[15] New York Tribune, December 18, 1911.
[16] New York Times, June 26, 1911.
[17] New York World, February 24, 1910.
[18] See Appendix, Table 6, [p. 169].
[19] For further data regarding size of families, see Appendix, Table 7, [p. 170].
[20] For economic status of the mothers in 222 of the 241 families of delinquent boys, see Appendix, Table 8, [p. 170]. See also Anthony, op. cit., p. 59.
[21] The conjugal condition of the parents in 233 families is shown in the Appendix, Table 9, [p. 171]. For eight of the group of 241 families this information was not available.
[22] The relief records of 86 families who were known to have received aid, and the duration of the relief records in 73 of these cases, are given in the Appendix, Tables 10 and 11, [pp. 171] and [172].
[23] For the full text of the law referred to, see Consolidated Laws of New York; the Penal Law; Laws of 1909, section 2186, chapter 88.
[24] Compare with classification of arrests according to analysis of offenses made in the Bureau of Social Research, as given in Chapter II, [pp. 16-17].