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Show ' AwJAi J SOUTH 1 1 J ilril I nrj VV CACHE COURIER, I lO lUCftlilorui lihhar.mii' Hyrum, Utah, Friday, January 16, 1948 XHE GRIN REAPER When We Disagree Harold Stassen went on record as favoring freedom of the press, and, oddly, his statement had news value. A few years ago, a fairly gooc For Stassen spoke for the freedom not only of the papers gag for someone whose hair wasnt that are supporting his candidacy for the Republican combed too wejl, was Youd think not only for the big and rich we had broken the comb at our presidential nomination, house! These days, it wouldnt be and powerful metropolitan journals who bend over bacunderstood. kward in treating the news objectively, but for the labor The comb industry certainly has press. done a job. How good a job I hadnt the labor press has taken a treAmong realized until I overheard an early not just recently but always. explain to a contempor- mendous kicking around, ary, Oh, I have a comb for each Labor papers at first were cried down as Bolshevik,' of have. I pants pair In any event, the and then (and now) as Communist. often is. inclined to doubt the right to . And in the same way, weve got American public to watch this coffee thing. I adexistence of anything with which it disagrees, with which mit its got me, already, so my role it is entirely unsympathetic. is akin to that of the By Bill Long Local Boy Makes Good Theres no better story a country paper can print than home town boy makes good, and oddly enough it seems the country papers have far more than their share, on it seems State papers last week carried the news that T. S. home town boy makes good, and oddly enough Petersen, a Cache valley native, had been elevated to the position of president of Standard Oil company of California. Petersen started work with Standard in 1922, served In the marketing department, then became manager of employe relations and personnel, general manager of sales and, in 1942, a member of the board of directors. Tagged in the Era of Loose Talk as one of the more soulless corporations, Standard now is headed by a man who is an expert in the field of personnel which simply indicates the qualifications of being able to get along with people, understand their problems, being willing and eager to help them, to win respect and accord respect to every man as a human and an individual. Standard is headed by a man who understands and is an expert in the field of marketing which means simply that he is a salesman. And there is no more important cog in the United States economic machine than the cog of salesmanship. non-laborit- es, teen-ag- er protagonist in that epic, The Face On The Barroom Floor. Stassen paraphrased, I urge that even though you disapprove of every word published in every labor union What got me was the ad I saw paper in America, you emphatically insist upon their right in Life last night, sponsored by the to publish it, limited only by the regular law of libel. Coffee Bureau with the cooperation of jthe National All of us, for as long as we' can remember, have upheld Coffee Association. Maybe you saw and agreed with the principle of freedom of the press, it - - it showed a picture of two follow Stascups of coffee on the coffee table when we agreed with the press. But let us in the foreground, and just back sen in projecting the principle and applying the of that the feet and legs of two to the point of admitting the need and necepeople, a young man and a girl, who apparently are seated on the ssity and rightness of a free press even when we disagree divan. Cast carelessly on the floor with everything it presents. Pan-Americ- an Con-stitutio- , - between them is a ring box, drawn slightly oversize so you wont miss it. Good Things, the ad headline explains, Happen Over Coffee. Apparently the guy has just proand she has just accepted posed, a by . . . over a cup of coffee. T. S. aQPUDG rasrssfl eopecoG is expanding constantly . . . And first and foremost, Standard now is headed native son, a man many of us knew as a boy. Petersen was born in Logan, a son of Soren and Annie Io you suppose the guy had been Elizabeth Scarborough Petersen. He attended Logan carrying the ring around for a week or it took a cup of coffee schools until 1912, when he was 16 years old, and the for so,himand ito get his courage up to, as we used to say, pop the quesfamily moved to Portland. tion? - . . - ' mission for the L. D.S.'church ' ' Or maybe she had insisted on his in the eastern states. the ring, but even then he buying Cache Valley wishes him well in his important new made a h stand, and it position. wasnfuntil she had convinced him He served a two-ye- ar ..X ' last-ditc- Free Portraits to Our Readers v Then again, perhaps f fearfully, with heart filled with adoration, he came .to the door that evening, and m , Every working day new telephones are installed, pole lines built and wire strung to serve more farms and ; HERES WHAT YOU GET 1. The newspaper at a reduced price ($2.50) for one year; 2. A 5x7 Brunson portrait of any individual or group. 3. Cancellation of any amount past due on your sub- scription. This is a good deal, and we are offering it to clean up our subscription lists. SEND IN YOUR SUBSCRIPTION TODAY. TO OUR BUSINESS OFFICE AT 62 WEST CENTER, LOGAN, OR SEND IN CARE OF YOUR LOCAL EDITOR. FEBRUARY I IS THE DEADLINE. A that she could make coffee just like mother used to make that he decided to weaken. has agreed to honor coupons issued by this newspaper which will entitle the conversation went something the bearer to ONE 5x7 portrait of the finest quality. like this: hello, John. What do Group or individual pictures will be taken and will be She: Why, you think we ought to do this evemounted in a folder ALL AT NO COST. ning? A movie, perhaps, or would No effort will be made to sell more than one picture. you like to go dancing? ! However, if more are desired, the coupon will pay for one. He: Naw, Mary, lets just sit quietly here at home. Ive sorta got it in my mind to ask you a mightly imCOUPON THE TO OBTAIN HERES HOW 1. Renew your subscription to this paper BEFORE portant question. She: Now what could that be? : FEBRUARY 1 at $2.50 per year ($3.50 outside Well, anyway, lets get at it. He: Naw, lets have a cup of cofCache County). fee first. 2. If not a present subscriber, start a new subscription either at the county rate of $2.50 or $3.50 Or yet again, perhaps he popped the question and she didnt want outside Cache county. to seem too eager. Tell you what, Upon receipt of the subscription and the money we she said, Ill think it over. Ill will send a coupon by return mail which will be good, make coffee, and decide 'while its when presented at the Max Brunson Studio, for one 5x7 cooling enough so we can drink it" portrait. There are no other requirements. My point is - - to club it about FURTHERMORE a bit more - - that was no place for If your subscription is now in arrears we will also a cup of coffee. And the Coffee Association is moving in on us to CANCEL ALL THE AMOUNTS PAST DUE. pretend that it is. And when an industry moves in, let the buying THIS WHOLE OFFER: DEPENDS UPON THE NEW public, the consumer, beware. It we SUBSCRIPTION BEING RECEIVED BY FEBRUARY 1 arent careful, before long theyll MAX BRUNSON STUDIO in Logan n ranches.. More. than' 30,000 poles and 0Verl2,- 000 miles of wire have been added to our; rural telephone! systems! since .the beginning of 11 946 nearlyhalfof Ithisequip. ment being installed during jthe last year Many lines! havelbeen; constructed of; new! steeliwireiWhichper mi tsthe spacing of poles more than"twice as far apart as formerly, thereby, speeding, uprural construction. Over : 1 4.0 0 0telephoneslweredded in high-streng- th 'l have us carrying coffee around with us all .the time, in pocket thermos flasks! SOUTH CACHE COURIER UTAH Published by Cache Valley Publications Silbert V. McDowell Hyrum Editor Mrs. Elton Olsen Hyrum Reporter Margaret S. Maughan. . YVellsville Editor Wm. M. Long Managing Editor C. W. Claybaugh Business Manager J. W. Edwards. . . .Advertising Manager Gilbert V. McDowell. .. .Circulation Mgr. A weekly newspaper, published every Friday by Cache Valley Publications and entered as ' Second Class Matter at' the post office at Hyrum, Utah, under HYRUM, the act of March 3. 1879. Subscription rate in Cache County, $2.60 per year; outside Cache County, $3.60 per year; single coplea five cent. ' , F r ruralareasduringll 947. During 1 94 81welexpec tTto.brihgTtele) phone servicetoXmany .thousands i mortfi ' r peopIelonjFarmsiandiranches; Th fountain Stott sTekphon tcndTcI crop kCompsny s |