Buy.Sell.Swap Recent Retiree! FOR SALE: Two oil circulators. Large one has fan and will heat three rooms. Small one will heat one room. Call 623- 2092 before noon or after 5 p.m. FOR SALE; Queen Anne style matching buffet and china closet. $30 each or $50 for both. Call Fieldcrest extension 53304 or 623-8916 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE: 1972 Starcraft Starmaster 6 three-burner gas stove, ice box. Call 623-9806. WANTED TO BUY: Set of bunk beds and a % size (48” wide) box springs. Call Fieldcrest extension 2275 or 627-1638 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE: 1972 gold Suzuki motorcycle. 550 model. $100 cash and take up payments. Contact Becky Blackburn, Fieldcrest extension 7765 before 5 p.m. or call 635-1048 after 5 p.m. Frank Cox shows where accident happened. Saved From Foot Injury FOR SALE: Large size refrigerator, in good con dition. Also a half-bed, prac tically new with innersprings. May be seen at 219 Clifton Street, Eden, or telephone 627- 1681. Another Fieldcrest employee was recently saved from serious foot injury by wearing safety shoes. Cox Frank Cox, a warp hanger in the Weave Room at the Draper Sheeting Mill, was removing a 270-pound loom beam from a loom on July 16, when the beam slipped and fell on his foot. Due to the fact that Mr. was wearing safety shoes at the time, his foot was not injured. Mr. Cox has been nominated for membership in the Golden Shoe Club, a national organiza tion made up of people who have escaped foot injury by wearing safety shoes. FOR SALE; One white French provincial dresser and one twin bed to match. Perfect for girl with small room. Very good condition. $50. Call 623- 2025 after 5 p.m. FOR SALE: Set of Encyclopedia Britannica with yearbooks and bookcase. Very good con dition. $200. Call Fieldcrest extension 53383. UF Drive Will Open Oct. 7 Three Years Old T. P. WEBSTER, JR. (Continued from Page One) throughout the week of October 7. The gifts by Fieldcrest employees and the company are again expected to be an important factor in insuring the success of the overall campaign. Fieldcresters, along with employees of other firms in Eden, will be asked to pledge on the ‘‘Fair Share” basis. For the convenience of employees and upon their authorization, the company will make payroll deductions over a 12-month period to collect the pledges. Payroll deductions authorized by employees will not begin until the first pay period in January, 1975. If an employee has no work during a particular week, he will not be required to make up the missed deduction. Employees who are signed up for the Eden United Fund deductions on a continuing basis, of course, will not be solicited in the campaign. To reduce the work involved in an annual campaign, employees in recent years have been asked to make pledges on a continuing basis and large numbers of employees are signed up under this arrangement. The United Fund agencies and the amount allocated to each are: Girl Scouts, $4,515; Carolinas United, $8,123.39; Red Cross, $11,760.39; Boys Club, $27,000; Boy Scouts, $16,240; YMCA $57,000; Tri-City Rescue Squad,’ $6,500; Retarded Children, $3,000; Salvation Army, $7 700 ’ 4-H Club, $1,100; Child Develop ment Center, $4,000; and contingencies, $18,061.22. The amount for contingencies is to be used to fulfill pledges for those who, due to moving away, illness or other such circum stances, are unable to pay their pledges. The fund is also used to meet emergency needs which may arise during the year. ■ ■1 I /' Law Mrs. Cassandre Renee „ celebrated her third birthday on August 4 at a party given to her by her parents, Mr. and Fred Ray Law, Jr. Her mother, Janice, production clerk at the Sheet Finishing Mill office. Paternal grandparents are Mr. and Mrs. Ray F. Law and Mr. and Mrs Ernest L. Clifton. IS a Long Service (Continued From Page Two) FOR SALE: Bunk-size bed. $15. Also black and white television set with good picture. $10 627-4031. Call FOR SALE: Tappan gas range with built-in oven and broiler. Like new, used only short while. Very reasonable price Call 623-6930. wrapper at the Blanket Finishing. She became a timekeeper in 1950 and a payroll clerk at the Draper Sheeting Mill in 1956. Mr. Ledbetter began continuous service September 15, 1934, at Alexander Sheeting Mill, worked as a watchman and fire man and oiler until becoming'a tape bonder and cleaner in 1972. on the He JOHN S. CRAFT Columbus 37 Years MYRTIS MARTIN Foremost 8 Years ANNIE B. SWINNEY Fieldale 24 Years JAMMIE F. MCLAWHI Karastan Spinning 18 Years LUTHER R. NEWBERRY Columbus 22 Years MAMIE M. SAWYE* Fieldale 24 Years DEWITT W. SWICEGOOD N. C. Finishing 41 Years ROY MASSEY Columbus 18 Years THE MILL WHI