Show WE ACCEPT IT The Tribune this morning recommends us to read Gullivers travels and we have done so It is nn interestinc work and one from which we gathered many ideas I In fact it is far more interesting than most works of travel and it shows Mr j Gulliver have been a most keen observer ob-server of human nature find while i 4 ii ro o < < some of the peoples among whom he traveled have become extinct yet their human nature was much the same as it is found today Many of the political conditions were the same where Mr Gul liver traveled as they are inUtah and we were very much struckiwith the resemblance re-semblance between Mr Gulliver when he visited the Lilliputians and that of the journal which holds the foremost place among newspapers for a thousand miles in either direction in coming to Utah In the capital of the Lilliputians a fire once broke forth and they did not know how to put it out In their dilemma di-lemma they kran to Mr Gulliver and begged him to aid them He did so but we do not now remember just how lIe put the fire out j but this we do remember that the fumes arising from the water he used were such that the people again begged him to desist as they preferred that their city should burn to the ground rather than endure the terrible stench arising from the water that Mr Gulliver used to subdue the flames So it is in Utah The people prefer that their cities and houses should burn down and the political cauldron should be kept forever boiling to have the fires put out by the journal which holds the foremost place among I newspapers in either direction because of the terrible stench that would remain I after the fires were put out as the Tribune would put them out Mr Gulliver also speaks of certain schools of philosophy and their endeavors to reform the world in nil ways It seems as though some I of these philosophers had plans for using food that had been I again once employed I to nourish the body and we understand under-stand that the journal which holds the foremost place among newspapers news-papers for a thousand miles in either direction di-rection is engaged in experiments of alike a-like nature There was one thing that struck us as being more remarkable than I anything else This was a certain class of men who were destined to live on to immortality j and as we read about them and considered their characteristics we could not but wonder if some of those immortals were not doing editorial work on the journal which holds the foremost fore-most place among newspapers for a thousand miles in either direction |