University of South Carolina Libraries
2 Cktf f ~ Published n ' ] for employ* Ir cf I and Lydia X-.4i Clinton, S. | : ^ direction c ? . , Crocker, Ii Member of South ;U?Atlantlc Council of UOns Industrial Kdltors Calvin Cooper C. C. Huffstetler Truman Owens The publishers of The items of interest from to your departmen persor IMPORTING EXPORT Textile industry leaders, of foreign-made textiles, have yard of cloth brought into t less that would be produced 1 Recently, a new approach It is this: Regardless of how t tiles are brought into this co yards imported means the los American textile employee. The work and pay that v American textile employee Hong Kong. India, Pakistan, 1 countries that buys Americ cheaper than American mills by employees who make as textile employee's earnings. The textile industry is Sc turing industry. It pays mon vpar tn <nmo 1 000 pmnlnv* taxes than any other manuft stone of our state's economy mainstay of the communities With the textile industry and to only a slightly lesser that threatens it is the cone I AM YOU I am your customer, the Cloths. I realize that you h I. too, make a quality produc as I receive it from you. There are several very i consider carefully before I c First, my customers demand afford to accept poor qualit; product. So I must buy frc cloths. Second. I must consider ] cannot compete with others highly competitive market an the bounds of our competition Third, I must have shipme in your industry, have deadli duction just because my sup] In other words to sum it company where I can get the the best service. I am in business too, just c problems in all three of the have those problems in all thi I also have those problems 1 tween all of my departments, is a never ending cycle from So all that I can promise y my orders with the compan business. STEP ! Ever watch closely when one foot carefully in front ol falls many times, he learns gi until soon he walks perfectly Try this step by step n though you are thoroughly for this experiment. r* i r..n__ mi?. .1 rroceea careiuuy. ininK it carefully, the right way. ] forgotten about. Maybe you will find some speed that you can make. P< tant steps you are leaving oi step" for a little while will 1 monthly by and _ ?es of Clinton f'/n ^,/rTVCf Cotton Mills, C., under the Tf >f Claude A. "V idustrial Rela- .. , . t-,. * Member of American Director. Aaaoclatlon of Industrial Editors Editor Staff Artist Photographer Clothmaker will welcome its readers. Turn them in tal reporters or to the inel office. ??????__?i????? TEXTILES - - iur. innc II1M JVUiJ in remarks concerning imports made the observation that every he United States means a yard by Americans in American mills. to the problem has been made, nanv yards of cheap foreign texuntry, remember that every 600 >s of about a week's work for an /ould have been available to an have been exported?to Japan, xorea or one of the other foreign an conon eignt cents a pound can buy it and has it processed little as one-tenth an American )uth Carolina's BASIC Manufac? than $419,000,000 in wages each ?es. It pays more state and local tcturing group. It is the corner. Many individual mills are the : in which they operate, vital to the economy of our state degree, our nation, any situation ern of all of us. n mrTAiiPM n luaiumtK buyer of your Superior Quality ave your problems and so do I. t and produce it from the cloths mportant factors which I must an afford to give you an order, a quality product and I can not y cloth to finish a high quality >m the mill who makes quality price because I can not sell if I in those lines. We too are in a d must see that our cost is within i. nts on time because I, just as you nes and can not hold up my propliers are slow. all up, I expect to buy from the ? best quality, the best price, and is you folks are. I know you have above mentioned things. I also ee of the above mentioned things. )ut through good cooperation beI am working out of them. There beginning to end. ou at this time is that I will place iy that can best help me in my D\i ftrn di jicr a baby learns to walk? He puts f the other. And even though he radually from his own mistakes? with rarely a fall, aethod on your own job. Even experienced, take a little while about each step of your job. Do Notice how many things you had improvements in workmanship or ?rhaps you will find some imporjt. In either case, going "step by lelp you to do a better job. THE CLOTHMAKER What's In The Future? Can you imagine a twoounce telephone that you carry clipped to your belt? A pill that gives you more rest from five hours of sleep than you now get from eight? A communications system that transmits odors and heat as well as sounds and pictures? These ideas are almost here. For the future, "scientific dreamers" envision even more amazing advances. And if these predictions strike you as too fantastic, consider whether YOU, had you been an adult in 1900, would have believed that: ?In eight short years, ma chines called "aeroplanes" would be pulling advertising signs through the sky. ?In ten years, a human being in an autocar would hurdle along at 133 miles per hour. ?In 13 years, a radio message would be transmitted, without wires, from Maryland to the Eiffel Tower in Paris. ?In 48 years, a rocket would zip through space at 3,000 miles per hour. ?In 50 years, life expectancy would be increased by 20 years. In spite of all these advances, modern scientists would probably agree that we have barely reache d the threshold of a "miracle age" of science. One reason is the big change in attitude toward scientists. Edison, Bell. Marconi and others were at one time regarded as misguided, even crazy. But today, research is favored with public appreciation and support (record gift to schools and hospitals: $500 million, awarded December 12, 1955 by the Ford Foundation) and the future seems limited only by man's ability to imagine. What can we envision? Cities of gleaming glass and siainiess steel, for one tiling. Already, skyscrapers, store fronts and factories are being sheathed in thin stainless steel "skins". As more and more builders combine the advantages of curtain wall construction . . . better insulation, speedier construction, more available renting space . . . with stainless steel's beauty, indestructibility and low maintenance requirements, the stainless steel curtain wall will be employed for a dazzling variety of decorative and structural functions. both inside and outside the buildings. You'll see it increasingly in countless other applications, too. On the streets of shining new cities, and on the roads leading to them, you'll see it in advanced automobiles. To expedite t r a v e 1 , wheel less cars, which ride on a cushion of air, will become popular. At home, you'll be able to turn on lornni' - IM I | | j /.-> (1IUI appliances just by flicking a switch; there will be nothing to plug in. And you'll dial the level of illumination you want. Already on the market are switches that make lights brighter if you turn them one way, dimmer if you flip them BUYERS BU' fiL3 Cecil Smith, long service emp Versamatic Drawing Frame in the To keep our fabrics movir pool all our varied resources, carefully plan and perform 01 mean just our management, 01 trol department. It means all These facts issue a challe C1 i nton-Lyd ia em p 1 oy ees?Wh it reflects in our cloth. We c; quality on someone else. It's each one of us to see that his way, carefully checking to see we are in opening, carding, sp 1 rni i - uouse. ine cnain 01 quality i weakest link. Let's be sure w chain of Superior Quality Clo Our Company is progressh cotton and modern machinery competitively priced quality chines are essential to the sue Cloth mills, but nothing has alert quality conscious emplo part. in the other direction. Air conditioning will not be common, but it will save you money by storing up heat, then using it to cook your food or warm your home. Heat energy may one day be transported from places like Africa to help warm frigid polar regions. Most ama/.ing of all will be the medical advances. Coronary thrombosis m a y be largely thwarted by the development of an operation that will substitute a plastic tube for the coronary artery. The "eye banks" of today will be expanded to include many other parts of the human anatomy. An artificial kidney is already in experimental stage. This stainless steel and plastic device cleans and purifies the blood in a reservoir outside the body while the kidney and liver heal. Radio waves will be adapted to alter certain chromosomes in our bodies, and thereby eliminate many diseases, like diabetes, that are now transmitted bv heredity. The production and distribution of hormone substances will become a $1-billion a year business. When fully developed. hormones mav make it possible for short people to grow taller . . . bald men to grow hair . . . women to lose unwanted face and leg hair. Hut the most fantastic fact about hormones is that they may make it possible for us to age only a fifth as fast as Y THE BEST ? 1 "^Ti * loyee, is shown above operating a Clinton Mills Carding Department. ig in today's markets, we must concentrate all our energy and tr individual jobs. This doesn't ur salesman or our quality conof us. nge to each and every one of at we do and how well we do an't place the responsibility for the duty and responsibility of or her part is done in a ciualitv that each step is best?whether inning, weaving, cloth or wares only as strong or good as its e are not the weak link in our ths. ,*e and quality conscious. Good is provided to help us produce cloths. New and modern marcessful operation of good Print or ever will take the ulacc of yees. Let's be sure we do our we do now. Sound waves, which will probably see their first home use in waterless dishwashing machines, will be adapted to give the human body a "bath" that removes every speck of soil from the skin and kills the millions of skin bacteria that each of us now tote around. Already some dentists are using sound waves to clean the teeth. For calorie counters, a machine for home use will be available to "do - valorize" foods, removing most of their fattening properties without affecting their taste. A solution may even be found for a problem which puzzles many young people * . I- ? ? muiiv. now in ni* sure oi selecting the right career. Personality traits, interests, field of occupation selected, subsequent happiness level . . . will be fed into electronic computers. From the machines will come indications as to the field in which a person with a given set of traits is likely to be happiest and accomplish the most. TAe C)U "First, a man learns to talk. After many years, he learns to keep si ill!"