Bulletin of State Institutions, Volume 17Board of Control of State Institutions, 1915 |
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Página 2
... living wage . Upon close questioning a number of these clerks we found that some of them sometimes paid for the privilege of their afternoon employment , relying solely upon the hope of attracting some man and securing from him money ...
... living wage . Upon close questioning a number of these clerks we found that some of them sometimes paid for the privilege of their afternoon employment , relying solely upon the hope of attracting some man and securing from him money ...
Página 4
... living con- ditions , and social conditions vary in different communities , just so much must the ways of working differ . A river city has problems to overcome that the inland town does not face , and the opposite holds true . Perhaps ...
... living con- ditions , and social conditions vary in different communities , just so much must the ways of working differ . A river city has problems to overcome that the inland town does not face , and the opposite holds true . Perhaps ...
Página 8
... living and well - doing to such an extent that one can feel quite certain of her success in the future . The question is often asked , " How many girls have been made better women by state's care and paroling ? " I would say all , but ...
... living and well - doing to such an extent that one can feel quite certain of her success in the future . The question is often asked , " How many girls have been made better women by state's care and paroling ? " I would say all , but ...
Página 41
... living in sod houses . Why don't you drown them , as if they were supernumerary pups ? " The general assembly itself pigeonholed the bill , and it was necessary for myself and Stone always to be on hand in or der to get it before the ...
... living in sod houses . Why don't you drown them , as if they were supernumerary pups ? " The general assembly itself pigeonholed the bill , and it was necessary for myself and Stone always to be on hand in or der to get it before the ...
Página 78
... living . The parents were of the labor- ing class , with a large family . Education of both father and mother was limited . The girl early in life consorted with bad characters and developed a propensity for general viciousness ...
... living . The parents were of the labor- ing class , with a large family . Education of both father and mother was limited . The girl early in life consorted with bad characters and developed a propensity for general viciousness ...
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Palavras e frases frequentes
abscesses alfalfa Anamosa attention bacillus believe better board of control brain cause cent Chairman child City Clarinda cocaine conference corn cows Cromer crop dairy defective delinquent dentist discipline discussion disease doctor Donohoe drug Eldora ensilage Eschenheimer feeble-minded formalin George Mogridge germ girl give Glenwood hundred individual Industrial School infection insane institution interested Iowa Iowa City large number lesions matter McClaughry Member Dixon mental methods milk mind Mitchellville morons morphine mouth normal nurses officers organs paper parole patients physical physician possible present prison problem Prof psychopathic psychopathic hospital pyorrhea question reformatory seed soil Superintendent Applegate Superintendent Kuser Superintendent Mogridge Superintendent Sessions Superintendent Witte teeth thing tion treatment trouble tuberculosis typhoid typhoid fever vaccine Warden wards Willowdale woman women
Passagens conhecidas
Página 44 - A wise old owl lived in an oak; The more he saw the less he spoke; The less he spoke the more he heard. Why can't we all be like that wise old bird?
Página 34 - Although it be a known thing subscribed by all, that the foetus assumes its original and birth from the male and female, and consequently that the .egge is produced by the cock and henne, and the chicken out of the egge...
Página 338 - ... control, while private organizations should seek development in directions that are more experimental, require more temporary care, are more unusual In their application or are carried on with the co-operation of the families benefited.
Página 342 - ... more warning for the removal of a boy than the woman does who is in charge of a girl; the reasons for removal do not appear to be, and actually are not as urgent in nature as those in a girl's case. It is our purpose to select our families so carefully, and with such concern for the special fitness of the particular children to the particular homes selected that the caring families, under the oversight of our visitors, will be generally responsible for the training of the children received. It...
Página 85 - July, annually thereafter, every person who produces, imports, manufactures, compounds, deals in, dispenses, sells, distributes, or gives away...
Página 85 - ... or their salts in one fluid ounce or if a solid preparation, in one avoirdupois ounce, nor to plasters, liniments and ointments for external use only.
Página 34 - And here the assumption to which we seem driven by the ensemble of the evidence, is, that sperm-cells and germ-cells are essentially nothing more than vehicles in which are contained small groups of the physiological units in a fit state for obeying their proclivity towards the structural arrangement of the species they belong to.
Página 339 - ... institutions of the Department of Public Charities of the City of New York, I think it will be conceded that it has been established: I. That the type of children's institutions and the character of service rendered by them to the little ones entrusted to their care, varies greatly. Probable Result: Good institutions, indifferent institutions, and decidedly bad and useless institutions. II. Children, in a number of institutions, are not receiving adequate medical, surgical, and dental service....
Página 142 - ... weighing of all the evidence which any reputable method of examination and weighing can furnish. The Binet tests assume the twelve year mental age as the upper limit of feeble-mindedness because observation and test showed that people of any higher intelligence are usually able to float in society. And, after all, the ability of a man to earn a living, to maintain himself independently in the station of life in which he is born is the one supreme test of mental normality. If a man can secure...
Página 90 - The way to educate a man is to set him to work ; the way to get him to work is to interest him; the way to interest him is to vitalize his task by relating it to some form of reality.