Safety ... A Moral Obligation The prevention of accidents is a goal worthy of achievement. Free dom from harm is not a privilege given to us: it has to be earned by proper attitudes about protecting ourselves from danger. To strive for the elimination of accidents is a moral obligation imposed upon all of us. Self-preservation is the first law of nature. Do not fail yourself and your fellow man. An accident is even more tragic when you realize that it could have been avoided, that some thing you did or did not do was the sole cause. For example, the size kettle needed cleaning, and you turned on the steam valve before open ing the drain valve; the size boiled out of the kettle, burning you. or your fellow employee. Or, you noticed that a switch box on a loom was loose and did not report it so it could be repaired; after a while it dropped down, causing an electric arc which set fire to the warp, but fortunately the only personal injury was some singed eyebrows. Should you receive an injury, take the simple step of reporting for first-aid treatment, and by so doing keep that “little” injury from turning into something serious through infection caused by neglect. Don’t gamble with your good health by trying to be your own doctor. Work safely because self-preservation means the ability to continue to enjoy not only the good things but the necessities of life as well. And actually, everything is so much easier when done the safe way. — Quills Life Goes Onward . . . Federal Spending Upward There are several senators and representatives still in Congress who began serving in the ’20s and early ’30s when the annual federal ad ministrative budgets were less than $5 billion. Now look: The current budget is $140 billion, and the interest, alone, on the federal debt is $14.2 billion — three times as much as budgets 35-40 years ago. Life goes onward, and spending upward. Safety Shoes Save Foot Of Tie-In Helper The heavy beam cut the leather on the safety shoe but foot was uninjured. Safety shoes recently saved the foot of a Bedspread Mill employee. Wilbur Nance, a tie-in. helper, was removing a beam from a loom when the beam dropped with the rim striking his foot. The heavy beam cut the leather on his safety shoe but the steel cap in the toe of the shoe saved his foot from being severely injured. “I’m thankful that I was wearing safety shoes, otherwise my foot would have really been hurt,” Mr. Nance said. He stated that he thought all tie-in personnel and others w'ho handle beams should wear safety shoes on the job. K. R. Baggett, safety director, said, “This mishap emphasizes once more Wilbur Nance shows how mishap oc curred while taking beam frcm loom. the importance of wearing safety shoes on jobs where the feet are exposed to heavy falling objects. I strongly urge the employees on such jobs to obtain and wear the safety shoes available to them.” Copyright, 1968, Fieldcrest Mills, Inc. Eden, N. C. 27288 Issued Every Other Monday For Employees and Friends of Fieldcrest Mills, Inc. OTIS MARLOWE EDITOR Member, South Atlantic ' Council Of Industrial Editors REPORTING STAFF Alexander Sheeting Mill vliton Pauline Yelfo." Automatic Blanket Plant Bedspread Finishing Mill A”" u'„ni>r Bedspread Mill Edna , Blanket Mill Katherine Turn® Central Warehouse Geraldine Perkin’ Dallas Service Center Barbara Aldrieg Draper Offices Mamie meksoi General Offices Hilda Gropan Gladys Holland, Katherine Maniev Karastan Mill Irene Meek> Karastan Service Center Mary Stephen Karastan Spinning Div Evelyn Beasiej Laurelcrest Carpets Carolyn Bram Midwest Service Center Shirley McCuir Mount Holly Barbara Collin’ Muscogee Mill Mildred Newsom New York Offices Betty Lencse Northeast Service Center Mary Kuipa Nye-Wait Plant Mary Sp.eci^ Sheet Finishing Mill Faye Li9 . Sheeting Mill Ruth Mint® Fieldale Towel Mill Faye Waff®' Winchester Spinning Mill Ann Wils^ Vol. XXVI Mon., April 29, 1968, i>4S£ffVfC£ mNNIVERSARlES Forty Years Ha S. Krantz Finishing Thirty Years , Jesse L. Kennon Blanket Twenty-Five Years , Mary L. Lynch Blank® Noel J. Holt Towe Roma Steve Wall Towe Robert Wilmoth Karasta Mildred C. Price Blank® George A. Whitten Karastan Twenty Years Minnie P. Ram.ey Muscog® Fifteen Years Robert L. Wyatt Finishing Flossie I. Pratt Muscog®® Annie S. Joyner Karastan Spn*' Robert Carden Muscog® Dennis R. Steagall Specif^ William I. Rogers KaraiStan Spi”' James A. Meade Blank® Ten Years Elaine N. Kendrick Specia Kenneth H. White Blank®' Betty J. Clark Karastan Spi”- you’re always at the credit union THE MILL WHIS TL^'