|ipHHi .i|p;:v;,. pipi I li^nl C1111 WH COORDINATED FASHiONS ^ ■ FOR"eeD AND BATH fieuocrest iNO.^B* Wanh ot Draper, Greenville/leaksviBe, Mount Holly, Smithfield am) Spray, N. C..- FreWalo, Va.j Colotnbos, Ga. and Aobum, N. Y. XXIII Spray, N. C., November 2, 1964 NO. 9 Employees Give $50,394 In Fund Drive ■ i»«3' b, Fieldcrest Mills Credit Union has Shi Worthville Employees Join Credit Union The picture above shows Howard Slack (right), slasher tender at Worth ville, who was one of the first em ployees to join at his mill. He is being signed up by Sally McCain of the super intendent’s office. Looking on are W. J. Burgin (far left), superintendent of weaving; and Edward Fowler, mill sup erintendent. extended to employees at the tjj®^^def Sheeting Mill, Forest City, .North Carolina Finishing Company '''ision, Salisbury, and the Worthville . ^ting Mill, Worthville. The response ® good at each location with many (j^^Plo^yees joining the Credit Union the first week. Second Stop Polio Sunday Set For Nov. 15 \yjJj^'City employees and their families share in the effort to banish polio ^Ver from the area when they go out the various immunization clinics to _ November 15, to receive their dose of Sabin oral vaccine, the first Stop Polio Sunday, Sep- 20, more than 13,000 Tri-City by received the vaccine. They filed Ii, ®®rving tables and each was given a Mth* sugar which had been treated the vaccine. Those who received j dose termed it “quick and pleasant.” Urging those who received the first sure to take the second dose tifg^'^'ber 15, Dr. L. Gordon Clarke, of medical director of the Stop Polio Sunday campaign in Rockingham County, stressed that everyone over three months old needs BOTH DOSES for complete protection. “Since the Sabin vaccine eliminates the possibility of carrying the polio virus in the body, to be passed on to an unprotected person, everyone needs to take the final dose,” Dr. Clarke said. He emphasized the importance of everyone’s taking the vaccine including senior citizens, pregnant women, and diabetics. Persons who have had the Salk polio shots also need to take the Sabine vaccine to avoid the possibility of being a carrier of the dread disease (Continued on Page Four) Fieldcrest Organization Gives Nearly 85 Per Cent Of Goal In Community-Wide Campaign In a magnificent response, again dem onstrating their interest in the welfare and betterment of their home commu nities, Fieldcrest employees contributed $50,394 in the Tri-City Community Fund campaign. In addition to the employees’ gifts, the company, through the Fieldcrest Foundation, donated $6,500 to the fund. The combined contributions of the em ployees and the company, which totaled $56,894, were nearly 85 per cent of the community-wide goal of $67,207. Of the 4,011 employees on the pay roll, 2,728, or 68 per cent, contributed a day’s pay or more. In addition, many more employees signed up for continu ing deductions. C. J. Frank, general chairman of the Community Fund campaign, and Haven Newton, chairman of the Fieldcrest campaign, congratulated Fieldcrest em ployees who they said had done “ a tre mendous job.” They expressed their pride in Fieldcrest employees and thanked them for their “excellent sup port.” Following a report meeting October 27, it was announced that the over-all community campaign had gone “over the top” with $78,500 contributed to date for 117 per cent of the goal. “We are pleased at going over the top (Continued on Page Five) Greenville Sets Record Employees of the Karastan Spinning Division at Greenville set an all-time record when 98.5 per cent of all the employees pledged a contribution in the United Fund campaign, Moreover, 98 per cent of the employees pledged a contribution of a day’s pay or more, and 95 per cent of the Greenville employees are signed up for continuing deductions. The tabulation shows that of the 268 employees at the plant, 262 pledged a day’s pay or more, two employees pledged contributions less than a day’s pay, and only four employees failed to make a contribution. In the following departments 100 per cent of the employees pledged at least a day’s pay: Dyeing, Blending, Carding, Twisting, Winding & Reeling; Superin tendent’s Office, and Plant Service.