BRAP|R gOPtE ri {visitors mmmmmmmmmm BHH Charles Myers (left), YMCA secretary, and Ernest Stophel, a member of one of the local teams, admire new softball scoreboard installed at Draper field. New Scoreboard Boosts Fieldcrest The official scoreboard at the Draper Recreation Park softball field calls at tention to Draper as the home of Field crest blankets and sheets. The new board was put into use in August. Next season an electric panel will be in stalled to show the score, balls and strikes, outs, innings, etc. Issued Every Other Monday For Employees and Friends of Fieldcrest Mills, Inc., Copyright, 1964, Fie'dcrest Mills, Inc. Spray, N. OTIS MARLOWE EDITOR Member, South Atlantic Council Of Industrial Editors ADVISORY BOARD D. F. Carson R. O. Howard, Jr. J. L. Crabtree J. M. Moore C. A. Davis J. T. White J. S. Eggleston J. M. Rimmer Vol7~X:^II Monday, Nov. 2, 1964, No. 9 Use The Credit Union Consumer economists generally agree on three rules which consumers and businessmen alike should remember when considering the use of credit: ONE Use credit only when necessary, or where the benefits from using it justify the cost and risk involved. TWO Assume no more debt than you can reasonably expect to pay from your cur rent level of income. THREE And in hunting for the best credit bargain, be sure to visit your credit union. Your credit union offers you con venience, plus low-cost loans and a safe place to save! SERVICE Anniversaries Thirty-Five Years , Mamie R. Alderman Mary S. Hankins Sheet Finis^ Kermit R. Martin Central ' Thirty Years Walter T. Slaughter Mu& Ethel M. Martin Mus' Annie F. Joyce j Henry B. Williams Muscog Twenty-five Years Grover L. HaUmark Muscog^ Ezzie A. Spivey Muscog Orene P. Ingram Avery McCann Karast^ Twenty Years i Anna L. Stone Annie M. Mobley Muscog Oscar O. Bailey Shee " Towe' Roy C. Whitlock The Draper field, which is under di rection of the YMCA, is being improved in several ways, including further grad ing and seeding. Charles Myers, YMCA secretary, said when the improvements have been com pleted it is expected to be one of the best softball fields in the state. Towel Mill Honors Top Weavers, Fixers The Towel Mill’s top quaUty weavers and loomfixers are listed below for the most recent periods of record. Weavers—W/E October 18 Dobby & Cam Wilfred Jones Jacquard Terry None New C-7 Looms James Meredith Fixers—W/E October 18 Dobby & Cam James Law Jacquard Terry John Wright New C-7 Looms Jo© Jones Weavers—^W/E October 11 Dobby & Cam Harry Kennett Ronald Wright Jacquard Terry None New C-7 Looms Charles Grindstaff Fixers—W/E October 11 Dobby & Cam Roy Whitlock Jacquard Terry John Wright New C-7 Looms Joe Jones Receive ‘Safety Bucks’ Winners of “Safety Bucks” in the safety contest at the Bedspread Finish ing Mill for the month of October were: Edna Self, Betty Slaughter, Lillie Rob ertson, and Robert Galloway, aU of the Cutting and Sewing Department, and Mildred Rickman of the Packaging De partment. Participating in the drawing for the “Safety Bucks” were Jewel Smith of the Packaging Department and Myrtle Shropshire of the Cutting and Sewing Department. Ethel S. Moore Sheet FinisbJ®” Manx Artis Blai' Fifteen Years . a Nina G. Harding Sheet FinisW Grace S. Thompson Sheet Finish , Eugene M. Boyte Dock Burroughs .... Karastan Serv.^ ' Walter J. Boyte Central 'W'J John Lepak ting Bertha L. Stultz Wallace M. Gourley aei Luther Wilks Muscog Ten Years . Marvm E. Wilmoth Finish ( Helen W. Macy William R. Murphy Sheet Fmisii Cora W. Pearman KaraS . Louise C. Weddle Spray g Estelle R. Anderson John Brown Ralph G. Carter Charlie Craddock, Jr To . Pauline R. Farmer Sheet Fin^"^ Zelma G. Murray Nancy S. Powell Central W ^ Louise E. Shelton Ka^® j Colleen B. Daniel Faye H. HaU Mary H. Jamieson Muscog ( Ruby L. Setliff Bessie J. Craddock Grace B. Spivey Ruby P. Agee Pauline H. Blackwell .... Sheet Finish ^ Jacqueline H. McBride .... R. & Q- Myrtle H. Morrison Finish ^ - vgt Aza Z. Armstrong Julius R. Sims Finis , William J. Allen KaraS^' To^ 1 To^'^l To''*'^! John V. Hairston Norman L. Hopkins Ruth W. Martin To ^ Opal W. Pope Finish John D. Haynes Mary F. Minter J. Eugene Peters American yarn mills produced 5,7^^' 174,000 pounds of yarn in 1963. Sixty per cent of Syria’s cottof'^^j grown along the course of the Euphrates River, which, with the River, is said to be the “cradle of ci zation.” ST^ THE MILL WHI f