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Show OO H SCHOOL MAY PROVE II BIG SUCCESS The first meeting in connection with the free night school plan now being fostered by the city board of education was held last night at the Lewis Junior high school, but the attendance at-tendance so far exceeded the expectations expecta-tions of Supt J M Mills, that the crowd could not be accommodated. The number present was estimated at between 500 and 600. In view of this condition, it was decided to hold a general meeting at the Ogden hie;h school next Monday night at 7:15 o'clock and. in the meantime, the Central Junior high school will be placed in order for a social center. At the session last night nearly all present enrolled for Instruction la one or more of the branches of study offered. There wan but little demand de-mand for the dead languages, ancient history and English literature. Sixty enrollments were noted for the arithmetic arith-metic class, between 60 and 70 for penmanship and spelling Fifty each in the domestic science and arts elapses elaps-es and nearly 70 for the bookkeeping, shorthand and typewriting classes. Nineteen persons enrolled In the CIVICS class, io in lii v."""".' and 2r in the physics department Twenty-five desired to take up woodwork. wood-work. 30 enrolled for th- music course. B0 for phvsical culture and elocution and 12 for the art class Twenty-two Twenty-two answered the call for the literature litera-ture and rhetoric classes and the commercial com-mercial arithmetic class started with 20 members enrolled In the department depart-ment of modern languages. 20 people enrolled for Spanish. 15 for French uud 25 for German. The class in phonetic? was organ i7:ed with 15 merilDers ami 1". enrolled for the study of mechanical drawing. The class in commercial law found 46 applicants This class will be in-Btructed in-Btructed bv Attorney Joseph E Evans Ev-ans and will meet every Tuesday night at the Central Junior high school at 7 o"clock. Classes will be held nearlv every night. It is expected, expect-ed, hut each subject will be given onlv once a week. The leathers who will lake up the work havo all volunteered their Her-ire-H and the list is as folio s John Wlntle, in charge; John M Mills Spanish; Joseph E. Evans, com-mercial com-mercial law; L. A Hoach, bookkeeping bookkeep-ing and penmanship; James Haslln, shorthand; J. J Andrews, agriculture; agricul-ture; Moroni Olson, elocution; Mlsfl Jeanette Stephens, physical culture: Roswell BelnaP, Herman; Mrs FamS-worth FamS-worth literature; Miss Margaret Mal-lcry. Mal-lcry. ancient history; W. E. Archibald, Archi-bald, American history and civics; Mlaa' A A Casaatt, algebra; C W. Bailey, sanitation ami physiology. MIbsm's Keane and Crompton, sewing, Mrs. J J. andrews, millinery, Mls; Vema Bowman, cooking, G. W Bru-;erton, Bru-;erton, manual training, Miss Carrie V Knapp art. MIsb Manila Hunter. mu9ic; Mr. Curamings, chemistry and physics; Thomas M. Henley, grammar and rhetoric; MIbb Jeanette Hawkes. French Capt W E KneasB D. ams Henry Barker. E M. Read John A Junk P S. Kingsbury, and l . 1-m-lprwood and Miss Ina Craven. Jo sephine Seaman and June Pierce, sublets sub-lets unaBBigued. The opening evening of the CIVIC Center movement was certainly graU-Mng" graU-Mng" said Superintendent Mills last SS&I. "and equally gratifying was the ready response of people to the call for teachers, who serve without Dav The success of the plan 18 solutelv assured and the hundreds of peoplewho attended the meeting laal evening will probably ?W take th topic with hundreds of others, largelj innreaalne the classes" |