The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, July 15, 1963, Page 5, Image 5
JULY. 1963
Claude Kernells, Jr.. front row
Shrmer Candidates taking their ii
ville.
Clinton News . . .
(Continued from page 3)
SPOOLING
1ST SHIFT
by Kate Riddle
Well, we are all back at
work after a wonderful vacation
and we would like to
say thank you to the management
for making it possible
for us to have a vacation and
with pay. All report a very
good vacation and no accidents
reported.
Mrs. Jackie Bigham and
son, Eddie, and Mr. and Mrs.
Claude Kernells, Jr. and
children visited relatives in
Monroe, Mich, and toured to
Essex. Canada and visited
many interesting places.
Mr. and Mrs. C. F. Oakley
spent several days in the
mountains touring and sightseeing
and visited the Cherokee
Indian Reservation.
Mr. and Mrs. Jones Wallenzine
spent their vacation at
Folly Beach, S. C. They were
joined there by the latter's
sister and her husband. Mr.
and Mrs. Ed Wilkerson, of
Augusta. Georgia.
Mr. and Mrs. "Bo" King
,-,a ; 1,1? ,1
CI 1 I V 4 LII11U1 VTI I, l\CiICCHC CtliU
Kcllv and Mr. and Mrs. Chestley
King and daughters vacationed
at Myrtle Beach, S. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Arzo Ivester
and Gail and Danny and
their two granddaughters,
Christie and Connie, of Spartanburg
visited at Blowing
Rock, N. C. and the Tweetsie
Railroad and the other amusements
there and report a very
interesting visit. They also
visited Mrs. Ivester's parents,
Mr. and Mrs. George Smith,
in Martin. Georgia. Danny
remained for the remainder of
the week and Beatrice Jordon,
Mrs. Ivester's niece, came
home with them for a few
days. Rev. and Mrs. Jerome
Jordon spent Saturday with
Mr. and Mrs. Ivester and
Beatrice returned home with
them.
Mr. and Mrs. Lawson Smith
of Chicago, Illinois visited
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kernel
Is, Sr. and other relatives.
Mr. Claude Kernells, Sr.
has returned home after an
operation illness at Self Memorial
Hospital in Greenwood.
We wish him a very
speedy recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Elbert Self
visited many interesting
places in the mountains and
visited Mr. Self's mother in
Del Rio, Tennessee.
Mrs. Ralph Ross of Indiana
and Mrs. Loree Burgess of
Laurens spent the week end
-S?||
j
r. fourth from left, was one of the
nitiation this past spring in Greenwith
Ralph and Kate Riddle.
Mr. and Mrs. Maxie Joe
Hedspeth of Kansas visited
nis momer, ivirs. jonn neaspeth,
and other relatives recently.
Happy Birthday to:
I la Kerriells?July 24.
Joel Ginn?July 29.
CLOTH ROOM NO. 1
by Vera Snow
Mrs. Corrie Satterwhite and
daughter. Betty, spent the
week in Savannah, Georgia
with Mr. and Mrs. Ray Carroll.
Mr. and Mrs. Billy Pace and
family spent a few days at
Cherokee Indian Reservation,
Blowing Rock, Tweetsie Railroad
and the Blue Ridge
Parkway. They moved recently
from Buice Street to
E. Carolina Avenue.
Mrs. Fred Tumblin and
son. Freddie, and Mrs. George
Bagwell and daughters, Nancy
and Judv, spent the week in
Washington. D. C.
Mr. and Mrs. Fred Tnmh
lin and Freddie and Mrs. C. T.
Satterfield spent the week
end in Anderson with the
Rev. and Mrs. A. L. Tumblin.
Mr. and Mrs. William Snelgrove
and family spent the
week at Hilton Head.
Mr. and Mrs. Charlie Groijan
and family visited in the
Smokev Mountains recently.
Birthdays
Woodie Pace?July 4.
Vera Snow?July 9.
Mr. and Mrs. "Rones" Campbell
and Mike visited Ghost
rr i _ n /r _ ? _ t r n ^
lown in iviaggie vaney. i\. l .
during vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. "Bootsie" Allman
and ns visited Mrs.
J. B. Fortner in Charleston
during vacation.
Mr. and Mrs. James Harris
and family vacationed at Daytona
Beach. Florida and attended
the races while there.
Mr. and Mrs. J. W. Fowler
and Patsy visited relatives in
Atlanta and LaGrange. Georgia.
Gertrude said they'd like
to sav "thanks" for the flowers
sent J. W. while he was a
patient at Bailey Memorial.
Mrs. Aline Lanford and son.
Pat. and Miss Phyliss Jenkins
were visitors in Greenville
recently. (By the time you
read this Phvliss will be Mrs.
Pat Lanford).
Mr. and Mrs. J. A. McNinch
and Johnny visited the Frank
McNinehes in Rock Hill.
Mr. and Mrs. Fern Hardman
visited their son and family,
Mr. and Mrs. Paul Hardman.
in Muskogee, Oklahoma vacation
week.
THE CLOTHMAKER
Charles Huey vacationed at
Myrtle Beach.
Mrs. Mell Huey and Mrs.
J. E. Braswell, Sr. visited
friends in Greenwood.
Mrs. Mell Huey * nd Mrs.
Ina Bell Hooper and Ina Bell's
sister, Mrs. Corrine Hanks, of
Anderson attended the beauty
pageant in Greenville Saturday,
July 6.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Kernells,
Jr. and family and Mr.
Kernell's sister. Jackie, visited
Mrs. Kernell's sister. Mrs.
Lily Mae Fleeman in Monroe,
Michigan. They also visited
on up in Canada.
Glad to report that Mrs.
Dick Harrill, Claude Kernells.
Sr., Giles Lawson and Richard
Bull, who have all been patients
at Bailey Memorial
and Self Memorial hospitals
are now home and we hope
well on their way to complete
recovery.
Mr. and Mrs. Tom Wooten
and children spent the day.
July 4th. with the C. W.
Wootens.
Mr. and Mrs. D. W. Bagwell
of Anderson and Mrs. Jimmy
Armstrong and children of
Miami. Florida visited the
C. W. Wootens and other
friends and relatives recently.
Mrs. Henry Suttle and Mrs.
Mildred Satterfield and children
visited in Durham and
Raleigh, North Carolina during
vacation week.
Birthdays
Doris Gibbs had a birthday
July 22 (39 again!)
J. D. Gibbs?August 6.
Sandy Leopard will be 17
August 17.
Steve Allman celebrated a
birthdav Julv 30 and his
brother. Ken, August 6.
Mrs. Zeke Campbell ? August
13.
Your reporter (Grace) ?
August 27.
Patsy Henderson ?
August 5.
Robert Adams ? August 24.
Dennis Fallaw ? 2 years
old?July 20.
We hope everyone had a
happy vacation and we're
thankful that all our folks
had a safe one.
SMILE
SMILE, and the world smiles
with you;
Knock, and you go alone.
For the cheerful grin
Will let you in
Where the kicker is never
known.
Growl and the way looks
dreary;
Laugh, and the path grows
bright.
For a welcome smile
Brings sunshine, while
A frown shuts out the light.
?->ing and the world's harmonious;
Grumble, and things go
wrong.
And all the time
You are out of rhyme
With the busy, bustling
throng.
Kick, and there's trouble
brewing;
Whistle, and life is gay.
And the world's in tunc
Like a day in June.
And the clouds all melt away.
?E. A. Brininstool
Today Is Cash
There are two days in every
week about which we should
not worry, two days which
should be kept free from fear
and apprehension.
One of these days is Yesterday
with its mistakes and
cares, its faults and blunders,
its aches and pains. Yesterday
has passed forever beyond our
control.
All the money in the world
cannot bring back Yesterdav.
We cannot undo a single act
we performed; we cannot
erase a single word we said.
Yesterday is gone.
The other day we should
not worry about is Tomorrow,
with its possible adversities,
its burdens, its large promise,
and poor performance. Tomorrow
is also beyond our
immediate control.
Tomorrow's sun will rise,
either in splendor or behind
a mass of clouds . . . but it will
rise. Until it does, we have
no stakn in Tnmnrrmi' fr\r~ it
is as yet unborn.
This leaves cnlv one day . . .
Today . . . any man can fight
the battles of just one day. It
is only when you and I add
the burdens of those two awful
extremities . . . Yesterday
and Tomorrow that we break
down.
It is not the experience of
Today that drives men mad
. . . it's the remorse or bitterness
for something that happened
Yesterday and the
dread of what Tomorrow will
bring.
Let us. therefore, live one
day at a time . . . Yesterday is
a cancelled check . . . Tomorrow
a promissorv note . . .
Today is cash, spend it wisely.
\ ..4.1 T T 1
?rvumor unKnown
Lydia News . . .
(Continued from puge 4)
Florida visited his parents.
Mr. and Mrs. D. E. Roberts,
recently.
Mrs. Hallie Campbell was
a patient in Greenville General
Hospital for several days.
Mr. and Mrs. Perry Parrish
and daughter. Tami. spent
their vacation at Davtona
Beach. Florida. They attended
the races on Wednesday and
Thursday. Perry and Major
Crawford are real race fans,
they even attended the dog
races.
Roy Farmer and Mr. and
Mrs. Wesley Farmer visited
their parents. Mr. and Mrs.
Roy Farmer, in Belmont. X. C.
Butch McElveen and Bill
y \ WW*
I >.
The 75th anniversary of the 1
the Lydia Baptist Church. Mrs.
County Association, was the gu<
"Aunt Bert" Abercrombie, th
I that is over one hundred years <
5
SocialSecurity
QUESTION:
I filed a claim for disability
benefits last year when I
was 61. I was turned down
as not being totally disabled.
Now that I'm 62, couldn't I
file for retirement benefits
since the ace ha<; hppn 1nu;pr.
ed for men?
ANSWER:
Yes. Even if you have been
turned down several times in
the past, you may certainly
file a new claim and draw
benefits if you have enough
credits.
QUESTION:
I heard that any man who
reached 65 before 1958 can
now get social security with
just a year and a half of
work. Is this true?
ANSWER:
Yes, it is. Because of the cut
in the credits required, men
who reached 65 and women
who reached 62, before 1958
now qualify with a year and
a half of social security work.
QUESTION:
What about death benefits
under the new law? Has
there been a reduction in the
credits required?
ANSWER:
Yes. If the worker died be
fore 1958, a year and a half
of social security credit is all
that is needed. Where a
worker died after 1957, more
than a year and a half is
needed. However, the requirement
is less than it was
under the old law.
Rowland spent vacation week
at Myrtle Beach.
We would like to welcome
new employees, Roy Hanley
and Roy Farmer.
Birthdays
Donnie Wayne Cooper ?
12?July 24.
Teresa Cooper?7?July 24.
Mrs. Juanita Crawford ?
July 22.
VT ^ v.?U? 10 T i - ?
.iiai met JO JU1V 1U.
Matthew King?11-July 18.
D. E. Roberts?July 17.
Mrs. Faye Roberts?July 24.
Miss Gloria Jackson?July 7.
Aniversaries
Rev. and Mrs. Clee Blackwell?July
7.
I vl
W. M. U. was celebrated recently by
Grady Smith. President oi Laurens
?st speaker.
lird from left, is wearing a bonnet
ild.