Fieldcresters Serve On Cheer Committee Jesse Burton, of the Central Ware house Office, and Robert Hair, of the Data Processing Department, are mem bers of the Christmas Cheer Clearing house Committee of Consolidated Cen tral Y. M. C. A. The Jaycees, the churches and other civic-minded groups are represented on the committee which coordinates Christ mas Cheer activities in the Leaksville- Spray community. All persons who plan to give food, clothing, fuel and other items to the needy at Christmas are invited to con tact a member of the committee or the Clearinghouse office at Consolidated Central Y. M. C. A. Should Report Needy To YMCA Those who know of needy families or individuals are asked to report them to the Consolidated Central Y. M. C. A. before 5 p. m. on Tuesday, December 22. This will be necessary to avoid dup lication and to insure a wider distri bution of the food, clothing and other items. In recent years, The Leaksville News, Radio Station WLOE, the Jaycees, churches and other community groups have played a prominent part in the program. All of these are being asked to cooperate again this year. Other members of the Clearinghouse Committee are Hicks E. Anderson, chairman; Coy L. Stack, Jerry Webster, Mrs. Sallie Gray Dunn and the Rev. C. Bernard Smith. Hall Children Terry Hall, age 4V2, and Donna Sue Hall, one year old, are children of Mr. and Mrs. Carl Hall. Father is a super visor in the Accounting Department. 6 Blanket Mill Lists Its Quality Weavers Ten Blanket Mill weavers—all in the dobby or plain classification—continue on the quality honor list for the period ending November 30. In order to make the quality honor list, a weaver must work for six months without his or her cloth having a major quality defect. Names of the quality weavers are posted on the weave room bulletin board each month and are published in The Mill Whistle. When a weaver on the list has a major quality defect, his name is dropped from the list. Other weavers are added as they attain six months of quality work. The listing of the quality weavers is part of a program at the Blanket Mill designed to emphasize the importance of quality weaving and to give recognition to weavers with outstanding quality re cords. The quality honor list for the six months ending November 30 is shown in the accompanying box. QUALITY HONOR LIST Plain Weavers John Brown Lessie Chilton Otra Chilton Kate Fuller Mattie Hall Dillard Harris L. H. Hundley Sallie Isley Margaret Murphy Garland Samuels Visits California Helen Coleman, of the Fitted Sheet Department at the Bleachery, reports a most enjoyable trip to the West Coast. She flew to California October 20 to visit her son-in-law and daughter Mr. and Mrs. James Janney and to see her new grandson, Charles Moir Janney. She returned home November 14. Quality Counts The old saying, “A workman is known by his work,” is no less true today in the machine age than it was hundreds of years ago, when terms like “mass production” and “assembly lines” were unheard of, when shoes and clothes and furniture and carriages were made by individual craftsmen. Today, quality is still the important thmg. The quality of Fieldcrest and Karastan products still determines how well the Company meets its competi tion in the textile markets. The skill and craftsmanshp of the individual employee at the machines still deter mine the quality of the products our Company sells. Many Fieldcresters Spirited Competition Marks Matches Rolled At Y.M.C.A- Each Tuesday Evening The Bouldin Motor Co. team, wit 36-8 record, is on top in the Wo®' Bowling League at Draper Y. M. C. Close behind, with a 35-9 record Draper Shoe Store, while in third p' is People’s Finance Co. with 28 '' and 16 losses. Cindy McCanless, of the Motor team, holds the high game r®*] with 134. Hazel Powell, of the D’'*. Cost Department, who rolls with Draper Shoe Store team, has 353 high individual set. The Draper ^ Store team holds the record for team game, 535, and high team 1508. Matches are rolled each Tuesday® ning with spirited competition 3*” the teams. Many Fieldcresters eluded in the league members. The ^ half of the season ends January 1®’ | first half winner and the winner second half will engage in a next spring to determine the championship. The Draper Y. M. C. A. is a P cipating agency in the Tri-City munity Fund. Your contribution Fund helps suoport Y. M. C. grams. One Year Old Shown in the ac companying picture is Cathy Gregg, 2 years old. She is the daugh ter of Mr. and Mrs. Tommie Gregg, who live at High Point. Cathy is a grand daughter of Richard Williams, a for mer Fieldcrester. Her mother, ths former Libby Williams, is a niece of Ada Jones, Bedspre reporter for The Mill Whistle. Hamrick Grandchild Julia Faye yj is the eig*’ f 3 old daughter and Mrs. non of 216 iKSi • , j ton Street, ^ Her father is ® , ed in the C'o ^ ^ J ishing Departi^p^ ' ' the Bleachery^^^f grandparents (pj and Mrs. Aubrey Hamrick, ^ whom are employed at the ^ | Rug Mill. i “Think how big flag poles to be if flag makers had add® instead of stars!” (Kansas State Co THE MILL W H