Four THE MILL WHISTLE Tli« MILL WHISTLE Issued Every Two Weeks By and For the Employees of MARSHALL FIELD & COMPANY MANUFACTURING DIVISION SPRAY, NORTH CAROLINA J. U. NEWMAN, JR., Editoi August 27, 1945 WE HAVE BEEN LIVING in a house that no longer stands—the House of War. We must now move to another house — the House of Peace. This moving business has many complications and now, more than at any other time during the past four years, we must keep busy until the moving is completed. True, Victory is ours, and a lot of people feel that the task is over. Nothing could be further from the truth. As President Truman said in announcing the Jap surrender, “we have a hard task ahead.” That task, as we understand it, is in individual cooperation (by every single one of us) with industry, business and the government. Fighting is over, but that’s all. The war will not be completely won until all of our fighting men are back home and until the country once again is living, thinking, working peace. As in the past, we must help feed and clothe the world—or most of it. We must do that while working our way back to normalcy. This certainly is no time to let-up in cur work. On the contrary it is more important than ever that we stick to our .jobs, work as hard, or harder, than ever before. That should be a real pleasure, for now we can real ly look forward to peace and prosperity, secure in the knowledge that we have done everything in our power to aid our men in bringing Wc- tory to us; we can look ahead and see, not bloodshed and desolution, but a country united in its efforts to bring lasting peace and prosperity to all. No, there must be no slackening of work, no laying off a day or two because “the necessity no longer exists.” We are, as during the past few years, all working towards a common goal, and we must con tinue to work regularly and hard. Those of us in the textile industry are indeed fortunate that there isn’t a great deal of reconverting to do, and we should be equally thankful that there is still a great and urgent need of all the goods we can produce — for our own needs as well as those of peoples in war-torn lands. Let’s compare the present to moving — as we mentioned in the beginning — from the House of War to the House of Peace. Most of us, doubtlessly, have at one time or another moved from one town to another, or from one house to another. So we know that moving means a lot of work, both in dismantling the old house and preparing the new one. We know that changes have to be made in the new one, that it must be thoroughly cleaned before we .start moving in our belongings. Then things must be arranged and re-arranged until everything ap pears to be in its proper place. So, that’s the situation now. Before we can settle down and enjoy living in the House of Peace that house must be prepared. Everybody must pitch in and work hard to get the house ready. Everybody must help to move the furniture in; help to arrange it. Then there’s the grounds. That, too requires work. Only when ev erything is in its right place can we settle down and enjoy ourselves. The house is our work, our daily lives. The people preparing to move in are ourselves. The grounds are the foreign countries. So the war isn’t really over until we have bought the new house (by buying War Bonds and refusing to cash in the ones we have), until we realize that we must work as hard as ever before, and help those war-torn countries back to normalcy. Then, and only then, can we say the war is really over. The picture shown above at right was taken while Pvt. Walter T. Curry was at home on a 10-day leave. He train :d at Camp Robinson and is now station ed at Fort Ord, Calif. He is a former employee of the Blanket Mill. Pvt. Eugene R. Cobb, left, who has been in service one year, is now located somewhere in the South Pacific. He has three brothers in service—Her man, David and Robert. Another brother, Jasper, was killed in France October 1944. He is a son of Mrs. Annie Cobb of Draper. TOOTS From the General Office By Helen Redmon Mountains Ho! Vacationing at Banner Elk, N. C., thi.si week are Mr. and Mrs. H. Z. Smith andf their son John Rand, Miss Annie Baughn and Mr. June Lineback. Far From Quiet Among a group celebrating the end of the war were Margaret Edwards, Ann Dillard Grogan and Helen Redmon. Bell ringing, whistle blowing and singing gave them all a big appetite for hot dogs and buttermilk. Vacationist Mae Roberts back from two weeks at Virginia Beach—boy, what a grand tan, Elaine Collins and “Elaine Jr.,” Zig- lar are spending two weeks at Atlantic Beach. Marguerite Bendigo vacationed in Greensboro. Maggie Bowling visit ing in Roanoke and Mr. C. C. Campbell and family vacationing at Pauley Beach, S. C. Fortune Telling- Wanted: Star gazer, crystal ganer, card readers, tea leaf readers, or any reasonable facsimile t o relieve over worked fortune tellers of this sector. Visitors Velma Minter of the New York Office is spending a few days in Spray. Irene Boone and Jane Simmons visited the New York Office last week. Back Yard Sun-Tan No discomfort for Howard Sheffield,^ he acquired his sun-tan at home.- Gretchen Becker, likewise—nice too. Missing Ruth Robertson of the purchasinjg department is ill. Hurry back, Ruth.