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Show THE DESERET EAGLE, 62 We were almost certain that the meeting would ne held here this year, and are consequ ntly disapSAIr I AUK CITY, UTAH, A VHUs 15, ISM. pointed. The meeting as will be seen from the date, will be held before the DUJilNO SEMIMONTHLY l'l'liLlSlIH) Confererceof Piinsipals : nd Superiu- -t indents here, thus giving our eastern Tin: school yuan. friends ac opportunity to attend both Tor school year In julvanc- $.SO meetings. Uolo. Iudex. Advertising rntvn made known on What about those vh live in the EAGLE. June 2230. THE DESERET -- application. Tlu; object of this paper is to teach the art of printing to the pupils in the Utah School for the Deaf. Address all communications and subscriptions to THE DESERET EAGLE, Salt Lake Entered at the post second class matter. office City', Utah. in Salt Lake city as fi&axk w. mi:tcam i:iitok. On Wednesday the 6th inst. the of the temple was laid. It was an event of great interest to the people of Utah especially those of manor horn, and those who witnessed the laying of the corner stones forty years ago. During all these years the work has been carried forward with zeal and to see the last stone put in place thousands on thousands flunked to the city. It i estimated that from 30,000 to 50,000 people witnessed the ceremony. All our pupils were there. Those who had friends here to call for them accompanied their friends, while the others went in charge of their teacheis. We do not think we have ever seen so many people, concentrated at one point before. It was literally a sea of cap-ston- e humanity. The M-jrmo- is surmounted by a copper figure of an angel 13 teet high. Each of the six pinacles .vill be surmounted by a cap-ston- e powerful electric light, which at night will produce a grand eilect. It will be at least a year before the inside of the temple is finished. Tins Executive Committee of the American Association to Promote the Teaching of Speech to the Deaf held a meeting in Boston March 10th and decided to hold the next meeting ot the Association at Lake George, N Y.r It is a sign fleaut fact that children that are reared in seclusion and not allowed to see tee ways of the world and know of its temptations and vices are those who mast easily fall a prey to these same temptations and vices whenthty aaveg.own up and go into active life. The reasons for this are obvious. The child has not been trained to overccm t temptations ; his powers ot resistance are weak and his natural West? There are quite a number strong. He therefore falls at impulses of us west of t he Mississippi. We tne first' tempta' ion. We would not are just as anxious to profit by the throw childi en upon i he world w Knmeetings of the Association as are out protection in order to sttenirtf-epowers of lesis'anci', but would our friends of the east hut the date their I t. i hem learn little by in tie aud overol the meeting practically prohibits came iittle hy iiitle. Place around possible, the majority from attending, to bay them all good incentives U:em in the way of right and direct nothing of the expense. It would allow thtiu to work out their own seem to us that it would be possible character's Ex. to select a date neither too early nor Jh-s- t Continual from ( jmi too late (as was the case of the last traits some of real opinion Teachers Convention) and thus their of their parents. Vet children to desire a all who chance, give have such natures that thev will find something in any parents and respect; and parents He is not necessarily the best teacher to love who knows the most, nor is he the cannot fail to see much to rouse best who imparts knowledge to bis affection in the worst of children. I knew this last when much pupils; but he is the best teacher who in addition to these secures tr.emost rounder then I am now, for one williDg a iid iutelligentcompliance with day when, after having been those require in tints whereby knowledge freshly clad, I went out and played - (.) becomes a part of the individual by its proper reception and assimilation. As food taken at proper limes, in a proper quantity, in a Judicious manner, goes to make up and continue our physical existence, so knowledge imparted methodically and applicaoly to the and my mother, obliged to renew mv dress, in the dirt, re-buk- ed me most ernestlv, so that no merit appeared in my character, I nevertheless, as I have said, knew there was still something about me that fastened her future wants of its recipients, may become the intellectual exponent of hiui alfection, and, interrupting her who receives it. Brown. by throwing mv arms around her Teacher as well as parents too frequently foi get that tue true idea of govconernment is to m ike the child trolling, to idace in his hands tue responsibility aud only Ik. Id him accountable for the proper use of it. That management which controls only while the child is under tbe immediate care of the teacher is not government but constraint. The band that, groverns is seldom seen. People will even go inthe right way under the coercion if the coercion power is concealed and not "known and read of all men," when on the othur hand if open coecion be resorted to a rebellion would follow. Place the child upon his own responsibility; give him to see as early as possible ttoat in ifel eis to shape hi? own career; then follow this with good incentives, aud but little constraint with be necessary. Exchange. neck, 1 said: kkiut vou love me attcky hard allee same." And so it turned out she did. (iood-bto you and to my little self. y Cameron for Jusi, in .Panic. xkat and AIM'EftTIC l'ltlSTIXU. CiO TO JIOOIilSIMlIXfj. ISCOKI'OJtATKl). Ojh'ce Orcr Utah Xatiomd Panic. Salt Lakh City. The Largest Job Piintii.g (Mike in Utah. |