Show CONCERNING SOME CAMPAIGN PLEASANTRIES JAMES TAMES H it MOYLE corresponding secretary of the Democratic state J headquarters in ill his speech at th the Democratic meeting Saturday night took rook to criticise the De eret News for not publishing some of the correspondence IH he 8 8 sent lt to it during the campaign At the same time he lauded the Tribune Tri e being baing so 80 good to Democratic headquarters Of course everybody understood that Mr Moyles commendation of o the Tribune was wa just juat such as any state chairman would give his party paper for close to him during the campaign and obeying his hia hi wish in everything g The Moyle idea of a state campaign was A series of letter writing and the dissemination di of literature There waa was no Democratic canvass canua there ware were no Democratic workers There was no Democratic organization any where and no serious attempt was waa made from Democratic headquarters to do anything further than thau to spend Uncle Jesses money in writing circulars printing attacks upon Republican leaders leadeN in obscure publications that were born In a back alley and will die there and in getting up matter for the Tribune T The pretended conversations between members of the federal bunch were written in Democratic headquarters by Moyle Moy and an ex cx nm Urn paper man who should have been an Iter ex cx long before he ho was waa The perl the th man played waa was to carry oary thorn thom to the Tribune The Th Tribune Tri une always printed this matter because of the deal between Kearns earns and the tho Democratic leaders and it tickled tinkled MoylE so much to seo see seep p his lila name in print p print int that he sent his hi communications to the News r Apparently they the did not nt appeal to tho the News from a literary standpoint and anol from the standpoint of fact they thes seemed to be open to suspicion while whilo their MT character was not such mch as ai the editor of the News seWS desired to lay be f e its readers just as U they were sitting down to the evening neal meal here Thara once CIlC wag wu a newspaper man in charge of a newspaper who en oed the tho rule among his editors that they should publish nothing tint that mould not DOt be read by a subscriber while he ho waa wa dining It was a pretty air roK rul and the editor of the News Mews had it in mind as is seen by this thi edi tadal t which appeared in the News yesterday Mr James H Moyle In a political address on Saturday took on to say that th the tho Deseret News had refused to print matter sent to it from tram Democratic headquarters that it had mutilated copy and in general played havoc with it At the t o same saIle time he lauded the American party organ for its generosity in the matter of at space Mr Moyle seen tit to bring this question up in the way ho did cUd he ho will win perhaps pardon us for stating that the News has printed every item of news of this campaign as extensively as space would permit We have printed notices of meetings to be held all over the state and reports of meetings We have printed notices of general interest from both Republican and Democratic headquarters some sometimes times timos in full and ad sometimes in substance The policy of the News has bean been to give the news impartially but not to permit partisans of any color to use US the columns of the paper as channels through which to abuse their opponents We have ad adhered bend hered strictly to this policy and d we have ave the he satisfaction of 91 o knowing r that it has the t e approval of men and d women kothen of all parties whose judgment and ud wisdom we value highly f fTh Th The fact is unfortunately that during the tSe th heat of a political t campaign the usual UlUa rules of courtesy that govern intercourse between gentlemen n are sometimes forgotten and things are said from tho platform and in writing that no gentleman would say to another face bee to face This has been the case in this campaign to an un flu unusually unusually usually large extent There has been more bitterness more person personalities personalities more mudslinging than in any other campaign of recent years Intemperance and not temperance has been the chief char characteristic characteristic characteristic of it As for the Tribune we can only say Bay that the mere fact of a speech or a letter appearing in the columns of that paper is no recommendation It does not prove that it is suitable for a decent paper The presumption is to the contrary What finds fin its way into a garbage can is generally not suitable for the table That paper prints every falsehood every libel h el every insinuation against the church and the tho men who hold responsible positions in the church while wh e it tt declines to print the truth about its supporters and owners It b is a affair entirely Like a flounder it is all dark on cs cm one side lIMe and aid an all white on cn the other And it has baa eyes only on the dark side dele The Tha less eaid eald of that concern the better ere seems e to b be some rather convincing reasons there why hy the News a not print the tha Hoyle Moyle correspondence What finds its iu way into tho the can n is ii not suitable for the table is a pretty strong ex expression e bat brt did diou you ever e see a better word picture of the Salt Lake Tribunal eI And it is a pretty fair characterization of the Moyle cor car correspondence What goes into inu a garbage cant em t Answer all at once Why garbage of coarse Now N ow we had not thought of oL the th Moyle Yo le letters lotters as garbage alto altogether altogether gether but that word rd so thoroughly expresses wr own idea of them that we W here hore and now adopt it The News N evs retort is tho the retort courteous and andu andt n t u We have haT no doubt that tbt when Corresponding Secretary Moyle read that last laM night he ha felt as though t ough he ho had sat a pin |