The Juvenile Court Record1913 - Child welfare |
From inside the book
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Page 3
... organized - yes , definitely and somewhat elab- orately organized - into what amounts to a defensive secret league , with tens of thou- sands of members . This league is made up of small gang units , which are sometimes fed- erated for ...
... organized - yes , definitely and somewhat elab- orately organized - into what amounts to a defensive secret league , with tens of thou- sands of members . This league is made up of small gang units , which are sometimes fed- erated for ...
Page 5
... organized games which have been developed by street conditions . They involve acts which the children know to be immoral , but which gang standards allow . An example of this type of child crime is the widely popular sport of gang ...
... organized games which have been developed by street conditions . They involve acts which the children know to be immoral , but which gang standards allow . An example of this type of child crime is the widely popular sport of gang ...
Page 6
... organized into a gang of robbers and may , for the game of the thing only , have committed the burglary . Thus there was no criminal intent on the part of the marauders . Gang fighting , another common and serious offense , is a product ...
... organized into a gang of robbers and may , for the game of the thing only , have committed the burglary . Thus there was no criminal intent on the part of the marauders . Gang fighting , another common and serious offense , is a product ...
Page 19
... organized the work at the prison in many ways . The honor system has been used among the convicts both in and out of the prison . At some times fifty men have been working in various parts of Lancaster county , un- attended by guards ...
... organized the work at the prison in many ways . The honor system has been used among the convicts both in and out of the prison . At some times fifty men have been working in various parts of Lancaster county , un- attended by guards ...
Page 5
... organized as boarding out agen- cies . They soon found that children came into their care whose mothers were whol- ly suitable to provide for them , and there- fore the plan was inaugurated of return- ing to the mother such children as ...
... organized as boarding out agen- cies . They soon found that children came into their care whose mothers were whol- ly suitable to provide for them , and there- fore the plan was inaugurated of return- ing to the mother such children as ...
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Common terms and phrases
agencies April 12 arrested baby become better Big Brother blind cause cent charge Chicago chil child labor Children's Charities cial ciety citizens co-operation cost crime criminal cruelty defects Dependent and Delinquent dependent children disease dren dren's Charities duty fact family home farm father feeble-minded girls give given Handicapped Haskins homeless human institution interest judge JUVENILE COURT RECORD La Dow labor living marriage matter ment mental methods months moral mother Nainsook National National Children's Home ophthalmia neonatorum organized paper is published parents parole pension persons physical play ploye prevent prison probation officer problem proper sent sex hygiene social society street supervision teacher teeth things tion tuberculosis vidual women York City young
Popular passages
Page 14 - Where did you get your eyes so blue? Out of the sky as I came through. What makes the light in them sparkle and spin? Some of the starry spikes left in. Where did you get that little tear? I found it waiting when I got here.
Page 17 - Where did you get that little tear? I found it waiting when I got here. What makes your forehead so smooth and high? A soft hand stroked it as I went by.
Page 18 - I passed by, and from under the flapping brim of his hat he cast a quick glance out of dark, half-bashful eyes, and modestly returned my salute. When his back was turned I took off my hat and sent a God-bless-you down the furrow after him. Who knows ? — I may yet go to that boy to borrow money, or to hear him preach, or to beg him to defend me in a law-suit ; or he may stand with pulse...
Page 15 - A band of boys from three to six or seven in number will go from tenement to tenement on Saturday evenings, taking orders from the housewives for fruits, vegetables, groceries, light hardware and clothing, just as though they were delivery clerks. When they think they have a sufficient number of orders they go out on the street and by a series of organized raids secure the goods which the housewives have ordered. These goods are sold on a regularly established scale of prices, which in most parts...
Page 15 - This is a regularly organized form of amusement, which has existed to the writer's personal knowledge for a decade or more on the middle west side. As far as the boys themselves are concerned, it is a game and nothing more. The crimes .committed are incidental to the game. The elements the boys are striving for are the dramatic adventure in obtaining stolen goods, the excitement of gambling, which to them is no crime, and the physical joys of the soda water, cigarettes, motion picture shows, etc.,...
Page 11 - Well, so he did," persisted Johnny.' " He had his arm " " John ! " screamed his mother frantically. " Why," whined the boy," I was " " John," said his father sternly, " leave the room !" And Johnny left, crying as he went: " I was only going to say that he had his army clothes on.
Page 4 - ... contemporary ancestors" in the mountainous backyards of Virginia, Tennessee, Kentucky, and the Carolinas These fragments and relics of bygone times have been left untouched by the progress of civilization above and about them. They represent to this day mediaeval and even primitive life conditions and instincts. The great modern improvement in the means of travel and the new migration of peoples have begun to mix these various layers of human material together to some extent, and to distribute...
Page 16 - The result is a fundamental schism between the child com11 munity and the adult community. The child community is a nuisance. The adult community is a tyrant. Neither is to blame. Our laws, our court procedure and our probation system, imperfect though they be, are not to blame. The blame rests with the city which has not provided play space and which does not intelligently use even the little play space that is provided.