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APRIL. 1964 ?INSIDE IND SOUTH CAROI South Carolina textile plants last year produced more yards of fabric than anv other state, leading the nation in production of cotton fabrics and placing second in man-made fiber and also woolen and worsted goods. * # # * * Textile plants of South Carolina consume more than 2.500,000 bales of cotton annually, or about six times the amount of cotton grown in South Carolina. * * * * The 3,988,021,000 yards of cotton broad-woven cloth produced in South Carolina last year constituted 43 per cent of the nation's out-put. highest of any state. * * * South Carolina was the second largest producer of man-made fiber fabric last year. Palmetto textile plants produced 817,262,000 yards, second only to North Carolina's 879,790.000 yards. * * * * F.VPrv no\*r f i nfnKri/. ?- . x.? J i>v ff - IV7"IU L/l IV, cotton-system textile plant constructed in the United States since the end of the World War !T has been located in South Carolina. ***** The approximately 125.000 textile production workers in South Carolina make up about GO per cent of the state's entire industrial labor force. o i Jk Mr. and Mrs. Ronald Pace of Lydia Weaving announce the arrival of a son on March 20. 1964 at Bailey Memorial Hospital. What Kind Of He wants to run his owr He wants to select his o\\ He wants to make his o1 He wants to buy his own He wants to select his o\\ He wants to provide for h He wants to make his owi He wants to select his ow He wants to educate his c He wants to make his ow He wants to select his owi He wants to provide his o He wants to compete free He wants to grow by his He wants to profit from h He wants to take part in He wants to be a man of What kind of a nut is he? WHAT KIND! iUSTRY-hQ^ ? -xrtm UNA TEXTILES Textile wages in South Carolina amount to 62.2 per cent of the state's entire industrial payroll. ***** South Carolina last year was the nation's second largest producer of woolen and worsted goods, trailing only Massachusetts, with a total of 39,246,000 yards compared to the leader's 44.998.000 yards. * * * * Because of the two-price cotton system. South Carolina textile plants last year paid $113 million more for the A Nut Is He? 1 business, n doctor, ivn bargains, insurance. n reading matter, is own old age n contracts, n charities, hildren as lie wishes, n investments, n friends. \vn recreation. lv in the market place. own efforts. lis own errors. the competition of ideas. goodwill. HE'S AN AMERICAN. THAT'S American-grown cotton they consumed than their overseas competitors would have paid for the same American cotton. * # * * * One of the first textile plants ever built in South Carolina still stands. The walls of the Graniteville Co. plant near Aiken have been incorporated in its modern successor. The Graniteville plant was built in 1845. * * * * Value of the textile products turned out by South Carolina textile plants during the last fiscal year was $2,350,976,385. *<:*** South Carolina leads the nation in number of cotton system spindles in place, with 6,679.000, as compared with 5.700.000 for second place North Carolina as of June 29, 1963. ClMF" Mr. and Mrs. Tommy Proffitt of Clinton Spinning announce the arrival of a son, Timothy Ray. on March 25, at Bailey Memorial Hospital. THE CLOTHMAKER Remember Mother Mother's Day May 1 Oth We cannot claim for Mothers Day an unbroken line of descent from the old English Holiday called Mothering Sunday. It is interesting to note, however, that even be fore the advent of Christianity, we find in the pages of history an ancient foundation for Mother love. Mother worship reaches back into pagan times with the ceremony of Rhea in Asia Minor as the great "Mother of the Gods." This particular rite was introduced through Greece into Rome, about two hundred and fifty years before Christ and was called the festival of Hilaria, serving the purpose of elevating Motherhonrl inf n if c rirtUifnl ...vw uig.mj. Mothering Day With the advent of Christianity this festival gave rise through various church changes to the English observance of Mothering Sunday. This day was set aside for young men and women bound out as apprentices or servants, to visit parents and especially the Mother. One can imagine how, after having been away in service, the youths and maidens would brighten the bonds of filial love by the annual visit home, bearing as custom decreed, some pleasant gift. Certain foods became associated with this English Holiday. Pancakes, by the name of Carlings. composed of steeped peas fried in butter, pepper and salt, were served in Northern England and Scotland. A rich fruit cake with an outer crust called Simnel Cake was also a delicacy much esteemed on Mothering Sun day. National Observance It is a far cry from these quaint English observances to our own American-Mother's Day. first conceived and brought into being bv Miss Anna Jarvis of Philadelphia in 1908. and made the second Sunday of May a National observance day by a bill of Congress passed and signed by President Wood row Wilson. May 8th. 1914. The strengthening of home ties by a day so rich in love and tender in its meaning by our nation, which prides itself on practicality, reveals undc rneath a crust of commercialism. the idealism much needed in so great a nation. Now, the observance of "Mother's Day" has been expanded. to include many new o u t \v a rd demonstrations of latent love and gratitude to Mothers. The w e a r i n g of flower boutonniers. the sending of Mother's Day cards and gifts, church attendance as a family, has become a fitting symbol of gratefulness to the Mothers of the world. A Happy Day Mother's Dav is a happy day for everyone because doing special things for our mother, or the mother of someone else, with love and understanding in your heart, will not only CAMP I (flW a r-*t ? CAMP G Clinton Campfire Girls wi spend the week of May 31 June 6 "on top of the Bli RiHno" ot P"?? _11 aw ^aiujj UlCCUVill Cedar Mountain. North Car lina. Camp Greenville, one of tl finest Camps in this sectio is located 40 miles fro Greenville, South Carolii and 18 miles from Brevar North Carolina on U. S. Hig way No. 276 at the Sou Carolina-North Carolina sta line. A well rounded progra providing the girls with tl opportunity of living, plavin bring happiness to a mothi but you yourself gain so muc May God bless ever Mother, young and old. tod? and every day throughout tl \'00 r frvr l/~?? -J " <vui, 1U1 11 ic 1UVC dllU l/ur ante which has been bestowe upon us each day of our live World's Fair ? (Continued from page 1) visit the Fair on an averaj of 3.5 times Built on the same groum as the New York World's Fa of 1939 1940, the new Fair w comprise about 175 separa pavilions and structures, bo and startling towers, dome buttresses, pylons and oth architectural fantasies on 6 acres. It will be about nil times as big as the Seattle Fa of 1962. The Fair will be divid< into five sections: Industrii International. Federal an State. Transportation, and tl Lake Amusement Area. Tl center of the fairgrounds ll-lO T'llicnUni built by the United Stat Steel Corporation. This gia globe tall as a 12-storv buil ing and ringed with the orbi of satellites, is intended symbolize "a shrinking glol in an expanding universe This is a permanent structu and will tower over the lan scape when the Fair is goi and the area has been trar formed into a new city park Over .'150 hotels and mote in the New York area ha signed agreements not to rai rates during the Fair seasor Adult admission tickets a priced at $2.00 each. Ch A - / -? (anus - xnrouj 12) are priced at $1 75 each Suggestion for some aut mobile advertiser who war to be different: Show peop over 40 driving the new ca Who pays for them, anywa 5 FIRE GIRLS 4^0 MAY 31ST7 JUNE 6 j!j; 196^iREENVILLEr ill and learning together in a L - Christian atmosphere will be le conducted by local adult leade, ers. o- tamp ureenville is one of the highest camps east of the le Rocky Mountains. It sits atop n. Standing Stone Mountain m some 3300 feet above sea la level. Four hundred seventyd, five acres of mountain forest, h- trails, springs, waterfalls, and th magnificent views comprise te the Camp property. The Camp is owned and m operated by the Young Men's le Christian Association. Greeng. ville. er id >s. Life consists of opposing forces, and the pull of these opposing forces can either make or hrpalf nc Tt ic Divine plan that the pull of these opposing forces shall make, and not break us. Browning emphasized this point when he said. "When lir the fight begins within himself, a man's worth something. Without temptation, there is Id no character; without sorrow ?s. there is no joy; without pain er there is no courage; without doubt, no faith." A man's creed is not his relir ligion any more than his backbone is the man himself, but -d a good creed is just as essenal. tial to a man's being as a good i d backbone is to his body, tie ne is SPRING GLEANING Spring Clean-Up time is es here! nt Across the nation civicits minded citizens arc out to to clean up their yards and be brighten their homes. This spring ritual can yield re two end results of value: It can beautify your home ne and communitv. is. It can at the same time resj duce danger from fire and ' other hazards. se It is well-known that a 1 i?- ' ' is. mime inax is spic and span is re safer from fire and that an il- industrial plant that is spic i^h and span is a safer place in which to work. Quality and efficiency as G_ well as employee safety are . enhanced by cleanliness and orderliness, and everyone will agree that it is more pleasant rs- to work in a plant that is y? clean and well-kept.