Show Ub Dear T HE SALT LAKE HKKJLLO naVes an assault upon the character of Obrlauder the prose rutinguitaes in the XelUon case and tries to mate it appear that Cberiauder Is a > ai clilin ear informed by a teem 1er of the bar hat everytsioj tends to show tat a lot of the bretlireu of Lr jnn under tok to fleece Oberlaiidrr who Is a Gentile but failed iu their little Kme and R3 a tc suit of the failure Xellwh pot i into Pf baLd b-aLd now his friends are trying to help him out by abusing Oberlauder We find the above in this department depart-ment of Sundays Tribvitf How the Tribute likes men of its own ill VVe did not attack Oberlander but his character figures rather consjiicujutly in a stale of facts that one would suppose sup-pose would make even the scribe of thij department of the 7riune bush A man who will dine at the table of another sleep in bit beds and occupy his house for fourteen weeks and after failing to pay for the food that he and his family have eaten turn round and prosecute his benefactor to escape the penally of his own acts may be a good citizen even though he be a Gentile A man who will permit a church to Hipport hi wife and little children while be is es abihag a reputation repu-tation At a loafer and then turn traitor to members of tbatchnrch af erhavicg guned their confidence by reason of their very charity and seek to have them thrown into prison cells while he himself seeks immunity from punishment punish-ment under the cloak of an Informer mav be a giod citizen according to tte Triluns idea of good citizenship This however 1i not cur m del The narrative might be continued to an indefinite in-definite length but we are not inclined It h to pur = ne the subj ct further such citizens that the 7rilune delights in praising It is men of that class who bold up their hands in holy horor and shout themelves hoarse over other peoples supposed crimes but never think cf tneir own acts Dont you think they are good ciZ ns t |