Show o Not in in Utah as in in Gotham Goodwins Goodwin's Weekly When certain students of the edir edi- edi r tonal rial corps of the Utah university murmured because the faculty of theL the L school put ban upon running tobacco advertisements in their students student's d I magazine the Deseret News editorially edito edito- Y in sorrow and wrath read those vagabond students a brief lec- lec r tore 0 y From it the New York Times copies e e following The same argument which a would lead to the rejection of r i the one class of announcements Ih would also lead to the rejection j- j of t the other People of sense a and discrimination will be amazed r ed that any such question could I C have arisen especially here in 1 Utah Upon that the Times in its own pan pon derous spay exhausts half a COlUmn of mingled humor and satire In Ini i Passing sing we may mention that about the e most serious feature of the Times v la o one ne of its ts homer p us fights and anden Then en at the same time it tries to toa toke a make ke it its jokes caustic then to the ordinary reader a blue print is need need- needed neede e ed l to make malco clear just what it really real real- ly means But it is clear that the ther r local pride of The Times is wounded i hY the especially here in Utah of the News Great as The Times is eta nd wise beyond belief as it is it evidently cannot comprehend that al t xe in Utah are a peculiar people ot only sinless in ourselves but Voiding the very appearance of sin People who regulate our morals w Y statute and the grace of God and ande e f either admit nor permit any lapses torn rom sanctity i The Phe Times refers to the fact that the e men in the navy nary when 1 out on ono the o lapel lonely sea and the soldiers in e he bloody trenches in hi tho pause of 4 he battle storm crave the soothing hat but what the pipe brings them I. I Y as that to do with a now and thou then Utah student who fain fainn n s p purloin and burn a poison poison- tie e aden stogy or cigarette The Times of that not half the vote I- I lament my Hall could be brought out ell ll tobacco but what has that nt it o IL-o do with a state where all the thel ol- ol l- l ties ies i vote and no gentleman ree ee ld puff tobacco smoke in a aYs aY's vote Ys Y's face when she essayed to be just justi- justi The use of tobacco may 14 Jn lN Now York because a tobacco breath is not nc t so as the natural natural nat nat- ural breath of many people there but that Jias no application in Utah where there is no more taint in the bodies of the people than there is in inthe the perfume of the roses in the gardens gardens gar gar- dens of Cashmere There is no music mu mu music sic where there are no airs dars to hear J a How Could a deaf man describe a grand grand opera How can an utterly newspaper like The Times give any idea of the moral status of Utah or the customs customs' that govern here On celery day next Monday a a bunch of Utah celery should be sent to The Times editor and with it a note that Utah celery is typical of Utah morals and by tasting the celery the editor may know how important are all his attempts to form an estimate of Utah morals The disposition of the few students in our university to use and adver advert Use tiso tobacco can only be accounted for through that freak which nature sometimes indulges in as when the colt of a black horse and black dam appears in the mouse color which its immemorial ancestors adopted so that the wild beasts could not dis distinguish distinguish dis- dis them from the dried grass grassin in fu which they pastured It is a breeding back and so we we are sorry to have to confess that now and then a child is born in in Utah with all the depraved instincts of a New York child but who shall say that it is the rule |