14 JUKES EDWARD* 



Three hundred of the 1,200, or one in four, died 

 in infancy from lack of good care and good condi- 

 tions. 



There were fifty women who lived lives of notori- 

 ous debauchery. 



Four hundred men and women were physically 

 wrecked early by their own wickedness. 



There were seven murderers. 



Sixty were habitual thieves who spent on the 

 average twelve years each in lawless depredations. 



There were 130 criminals who were convicted 

 more or less often of crime. 



What a picture this presents! Some slight 

 improvement was apparent when Mr. Dugdale 

 closed his studies. This resulted from evening 

 schools, from manual training schools, from im- 

 proved conditions of labor, from the later methods 

 of treating prisoners. 



