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APRIL, 1969 It * I It T j nl \ I Mr. W. C. Wallenzine is | raking yards since he retiree ~2 after 35 years service. M and garden in his reiiremen February 15, 1934. Engagements \ ^ The engagement of Miss Sandra Gail Dunavvay to Mr. Wade Hampton Hargrove, Jr. is announced by her mother, Mrs. Pauline Bolt Dunaway of Clinton. Sandra was a Mercer Silas Bailey Scholarship recipient in 1962 and a 1966 Graduate of WintV?rr?v? College. Wade is an honor graduate of University of N. C. and the University of North Carolina Law School. He has a private practice in Raleigh. At the present, Sandra is i on the staff of US Senator ] J. Strom Thurmond. Her father, Charles F. Dunaway, is employed at Clinton ~2. A June wedding is 1 planned. 1 OUR RETIREES t m| >IIH [spending much of his time m from Clinton Mills' Plant m -??r u *? r. wanenzine plans to fish 1. He joined Clinton Mills Announced ., -jfep. jlH * j ar *r I \ Jji Mr. and Mrs. Gordon Williams Black well of Greenville announce the engagement of their daughter, Miss Elizabeth Blair Blackwell to Charles Douglas Cooper, son of Mr. and Mrs. Calvin A. Cooper of .'130 Poplar St. in Clinton. Calvin is Clinton Mills Personnel Director. The wedding will take place June 24 at 3 p.m. at Christ Episcopal Church. rnr. cooper is serving in the Marine Corps at San Diego. California. A graduate of Clinton High School, he attended The Citadel and held membership in Pi Sigma Alpha national political science honor society as well as on the tennis team. THE CLOTHMAKER . r^Wm Mrs. Lavonia Phillips, Clinton Mills No. 2 Spooling, retired March 11. She came to work at Clinton Mills in 1955. James W. Hawkins re i i * - - lueu uum ^nnion Mills' Lydia Plant March 29. Hawkins joined Clinton Mills June 15. 1961 and plans to fish and garden in his retirement. EDUCATION PAYS OFF Education provides dollars - and - cents advantages in terms of better jobs and higher wages. Statistics show that from the age of 25 high school 1 graduates earn approximately $2,000 a year more than elementary school graduates and college grad cijjjjujAiiuaiciy me same amount more than high school graduates. More young people are entering the job market each year. By 1970 the number of boys and girls reaching 18 will be a third more than 1962 ? 3.7 million. As youth population increases, those who lack adequate training will find it harder and harder to get a job. For their own economic well-being, young people should stay in school and graduate. HOUSEWIFE WORK If science constructed a robot to do a housewife's work, it would need the ability to do: 17 hours of general housework a week; put its hand in water 45 times a day; scrape, wash, dry and store 1.000 dishes a month; walk 300 miles a year just in the house and cook 57.000 meals in a lifetime. One-Millie Hours k 7 ^ Clinton Mills' Lydia recently to a buffet di safe man hours of contin accompanying pictures ai of people enjoying the Manager Dick Swetenbv to Lydia employees for safety record. Turner Receiv LJ& Van Oxner (1). Lvdii King (r). Assistant Overs section man, center, witl fully completing a correi One half of the cost course was refunded by benefit of Clinton Mills bursed for one half the education related to his successfully completed ar is obtained. Employees interested should contact the Perso 3 m Safe Man At Lydia 'vl "T Iw V jkM v??b i-y^U 'n'i^VTl n flj*E i *-i_m Ki^SH i % Plant employees were treated nner for completing 1.000,000 uous operations. Shown in the re scenes throughout the plant "safety dinner." Lydia Plant irg expressed his appreciation achieving such an outstanding vs ICS Diploma a Cardincr Oversppr anH "Rill ;eer, presented Carl E. Turner, 1 an ICS Diploma for successspondence course in carding. of the correspondence study Clinton Mills. This is another whereby an employee is rcim? cost of obtaining additional work, provided the course is id prior approval of the course in further educational benefits nnel Director.