Tanner Kalervo Miettinen ' ■ • ■. Visitor from Finland are a very kind and gen- People”, Kalervo Miettinen, " Mustrial Life In Finland And U. S. (Contrasted By Visiting Textile Man textile man from Finland, said ! ' and gave particular attention to during his visit to Fieldcrest * Where he toured many of the Hr ere 'JUality testing system which he de- as the best he had seen any- ^^®ttinen, who Is associated with .j^men Trikoo OY/AB in Tampere, is spending six months in the ‘j^ States on a - scholarship from a technical foundation, an agency f, ® government. 'j, ® visiting mill man said Suomen is a tricot knitting firm making of the knit goods in Finland. “OY/AB” following the name ,iv 4-1. % I . - company is incorporated, he Suomen Trikoo produces full hosiery, bathing suits, under- ’ Sweaters and other fine knitted *cs. S).y ■ Miettinen has visited the various W ® centers of the United States in- the New England and Philadel- l(,o®^eas as well as the mills in the W ' He has visited Lowell Textile Lowell, Mass., the Rhode School of Design, Massachusetts V Technology, Cambridge, ■l«th ’ ^°rth Carolina State College and College in addition to his visit tt|® heading textile companies. poitimenting on his first trip to Mr. Miettinen said he was impressed with the up-to-date textile machinery of this coun- With the excellent employee re- ® in the industry. The standard 0 Vr -r^ ^DAY, may 3, 1954 unusually whole of of living here, he said, is high as compared to the Europe. In Finland, he said, very few people own automobiles. Of his company’s 3,- 000 employees only about 20 have cars. Mr. Miettinen’s father, a mill superin tendent, rides a bicycle to work. Bi cycles are popular in Finland even on long trips. A tremendous parking rack for bicycles is maintained at mills, Mr. Miettinen said. He said few American cars are used in Finland, most autos being of English or German make. These are of rela tively low power, he said, in order to provide better gasoline mileage. He said gasoline was expensive and was a factor in the small degree of auto ownership in his native country. National Magazines (Continued from page one) and LIVING FOR YOUNG HOME MAKERS for June contain ads on our solid-color towels showing all 13 colors. Karastan’s national advertising in cludes pattern No. 779 featured in full- page colored ads in the April HOUSE BEAUTIFUL, and the May HOUSE & GARDEN. Karastan pattern No. 781 is advertised in a full-page colored ad in BETTER HOMES & GARDENS for April and HOUSE & GARDEN for May. Report Shows Men Stay Active After Age Of 65 Contrary to the general impression that age 65 usually marks the end of productive life, a relatively large pro portion of American men past that age are still actively at work, the Metropol itan Life Insurance Company’s statistic ians report. Of all men at ages 65 to 69, fully three-fifths are gainfully employed, and at ages 70 to 74 the proportion is about two-fifths, according to estimates de rived from Census Bureau data. Even among those at 75 and over, one in five is still working. A larger proportion of those work ing after 65 are self-employed than is the case at the younger ages, and the proportions employed as farmers and farm managers, in executive positions in business, or as service workers like wise are greater than for the years prior to age 65. This increase in the proportion of service workers reflects the tendency of older men to take such lighter jobs as watchmen and guards. It is noted that about one-fifth of those working at the advanced ages are in part-time employment, and that about one-sixth of those employed after age 65 do not prefer or cannot accept full-time work. “The chances of survival to the older ages have increased markedly, and to make adequate provision for this per iod calls for a program of careful plan ning and savings during the productive years,” the statisticians comment. UnriMiMftMt I 1926 DRAPER TEAM—The picture above was loaned to the Mill Whistle by Mrs. Walter Braswell of Blanket Spooling and shows the Draper baseball team in 1926. Seated left to right are; the catcher, Walter Braswell, who died in 1953; J. U. Newman, Jr., Noel Shelton; Tootsie Swift; Lem Shelton; George Holland. Standing: Bill Jones, Leonard Stultz, Clarence Combs, Howard Sheppard, Fred Hall, Furman Holland.