University of South Carolina Libraries
2 CLo$ J - ? -i-o- Published m< 13 > for Clinton i ' f ,) ployees. ClinJ itxcuj fhe direction Crocker, Dir Member of South munity and Atlantic Council of |B?;nnc Industrial Kdltors laixons. Calvin A. Cooper Truman J. Owens James R. Braswell Betty S. Tyson The publishers of The items of interest from i to your department; personr PREACHMEN The Conviction on the pari one of the best ways to mei through voluntary action and r is backed by their generous sc Last year business corporat $563 million to the United Fi the community level?and to the Red Cross, Cancer Society, Moreover, corporations alt part of the $819 million in cha dations in the same year, sinc< uted came from corporate ear Great fanfare attends gov payers' funds for welfare. Coi by more than a ripple of publ corrected. THI1N An electronic brain is the world?it can't think. It can recite only what it he being a brain. It works fast?1 It can spew its fund of informa typist. It can probably store r tion than the average human i But it can't think. It can recite only what it h It can never know the joy something and then realizing job. It can never appreciate tl to new conditions to make a j It can never feel the thrill created where nothing existec pretty in a simple sort of way. on me jod. dui 11 is just iiKe do only what it is told to do. Here at Clinton Mills we 1 also have three modern plants ?and there are jobs for all ol told what to do. That's what people are forof the fact that here at Clinton men and women who are m; THEY CAN AND DO THINK Americanism A NATIOI Read the following lines. 1 about them for a moment. W States today? Does it make c Or give you butterflies in the "From Bondage to From spiritual fait From courage to fi From freedom to , From abundance t< From selfishness t( From complacency From apathy to fee From fear to Hpiip ? ? And, from depende It now seems that we are ir dependent on government for sistance, subsistanee to our fa subsistance to our hospitals, n rent on our houses if we are i of business or even personal control and dependency of the it doesn't have to be this way! The next step in the cycle be complete. onthly by and jn ytssO ?nd Lydia em- f ton. S. C? under of Claude A. ^ ector of Com- ^ ^ ^ Employee Re- Member of Ameerlcan Association of Imlustrln! Editors Editor Photographer Photographer a??* MuiiVAiai jr&aaisiaux Clothmaker will welcome its readers. Turn them in il reporters or to the tel office. T PRACTICED ; of most business concerns that ?t health and welfare needs is lot through government handout ipport of charity fund drives, ions made contributions totaling jnds?which help the needy at such national organizations as Cerebral Palsy, Cystic Fibrosis. ;o deserve credit for a goodly ritable donations made by foune much of the money so distribnings paid into the foundations. ernmental expenditure of tax~porate giving is seldom greeted icity. a situation that should be [KING t most mis-named thing in the as been told, and that isn't really far faster than the human brain, tion far quicker than any human nore bits and pieces of informanind. as been told, of considering a way of doing mere is a better way to do that le quiet satisfaction of adjusting ob run smoother. that comes when something is 1 before. An electronic brain is It is fast and precise and always so many other machines. It can lave electronic brains? and we equipped with modern machines F them to do?but they must be ?they can think. We are proud i Mills we have many intelligent asters of these machines?AND N'S CYCLE 'hen read them again, and think here in this cvcle is the United old chills run down your back? stomach? spiritual faith, h to courage, reedom. abundance, a selfishness. } complacency. to apathy, lr. ndencv. ?ncy back into bondage." 1 the Dependency cycle. We are minimum wages, old age subrms, subsistance to our schools, ledical care, voting rights, even inable to pay it. Hardly a facet life is now free of government individual on government. But is bondage. Then the cycle will THE CLOTHMAKER I i MEDICARE i i How It Will v T 1/ i/ Is I Work 1 t \ \ c t 1 Ji t ( I c 'Medicare' Tax Will Rise During the I By ;t WALL STREET JOURNAL S WASHINGTON?Here is how the annu; "medicare" tax paid each by employers ar rise over the next 21 years, starting Jan. 1 rates for both the Social Security tax and tax will be applied to the first $6,600 of an i earnings. This taxable wage base also 1 Jan. 1, up from the current base of $4,800. BILLY GRAHAM FILI "The Restless Ones," con- n sidered the most successful i? motion picture yet produced c< by Evangelist Billy Graham, vv will be shown at the Broad- le way Theatre in Clinton on r< Oct. 18, 19, 20. t< Sponsored by local churches, a representative committee is tl directing plans for bringing w the production to Clinton. a Serving as chairman is b J. B. Templeton, and the co- gi chairman is A. C. Young, ir Others included are Ratchford R Boland, Rembert Truluck, p: George Brockenbrough, Dillard Boland, Rev. A. L. Bix- a ler, L. S. Reddeck and Claude tl Crocker. ai Graham's evangelistic film s\ Fire Prevention Week g. October 3-9 y< October means red leaves, a| football, and National Fire n' Prevention Week. In 1963 T (most recent complete fig- tl ures), fire cost the Nation not r( less than 1.4 BILLION dol- cl lars. Like other "accidents" S the true cost is higher. How h: much is anybody's guess. fa uon i guess about fire pre- s* vention. Fires require oxygen (from the air), a source hi of ignition (lightning, kids c< with matches, a cigarette), tc and fuel (newspapers, rags, S( junk. You can't keep away the air and you can't always keep away the ignition?BUT you can keep away the FUEL. rc Clean it up now. in What Medicare Covers . . FOR EVERYONE OVER 65, GOVERNMENT INSURANCE PAYS FOR THESE: HOSPITAL BILLS (Begii Up to 90 days for each "spell of llness." including mental illness. \11 hospital services normally fur- * lished to in-patients. . Drugs used in hospitals. EXTENDED CARE (Begini Dp to 100 days in "extended care" Facility, but only after hospitalization for three days. Drugs, physical therapy, speech . therapy, care by interns, residentsin - training from hospital with which facility is associated. HOME HEALTH SERVICES fallowing discharge from hospital ir extended care facility, 100 home ,-isits per year from health workers . visiting nurses, etc.) under plan established by physician. Hospital out - patient diagnostic ests. rou CAN ALSO SIGN UP FOR VOLJNTARY PROGRAM THAT PAYS FOR: . DOCTOR BILLS (Begin 10'. of "reasonable charge" for ihvsicians' services in or out of lospital; X-rav, radium treatments; . liagnostic X-ray and other laboraory tests. Treatments for mental illness out ;ide a hospital (50'.' of expense up o maximum benefit of $250 in any >ne year). . dome health services up to 100 . lays without prior hospitalization. rou PAY FOR THESE SERVICES THROUGI BEGINNING JAN Next 21 Years laff Reporter Now il Social Security- 1966 id employees will 1967 . The percentage 1969 the new medicare 1973 mployec's annual 1976 Jeromes effective 1980 1987 II rrn nr CIIAW/1VT II u i yj oil onu w iy n cpresentative, Ray Harvey, ; working with the local ammittee, which, together 'ith local pastors and lay ;aders, previewed the film ccently at the First Presbv?rian Church. With the accent on youth, le feature-length film deals ith the teen-age crisis. With background setting provided y the 1963 Graham Los Ancles Crusade, and woven ito the storv pattern, "The estless Ones" is a bold aproach to social problems. One reviewer said, "Here is picture that tells the world le truth and comes up with ii ciiiowci, uui ctn uasy silver, but an answer from beond us." This answer will itisfy, challenge and inspire ung and old alike and will ppeal to churchgoers and on-churchgoers, it is stated, he Christian message comes irough in the midst of a ?alistic teen-age situation, eanly and without cloying, wift- moving plot episodes ighlight the opportunities icing the church, viewers ate. Screen writer James Collier as Drought into focus the )ntemporary plight of both fenagers and parents. A 'nsitive script, produced by rorld Wide Pictures under le direction of Dick Ross, has suited in a "break-through" i "The Restless Ones." SEPTEMBER, 1965 ... and Does Not Cover | YOU-OR OTHER INSURANCE PROGRAMS-MUST PAY FOR THESE: nning July 1, 1966) First $40 of hospital bill, plus $10 per day after first 60 days. Services of hospital-employed radiologists, pathologists. First three pints of blood. ning January 1, 1967) After first 20 days, $5 per day up to 100-day limit. (Beginning July 1, 1966) Full-time nursing care. Drugs and biologicals. First $20 of cost and 20'? of remainder of bill. BUT YOU MUST STILL PAY: ining July 1, 1966) $2 per month share of insurance premium. First $50 of bills for these services. Routine physical examinations; eye, hearing tests; eye glasses, hearing aids: immunizations; cosmetic surgery. V 4 INCREASED SOCIAL SECURITY TAXES UARY 1, 1966 S. S. Med. MailII. i to H.i l?- mum 3.625". None $174.00 3.85 " 0.35'/r 277.20 3.9 0.50'? 290.40 4.4 Vr 0.50'. 323.40 4.85 r'. 0.55"r 356.40 4.85 '/. 0.60". 359.70 4.85 /? 0.70' '< 366.30 4.85 0.80' V 372.90 ERE IN OCTOBER inside the brightturbulent world of todays youth... Special screen appearance BIUY GRAHAM BROADWAY THEATRE October 18, 19, 20 Mon. Tues. Wed. 4:00 p.m. 1:00 p.m. 4:00 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. 7:30 p.m. (In Cooperation With Clinton Area Churches)