University of South Carolina Libraries
6 Pictures 0 WnM -? DRAINAGE LINES ? Pipe crew workmen's safety. EXCAVATION WORK ? This h Things I Wish I Had Known Before J I Reached "Forty " 1. What I was going to do for a living ? and what my lifework would likely be. 2. That my health after thirty depended to a large degree on what I had put in my stomach before I was twenty-one. 3. How to take care of money. 4. The commercial asset of being neatly and sensibly dressed. 5. That a man's habits are mighty hard to change after twenty-one. 6. That a harvest depends upon seeds sown. 7. That you can't get some Viiv-wT for llllllg M.KJI UV^LIHIIg. 8. That the world would give me just about what I deserved. 9. That the sweat of my brow would earn my bread. 10. That a thorough education not only pays better wages than hard labor, but it also brings the best of everything else. 11. That honesty is the only policy. 12. That value of absolute truthfulness is everything. 13. The folly of not taking T f Bailey Plant Prog . /M^Br BJBSjf^J 4^MNW^ HrWc^^^Ur ?|i RBBBBSSBSfiinHP lay drain lines 16 feet down. Ditches i r M tuge drag line moves a yard of dirt v older people's advice. 14. That everything my mother wanted me to do was right. 15. That Dad wasn't an old E fogey after all. 16. What it really meant to father and to mother to rear their son. 17 TKo .u.. a >. x 111. canicaa U1 tilt: UJJportunity and joy of serving a fellow man. ?Author Unknown Textile Industry Is Ranked Second In Industrial Support Of Education Textile companies are the nation's second most generous supporters of education, according to a survey by the National Industrial Conference Board. The survey shows that in 1964, the most recent year for which complete figures are ^ available, textile companies gave an average of 0.77 per cent of their pre-tax net in come to education institutions ^ or programs. Printing and publishing companies were first with an average of 0.91 per cent of net income before T taxes and electrical machinery companies were third with an g average of 0.53 per cent. c< HE CLOTHMAKEH Improvec .... at a more ra month show project. sloped for PREPARING FO thing can go up." ^ construction. I vith ease. PATTERNS OF S Hindsight Versus Foresight veryone has 20 20 hindsight: The student who knows the correct answer after he has turned in his exam papers. Tho MnnHav mnrnirin ov_ J ...w?...w6 perts who point out how the week end basketball or football games should have been played. The space scientist who discovered what went wrong with the rocket after it had to be destroyed. The lawyer who has lost his case. We all look back and think f how we could have lived ur lives or handled our jobs ifferently. Then, we may ssign oursleves with the comlent, "Well, there's nothing lat can be done about it!" ut there is! Today is the time to review ie past ? don't put it off. hen, focus on the future with ) 20 foresight to plan for reater achievements and acimplishments. I weather conditions are permitti pid pace on the Bailey Plant. Th something of the progress. Some IT:: YJvSflllHF*^ R CONCRETE FOOTINGS ? "Mu( Several thousand cubic yards of c TEEL ? Steel girders are easily set "AMAN MA BUT HE'S A Famous American author, Bruce Barton tells us how this famous Salvation Army slogan hor?aiv D "Back in the closing days of World War I, I had the honor of collaborating with Evangeline Booth in the preparation of an article for "The American Magazine." The editor was not entirely satisfied with the title first suggested and asked me to think of another. I took a lead pencil and wrote across the top of the proof: "A man may be down but he's never out." So it was that with no When Is A Safe Not A S When it is seen ? but not reac When it is read ? but not app When it is known ? but not c When it is deliberately violate< When it is winked at, sneered When it is not accepted in a sp manship. MAY, 1966 ng construction crews to move ese photographs taken at mid125 men are working on the jjp^pL i r* :h must go down, before anyoncrete will be poured during into position by a giant crane. Y BE DOWN 1EVER OUT" mental effort on my part, and merely by one of those freaks of mind that are so surprising and inexplicable, I became responsible for the slogan which The Army has carried around the world. I presume that of all the millions of words that have flowed from my pencil and typewriter in 35 years, these few are by all odds the most famous and enduring. I am proud indeed to have this association with the work of the Army, and the privilege of the friendship of so many of its leaders." 1 ty Rule afety Rule? I. lied. >beyed. J. at and finally ignored. ririt of cooperation and sports