^mco J^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 - Delia Arrington, Nancy
Thomas, Folger Montgomery,
Ethelene Bowman, Frances Gates
and Vivian Mabry.
Plant No. 3 - C. W. Browning, Ethel
Carden, Hilda Coleman and Ruth
Berrier.
Plant No. 4 - Ruth Hayes and Jessie
Phillips.
Plant No. 6 - Nell LaFone, Helen
Young, Pauline Hollar, Betty Bob
bitt, Margaret Whitener and Jo
sephine Hoyle.
Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Phillips, Patsy
Rush, Mildred Fields, OpalAsbill
and Brenda McHenry.
Plant No. 8 - Patsy Burton.
Plant No. 9,- Bettye Tuttle.
Machine Shop - William L. Cline.
Main Office - Donna Horton and Frances
Smith.
Composing Staff - Addline Hill, Ruth
Ellington and Bertha Hester.
Forgive, I pray you. --(Gen. 50:17)
Nothing is to be gained by judging
harshly ourselves or some other person.
To hold to a thought of condemnation
does not solve problems nor dissolve
hurts. We need a spirit of forgiveness,
for as we forgive we are made new--all
things are made new. Let us forgive
ourselves first, if we feel that we have
failed in any way. Then let us forgive
those near to us.
Opportunity In Disguise. . .
Be thankful for the troubles of
your job. They provide about half
your income. Because if it were not
for the things that go wrong, the dif
ficult people you have to deal with,
someone could be found to handle your
job for half of what you are being paid.
It takes intelligence, resource
fulness, patience, tact and courage to
meet the troubles of any job. That is
why you hold your present job. And
it may be the reason you aren't hold
ing down an even bigger one.
If all of us would start to look for
more troubles, and learn to handle
them cheerfully and with good judg
ment, as opportunities rather than ir
ritations, we would find ourselves
getting ahead at a surprising rate. For
it is a fact that there are plenty of big
jobs waiting for men and women who
aren't afraid of the troubles connected
with them.
--Robert R. Updegraff
A youth gets together materials for
a bridge to the moon, and at length the
middle-aged man decides to make a
woodshed with them.
--Henry David Thoreau