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NOVEMBER, 1961 MEET Oi MBBaBgg3E==i '"*" L Time?All people have the same amount of time to use ?10.080 minutes each week. On a five day week, we devote ony 2,400 min*; r?q ffl WflJ'k Rv f?Mr*?fnl nl'jnnino UIC'3 10 WUi " "J Cmi we can make every minute productive and keep them out of the grasp of the "Octopus of Waste". iki HJHj srauxc Supplies?Every person uses form of operating supplies clay?brooms, files, drills, p and hacksaw blades to na few. By requesting only i sary supplies and by taking care of those on hand, wast be kept at a minimum. Equipment?Brol equipment can't i purchased to do time and ma tern to put the equi) operating eondit care of the equip help fight off t Waste". Lydia News . . . ried October 28 at the home of a sister and brother-in-law, Mr. and Mrs. Rav Crisp, in Laurens by the Rev. John Water. They are now living on Airport Road in Clinton. Mr. and Mrs. James Stewart. Jimmy and Johnny were dinner guests Sunday, October 22, of Mr. Stewart's sister and brother-in-law in Kings Mountain, North Carolina. They also visited his hrntlior vvliiln in IMnrtti fnrn. lina. Mr. and Mrs. James Stewart tfave Mrs. Lora Waldrep a surprise birthday dinner Sunday October 29. at their home Mr. and Mrs. Bobby Waldrep and Debbie also attended. We welcome Mary Lec UR OCTO 1\ E HT Did you ever r dinner, and perha who would give 1 on his plate? Mos we want our your trying to protect topus of Waste". It's ODViOUS tuc or our work, and ; Clinton-Lvdia Mil been profit. This lost profit it been eliminatec jobs more secure. In the pictures n instances where v The elimination c us in the years t through loss, only we go forward or of Waste". MM me a good e can ten Jfip Jo the job it and additional E^3j ^SB lis must be used fjfl anient back into 8^3) jg ion. Take good uncnt and it will he "Octopus of Hughes back after being out several weeks due to an on oration. Also Daisy Moore after being out 5 days with a virus infection. Mr. and Mrs. Lake McDowell of Edgefield visited Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Moore recently. Rev. and Mrs. Leon Lancaster and daughter, Nancy, of Simpsonville visited Daisy Moore Tuesday night, October 31. Rev. Lancaster is Daisy's pastor. James Moore, Jammie Pinson and Carolyn and some of I r..: 1. ~ * ? 1 - i -i hit mil inenus tiiieiiueci inc i football game in Clinton. Mr. and Mrs. B. P. Lark. Joe and Shirley spent the day ' Sunday, November 5, with Mr. Lark's mother and father in Easley, S. C. THE CLOTHMAKER >PUS OF 3UPPUIES EQUIPMENT eprimand your youngster for nc ps remind him of the starving C heir eye teeth to have what hi t of us have, at one time or anot igsters to be strong and healthy ourselves personally against th it none of us want waste m cithe yet. every day we can see dollar Is through waste . . . waste that . could have benefited all of us i. Surely this money could hav below are examples of some of vaste occurs. You can think of >f these and other losses can b< .0 come. There is no progress 4i c: 4 t 1' ? a 1- _j iiiiuugn jjium. 11 s up 10 eacn oi backward in the fight against t lK as HMM Who's the Goat? It's always the other fellow's fault regardless of the charge. Why? Because the expression "don't blame me" is a common occurrence in our everyday vocabulary and threatens even further to become a natural response. Scapegoating was actually an accepted practice in ancient times, as recorded in the Bible, for an individual would transfer his sin onto a goat and then kill the goat. But this custom was not intended to be applicable in human relationships. Somehow the practice has become misplaced. Today, sins are transferred WASTE I PROJECT >t eating his !hinese Kids e is leaving r our homes s lost out of made our the common a lot more. ?nefit all of or security Personal Injuries f us whether wasteful not only he "Octonus fering hut in do] ne uciopus In ig5g for inst cost of accidental United States an billion. "Safety F dends by starving L .I i sjC. ? _jH to another individual who i serves as the "eoat " ? 0 ? However, there is a marked diffeience in the knowledge of behavior from the days of old as disclosed by findings in the field of psychology. Psychologists know that not only does the scapegoat suffer unnecessarily, but also the guilty person who has not learned to face his own shortcomings. It seems that in order to 1 benefit from experiences? 1 notn good and bad?they must bo acknowledged. "Giving 1 them away" only postpones ] the same problem which may ' be twice as difficult to handle. 1 Before you select the goat? make sure your motives do 1 not involve prejudice, greed, selfishness, hate, or pride ... for you may be the ultimate goat. s ^njj roduct?Cloth which meets all uality standards never goes into aste. From cotton to cloth the Dctopus of Waste" reaches out nu uiuuiua u w a* at uui pi UUULI. j \ , ;:*r - J ? Injuries are in human sufllars and cents. ance. me loiai injuries in the lounted to $2.1 'irst" pays diviI the "Octopus". ngredients ? (As our women oiks would call many of the iroducts and commodities we ise) ? Such as corn starch ised in our size are expensive terns. It is vitally important that re do not waste any commodity . . be it air, oil, grease or anyhing else we use directly or ndirectlv in the manufacturing if our product . . . Superior Quality Print Cloths. Remember -Waste Not . . , Want Not. A Sense of Wonder The most beautiful thing ve can experience is the mvserious. It is the source of all rue art and science. He to vhom the emotion is a stranger. who can no longer pause o wonder and stand wrapped n awe. is as good as dead: his ?yes are closed. The insight nfrv VIA *-V-* * ? IIIU 111*. IIH OIC1V U1 111C. 1,'UU" aled though it be with fear, aas also given rise to religion, ro know what is impenetrable to us really exists, manifesting itself as the highest wisiom and the most radiant beauty, which our dull faculties can comprehend only in their most primitive forms ? this knowledge, this feeling is at the center of true religiousness. ?Albert Einstein