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D. INDEX

Accident compensation, 303

Adler, Herman M. (paper), 375

INDEX

Administrative council, of state departments, for
public welfare, 228

Adolescence, mental hygiene problems of, 355
Adult education among immigrants, 471; immi-
grants, efforts to assimilate, 489

After-Care for Industrial Compensation Cases,
Perkins, 58

Alabama, study of child welfare by state university,
214; activities of state boards, 223

Alchemist, the social, the demand of the day, 12
American: Home Economics Association in rural
social work, 19; Library Association in rural
social work, 19; Red Cross in rural social work, 17
American Red Cross in Relation to Health, Some
Activities of the, Platt, 162; Bedinger, 167;
Fox, 169

Americanization, difficulties of, 312; compulsory,
futile, 489; newer ideals of, 492; begins in old
country, 496

Anderson, Mary (paper), 285

Anderson, Meta L. (paper), 363

Anderson, V. V. (paper), 367

Andress, J. Mace (paper), 172

Arizona, legislation for public welfare, 219
Arkansas, state university study of child welfare,
214; legislation for public welfare, 219
Armstrong, Donald B. (paper), 156

Articulation of Service of Juvenile Courts, Com-
pulsory Attendance and Child Labor Laws, Train-
ing Schools, Placing Agencies and Other Bodies,
under a Controlling and Directing State Depart-
ment, The, Clopper, 209

Athens, emancipator of the human mind and
spirit, 52

Atkinson, Mary Irene (paper), 230

Atlanta, survey of social agencies, 435

Baltimore, mental hygiene in public schools, 352
Bane, Geneva M. (paper), 477

Barth, George P. (paper), 292
Baughman, Ruby (paper, 471

Bedford, Caroline S. (paper), 247

Bedinger, George R. (paper), 167

Bequests for philanthropic purposes, 420, 427
Birth registration literature, 190
Blanton, Smiley (paper), 401

Blind children, in school, 102, 103

Board Member, The, What Is He? What Are
His Responsibilities? How Can He Be Made
Efficient? Wilcox, 406

Bogue, Mary F. (discussion), 267

Bookman, C. M. (paper), 413

Boston, study of Morals Court, 148, 154; nutrition
classes, 197; study of feeble-minded persons in
court, 368; Permanent Charity Fund, 429

Boy Scouts in rural social work, 18
Bradley, Francis Sage (paper), 212
Breckinridge, Sophonisba P. (introductory state-
ment), 27

Brent, Charles H. (conference sermon), 4
Brooklyn, Confidential Exchange, 446

Budget, basis in relief giving, 241; basis of financial
support of agencies, 406, 417; joint, through
federation, 412, 415; review of by central
council, 438; study in Cleveland, 447

Buffalo, requirements of chambers of commerce as
to managing boards of social welfare agencies,
406; Community Foundation, 429
Burgess, J. S. (paper), 336
Burnham, William H. (paper), 390
Burns, Allen T. (presidential address), 3
Byington, Margaret F. (paper), 262, 443

Calder-Tinkham bill to establish information
bureau on housing, 315

California, administration of mothers' pensions, 242
Campbell, Dorcas (discussion), 446
Cannon, Ida M. (paper), 179

Carstens, C. C. (discussion), 240

Case Records in Family Agencies, Sheffield, 242;
Bedford, 247; Sears, 249; Robinson, 253
Case Work Methods in Legal Education, Hunter
and Wigmore, 55

Case work, in industrial compensation work, 58;
clue-aspects of, 242; field work, 256; mission-
ary aspect of, 256; family, in small communi-
ties, 200, 262; mental tests in family, 268; and
individual standards, 281; psychiatric, 382;
improved through federation and central council,
412, 436; county committees on, 440; conference
may be developed into confidential exc
Central Council of Social Agencie
Accomplishments, McLean, 437
Centralized supervision of mothers

237

Centralized Supervision, The Pos L
Byington, 262; Bogue, 267

Chicago, control of venereal diseases,
of Morals Court, 146,

tion, 429
Child (see also Di
82; labor, p
dependency in
needed, 158; 1
172, 175, 179
study in Alab.
boards in South,
labor in coal regio
355, 359, 363, 367, 3
Ohio Council on, 440
Child Labor, Matthews, 2
295; Stewart, 297

Child Welfare, New Values in t.

of Conventional Child-C

In Terms of a Better

519

INDEX

ality and Conduct Problems, Healy, 82; In
Terms of a Better Understanding of the Psychol
ogy of Child Labor, Fuller, 85

Child Welfare, Some Needed Readjustments in
Special Fields, Hathaway, 102; Reeves, 105;
Gillam, 109

Childhood an end in itself, 86; and youth, mental
hygiene problems of, 351

non-

Children (see also Div. I, child, juvenile, infant),
the nation's obligation to, 68; of Europe, our
duty to, 71; personality and conduct problems
of, 82; in rural communities, 90, 212; handi-
capped, 95,
102, 181;
institutional care for, 102, 105; day nursery's
extension of
task, 109; code commissions, 159; nutrition
problems of, 191, 194, 198; state pubic welfare
programs for, 200, 212, 215; number in institu-
tions as affected by mothers' pensions, 235;
"children's sheet"
mental tests, 269; misconduct problems of,
in record keeping, 247;
276; of coal miners, 287; enforcement of phys-
ical standards, 292; speech defects of, 401;
improvement in work for, through central
council organization, 436

Children, Admission to Child-Caring Institutions
and Societies of Neglected and Dependent,
Reynolds, 93

China, social revolution, 336, 342; importance of
recreation program, 343

Church in rural social work, 19, 20; and social
service, 41; purpose of, 44; in China, 340
Cincinnati, housing shortage, 333; community
organization of social forces, 414; family welfare
work, 419

Citizenship, education for in public schools, 26, 27;
right to, 99

Clapp, Raymond (paper), 447

Cleveland, illegitimacy, 335; welfare federation,
410, 447; foundation, 428; recreation survey,
432; job and salary analysis, 447

Clinic, mental hygiene problems of maladjusted
children, 371; mental health, 385

Clopper, Edward N. (paper), 209

Clothing industry organized, 38

Coffman, L. D. (paper), 21

Colorado, mothers' pension law, 238, 239
Commons, John R. (paper), 300

Community (see also Div. VII, Div. IX, rural,
etc.) Service, Inc. in rural social work, 18;
health knowledge for, 63; definition of, 64:
interdependence of small and large, 256; family
social work in small, 260; value of centralized
supervision to, 263; in Far East, 341; centers
in Milwaukee, 347; library's relation to, 348;
chest, 410, 418, 420; trust, 423, 427; confidential
exchange in small, 443; life among immigrants,
486

Community, The, Maker of Men, Lee, 47

Community Organization of Social Forces-From
the Standpoint_of the Constituent Agency,
Jackson, 410; From a Federation Secretary's
Point of View, Bookman, 413

Community Trust The, Moley, 427

Confidential Exchange in a Small City, Byington,
443; Campbell, 446

Connecticut, mothers' pension administration, 239
Contract system in prison labor, 203
Cooper, John M. (paper), 116

Co-operation and Co-ordination in Health Work,
Armstrong, 156; Dinwiddie, 158

Co-operation, through federation, 411, 432, 435
through central council of social agencies, 445
social service exchange, 443

Co-operative Health Plan of the New York County
Chapter, American Red Cross, Bedinger, 167
Co-operative system (Rochdale), 11; organizations
among farmers, 21

Costigan, Mrs. Edward P. (paper), 316
Council of Social Agencies, in Cincinnati, 415
accomplishments, 432; in St. Louis, 433-35
Milwaukee, 433-35; Columbus, Ohio, 433-4
Cleveland, 438; Ohio, 439; Texas, 442; plan in
Wisconsin, 443

County agricultural agents in rural communitis,

16; case committees, 440
Crawford, Ruth (paper), 465

Credit cycle, a cause of unemployment, 301
Crime, forces tending toward, within control,
effect of prohibition, 133, 134
Cripples, education of, 105

Croxton, Fred C. (paper), 439
Crusade, The Modern Health, description of, 198
Culbert, Jane F. (paper), 96

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Cultural Aspects of Immigration, Drachsler, 485i

Park, 492

Cultural Contributions of the Immigrant and
Policy of Incorporation, Drachsler, 485
Czecho-Slovakia, emigration policy of, 455
progress and future of, 463

Day Nurseries, A New Interpretation of the Tast

of, Gillam, 109

DeForest, Charles M. (paper), 198
Definition, community, 64; law, 236
Deibler, F. S. (paper), 306
Delinquency (see Div. II)

Delinquency, Certain Steps in the Prevention of
Democracy, price to be paid, 331; in China, 339
necessary in building a synthetic civilization, 49:
Detroit, mental hygiene work in public clinic, 371
Dinwiddie, Courtenay (paper), 158
Disarmament, 23, 26, 27, 69

Lewis, 132; Gillen, 133; Stern, 136

Dispensary, advantages in social hygiene, 113
District of Columbia, effect of prohibition, 135
Dividing Line Between the Cases Which the Publ
Should Be Handled by Private Social Agencies?
Agency Should Take Over, and Those Which

Is There a (Kelso), 215

Drachsler, Julius (paper), 485
Duplication of relief, prevention of, 444
Dutcher, Elizabeth (paper), 272

Education (see also school) history of public, i
America, 21, 22; compulsory laws in England
and America, 22; public support of, 24, 26;
national concern, 26; for citizenship, 26; lega
55; health, 66, 163, 194: the public school a socia
agency, 95; of the blind, 102; of cripples, 105
moral, the solution of sex problems, 117;
social hygiene, 121; difficulties of public system
224; department of, suggested plan of organiza
tion, 226; new values in, 298; in mental hygiene
351, 390, 395; of feeble-minded, 369; a function
foreign-born, adults, 471; home teachers for
of council of social agencies, 433; for native- and
immigrants, 477; and foreign-language press,

481

Educational Ideals and Public Welfare, Coff-
man, 21

Educational Value to the Community of Mental
Hygiene Agencies, Lorenz, 379; Jarrett, 381;
Singer, 385

Eight-hour day for women in industry, 286
Elementary Adult Education for Native- and
Foreign-Born, Baughman, 471

Elementary School and the Individual Child,
The, Richards, 351

Emerson, Haven (paper), 63

Emigration Policy of Czecho-Slovakia, Sum, 453
Employment offices, public, 306

Enderis, Dorothy (paper), 346

Endowments; How to Leave Wisely $25,000 to
$1,000,000, Hart, 420

Enforcement of Physical Standards for Working
Children, Barth, 292

Epidemics, U.S. Public Health Service activities,
184, 186

Europe, Our Duty to the Children of, Folks, 71
Europe, port problems of, 465

Evans, William A. (paper), 112

Extension of Non-Institutional Care of Children
with Seriously Defective Vision, The, Hathaway,

102

Extension of Non-Institutional Care for Crippled
Children, The, Reeves, 105

Extra Medical Service in the Management of the
Misconduct Problems of Children, Kenworthy,
276

Family (see also Div. V) field work, 256, 263;
welfare work in Cincinnati, 419

Fears of childhood, 83, 391

Federal Children's Bureau, The, Rude, 188
Federal Children's Bureau, at work in rural
communities, 15; its purpose to investigate and
report, 69; 'child welfare special," 214; studies
of children of coal miners, 287; standards of
physical fitness, 290

Federal, Trade Commission, investigation of
packing industry,
expenditures and
revenues, charts of, 69;

317;

Federation, welfare, in Buffalo, 406; in Cleveland,
410; elements for success, 410; disadvantages
of, 413; in Cincinnati, 413; a secretary's point
of view, 413

Feeble-minded, training for, 267, 270, 272; in
public schools, 363; in institutions, 367; dealing
with in Cincinnati, 419

Field work, in family social service, 256, 263

Field Work Side of Organization in Smaller Com-
munities, The, Holbrook, 256

Financial duties of board members, 406; cam-
paigns, 415; federation, 412, 416
Florida, mothers' pension laws, 238
Folks, Homer (paper), 71, 81

Food (see also nutrition), situation in Poland, 73;
Vilna, 74; in Riga, 75; Lithuania, 75; Serbia,
75; control by packers, 317

Foreign-language information service, ro; press,
among Czecho-Slovak immigrants, 459; news-
papers, 10, 459; press, in education, 481;
communities, 492;

Fox, Elizabeth G. (paper), 169

Fuller, Raymond G. (paper), 85
Future of the Criminal Law, The, Kirchwey, 141

Gillam, Mabel A. (paper), 109
Gillen, John L. (paper), 133

Girl delinquents, training schools for, 131; Scouts
in rural social work, 19

Government agencies engaged in social work in
rural communities, 15, 16, 17; relation of state
and local, in public welfare, 218; state boards
of child welfare, 222; administration of mothers'
pensions, judicial or executive? 234; service,
present status of, 224: Women's Bureau, 286;
experience in housing, 312;

Government Departments in Their Relation to
Health, Pierce, 182; Rude, 188

Grand Rapids, effects of prohibition, 134; work
for speech correction, 404

Handicapped children, 95, 96, 102, 105, 181
Hart, Hastings H. (paper), 420
Hathaway, Winifred (paper), 102

Health (see also Div. III and Div. VIII), organiza-
tion in rural social work, 19, 185; knowledge in
the community, 63; of school children, 159;
literature, 160, 189; education, general, 163,
185, 195; legislation for health centers, 166; of
school children, 172; boards of, co-operation
with, U. S. Public Service, 184, 188; activities
of Federal Children's Bureau, 188; program,
nutrition in a, 191, 194, 198; work in Kansas
City public schools, 197; departments and social
workers, 225; department, suggested plan of
organization, 226; summaries in record keeping,
248; work in India, 345; public health federa-
tion, 419

Health Centers, The Social Significance of, Platt,
162

Health Program for Children, Certain Elements in
a, McCullum and Simmonds, 191; Wood, 194;
DeForest, 198

Healy, William (paper), 82, 123, 268
Hegel, Newton H. (paper), 98
Hill, T. Arnold (paper), 321
Hillman, Sidney (paper), 37
Hodson, William (paper), 218
Holbrook, David H. (paper), 256

Home demonstration agents in rural communities,
16; care for chldren advocated, 80, 81, 93;
supervision of moron women, 272; Loan Bank
bill to provide reasonable credit for home-
builders, 315

Home Supervision of Moron Women, Possibilities
of, Dutcher, 272

Home Teacher Experiment in Springfield, Ill.,
Bane, 477

Hospital Social Service to Child Health Work,
The Relation of, Cannon, 179

Hospital social worker, need of better training, 182
Housing, Lessons Learned from the Government
Experience in, James, 312

Housing Shortage in the United States, Extent of
the, Its Economic and Social Effects; Resources
Available in Dealing with It, Ihlder, 331

How Mental Hygiene May Help in the Solution
of School Problems, Johnson, 395
How to Study a Case of Delinquency, Healy, 123
Hunter, Joel D. ( paper), 55, 234

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