"8ae73a34-6cb9-448c-89de-68d4090bf89e"@en . "CONTENTdm"@en . "REPORT OF INDUSTRIAL HOME FOR GIRLS, 1927-28."@en . "http://resolve.library.ubc.ca/cgi-bin/catsearch?bid=1198198"@en . "Sessional Papers of the Province of British Columbia"@en . "British Columbia. Legislative Assembly"@en . "2018"@en . "[1929]"@en . "https://open.library.ubc.ca/collections/bcsessional/items/1.0368907/source.json"@en . "application/pdf"@en . " FOURTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT\nOF THE\nPROVINCIAL INDUSTRIAL\nHOME FOR GIRLS\nOF THE PROVINCE OF\nBRITISH COLUMBIA\nAPRIL 1ST, 1927, TO MARCH 318T, 1928\nPRINTED BY\nAUTHORITY OF THE LEGISLATIVE ASSEMBLY.\nVICTORIA, B.C. :\nPrinted by Charles F. Banfield, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty.\n To His Honour Robert Randolph Bruce,\nLieutenant-Governor of the Province of British Columbia.\nMay it please Tour Honour :\nThe undersigned has the honour to present the Fourteenth Annual Report of the Provincial\nIndustrial Home for Girls for the year ended March 31st, 1928.\nA. M. MANSON,\nAttorney-General.\nAttorney-General's Department,\nVictoria, B.C., May, 1928.\n Provincial Industrial Home for Girls,\nVancouver, B.C., April 1st, 1928.\nThe Honourable A. M. Manson,\nAttorney-General, Victoria, B.C.\nSib,\u00E2\u0080\u0094I have the honour to submit herewith Annual Report of the Provincial Industrial\nHome for Girls; covering the fiscal year April 1st, 1927, to March 31st, 1928.\nMARGARET W. BAYNE,\nSuperintendent of the Provincial Industrial\nHome for Girls.\n PROVINCIAL INDUSTRIAL HOME\nFOR GIRLS.\nSUPEKINTENDENT'S ANNUAL KEPOKT.\nThe Honourable A. M. Manson,\nAttorney-General, Victoria, B.C.\nISir,\u00E2\u0080\u0094I have the honour to submit to you and the Honourable members of the Legislature\nthe Fourteenth Annual Report of the Provincial Industrial Home for Girls from April 1st,\n1927, to March 31st, 1928.\nThis report will be chiefly a review of the ten years' work of the present Superintendent.\nTHE BUILDING.\nMany changes have been made in the building, adding to its comfort, safety, and usefulness.\nFireplaces have been built in the living-room, the school-room, and the Superintendent's suite, in\nwhich for several years the fuel used was salvaged from the land-clearing of the premises.\nTHE LAUNDRY.\nIn the laundry live steam is now used in the boilers; drying-cupboards have been built\nto dry the clothes and electric irons have replaced the old-fashioned sad-irons.\nWhile the drying equipment was being installed in the laundry the linen was sent out and\nlaundered in a city plant. The prices paid enabled us to place a monetary value of $40 per\nweek, or $2,000 per annum, on the work done by the girls in our own laundry. This is carried\nout under the teaching and supervision of one member of the staff.\nPREMISES.\nThe site, comprising 14 acres, has been cleared for six years. Hundreds of cords of wood\nwere obtained and used as fuel for the furnace and fireplaces. As each portion of land was\ncleared large quantities of chips and bark and other debris from the clearing were gathered\nby the girls and burned in bonfires, in which potatoes and onions were baked as a relish with\ntheir lunches. The stones were gathered in heaps to be afterwards broken up and used as\nfoundation for the service roads.\nGROVE.\nA grove of about half an acre was preserved from the clearing. This was cleaned out and\nmade park-like by the girls, who use it as a shady retreat in which to eat the mid-meal lunches\nthat are served to all the girls working outdoors.\nCROPS.\nThe land is all either under crop or used as pasture for the dairy cattle. The returns in\ncrop value are always greater than the outlay, besides furnishing needed work for the girls.\nFENCE.\nA 6-foot close-board fence surrounds the property. Though adding to our privacy, it is\nnot sufficient defence against the visits of prowlers, or obtaining contraband goods or surreptitious letters and messages.'\nORCHARD.\nThe orchard set out in 1923 bore a small crop of fruit last year. While the greater number\nare apple-trees, there are also pear, cherry, prune, crab-apple, quince, and mulberry trees.\nPOULTRY-HOUSE.\nAs soon as the land was cleared a poultry-house was built for 150 birds. Good stock was\nobtained and by trap-nesting and leg-banding only the best were kept. A brooder-house and\nbreeding unit have since been added, with good results. When the price of eggs is low many\n R 6 BRITISH COLUMBIA.\ndozens are preserved in water-glass for use in the kitchen during the period of high-prices, when\n\u00E2\u0080\u00A2 the fresh eggs are sold. This enables the poultry plant to pay its way.\nA number of girls are trained in poultry-work, so that they are competent to take positions\non poultry-farms.\nFor a while we carried on the rearing of rabbits, ducks, and geese, but the premises are\nnot large enough to continue this work properly, so it has been given up.\nDAIRY-BARN.\nA dairy-barn large enough to care for six cows is a valuable part of out plant. Grade\ncows of ordinary quality were tried first and gradually replaced with a pedigreed Holstein and\ntwo pedigreed Jerseys. From these foundation cows was obtained a herd of four Jerseys and\ntwo Holsteins. These are all on the R.O.P. test. A number of enviable records have been won.\nThese, together with the cows' pictures, are framed and hung in the barn.\nWhile much of the butter used is made in the dairy, there is also an abundant supply of\nmilk and cream for the house and separated milk for the chickens and pigs.\nThe care and exactness required for this work, with its resultant successes, is a constant\nincentive to good work, and of unfailing interest to the girls themselves, who are impressed\nwith the value of unceasing care.\nThe early rising is willingly done, the animals are tenderly cared for, while their success\nin the R.O.P. test is an occasion for rejoicing.\nPIGGERY.\nVery early in the work some pigs were procured and used to kill out the fern-roots in the\nnewly cleared land, as well as to utilize the necessary waste from the kitchen. A commodious\npiggery has been built. The school has since been well supplied with excellent pork, home-\ncured bacon, and hams.\nROOT-HOUSE.\nWith the increased cultivation of the land a root-house was needed to store our winter\nsupply of vegetables and provide a cool room for the canned fruit and pickles.\nSufficient fruit is canned each year to supply the breakfast-table each morning with a\nsmall portion of jam, and the supper table six nights of the week with canned fruit when fresh\nfruit is out of season.\nGARDEN.\nAll the girls do some form of garden-work. Small plots are allotted to them, in which\nthey prepare the soil, sow the seed, plan the design, and care for the plot throughout the\nseason. Prizes are awarded to the best plots. Many girls at first do not so much as know\nthe names of the tools, and nothing of their use.\nMuch pleasure is derived from this work, for gardening satisfies the creative instinct more\nthan any other form of work.\nBesides caring for the garden-plots, many hours are spent hoeing and weeding in the\nkitchen-garden.\nFor a happy diversion there is the picking of raspberries, loganberries, and blackberries,\nfrom which much fruit is canned. No day seems too hot for this work. The daily sense of\nfullness at quitting-time is much envied by those not participating in the fruit-picking.\nPLAYFIELD.\nThe levelling, stone-picking, raking, and rolling the playfleld has been the work of the\ngirls. On the playfleld is a straight and a wave slide, productive of much enjoyment.\nGYMNASIUM.\nThe last building to be erected is the gymnasium, finished a few months ago but as yet\nunfurnished. It is equipped with shower-baths, which we expect to enjoy during the summer.\nWhen Dr. Augusta Stowe Gullen, of Toronto, visited the school she remarked in the\nvisitors' book: \" This is truly a home where maternal love is expressed and all efforts are\ntowards upbuilding honour, integrity, and courage of a high order among the pupils, while the\nmental and spiritual side of life is the guiding principle.\"\n REPORT OF INDUSTRIAL HOME FOR GIRLS, 1927-28.\nR 7\nFlower-garden plots bloom at the Provincial Industrial Home for Girls in soil that was\nuntil a few years ago covered with mighty fir and cedar stumps. The fence at the background is parallel with the old historic Douglas Trail, that was built in 1862 to enable\nthe officers of the ships loading at Moodyville to take a short-cut to New Westminster,\nwhere they were able to clear the Customs.\nj*\u00C2\u00AB \u00C2\u00AB*\n\u00C2\u00BB\u00E2\u0080\u00A2<\u00E2\u0080\u00A2*'\n^Sp\n^jjggs* *<\u00C2\u00A7\u00C2\u00A7p.\ni^^^^u^\nYOUNG GOSLINGS OF THE TOULOUSE\nSTRAIN.\nThese extremely fine birds are only 8\nweeks old and the gander immediately in\nfront weighs 9 lb.\n\" JOHANNA POSCH KOBA MCKINLEY.\"\n\" Johanna,\" who is only 6 months old, is\nexpected to keep up the reputation of her\ngrandmother, \"Pauline Fayne Peitje,\" who\nis the foundation cow of the herd.\nDOMESTIC TRAINING.\nIn homelike surroundings of scrupulous cleanliness the girls are given a training in home\nefficiency, in the preparation and value of plain wholesome food, in household cleanliness, the\nuse of soap as a cleanser being a high mark of civilization, the cultivation of the pleasures of\nsimple tastes, and the value of moral and spiritual behaviour.\nSince marriage is the greatest trade open to women, household training is her greatest\nnecessity. The successful married life of many of our girls is due largely to this training in\ndomestic efficiency.\nIn addition to the household training given to all the girls, some are instructed in dairy and\npoultry work as previously outlined. Several of these so trained have gone to positions in the\ncountry, where they are now happily married to successful farmers.\nHAIRDRESSING COURSE.\nSome years ago a hairdressing course was. established to train the girls of higher mentality\nwhose education did not permit their taking the commercial course.\nAn experienced hairdresser was secured, who taught marcelling, hair-cutting, and manicuring. Plenty of practice was obtained on the other girls.\nAlthough begun so auspiciously and carried on so successfully, this training was discontinued after one year. The system of exploitation carried on in the beauty-parlour business\nprevents our girls from obtaining positions. Until the privileges regarding paid apprenticeship\nin beauty-parlours is under a more just regulation it is useless to resume the teaching of this\nwork.\n R 8 BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nWhile sewing and the making of simple dresses is* taught, neither the trade of dressmaking\nnor of millinery has been carried on. The minimum wage law has brought about the elimination of the work-room, whose productions are now made in factories.\nVARIOUS TRADES.\nClerks' positions are difficult to obtain. The minimum wage law again operates against\nthe girl of deficient mentality or limited education.\nThere are few industries available for our girls except positions as waitresses, as domestics,\nas laundry-workers, and the various branches of seasonal work.\nTHE SCHOOL-ROOM.\nWhile the academic work of the public school is followed, much time is given to hand-work,\nas basketry, bead-work, toy-making, paper flowers, and various other kinds where restricted\nspace is a consideration. A commodious work-room would greatly facilitate our manual teaching, would permit new industries to be taught, would remove the hand-work from the present\ncrowded school-room and allow the academic studies to be carried on more peacefully and\nundisturbed. This would form the beginning of a trade school that should be established at no\ndistant date.\nSince a considerable proportion of our girls are subnormal the most to be hoped for them\nis to become skilled manual workers, and thereby, if possible, adequately self-supporting.\nNo industrial school can discharge its whole duty unless provision is made for training in\nvarious manual arts. Industrial inefficiency is one of the principal causes of poverty.\nCOMMERCIAL COURSE.\nTo those who have sufficient academic education a commercial course in stenography,\ntyping, and book-keeping is given if desired. So successful has this work been that for the past\neight years the Civil Service has never been without one or more of our graduates. Other girls\ntrained here are now filling responsible and well-paid positions in the commercial world.\nOne example will suffice. Beginning at a salary of $75 per month, one girl was given an\nincrease of $5 at the end of three months and a bonus of $10. At the end of the year was\ngiven a $10 increase and a bonus. Is now getting $125 per month with bonuses. Same girl\nattended night-school, where for speed in typing she won a bronze medal and bar, a silver medal\nand bar, and a gold medal, as well as a prize for speed in shorthand.\nSPIRIT OF SCHOOL.\nOn the whole, the spirit of the school has been one of content and cheerfulness. There is\nenough work and in sufficient variety to keep every one occupied. This has been interspersed\nwith frequent and pleasing recreation.\nDISCIPLINE.\nThe spirit of discipline is one of teaching and training rather than punishment. It is the\ndesire to reward for doing right rather than to punish for doing wrong, though both are sometimes necessary. The honour roll, the honour motor-rides, honour uniforms, honour jobs, birthday cakes, time earned off, and good-conduct money are all means to this end.\nPURPOSE OF THE SCHOOL.\nIt is well to keep in mind that the great purpose of this school is to provide for delinquents\nsuch wise conditions of modern education and training as will restore the largest possible\nportion of them to useful citizenship.\nDECLARATION OF GENEVA.\nIn the Declaration of Geneva, known as the \" Children's Charter,\" the men and women of\nall nations, recognizing that mankind owes to the child the best that it has to give, declare and\naccept it as their duty that, regardless of all considerations of race, nationality, and creed, the\nchild must be given the means requisite for its normal development, both materially and\nspiritually; that, the delinquent child must be reclaimed and put in a position to earn a livelihood ; that the child must be brought up in the consciousness that its talents must be devoted\nto the service of its fellow-men.\n REPORT OF INDUSTRIAL HOME FOR GIRLS, 1927-28. R 9\nCONFORM TO THE DECLARATION OF GENEVA.\nThe rules and regulations of this school conform to the spirit of the \" Children's Charter.\"\nEach member of the staff is expected to carry out the work in accordance with this spirit. It is\nnot easy to find people who are willing and capable of doing this work.\nIn reviewing the work of the past ten years, the percentage of successes is sufficiently high\nto show that the Industrial Home is eminently worth while; that the number of good citizens\nproduced thereby is of much economic value to the country.\nEXPERIENCE.\nOur experience has shown:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n(a.) That a lack of self-control indicates an unpreparedness for life on the outside.\n(6.) That some girls are definitely feeble-minded; some are sophisticated to a degree that\nmakes them capable of being exceedingly harmful.\n(c.) That without segregation the proper care of these is an extremly difficult and well-\nnigh impossible task.\n(d.) That we are expecting too much when we attempt to make socially safe in a period\nof two years girls who have, as their personal histories show, unfortunate social heredity and\nhave never in all their lives had proper social view-point.\n(e.) Their backwardness in their academic studies, due to subnormal mentality, shows\nthat it is a mistake to require them to attend public school until 15 years old. This produces\nthe habit of inefficiency and failure and tends to make them vicious.\n(/.) That special training is needed for the subnormal.\n(g.) That a twenty-four-hour school in the pre-delinquency stage would save many children\nfrom the industrial school and be a saving economically, morally, and spiritually to the State.\nPSYCHOLOGICAL RECORDS.\nTen years ago a happy arrangement was made with the psychological clinician of the\nVancouver schools to have all the girls here given the psychological test very soon after\nadmission. This has been a most valuable working basis for the training of the girl.\nThis work has been carried on throughout the entire ten years. We have now the most\ncomplete and extensive psychological record of any industrial school in Canada.\nIf a properly qualified officer could be engaged to follow up these cases its would form a\nvaluable record for the study of delinquency. I would earnestly request that this work be\ncarried out.\nA NEW LOCATION NEEDED.\nDuring the first years of our decade here many excursions were made in summer into the\nsurrounding woods to pick wild berries. Long walks were taken on Sundays, as the houses\nwere few and only occasional cars and people were met.\nWithin a few years this rural seclusion has been changed to a busy community. Houses\nare built thickly on all sides. Roads and streets have been made that carry an unending stream\nof motor-vehicles bearing all manner of people, some shouting and horn-honking; other conversing with the girls, and many shouting coarse and vulgar remarks; others prowling around\nthe premises, especially at night, leaving contraband articles and letters till the school is no\nlonger a place of safe-keeping for the girls.\nThe projected Harbour Railway is expected to pass close to the premises. All these and\nother changes make a new location an immediate necessity.\nIn the present building it has been impossible to segregate from the better-behaved girls\nthose who are persistently incorrigible and vicious. This herding is detrimental to good\ndiscipline and interferes with the training and well-being of most of the girls.\nIn a new location buildings could be erected to meet modern requirements which this\nbuilding does hot.\nThe work now carried on and the money expended would be productive of greater and\nbetter results if a more secluded and rural situation could be selected. No delay should occur\nin making preparations to meet an increasingly difficult and crucial condition.\n R 10\nBRITISH COLUMBIA.\nPROVINCIAL INDUSTRIAL HOME FOR GIRLS, CASSIAR STREET, VANCOUVER, B.C.\nOUR IDEALS.\nOur ideal is to elevate the ideals of the girls; to increase their efficiency; to create a\ndesire for better living, and to give the training necessary to make possible that desire; to\ninculcate a respect for law and order, for '\u00E2\u0096\u00A0' as a man thinketh in his heart so is he.\" No home\ncan be wholesome, no school efficient, and no country or nation safe until this lesson has been\nmastered.\nThe present yearly report is in much of the statistics typical of all the years.\nThe matron's report shows a well-filled larder and a busy household.\nThe outdoor report shows many lines of activity.\nThe doctor's report indicates the average health of the school in the past ten years.\nCOMMITMENTS.\nThe age of commitments is as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\n13 years of age 2\n14 years of age 4\n15 years of age 5\n16 years of age 5\n17 years of age 5\n18 years of age 1\n19 years of age 1\nNATIONALITY.\nTheir nationality is as follows:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nCanadian 3\nEnglish 9\nItalian 1\nFrench-Canadian 1\nCzeckslovakia 1\nCanadian children having British parents 8\nScotch 3\nIrish 3\nRussian 1\nUkrainian 1\nOFFENCES COMMITTED.\nIncorrigible 18 Breaking parole\nSexual immorality 1 No charge \t\nTheft 2\nNUMBER OF INMATES.\nDuring the year twenty-three were admitted, making 292 since the opening of the school,\nand 262 in training during the incumbency of the present Superintendent.\n REPORT OF INDUSTRIAL HOME FOR GIRLS, 1927-28. R 11\nRELEASED ON PROBATION OR DISCHARGED.\nNumber released on probation or discharged during the year is twenty-seven. Of these,\nthirteen were released through the Vancouver Juvenile Court and fourteen were returned to\nrelatives or were placed in suitable positions.\nESCAPES.\nDuring the year there were nineteen escapes. Two made their escape for the fourth time.\nMost of the girls escaping received outside assistance and indications are not wanting of\ntreachery on the staff.\nCOST OF MEALS, ETC.\nThe average cost per meal throughout the year including meat, fish, groceries, cereals,\nyeast, ice, and fruit, is 9 cents per meal.\nThe number of meals served during the year is 53,432.\nThe cost per girl per month, including salaries, office supplies, travelling expenses, furniture\nand fixtures, clothing, boots, etc., janitors' supplies, etc., fuel, light, and water, provisions,\nmedical and hospital supplies, good-conduct fund, and incidentals and contingencies, is $54.65.\nSTAFF OF OFFICIALS.\nThe following is the present staff of officials:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nSuperintendent Miss Margaret W. Bayne.\nMatron Mrs. Rhoda Butter.\nFirst Assistant Mrs. Agnes C. Oxley.\nSecond Assistant Mrs. Nancy Lyall.\nThird Assistant .Miss Jessie Macdonald.\nNeedle-woman Mrs. Helen M. Atcheson.\nLinen-keeper Miss K. M. Smith.\nCook Mrs. Jean F. MacDonald.\nTeacher and Agricultural Instructor .Miss Mollie Mornington.\nClerk and Commercial Teacher Miss M. AV. Sibbald.\nEngineer and Janitor Claude S. Gardner.\nGardener Thos. Hoskins.\nGardener Frank Holland.\nAll of which is respectfully submitted.\nMARGARET W. BAYNE,\nSuperintendent.\nOUTDOOE BEPOET.\nMaintenance Account.\nLabour $ 329.75\nSeeds, plants, etc 164.10\nTools and sundries 276.40\nFeed and stock 2,027.37\nRepairs to outbuildings \t\n$2,797.62\nCredit .1,713.79\n$4,511.41\n R 12 BRITISH COLUMBIA.\nIncome from Outdoors.\nMilk, total value for year $1,034.75\nButtermilk, total value for year 41.05\nButter, total value for year 773.96\nEggs, total value for year 628.02\nPoultry (used) 364.66\nPork supplied to house and sold 397.81\nVegetables used 662.40\nFruit 152.56\nField roots and fodder corn 88.70\nFertilizer from barn 192.50\nLive stock sold\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOne calf 25.00\nOne cow 150.00\n:,511.41\nMATEON'S EEPOET.\nMiss Margaret W. Bayne,\nSuperintendent, Provincial Industrial Home for Girls,\nVancouver, B.C. ' .\nDear Madam,\u00E2\u0080\u0094I beg leave to make the following report on the house-training and work for\nthe past year:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nThe ususal bread-making was carried on twice a week. Twenty-five girls were taught to\nmake good bread. From April 1st, 1927, to March 31st, 1928, were baked 6,973 loaves of bread.\nCakes, buns, cookies, and pies numbered 3,997. The number of hours worked in the bakery\namounted to 785.\nFruit-canning was carried on during the season. Several groups of girls assisted and were\ntaught the work.\nThe following fruits were cared for :\u00E2\u0080\u0094 Lt|\nApples 302\nBlack currants 22\nCherries 456\nCrab-apples 46\nDamson plums 150\nGooseberries 218\nMarmalade (orange) 356\nMarmalade (green tomato) 994\nPeaches 256\nPears 140\nPrunes 530\nRaspberries 412\nRhubarb and raspberry 46\nStrawberry 92\nTotal 4,020\nThe total outlay was $323.91, or an average of 8% cents per pound.\nCanned fruit was served over the whole house six times a week for supper when fresh\nfruit was not available, and a small portion of jam each morning for breakfast.\nOne hundred and fifty quarts of pickles were also made.\nIn the sewing-room from April 1st, 1927, to March 31st, 1928, the number of articles mended\nis 5,443; number of new articles made, 973 ; number of yards of material used, 1,623; number\nof hours worked in the sewing-room, 1,914.\n In the laundry for the same period the number of articles washed and ironed is 44,590;\nnumber of hours worked, 6,385.\nDuring the year the hours spent in housework is 34,238, and outdoors is 16,495.\nTreatment for venereal infection has been given daily to eighteen girls. Some of these had\nthree treatments each day; a few had two treatments daily. At proper intervals Dr. Campbell\ngave special treatment.\nEach member of the house staff when on duty works a twel\ e- or thirteen-hour day. Taking\ninto consideration her afternoons, evenings, and Sundays off, her working-time averages ten\nhours per day for seven days in the week.\nThe outdoor staff works longer hours owing to the milking of the cows involving early\nrising and later turning-in.\nAll of which is respectfully submitted.\n(Mrs.) Rhoda Rutter,\nMatron.\nMEDICAL OPFIOEE'S EEPOET.\nMiss Margaret W. Bayne,\nSuperintendent, Provincial Industrial Home for Girls,\nVancouver, B.C.\nDear Madam,\u00E2\u0080\u0094I beg leave to submit the following report on the work of the Girls'\nIndustrial Home for the past year:\u00E2\u0080\u0094\nOne girl who was pregnant on admittance was transferred to the Salvation Army Hospital,\nwhere she gave birth to a child last July.\nTwo girls were sent to the General Hospital for tonsillectomy. One girl was transferred\nto General Hospital for appendectomy. Two girls were given X-ray treatment for fractures.\nOne case of measles developed, but immediate and effective quarantine prevented further\ncontagion.\nSeven cases of goitre were given proper iodine treatment here for this condition, while one\ngirl was given several basal metabolism tests for goitre.\nTwenty-nine girls were given the Wassermann test for luetic infection. One was found\npositive. She was given special treatment in the General Hospital for several months.\nThirty-one cases of Neisser infection were given treatment here. One case was transferred to General Hospital for special treatment.\nTwo girls were given special treatment for ear-trouble. Forty-eight girls were given dental\ntreatment by dentist.\nThe general health of the school has been good throughout the year.\nAll of which is respectfully submitted.\nMary B. Campbell,\nMedical Officer.\nVICTORIA, B.C. :\nPrinted by Charles F. Banfield, Printer to the King's Most Excellent Majesty.\n1928.\nS2 5-929-3135\n "@en . "Legislative proceedings"@en . "J110.L5 S7"@en . "1929_V02_04_R1_R13"@en . "10.14288/1.0368907"@en . "English"@en . "Vancouver : University of British Columbia Library"@en . "Victoria, BC : Government Printer"@en . "Images provided for research and reference use only. For permission to publish, copy or otherwise distribute these images please contact the Legislative Library of British Columbia"@en . "Original Format: Legislative Assembly of British Columbia. Library. Sessional Papers of the Province of British Columbia"@en . "FOURTEENTH ANNUAL REPORT OF THE PROVINCIAL INDUSTRIAL HOME FOR GIRLS OF THE PROVINCE OF BRITISH COLUMBIA APRIL 1ST, 1927, TO MARCH 31ST, 1928"@en . "Text"@en . ""@en .