Germany is described by Dr. Grace L. Meigs of the Children's Bureau of the United States Department of Labor in a paper on Infant Welfare Work in War Time which the bureau has just made available for general distribution. The Woman's Medical Journal - Page 1711917Full view - About this book
| Ferdinand Eugene Daniel - 1918 - 616 pages
...WAR. War work for babies which resulted in lowering the infant death rate in Great Britain, France, Belgium and Germany, is described by Dr. Grace L. Meigs of the Children's Bureau of the US Department of Labor in a paper on Infant Welfare Work in War Time, which the bureau has just made... | |
| Edward Aloysius Pace, Thomas Edward Shields - 1918 - 448 pages
...small town communities are being deprived of a fair chance for normal development is the assertion of the Children's Bureau of the United States Department of Labor in a report just issued on conditions which tend to juvenile wrongdoing in the country. One hundred and... | |
| 1926 - 354 pages
...prevention of delinquency and crime in children and young persons is recommended by Grace Abbott, Chief of the Children's Bureau of the United States Department of Labor, in her annual report. "Crime begins in delinquency among children," Miss Abbott stated. "Though the sensational... | |
| 1917 - 482 pages
...work of Conserving Life by Eliminating Waste. * * * In a recent paper on "Infant Welfare in War Time," Dr. Grace L. Meigs, of the Children's Bureau of the United States Department of Labor, describes the methods adopted by the different countries which have resulted in... | |
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