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8 Prior to the tour President R. M. 1 to representatives of our "Farming Room. They are: (first row) Richar Vance, and I. M. Smith. (Second Sr Rcp?jr> Vnnnu rinrt Prir?ol<? Local Farmers . . . (Continued from page 1) Laboratory, then to the cotton storage warehouses where the group began to follow the flow of cotton through all the various manufacturing processes from the opening room to the cloth room. Following the tour, the group had lunch at the Clinton Community House where each received a beautiful set of pillow cases made from the cloth produced at the Clinton plant. All guests expressed their Mr. G. M. Huguley, Superinlenden Mr. Richard Buford the drafting sy DID YOU KNOW * about our SOUTH TEXTILE I South Carolina accounts for textile spindle hours in the U. 5 * * 4 South Carolina textile mills of all cotton consumed in the I $ + 4 South Carolina has more t spindles in the U. S. South Carolina's textile ind fabrics, industrial fahrirs nnH * # 4 Virtually all cotton consun mills is grown in the U. S. * * ? One pound of cleaned cottor of 48 miles. * * * Some of the nation's largest processing cotton, man-made f South Carolina. l/ance extended a cordial welcome I Friends" group in the Directors" d Buford, W. P. Dickson, President (>\V) Ih'.lt h Coni'l:! nrt V:in Ovoit leland. thanks for the opportunity to visit in a modern textile mill. Several of the group had not 1 been inside a mill in over twenty years. Two had never been inside a mill before. , The group was highly im- , pressed with the clean, mod- , ern, and well lighted departments. One said, "I had no j idea of the tremendous progress that has taken place in 1 the mills. It was evident to me that everyone was happy i in his work. Now I fully i know what someone means when he says, 'I'm Proud To ( Be In Textiles'." . wn t, shows Mr. Heath Copeland and stem in Spinning -3. rHAT? CAROLINA \S NDUSTRY more than 24 per cent of active more than any other state. + * consume more than 28 per cent J. s. t * :Je han 30 per cent of all textile I * o lustry manufactures household fabrics for wearing apparel. t * f led by South Carolina textile I # 1 can be spun out to a distance t * # and most modern textile mills, ibers and wool, are located in THE CLOTHMAKER LET'S TAKE STOCK Let's take stock. The beginning of a new year is traditionally a time for taking inventory in businesses, and in personal situations as well. Now is the time to look back at the old year with its successes and its failures, and more important, ahead to the m?--w .yt-cti wun planning ana insight based on old experiences. In relation to all phases of work in the mills, each person needs to take stock of not only his attitude, but also his everyday practices in working safely. After all, safety is insurance. God gave us all only one set of limbs and organs; then He gave us the responsibility of caring for them. The human body is not like a machine with replaceable parts for the ones that break down. The only way to preserve our God-given working parts is to take care of them. During 1958 we had tUi?tvnine accidents in our plants whi h required medical at tention. Clinton 28 ? Lvdia 11). Four of these inju'iess resulted in Lost Time. (Clinton 3?Lvdia 1.) Each of the thirty-nine cases is a separate distinct situation, but likewise, each r>ne could have been prevented. Today's machinery is equipped with safety devices, especially designed to prevent accidents, but there is always the human factor for which there is no accounting and can be no design. A person who ignores the instruction given for his protection is taking the long shot on a chance of injury. He gets by with an unsafe shortcut the first time and perhaps the second, but one dav the long shot comes through and another accident nuts someone out of work and monev. and maybe a few fingers. An acci rient that could have been nrevented if someone had not been careless, thoughtless or had been paying attention to what he was doing. Accidents benefit no one? not the employee and not the Company, and the injury can cause physical suffering, disability and expense. And although every employee knows this, still accidents hapnen. Why? Let's take stock. Signs are posted. "Alwavs Do This", "Never Do That". "Disconnect This", or "Release That". These signs are signs of safety. One might say. "Oh. I know what to do and how to be careful". All of us slip into ruts and habits. When we do this, we become careless and oav loss and less attention to rules, until we may ignore them altogether Then an accident happens and it is too late. Safetv is not a sometimes when-I-hapoen-tothink-of-it-thine. It is and must be as much a part of the iob as the iob itself. Essentially, safety is not eettin" hint. It is avoiding the harmful situation. It is one's own protection for himself. It is everyone's iob, not the sign maker's, but the worker's job. Let's take stock. Can't vou be more safety conscious in 1959? New Star ? New Flag mm (Ainlon i.loth Roy Adams. Calender Machir as it comes off the Calender in the Printing and Finishing Company Our Company recently obtaint tribution to schools, libraries. Ca Downtown Merchants, etc. RUSSIAN t Russia's 10 hit tunes as compiled from the Molotov Cocktail Hour by radio monitors: 1. You're the Kremlin My Coffee. 2. Come To Mc My Malenkov. Eh Baby? 3. Little Red Crowd That Spied. 4. Ural I Want. 5. Red Jails In The Sun sot. Strictly for the i Bh m /?4 /(I V/'* Mvlv fckCQ'.\\>v\^.','iil i \ V**SH;5 *%I| Eiblii'rifCjijjl The Points For cold winter evenings w can compare with needlework enjoyment. Plus, of course, il hobby that brings telaxation ; Community Recreation l)ii I n 1:.. - LU L-\ l I L_ cum miss i\eiiie usnoriH", l^vcu direction leaflets for this han< chair set is both functional a chairs at the points of greate* the same time. It is simple edgings. TrannuU 'zvrs A London psychologist says ki you can find. He means for men, prescription: "Take two No. (i and four No. wool, one sweater pattern, and kn sweater." The sense of creating a zanni satisfying, says the learned docto FEBRUARY, 1959 "fl 111 MBtSv !W M ' 1 f/iiftmJ//Ma '? 357 le Tender, watches Clinton's 6.25's > Finishing Department of Rock Hill in Rock Hill. S. C. ?d a number of these flags for disimp Fire Girls. Boy Scout Troops. IIT PARADE 6. Oh, What a Beautiful Mourning. 7. Lenin Call Your Sweetheart, Ivan Love With You. 8. Everything Is Peaches Now For Georgi. 9. Beria Me Not On The Lone Steppes. 10. I'm Stalin In Love With Someone. ?Henry Exeald Girls //////A'//// jjj^ Thot Count c don't know of any hobby that ; for veisatilitv, usefulness and s added attractions of being a ind stretches the budget, ectors Mrs. Eva Land, Clinton, a, have available free of charge Isome crocheted chair set. This nd decorative. It protects your ;t wr?;ir :inf) Hrnecne thom nr> - - " "K to make and has solid crochet ntting is about the best tranquilizer too. Dr. F. It C\ Casson gives this H needles, 26-ounce double-knitting it yourself one man's fisherman-knit nt from its basic elements is very r.