RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION PUBLICATIONS THE STANDARD OF LIVING AMONG WORKINGMEN'S FAMILIES IN NEW YORK CITY. BY ROBERT COIT CHAPIN, Ph.D. 388 pages. 131 tables. 16 diagrams. Price, postpaid, $2.00. MEDICAL INSPECTION OF SCHOOLS. By LUTHER HALSEy Gulick, M.D., and LEONARD P. Ayres, A.M. 286 pages. Third edition. Price, postpaid, $1.00. LAGGARDS IN OUR SCHOOLS: A Study of Retardation and Elimination in City School Systems. By LEONARD P. AYRES, A.M. 252 pages. 106 tables. 38 diagrams. Second edition. Price, postpaid, $1.50. THE PITTSBURGH SURVEY WOMEN AND THE TRADES. By Elizabeth Beardsley Butler. Price, postpaid, $1.72. THE STEEL WORKERS. By John A. Fitch, Expert, New York Dept. of Labor. (In press.) PITTSBURGH: THE GIST OF THE SURVEY. By Paul U. Kellogg. (In preparation.) HOUSING REFORM. A Handbook for Practical Use in American Cities. By Lawrence Veiller. 220 pages. 5 schedules. Price, postpaid, $1.25. A MODEL TENEMENT HOUSE LAW. By LAWRENCE VEILLER. 130 pages. Price, postpaid, $1.25. AMONG SCHOOL GARDENS. By M. LOUISE Greene, M.Pd., Ph.D. Illustrated. 380 pages. Price, post paid, $1.25. WORKINGMEN'S INSURANCE IN EUROPE. BY LEE K. FRANKEL and MILES M. DAWSON, with the co-operation of LOUIS I. DUBLIN. 450 pages. 145 tables. Price, postpaid, $2.70. THE CAMPAIGN AGAINST TUBERCULOSIS IN THE UNITED STATES: Including a Directory of Institutions dealing with Tuberculosis in the United States and Canada. Compiled under the direction of the National Association for the Study and Prevention of Tuberculosis. By PHILIP P. JACOBS. 467 pages. Price, postpaid, $1.00. REPORT ON THE DESIRABILITY OF ESTABLISHING AN EMPLOYMENT BUREAU IN THE CITY OF NEW YORK. By EDWARD T. DEVINE, Ph.D., LL.D. 238 pages. Price, postpaid, $1.00. CORRECTION AND PREVENTION. Four volumes prepared for the Eighth International Prison Congress. Edited by CHARLES RICHMOND HENDERSON, PH.D. Price per set, $10; per volume, $2.50. PRISON REFORM. By Chas. R. Henderson, F. B. Sanborn, F. H. Wines and Others. And, PREVENTIVE AGENCIES AND METHODS. By Charles Richmond Henderson, Ph.D. 440 pages. PREVENTIVE TREATMENT OF NEGLECTED CHILDREN. By Hastings H. Hart, LL.D. Illustrated. 420 pages. JUVENILE COURT LAWS IN THE UNITED STATES SUMMARIZED. 160 pages. Price, postpaid, $1.50. THE WIDER USE OF THE SCHOOL PLANT. BY CLARENCE A. PERRY. (In press.) CHARITIES PUBLICATION COMMITTEE 105 EAST 22D street, new YORK RUSSELL SAGE FOUNDATION JUVENILE COURT LAWS IN THE UNITED STATES A SUMMARY BY STATES, BY THOMAS J. HOMER; A TOPICAL EDITED BY HASTINGS H. HART, LL. D. DIRECTOR OF THE DEPARTMENT OF CHILD-HELPING OF THE NEW YORK CHARITIES PUBLICATION COMMITTEE ..... MCMX Τ' PREFACE HE material here presented is intended for the use of judges and officers of juvenile courts, of students of legislation, and of those who may undertake the preparation of new legislation or the revision of old legislation affecting dependent and delinquent children. Part I is a summary of the juvenile court legislation of the United States to 1908, inclusive, which was prepared in 1909, under the direction of John Koren, expert special agent of the United States Bureau of the Census, by Thomas J. Homer, of the Suffolk (Massachusetts) Bar. With the consent of Mr. Koren, his summary has been revised so as to cover the legislation of 1909. For most of the states the revision is complete to the close of 1909. For a few states, the changes made by the legislatures of 1909 have merely been indicated by foot notes, the text itself still comprising the legislation in force in 1908. The summary is printed by permission of Mr. E. Dana Durand, Commissioner of the Census. Part II is a topical abstract of state laws governing the trial and disposition of juvenile offenders, prepared by Miss Grace Abbott of Chicago in connection with a study of the Juvenile Court of Chicago made by the Chicago School of Civics and Philanthropy, for the Russell Sage Foundation, and covering legislation in force at the close of 1909. It is published with the consent of the officers of the school. This abstract is arranged topically under eleven topics: I. The Court Given Jurisdiction; II. Extent of Jurisdiction; III. Procedure; IV. Records and Reports; V. Place of Holding Court and Exclusion of the Public; VI. Disposition of the Child Pending Trial; VII. Final Disposition of the Child; VIII. Probation Officers; IX. Construction of Juvenile Court Laws; X. Adult Responsibility for Juvenile Delinquency; XI. Relation of Court to Institution in which Children are Placed. Each topic is treated by states, alphabetically, enabling the reader to ascertain what is the legislation of each state with reference to each several topic. The topics are treated only in outline. For |