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IHBMtlBUlitHiiwiiummiiiii i "- ,,,-..., I !. i . witfT .., ,. , , , , , ltl, , , , n.lrrff-1TTr.r..lfTrn-1..TTlfl.T-vl,inilltrimrT.innllt.1 mM .,., KTtmnyll.tiiull. ,fr 'TfotfjpiB 'H i 1 i muEuM Thinking Paperfor Thinking People J 777E .4 CKSLIDING OF 1 r A WILSON I THE backsVling of Elder Wilson was a source of pain and disappointment, not to say fanatical fury, to his brethren who S had hoped that Demon Rum' would permanently decamp from the I bars and saloons on July 1. Elder Wilson has acted shockingly. He has pleaded the cause of Rum's aristocratic associate, Wine, and -that I poletarian knave, Beer, asking that they be not condemned to private i homes until Jan. 1, 1920. It The effect of the president's plea, if congress accedes to it, will be to suspend war time prohibition on light wines and beer during the Iii six months it would be in force under the present law. That law t provides for prohibition on and after July 1 as a war time measure. lh On January 1 the constitutional amendment forbidding the manu- L . facture, sale or transportation of intoxicating liquors will take effect. The president, therefore, is asking that prohibition be delayed for f six months. jL The obvious conclusion is that the president must have heard JEjv about a change in sentiment among the American people. He may have formed the opinion that when the soldiers went to war the slackers voted the country dry. ." ur brand of prohibition is a strange and wonderful thing to the i rest of the world. We heard, early in the European war, that Russia and France had gone dry, but it transpired that "dry" in the Euro- i pean sense meant only semi-arid. It never occurred to the French 1 or the Russians to prohibit wind or beer. The French drew the line 1, between absinthe and brandy on the one hand and wine even strong , ,; wine and beer on the other. To them wine and beer, although in- . toxicating, did not seem to contain any of the demonical qualities that ' American prohibitionists ascribed to all intoxicating liquors under fthe generic name of "rum." The influenza epidemic, we believe had much to do with chang ting sentiment in this country. It even "sobered up" the prohibition ; ists. Some of our erstwhile most obstreperous and pious prohibition It hv, ists fell sick of the influenza and, if their cellars were empty, sent out X scouts for whisky. When members of their family contracted the t disease they rushed off to plead with the bootleggers or others for a b few quarts of their old enemy. f. We are conscious that as we add sentence to sentence the general effect is alcoholic, as if we were pleading for a return of the r saloons and the "wide open town." We hasten to meet the charge I half way in full tilt and overthrow it. Although it is quite evident to the observing that the saloon has been moved into the homes we do f" not wish to plead the defunct cause of the public bar. Our purpose is to emphasize, not so much the defects of pro- fi hibition, as the defects of prohibitionists. Our recollection goes back 1 to those earlier days when Governor Spry opposed prohibition be- f cause the state was not ready for it. The people did not understand f ' what kind of prohibition they wanted. They don't know today what i kind of prohibition is needed. L When the influenza swept into Utah some of oar leading prohibi ts it tionists, the very men who had denounced Governor Spry from pulpit H and rostrum, began to call for booze not light wine and beer, but jtl for whisky. We are not blaming them for that, but we do blame II them and their fellow zealots, laymen and churchmen, for the intoler- II ance of their utterances and for their downright misrepresentations II of those who were acting according to the light that was in them and II who, in the retrospect, appear to have had more light than heaven 11 accorded to many of the bell-wethers of the prohibition flock. Fanaticism and charity are as the poles apart. The fanatical prohibitionists denounced with a searing, annihilating fury the public H men who stood in their way. Uncharitableness was the least of their H sins. Murder of reputations was perhaps the worst. Among the H most clamant of the crew who breathed forth destructive fires and H poison gases of all uncharitableness were democrats, laymen and H clergymen, who went about the state quoting their great and pure H exemplar, T. Woodrow Wilson, as their saintly sanction for prohibi- tion and for tearing their opponents to shreds. And now Elder Wil- son has boldly removed his rusted halo somewhere in the land of H the fizzing champagne and has called upon congress to let the wine H and beer flow down the gullets of our hundred million for another six months. Perhaps the elder will take "a wee little nip" himself now and again. H We have remarked that after debating the prohibition question H for many years the prohibitionists did not know what was needed H when the time came to enact state and national laws. They felt quite H sure that "bone-dry" prohibition was the only absolutely perfect system, but the influenza and the straying away of Elder Wilson H have somewhat unsteaded their nerves, without, of course impairing their vocal powers. If any of our statesmen dared to doubt the per- H fection of their proposals they flew into a tigerish rage and were H ready to rend and devour. H It is about time, we think, when even the righteous should pause H and consider their neighbors in charity. A few years ago there were H two sides to the question and even today the question is not all one- sided. It is about time, moreover, to let the furies of yesterday die H out and to live together in true charity and according to the rule of H reason. H 1 "HONEST ABE'S" SUCCESSOR. I ttnpHE heart of the world is under very plain jackets," said Presi- X dent Wilson in a recent speech to the illuminati of France. "Tlie .heart of the world is at very simple firesides. The heart of the world is in very simple circumstances ; and unless you know the pres- sure of v life on the humbler classes, you know nothing of life what- ever." H In his academic fashion, without ever having been in touch with the "heart of the world," Mr. Wilson has arrived afsome very true conclusions. Feted by kings while he was spending millions of thq P SALT LAKE CITY, UTAH, MAY 31, 1919. H ifl M mLiimi.iii.i Bllwm, , ,, ... , . . . ,bB