Antco ^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. 2 - Clifford Inman, Nancy Thomas,
Ethelene Bowman, Pauline Atkins, Alpha
Hiatt and Vivian Mabry
Plant No. 3 - C, W. Browning, Hilda Coleman
and Ruth Berrier
Plant No. 4 - Ruth Hayes and Jessie Phillips
Plant No. 6 - Nell LaFone, Pauline Hollar,
Betty Bobbitt, Margaret Whitener and
Josephine Hoyle
Plant No. 7 - Dorothy Phillips, Kathy Cavin,
Edith Smith, Opal Asbill and Estell Pernell
Plant No. 8 - Priscilla Brown
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 Ellington
and Bertha Hester
I can do all things in Him who strengthens
me. --(Phil. 4:19)
God created us with infinite potential to
be a self-motivated, forward looking, posi
tive-minded individual. In looking beyond the
mists of doubts, fears and anxieties, we will
find new and miraculous ways to use our power
that comes from the Spirit. Minimize the ap
pearance of negation, and real opportunities
for growth, progress and success will be re
vealed.
Jerald Wyssman graduated from Central State
College in Edmond, Oklahoma. He is the
husband of Sue Wyssman, Greige Goods De
partment, Plant 19.
People seldom notice old clothes if you
wear a big smile.
-2-
A Man's Attitude. . .
A great many people these days complain
that their work is boring. The tendency is to
blame the job for lack of challenge. What
usually makes work drudgery, however, is a
man's attitude--not the work itself.
No task need be boring, for the simple
reason that every job contains within it a hid
den challenge. That.challenge is this: How
can it be done better?
Could anything be more boring than sweep
ing floors? Murray Spangler, a department
store janitor in Canton, Ohio, didn't think so,
even though the dust made him wheeze and
cough. Many men would have given up and quit.
Instead, Spangler set out to find a better way
to clean floors. "Why not eliminate the broom, "
he wondered, "maybe something that would
suck up dust. . . ? "
Spangler's question led to a crude but
workable vacuum cleaner, which he induced
an old friend in the leather business to finance.
The friend's name was H. W. Hoover.
Steven Hedgecock
has returned to his
job at Plant 3 after
serving a tour of duty
with the 312th Evacua
tion Hospital.
Steven was order
ed to active duty on
October 23, 1969, at
Fort Polk, La. After
completing his eight-
week basic training
assignment, he continued a period of advanc
ed individual training. Later, he was given
specialized training in mess management and
received training as a mess clerk. Steven
was one of the top ten in his class. He was
released from active duty on March 6, 1970,
but will continue to fulfill his military obliga
tion by training with the Army Reserve on
weekends.