Show Youth of Land Growing Better BetterIn i V In Spite Jazz and Bootleggers By Thomas Grain Cram Surrounded by jazz by preying bootleggers bootleggers' by a n moving fast life of hazards Am Americas America's erica's you youth th nevertheless less is sound at heart The automobile and the modern dance teach many to say Good morning morn morn- ing lag judge it ft is true but only in utterly indifferent communities te Is I wickedness among the young on tho the V Increase In a majority of oC It steadily decreases And prohibition as it affects the young 19 is tremendously triumphant Who thus brand the age as rIotous riotous riot rIot- ous ens yet throw the den deli in its teeth Probably the tho greatest authorities in inthe inthe inthe the land representatives of tho the oldest oldest old old- est eat commonwealths J. J Of f th the National Probation association and judge of the juvenile juvenile juve juve- nile court in Richmond Va and Herbert C. C Parsons former president of the tho same organization In Massa Mama They talked on childhood and It Its present dangers after the adjournment adjournment adjourn adjourn- ment of the annual conference of or the National Association of Juvenile I Court Judges and Probation Officers in n Washington Neither believed beHoved that hat any individual Is beyond salvation salvation sal sal- no matter how depraved homay homay ho homay may seem V The automobile Is one one- of our greatest problems they admitted V Parents of ot high standing toil tell us they have no control over oyer their youngsters There Thore Is s one vicious association of Ideas we find it t hard bard i t to combat t Boy Dor girl irl automobile I V I i speed seclusion alcohol Immorality immoral Immoral- ity ity It is an enigma to be solved s Inthe in inthe inthe the home After all they asserted the tho most of tho delinquencies amon among the young can be traced to improper home life V But one of the former causes of ot otI wickedness by children has virtually virtual virtual- ly been eradicated by dry laws lawa they said Despite the activities of tho the bootlegger there is much ranch less lees drinking drink drink- ing lag In the average home today Only the tho old topers tapers and the people of the so called upper classes indulge And Andi juvenile court records record reflect V tho good influence on the children in these homes now become temperate Judge Ricks is a champion of the therod therod therod rod in the tho home but only whon when In Intelligently in- in used When a parent whips a child to Inspire fear then he has haa lost his hia case he declared I do 40 not advise the hickory for the willed strong youngster Really I dont don't know exactly exactly ex ex- where to draw the line lino I do donot donot donot not believe In the tho custom handed down by the little red schoolhouse A teacher has no rl right ht to whip any mans man's child but his own Look at Florida and you'll see what flogging by outsiders leads to Tho The churches also must take cognizance cognizance cognizance cog cog- of or the pre presidents plutocrats and plumbers of ot tomorrow they V said Give a child surrounded by religious influences a chance and Inmost Inmost in inmost most cases the thO child Is decent Heres what I consider a startlIng startling start start- ing ng fact fact said Judge Ricks In my myOn myOn myOn On Last List Page Pal i. i V V TilE THE U UTE E INDIANS WERE ERE MOVED MOVED- 1 t From Page One bring In the twelve men whom the women swore had been engaged in the massacre But they could get none to come In save Douglas who was wa only indirectly engaged In it At last ten of them were brought In Some were sent to Washington and nothing was done don with the murderers murderers mur mur- except Douglas who was confined con con- fined lined to Leavenworth for fOl a time and then liberated Ouray knew that the massacre meant that the Utes were vere to be removed removed re re- moved from their heritage tho the mountains and aud valleys of western Colorado but he strenuously opposed ed d being moved to Indian territory which was talked of It Is said he lie would have fought r rather ther than sub sub- mit to that The result would kayo havo I been a general Indian war which would have cost many lives lires for It It would have been no small matter to toj I subdue these mountain Indians in their native fastness The spring of 1881 was the windup wind- wind up of th the commissions commission's labors and of ot the ratification of the final treaty wi with h the Utes by tw which they relinquished relinquished relin relin- all all- their lands in Colorado north of the 32 1 parallel Only a small mall s remnant of this once powerful I tribe remained in Colorado Ignaci Igna Igna- Ignacios Ignacio's Ignacio's Ignacios ci cios cio's s 's band of Southern Utes occupy today In the the southwestern corner o of Colorado a pan nan pan handle of territory ext extending nd ng into New Mexico Inasmuch Inasmuch Inasmuch Inas Inas- much as they took no part In th the up- up uprising rising their rights lights were were respected 0 |