GASTONIA • NORTH CAROLINA AN ALL-AMERICA CITY VOLUME XIII - NUMBER 8 JULY * 1964 Tir«$ton« Your Symbol of Quality and Service Raising of the Stars and ^^J^ipes on Mt. Suribachi in ^orld War II, one of the ex- AM INDEPENDENCE- fAESSASE hibits of the American Wax Museum at Independence Mall in Philadelphia. Here more than 100 figures and some 30 tableaux recreate history's greatest mo ments — and people — in the Legend of America. When Thomas Jefferson Prayed For His Country A LMIGHTY God, who has given us this good land for our J\, heritage, we beseech Thee that we may always prove , ourselves a people mindful of Thy favor and glad to j 0 Thy will. Bless our land with honorable industry, sound ^^rning, and pure manners. ^‘Save us from violence, discord, and confusion; from and arrogance, and from every evil way. Defend our ^berties, and fashion into one united people the multitudes bought hither out of many kindreds and tongues. “Endow with the spirit of wisdom those to whom in , hy Name we entrust the authority of government, that may be justice and peace at home, and that through ?^ed;ence to Thy law, we may show forth Thy praise among nations of the earth, r “In the time of prosperity, fill our hearts with thank- ^mess, in days of trouble, suffer not our trust in Thee to all of which we ask through Jesus Christ our Lord. len.’ ^^ried Fare Rec Program Softball, baseball and golf are Ports in which employees and ^^i^bers of their families are ^ticipating in the plant recrea- program this summer. ^ -^Iso on the schedule this sea- are a community sing with ®ekl y sessions, activities through the Retired Men of Firestone Club, Variety Garden Club of Firestone; and the class es and workshops in ceramics. Firestone playground, with wading pool for children to 12 years of age, and other recrea tional facilities, is in its 10-week season. It is operated by the Gastonia Department of Parks and Recreation. Included in the playground program this season is instruction in arts and crafts. ^*'oduction Manager At UF Meeting ^lant production manager Galligan was among the sel ^^^ted Way volunteer leaders ^jpcted to attend the national j conference for campaign ^ers at Dayton, Ohio in June. u Galligan is chairman of Oct. 8-Nov. 1 Gastonia UF jPpeal which solicits operating ^ d s for UF participating agencies for 1965. This year the UF is seeking a record total of $212,485.77 for support of 26 community welfare-betterment services. The production manager here met in Dayton with 299 other UF campaign chairmen from all over the United States and Can ada. The Firestone company recorded an increase of 25.9 per cent in earnings for the first six months of the current fiscal year. Chairman Harvey S. Firestone Jr. and President Ray mond C. Firestone said both the second quarter and first six months of the fiscal year were the highest sales and earn ings in the company’s history. They reported record sales of $689,444,229 and record estimat ed net income of $33,857,663 for the six months ended April 30. Sales were 7.6 per cent more than the previous record of $641,027,522 during the same period last year. Earnings in creased from $26,889,001 to $33- 857,663 during the first half of 1963 and exceeded the $30,392,- 317 record for the period in 1960. ESTIMATED net income for first six months amounted to $1.18 per share in common stock, compared with 94 cents during the same period a year ago. Pro vision for domestic and foreign taxes on income amounted to $36,050,000 in the first six months this year and $30,700,000 last year. The officers said $3,500,000 has been set aside this year as pro vision for devaluation of assets in foreign countries, compared with $3,142,622 during the first six months of 1963. Sales during the second quar ter totaled a record $356,951,167 compared with the former high of $336,870,699 in February, March and April last year. Record income of $18,284,089 was earned during the quarter, compared with $12,329,371 in the —Turn to page 2 Record Sales And Earnings FIRST SIX-MONTHS PERIOD • Scout Costner displays the Harvey S. Firestone Jr. Award Silver Medallion. With him are Max Robinson (left), his Scout master, and Firestone Textiles general manager Harold Mercer, who presented the award. Ray Costner Is Top Scout “It’s not often that a Boy Scout makes 32 advancements in two years,” said employee relations manager Ralph John son when Gastonia’s outstanding Scout received his award at the Recreation Center last month. There are more than 222,000 persons employed in North Caro lina's 1,077 textile plants. They earn nearly three-quarters of a billion dollars a year. Johnson was referring to Ray Costner, 15-year-old farm boy who is this year’s winner of the Harvey S. Firestone Jr. Award for all-round Scouting excel lence. Chosen from 38 boys nominated for the coveted award, Costner received from general manager Harold Mercer the Silver Medallion, a Certifi cate of Merit, a $100 U.S. Sav ings Bond, and a check for $15.50 to help with expenses for a week at Camp Schiele in Polk county. COSTNER is the 19th Gas- tonia-area boy to win the Fire- —More on page 3 A Fair in the Highlands LOOKING AROUND FROM CMAP FIRESTONE Company-operated Camp Firestone, nest ling deep in the Blue Ridge Mountains, is in its 29th season offering employees and their families rest-recreation in a lake-and-forest setting. At Bridgewater-Nebo on Lake James, Camp Firestone is an ideal “leave- your-cares-behind” facility in one of the country’s most-visited highland playgrounds. And it’s a good point from which to make sightseeing tours of a far-flung mountain domain—all no more than a few hours tra vel from Marion. Going Back Chiltoskey, Cherokee Indian wood- carver. Figure at left is of a Cherokee Eagle Dancer representing those in "Unto These Hills" outdoor drama at Cherokee. Chiltoskey and pot ter Tom Case of Arden (right) are among regular artisans who show their skills at the Craftsmen's Fair of the Southern Highlands. Asheville.—NC Travel Information Division photos. Typical of annual visitor events in the area is the Craftsmen’s Fair of the Southern Highlands at Asheville. The 17th annual Fair is July 13-17.