United Giving Is Economy For You Thirty years ago, hay for horses appeared as an item cm a midwest Community Chest budget. Today, that town is surrounded by a net work of super-highways. Times change and with them so do each community’s needs. Just as towns and cities have expanded so, too, has the network orf health and welfare services necessary to serve the young, the aged, the hand icapped and the troubled. A way had to be found to serve them all and to serve them well. To get places faster, man invented the horseless carriage. To serve health and welfare needs more efficiently and economically, he de vised the United Giving idea. Each fall millions of Americans join their Community Fund, to help raise money to support vital voluntary health and welfare agencies. This efficient, simple method saves contributors and volunteers endless time and effort. Best of all, it makes more money available to the participating agencies, for they do not have to conduct overlap ping, separate campaigns. Furthermore, each agency participating in your Community Fund has had its services and dollar needs screened and approved by a committee of citizen volunteers. With just one contribution you help the Boy and Girl Scouts, Boys Club, Y.M.C.A.s, Red Cross, Salvation Army, Rescue Squad and the many fine causes served through Carolinas United. And, fortunately, you can do it in an easy, convenient way through payroll deductions. Fieldcrest again has agreed to make payroll deductions of Community Fund pledges on a year-around basis. This means that you can afford to be generous in your pledge and have the installments spread over an entire year, making the individual deductions so small you’ll hardly miss them. When your co-worker approaches you for your pledge, think of the many people who will be helped by your Community Fund contri bution, and give generously. It’s a giant economy package! 21 Blanket Weavers On Quality Honor List of quality weaving and to give recogni tion to weavers with outstanding re cords. Twenty-one weavers continue on the quality honor list at the Blanket Mill with four new names having been add ed for the six months ending Septem ber 30. Mae Hawks, Otha Scott and Mack Shelton were added to the list in the plain or dobby division and Lester Am- burn was added in the jacquard classi fication. The listing of the quality weavers is part of a program at the Blanket Mill designed to emphasize the importance QUALITY HONOR LIST Weavers Plain Lessie Chilton Otra Chilton W. J. Combs Kate Fuller Mattie Hall Dillard Harris Mae Hawks Lillian Holt Luther Hundley Sally Isley Garland Samuels Mack Shelton Otha Scott Howard Vestal Jacquard Weavers Lester Amburn Julius Murphy Grover Corum Wm. J. Sanders Gladys Harris James Vernon Lee Cochran In order to make the quality honor list, a weaver must work for six months without a major quality defect. When a weaver on the list has a ma jor quality defect, his name is dropped from the list. Other weavers are added as they attain six months of quality work. The quality honor list for the six months ending September 30 is shown in the accompanying box. Buy- Sell - Swap FOR SALE: Browning automatic (Sweet 16) 16-gauge shotgun. Price $80.00. See J. W. Shockley or call MAin 3-3355. WANTED couple or settled lady to live in house with the owner, a widow. Three - room apartment, completely furnished. Private bath. Mrs. Moir Janney, 125 North Patrick Street Leaksville. ’ WANTED; 10-inch bench saw. See Jim Robertson or telephone MAin 3-2493 after 5 p. m. THE MILL. WHI Issued Every Other Monday For EniP' and Friends of Fieldcrest Mills, i” Spray, N. C. ,,, Copyright, 1960, Fieldcrest Mills,_ ''H OTIS MARLOWE EDITOR Member, American Association Industrial Editors Vol. XIX Monday, Oct. 10, 1960 SERVICE I mNNIVERSARi^ Forty Years Edgar D. Arnold Thirty-Five Years Edith W. Sparks Sh^' Eliza S. Barrow Elsie L. Hankins i Thirty Years James E. Burnett Bl* Howard L. Denney Howard T. Edwards Raleigh L. Rodgers William J. Thornton ^ . Twenty-Five Years , William S. Martin BedsP, Cosby Wray Womble E. Black William S. Hundley Central ' John B. Hairston Carl D. Rhodes .... Domestics Virgil A. Cochran ® i W. Rawley Turner Sh® Twenty Years j Clara C. Alley Beds^ Bascom S. Hale ■ Dollie M. Kennon Aubrey B. Purdy Bed®( Ruth S. Talbert Mae B. Underwood ^ Carrie B. Fain Robert S. Lamar Central j Lessie B. Rickman Fifteen Years , -x John W. Arnall, Jr Clara V. Farmer Automa*^^|| Mary L. Fitz General Ruth H. Rippy William R. Jones Manuel M. Spencer ■ • ^jjii Muriel S. Tulloch .. Bedspread fj L. Mae Anderson Lillie H. Foster • .(( Charles H. Cofer Bed®L Agnes T. Pilson ■ J Foncie N. Robertson j Paul O. Tucker Garnetta H. Turner William T. Gregory Ten Years Jerome J. Bedell, Jr 9 Noel c. Odell • ^ Dillard M. Powell Ada J. Tucker Brack H. Wiles f. J Zendale P. Lemons .. Automat' Frank G. McGhee ' James W. Talley • V,i Frank M. Hopkins IllS THE MILL W

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