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Show II1JUHLE 1 BETTEIEi H! At the Hotel Utah, Salt Lake City, yesterday, a meeting was held for the purpose of organizing a society for juvenile betterment. E. S. Hinckley, of the State Indus-trial Indus-trial school spoke of the work of the juvenile courts and state industrial school as being truly educational in the highest sense and asserted that the state public school system should recognize this fact and should accept as. part of its functions the juvenile problems, including juvenile delin-quency delin-quency and dependency as well as juvenile truency. 1 It was thepolicy of the meeting to 1 remove the work of the organization as Tar as possible from politics but to connect it up with the public school system both legislatively and on pub-liclty. pub-liclty. Committees were appointed to handle those phases of the association. Officers were elected to look after the work undertaken with Professor George Coray as president, I. B. Ball, secretary, and Professor Frank S. Harris of Ixgan, assistant superin-tendent; superin-tendent; George N. Child of- the Salt Lake City schools, President Guy Wi'l-son Wi'l-son of the L. D. S. U., Dr. Joseph T fj Kingsbury, Professor LeRoy E. Cowles, Alma Clayton, Professor C." Swenson, Dr. George Brimhall of j Pjovo, E. S. Hinckley of the state in- ! dustrlal school at Ogden and Profcs-1 Profcs-1 sor W. W. Boyle of Provo as mem- bers. |