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Pubhvhed
XVIII
Spray, N. C., Monday, March 7, 1960
NO. 17
National Ads Feature
Karastan Products
^EW BROWNIE SCOUT — Seven-year-old Teresa Baker models Brownie
fQi- proud parents, Mr. and Mrs. Jack C. Baker, both employed at Fieldcrest.
is a new member of Troop 55, sponsored by the Draper Junior Woman’s
v„^^^^cal Girl Scout units are observing Girl Scout Week March 6-12.
fieldcrest People Active In YMCA Program
• B. Weaver, retired Fielder ester,
■ Robert L. Moore, industrial rela-
supervisor for the Spray mills.
among the 11 men and women
to the board of directors of
^olidated Central Y. M. C. A.
men elected by the members
s
board of directors are Hicks E.
®rson, Jr., James M. Fair, and Dr.
w Turner.
°fnen elected include Mrs. John T.
Mrs. Sallie Gray Dunn, Mrs.
Ijj^rt A. Harris, Mrs. Joe J. Price,
Sarah J. Slate, and Mrs. C. F.
frh, Jr.
is the first time that women
If.,® served on the board following the
c
L. Stack and Robert M. Wall. These
men are to be honored at the annual
meeting of the membership this month.
Other members of the board of di
rectors are C. C. Campbell, Fieldcrest
paymaster; Douglas L. Craddock, John
K. Houston, Rev. H. Fletcher Lambert,
J. F. Law, John T. Maclsaac, Jr., head
(Continued on page four)
of the Y. M. C. A.’s constitu
ent the annual meeting in 1959.
women will serve staggered
Vo ® of one, two and three years. Two
directors will be elected by the
Ijj^^srship each year beginning in
V®*! directors whose terms have re-
V ^ ®xoired include Neil D. Shively,
T. Joyce, of the Fieldcrest
Scheduling Department; Coy
Safety Barbecues
Employees of the Bleachery
were given a barbecue by the
Company in recognition of their
1959 safety record. Pictures taken
at the barbecue are carried on
pages four and five of this issue.
Other mills qualifying for State
Labor Department safety awards
and for barbecues for the em
ployees are: Automatic Blanket
Mill, Blanket Mill, Central Ware
house and Sheeting Mill.
Barbecues for the other mills
are to be held later in the year.
New Bokhara Rug And Tourneau
Broadloom Pattern Promoted
In Spring Advertising
Karastan’s new ivory Bokhara rug
and the new Tourneau broadloom pat
tern in the Kara-loc construction are
featured in beautiful colored advertise
ments in Karastan’s Spring 1960 na
tional advertising program.
The Bokhara rug ad appears in the
latest issue of House & Garden, which
went on sale February 20, and in The
New Yorker, on sale March 3. The ad
featuring Tourneau broadloom was car
ried in the same issue of The New
Yorker.
Karastan’s emphasis on the Bokhara
design and Tourneau carpet is in line
with a significant return of the influ
ence of traditional styling. The Bok
hara ad reflects the formal influence of
traditionalism while the Tourneau ad
is somewhat less formal.
The key to the spring advertising
program is best expressed in a phrase
used often at the January Market in
Chicago, “Elegance—a returning way of
life.”
The Bokhara ad will appear in the
April issue of Holiday, on sale March
15, and in the summer Bride’s Maga
zine, which goes on sale April 15.
The Tourneau ad is scheduled for the
April issue of Living for Young Home
makers, on sale March 20, the April
issue of Town & Country, on sale April
5, and the May issue of House Beauti
ful, on sale April 19.
See pictures on pa-gre three.
Education Center Opens
New Series Of Courses
Courses in Machine Shop, Drafting,
and Electronics are being offered by the
Industrial Education Center located on
the Morehead High School campus, ac
cording to an announcement by John
Houeh, superintendent of Leaksville
Townshio Schools.
Registration began at the Center Feb
ruary 26 and continues to March 15.
Thore interested may obtain further
information from Henry Rahn, director,
or Bin ArmfieW, counselor coordinator,
by calling MAin 3-3317 between the
hours of 8 a. m. and 8 p. m.