalty to your j if: i fair day's work?full measure ort. ind support its policies. I confidential. its only with your supervisor or li your problems, p and support your company, its public as well as on the job. cessary skills and qualifications, in helping you progress within in you the respect of people who hough intangible. Your company lonev it pays you provides food, ' (ur luxuries and educates your j inlover and von'll likr> vnnrsnlf I the Game j inic the spectators rushed out to ; had carried the ball for the lone ?y began to pat him on the back, earn and thanked them, espccialv blocks for him. his friends who were spectators victory, without that last effort *s, he could never have scored, ail in the same way as the speci't see that it is a team fight for i. One man never carries the ball nen on the field but a coach to full of subs to relieve in times rer your job here at Clinton and Learn. One block not thrown will r l -11 [ carelessness win cost a sale, all plav as a team. Business is ?e realizes his or her obligation aber?life can well be compared heir obligations, principles and md Round 1 selling prices get too high, then ers STOP SELLING, others STOP MAKING, n some STOP WORKING, me STOP EARNING. , some STOP BUYING. f nmnptonro" ntion docs not depend on only oplc. The boss, or the man workb, or the interest of just some of t for real safety "competence." lain, no stronger than its weakest , and as a group?must be cnng out of proper safety practices, our own safety competence. Do safely as possible? Do we assist n? When everyone can answer jstions?then true safety "com THE CLOTHMAKER REWARD OF GOSSIP The word "gossip" has an nteresting origin, and came o have its present meaning jy a roundabout route. Origilally it came from the AngloSaxon word "godsib," which neans "related to God." The vord referred to a sponsor at ine's baptism. Thus a "godjib" was a close friend who vas familiar with a person 1 1 _ 11 ? i i uiu Knew an aooui mem. It didn't take long for the dea of "knowing all about a nerson" to change to "telling ill about them," and thus the 3resent meaning of the word 'gossip" was born. Gossip has been defined as jutting two and two together, md making it five. Pascal pointed out the danger in gossip when he said: "I lold it to be a fact, that if all jersons knew what each said jf the other, there would not je four friends in the world." Quarles gave good advice when he said: "Let the greatest part of the news thou nearest be the least part of what thou believest, lest the greatest part of what thou believest be the least part of what is true. Where lies are easily admitted, the father of lies will not easily be kept nut." The great tragedy in telling nr spreading falsehoods is inai you can i iaKe mem DacK. A story will illustrate this point of view: A man with a troubled conscience went to a friend for advice. He told his friend he had circulated a vile storv about another friend and later found that the storv was not true. "If you want to make peace with your conscience," said the friend, "you must fill a bag with feathers, go to every yard in your village and drop in each one of them one fluffy feather." The man did as he was told. Then, he came back to his friend and announced he had done penance for his folly. "Not yet," replied the friend. "Take your bag to the rounds again and gather up every feather that you have dropped." "But the wind must have blown them all away," said the man. "Yes," cairl t 4*?*?/-I ** " ^uiu uic iiii.hu, uiiu au ll ia with gossip. Words are easily dropped, but no matter how hard you try, you can never get them back again." For, as a poet also has said: . . . "Careful with fire," is good advice we know, 'Careful with words," is ten times doubly so; Thoughts unexpressed may sometimes fall back dead. But God Himself can't kill them when they're said. Good advice to follow woidd be never to say things about another which later you will regret. GIVE SEPTEMBER, 1958 cautionI Inn qdhtI jl^P Wl^* "\m "^f "** The Story of An Oil Spot ^^NCE UPON A TIME a department was plagued with the presence of a large spot of oil on the floor. It was InnnloH i >-> r? Nl ICir cnMinil <\f <Un rlnnnxtninnt nn.l nn..U .v/vwtvv* ill l> OVVUV/II U1 II IU ULptU UIIUIIl, ClIIU Cell. II employee who passed by had to use care to avoid slipping in it. The spot never seemed to dry or get any smaller. Finally one day. when Tillie Sloughfoot was passing by the spot, she stepped right smack dab in the middle of it. Her supervisor protested, "Tillie has worked in this same department for over three years. I know she knew about that oil spot being there. I remember warning her personally about it as I did everyone in the department, and I even went to the trouble of having a sign painted to caution the employees about that old spot. I just can't understand why she stepped in it." Tillie moaned when she explained, "I knew about that doggoned oil spot being there. It has been there ever since I came to work, but today I was in a big hurry and I guess I must have forgotten about it that one time. Before I knew what was happening, I was flat on the floor. I guess I just forgot." Congratulations, Tillie! You proved that you are a human being. You did what all humans are guilty of once in a while ... you forgot! Of course, you can be consoled by the fact that all your friends will come to see you. They will bring you candy and flowers, and you must be certain to have them autograph that nice white cast on your leg! Actually this little storv is a ridiculous exaggeration, but there is a method in this madness. It is much simpler to remove a safety hazard whenever possible than to warn everyone of its presence and take the chance of someone forgetting. Do you know of a safety lu., aid in your department? Whether it is a hazard known to everyone or only to you, talk to your supervisor about it. Ppi-Ii:i n? it pnn V-w, nocil" ?>1 ?v> ??> * *U V.IUI MC tu.THV Clillllliaicu. tfe - , w<e&me AUGUST. 1958 CLINTON COTTON MILLS ira t.. Bull?Warding Kenneth Lawson?Weaving Margaret Barker?Spinning Blufford M. Nabors?Weaving Kathryn George?Spinning Robert Thomas?Weaving Thomas W. Lanford?Weaving John W. Cranford?Shop LYDIA COTTON MILLS Cora Calvert?Spinning Fred M. White?Spinning Lottie M. Clark?Spinning Clark Murff, Jr.?Weaving Beatrice Coker?Spinning Joseph Sprouse?Weaving Ellen Culpepper?Spinning Wells Stoner?Weaving James Edmonds?Spinning Lewis Williams?Weaving Opal Reed?Spinning Johnnie Bragg?Slashing