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Cancer councils, 245
Carstens, C. C. (paper), 479

Carter, Leyton E. (paper), 457
Case descriptions-administration of criminal
justice, 184; Barlow family, 300; breadth of
vision, 612; child protection, 171; family
discipline, 383; farm living, 392, 393, 394;
legal aid, 192; measure of growth in per-
sonality, 291; observation as process of
treatment, 401; pandering, 180; probation,
145; prostitution, 162; publicity, 671, 675;
religious background, 260, 261, 263, 266;
transportation, 535; unmarried mother,
260; use of social service exchange, 472, 510;
zoning legislation, 365

Case work, a step toward democracy, 628;
and psychiatry, 414, 430; and religious life,
259, 265, 270; objective tests in, 300; of
juvenile court, 142; with children, ineffi-
ciencies of, 165

Case worker, attitudes and problems of, 436
Catholic agencies, attitude toward state super-
vision, 516

Channels of Publicity Available, Routzahn,
643

Chicago, education publicity by use of plat-
form address, 658; proposed districting for
social work, 504, 510; Mexican population,
331; Negroes in industry, 323; psychiatric
work, 419; recreation commission, 162;
turnover in tenancy, 511

Child (see also Div. I, 135) and the com-
munity, 158, 164; guidance clinics, 411,
484; hygiene councils, 246; labor, 158, 330;
placing in Illinois, 552; protective work,
158, 164, 172; Welfare League and inter-
pretation of standards, 679; welfare statis-
tics, 560; welfare work of League of Na-
tions, 117, 126; welfare work of American
Legion, 151

Child Dependency in the United States,
How Much Is There? Thurston, 148
Child Welfare Work in New Orleans, with
Special Reference to Community Planning,
A Social Audit of, Carstens, 479
Child Welfare Work, Participation in Inter-
national, Lathrop, 126

Children (Div. I), 135; agencies in New Orle-
ans, 479; agency defined, 413; and parent-
hood training, 277, 283; clinical service in
agencies, 407, 412; crippled, work for, 485;
in care of family welfare societies, 149; in
institutions in Cleveland, 155; naturaliza-
tion of, 580; number in families receiving
mothers' pensions, 297; of farmers, number
in family, 391; of Mexicans in U.S., 337;
of Negroes in small town, 387; psychiatric
work with, 419, 425; state grants proposed,
312; temporary care of, 135; working in
families receiving mothers' pensions, 297
Christian concept of family, 376

Church (see also Religious, etc.); Mission of
Help, case work and religious background,
260

Church and the Public Authorities in the
Supervision of Private Organization's in
New York, Relations between, Keegan, 515
Cincinnati, Federation (health) 245; program
for speakers' bureau, 664; use of appraisal
form in health work, 228

Citizenship, ways of acquiring, 576

City, built for adults, not for children, 379;
districting for social and civic purposes, 500,
504, 510; health surveys in, 186, 233; life in
and family, 379; organization for pub-
licity, 648; program for American, 369;
program for meeting psychiatric needs, 424
Civil Administrative Code, 420; service re-
strictions, 421; war soldiers, ideals of, 70
Clapp, Raymond F. (paper), 449
Clarke, Helen I (paper), 510

Classification of adolescent in institutions, 201
Cleveland, charting of welfare work, 486;
Children's Bureau, 156; conference city, 3;
federation and publicity, 646; Negro migra
tion, and health, 238; program for meeting
psychiatric needs, 424; training teachers,
618; Welfare Federation study of social
work, 449

Cleveland in the Last Decade, Changes in
Institutional Field in, LeBlond, 155
Clifton, Eleanor (paper), 442

Clinic, child guidance, 411, 484; habit, 410,
429; prenatal, 207; psychiatric, 407; 413
Clinical Service Available to Children's
Agencies, Types of, Robinson, 407

Coal, bituminous problems, 50; problems in
England, 40, 56, 119

Coal Industry, Social Aspects of the, Devine,
35

Coal Industry, Social Significance of the,
Raushenbush, 55

Colcord, Joanna C. (paper), 251
Colored (see Negro)

Community (see also Div. V, 305) and amount
of social work it can afford, 100, 108; and
parenthood, 258; and psychiatric work, 428;
chest and demand for trained workers, 597;
chest and speakers' bureau, 664; districting
for social and civic purposes, 500, 504, 510;
fund and interpretation of standards, 669;
fund and publicity in St. Louis, 654; funds in
development of social work on county unit
basis, 471; planning of child welfare work,
479; rural, a maternity and infancy pro-
gram, 396; social work and democracy, 630;
work and the family, 379

Community and Public Health, The, Walker,
233; Rockwood, 238

Community, Making the Child Safe for the,
Falconer, 164

Community Programs and Cooperation in
Americanization, Turner, 582

Community Recreation: Its Significance, Ob-
jectives, Machinery, and Standards, Lies,

493

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Community, Safe for the Child, Making the,
Binford, 158

Conant, Richard K. (paper), 562, 641
Conservatism hardened down from radicalism,
70

Cook County Infirmary described, 551
Cooley, Elizabeth A. (paper), 467
Cooperation (union) an ideal, 71; in Ameri-
canization programs, 582; in carrying out
standards, 517; in Iowa in welfare work,
545; in rural social work, 462, 468, 469; law
and social work, 181, 189; of social service
agencies in New Orleans, 477; public and
private health organizations, 234; through
social service exchange, 471

Coordination of public welfare bureaus in
Illinois, 552

Corbett, Lucille K. (paper), 265

Correction (see also Div. II, 175); statistics,
560

Cost of publicity, 655; of social work, 449
Cottrell, Louise (paper), 545

County as a unit in social work, 461, 467, 471,
545; takes care from cradle to grave, 550
County Unit as a Basis of Social Work and
Public Welfare in North Carolina, The,
Odum, 461.

Court decisions on zoning, 364

Crime (see also Criminal, Delinquency, etc.)
and punishment, spiritual element in rela-
tion to, 6; treatment vs. punishment, 175
Criminal Justice, the Administration of,
Lindsey, ; administration of, 183
Crothers, Rev. Samuel McChord (paper), 30
Crowdy, Dame Rachel (address), 113

Dance halls, 161

Day nurseries, 482

Definition: children's agency, 413; ethics, 607;
personality, 272, 290; public address, 658;
religious experience, 272; spiritual element,
65

Delinquency, the New Approach to the Prob-
lems of, Jacoby, 175

Delinquent Adolescent, The: What the Insti-
tution Can Do for Him, Derrick, 195
Delinquents and Correction (Div. II), 175
Demand for social workers, 587, 595, 602
Democracy and social work, 625
Dependency (child), how much in U.S.? 148
Dependent child, mental health of, 430
Derrick, Calvin (paper), 195

Des Moines, home ownership in, 101
Detention homes for children, 137
Detroit, Americanization work, 583
Devine, Edward T. (address), 35
Dexter, Elizabeth H. (paper), 436

Discipline in institutions for adolescents, 202

Districting, uniform, in cities, 500, 501, 504
Donnelly, Thomas J. (paper), 346
Douglas, Paul H. (paper), 305
Drama as means of publicity, 644

Economic, basis of Negro life, 385; method vs.
political method in solving coal problems,
52; point of view of how much social work a
community can afford, 100; problems (see
Div. V), 305

Education, adult, of A.F.L., 340; engineering,
613; for parenthood, 277, 283; health, 222;
legal, 187, 621; legal aid law, 193; legisla-
tion on control of marriage, 256; standards
of professional, 587; through experience, 404
Educational Publicity (Div. XII), 637
Educational Publicity from the Angle of
Governmental Supervision, Conant, 641
Educational Publicity from the Angle of the
Federation, Importance of, Vance, 645
Educational Standards, Ways in which Pro-
fessional Schools are Elevating, Woodward,
621

Educating the Field Outside of Metropolitan
Centers to Demand Trained Workers,
Wyckoff, 595

Effect of Negro Migration on Community
Health in Cleveland, The, Rockwood, 238
Efficiency with humanity, 55

Embarkation ports in Europe, 571
Emerson, Charles P., M.D. (paper), 205
Emigration (see also Div. X, 565)

Emigration Conditions in European Ports of
Embarkation, Schisby, 571

Employment by individual contract, 346
Engineering Education, the Investigation of,
Hammond, 613

England, coal problems in, 40, 56, 119
English poor law the basis of law in social
work, 181, 457, 527, 536; teaching of to
immigrants, 585

Environment, adjustment of individual to, 20,
26; economic, of coal industry, 53
Epidemic bureau of League of Nations, 116
Ethical basis for governmental responsibility
in social work, 457; point of view of how
much social work a community can afford,
108

Ethical Elements in Leadership in Social
Work, Some, Stillman, 607

European ports of embarkation, conditions
among emigrants, 571

Exchange (Social Service), a tool for coopera-
tion, 471; use of by almshouse, 527
Expenditure for health service in cities, 234,
238

Facts and Factors with Regard to the Farm-
ers' Standards of Living, Kirkpatrick, 388
Falconer, Douglas P. (paper), 164, 471

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Family, The (Div. IV), 251

Family, allowance systems and living wage,
305; and growth in personality, 291;
and parenthood, 277, 283; background of
religion as social data, 259, 265, 270; board-
ing home, 483; case work statistics, 561;
Christian concept of, 376; composition of
farmers', 388; economic basis changing, 381;
founding of and social work, 251; life, essen-
tials of, 295; life of Mexicans in U.S., 337;
of five, the normal questioned, 306; size of
in England and Wales, 307; value of living
on farm, 389; welfare agencies and trade
unions, 339; welfare societies and relief, 103
Family as an Institution in Society, The,
Kerby, 374

Family Life of the Negro in the Small Town,
Frazier, 384

Family Life, The Relation of the Community
Work to, McDowell, 379

Farm Bureau and the county as a unit in social
work, 471

Farmers (see also Rural, Agricultural, etc.)
Farmers' Standards of Living, Facts and Fac-
tors with Regard to the, Kirkpatrick, 388
Feather, William (paper), 655

Federal (see also U.S., Public, etc.); Coal
Commission, work of, 35, 50, 55; laws on
marriage, 255; legislation on immigration,
565

Federal Government, Public Health and the,
Frankel and Tobey, 211; Bolt, 215

Federal Health Activities, An Ideal Arrange-
ment for, Frankel and Tobey, 211
Federal Subsidies to the States, with Special
Reference to Health, Bolt, 215

Federation and educational publicity, 645;
house organs, 656; movement interpreter of
social work, 641

Federation Publicity, The Proper Form of
Organization for, Street, 648
Fellowship, A Wider, Cabot, II

Financing of charities assured by state super-
vision, 515

Florida, county social work, 467
Fluckey, J. A. (paper), 565

Foreign Language Information Service, in-
vestigations of, 571

Founding of New Families? What Has Social
Work to Do With, Colcord, 251

France, family allowances paid by industry,
310

Frankel, Emil (paper), 558

Frankel, Lee K. (paper), 211
Frazier, E. Franklin (paper), 384

Freight rates a social aspect of coal industry
49, 53, 56

Future of the almshouse, 527

Gardiner, Elizabeth (paper), 396
Gillin, J. L. (paper), 539
Glassberg, Benjamin (paper), 339
Glenn, Mary Willcox (paper), 259

Goals in educational publicity, 642; in social
work, 3-10

Gorby, John W. (paper), 151

Governmental Responsibility in the Field of
Social and Welfare Work, Carter, 457
Governmental supervision and educational
publicity, 641

Gwin, J. B. (paper), 327

Habit clinics, 410

Hammond, H. P. (paper), 613
Handman, Max Sylvanis (paper), 332
Hart, Joseph K. (paper), 369
Hartman, Edward T. (paper), 360
Hasking, Arthur P., M.D. (paper), 536
Haynes, Rowland (paper), 486
Health (Div. III), 205

Health, activities of federal government, 211,
233; center a hospital, 205; center in Cin-
cinnati, 232; departments, personnel of,
234; education a major objective, 222; in-
ternational problems before League of
Nations, 116; Negro migration and com-
munity, 238; public, 205, 211, 215, 222, 228,
233, 238, 244; public, administration and
politics, 228; statistics, 241, 242; surveys of
186 cities, 233

Health Council Idea, The, Marquette, 244
Hiller, Francis H. (paper), 142
Hillhouse, Lewis J. (paper), 664

Home ownership, 101; work for women and
children, 298

Hopkins, Harry L. (paper), 222

Hospital as a Health Center, The, Emerson,
205

Hospital, state, having psychiatric clinics for
children, 408

House Organs for Year-Round Publicity,
Feather, 655

Housing, affected by zoning, 360; and public
health, 224, 239; of Mexicans in cities of
U.S., 331; of Negro in small town, 386

Human Relations in Public Charity, Bemis,
550

Hunt, Charles W. (paper), 618

Hurlin, Ralph G. (paper), 587
Hygiene, mental (see Div. VII), 400

[graphic]

Illinois, appraisal of health activities in cities,
237; Civil Administrative Code, 420; co-
ordination of public welfare bureaus, 552;
family welfare work and legal aid, 191; plan
for meeting psychiatric needs, 419
Immigrant, The (Div. X), 565

Immigrant, education in Detroit, 584; ex-
ploitation of, 568; labor, substitution of
Negro for, 317; labor (Mexican), 327, 332
Immigration, and anarchistic classes, 568; and
vice, 566; legislation, 565; restriction of, 570
Income, of social work organizations, study of,
102; per capita, of states, 100

Increase of immigrants to South America, 574;
of social work personnel, 590

Indian Medical Service in public health work,
213

Individual contract, 346, 357; intrinsic value
of, 65; right to marry, 251

Individual or "Yellow Dog" Contract, The,
Donnelly, 346

Individualism in U.S., 215

Industrial and Economic Problems (Div. V),
305

Industry (see also Labor); call of responded to
by Negroes, 238; Negro substituted for
immigrant in, 317; overdevelopment of, 51;
regularization of employment, 352; social
aspects of coal, 35, 50, 55.

Industry, International Social Action in,
Magnusson, 118

Infancy and maternity program for rural com-
munities, 396

Infant (see also Div. I, Child, Juvenile, etc.);
mortality and public health, 225; welfare
work in New York City, 225

Infirmary (see also Almshouse); social re-
search in, 519; work described, 551
Institutes of public welfare, 463
Institution in society, The Family an, 374
Institutions, changes in Cleveland in decade,

155; for children in New Orleans, 480; for
delinquent adolescents, 195; state and
politics, 554

International Aspects of Social Work, Crowdy,

113

International Child Welfare Work, Participa-
tion in, Lathrop, 126

International Labor Organization, work of,
118

International Ladies Garment Workers'
Unions' social welfare activities, 344
International Social Action in Industry,
Magnusson, 118

Interpreting Professional Standards of Social
Work to the Public: From the Standpoint
of the Community Fund, Bliss, 669; From
the Standpoint of the National Agency,
Rowe, 679

Interview, a process of treatment, 400
Investigation of Engineering Education, The,
Hammond, 613

Iowa Plan of Cooperation in County Welfare
Work, The, Cottrell, 545

Jacksonville Agreement about to expire, 35,
48, 58

Jacoby, A. L., M.D. (paper), 175
Jesus as an organizer, 7
Johnson, Charles S. (paper), 317
Justice, The Administration of Criminal,
Lindsey, 9, administration of, 183
Juvenile (see also Div. I, Child, Infant, etc.)
Court, care of children pending hearing,
135; in New Orleans, 481; supervision in
Michigan, 179; the great achievement of
social work, 183

Juvenile Court as a Case Working Agency,
The; Its Limitations and Its Possibilities,
Hiller, 142

Juvenile Psychopathic Institute (Chicago),
history of, 419

Keegan, Rev. Robert F. (paper), 515
Kelso, Robert W. (paper), 637
Kerby, Rev. William J. (paper), 374
Kirchwey, George W. (paper), 181
Kirkpatrick, E. L. (paper), 388

Knights of Columbus, training for boys' work,

173

L's in publicity work (three), 670
Labor (see also Industry), international as-
pects of, 118; legislation, 118; Negro sub-
stituted for immigrant, 317; of Mexicans in
U.S., 327, 333; regularization of employ-
ment, 352; "Yellow Dog" contract, 346
Lathrop, Julia C. (address), 126
Laughter of value in social work, 19
Law (see also Legal, Legislation, etc.), housing,
360; marriage, study of, 254; naturalization,
576; school and professional standards,
621; schools studying social conditions,
187; zoning, 360, 364

Law and Social Progress, Rosenberry, 76
Law and Social Work, Forms of Cooperation
between, Kirchwey, 181

Leadership in social work, 7, 10, 21, 607, 627
League of Nations, social questions of, 113,
126

LeBlond, Rev. C. H. (paper), 155
Lectures (see Speaking)

Lee, Porter R. (paper), 19

Legal (see also Law, Legislation, etc.); aid and
family welfare work, 190; aid education,
193; courses in schools for social work, 193;
education, 187; education and elevating
standards, 621

Legal Aid, Bradway, 189

Legislation (see also Law, Legal, etc.) and
marriage, 253, 256; dangers of too much,
78; for social work in North Carolina, 462;
English poor law, 181, 457, 527, 540; growth
of social, 458; immigration, 565; mothers'

[graphic]

pension, 296; naturalization, 576; need of
uniform settlement law, 536, 540; pro-
posed for old age pension, 562; relief in
Iowa, 547; zoning, 360, 364
Lenroot, Katharine F. (paper), 135

Lessons from the Health Surveys of 186 Cities,
Walker, 233

Liaison officer in publicity work, 670

Liberty, an ideal, 73

Licensing of social workers, 598

Lies, Eugene T. (paper), 493
Lindsey, Edward (paper), 76

Literature a means of publicity, 672

Living Wage and Family Allowance Systems,
The, Douglas, 305

Louisiana, Supreme Court decisions on zoning,
365

Lowrey, Lawson G., M.D. (paper), 283, 424

McConnell, Rt. Rev. Francis J., D.D. (ad-
dress), 70

McDowell, Mary E. (paper), 379
McHugh, Rose J. (paper), 270

Machinery for community recreation, 496
Magnusson, Leifur (address), 118
Marquette, Bleecker (paper), 244
Marriage, social control of, 25
Massachusetts, care of aged, 562; law of set-
tlement, 543; psychiatric service to social
agencies, 410; supervision and publicity,
641
Maternity and Infancy Program for Rural

and Semirural Communities, Gardiner, 396
Maternity home service in New Orleans, 482
Measurement of results of publicity work, 654
Measures for growth in personality, 290; for
securing essentials in family life, 295
Measuring Our Results in Securing the Es-
sentials of Family Life; Some Suggestions
Based on a Review of Mothers' Assistance
in Pennsylvania, Tyson, 295

Measuring the Demand for Social Workers,
Hurlin, 587

Medical activities of religious organizations,

210

Medicine, the Public Practice of, Peters, 228
Memorial Day Address, Silver, 61; McCon-
nell, 70

Mental Hygiene (Div. VII), 400

Mental hygiene councils, 246; for high-school
and college students, 288; statistics, 560
Mental Hygiene Service Do Children's Agen-
cies Need? What Kind of, Taylor, 412
Mexican child labor in U.S., 330; population
in cities of U.S., 329

Mexican Immigrant in Texas, The, Handman,
332

Mexican Population, Social Problems of Our,
Gwin, J. B., 327

Mexico's work for child welfare, 129
Michigan, treatment of delinquency, 179
Migration of Negroes to Cleveland, 238; to
town, 386

Minick, Clara Babst (paper), 576

Minneapolis, interpretation of professional
standards in social work, 669

Mother, the working, and pensions, 298
Mothers' assistance in Pennsylvania, 295;
pensions, extent of, 149

Motives of social worker, 436

National agencies and demand for trained
workers, 596; agency and interpretation of
standards, 679; Crime Commission and the
social worker, 186; Health Council activi-
ties, 211; Health Council idea described,
244; Probation Association cooperation
with legal aid, 190; social statistics service,
558

National Area as the Unit for Social Work in
the Large City, The, Burgess, 504
Naturalization Law and Its Administration,
The, Minick, 576

Nature a healing force, II

Need of Educational Publicity in Social Work,
The, Kelso, 637

Negro, family life in small town, 384; health
in Cincinnati, 248; in Cleveland, 238; migra-
tion and health, 238; migration and labor,

325

Negro Labor for European Immigrant Labor,
Substitution of, Johnson, 317

Neighborhood and Community Life (Div.
VI), 360

New Jersey, uniform legislation, 537

New Orleans, child welfare work 479; social
work, 475

Newspaper, a channel of publicity, 643, 676
New York, church and state supervision, 515;
legal aid and social work, 192; Supreme
Court decision on zoning, 368

New York City, appraisal of health activities,
237; East Harlem Health Center in dis-
tricting, 512; infant mortality, 225; Negroes
in needle trades, 322

North Carolina, the county unit in social work,
461

Nurse in maternity and infancy program, 398;
in public health work, 207, 233

Objective Tests in Case Work, Bruno, 300
Objectives of community recreation, 495
Obscene literature, suppression of, 115
Observation a process of treatment, 401
Odum, Howard W. (paper), 461
Offender, the adolescent, 195

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