Afffco ^ews
Published by and for the employees
of ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION in
High Point, Kernersville, Mt. Airy
and Hickory, North Carolina. Produc
ed in the Duplicating Department of
ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION.
Plant No. 1 - Helen Mason, Mary
Maske, Rochelle Ester, Virginia
Wood, Margye Martin and Mary
Deaton.
Plant No. 2 - Eloise Hiatt, Pat Easter,
Lola Miller, Dot McFall, Janie
Stevens, Kathleen Chilton and
Vivian Mabry.
Plant No. 3 - Jean Iris Smith, C. W.
Browning and Ethel Carden.
Plant No. 4 - Ruth Hayes and Jessie
Phillips.
Plant No. 6 - Nell LaFone, Helen
Yount, Margaret Whitener, Paul
ine Hollar, Betty Bobbitt and
Josephine Hoyle.
Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Halker, Patsy
Rush, Eva Jones, Mildred Fields,
Virginia Coggins and Opal Asbill.
Plant No. 8 - Shelby Spainhour.
Plant No. 9 - Lois White.
Machine Shop - William L. Cline.
Main Office - Donna Horton and Frances
Smith.
Composing Staff - Addline Hill, Ruth
Ellington and Bertha Hester.
n«BiU*
Be not. . . anxious for the morrow.
(Matt. 6:34)
We live in God’s eternity. We
have all the time there is. Whenever
there is a sense of being rushed, it
is well to relax and remember that
God blesses us with all the time we
require so that we may perform need
ful tasks in divine order. Do today's
work today. Yesterday is gone; to
morrow is yet to appear. God blesses
you today.
- 2
How To Be Lazy. . . And Love It
It's wonderful to be lazy--if you
know how. It spares your heart, saves
your energy, relaxes your mind--and
you needn't feel at all guilty about it
if you confine your laziness to these
approved ways recommended by a
psychologist:
Be too lazy to frown, fidget or
worry.
Don't wear yourself out carrying
the needless weight of grudges, prej
udices and envy.
Listen more than you talk, and see
how much better you feel after almost
any meeting or gathering.
Don't rush for a bargain that takes
more out of you than it saves for your
pocketbook.
Don't knock yourself out trying to
park your car in a space too small for
a scooter. Better to pay a parking fee
at a lot than a bill at a hospital.
Don't bother to quarrel over small
things--like a card game. Let the
other fellow think he's right when it
really doesn't matter.
Conserve your mental muscles for
things that count, and never bother to
wrestle with the inevitable, the im
ponderable, or the insignificant.
Never fear criticism when you
are right; never ignore criticism when
you are wrong.