Newspapers / Amco News (High Point, … / Jan. 1, 1970, edition 1 / Page 2
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- 2 - Awco ]^ews Published by and for the employees of ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION in High Point, Kernersville, Mt. Airy and Hickory, North Carolina, and Edmond, Oklahoma. Produced 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. Z - Delia Arrington, Nancy Thomas, Ethelene Bowman, Pauline Atkins, Alpha Hiatt and Vivian Mabry Plant No. 3 - C. W. Browning, Hilda Coleman and Ruth Barrier Plant No. 4 - Ruth Hayes and Jessie Phillips Plant No. 6 - Nell LaFone, Pauline Hollar, Betty Bobbitt, Margaret Whitene r and Josephine Hoyle Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Phillips, Patsy Rush, Edith Smith, OpalAsbill andEstell Pernell Plant No. 8 - Patsy Burton Plant No. 9 - Bettye Tuttle Plant No. 19 - Louise Tuttle Machine Shop - William L. Cline Main Office - Donna Horton and Ruby Peurifoy Composing Staff - Addline Hill, Ruth Ellingtcn and Bertha Hester Whatever you get, get in sight.—(Prov. 4:7). With our every breath we make a decision. Every breath affirms life. Decisions are so much an integral part of us that we hardly recognize the fact that we are mak ing them. With God's help, we can build good judgment from within. We, by prayerful thoughts, establish a pattern of procedure ‘from which we are moti vated. This becomes the truth about us, and we find we are alight with the light of Christ. In his autobiography. Captain Eddie Ricken- backer predicted that extrasensory perception research is in its infancy, that someday "mind reading" will be recognized as an established means of communication. This is a bit frighten ing. Imagine what it would be like if other people could read your thoughts, whether you wanted them to or not. Yet, it might encourage us to guard our mental gates more carefully. Each of us is the sum total of his thoughts. What you are going to be tomorrow you are becoming today--and it is your thoughts that are shaping your destiny. Have you ever taken an inventory of the kind of thoughts you habitu ally think? Try it sometime. It will give you an idea of what your "total" is likely to be. If you consistently think thoughts that are colored with hate, bitterness, jealousy, greed, distrust, poverty, failure, ill health--even grief--it is quite likely that you will have a chance to review them someday in a psychia trist's office. If, on the other hand, you con sistently slam the gates on such thoughts, you can be pretty sure of turning out to be a reasonably happy person. - -The Little Gazette “How long must I do unto others before they start doing unto me?”
Amco News (High Point, N.C.)
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Jan. 1, 1970, edition 1
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