The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, April 15, 1961, Page 6, Image 6
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THE RA1NBO
G L A U <
"It's haDDGned." savs tho
THE CLOTHMAKER
Mother's Day is May 14, the
special day which has been
set aside to pay special honor
to our most precious possession,
our Mothers. There will
be red roses at church as a
tribute to the mothers who
are with us and mean so much
to us. There will be a lot of
white roses, too, in loving remembrance
of those mothers
who have earned eternal rest
after giving an abundance of
willing love and sacrifice to
those who wear the white
roses.
Our Mother's Day feature is
dedicated to all mothers and
especially to all "working
mothers", like Inez Turner
who have many responsibilities
of running a good job at
the Plant and keeping things
running smoothly on the
home front. We have not
made a count of working
mothers at Clinton-Lvdia but
we have many. We dare not
attempt to take anything
away from Dad who brings
home the bacon, but it seems
only fair and fittine that we
tip our hats twice on Mother's
Day, to folks like Inez. We do
so because it's easy to see how
important they are regularly
working an 8 hour day in the
Plant, keeping Dad and the
children happy and handling
all the household duties that
are too numerous to list.
A typical Clinton - Lydia
Mother is Inez Turner at
Clinton, mother of five children
and wife of Dorsev Tur
nor. Clinton Cloth Room. The
Turners reside at 602 Elizabeth
Street in the home they
bought from the Company
dining the house sale program.
Employed as a Weaver at
Clinton on the second shift
since 1942, Mrs. Turner nevertheless
has devoted ample
time to properly mothering
Randy, age 14. Marsha Ann.
12. Earl, 11, Anita, 9, and
Lana. 8. And on top of that,
she is active in church nnrl
community affairs.
Clinton - Lydia Mills is
proud to salute Mis. Turner
?typical of the hundreds of
fine mothers employed. On
the job a fine Weaver?off
the job an outstanding wife
and mother.
To Inez and all ClintonLydia
Mothers ? a special
tribute on Mother's Day.
?iMfSTi
?r i i
-?L . I . i
A
Bffy
unhappy woman in the cartoon.
"Bifocals!" Well, yes, it's
true. The need for bifocals is
one of the signs of advancing
age. But doing without bifocals
which may be prescribed
is courting blindness. You
want your eyes checked for
more than just glasses. For
example:
Peoole over forty are particularly
liable to the eve
disease glaucoma. Normally,
fluid is constantly pouring
into the inside of the eyeball
and draining off through a
special channel. In glaucoma,
that channel becomes
blocked. Fluid continues to
pour into the eye. but it has
no outlet. Pressure builds up
inside the eyeball until it
becomes hard. The eyeball
presses on the delicate optic
nerve ending and destroys it.
Blindness results, unless the
disease is detected and
treated.
Food For Thought
The greatest sin is fear.
The best day is today.
The biggest fool is the boy
who will not go to school.
The best town?where you
ci w.,.?wwl
w \-v?.
The most agreeable companion?one
who would not
have you any different from
what you are.
The greatest bore?one who
will not come to the point.
The still greater bore?one
who keeps on talking after he
has made his point.
The greatest deceiver?one
who deceives himself.
The greatest invention of
the devil?war.
The greatest secret of production?saving
waste.
The best work ? what you
like.
The best play?work.
The greatest comfort ? the
knowledge that you have done
your work well.
The greatest mistake?giving
up.
The most expensive indulgence?hate.
The cheapest, stupidest, and
MARC
CLINTON CO
Catherine Hanley?Spinning
Ernest E. McCall?Spinning
Rachel E. Rowe?Spinning
Grerald D. Satterfield?Spinning
Charles E. Armstrong?Weaving
Elsie W. Bishop?Weaving
LYDIA COT
Roy G. Haupfear?Shop
Betty J. McD
APRIL. 1961
ZSlSeOLUMN \
W WARNING
COMA
As glaucoma progresses, vision
becomes blurred and
lights seem to have a rainbow
ring around them. The rainbow
ring is one sign of glaucoma
that anybody can recognize
and it should never be
ignored. But don't wait for it
to appear. Glaucoma can be
discovered by an eye specialist
tU? ?:.,u
ov uciwii; tutj luuiuuw
appears ? before the optic
nerve has suffered any damage.
Your sight depends on
that nerve's r e m a i n i n g
healthy.
Glaucoma can be treated
successfully today with drugs
or with surgery, and so blindness
can be prevented. The
method of treatment depends
to some extent on how far
the disease has gone.
Periodic eye examinations
become more important as
you grow older. Bifocals may
well happen to you. But
avoidable blindness won't.
easiest thinking ? finding
fault.
The greatest troublemaker
?one who talks too much.
The g r c a t c s t stumbling
block?egotism.
The most ridiculous asset?
pride.
The worst bankrupt ? the
soul that has lost its enthusiasm.
The cleverest man ? one
who always does what he
thinks is right.
The most daneerous norsoo
?the liar.
The best teacher ? one who
makes you want to learn.
The most disagreeable person?the
com plainer.
The meanest feeling of
which any human is capable
?feeling bad at another's success.
The greatest need?common
sense.
The greatest mvsterv death.
The greatest puzzle?life.
The greatest thing, bar
none, in all the world?love.
* * *
From Miami Beach: "Bellboy,
can I get change for a
dollar?" "Lady, at this hotel,
a dollar is change."
!
H. 1961
TTON MILLS
Margaret D. Cannady?Weaving
John E. Eldridge?Weaving
James E. Eubanks?Weaving
Gene N. Hamilton?Weaving
Frances Huntsinger?Weaving
Earline M. Ficklin?Cloth
TON MILLS
Ludie T. Watts?Shop
onald?Office