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MARCH. 1964 SCOUTS C I ' - ? | Annually 6,000 - 8,000 wild Canadian geese, and five times as many spectators visit Gaddy's Pond near Ansonville. North Carolina. Rrmit Masters Truman Owens and Jimmie Braswell, leaders of Company sponsored Troops, carried a group of Scouts to see this wonder of nature earlier this month. The boys delighted in seeing and feeding the geese now in route to Canada. They were amazed at the stories told about the geese by Mrs. Gaddy, widow of the founder of the sanctuary. Newspapers and magazines throughout the nation have carried stories of the geese being followed by helicopter from Canada to Ansonville in a 16 hour, non-stop flight. Appreciation The Wilford Samples family wishes to express their grateful appreciation for the kind expressions of sympathy extended them by their many friends on the loss of their father and grandfather. Mixed Yarns The husband arrived home one evening to find his wife distraught. "I've had a terrible day," she complained. "The baby cut his first tooth; then he took his first step; then he fell down and cut his lip on the tooth." "What happened next?" the husband asked. "Then," she added in a shocked voice, "he said his first word!" A suburbanite, we read, is a man who hires someone to mow his lawn so he can play golf for exercise. Mr. and Mrs. John R. Swetenburg, Jr. of Lydia Mills Spinning Department became the proud parents of a son, TlllllIC A /"J /XV* XPrtlx uunuo nnuci 5UII, Ull I" L'UI U cl 1 V 25th at Bailey Memorial Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. Tarrant C. Gambrell of Clinton Mills Weaving announce the birth of a daughter, Phyllis Kimberly Kay, on February 11th at Bailey Memorial Hospital. O WHERE THE WILD ( Service Awards . . - (Continued from page 1) 20 YEAR AWARDS Carding R. B. Amick R. L. Simmons B. F. Woodard, Jr. Spinning J. C. Craine Eioree Cunningham Plant No. 2 10 YEAR AWARDS Carding h loyd L. Madden Spinning Sallie A. Duckett Ralph D. Nelson Nesby M. Rowe Spooling Wesley Ivester Carl Landers Weaving Troy Bentley Fred W. McCarson W. H. Beckham. Jr. Wm. A. Campbell E. N. Harrill J. J. Burns James B. Harris C. E. Leopard \V. E. Madden Dave W. Lawson C. E. Roberts Hubert Rollins Slashing Jesse J. Campbell Hobby D. English Women's faces are nevei shown on currency, but the\ do not mind so long as the\ can get their hands on it. People who have an hour tc spare usually spend it with someone who hasn't. Little girl (to mother): Why is it "temper" when ' slam things and "nerves' when you do? Young bridegroom: "Witt all my worldly goods I thee endow." His father: "There go hii fraternity pin and his stamj: collection." Mr. and Mrs. James Estej of Lvdia Mills Spinning De partment announce the birth of a son. Ricky Dale, on February 17th at Bailey Memoria Hospital. Mr. and Mrs. William R ID..1;?? i\/r:n_ m.ii i i7i ivums v^ioir Room take pleasure in an nouncing the birth of a daugh ter, Tammv Lynn, on Feb ruarv 26th at Bailey Memoria Hospital. THE CLOTHMAKER SOOSE GOES Cloth Lewis D. Yarborough Naomi B. Yarborough Shop Wm. S. Hedgepath Woodrow L. Wilson Office Shirley B. Pitts Purchasing Dept. W. Eugene Johnson Cotton Department A. D. Lancaster Assistant Superintendent D. O. Freeman 15 YEAR AWARDS Carding Henry E. Reynolds D. D. Samples, Sr. Spinning Selma E. Ballew Mary L. Barlow Clyde W. Brazill Paul E. Foster Gertrude Holbert Dollie Lusk Mary C. Martin Lila H. McCullough Mary R. Turner Billy R. Heaton Janie M. Hickman Richard Rochester Spooling Maggie L. Burden Edward King Tlonnie McWaters James P. Woodard [ Weaving Harold H. Burgess Robert White, Jr. r Glidy Holmes Josephine Allman William H. Fowler Thelma J. Suttle ) William H. Rogers 1 Slashing Joe M. Lynch Cloth j Virginia Reeder Ruby L. Lydia 20 YEAR AWARD 1 Spinning - Collie S. Edmonds Cecil Lawson Nellie L. Moore 5 Walter Smith ) Mary Osborne Jeanette Woodard Spooling I.illie V. Brazill Mary C. Ealy Weaving Newell Brewington F olly Fallaw Slashing Lanham L. Lawson = Cloth Lillian S. Wallenzine > Shop j CM is Graham Office 1 Elmyra Pitts LYDIA: 1 10 YEAR AWARDS Carding J. F. Broom J. F. Deyton, Spinning Mary Deyton rfepwi ^4] === April - Kah - Ch One hallowed institution j A.X- 1 1 me aeounkers have never 1 cared to fool around with is i the April Shower. t They've snarled at Mother- s hood; they've even heckled Love. But the April down- c splash is still as widely re- j spected an institution as t Baby's First Tooth. i Just the same, there are c some April showers that de- t serve a jaundiced look. The j kind that come down verti- s cally from on high are just i fine. But there's the horizontal c type, too ? the April shower that goes with somebody's < springtime cough or sneeze? s and that's the one that can \ bug you. c "But you" happens to be no 1 metaphor in this case. Be- s cause these spring showers may be loaded with disease 1 organisms that shouldn't hap- 3 Margaret F. Goen 1 F.rnest F. Hendrix f C Spooling \ Nellie (5. Dean J Louise L. Lamb J F.ula H. Quinton I Joan S Rppcp c Weaving I Annie V. Baker C James H. Deitz J Andrew H. Ellis C Hiram N. Hughey Mildred L. Lawson > E. Perry Sumeral / Kenneth Armstrong ( Cleveland Campbell ^ Horace R. Campbell I Walter T. Campbell Arthur G. Gallman < James W. Hazel ( Doris G. Hughey George M. Lawson J Daisy D. Moore ^ Grace M. Nelson 1 J. P. Oakley ( Wilma L. Stone \ James E. Carroll David R. Coker < Jack D. Graham I David E. Hughes David Mason 2 Garel Satterfield ? Joe B. Spillers 1 Ruby D. White I Glen D. Gaskins > Slashing Helen L. Cook * Cloth I.illie B. Bennett jj Mildred Dickerson I Flant Manager D. H. Roberts c Assistant Superintendent Claude Gilstrap, Jr. ' FEBRUAR CLINTON COT' Ruby J. Baker?Spinning Louise R. Burton?Spinning Keith E. Caughman?Spinning Emma Johnson?Spinning Jessio I Mrrall ?;? _ . ... w w>?* Betty J. Milam?Spinning Erskine R. Milam?Spinning Gertrude H. Payton?Spinning Paul F. Samples?Spinning LYDIA COTT< George R. Smith?Carding Larry McCravey?Spooling John D. Black?Weaving Nora C. Bramlett?Weaving C. A. Burrell, Jr.?Weaving 5 >.si$eaiuMN\ 100 - Showers Den to an innocent bystander, [t isn't really raining rain, it's * a i n i n g viruses ? plus a /ariety of bacteria in many shapes and sizes. Spring sneezes and bron:hial barks, in short, can be Drime distributors of Respira;ory Disease ? a group of ailnents that range from the common cold all the way to uberculosis. Two simple rules ipply to the horizontal April shower. If it's yours, cover it jp; if it's the other fellow's luck! There's a third rule. too. If i spring cold develops into a stubborn cough that just won't *et lost, better see your ioctor. A chronic cough can De a tipoff to something pretty serious. April showers? They're fun ;o sing about ? especially if four lungs are in good shape. 5 YEAR AWARDS jpinning 7onnie J. Davis Villie M. Dean (alia L. Frick fohn M. Edmonds jena E. Mathis > pooling ..ewis D. Bass rharlie Birchmore fessie T. Howell 3ttis R. Woody Weaving \nna B. Mclnvaille 'trover Mclnvaille William R. Fennell tathryn Hampton Z loth Tharles L. Barlow >hop Wm. Abercrombie T. D. Douglas j. M. Knox William Thrift. Jr. Office ileda B. Williams 0 YEAR AWARDS Spinning tuby W. Cook .aura M. Darby Mice O'Shields r. B. O'Shields Veaving rrances H. Meeks Community Activities Nellie P. Osborne. Umpires have something in common with wives: They seldom call a man safe when ie is out. /j/j n/eeeme X/at? Y. 1964 TON MILLS Julia S. Campbell?Wearing Alfred E. Cothran?Weaving Christine M. Cothran?WnAwinn Ruby F. Wright?Weaving Richard A. Bull?Cloth Leroy J. Calhoun?Shop Pervis Richie?Warehouse Myra B. Nichols?Office ON MILLS Bobby G. Maner?Weaving Jerry D. Poythress?Weaving Nancy H. Poythress?Weaving Richard G. Turner?Weaving