The clothmaker. [volume] (Clinton, South Carolina) 1952-1984, February 15, 1964, Page 5, Image 5
FEBRUARY, 1964
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CLINTON & LYDIA
offer
Superior Quality
at standard prices
Clinton Cottons i\r
I 111 West 40 St., New York 18, N.Y. I
^(*riiCid^12)l05|730^^^J
A Lesson /
From the inaugi
George Washingto
"Among the vicissitudes incic
filled me with greater anxieties
cation was transmitted by your
day of the present month.
"On the one hand, I was sun
voice I can never hear but wit
retreat which I had chosen . . , i
years.
"On the other hand, the m;
trust to which the voice of my
cient to awaken in the wisest
citizens a distrustful scrutiny
not but overwhelm with desp
inferior endowments from na
duties of civil administration) o
of his own deficiencies."
C. E. Leopard Complete:
V\Bk
Clinton Weave Room Supervisor
C. E. Leopard, left, is
shown with his Overseer,
James Tiller, admiring the
check C. E. received from
Clinton Cotton Mills after successfully
completing a special
I.C.S. Course in Cotton Warping
and Weaving.
The check to C. E. covers
one half of the cost of the
corespondence study course.
"The hardest thing about a
course of I.C.S. study is to get
at it while others are watching
T.V. or going fishing." according
to C. E. "It is well
Worth
$22,000-$25,000?
Not these particular tools,
carried around the waist of
Junior Heaton, Clinton Plant
electrician.
But $22,000-$25,000 is the in
vestment required to provide
one job, in today's modern
textile industry. Quite a sum,
isn't it?
How efficiently we use our
tools and equipment determines,
to a large extent, our
job security and opportunity.
iff Humility
ural address of
n, April 30, 1789
lent to life no event could have
than that of which the notifiorder
and received on the 14th
amoned by my country, whose
h veneration and love, from a
as the asylum for my declining
agnitude and difficulty of the
country called me, being suffiand
most experienced of her
into his qualifications, could
>ondence one who (inheriting
ture and unpracticed in the
ught to be peculiarly conscious
s I.C.S. Study
worth-while, however, and I
thoroughly enioved it." ho
said.
Employees are reminded of
the Educational Assistance
Plan. The Companies will reimburse
an employee onehalf
the cost of obtaining additional
education related to
his work, provided the course
is successfully completed and
prior approval of the course
is obtained.
Employees interested i n
further home study of job-related
courses should contact
the Personnel Director.
THE CLOTHMAKER
Suggestions for
Tax Returns
(Continued from page 1)
the official schedule. If substitutes
are used, attach to the
official schedules and enter
totals on the official schedules.
(7) Be sure the total number
of allowable exemptions
are entered on Page 2, Form
1040 or 1040A.
(8) If medical deductions
are claimed, be sure the total
cost of medicine and drugs
and total amount of other
medical, dental expenses are
entered on Page 2, Form 1040.
(9) Be sure the return is
signed at the bottom of Page
2, Form 1040.
(10) If a joint return is filed
both husband and wife must
sign.
i\/r? n?l.i? 1
AY.ii. ju><juis.iiuii stressed mai
each local Internal Revenue
office provides free assistance
to taxpayers.
Cherry Salad
1 can pie cherries (water
pack)
V2 cup sugar
1 flat can crushed pineapple
Vz cup chopped nuts
1 nkp. rhprrv crp-latin
*2 envelope unflavored gelatin
1 tablespoon lemon juice
Juice drained from pineapple
plus enough orange
juice to make 1 cup
Pour sugar over cherries
and let stand. Heat juice and
pour over cherry gelatin to
dissolve. Dissolve unflavored
gelatin in a small amount of
water and add to this mixture.
Add cherries, stirring until
sugar is dissolved. Add crushed
pineapple and nuts. Pour
into oiled molds. Makes 8-9
individual molds.
Cherry Surprise
Cream together:
1 stick butter or margarine
1 cup sugar
Add and beat:
2 eggs
Fold in one large can crush- (
ed pineapple, drained, and one
cup chopped pecans.
Line oblong pan with 15
graham crackers. Pour mixture
over crackers. Pour on
top two packages cherry jello
that is partly thickened. Refrigerate
till ready to serve. (
Serve in squares, topped with
whipped cream if desired.
?2
J# !
m
\ ^ A
SALES TAX DEI
Listed below is a table
rector of Internal Revenue fc
which shows the average am
deducted for federal income
to furnish records to substan
claimed. This table does no1
but records must be availabl
tax claims.
llH'Ofllt* shown on ll???
pane |. Form 1040 pers
I'nder $1,000 .. 5T7
$1,000 iiiidi-r $1,500 '
$1,500 under $2,000 .. 31
$2,000 under $2,500 ......".."1 37
$2,500 under $3,000 j I
$2,000 under $3,500 -q
$3,500 under $4,000 "
$1,000 under $4,500 ~ ??i
$1,500 under $5.000 07
$5,000 under $5,500 72
$5,500 under $0,000 J. ~Z. 78
$0,000 under $0,500 .. .."
$0,500 under $7,000 .. ~ X!<
$7,000 under $7,500 94
$7,500 under $8,000 u.s
$S.ooo under $8,500 ".'.'1 lie
$8,500 under $0,000 . " mo
$9,000 under $9,500 .... * "llo
$9,500 under $10,000
[ ?1
Hands off the Aspirin
Do you dive into the aspirin
bottle for every ache and
pain? You may be masking
the signs of disease. Pain is
not an illness in itself. It is
a symptom o f something
wrong somewhere in the
body.
You can't tell what's wrong
by where you have the pain.
Pain is sometimes what the
doctors call "referred." That
simply means that when
something is wrong with one
part of the body, it hurts
somewhere else. Hip troubles
can give you a pain in your
knee. An ailing heart can
cause pain in a shoulder and
arm. Decayed teeth can give
you an earache. Pleurisy can
Welcome to the new arrivals
and congratulations to the
lucky parents!
CLINTON COTTON MILLS
To Bobby Tucker of the
Clinton Weaving Dpnartmont
o r? v
and Mrs. Tucker on the birth
of a daughter.
To Kenneth Lawson of the
Clinton Weaving Department
and Mrs. Lawson on the birth
of a daughter.
To Charles Shepard of the
Clinton Carding Department
and Mrs. Shepard on the birth
of a son.
To E. C. and Mary Vincent
of the Clinton Spinning Department
on the birth of a
daughter.
To William R Hanley of
Clinton Spooling Department
and Mrs. Hanley on the birth
of a daughter.
To Roy Lawson of the Clin
LYDIA COTTON MILLS
To Michael McGee of the
Lydia Carding Department
snd Mrs. McGee on the birth
5
MICTION TABLE
released by the District Di>r
the State of South Carolina
ount of sales tax that may be
tax purposes without having
itiate the amount of sales tax
; limit you in claiming more
e to offer proof of additional
, Family size
?le ;
2 3 4 5 6 or more
persons persons persona persons persons
$21 422 $30 |3!? $39
39 32 31 39 39
38 40 43 47 47
47 49 52 56 58
55 57 63 66 68
62 65 71 76 78
70 74 81 86 89
79 83 91 96 99
87 92 101 106 10S
95 100 109 115 118
103 109 117 125 128
111 117 126 133 137
118 124 134 140 146
126 131 142 149 155
132 138 149 157 1C4
138 146 156 165 171
144 151 164 173 179
150 157 171 180 187
155 163 177 189 194
P/ZFZ /?/)/ IIUKII
vv^i/#n/f I
Bottle
cause abdominal or shoulder
pain.
You can get a false sense of
security once you've managed
to dispose of the pain. Meanwhile.
what's really wrong
with you can be getting steadily
worse. If you see the
doctor in time, much of what
ails you and is causing the
pain can be successfully treated.
If the pain is an occasional
headache or some stiff muscles
from spading the lawn,
it's probably okay to take a
couple of aspirins and then
forget about it. But if pain
recurs or is persistent, stay
away from the aspirin bottle
and pay a vsit to your doctor.
ton Cloth Room and Mrs.
Lawson on the birth of a son.
~ j 1-" ?
kjl <x uaugmer.
To William M. Boozer of the
Lydia Carding Department
and Mrs. Boozer on the birth
of a son.
To Nellie Sherifield of the
Lydia Weaving Department
and Mr. Sherifield on the
birth of a daughter.
To Frank and Evelyn Birchmore
of the Lydia Spooling
Department on the birth of a
daughter.
To Joseph Young of the
T .\rH i O ? *- *
uTuiu u[jn 111 ii uepanmeni
and Mrs. Young on the birth
of a son.
To Cecil Wilson of the Lvdia
Weaving Department and
Mrs. Wilson on the birth of a
daughter.
A pessimistic fellow read
his horoscope which said,
e--?j- -- *
mane iicw mtfiius ana see
what happens." He went out,
made three new friends, and
nothing happened. Now he
complains he's stuck with
three new friends