Amco 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, Lela Rus
sell, Mary Maske, Rochelle Ester,
Virginia Wood, Margye Martin,
Mary Deaton, Ethel Carden and
Jessie Phillips.
Plant No. 2 - Vivian Mabry.
Plant No. 4 - Minnie C. Nelson, Jean
Iris Smith, Ruth Hayes and C. W.
Browning.
Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Halker, Mary
Chapman, Eva Jones and Patsy
Rush.
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 - Sue
Embler and Eva M. Lynch.
Composing Staff - Addline Hill, Ruth
Ellington and Bertha Hester.
The Holy Spirit. . , shall teach
you all things.
--(John 14:26).
If we but recognize the presence
and reality of the indwelling Spirit, we
will be able to consult it for guidance
and illumination.
God,gave us memories so that we
could have roses in December.
--J. M. Barrie
The "Lost" Customers. . . .
Where do the "lost" customers of
a business go? More important, why
do they go away--and is there any way
to keep customers from departing?
The Canadian Manufacturers'
Association has gone to some pains to
find out the answers to these questions.
It surveyed many industries. Here is
what it discovered:
Of every 100 lost customers--
1 was lost through death
3 were lost when the salesman left
the company
5 left to buy from a friend or rela
tive
9 left to buy at lower prices
14 left because of unadjusted com
plaints
68 left because of the company's
indifference and lack of interest
in the customer
Whether you are selling the com
pany, its products or its services,
remember the lesson of the 68 per
cent. There's nothing like indifference
and lack of interest for losing custom
ers.
We extend our sympathy to Doris
Hulin, Finishing Department of Plant
#1, in the death of her mother, Mrs.
Edna DeLappe.
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