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Show TIIK 2 MOHXIXfJ Music & Art Instructors EXAMINE!!, MOIIXIXO, DECEMBER UTAH, MONDAY OCDEX, 1906. 10, SALT LAKE AND STATE NEWS I From Correspondents and State Exchanges Utah Copper company, for whom ha claimed he waa traveling. DELINQUENT YOUTH. Second Annual Conference of tho Juvenile Court Aeaociation. THE FADS OF Salt Lake. live. I. The second annual eouveutluti of I he Juvenile Court association eu held yesterday morning and afternoon in the Juvenile court ruum. The program completed at the evening session, which waa held' at the first Presbyterian church. The phases of Juvenile court work, the probation of girls and boy a, the care of delinquent and dependent children, the state's responsibility to the mentally deficient youth, the relationship of the publle school to the juvenile courts, and the classes of delinquents wers discussed at length. The convention waa attended during the three fcesaions by an Interested audience. After the evening session the association adopted and the election of officers will be held at a special os is Ion, to be called In the near future. During the existence of the Juvenile court lu Utah three or four hundred glrla have brought before it for Incorrigibility, according to the paper read before 'the convention by Airs. Anna L. Young, probation officer uf the Juvenile court. In her paper, Mrs. Young blames the mothers in nine cases out of tea for the delinquency of their daughters. Aa often as possible the eases of young glrla arc settled nut of itnurt. so that they can lie protected. The rort is greatly handicapped In the caae of delinquent yirla. for there la no detention home la which to care for them. Industrial School Work. H. if. Thomas, superintendent of the 8tat Industrial school, read a paper ou the wrk of the industrial school, and G. M. Slumlord, superintendent of the public schools of Murray, delivered a lecture on the relation ef the public schools to the Juvenile court. Dlscusaione were had by the members of the auaocdatkm on different phases of the Juvenllp court work and probation work. At the evening sensiou Judge Willis brown read a paper ou "Utah's Greatest Mission. Attorney General M. A Breeden presided over the convention. The boys' Puck band, a Juvenile court organisation, played several selections, sud 'Miss Millie Williams sang two oloa. The paper road by Judge Brown waa the closing number of the program. br-e- n KILLED Real Estate Ag'ents m Mr bargains In Ogden and eutelde propontoo Claaalflad Sales column. BY TRAIN. Jospah Bryan Had Accidant Insuranca Policy Payabla to Hio Wife. Severe Strictures Upon Change for the Worse in Our g CASHED CHECKS IN MANY CITIES City Florists IDLE HOUR GREENHOUSE CO. Funeral deaigne of all klnde; cut flowera and gottad plant All promptly filled. Phone 903-- a 740 Twenty-eight- h it THE PORTER FLORAL CO. eut flowera alwaya on hand. Floral deaigne a epacialty. Graenhouao cor. Jefferson avo. and Twsntietn at W. L. Porter, Mgr. In 2U. Phonoe Bell 260-Z- ; Chaleo VARNEY FLORAL VARNEY FLORAL CO. Floral dooigna of evory deacrip-tloto ardor. Delivery promptly made. Order hy phono. Boll I13-K- . Graonhouaa. 1S2 Thirtieth at OGDEN FLORAL Floral Artist CO. Store 411 Twenty-fourt- G-- Grocnhouoo 0L oppoaite Glanwood park. Phono Bell 34.. Ind. 193. Ca carnation reaca The choice' and other flowera, with appropriate groan. Pricco moderate. 1S2 Thlr--t oth et. Bell 118-K- . Ogden City Dentists FELSHAWB DENTAL PARLOR Over Spargoo Book Store 244 Wash. Ava 'Phono 734, BolL e Salt Lake. Dec. 8. After evading the officers of the law In a relentless search for three weeks, F. L. Uray. wanted In Suit Ijike fos forgery, was topped yesterday morning in hla meteoric flight through every state In the West, when he wws arrested at Spiv kane. Hla trail la now strewn with ten alleged forgerlea which netted him f 4tt. by cashing drafts, alleged to have been forged. Gray Jumped from one city to another. Dogged in every quarter he was forced to fly from one city to the next nntll he had covered every state in the West. Ills last forgery waa nimmllted In Goldfield. Nct., and from there hn purchased transportation to Spokane. Two weeks before leaving Goldfield, Gray had cashed a check In Spokane which was dwlared worthless at the lnk. In attempting to cross hla trail sxsln and seek refuge In Victoria. Vancouver. he was apprehended and wilt now he hrouaht bark to Salt Ijike City for trial. Deputy Sheriff Alex Steelo leaves today with requisition papers for the return of Gray to the state of Uiah. When Gray left Suit Ijike In the earl part of November tin re was not one charge of forgery against him. Slnre then the Utah Cupper company, whom Gray cNImed he represented, has receive,! ten draft pos. d in as many different rliles. which were statied In-- Gray, and said to be forged. The drafts were all drawn to Gray on the rtnh Copper company through i the National hank of i'iah. lisa hi en refused on all the drafts. ;ii'd warrau'a hare been p)trcd In the hands uf the authorities In five riihs for Gray's arrest. wns employed hy the Utah at time keeping. Copper runipan) While checking up in the office Gray is illegod in haie stolen a check for f'17 from Chris KosMtlnos. a Greek. The cheek was signed by the treaa-iirt'- i of the rompnny and Gray forged KoFiiflno' name to it and cached It. !ta was niTiised hy Kostlflnoa nf In order to avoid making his check. i, rrct Gray went to Boise. Idaho. A variant wns sworn out for hi arrest an it was learned that he was in him. Before the officers could find hint he cashed a draft drawn on the Kii-g- i 1 I Pav-ine- a School Methods. From the Ind, pendent. From 5 to 11 years of age. however, most American children are In school, snd. if properly instructed, they could be lifted out of iufancy and trained in hablta of real mental application. Two or three generations ago children of this ago were so trained in all the district achoola throughout the land. There were no "methods" in those days. "Pedagogy"' had not been Invented. "System" waa unknown. Boards of education, state and county superintendents, teachers institutes trnat had not then and a text-boo-k been thought of. Teachers were permitted, and even though it their duty, to require their pupils to learn the multiplication table and to master various texts in geography and grammar with sufficient thoroughness to stand on their feet and render an intelligible account of the subject matter studied. Incldently, ft waa considered entirely proper for a child to put hia mind upon some one book long enough to read it through: All that haa been rhanged under the fad of these later daya. A child In the public achoola is not expected or permitted to learn anything whatever in a simple, direct and natural way. The teacher who should venture to teach the multiplication table and persisted In her offense would be dismissed. The idea that a "normal" child should commit to memory anything that he does not understand ia supposed to savor of the dark age and the proposition that five times one is five is held to be one thst no child can be expected to grasp. He must patiently be led along the path of knowledge until, without Intellectual exhaustion, he is brought to see that one and one and one and one and one are fire ones. In like manner the pupil must not be permitted to study a "geography. That would be to permit him quickly to become familiar with maps' and to learn in a few days from the text what the maps mean. This would presuppose Intelligence. It would be making tha unwarrantable assumption the child brain la capable of drawing an Inference that various parts of the earth's surface have shapes like the shapes that represent them on the maps; that their relative distances are like the relative distances on the mapa, and that the arrangement of land and water la like the arrangement of the colonf-tha- t represent land and water on the siapa. All this would be to presume that children In some quite elementary fhahtoa are. able to think and a modern board eit education. curiously presuming that It can think, knows, of course, that children FILES CURED IN TO 14 DAYS. PAZO OINTMENT la guaranteed te cure any caae of Itching. Blind, Bleeding or Protruding Piles to g to 14 days or money refunded. 60c. IMim 1 Gaitaad 1st Mvsls, Ion cannot regard any tatter yea may send through the post as being private. The government has a legal right to open any tatter or parcel passing through tho post and la also entitled, of coarse, to use any information thus obtained to furtherance of the interests of the law. At ous time the official and secret opening of private" letters was of such coidiuoa occurrence thst postofflee employees were sent to France to take taaaoue from aa expert In the art of opening and rescaling tatters. In Iblli the postmasters ef Manchester, Nottingham and Glasgow were instructed to "open all such tatters as should appear to be of a suspicious nature and likely to convey seditions information, and so recently as fifty years ago there whs an agitation to deprive the government of the right to oiien tatters passing through the post The Agitation failed; however, so that your tatters are atill liable to be opened, and the law would be ou the side of the official opener. London Answers. Ink Msstlis - tht ' can't The subject Is a targe one, and we cannot pursue r In one short arilrle. But we dan assure any erne who will acquaint himself with the actual methods so generally followed today In our public achobla that he will not have to push hla investigations tar before discovering what la the matter with the American mind. For the mental concentration that waa demanded in earlier days of children that were being taught the elements of knowledge we are substituting prattle, chatter, srp liter and drivel. The American nation needs many reforms today, but there is none that it neede more than a revival of plain, elementary schooling. ltp EXTENSION lisultr ail er and nobler toll. The machine Is tho bred master of tbe high school of tho race. Header Mags sine. ' htsrk Wflllii, At A wedding feast ia an important ceremony in France among all classes of society. Even among tbe very poor- est of the Parisians wedding banquet is the occasion for a reckless expenditure of money in the purchase of wlno and viand, lu Brittany a wedding Is even a more gorgeous affair than In Paris. At n recent wedding ceremony In Brittany llie guests numbered L200. and three bullocks were slaughtered to. provide them with meat. Wine was couaumed In large quantities, snd in addition forty barrels of cider was conThe Ce reset. i ; according to which I ra-'of animal psychic perception have no other cause than hallucina- ! tion. this latter having Its origin in a human brain and being then transmitted to tho centers in the animal brain. He declares, that c:tpt Ions ns wo may be In the cases cited, there are a large number which did not allow ii to doubt the essentially aubstanr.ai character uf the experiences. Therefore "we may say that Trim now on It Is not admissible to contest a priori the possibility of phenomena of animal psychic perception. if. on the one hand, it is undeniable that much remains to he done before the phenomena In question can be cleared up completely, on the other hand, we may confidently believe that the verdict of the future will be In the affirmative It is also In place to observe that animals, besides sharing with man the ef supernormal psychic, perception, appear to be endowed with spec'al psychic powers s s Rmrekw tho Mil lam Ahnyi 1 .Mttove Rromo QummeJC ev-rcis- j koc. 23e , sumed. ani-ms- s. hyp-rthese- . people. Machines that coma rlooe to our lives and .homes Insensibly teach troth, precision, the adjustment of universal laws to human needs, respect for that wise American Idea that labor saved la labor released for high- s the Maehlsctr, new that we do. not yet know Its poetry. Wo do not yet understand. Only two generation have fired heebie the highway of steam; only one has seen the Beesemer converter transform tho blacksmith Into the master builder of ships gad towers. The sewing machine, the for speaker, tho typewriter, ore common things of today, accepted as a matter of dally convenience, and yet are they teachers of the o In considering the caVes M. Borzann tliiiiUa that thy permit na to dlacard I MM. Machinery is the cornerstone of modern society, the very foundation on which taw, eclence, ethics, tho arts, oven tho state itself, recto. It In oo OF THE TELEPATHETIC IDEA. Two or three years ago H. Rider Haggard reported a case uf apparent telepathic activity In which a dng formed one of the poles of the experience. Mr. Haggard stated thst upon a certain night ho had a vivid dream In which a favorite dog. Bob. played an active part. Mr. Haggard said that he saw the body of the dog extended among the reede of a pool; and that, the dng tried to spratt. but was unable to do so. He succeeded, however, in some Indefinable way, in conveying the Ides to the novelist, that he was dying. The next day Bob was missing, and after four days' search the body of the animal was found floating amnng the reeds of a pond, and Investigation proved that the dng had been killed by a railroad train the night of Mr. Haggard's dream. With this as an Introduction M. Ernest Borland, to a recent number nf the An nsles dH Retrace Psychlques of Paris, proceed to thoroughly examine other cases of a similar or allied nature. M. Boizano divides hfs esses into numerous categories, citing twelve similar to the Haggard case, In which the animal played the role of agent; seventeen cases In which apparitions were perceived by animals as well as beings; eighteen In which all rcmmtinlcatlnn between telepathic muster and animal was excluded, but In which apparitions were perrelveo by human beinas and simultaneously miscelby animals, and twenty-twlaneous rases. In thirteen of the clta tions animals became senslhle to spiritistic Inffuenci-- before human beings an.) In twelve rases animals clearly manifested that they saw phantoms siilcli were not visible to persons present In the same place with the With the Australian aborigine Is pushed snJT'sn find no other game, he catches snakes for food. With bis wonderful brows eyes he can see tbs faintest trail wfcere a snake has aigxagged through the dry loose sod tesves. At nighttime his broad nostrils toko np the chase, and, stooping down among the bushes, with a tough forked stick to hla band to support him, bo follows the track as unerringly aa a blood-bounWhan ho runs a snake to earth. If be ranuot surprise it in the opes and kill ft by a sudden Idow of his stick, he squats over Its hole, making a low hissing1 or whistling sound with bis Bps. Boon the snake puts Its heed out of the bole and peers round. IS an Instant the forked stick descends and fixes ft to the ground by the neck, and tha black fellow, seising It behind the bead.no that It cannot bits him, drag It out of the hole and either twists Its heed off or pounds ft on the ground till Its back Is broken. When 1 Balt Imho, Dec.' fl. Seven hours before ho met his death on the tracks of tho Oregon Short line, Joseph Bryan. agnd S3, a freight handler,, received an accident insurance policy that promised to pay his wife $ 1,000 la the erent of hU death, llg had been sep. rated from her fur eighteen months. Bryan showed the acrldent policy to several men with whom ho was employed in the freight house, before he met his death. Ho woo struck by a switch engine four tracks west of tho freight house at five o'clock this afternoon. No one knows exactly how the accident occurred. Before he started across the tracks he told two of bio fellow workmen that he waa not feeling very well. He bmj fallen with hla head renting on one of the rails. When be was found his head had been badly crushed but he woa still breathing, but unconscious. He died a half hour later before a doctor arrived. Hid body woa taken to the nndre-takinestablishment of S. D. Evans, 4H South State street. The money and papers found on the body were turned over to Coroner Dana T. Smith, who will Investigate the manner in which the man pint hla death., bryan came here several weeks ago from Glenn's Ferry. Idaho. Over a year before he had left hla wife there aftgr a disagreement. To hla friends he aaid that he waa a married man bu that perhaps he would neved live with hla wife again. Ha was living at tha home uf I. K. Hollis, 153 North Fourth West street. Hla wife, father and mother in Glenn'a Ferrv, have been notified of hla death. Attorneys SCHOOLS Soma tu by-la- LATTER- DAY which are unknown to man. Such, for Instincts of example, are the direction and miraUun, the faculties of foreseeing storms, esnhquakes and Another other natural phenomena. point to be noted here la that although man appears to be without these secondary psychic powers they are still present la the subconscious domain. Indeed, the faculties of telepathy, premonition, prevision, etc., closely correspond to the animal faculties in question. Public Opinion. Tbe entrant of commerce Is said to be one of tbe moat nutritions forms of food, pound of the little berries from Greece containing more than throo much actual nourish meat as times the same weight of lean beef. "Currants, says one antbority. should really he eaten every day. They contain all the beneficial properties of the The apple, but In greater proportion. most lmiortant fact connected with them is that they supply tbe body with muscle building and nerve sustaining material in a form ready for speedy digestion and MMlmllatioa. 1 Um of takrlw. at the same time most Interesting bits of pictorial work which bare leen preserved from antiquity la tbat of the lien of Babylon, and ao careful waa the workmanship that even after tlie lapee of several thousand years not only tbe. outline, but tbe color. Is very distinct Tbe figure was used very generally for decorative purposes in ancient BabyOne of the oldest and lon. nilikssS. Man begins lift helpless. The bal is In paroxysms of fear the moment I nmwe leaves It a I. me. and It comes slowly to any power of self protect i( that mothers ay tbe salvation of li and health of a yonng child Is a p pctnal miracle. Emerson. i To wade In marshes and sea ma la li,," deettoy of certain birds, they are so accurately made for thst they are Imprisoned in place. Each animal out of its hi would starve. A soldier. lorksm bank clerk and dancer could im change functions. And thus vi victims of lillDtitias. Caienna. |