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Show Page THE JOURNAL 4 J NATIONAL SOMNOLENCE PRESS CAN PRESERVE FREEDOM In the editorial columns, on the front pave the speakers' platforms, we constantly hear about the dom of the press. Newspaper editors are constantly seeking i guard the freedom of the press. There is no search to be prolonged or difficult, for this rivht 18 K teed under the Constitution. Freedom of the press is a right which earn, J definite responsibilities with it. All that the the nation have to do, to protect and preserve the S5) of the press, is to see to it that they rigorously duties that the public has a right to expect of a fn?8. As long as the people of this country believe that press is, in fact, free there is no danger whatever newspapers' losing their freedom. If the public W convinced that the newspapers of this country are distr the news, misrepresenting officials, or otherwise usW journals for selfish purposes, there will be no need oil oring about a free press. The general public, disgusted with a sycoriiant J will applaud any step taken to curb unbridled license.!) cent code of ethics, a sense of responsibility and the evide! of a desire to serve the public will go far towards ing the freedom of the press.. i , ' ? LIFE ON THE FARM IMPROVING Now that the conveniences and advantages of city can be enjoyed by those who live in rural areas, we canf help but wonder why the trend is from the farm into The JOURNAL the interests of the residents of Davis County, at Layton, Utah. matter at Entered as second-clas- s Act of under the Layton, Utah, 1879. March 8, I1ERE ARE SOME for Success suggestions which will direct you on your path toward success. I found them in a timely little volume called Live a New Life published last spring by Professor David Guy Powers. And every one of these suggestions is easily followed if your mental attitude is right: 1 Cultivate the attitude of agreement. This is the very core of persuasion, sweet reasonableness.' Two or more minds coming together to seek understanding set the pattern of agreement On the other hand, truculence creates truculence. A f 'Sv. 2 Accept men as they are and seek to understand them. There is a point of course, where a man must take the isolated peak and break with it all for clear principle, but until it comes he must work, if he would be of use, with men as they are. As long as good in them overbalances the evil, let yv him work with that for the best that can be got. 3 When dispute arises ask yourself, How far can I go along with his views? You may be amazed at the number of concessions you can really make before points of difference arise, and agreement in minor points often prevents issues from arising. 4 Assure the opposition that an agreement can be reached. Thomas A. Morgan advises: I never assume that there is a fight. In fact, I tell the other person there isnt a fight, and ask his help with the problem. 5 Establish areas of agreement, and agreements will follow. In any dispute, be more than ready to compromise. The wise man continually seeks modifications which will create harmony. He i. knows that each item of agreement builds toward the next one by setting the pattern. Time spent in creating a mood of agreement is well invested. Follow the path of nature to a mans mind ' present your story to his senses. For the mind must yield to evident things. Remember there is nothing in the mind that was not previously in the senses. Make demonstration a part of your thinking process. Visualize every aspect of your cause. Search your cause or product for its uniqueness. Ask yourself, How can I make this point aDDeal to the senses of others? You cant go wrong In reading Profeisor Powers Ideas, and you will be more and more likely to go right If you mull them over. sure-fir- e W2 si l ' j Published By INLAND PRINTING CO. Phone: Kaysville 10 MEMBER UTAH STATEPftSS ASSOCIATION NATIONAL EDITORIAL ASSOCIATION Natl. Advertising Representative Newspaper Advertising Service. 222 No. Michigan Ave. Chicago, 111. Editor Manager Richard O. Anderson News Editor J. V. Woolsey Display Advertising Manager Ernest R. Little Classified Advertising Manager ; I LEGION VOTE MEETING i Folks who have no vices have very few Lincoln. SCHEDULED KAYSVILLE Regular monthly meeting of Kaysville post S2, American Legion, will be held at the city building, Monday, June 12, at 8 p.m. All members are urged to attend as new officers will be elected and delegates for the state convention will be chosen. The state convention is scheduled for August in Richfield. tie I wo sun to pie chit tece An Incredible Situation" ML on Some organized labor groups seem to have awas the menace of socialism and government ownership Ha nit rri oi o n field of privately owned utilities is the first socialistic highway. They passed a resolution s) J Federal power projects offer conditions irleJ m 'J enjoyed by our members employed in private Labor An editorial in the Central Missouri L, observed : With a full head of steam, the P alize the electric power industry is under way. credible situation. , The tact is as the CIO group also Poinfdtroi to control of the electric industry is the key the d major industries of the nation. And if ma when government controls or owns these bor will be a thing of the past. The unwnsjv and, at best, will become what amounts to a ernment, as has happened in socialist England. The big unions can bargain on even term ness. But they can never be big enough to terms with government all-power- 1 iPe scri te inj ofi . verr LeS ' .v . OB fin Viif ful Davis County Market Pie REFLEX-JOURN- AL Fir 'oilc step i i yi ness. , Subscription: $1.00 Per Year oft At their recent convention, 400 delegates Payable in Advance. In combination with Workers Union of America, CIO, said that The Weekly Reflex, $3.00 per year. the trictTpower development which encroaches OH Albert W. Epperson XI e country-thes- A weekly newspaper published in Suf(ttlons cities. The automobile and good roads have placed a resident miles from town, closer to Main Street than theoutlj citizens of that same town were fifteen years ago, inpoir time. Daily deliveries bring mail and, if conditions warn it won't be long before two deliveries daily will bring the ral dweller even with the city lodger. The telephone, the radio, the. individual ice man er, the nearly complete electrification of our things make available modern comforts on the along any improved highway. One of the greatest disadvantages of rural life in past has been its comparative isolation, where the fi family lived apart, without near neighbors or desirable panionship. Already, however, the difference between'' and country has disappeared. The farmers childr tend school in town, form a part of the younger social set the family often rides five or ten miles to church and day school. Life on the farm is rapidly changing for the better.to Ik1 tend change means a revived agriculture, which will come. Ik rather than lose its young folk in the years to life in will be a disappearance of all dark corners and and country will approach a common level. w J J |