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Show :r GIRL STOLE JEWELS TO BUY BETTER . CLOTHES Confession Made After Detectives De-tectives Trace Sudden Disappearance. "T roulrt nnt resist the temptmlnn I have .wav wanted many ihitiit" 1 couM rot hae. and worth of t Jewelry m a lot Th's Is the statement whleh Rerthr. Cf, 17 ynr .f hk a, dornMic. , Juvenile tnurt thi mriilnie lwt'fii her sobs Although the ttlrl haa admitted ad-mitted tnkipf? I300 worth nf Jewelry lth the Intention t iwllln; tt and , uslnx the muney lo Luy clothti Jud Nielsen hnn taken the octitHlon to point a, moral to employe In general who .xpoM their employ tt temptation nd their ultimate downfall. DETECTIVES PROBE LOSS. Th ajlrl was employed hy Mrs T. R. Byrn. 1410 Huller avenue. Ves-terduy Ves-terduy afternoon Mrs. Byrne, returned to her reside n re only tA discover that her moM valnaM Jewel had been tnken. The dete-ttve of the local police po-lice force were notified and at once an Investigation was under way. They found that Bertha had aud-denly aud-denly dlnappenred tihotit the name time the Jewel were taken. Aerlinn to 1 JndB Wtelwen. ihw anna had I I'M careleenly lying about. Aim. Myrne could not rerHll the last name of the girl. AH ihe had ever railed her was Bertha. FOUND AT HOME. With this alender rue upon wh'rh to work, the police trared up tha record rec-ord of all juvenile comlnr to their at- tentlon. and ar Iar decided "ThaFTler- tha Com might he the culprit. According; Ac-cording; to the police, tha frirl man found at her home and reudily admitted ad-mitted tha theft. Hha waa taken before tha juvenile court and later a complaint waa U- sued again t her mother charging her with contributing to the delinquency f a minor. COURT POINTS MORAL. "I want to take this occanlon to point out that many employer In Bait Lake are very laX In ex poet ng their employe to temptation." aatd Judge Nialaen. "I know of one caae where a young lunik cttehler elaved alone f'r year on a ml ealary and waa denied a rales. He handled thou-aanda thou-aanda of dollar, and one dav he could no longer resist the temptation. He took a large turn of money, waa apprehended ap-prehended and ht life waa wrecked. "The banker were eitial ha rare In posing him to temptation. The caae I of this unfortunate girl Is of the sume character. Tiie child admits tAking the Jewel beciuse she wanteil pretty things like other girt and was too poor to srord them." Th girl hs beefl placed In the Wasatch Wa-satch domestic science school pend-trig pend-trig a f''rtbr 1iivewrtoTWif hejsn e CASE IS OPENED AGAINST I; W. W. Government Attorney Outlines Out-lines Charges Faced by 46 Wobblies. y Assesiatsd Press. SACRAMKNTO, t'aj., Dec. JJ. Exje dence to prove each of the forty- defendants In the ant 1 mar conspiracy caae here was a member of tha Industrial Indus-trial Workers of the World waa to be Introduced by the government at the resumption of the trial In th t'nited fttntee district enurt hero today. William D. Haywood, general execu tlve officer of the I. W. W.. who wa convicted at the Chicago trial last spring, waa held to be tha "gruldinp spirit" f the -nrganlsatum atnee Inception In 103, by Kolwrt Duncan special attorney of the L'nlted rotates department of JusMce, In his opening statement. Duncan said th govern mem' case would be "an aasault upon the entire I. W. W. organisation, organisa-tion, which, he said, sought 1h overthrow over-throw cf tha government by violence Five men on Ihe jury, complrted yes t err ay. are farmers, others ttelng a butcher, an accountant, a retired grocer, gro-cer, a horseahoer, a cigar manufacturer. manufac-turer. aA automobile salesman and ar elevator operator. |