Newspapers / Amco News (High Point, … / Sept. 1, 1962, edition 1 / Page 2
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iAntco J^ews Published by and for the employees of ADAMS-MILLIS CORPORATION in High Point and Kernersville, North Carolina. Produced in the Duplicating Department of ADAMS-MILLIS COR PORATION. Plant No. 1 - Helen Mason, Lela Rus sell, Mary Maske, Rochelle Ester, Maggie Gable, Virginia Wood, Margye Martin, Mary Deaton, Ethel Fitts, Ethel Carden, Mar garet Russell and Jessie Phillips. Plant No. 4 - Minnie C. Nelson, Jean Iris Smith, Ruth Hayes and C. W. Browning. Plant No. 6 - Patsy Rush. Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Halker, Mary Chapman, Helen Lassiter, Eva Jones, Blanche Jackson, Viola Jones and Nannie Smith. Machine Shop - E. Verne Snotherly. Main Office - Faye B. Spencer and Frances H. Smith. MAC Panel Company - Nancy Boyles, Allene Allred and Annie Hilliard. Southern Die Casting Division - Dorla McKenzie. Composing Staff - Addline Hill, Ruth Ellington and Bertha Hester. S' ThBiUt There is nothing in the world really beneficial that does not lie within the reach of an informed under standing and a we 11-protected pursuit. There is nothing that God has judged good for us that He has not given us the means to accomplish, both in the natural and in the moral world. If we cry, like children, for the moon, like children, we must cry on. --Edmund Burke ^ I Pluggers and Stickers. . . The late Justice Cardozo once said that he was an example of "plod ding mediocrity. " He meant that he was an ordinary person, and that such progress as he had made was the re sult of being on the job every day. This accounts for nearly all suc cess. The best jobs and the largest fortunes are in the possession of ordinary people. Nearly everyone who will knuckle down to hard work where he is can make a fair success of life. The saddest failures are found in the ranks of men of more than ordi nary ability who shift jobs so often be tween the ages of twenty-five and forty that they have no firm hold on any job or business. By the time they are ready to settle down, they find that they can't dislodge the pluggers and the stickers. They have to take marginal positions that exist only in time of general prosperity. Neces sarily they are the last to be hired and the first to be laid off. Too often these men are impatient. They get discouraged because they can't double their pay in a year. It would pay them to take a longer view of life. -2-
Amco News (High Point, N.C.)
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Sept. 1, 1962, edition 1
2
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