" The
Desertion Bureau immediately telegraphed to Cincinnati and
Indianapolis. The United Jewish Charities of Cincinnati working
together with the labor union lost little time in effecting his
arrest.
Many theories about family desertion have suffered a change in recent
years. One of these relates to the "collusive desertion." Social workers
in training used formerly to be taught that the first place to look for
the deserter was around the corner, where he could slip back into the
house and partake of charitable bounty or, at the very least, keep close
watch of his family and return if any serious danger threatened them.
Although the collusive desertion seems to have been a frequent happening
in the past, there is almost unanimous testimony from case workers at
the present time that it is not common. "I don't come across an instance
once a year," said one case worker.
Another, after searching her memory, recalled what seemed to her one
instance of real collusion. A woman, pregnant and seeming to be in
great destitution, applied to a family social work society in a
small city for help. Careful search did not discover the man's
whereabouts--he seemed to have disappeared without leaving a trace,
and his wife professed ignorance.
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