The Survey October 1917-March 1918 . l. KansasCity, May 15-22. Secy, Charles L. Chute,State Probation Commission, Albany, N. Y. Public Health Nursing, National Organi-zation for. Cleveland, May 6-11. Secy,Ella Phillips Crandall, 156 Fifth avenue,New York city. Social Work, National Conference City, Mo., May 15-22, 1918. SecyW. T. Cross, 315 Plymouth court, Chicago. STATE AND LOCAL Charities and Correction, New Jersey StateConference of. Newark, April , Ernest D. Easton, 45 Clinton street,Newark. Social Agencies, California, State Confer-ence of. Santa Barbara, April


The Survey October 1917-March 1918 . l. KansasCity, May 15-22. Secy, Charles L. Chute,State Probation Commission, Albany, N. Y. Public Health Nursing, National Organi-zation for. Cleveland, May 6-11. Secy,Ella Phillips Crandall, 156 Fifth avenue,New York city. Social Work, National Conference City, Mo., May 15-22, 1918. SecyW. T. Cross, 315 Plymouth court, Chicago. STATE AND LOCAL Charities and Correction, New Jersey StateConference of. Newark, April , Ernest D. Easton, 45 Clinton street,Newark. Social Agencies, California, State Confer-ence of. Santa Barbara, April , J. C. Astredo, Santa Barbara, Cal. Southern Sociological Congress. Bir-mingham, Ala., April 14-17. Secy, J. , 609 McLachlen bldg., Wash-ington, D. C. Charities and Corrections, Tennessee StateConference. Memphis, May 5-7. Secy,Mary Russell, Associated Charities, Mem-phis. Charities and Correction, New York CityConference of. Brooklyn, Manhattan andYonkers, May 7-9. Secy, John B. Prest,287 Fouth avenue, New York Move Forward, Please Some Unexpected Results of Putting Women Conductors on the St. Louis Street Cars By Oscar Leonard a I T sounds good to hear the street cars clatter by oncemore, was the happy remark of a business man,when shortly after three oclock Friday afternoon,February 8, some 3,000 employes of the United Rail-ways of St. Louis went back to work. You should have seenthe happy faces of these men. They had a right to be less than six days they won what eighteen years ago theyfailed to win after a bitter struggle of four months—recog-nition for their union. That was the one issue in the other demands the men had, they were willing toarbitrate. The company would have willingly arbitrated anyother demands. How the men were unionized almost over night is difficultto guess. The United Railways Company has done all in itspower to prevent organization. The company denies that ithas ever discharged men for talking unionism


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Keywords: ., bookcentury1900, bookdecade1910, booksubjectcharities, bookyear19