Ant CO J^ews Published by and for the employees of ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION in High Point, Kernersville and Mt. Airy, North Carolina. Produced in the Dup licating Department of ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION. Plant No. 1 - Helen Mason, Mary Maske, Rochelle Ester, Virginia Wood, Margye Martin, Mary Deaton, Ethel Carden and Jessie Phillips. Plant No. 2 - Gertrude Scales, Nell McGee, Gertrude Fulk, Kathleen Chilton, Mary Harvey, Winfred Stanley, Janie Stevens and Uniter Bowman. Plant No. 4 - Minnie C. Nelson, Jean Iris Smith, Ruth Hayes and C. W. Browning. Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Halker, Hilda Moorefield, Eva Jones and Patsy Rush. Plant No. 8 - Shelby Spainhour. Plant No. 9 - Glenda Burns. Machine Shop - C. O. Young. Main Office - Faye B. Spencer and Frances H. Smith. Composing Staff - Addline Hill, Ruth Ellington and Bertha Hester. I shall walk at liberty. (Psalms 119:45). It is through the presence and power of the Christ within us that we walk in liberty, because the Spirit of Christ knows no bondage or limitation and is ever strong, ever victorious. When Are We Well Off? . . . America is the result of pioneers not knowing when they were well off. Risking their lives on the salty deep, starving and racked by fever, shooting and being shot by Indians, snatching garden patches out of the wilderness, moving west and doing the same thing over and over and over again. Why didn't they stop somewhere ? Didn't they know when they were well off? When are we well off? Who can say? Europeans say the American is crazy, running around and getting no where. The American answers that business in America is a game, not a job; it excites the sporting instincts as much as the acquisitive instincts. If we knew when we were well off, would there be anything that seems worth having? We climb and climb; a few of us fall and get up again; a few of us retire only to find we want to get back into the game; it is the climbing upward that has put America at the top. HOW TO BE A WRECKLESS WtNTER DRIVER: ^PROCEED WITH M^CAUTION - 2 -

Page Text

This is the computer-generated OCR text representation of this newspaper page. It may be empty, if no text could be automatically recognized. This data is also available in Plain Text and XML formats.

Return to page view