Four FIELDCREST MILL WHISTLE March 31, 1947 FIELDCREST MILL WHISTLE Issued Every Two Weeks By and For the Employees of FIELDCREST MILLS Division of MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY, INC., Spray, North Carolina OTIS MARLOWE. Editor ------- WALTER GARDNER, Photographer REPORTERS: Ada Jones, Katherine Turner, Charlotte Martin, Glennice Jones, Beulah McBride, Frances Watson, Mildred Saunders, Virginia Hurd, Faye Warren, Geraldine Hubbard, Evelyn Lewis, Kathleen Barrow, Hazel Carter, Lois Shelton, Mamie Link, and W. E. Wigmore. Murphy Back After Adventurous Job It is not often that local boys leave Fieldcrest Mills and go with other tex tile concerns but when they do they usu ally make good wherever they go. A case in point is that of Junius Murphy, form erly with the Rayon Mill, who is now plant superintendent of Roanoke Weav ing Company, a division of Burlington Mills. After attending Leaksville High School, Junius began working lor the Marshall Field and Company in 1927. For 15 years he worked at various jobs in the Weave Room and was well known and highly respected by all his fellow employees. During this time he studied textiles for seven years at the Vocational School, took an International Correspondence Course and attended an extension course at Roanoke University. In 1942 he left the Company for a position as assistant superintendent with Roanoke Weaving Company and was promoted to plant superintendent in 1943. One of his most adventurous assign ments was in 1945 and 1946 when he left Roanoke to go to South America and supervise the opening of a Rayon plant in Medellin, Colombia. His task accomplished, he returned to Roanoke Weaving Company in January of this year to resume his position as plant superintendent. Junius is the son of Mr. J. M. Mur phy, a loom fixer in the Rayon Mill. He also has a brother, Paul Murphy, in Rayon Preparation. —V. H. Report immediately all unsafe condi tions which you yourself cannot correct. Inform your supervisor. Prompt action may avert an accident. Do You Remember These Old-timers at Woolen Mill? Foremen and assistant foremen (they were then called overseers and second hands) at the Woolen Mill along about 1918 or 1919 are shov/n in the old photograph reproduced above. Standing, left to right, are Charlie Roberts (deceased), Frank Eanes, A. D. Patterson, Tom Baker (deceased), Charlie Thomasson, and Lee Eanes. Seated, left to right, are B. W. Self (deceased), L. J. Baker, O. R. Clark (de ceased), William Stevenson, J. W. Roach, and W. J. Slayton. W. A. Blackburn Has Unusual Record In Rayon Weave Room ^ W. A. Blackburn, “Willie” to us, a loom fixer in the Rayon Mill, has a record that surpasses many others. Willie came to work for Marshall Field and Com pany 43 years ago, learning to weave. What would now seem like a very crude way, he learned to weave outing flannel on looms that were p r a c t i c a 11 y all wood. He has spent all these years of con tinuous service in me Weaving Depart ment, alone, without a lost time acci dent. Aside from a safe working record, he has set an example of dependability. He is above all a person of never fail ing good humor. Willie is a member of the 25-Year Club and a charter member of the Carolina Council. When away from the job, spare time finds him in his small workshop at home, his chief hobby. — M. S. W. A. Blackburn The Bleachery (By Charlotte Martin) Hilda Joyce, Annie Glass, and Elice Smith have returned from a week’s stay in Florida. Mrs. Pauline Hylton will leave Friday for San Diego, California, to join her husband, H. T. Hylton, Jr., who has been overseas. They will make their home in San Diego. Haywood Meeks, from Emory Uni versity, visited his mother, Mrs. P. G. Meeks, during the week-end. Mr. and Mrs. Clarence Beach, Jr., an nounces the birth of a son, Clarence Maynard, III, March 14 at Leaksville Hospital. She will be remembered as Dorothy Martin. Grandmother, Prud ence DeHart, works in Bleachery. Mr. and Mrs. James Clark and chil dren spent the week-end with the lat ter’s mother, Mrs. Zack Brame, at Beth any. We are sorry to have the following folks out sick: Mary Ward, Mary Craig, and Lillie Newman. Hurry back, girls; we miss you. Did You Know? One cotton fiber is made up of 35 layers of cellulose.