The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, April 15, 1959, Page 7, Image 7
APRIL. 1959
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"Uncle Bud" Trammell ? Clinton
shift, holds dear his memorie
Red School House" and the
Miss Lucia Barksdt
Si BYRD SCHOOL
neT??icT no. j f
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Scuiflclown Township.
Laurens County. S. C.
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Mis* Lucia Barksdale.
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SCHOOL BOARD
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Public relations is a vitally
important part of business today.
Good public relations
makes friends for the company.
It is more than merely
making the company and its
products known. Good publicrelations
conveys to the
people who have contacts ol
any kind with the company
an appreciation of the company's
character ? its attitudes.
integrity, and its problems
in operating as an asset
to the community.
Good public relations not
only helps to increase sales,
but also to establish the kind
of faith in the company that
forms a foundation for growth
and expansion and future job
security.
:%!WUBZL
MARC1
CLINTON
Andrew Baggett?Carding
William Bull?Carding
Wesley E. Seay?Spinning
Sybil Howard?Spooling
Faye E. Attaway?Weaving
James W. Hawkins?Weaving
LYDIA
R. B. Fennell?Weaving
!? ?CM CHOI KXKX IG* ** O *
nton-Lydia ,
ALBUM i
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Spinning ~1 ? 1st
s of the "Little
teachings of >Wk'M
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Pupils
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A company's public relations
is made up of thousands
of things, large and small,
beyond the regular activities
of the public relations department.
Everybody in the company,
in fact, is part of public relations.
Each piece of quality
work turned out ... every
letter typed, every phone call
handled . . . every meeting
with plant visitors . . . has its
effect on public relations.
Whenever you speak, write,
or act as a company employee
?whether the contact is persona!
or indirect?you influence
the public's opinion of
the company. To those who
meet you, or know your work,
you are the company.
1959
f MILLS
Ivy L. Longshore?Weaving
Barth F. Vanderford?Weaving
Edith Taylor?Draw-In
Robert Patterson?Cloth
Donald Stewart?Shop
Barbara Young?Office
MILLS
Richard Martin?Cloth
THE CLOTHMAKER
O yJ> C C- yj 4ft < > C- 4ft OJ
&.;JS9i ^9* 'M (/Pk AJft A A off. 'M 4
WHAT'S YO
JS* ?, *44- ? -^J,*. W. - ^ "4sft Vg*"4?* -JJ*, -jj* Ji(? J4J
1/ *11* S? V? V/ %? V/ V/- "?!/# V> ".* \f \i* V? 'Vr
"Has your husband any
hobbies?" asked the new
neighbor who was calling.
"No," said Mrs. Newlywed.
'He has rheumatism a good
deal and shingles now and
then, but he ain't never had
no hobbies."
Thic hncKnnrl'c nlirfV?l ic
typical of many Americans
who, through the evolution of
labor, have been given many
hours of free time which are
without definite direction.
With the decrease in the
length of the work day and
week, the problem arises of
how to occupy themselves to
advantage during these times
of leisures. The hobbv. at
least in part, is the answer,
for it provides something in
which you can submerge
yourself completely, independently
of your job.
If you don't have a hobby,
a few pointers in outline
form may* help you in selecting
one.
FOLLOW YOUR OWN INCLINATIONS.
Don't let a
friend "sell" you a hobbv
which doesn't fit your particular
need. Undoubtedly the
most famous hobbyist of to
day is Winston Churchill,
who several years ago took
up painting for his own personal
pleasure. To the amazement
of himself and friends,
a number of his pictures were
of such outstanding oualitv
that they found places in the
great salons of Paris and
other art centers.
TRY HARD TO GIVE IT A
PERSONAL TWIST. Don't be
afraid to create a foolish one
of your own. There is simplv
no accounting for the strange
choice of hobby material
made by some individuals.
One of the Rothehild brothers
spent tnousands on the collecion
of various kinds of fleas.
Shelley, the groat English
poet, spent his leisure moments
sailing tov boats in
the Sernentino of London.
BE SURE YOU HAVE A
YEARROUND HOBBY. Have
one which you can follow in
anv season, or if it's fishing,
golf or some other sport, decolor)
another iO take up the
slack in the off season.
YOIT CON ADOPT A HOBBY
AT ANY AGE. All of us
recall what a wonderful time
we had filling our pockets
with odds and ends, and having
a great interest in tinkering.
We were expected to
outgrow this "collecting" nature
by the time we were of
high school age. In the sense
of collecting odds and ends.
1- - 1- 1 - * A _
Mtmc noooyisis never grow up
and as a result go through
life having a perfectly wonderful
time.
SUBJECT YOUR UORBY
TO THE LONG VIEW. Can
vou follow it after vour retirement
from active work?
And will it be a source of expanding
vour knowledge0 If
not. bee in now to cultivate
some other type of interest
that mav be a source of pleasure,
and possibly of profit in
your old age.
You can start with anv hobbv
and vou will find that it
will lead you into o\T*rex
UR HOBBY?
***-. ' " * " ?* " ? .. .. w .. .f
*it sj V V V Sw \A sA \/ \A \/ \A '" *'
panding areas of interest and
knowledge. The collecting of
postage stamps will teach you
something of art, printing,
history, and even politics.
Start a garden and you are
bound to learn something
about the chemistry of the
soil, about botany, about the
evolution of plant life, about
plant enemies and how to
fight them. Make a few
wooden gadgets and you are
aware of a new beauty about
you in the common sights you
once viewed with unseeing
eyes.
' FIND A HOBBY THAT
SUITS YOUR INCOME.
Some people still regard hobbies
as the accompaniments
of wealth. This is not true
as they may be expensive or
inexpensive, just as one
chooses. The majority of collectors
soon learn that the r
unique and rare things of f,
other days are beyond their f*
means, and therefore become
interested in items of their c
generation, in most cases art- s
icles of little value at the ii
moment. And so toothpicks, c
snuff boxes, wishbones, tomb- y
stone epitaphs, and a host of n
queer objects have come to
be collectors' items. What mu- 1
cm 1 rr* otr *1
ovum luua^y wuuiu nui W CI" l
come the signature of the /
winner of the first Olympaid? s
or guard carefully the seeds s
of the apple which caused v
the fall of Troy, or those from v
the apple that bounced off the C
head of Sir Isaac Newton and p
led to the formulation of the t
law of gravity?
SUIT YOUR HOBBY TO \
YOUR HOUSE SPACE. While ?
there may be no article un- ?
worthy of collecting, many t
collectors' housemates will t
probably rise to protest ?
against those which are too \
LYDIA P. T. A.
Ilj^
Dr. James Walker is shown givin
and Mrs. Bobby Johnson, his pre-sc
A Pre-Sehool Clinic under i
sponsorship of Providence 1
School Parent-Teachers Asso- i
ciation was held Tuesdav. ]
April 14. from 12:30-2:30 P.M. (
in the Lydia Mills Clinic.
Twenty-four children were ^
offered Diphtheria. Tertussis.
Tetanus, Smallpox and Polio
shots and a thorough physical
examination.
Assisting Lydia Nurse Dor- !
cas Copeland and County
Nurse Annie Waldrop in giv- ]
7
CITADEL CADET
HR** k *
*
^^^4'
"Al" Williams, Lydia Pool
.ifeguard, is shown on campus
n his new summer dress uniorm.
He is the son of Mr. and
4rs. L. A. Williams of Lydia.
umbersome for a house less
pacious than a mansion. For
astance, don't attempt to
ollect antique furniture if
ou live in a two-room apartnent.
FINALLY. IF YOU ARE
:00 LAZY FOR ANY
'HING ELSE, BE CRAZY
^BOUT YOURSELF. If you
earch for a hobby without
uccess, then simply make
'our hobby yourself . . . you
viii oe in splendid company!
Did Rembrandt actually
jainted his own portrait 12
imes in one year.
Don't forget that the man
vith a hobby is a happy man,
md no matter what lies
ihead, the right hobby will
)e a "nest" of pleasant
houghts where all the distgreeable
things in life can
)e forgotten.
ACTIVITIES
"" ^ -,1
* k. ^
g Bobby Johnson, Jr.. son of Mr.
hool physical examinat on.
ng vaccinations, weighing,
aking medical histories, etc.,
ivere Miss Nellie Osborne,
Recreational Director. Mis.
Li. D. Ci.iski is and Miss Vir"ini^
Aberc.ombie. Mrs. B.
B. Ballard and Mrs. Annie
Belle B r o w n. Providence
School first grade teachers,
were on hand to register the
coungsters for school as Dr.
James Walker completed the
physical examinations.