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u. District Supervisors of the Poor v. County Boards of Child Welfare w. Probation Officers

x, x. Supervisory and other relations of State Treasurer, Attorney General, and other state officers to the general system

2, 2. Supervisory relations of State Comptroller over finances of State Institutions.

INSTITUTIONS

1. Bureau of Identification
2. Dannemora State Hospital
3. Matteawan State Hospital

4. State Farm for Women

5. State Prison for Women (Auburn)

6. Wingate Prison

7. Prison for the Condemned

8. Auburn Prison

9. Clinton Prison

10. Sing Sing Prison

11. Great Meadows Prison

12. Western House of Refuge for Women (Albion)

13. New York State Reformatory for Women (Bedford Hills)

14. New York State Reformatory (Elmira) 15. Institution for Defective Delinquents (Napanoch)

NOTE-a, a, a, etc., Boards of managers for state institutions.

b, b, b, etc., Trustees, Sheriffs, and managers of local institutions.

16. State School for Mental Defectives (Syracuse)

17. State School for Mental Defectives (Newark)

18. State School for Mental Defectives (Rome) 19. Letchworth Village

20. State Farm Colony for Mental Defectives 21. State Agricultural and Industrial School (Industry)

22. New York State Training School for Girls (Hudson)

23. New York House of Refuge (Randall's Island)

24. New York State Soldiers' and Sailors' Home (Bath)

25. New York State Womens' Relief Corps Home (Oxford)

26. Thomas Indian School (Iroquois)

27. New York State Hospital for Crippled and Deformed Children (West Haverstraw) 28. New York State Hospital for the Treatment of Incipient Pulmonary Tuberculosis (Raybrook)

29. New York City Reformatory for Misdemeanants

30. Society for the Reformation of Juvenile Delinquents in the City of New York

31. New York State School for the Blind (Batavia)

32. State Hospital for the Poor and Indigent

Insane

33. Mohansic State Hospital

34. Central Islip State Hospital

35. Kings Park State Hospital

36. Middleton State Homeopathic Hospital

37. Gowonda State Homeopathic Hospital 38. Brooklyn State Hospital

39. Manhattan State Hospital.

LOCAL INSTITUTIONS

40. County Jails

41. City Jails and Police Stations

42. Lockups

43. Coöperative Clinics, municipal and state 44. Local Institutions for Mental Defectives

45. County Tuberculosis Hospitals

46. Colonies for Inebriates, etc.

47. Almshouses

48. Outdoor Poor Relief

49. Mothers' Pensions and Child Welfare

50. Local Institutions for the Insane

51. Places of Detention of Insane.

PRIVATE INSTITUTIONS

52. Private Institutions for Mental Defectives licensed by the Commission

53. Coöperative Clinics in Incorporated Hospitals 54. Day Nurseries

55. Dispensaries

56. Fresh Air Charities

57. Homes for the Aged

58. Homes for Children

59. Homes and Schools for the Blind

60. Hospitals

61. Industrial Schools

62. Infant Asylums and Hospitals

63. Institutions for Mental Defectives and Epileptics

64. Placing Out and Boarding Out Agencies 65. Reformatories for Adults

66. Schools for the Deaf

67. Temporary and Special Homes for Children 68. Temporary Homes for Adults

69. Private Places of Detention for the Insane.

LOCAL ORGANIZATIONS

The State Board of Charities is in most extensive contact with local units of administration. The typical organization is illustrated in the chart. Variations in greater or less degree are the rule for particular cities or counties. In general, the County Superintendent of the Poor is the chief local poor official. He supervises county relief and acts as superintendent of the county poor asylum. The actual distribution of doles is in the hands of the district supervisors, who care for outside cases, and apply temporary or emergency relief. The County (Juvenile) Courts appoint child welfare boards, for the purpose of adminis

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