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Boyville: A History of Fifteen Years' Work Among Newsboys

Chapter 2: LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
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About This Book

This work chronicles fifteen years of organizing and supporting street newsboys, blending anecdote, practical guidance, and institutional history. It traces the formation of local associations and auxiliaries, describes charitable initiatives such as holiday dinners and relief efforts, and records educational and disciplinary programs including cadet and band units, parades, and public festivals. Personal sketches and case studies illustrate daily routines, challenges, and reforms, while rolls of honor and organizational details document successes and setbacks. The narrative emphasizes youth welfare, civic engagement, and preventive social work aimed at offering structure, training, and community support to keep boys from drifting into criminal paths.

CONTENTS

PART FIRST
Chapter I Page 3
II 9
III 14
IV 19
V 25
PART SECOND
Chapter VI Page 31
VII 35
VIII 43
IX 49
X 53
XI 59
PART THIRD
Chapter XII Page 65
XIII 71
XIV 80
XV 87
XVI 93
PART FOURTH
Chapter XVII Page 105
XVIII 111
XIX 115
XX 120
PART FIFTH
Chapter XXI Page 129
XXII 135
PART SIXTH
Chapter XXIII Page 143
XXIV 147
XXV 151
XXVI 158
XXVII 164
XXVIII 166
XXIX 171
XXX 175
XXXI 177
XXXII 183
XXXIII 186
XXXIV 189
PART SEVENTH
Chapter XXXV Page 195
XXXVI 200
XXXVII 205
XXXVIII 208
XXXIX 211
XXXX 217

LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS

Page
The president talking to the newsboys, Frontispiece
“I am scattering hickory-nuts under this old tree for the children to find termorrow,” 8
The original charter members, 16
Ready to start for the first Christmas dinner, 24
Where the Boyville Newsboy’s Association was organized, December 25, 1892, 32
A bunch of sellers, 40
Festival Hall. Where the National Newsboy’s Association was organized, August 16, 1904, 48
Newsboys’ Band and Cadets—ready to start for Washington, D. C., to participate in the inaugural parade of President Roosevelt, March 4, 1905, 56
“I am an officer of the sellers’ auxiliary; get busy,” 64
“Lady, I am sorry I run away wid de money,” 64
“Trow de cigarette away,” 72
“President, I have already licked de kid,” 80
Getting familiar with the headlines, 88
“Dis here is de dog,” 88
Roll of honor—some of the boys who turned in valuable articles found on the street, 96
The Boyville Cadets—when first organized, 96
Members of the East Side auxiliary, 104
“Firetop,” 112
“He sweared at a lady and I punked him,” 120
Carriers, 128
Carriers, 128
First sale of the day, 136
Lining up ready to go to church, 144
The tough from market space, 152
Dividing the papers, 160
Two new members, 168
“Tenements on the avenue.” In these old buildings, at one time, lived seventeen families, 176
“I will buy from the little fellow,” 184
Waiting for the last edition, 184
“Billy Butcher, we must have an understandin’, which corner ob de street will you take?” 192
“He was fishing in the lake,” 200
Pastime—the beginning, 208
Pastime—the finish, 216

 


“IF you are going to do anything permanent for the average man you have got to begin before he is a man. The chance of success lies in working with the boy and not with the man. That applies peculiarly to those boys who tend to drift off into courses which mean that unless they are checked they will be formidable additions to the criminal population when they grow older.

“No Nation is safe unless in the average family there are healthy, happy children.

“If these children are not brought up well they are not merely a curse to themselves and their parents, but they mean the ruin of the State in the future.”

President Theodore Roosevelt.


 

PART FIRST