Best Dressed’ College ^»Hs Are Visitors At Oiir N. Y. Showroom The SARA JANE MURDOCK to tijg ® editors of Glamour magazine, for year, invited what they con- dressed college girls *n guests for an exciting week iiiff York. Their “Glamorous” do- s included a stay at the Waldorf, live ^fances on two television shows. oyj ^ personal appearance at the Glam- Issue Fashion Show at the Otii l.|'i>icheo‘"n '^re Hotel. ® stop of their whirlwind tour was visit at Fieldcrest, where S^g ^i'^ture of Sara Jane Murdock of \Veg®. Briar College was taken. She is 3 trapeze duster (made from a CC '■‘"o bedspread) against a >on^ of campus bed and bath fash- . 'T’U bed behind her features the her’ to bedspread, while the mannikin left wears a Sorority robe. ^ * O H ^ • A r « T y ■« •.«.«. C O U M C I k Arrival Of Fieldcrest Truck In Los Angeles FIELOCR£ST MILLS Q At left, Fieldcrest Mills truck arrives at Los Angeles warehouse; at right, Davis Petty, warehouse manager; Homer Fain and Roy Sawyers, drivers on the first trip, stand beside truck while automatic blankets are unloaded at warehouse. When the Company inaugurated weekly deliveries by truck to our Field crest warehouse in Los Angeles and the Karastan warehouse in San Francisco, The Mill Whistle printed a picture show ing the departure of the first truckload from the Goldston Tranfer terminal at Leaksville. The arrival in Los Angeles of the truck carrying automatic blankets and rugs is shown in the above pictures which were sent to President Harold W. Whitcomb by Davis Petty, Los An geles warehouse manager. In a note accompanying the snapshots, Mr. Petty wrote: “Yesterday and today we are unload ing a (railway) carload of towels and sheets; also a Western Car loading ship ment of towels; also a truckload of St. Marys blankets; and at 5:30 p.m. the next Fieldcrest Mills truck will be here and be unloaded tonight. “A busy day! You can see we expect a good season and our salesmen have a job to do.” New Names Added To Quality Honor Roll Third Consecutive Month On Honor List Attained By Several Weavers Two new names appear on the Blank et Mill’s honor list of quality weavers for the six months ending July 31. El- wood Fayne and Bruce Powell, both jac quard weavers, won places on the hon or roll of weavers who have worked six months or longer without a major qual ity defect in their cloth. Continuing on the honor list for the third consecutive month were Rufus Dix, Laurence Overby and Marvin Pruitt, Quality Honor Roll JACQUARD WEAVERS Rufus Dix Elwood Fayne Laurence Overby Bruce Powell Marvin Pruitt PLAIN WEAVERS Drewey Chilton Mattie Hall Lessie Walker jacquard weavers, and Drewey Chilton, Mattie Hall and Lessie Walker, plain and dobby weavers. It is possible they have in mind beat ing the records of Ernest Powell, plain weaver, and Gentry Higgins, jacquard weaver, who established records of over two years without a major quality de fect. Mr. Powell retired recently under the Fieldcrest Pension Plan. The Blanket Mill began a program May 1 emphasizing the importance of good quality weaving and giving recog nition to weavers with outstanding qual ity records. At the beginning, the names of all weavers who had worked six months or longer without a major defect were posted on the weave room bulletin board and published in the Mill Whistle. The honor rolls are revised each month. Weavers having a major quality defect drop off and other weavers who have accumulated six months of quality work are added. It is planned to give extra recognition to weavers who are able to remain on the honor list for six consecutive months. The qualify weavers recognition pro gram has received much attention among the personnel of the Blanket Weave Room and has attracted the interest of other textile manufacturers who have written to the Blanket Mill for informa tion about the plan. Quality weavers for the six months period ending July 31 are listed in the accompanying box. ay, AUGUST 11, 1958