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2 The Clothmaker PUBLISHED MONTHLY BY CLINTON MILLS EDITED OY MACK PARSONS, EXT. B4 Is He Qualified? If you were hiring someone for a particular job, you would surely check thoroughly into his qualifications, his background, his reputation as a businessman to make sure he could handle 4 u ~ 4 :i.. uic juu r>citidicti'iui ny In a way, the coming elections are a similar situation. You, as a citizen of the country, will be casting your vote to help determine who will have the job of representing your country in making laws we must live by. Just as an employer would do, you should thoroughly investigate the potential employee. Find out everything you can about him and determine if he is eoine to take care of vnur nnmprtv in a manner acceptable to you. Study the candidates' backgrounds and study the party platforms which they are endorsing. Study the issues as they are reported in the press or on the television or radio. Discuss politics with your neighbors and friends. Carefully analyze all the information you have collected and then vote for the candidates who you would hire for the position they are seeking. Keep in mind always that voting is more than a privilege, it is a responsibility. Intelligent votine is a basic* re quirement to the survival of a free and prosperous nation. Graduate Edition Anyone desiring additional copies of the May issue of The Clothmaker can pick them up in Mack Parsons' office, or notify your supervisor. Additional copies will be distributed as long as the supply lasts. fk ' I CIint M ills Says: "You know, along about VACATION rniriKing qdout ine importance ot a gooa i before, VACATION PAY AND PROFIT SH ings. The more you work, the more you ec tion time comes and when you are read) attendance pays in more ways than one.' TUMBLIN WRITES AB' Mr. Robert M. Vance, President mi Clinton Mills Ai Dear Mr. Vance: sp Sunday, June 11th, concluded the most exciting week of my life; my week at Palmetto Boy's State. St My arrival at the Citadel on Sunday, June 4th, began this memorable and j remarkable experience. On that day, ^ we were assigned our room, our city t()j (mine was Santce City, Hampton County), political party, and were issued T-shirts and few other assorted w< items. i ne week was filled with classes on government, movies, demonstartions and assemblies. Strom Thur CLOTHMAKER /y. _r? I TIME each year, I really begin attendance record. As we've talked ARING are both figured on earnirn, the more you have when vacaf to retire . . . I'm glad that good OUT BOY'S STATE :>nd, Commander Oral Cox of the nerican Legion, and Fritz Hollings oke to us in some of these assemblies, though I wasn't elected to office, y party won the "State slate." Rv tho U/n\/ fhorn ic n f hintf of Rmt'e a ate called the C. A. B. (County Adsory Bureau). I think that I could st explain this to you personally. A.B.'s arc members of a rough and ugh set! Thanks for a wonderful and exciting ?ek. Sinrnrplu Guy Tumblin ^