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2 CLol feja f i Published r j^-\J\ for Clinton I lt " 11 ployees. Clir IvAcill the directioi Crocker. Dii Member of South munity and Atlantic Council Of lntSnne Industrial Editors lalions. Calvin A. Cooper Truman J. Owens James R. Braswell Betty S. Tyson The publishers of The items of interest from to your departmenl person In Our Business Y< When a group of amah Soviet Union last year, they Composed of top collegians a a good account of itself, but fc players. These men had nevei A few weeks later some swing through countries behir their superiority in no uncert make their living out of play In our jobs with Clinton our living in the different d in tVtD nffipD WKofl-?or urn o AAA V11V. V/111VV. ?? IIV.LI1V.1 ? t C* along technical lines or do c room for amateurs. Every day we are meeting ground is our respective plar are the players. The object of the game? quality fabrics at a price he's ' the service that will keep hirr The outcome? Winners a score is the sales we register, casts his vote on the kind of jc for pros only. And we have sc LET'S SHOW OUR SUP] IT'S 1 There's something very building, machines and other and earn our living. It almosl sort of guarantee that our Co will go on and on ? regardle: Yet one of the most stubt Our Company continues to oc machines and other equipmenl as long as we, as a group or te< cloth which satisfied customei We all know this to be ti guaranteed that our business continue regardless of how w< NO ONE HAS Even more important, w< position to guarantee this now one of us in the organization about how successful our Con may not have thought of it ii that all of us, by putting fort WORKING DAY, help to m jobs it makes possible. OUR INDIVIDUAL PARr to where we started. When we as being permanent, thev arc that WE ALL HELP to make And every nickel, dime or or supplies is a step in suppoi IT'S A FACT. THE PICTURi "He's a good advertiseme a remark like that about some What makes a person a ? pany? For one thing, the things company, your supervisor, vo fellow employees. Thoughtle: aren't sure are true can give company. On the other hand, if you ful to stick to the facts, you ; pression of a company worth \ FTmM ^ lonihly by and /n and Lydia em- / lion. S. C.. under f i of Claude A. S rector of ComEmployee Re- Member of Amoerlcan 1 Association of Industrial Editors Editor Photographer r ...... Photographer J Editorial Assistant ^ Clothmakcr will welcome its readers. Turn them in :al reporters or to the nel office. c c on Have To Be A Fro r ?ur basketball stars toured the ^ lost more games than they won. C nd AAU players, the team gave >und its match in the top Russian r played basketball for a living, of America's pro cagers made a v id the Iron Curtain. They showed 'r ain terms. They were pros. They ing basketball. Mills we are pros, too. We make r lepartments of the plants, or t ctually operate machines, work r )ffice work ? there's really no another team of pros. The battle- c . A. I * l1 1 A. TIT _ L us anu in me marsei piace. we k e To give the customer the best F willing to pay ? and to give him $ i happy. a re determined day by day. The * The judge is the customer who , )b we do. Our business is a game >me darned good ones! ERIORITY. V FACT permanent looking about the equipment here where we work t seems as though there is some mpany and the jobs it provides ss of what happens. >orn facts about our jobs is this: cupy our buildings ? to use the t and to provide work for us only "* *-v-? rvf v-v t \ 1 rv r? v?/-? r> 1 4 a mmm JIII <_?i pcupic, cue UUIL* IU jjiuuuctr I rs will buy from us. I :ue; that no one in the past has | and our jobs will automatically ell we do our work. A GUARANTEE e all know that no one is in a , or in the future. And yet every i has something to say, and do. npany will be in the future. We i just this way, but the truth is f, h our BEST EFFORTS EVERY aintain our production and the r ? And this gets us right back think of buildings and machines > permanent only to the degree them permanent, quarter we save in time, material t of such a guarantee. YOU GIVE ... I nt for his company." Ever hear i one you know? jwwvj anvci uacillCIU 1UI Ills t'oril- i you say off the job about your r ur overseer, your job, and your ?s criticism or statements you people wrong ideas about our show enthusiasm and are care- si are likely to give people an im- ? vorking for ? and buying from, xr THE CLOTHMAKER Social Security Employee Much attention has been b oeused lately on what Snuffy G >mith calls "Sociable Secur- tl ty." And there are some J hanges coming. The so-called Medicare Bill ... or amend- w nents to the Social Security e \.ct, was recently made law n >y the President's signature. n The only significant change u it the present is a seven per ent increase in old-age and ir Usability benefits now being t< >aid. These increases were o y-\o/ln ^ nauc icuuaiUVC IU iltlllUciiy p , 1965. Other changes, how- a iver, are on the way. b For instance, this year an mployed person pays 3.625 >ercent on the first $4,800 ci arned during the calendar v 'ear. Clinton Mills of course, b natches this $174 a year paid >y the employee. This a- si nounts to a total of $358 an- 1! lually paid to the account of he employee's social security ir lumber. d CHANGES JANUARY 1 S Come January 1, 1966. an in- v rease to 4.4 per cent, paid bv d loth the employee and the tl mployer is in effect. The em- b tloyee will pay on the first d 6,600 earnings during 1966 ... n n $1,800 increase on earnings axable. This will bring the ci 966 total to $277 for the in- w ividual ... or $554 paid by b PLANT g r.^H This vew, looking lo the west ii hows the location of the new Bailey resent plants. PLANT <;R . jaz^c^** "^ ;1 >c - - ' - v - - - ' 'I C-. -r . J% W * * -* > I*-. .-. * ; ' 1 \ Rough grading is nearing compli iie. A private grading contractor be< f dirt on the acreage October 10. Val lachinery at work on the job was e tillion dollars. Changes Lis is, Clinton W oth employees and company. Iradual increases will bring le total to 5.65 percent on anuary 1, 1937. The health insurance that nil be provided for the eldrly is effective in July of ext year. In other words, ledicare benefits do not start ntil mid-1966. At the peak of eontributions ?. 1987 (if you're still planning 5 be around by then), a total f $873 will be paid by the emloyee ... and another $373 nted up by Clinton Mills, ringing the total to $746. NEW BENEFITS LISTED The increase in Social Searity contributions will proide a number of changes in enefits. 1. It will bring health in.uance to the elderlv July 1, m 2. It will provide for relaxlg the eligibility standard for isability pensions. Full Social ecuritv benefits will be proided after 12 months of total isahilitv whnrp in thp nact lese disability benefits have een provided only for those eclared totally and permaently disabled. 3. It will provide for an inrease in the amount a retired rorker or a Social Security eneficiary can earn without SITE i the upper pari of the photo. ' P ant in relation to the three ADING ' .-v.* - . V X. ' s ... f, . . ' " - ..' . * ?tion on the new Bailey Plant jan moving some 200,000 yards ue of the massive earth moving estimated by one observer at a OCTOBER. 1965 ted; ill Pay More having his Social Security pension reduced. 4. It will provide for a seven percent increase in old-age and disability benefits n o w being paid, retroactive to January 1, 1965. 5. It will provide for an increase in the Snnial fiopnrifv benefits each employee will be eligible to receive at retirement. Social Security benefits for an individual have ranged from $40 to $127 a month; they now range from $44 to $135.90. Through the years, the maximum will increase gradually to $167.90 a month, although this maximum will not apply to persons retiring before the year 2,001. (You would have to be born after 1936). As individual retirement benefits increase, maximum family benefits will gradually increase from $254 a month to $368. DEPENDENTS' STATUS Another significant change in the Act provides that unmarried dependent children ceive oenelits while they are full-time students in school or college. Like Snuffy Smith, you may call the F.I.C A. folks "gooder than ary angel." But first, you'd better look at your increases in the amounts paid. Man?Not Machine?Still Solves Problem Best If you think the computers of today have limited application to everyday problems, let us show you how wrong you are: A computer programmer owned two watches. Both of them were family heirlooms. One watrh lnct covon ?x/UW UVVV.U OCLVHIU.') a day, and the second watch wouldn't run at all. So this programmer presented this problem to the computer. Which watch should he keep and which one should he throw away? The computer told him to get rid of the one that lost seven seconds. When he told the computer it had crossed wires, the machine came back with this explanation. The watch that lost seven seconds a day would be right only once in 17 years, but the watch that didn't run at all was right twice in everv 24 hours! No . . . man will not be replaced bv machines. Medical Air For The Caged A n* r av\/l ?-? 1 ?? ? ? . ? iiu/nncy d I ill <1 11(111 111 el zoo were stricken by a type of influenza. In an effort to prevent the spread of the disease. the zoo superintendent, decided on a new approach. He placed medication in the ventilating system and let it be wafted to the animals. This, he explained, is what is known as medical air for the caged. * * ? An old-timer is one who remembers when girls who had nothing to wear stayed home.