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2 rjgj CLoth .>- Published monl \ Jf\ for Clinton and i| J ployees. Clinton iLlciU Ihe direction o. Crocker. Direct Member of South munity and Er Atlantic Council of latinric Industrial Editors Calvin A. Cooper Truman J. Owens James R. Braswell Betty S. Tyson The publishers of The Cl< items of interest from its to your departmental personnel < |?cqniit of th The legend of the dogwood 1 the Christian era. No one kno^ reprint it to mark the Easter sea "At the time of the Crucifi been the size of the oak and otl strong was the tree that it was cross. To be used thus, for such tressed the tree. Jesus, nailed u pity for all sorrow and suffering " 'Because of your regret and again shall the dogwood grow 1 cross. Hencefore, the dogwood s twisted, and the blossoms shall t long and two short petals. And ir will be nail prints brown with the center of the flower will be who see it will remember.' " And so the dogwood, to this of the eternal Easter?an inspira world. Know Your Almost two-thirds of the na are located in the two Carolina; piled by the U.S Department of 1 that South Carolina textile plant: North Carolina plants have 5,82 12,518,000. The South Carolina sninrlloc onrl thn TV nrt 1-v earnlm' * * Transistors, originally develi tubes, are being adapted to uses tiny electronic devices have bee controlling the speed cf yarn ar duction processes. In some inst vices have replaced generator ai What Th< The real aim of any companj products that its customers wan One major American compar that it has placed on the desk of plaque inscribed. "Give them wl isn't interested in what the ex want; they're supposed to know Whether customers are buyir boxcars or bedspreads, they all will do a specific job and hold u] The textile industry has progi because of its ability to give its has become a major industry fc than barely satisfy man's need ; a great industry because it kno^ Every person in the industry hand in the preservation of that A (Ilium Is Only As Stroi This time-worn proverb is lesson for any business organiz of duty on the part of employe their responsibility, can prove h tion. We must all depend on e? Not only is our cloth of better the line has performed his assign but our sense of morale is imprm to an organization where all ei their jobs thoroughly and effici that we think of ourselves occas: that we resolve to make every For the stronger the individuals profitable, safe and efficient cor :hly by and s-. I Lydia em- I \y?v/j^L0^ . S. C.. under f Claude A. or of Com- ># nployee Re- Member or Ameerlron Association of liulnstrlal Kdltors Editor Photographer Photographer Editorial Assistant athmaker will welcome readers. Turn them in reporters or to tne office. c Jloqluouft :ree is probabljr the oldest of ws from where it came. We ison. xion, the dogwood tree had her forest trees. So firm and chosen as the timber for the a cruel purpose, greatly dispon it. sensed this. In gentle , fie said to the tree: pity for My suffering, never arge enough to be used as a ihall be slender and bent and >e in the form of a cross?two . 4 1 ~ 4 ?r ? ?4 ? 1 41 I llltr tCIUCl U1 CdLll JJCldl LIIdC rust and stained with red. In i a crown of thorns. And all day, remains a living symbol tion for Christians around the 1 Industry tion's cotton system spindles >, according to statistics cornCommerce. The survey shows s have 6,698,000 spindles while 0,000 for a two-state total of total is 34.7 per cent of all i total is 30.1 per cent. * oped to replace bulky radio ? in the textile industrv The in found to be very useful in id cloth through various proances, transistor-equipped deid electric motor systems. ;v Want f's sales program is to market t at a realistic and fair price, ly believes so strongly in this each of its executives a little lat they want." The company ecutives think the customers r# ig automobiles or print cloths, want quality?a product that p in the process of doing it. ressed for more than 170 years customers what they want. It lecause it is able to do more for shelter and clothing. It is vs the value of quality. r, regardless of his job, has a reputation. ng As It* Weakest Link familiar to us and carries a ation. Inefficiency or neglect ?es or management, whatever armful to the whole organiza ?ch other to do our jobs well, quality if every person along ed task in an efficient manner, /ed if we know that we belong nployees take pride in doing entlv. And so it is important ionally as links in a chain and link be as strong as possible, in an organization, the more npany we will have. THE CLOTHMAKER Sixty Employeei Fort) Sixty employees are enrolled in Carding, Spinning, and Weaving fixing evening classes held in the Clinton High School Textile Building. Classes under the direction of Instructors Bill King, Lydia Carding Supervisor, Dick Swetenburg, Lydia Spinning Overseer, and Furman Bratcher, Lydia Weaving Supervisor, are in progress each week night except Wednes- i day. The 40-hour courses afford opportunity to learn the fundamentals of fixing under the guidance of able instructors. The Company was instru mental is equipping tne lextile building for high school textile courses and adult training when the school was built. Left to right: Dick Sweetenburg. Jimmy Richie, Ernest Hendrick, John Henry Estes. An Easter 1 GOD OF (PllH FATHERS, of us, our life as a stewvt of self-determination, tlu government, the ivisdom f the duty of self-reliance thank thee for the houn upon us as American citi priceless heritage of freed May our living const it i i - i uumm iu Humanity. $64 A I believe in the j the firm I repr ability to get r< I believe that ho: be bought by honest method: I believe in work in boosting, nc in that way, I g my job. I believe that a i goes after, tha today is worth row; and that and out until h himself. I believe in todaj I am Hoim*- in t work I hope to < reward which 1 I believe in cour in generosity, friendship, and tition. t Presently Enroll r-hour Fixer Tra Left to right: Alvin Satterfield, Chappell, Carl Turner, George M< Instructor. 1 Left to right: Eugene Koon, S Tucker, Jimmy Eubanks. Earl < McNinch, Donald Kidd, and Furm rayer , who has given, to each irtlship9 with the power ? responsibility of selfwe w * or self-advancement and and self-restraint, tve tiful blessings bestowed zens. especially for our otn. nte a constructive contritnswers ob I am doing, in esent, and in my ?sults. nest products can honest men by ing, not weeping; it knocking; and. et pleasure out of Tian gets what he t one deed done two deeds tomor no man is aown e has lost faith in r, and in the work omorrow, and the io; and in the sure he future holds. tesy, in kindness, in ^ood cheer, in in honest compe?H. Lee Weber MARCH, 1965 led In wing Program ^1 Charles Shepard, Ray King, Calvin >les. Harold Stroud, and Bill King, I I JH JM ^SSSmES^h teve Allman, Curtis Oswalt, Benny Osborne. Jerry Satterfield, James an Bratcher, Instructor. SAFETY I R S T c; -,^,1 f~.. O A rTlTO X iuuiu oianu 1U1 on 1 lOFACTION that you had done your best. A?could stand for ASSISTANCE that you have given someone that didn't know. F?should stand for FAIRPLAY that we should all practice the whole day long. E?should stand for EARNESTNESS of purpose to all. and every task. T?must stand for TOLERANCE of a man who is learning the tricks of the trade. Y?must stand for YOU, for You are at the bottom of it all. 11 Il"l "< rapcr w 11 K*ii iMKlurt's The use of paper made from 100 per cent cotton has been advocated by a Congressman from New England as one means of increasing the permanence of government records. Rep. Silvio Conte, a Republican from Massachusetts, says a report from the National Bureau of Standards shows that continued use of microfilm records will dam age them beyond repair and that cotton fiber paper is the answer for original records. "I am interested in seeing that future records be kept in material that will last centuries," Rep. Conte says. "The alternative to present materials would be 100 per cent cotton fiber paper, which endures."