Congratulations
To These Recent
I
iollege Graduates
BELINDA HARMON
B.F.A. from Va. Com
monwealth University.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs. Wil
liam J. Harmon. Her mother is
employed in the Sewing
Department at Fieldale.
CAROLYN ELAINE SMITH
Fieldcrest Grant-In-Aid. B.S.,
intermediate education,
Winston-Salem State University.
Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Roland Smith. Her father is em
ployed at the General Offices,
her mother at Karastan.
IRENE S. NUNNALLY
Fieldcrest Grant-In-Aid. B.S.
in business education, Winston-
Salem State U. Daughter of Mr.
and Mrs. Fred Nunnally. Her
father is employed at the
Blanket Greige Mill.
FRANCELLA TRUEBLOOD
Fieldcrest Grant-In-Aid. B.S.,
business administration, N.C.
Central University. Daughter of
Mrs. Eleanor Trueblood and the
late Marion Trueblood, Sr. who
was employed at N.C. Finishing.
JAMES R. FERGUSON
B.S., University of North
Carolina. His mother, Mrs.
Mary G. Ferguson, is employed
in the Winding Department
Office at the Karastan Rug Mill.
JAMES REID SHINN
B.A. in business administra
tion, Pfeiffer College. Son of Mr.
and Mrs. John R. Shinn. His
father is employed at North
Carolina Finishing.
LARRY DAVID HILL
B.A. in music education, Shen
andoah Conservatory of Music.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Jack B. Hill.
His father is employed at the
Fieldale Towel Mill.
BRENDA GAIL SCOTT
L.P.N., Rowan Technical
Institute. Daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. James W. Scott. Her father
is employed at North Carolina
Finishing.
THOMAS RAY JAMERSON
B.A., economics and history.
Duke University. Son of Mr. and
Mrs. Robert L. Jamerson, both
of whom are employed at the
Fieldale Towel Mill.
RICKY LYNN McBRIDE
Fieldcrest Scholarship. B.S.,
North Carolina State University.
Son of Mr. and Mrs. Curtis S.
McBride. His father is employed
at N.C. Finishing.
AVON F. LONG
Fieldcrest Grant-In-Aid. B.A.
in history, N.C. Central Univer
sity. Daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Thomas Long, Sr. Her father is
employed at NCF.
KATHY WRIGHT PLOGGEIR
Associate in business science,
Patrick Henry Community
College. Daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. John R. Wright. Her father
is employed at Fieldale.
LARRY CHARLES CAUBLE
B.A., accounting, Catawba
College. He is the son of Mr. and
Mrs. Norman Cauble. His father
is employed at North Carolina
Finishing Company.
CLIFFORD L. SMITH
A.A.S., textile technology,
Rockingham Community
College. His mother, Mrs.
Gladys Smith, is employed at the
Draper Sheeting Mill.
Completes 40 Years 34-Year Old Fieldcrest Towel Still In Use
, r. tv
Lewis N. Gover, a loom fixer
at the Blanket Greige Mill,
. completed 40 years of continuous
.service with Fieldcrest on June
.17.
He has received the Fieldcrest
40-year service emblem, a $40
gift certificate for company
merchandise, and a letter of
commendation from President
William C. Battle.
He began employment at the
Blanket Greige Mill in 1935 as a
quill collector. He worked for a
short time as a tie-in-helper in
1938, becoming a weaver later
that same year. He worked as a
weaver until 1946 when he
became a loom fixer, his present
classification.
LEWIS N. GOVER
When Fieldcrest says that it
makes high quality products, it
isn’t just using empty advertis
ing jargon. Mrs. Jewel K. Suber,
of Columbus, Ga., is a case in
point. She has a Fieldcrest bath
towel, shown at right, which she
says was purchased at Harvey’s
Department Store in Nashville,
Tenn., in 1940 or 1941. The towel,
according to Mrs. Suber, has
been in use approximately 60
percent of the time since then
and is still being used.
The label on the towel reads:
Fieldcrest, Certified Quality,
Made in U.S.A., in green letters.
Mrs. Suber’s husband, Earl, is
a Wackenhut security guard at
the Columbus Towel Mill.
MONDAY, JUNE 23, 1975