Newspapers / The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle … / April 27, 1953, edition 1 / Page 8
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FOR t THE OIRlSi KEEP AN EYE ON LEATHER for decor in your home. "Leather in Decoration,” a show by twelve top American decorators, which will be presented to the public in depart ment stores across the country in 1953, high-lights new colors in upholstery leather. You’ll see new leather colors like American Beauty, Shrimp Pink, Blue Spruce and Tortoise Shell. Genuine leather in these colors is being used for everything from upholstery to floor coverings, screens and walls. Traditional tooling designs on leather have been replaced by patterns such m tiny gold bees on white leather, underscale fleur de lis on powder blue leather, and delicate gold pin stripes on a soft pink. m PINEAPPLE SLICES TO THE RESCUE when you’re at a loss for a colorful, tangy salad to set off your me^. For a salad-in-a-jiffy to go with any main-course dish, place a slice of golden pineapple on crisp salad greens, then a slice of picklei beet, and a slice of mild onion. A creamy dressing may be made quickly by combining two parts of French dressing with one part of mayonnaise. .. .You’ll have pineapple for flavor, beet slices for color and onion for tang IT’S HELLO TO THE HIGHWAYS, as millions of Americans take to their cars on sunny days. Be it a Sunday spin or a two weeks’ tour, it’s smart to have your car prepared for little emergencies. Be sure the spare is in good repair, the tool kit complete, a box of cleansing tissues in the side compartment. And don’t forget a box of baking soda in the glove compartment. Baking soda quickly extinguishes flash fires. Sprinkled on a damp cloth, it also is a first-rate cleanser when bugs and road film gum up the windshield. PIPING-HOT CHEESE BREAD PUFFS — new and different for a bridal shower, other parties, too. Here is how Barbara Starr, Consumer Service Director for Tip-Top Bakers makes them. (She says they’re easy to make — can be whipped up at a moment s notice.) Cut two circles from each 6 slices of Tip-Top bread and - —- arrange them on a cookie sheet. Combine 3 tablespoons of milk and 6 ounces of cream cheese. Add 1 beaten egg, 1 teaspoon grated onion, 1 tablespoon chopped chives and .. . hw,jii- salt to taste. Mix thoroughly. Pile the cheese mixture on )) , the bread circles; bake in a hot oven, 450 degrees, until lightly browned on top. * * * ANY FAMILY TRIP HOLDS MORE FUN AND ACTIVITY than you can crowd into one or two random snapshots. So take your snaps in series — the kind of series that tells where and when — and who had so much fun doing what. If it’s a picnic, picture making the sandwiches, loading the car, building the campfire. Later, snap the whole gang around the picnic spread, and the youngsters grinning over their hotdogs. Snap them often for a full photo story. Forget composition, but keep close to the center of interest. Accidents Don^t Just Happen By H. E. WILI.IAMS Safety Director A lot of people think accidents ju®* happen—that they are due simply “bad luck”. Or when a person barely escapes injury, he feels he was “lucW- Of course, most of these ideas spriDS from ancient superstitions— that blacK cats crossing the path are an omen. ® misfortune, that horse shoes and four leaf clovers bring good luck. Actually, statistics accumulated by ex perts prove that 98 out of every 100 ac cidents are avoidable. This leads us to the conclusion that we, as individuals, can -con trol accidents by making safety ^ ^ of life. To accomplish this, we form safe working habits and practic them every day. We, at Fieldcrest, like other cofflP®' nies and communities with outstanding safety experience, have proved that aC' cidents can be controlled. The fact we have cut down our accident quency from 10.01 some year ago to !• in 1952 has shown that something done about accidents and that they ca way ted be prevented. Countless examples can be ci where injuries were prevented becauS the individual had formed safe workiP® habits such as: a. Wearing goggles when using eW®” wheel. b. Wearing safety shoes when hea'^^ objects are being handled. c. Wearing protective apron, rubp gloves and face shield when worki® with acids or injurious chemicals. d. Wearing respirator wherever cessive dust is present. e. By never leaving tools or parts ladders or overhead where they fall on someone below. ^ f. By stopping machinery bef0‘^ cleaning, oiling or adjusting, unless SP®' cifically instructed otherwise by sup®‘ visor. f g. By wiping up oil, grease, or wai from the floor. j Accidents are never intentional ai*^ they are never expected. But nearly a accidents are caused and most of the can be avoided. Accident preventi® requires team work and requires eration from each of us. If we this attitude—that accidents can avoided—and start making safety ° way of life, we have taken an import^^ step in the prevention of on-the-J'’ - and off-the-job injuries. FIELDCREST MILL WHISTl^^
The Fieldcrest Mill Whistle (Spray, N.C.)
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April 27, 1953, edition 1
8
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