Atfieo 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, Vivian Mabry, Patsy Easter, Dot McFall, Janie Stevens, Kathleen Chilton and Uniter Bowman Plant No. 4 - Minnie C. Nelson, Jean Iris Smith, Rugh Hayes and C. W. Browning. _ Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Halker, Patsy Rush, Eva Jones, Carolyn King and Virginia Coggins. Plant No. 8 - Shelby Spainhour. Plant No. 9 - Lois White. Machine Shop - William L. Cline. Main Office - Faye B. Spencer and Frances H. Smith. Composing Staff - Addline Hill, Ruth Ellington and Bertha Hester. Ch*BiU( Not my will, but thine, be done. --(Luke 22:42). We should relax. We should let go. We should let God's will be done in us, through us and for us. If there is a need for p>eace in our mind, we relax. We should let God's peace come flooding in upon us. - 2 SANDY SAYS- The Customer Must Be Satisfied. . . There's one thing about our busi ness that everyone agrees upon: The customer must be satisfied with our product or he won't buy from us again. It's really not difficult to think of our customers as "Inspectors" be cause when we are customers our selves, we, too, are "Inspectors." We inspect someone else's productfor quality--and for price! When our company's customers inspect our products for quality and price, they really inspect the work of every one of us. For, if, in soma way, our job wasn't vital to the finished product, our job just wouldn't exist! The difference between "good" and "not so good" is often very small. But being just a little bit better than our competition means a great deal in getting customers to continue to buy our products. That's why we cannot afford to do less than our best. That's why we cannot afford to lean on our fellow em ployees--figuring that somehow things will come out all right. Things won't come out all right unless we all make them do so! The attention we give to quality workmanship--the care with which we perform our jobs to reduce costs-- these are the things which our custom ers are inspecting--and these are the things which determine the continua tion of our jobs. We protect our jobs best when we think of our contribution to our products as the part by which the customer judges the whole product. Remembering that our customer is the last and most important inspec tor is the best way to make certain that we will continue to have custom ers--and continue to hold the jobs which they make possible.

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