Ameo J^ews Published by and for the employees of ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION in High Point, Kernersville, and Tryon, North Carolina. Produced in the Dup licating Department of ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION. Plant No. 1 - Helen Mason, Lela Rus sell, MaryMaske, Rochelle McAr thur, Ernestine Noble, Katie Saun ders, and Virginia Wood. Plant No. 2 - Ethel Fitts, Ethel Carden, and Margye Martin. Plant No. 4 - Minnie C. Nelson, Jean Iris Smith, Ruth Hayes, and C. W. Browning. Plant No. 7 - Etta S. Kapp, Marjorie Chilton, Margaret Fulp, Blanche Jackson, Viola Jones, Eva Jones, Nannie Smith, and Louise Tuttle. Plant No. 8 - Ann Fisher, and Sybil Po- teat. Machine Shop - E. Verne Snotherly. Office - Fay Cheek and Frances Smith. Composing Staff - Chas. Deviney, Jr. , Addline Hill, and Ruth Ellington. VOL. XIII April, 1956 NO. 3 Behold, what manner of love the Father hath bestowed upon us, that we should be called the sons of God.—(I John 3,1.) Each of us came into this world filled with the love, the good, of our Heavenly Father. We depart from them through our own wilfulness, selfishness. But even then God continues to love us as His children, ever ready, through our prayers, to forgive and help us. SANDY SAYS: It amazes visiting Europeans to ob serve the way Americans tear down old buildings (buildings that would be con sidered practically new over there), trade in automobiles after only two or three years, and junk so many house hold appliances or furnishings that still have not been worn out. Americans who go abroad find it one of the interesting things about Europe that people have been living in the same houses, wearingthe same kind of cloth ing and using many of the same kinds of things that their grandfathers and great- grandfathers did before them. To Europeans, we probably seem a restless people, without deep roots in any one place. Where Europeans like things ‘to remain the same, we like change. What makes us different? For one thing, our kind of economic system. Our production and exchange system is geared to the adoption of new ideas, to improvement and rapid expan sion. When we think we've found a way of doing things in a better way, we aren't satisfied to go ondoing them the old way. Europeans might not be comfortable in this kind of economic climate—but it has given us more things, for more people# than any system ever employed abroad. ACCIDENTS DO NOT HAPPEN... THEY ARE CAUSED!

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