University of South Carolina Libraries
MAY IS. 1954 SPRING I t HL.? | n QUEEN AND COURT?Queer sight cs they posed on the raised ] shown above. .^ik!5 -'j Bl'TB K ATTENDANTS?This photogra opening ceremonies of the Lydia of the huge crowd which watche< i i i QUEEN AND ATTENDANT daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Richard recent Spring Festival and was a1 daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Claude I Mrs. Land Named To Committee Mrs. Joe Land. Clinton Mills Community Director, has been named chairman of the S. C. Religious Education Committee of the Eastern J5iar. The purpose of the committee is to select 13 children from the entire state who are interested in a college education in religious vocation training but who are unable to afford this education. TI FESTIVAL P! ^ | ' H mmm; " "~n 1 ? _ __ i Gwenda Tucker and her attendan alatform overlooking the Spring Fe L ^ 7 ph shows the atttendants following Community Spring Festival. In the t 1 the event. ?Lovely Gwenda Tucker, right, Moore of Lydia. presided over the (tended by Margaret Madden, left, Madden. Others serving on the committee with Mrs. Land are Miss Claire Richburg. Mrs. Evelyn Parks and Mrs. Vernon Kiser. y^FXTPV !! ^Bjj.4:7 Tbe worlds best *?*</ safety device bos v j\ just been discovered! We qII have one ond it ts not patented. It is located, about nine inches above your collar button and it is NOT a bard bat.? Use it ^rte it live lonper I <E CLOTHMAKER ICTURES A 11/ (KRi ts made a colorful and beautiful stival at Lydia M'lls May 7 as I juBBBLLL^a&?ae [ Queen Gwenda Tucker in the >ackground may be seen a portion * JA H /B mL\ \ r CROWN BEARER?Jo Carol Terry, attractive daughter of Bill and Edna Terry, carried out her duties as Crown Bearer in fine style at the Spring Festival. I II DADS AND DAUGHTERS?T held a Dad-Daughter box supper < organization. THE MAYPOLE?Wrapping the ight in any May Day ceremony and ^ydia Spring Festival as shown hen H^hpr ^ jL 1 MILK MAIDS?Following out 1 Spring Festival, these bright Milk 1 entertaining dance. .7 Stubborn .1 7 ni Attends Movies ( Ever hear the story about the stubborn man who at- i tends the movies but always j takes off his glasses? The ] entertainment is there, but he refuses to accept and enjoy it. ? Crazy? No more so than the \ employee who will not use ( his machine or equipment to ( its full production. He claims he'd "just put more profit into the pockets of the owners." I He's got his pockets mixed; : actually he'd put more into his own. All history proves that no i one can be paid for long ex- < cept out of what he produces ?what he adds to the world's goods. The more he produces. the more he can and will be paid. (There are short-lived his is the tremendous turn-out of is part o! the national observance o 7 it Maypole always is a colorful it was even more so at the 1954 the English theme of the Lydia viaids presented an unusual and jpsets to this age-old rule. Dut they never last long.) And the more a man produces. the lower its cost, rhat means more people will t>uv it. and so the worker's job will be safer as well as Higher paid. Stubbornness may give some people a strange sort of twisted satisfaction, but it can deprive them of a great ieal, too?including wages. Don't let your pride get inflated?you may have to swallow it someday. * # # Kindness is one thing you can't give away. It a1 ways comes back. ? ii, J _ i lini v^un^icaa 11 let v uu something about hidden taxes. Hope they don't just hide them better. U u Clinton Campfire Girls as thay ( the anniversary of the Campfire