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2 CLo1 . )h~ .j Published M i "^i for empl I |<a^ I and Lyd ) X Clinton, direction Crocker. Member of South ;!?, Atlantic Council of liOl Industrial Kdltors Calvin Cooper E. C. Huffstetler Truman Owens The publishers of 1 items of interest frc to your departn I per WE'RE SO RIGHTE There was a time when leadership. She made decis direction. She stood in c< much against great odds, world, disliked by some always treated with the command. We don't seem to be th don't lash back when Uni by the smaii and the wea the world we're a democ doesn't slug when someon We are supposed to speak where necessary. No wor willing to toy with us insl What makes us so right country away from the Ir with them. We haven't m? yet. It looks very much a: conscience along with the f when other peoples have become a slothful, materia We have been getting getting harder and hungr humanity honey and mon to like and respect us, whe for is leadership and guts, probably still do, but we'r until we stop worrying a world opinion and start wc of America. We are in a race for su gain money and influence to get tough with ourselve programs because friends and take steps to strength textiles for our own safety and recapture the spirit o and the leadership, or our to the dark ages with the Greener Grass WE'D HAVE TO BE "UP W The grass just seems t the fence. We're thinking now of saw fields of clover in Ruj was bogged in here in the The man was on the ro a comeback fight, he ch( changed his mind. Maybe we all need a r are blessed with as Amerii up with a revealing set of claims that the U.S.S.R. v "In order to enjov the we would have to abandc two-thirds of our petroh hydro-electric plants, and gas. "We would have to rip highways, and two of eve way tracks. "We'd sink eight out oi 19 out of every 20 cars an fleet to a shadow of its pr "We would have to cut destroy 40 million TV sets out of every ten houses; a million of our people bac TIT 1 ?A A I J we naven i nieiitiuiieu lost?all of the wonderfi granted?freedoms of spe our vocations, freedom of . If he were a Russian ci man's complaint? It wou (SakER *TOm monthly by and oyees of Clinton AVi J ia Cotton Mills, S. C., under the \_J^6?^JTr of Claude A. Industrial Rela- ? , . ?? t-.,Member of American IS Director. Association of Industrial Editors Editor Staff Artist Photographer "he Clothmaker will welcome >m its readers. Turn them in lental reporters or to the sonnel office. ous the United States was rich in robust ;ions with strength and purpose and ontempt of fear and accomplished America stood ten feet tall in the nations and loved by others, but respect only a great power can lat kind of a nation any more. We cle Sam is pushed into the gutter k and the bully. We prefer to tell racy and a democracy, please sir, e insists upon standing on its toes. : softly and politely, giving money ider the peoples of the world are Lead of reckon with us. eous all of a sudden? We took this idians and we never made it right ide it right with what's left of them s though we have acquired a guilty at. Guilty because we have so much so little. Guilty because we have ilistic and egotistical people. softer and softer in a world that s ier and more powerful. We offer ley, want desperately for everyone n the commodity the world hungers We used to have these things, we e not going to put them on display bout the effect of what we do on irrying about its effect on the future rvival and it profits no American to only to lose his freedom. We need s and the world; stop the give-away are never purchased but earned, len weakened major industries like . It is necessary to tighten our belts f 1776. the loyalty and the sacrifice lack of guts will push America back rest of the world. TO GIVE UP A LOT ITH" THE RUSSIANS o look greener on the other side of persons such as the ex-Marine who ;sia as compared to the quagmire he United States. pes, but instead of putting his all in )se to go to Russia . . . and then eminder now and then on what we ^ans. A reader of a newspaper came figures in reply to the ex-Marine's i L vas trie aiibwei. glories of the Soviet Union System. >n three-fifths of our steel capacity. 3um capacity, 95 per cent of outget along on a tenth of our natural out 14 of every 15 miles of our paved tv three miles of our mainline rail: every nine ocean-going ships, scrap d trucks, and shrink our civilian air esent size. our living standard by three-fourths. , nine out of 10 telephones and seven nd we would have to put around 60 k on the farm. either the blessings that would be jl freedoms we take so much for ech and religion, freedom to choose assembling and freedom of the press itizen. who would have heard of this Id have never been printed. THE CLOTHMAKER Fire Chief Says fl Buy Only Reliable m Home Fire is Protection bc Equipment Don't get stuck with a an worthless "beer can" fire ex- r r tinguisher or an unreliable home fire alarm, warns Fire Chief Paul Quinton. "If you do, you'll be more H than cheated," says the Chief. "You'll actually be putting \ your home and your family in greater danger from fire by 3 depending on such gadgets. "The cheap extinguishers come in tin cans, aerosol cans and plastic containers. They may contain a liquid or a powder ? frequently baking H soda. "They're dangerous princi- ? pally because they just aren't m big enough to assure you can put out a fire in its first _ stages, and their reliability is N uncertain. That means the fire gets out of control, and the extinguisher user is risk- " ing his life." Unreliablesubstandard home w fire alarm systems are another item the National Fire j1( Protection Association has js warned about, said the Chief, u. "They are just as dangerous ar and perhaps more so, since they lull the home owner and t0 his family into a false sense of s} security. hi "For example, if someone di in the family smells smoke during the night, he may go hi back to sleep, confident that the alarm system would warn bi him if there were a fire in n< the house. Actually, the sub- si standard fire alarm system lc has failed its first test, and a dangerous blaze is already cl under way while the house- e; hold sleeps." The "gyp" alarm systems w most commonly sold in stores tc or by mail are inexpensive ol units operated by flashlight batteries or house current, or rr sometimes spring-wound. But ci other substandard ones, fre- si quently sold by house - to house salesmen, may cost sev- b eral hundred dollars. v. An effective fire extinguisher or home fire alarm, ir Chief Quinton says, will bear d the label of the Underwriters "< Laboratories or the Factory n Mutual Laboratories. This means they have been thor- o oughly tested for reliability. a: tl tl Sparky says: ? : M-w r M I V" v v a Before you buy any , fire extinguisher, ask your b Fire Department for advice t: r~Sh r |"T'aJ Don't live fire a place to start! ^ h 4 ail Early for "It's time to start planning ailings," Postmaster Bill Adaii 61 "Mail Early For Christm Looking ahead to what may ; the biggest Christmas sean ever, the Postmaster said rther, "Here are the things '?ik use imiMuia* deaia wm W Pitted ?"i The Family Circle letting Along tequires Inderstanding How well do you get along ith your fellowman? Sooner or later, a man, if ? is wise, discovers that life a mixture of good days and ad, victory and defeat, give id take. He learns that it doesn't pay ? be a sensitive soul?that he lould let some things go over is head like water off a jck's back. He learns that he who loses is leiuper usuany loses. He learns that all men have jrned toast for breakfast aw and then and that he louldn't take the other fel>w's grouch too seriously. He learns that carrying a lip on his shoulder is the asiest way to create friction. He learns that the quickest ay to become unpopular is > carry tales and gossip about thers. He learns that it doesn't latter so much who gets the redit as long as the business lows a profit. He comes to realize that the usiness could run perfectly rell without him. He learns that everyone is nportant and that it doesn't o any harm to smile and say Good Morning" even if it is fining. He learns that most of the ther fellows are as ambitious s he is, that they have brains lat are as good or better, and iat hard work and not cleveress is the secret of success. He learns to sympathize dth the youngster coming lto the plant because he relembers how bewildered he ;as when he first started out. He learns that no man ever ot to first base alone and that is nnlv thrnilftVi mnnnrolittn ? - -""J" . ?n vt ffort that wo move on to bet?r things. He learns that the folks are ot anv harder to get along ;ith in one place than another nd that "getting along" deends about 98 percent on his ehavior. He learns and remembers hat the following of the lolden Rule is basic in all luman relationships. NOVEMBER. 1961 Christmas your Christmas card and gift : said today as he launched his as" Campaign. to watch to help in getting every Christmas card and package delivered before December 25th? CHECK your Christmas card and gift lists carefully. Be sure each address is complete with full name, street and number, city, zone and state. Avoid abbreviations of city and state names. FOR YOUR GIFT PACKAGES, secure heavy wrapping paper, sturdy corrugated cartons, strong cord and adhesive tape. Remember, also, that you can include your Christmas card or letter inside your gift packages if you will add the appropriate First Class mail stamps to the postage for the package itself. STOCK UP ON POSTAGE STAMPS?Bv doing this soon, you'll save lots of time that might be spent standing in line later on. When you go to the Post Office, ask for a supply of labels which rear! "ALL FOR LOCAL DELIVERY" and "ALL FOR OUT OF TOWN DELIVERY," so that before you mail your Christmas cards you can sort them into two groups with the addresses all facing one way, thus expediting delivery." The Post Office will help you plan your Christmas mailings. Get a copy of Pamphlet No. 2, which gives full information about proper packaging and wrapping of parcels. FIRST CLASS POSTAGE IS BEST for mailing your Christmas cards. All cards sent by 4c postage may include a personal handwritten message, and they'll be forwarded or returned, if that becomes necessary. Be sure to put your return address on your Christmas card envelopes. It's socially correct to do this, and enables both you and your friends to keep your mailing lists up-to-date. Predicting that this year's Christmas mail will set an all time record, even exceeding the 100,000 pieces that were handled here in the pre-holiday season of 1960, the Postmaster pointed out the importance of planning your Christmas mailings now t avoid a w ..r i >--? v?x iiuduacnes vvnen the Christmas rush comes in earnest. He said further, that through the excellent cooperation of the public during recent Christmas seasons, he has been able to get all of the Christmas cards and packages dispatched and delivered before Christmas Eve. "We can all make the 1961 'Mail Early For Christmas' Campaign a big success," ho continued, "if we'll all take a personal responsibility in planning our Christmas mailings so that cards and gift packages going to most distant points are mailed by December 10th, and earlier, if possible. Christmas packages for local destinations should be mailed by December 15th, and be sure to mail your Christmas cards for friends and relatives in this area at least a week before Christmas."