OCR Text |
Show THE INTER-MOUNTAIN REPUBLICAN, SALT LAKE CITY, 2 UTAH, SUNDAY, DECEMBER 9, 1906. heen a < Something of| { citizen | and x Useful more yter. iseful than than all the the ins | | | Mrs. Young. L. | | The Second Juvenile the rday yeste the annual court association morning courts was completed The at the ¢« Shopping Club. the Barly in last days when wait until the you W ill frenzy to get something anything offered in the ND SHOP EARLY- -eurly in day and the find thre make ; will er crowds, instead of : buying a pleasure Join held was room. which was session, Presbvterian ¢ hurch of afternoon and Juvenile gram convention i} pro-| ve ning| at the First phases of Yr he of the probation delinquent held { him! An the aL y heart opens in broad when ever IS fast approac thing The joyous sea Take and h appiness of others. ple as ure of the t inks charity, when eac no ne tomor> shopping- -hegin whieh year this ust ial more time than complete, you have > ure our holiday now Right row-ftinish this w eek have esmen to which sal from assort(me nt a greater who men -but compelled to acof inexperienced the things he to get negleeted needs but Are Mothers ful You find man or sed every) ClUzen cs the greatest vari- ety of beautiful patterns especially cB) 1 ‘ + shall " ' the merey ib from. proved a | giving tt t Xmas j Sam |} Angele to. the coust jmore than a Lake anes $5 ! Shirts 50c | S18 to $8.50 Pajamas $1.50 to Ifosiery 10c to $1.50 Mul¥lers 25¢ to $3.50 $5 Umbrellas 50c ancy to $12 Vests $1 Fancy to $7.50 Suspender 50e Suit to $3.50 Underwear 50c to $5 } Cases $2 Hats Si 50 . to a Pierce's _ be cared | lation few ad be Te ont want Industrial School Hi ive will been popular be showing a ens sWks and We are array or lin- fancy border striking with d Cc oberg cx »tto Linens at Silks at Silk i nitial, bony al »¢ A always and as gifts oft y JEWELRY. ) ERCHIEFS. Utah's ictor and of . GIRL a article of Jewelry is a small 108L appropriate and - lasting a reminder of the giver after useless things are 25c, "25c, effects, Ic Studs toilet 50c, 50c 7 7 de 5¢c, to $1 holders tie CS Mehesy's. . Brown was program, year the clot It follows and half number In every Juvenile the part ago, speaking In Ben Lindcourt of pee that those nlerested ehildren through juventle then WUWtiuh common on in the courts use, nat which, Cit estublished ys the rene quickly followed by our den, Provo, Logan ae yf, comes the ¢ redit of havi ng the highest type ot juve ae Jaw. The success liere gave to the ne ee strength the movement for a separate Juvenile ceurt in our capital city of Washington, a Sollowin of Dr Stlan> greatest shits "nts Boston, by legislative enactment, has now a separate Juvenile organized about three months 8 the n, is Utah's greatest misThe eare of her own ehildren, and in so doing setting an example for other states, whe may fin¢ gsreatest service in blessing the children who live within its bor Gives Boy a Chauce, * "While proud of our boys, I can not say that the American boy in Salt Lake has more honor than the Americé in boy in Indianapolis or Chicago. nen, the blessed our law jis that it vee chunce te correc a tmis2 square. His conception of in our Juvenile court is a law of justice and mercy, Not a@ strict law of punishment; a law that compels suffering. The divine truth that what man sows, that shall he also reap, comes to the boy when he stands on mre will on Lo Salt returnife be gone busines fm once. The FURS styles, efficient Mehesy, representa- Iepublican Cireu- Departmensr Roller. Rink for nice} Reduced Rates from ‘Utah and | Idaho to All Points East Call - and 34. to Return now and ‘Z make arrange = Me DAYNUES-ROMNBY Nt REE 25-27 E:~ ae First' MUS South. \ Via XMAS GIFTS and cases 5 . N 7 From Ogden and Salt Lake City -To- Missouri River Points. $32.00 | \Chicago ISt. Louis fore the juvenile Jaw. His suffering, | found. The boy was taken ‘anyon his disgrace, his parent sorrow and|City and placed in jail there atte the mother's t ring the Sdnbine to the | WHteh haunt: proce ded Vhe officer «at boy. Without oa court, his fnner. pun-| last had the watch tu. his possession ane nt is more than any Jegal punPheeguest was ended... Now:how to get shment can. eive Now, this. humane rid of the boys. Officer, Boy and watch eou endeavors: to find out why this) rived In. Salt. Lake City his)-bo bov: made the mistake Perh: aps: the of. | Was placed in jail, and later, with = the W 5 , soy | Other. boy, was brought before tl po2 ¥ : robbery The t i at year misti *s . "a8 ‘ ne acquainted is to blame? Having discovered the with nana On their arrival In theJuyefault-in.the child, it then becomes: tho nile court the officer informed me of the tate's duty for its future welfare ig promise made to the boy who stole the nake a.true citizen of this c paid not the state then demand. th¢ | hinder aiie Judge Edis d Week | | | \\ for | ine by howels. ee (lj Talkers---50¢ mei h days and boys it had in its a work in. o should, no on cities n- build- our court ia watch ""Buct | a Who ‘few if fo. let: he stole him' disspose d of ‘Well,' replied : it the go: and punish the othicers: I is the' want would tell ou oft? te 4. nan who had the waich.. Telegrams and jonas distance ‘phones were brought into service, for the watch must boy of the After sentence was made I ania to the other one ‘Did this officer tell you pal be would get, reply the can |} officer go." "If freely from his promise you | TI give his promise back, ‘Well, the Jaw wHl play -fair with] ou don't think the officer should| have made the promise; nt a eae and vou accepted it, The yatch has been] recovered, and now er icae you leetonsi 2nd release the officer !se-" Finding out. that ward of the Juvenile phoned the situation what from the Nov. 20 and Dec. 18, 1906. RETURN LIMIT 60 DAYS. Send for Literature. OC. F. WARREN, Agent A. T. & S. F. Ry., Be 7 411 DOOLY BLOCK, Salt Lake City, Utah. U. S. DEPOSITORY prom- this. boy was court of ode n, to Judge Patton $39.50. i larger variety than ever before-useful and api njiate- a Prices to | suit every pocket book, Call and see them, WILLES-HORNE DRUG Co. By | Deseret the : News Monpyoment ; Bldg. "Phones 374 no boy ‘| eres the old |make my word good to the boy | of dealing with| ""T know you do, and you watonlé 1] | replied I . you. see, you have, been} recovering one wateh, and now you. A Case in Point. have it. and the owner gets it, you are through with the boy I don't care so} Some weeks ago a gentleman, slop- | much for the watch, but we are en-/| | ping ut the Cullen hotel, missed a gold|deavoring to recove two citizer to watch Reporting the case to the po-| the state, and they are worth more than lit e, they, after some days in inveatina, a thousand wuteches tion, vered the thie.--a bo The ‘But my promise, said the offic | boy irrested tnd placed a3 jail. a 's, that isia ener dei pa He ad the theft, but would not! When the boy accepted your proposigive information as to where the, tion, you, as the representative of the watch s sult the watch must be) law, in the mind_of the bag would fulfound The owner prized jt and [ was) till every promise made, You should informed offered a reward for its renot have made the promise covery," Day: after: day "the boy "was ‘''Bu we wante the watch back, questioned, put he would not pen more rephed. the officer. than he took tt lust sort, to I know.' If replied, ‘and in this get the information fhe boy rer prom- |) you were doing your duty ou were Ised his freedom if he Rou S tell where / after the watch, and got it, and Lam the wateh is « rse.-there would! glad you. did Birt had the theft been be the show of a trial. Me agreed. The vu $ gold -piece the state would not} 16-year-old boy was taken te the crim-|have expended the Lime and money fer inal court Tle gay his age as 19 and/its recovery 00 expense to recov 85 pleaded guilty to a charge of robbery,! wuold be considered foolish, But he as bound over to the Distriet court | boys would have committed a theft just ind placed is the county jail to awalt|\the same, and the forgetfulness of the his trial, agreement with the boy!/law about it would have suggested to was that he aiid te where the watch | the boys ne ensy it was to steal and jax, and for so daing: when his case not pet caur me up the District court, the offi- | Vill vou res the boy go?' asked the cers would have it dismissed he boy officer fulfilled his part ok the agreement. His ‘No, I can. not do. this, but -your pal took the water Who was his pal?| promise ‘shall be considered: and the A boy who lived in Pueblo. Gtven the | 28% will release you," I replied. name of this boy, an officer left for ""Oh, no, he won't, replied the oftiPueblo with the required papers from | cer the governor of Utah to the governor) "'Then it will have to hold good, for} of Colorado, requesting that certain | we muat pl ay fair with the boy, but he} person was wanted in this state for) will play fal robbery. Arriving in Pueblo, be officer ‘The boy Nene back from Colorado located the other boy and he Was placed |) was sentenced to the State Industriy ul} in jail ‘Then the officer or m tojschool J gave him money r his fare | Denver for the prover doc eee is fad he took his commitment papers, | the governor of.that state, Bue the }and within two hours fears the time he boy in jail in milena Then on reg find | left tor Ogden surrendered litmselt | to a man|to the superintendent to tind this | school. your the * "MIL. night, 1£ Fou think it @ square} wil) you de? questioned the. boy. ‘ deal that you should go free and your) . pal 50 to Industrial School, you! Send you to the State Industrial can go, . } school," [ replied a is not fair to him, but the prom-| ‘"Che boy studie while ind with ise was made to-me, he said | tr mbling volce s uid I'll play square ago white tr well the new methods through the law the watch. is boy so who nee left the city. Now on was -- - $44.50 _ PROPORTIONATE RATES FROM IDAHO AND OTHER POINTS. Dates of Sale: Work. Williams paper read ae Lbove for XMAS three Auditorium was discussed at some length Dr. Beatty held that the state ‘owed the mentally affected child"< place where it could be cared fer. Dr. Ewing expressed ihe same opinion, and showed that where the mentally affected child was placed side side with the bright, keen witted child, that the former did not have a chance to learn H. Thomas, superintendent of the State Industrial school, read a paper on the work of the industrial school, and G. M. Mumford, superintendent of the ee slic schools of Mura ray, delivered ecture on the relation of the public sechools to the juvenile court Discussions were had by the members of the assof#ation Th different phases of the juvenile court work and arepetay work At the evening aceon auage Wills | Brown read 2 paper on tah Greatest Mission At tithes feat A Breeden presided over The a t invigorate liver and = Deticient. could Pleasant Pollots Notes. great variet of Furrier, Knutsford | tives at OS atfected of for cloth-bound. &-o- SPLENDID $5 pay, exe stamps and regulate stomach, up hine at to Send to Dr. Pierce, 21 one-cent inte ais for pa- or 31 yuntain fulfillment furs tho "Pavor- hos I blue Dr. multi-| head jt of { stamps held sacredly conficentia felt the Let If sick consult the Doctor, free of charge py letter, All such communications are Utah accepts) all the the receipt per-coverod, to,come unto TOG. WO? id) and portant, people TIANDK always Dr. T B. Beatty addressed the convention in the afternoon on the state's responsibility to the mentally deficient youth. th e eyening session rr 3rown Ewing pied: on the "Children with Half a Chane The need of an institution where children who are mentally Daler peculla alex Medical Adviser Is sent Sree mailing only, 3uffalo, N Z Mentally of William G Bradshaw, member. of the real estat firm of Bradshaw Brothers, ¢ Los Angeles, returned to the coast last night, after being a week in Salt : looking after real est e holdi ‘ In ithe to $20 on "0 | Porte! returned from esterday to remain in fot We to S her to-secure f is also very Dr. Pierce's ; lon arrays who. ha the her |< to sin wraye atient observet rulés and the Pe pre: res¢ ription will do the rest. tistied. This| humanity the with the. ot ee Business 295c Kobes "DOT et its of. right dot fon a Sensible Gifts. to $15. to in irth ory which ut excrvlso { eet YOURE SURE TO GETTHE | S141 We in. and the eared jst Counts, nd labor to enable nur- a before ll. one -_-_----- Lounging i Ree er ehuldre and lif you buy | Knut ford $5 hat su SEE you, only ( wa Blamed. Ilouse the poor, who from ee derangements and de ,billty which are seegravated by many household c he sthusipEOLecke i Sar & whodw gift- Suggestions {fe of household es ares snd the hartl, and never-ending work Fig the mother is called upon to perform r. Dlarce, the maker of thet world-famed re, Pett al woman peculiar ¥ {lls-Dr. Plerce's Favorite Presé ription that one of the eatest obstacle of this class of maladies Is the fat nor, over-worked housewife can not & E needed rest from her ee ny household cares that he ik erin: : the ‘ve here suffers load ots j ii ae ,| tinise Having sIVETL! but later | ud irned punish- | © vho escape th ne |to care jnefor corits littlend, ones.and with ¢ housew and it ox. with rai Frequent bearing of acting demands upon the stem, Se Ith the care, worry and laabor = rea =aso rge family, is often e ce of W { Sarit 4] vee pun) } said, ‘Suffer little children: imé, he gave-the.m bBo prepared to worked the heavy burdens, nesses, various placements organs and other disderangements to her sex, human all dis-| uvent full earwell ty aa oar When: are for to growl him popular desirable iene vow in | ove-shalbTy elory cu We boy tortab genes ie men app Toevery fot Pe for or over- under hu grealthe state; richest ré of of e Pe wey wenk, and eee Oi his *Prese etiog "it 8 ue Js a matter of fre prac aus ee 2 rence, in his extensive the moet with ) In whic ft his treatmer py roasc oe eth patient's Inability to ¢pom hard work mg ¢ bh tot Nth those suffering from prolapsus, wi o I 7 anteor tho uterus of d retroversion yersion other displacement of the womanly organs, ae hat, in ae js very school rial Ind the |from | God speed the: da hen other states | ing his"Fa r ‘Ton ato much very ing , from d whe bine he overt lshall d : ect. < ar t he |lth they ae com iy Mae} | their sary kind should also be avoid As rout h nore» ble tL the tizenship dmx Breda air as possible, with rites ight | gift ever. ila in his htured uS¢e = -< eas ap- An pee ernel, ‘yes criminal, to condemn the most gir Bene "for detention The can priate The responsibility of a pa not end, and is not fulfilled, ng & clad aplenty to eat, clothes It's education is not w holty that. ‘of"the : » Ana nas "many 2 mother confided a heartbreaking story, realizing too late, her own delinquency to her daughter for allowing carelessness In the choice of companions; or perhaps, she was too easily deceived." The reeord shows that sixty-one girls have been punished for incorrigibility, and four times as many cases settled out of court. The dependent girls have been taken to the Infants' and Protective association a and something parents. was most Llways that Is preciated between mother differences "Many satisfactorand daughter are adjusted the least ily to all concern¢ d without sald Mrs publicity.' Young causes We "In approachiug th that the chief one is a Jack dence between mother and The mother, in her hurried, forgets that time in her own when questions formed themselves in her mind. And when "er own child comes to her with questions, not ready to answer, and so So the knowledge of the street and the playground becomes child's refuge for information much wonder that the child absorbs the instructions so willlngly imparted by the older girl by "This can only be overcome = careful watchfulness on the part a a gift Make ‘oO Juvenile ce blames the Young ten for the delinquency of| out ot daughters As ofte,, as possi-| of young girls are set- | cases court, so that of The court Is protected the cCasc of delinque handicapped detention home is girls, for there no to ca re in which fur them. £6 Neckwear. Gloves. e irth SSP} : : Pott io eth hit; } ftRte iv ofther him. and sas him from two bo ‘ ped afl the Olive er towthe t the1 ¢ vd vod ] well il knowing }alone,) " it meted out to the dependent responsibility relationship cient youth, the juvenile publie schoo of delinquents, wel and the cla ses convention discussed at length The was attended during by an interested audience ‘ ion the association : the election of at a special session, - future ‘e of the Juvenile or four hundi ed| ght before it for | to the nvention by r a matte time vs who have | ind) traveled: thes country OVEEs 10 e been Hed 1ZTANts, | 10 ive We illed riminalts ho have b 1 up by hear parent bo Hay defied bo h ' been lmost| Tee ha oy 1 up ur ‘ld and every one delivered himself ‘ | our ul ii ben eh a through of samy ot ill the viho yea D oNo te nd Daughters' th ro Eo i Anna for Declares ll1 the copllver, richer down Ss Industrial on this if you NO BETTER WORKMANSHIP CAN BE FOUND IN CLOTHES THAN I HAVE IN THE Only high class tailors are employed and only high class work turned out. York | | tailors uncalled for suits and overcoats continues. ONES I MAKE! My sale of the New The selections are not quite so good as they were, for many have been bought, but, still, you will find a half value saving here when you come in to buy. Will f see you this week? Some Gspecially Sood Ohings M. in Full Dress and Ouxedo Sects DANIELS. 57 West Second South NO FIT FOR YOU, NO MONEY FOR ME, = aaa Responsible Deliquencies, ir uvenile. vty courts rt ha n Violation of certai of atures a De be to sny that all s orth sda ore ae ‘| to regarded as crimin2 "y dically overy reasonable| Cea as ra cany Ww rong. . It 5 would bo harsh, unsympathetic, | But Gold. Jives,and aie ; Certain it is, that much ofts theduc sickntss Ma and suffering of mani kind nation| the»recent ered oa that. will please BLAMED the ? magazine in w eh 4) 4 writer asserted, in snbstance, that a diseaso should he regarded as eriminal. eens oS ' we"| ‘ > or| c Than gold, un Istaken: Not very long ago, a popular published an editorial article great moun-| blesses and make More the Often e ea ciation. Are Mining? its hicH yal MOTHERS OFiis sion? e Is Disease a Crime wn the world i deep and un- =H Second Annual Conference the Juvenile Court Asso- now and DISCUSS NEEDS OF DELINQUENT YOUTH | oe | |