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Show IN JUVENILE COURT Judge Brown Passes on Soveral Cases of Truancy. Despite the protests of his mnthe and stepfather that the money which Edward Hanson cams is needed for the support of themselves, Iho boy, who is 14 years old, was adjudged a truant by Judge Willis Brown in the Juvenile court yesterday, lie was in ado a ward of the court and ordered to go to school. The stepfather, who looks like au able-bodied man, told the court that he was a house-mover by trado, and that business is slack' in his Hue. Tho $4 a week which the boy enrns running errnnds for a printing office, he declared, de-clared, wns iieeded by the family. The Ha uson bo3"'s father lives at Ilunter, Utah. Howard Corringe, aged J 3, was arraigned ar-raigned for truancy on complaint of A. S. Martin, principal of the Grant school. Judge Brown dismissed the case, however, how-ever, because Mr. Martin did not report re-port the boy's alleged truancy to his parents before making a complaint to the Juvenile court. Thomas Bond, aged 15, was found guilty of truancy, made a ward of tho court, and told either to go to school or subject himself to being committed to the State reform school at Ogdon. Ellis EI. Be-nolds, superintendent of the Morris Detention home, was inude an additional probation officer of the Juvenile court. |