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(ï S. B l /g U. S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR CHILDREN’S BUREAU JULIA C. LATH RO P. Chief UST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR COMPILED U N DER THE DIRECTION OF H. H. B. MEYER CHIEF BIBLIOGRAPHER. LIBRARY OF CONGRESS WITH THE ASSISTANCE OF LAURA A. THOMPSON LIBRARIAN. CHILDREN'S BUREAU IN D U S T R IA L SE R IES N o. 3 Bureau Publication N o. 18 WASHINGTON GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE 1916 26,2, 7 it, £ Sc. ft i% https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis PUBLICATIONS OF THE CHILDREN’S BUREAU. Annual Reports: First Annual Report of the Chief, Children’s Bureau, to the Secretary of Labor, for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1913. 20 pp. 1914. Second Annual Report of the Chief, Children’s Bureau, to the Secretary of Labor, for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1914. 19 pp. 1914. Third Annual Report of the Chief, Children’s Bureau, to the Secretary of Labor, for the fiscal year ended June 30, 1915. 26 pp. 1915. Care o f Children Series: No. 1. Prenatal Care, by Mrs. Max West. 41pp. 3d ed. 1913. Bureau pub lication No. 4. No. 2. Infant Care, by Mrs. Max West. 87 pp. 1914. Bureau publication No. 8. Dependent, Defective, and Delinquent Classes Series: No. 1. Laws Relating to Mothers’ Pensions in the United States, Denmark, and New Zealand. 102 pp. 1914. Bureau publication No. 7. No. 2. Mental Defectives in the District of Columbia: A brief description of local conditions and the need for custodial care and training. 39 pp. 1915. Bureau publicasi*h No. 13. * Infant Mortality Series: No. 1. Baby-saving Campaigns: A preliminary report on what American cities are doing to prevent infant mortality. 93 pp. 4th ed. 1914. Bureau pub lication No. 3. No. 2. New Zealand Society for the Health of Women and Children: An example of the methods of baby-saving work in small towns and rural districts. 19 pp. 1914. Bureau publication No. 6. No._ 3. Infant Mortality: Results of a field study in Johnstown, Pa., based on births in one calendar year, by Emma Duke. 93 pp. and 9 pp. illus. 1915. Bureau publication No. 9. No. 4. Infant Mortality in Montclair, N. J .: A study of infant mortality in a suburban community. 36 pp. 1915. Bureau publication No. 11. No. 5. A Tabular Statement of Infant-Welfare Work by Public and Private Agencies in the United States. 114 pp. 1916. Bureau publication No. 16. Industrial Series: No. 1. Child Labor Legislation in the United States, by Helen L. Sumner and Ella A. Merritt. 1131 pp. 1915. Bureau publication No. 10. Analytical tables of laws of all States and text of laws of each State. No. 2. Administration of Child Labor Laws: Part I. Employment Certificate System, Connecticut. 69 pp. 2 charts. 1915. Bureau publication No. 12. Part II. Employment Certificate System, New York. — pp. 3 charts. 1916. Bureau publication No. 17. No. 3. List of References on Child Labor. 161 pp. 1916. Bureau publication No. 18. Miscellaneous Series: No. 1. The Children’s Bureau: A circular containing the text of the law estab lishing the bureau and a brief Outline of the plans for immediate work. 5 pp. 1912. Bureau publication No. 1. No. 2. Birth Registration: An aid in preserving the lives and rights of children. 20 pp. 3d ed. 1914. Bureau publication No. 2. No. 3. Handbook of Federal Statistics of Children: Number of children in the United States, with their sex, age, race, nativity, parentage, and geographic distribution. 106 pp. 2d ed. 1914. Bureau publication No. 5. No. 4. Child-Welfare Exhibits: Types and preparation, by Anna Louise Strong, Ph. D. 58 pp. and 16 pp. illus. 1915. Bureau publication No. 14 No. 5. Baby Week Campaigns. Suggestions for communities of various sizes. 64 pp. 1915. Bureau publication No. 15. 2 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis * l£ TABLE OF CONTENTS. Page. Letter of transmittal.................................... ................. .......................................... 5 Bibliographies : Child labor*........1...... .......................................................................... ............ 7-8 Related subjects: Apprenticeship............. .........'. ............................................. . . ’.................. 8 Compulsory education................................................................................ 8 Eight-hour day........................................ , . ................... .......................... 8 Industrial education................... 8-9 Industrial hygiene....................................................................................... 9 Minimum wage...................................-............................................... 9-10 Mothers’ pensions. ........................... 10 Vocational guidance........................................ ............................................ 10-11 United States and General................. 11-44 Legislation: State legislation and enforcement..................................................... 44-54 Uniform legislation..................................................................... 54 Federal control................................. 54-59 Speeches in Congress..................... 59-62 Statistics.....................*.............. ...................... .............................. ............... 62-63 Foreign countries: General................................................................................................................. 63-65 Austria-Hungary.................................................................................................... 65-66 Belgium............... 66-67 France............................................ ....................... . . . . ................ ....... ............. 67-69 Germany.......................................... 69-73 Great Britain.................. ......................... : .......... . ’. . . ..............................., . . . 73-82 Colonies....................... 82-83 Italy................................................... 83-84 The Netherlands................ 84 Russia.. .................................. 84-85 Norway and Sweden................................................................... ............... -.... 85 Spain..... ............................. 85-86 Switzerland............................................................................ 86-87 87-88 Other countries........................................ Industries: Agriculture........... ............................................................................. 88-90 Canneries................. 90-92 Clothing..................................................................................... 92 Glass................. 92-94 Home work...................... 94-97 Mercantile establishments................................................................................. 98-99 Mines and quarries............. 99-100 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 3 S/3/4- 4 TABLE OF CONTENTS. Industries—Continued. Textiles.......................... Miscellaneous industries Stage........................... Street trades— . . . . ----Educational aspects............. Juvenile occupations and Employment bureaus Health of working child.......... ............................ Author index.................- - •.............. - .................. Subject index........................................................ https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Page. 101-105 106107 107- 108 109-116 117-132 133-136 136-141 143-152 153-161 LETTER OF TRANSMITTAL. U . S. D epar tm en t of L a b o r , Ch il d r e n ’ s B u r e a u , Washington, June 80, 1916. S i r : Herewith I transmit a list of references on child labor. The first edition of this list was compiled by Mr. A. P. C. Griffin and was published by the Library of Congress in 1906. This second edi tion was begun in 1914, under the direction of Mr. H. H. B. Meyer, chief bibliographer of the Library of Congress, but the material was transferred to the Children’s Bureau because the Library of Congress was committed to the completion of certain larger publications, which made it impracticable for the Library to publish this list at present. Miss Laura A. Thompson, librarian of the Children’s Bureau, has assisted in the preparation of the list, but the great bulk of the work has been done by the Library of Congress. The Children’s Bureau wishes to express its appreciation of the privilege of being associated with the Library of Congress in this publication. Respectfully submitted. J u l i a C. L a t h r o p , C hief. Hon. W il l ia m B. W il s o n , Secretary o f Labor. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis NOTE. The reports of the State bureaus of labor and the reports of the departments of factory inspection have been included only where a special investigation has been made or where special statistics have been given. Most of the reports of the bureaus of labor contain sta tistics of children employed and reference to the inspection of child labor where there is no special department of factory inspection. No reference has been made to the child-labor laws as found in these or similar reports, as these are covered by the compilation made by the Children’s Bureau. (See No. 577 in this list.) The numbers at the end of the titles are the shelf numbers of the books in the Library of Congress. 6 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR B IB LIO G RAPH IES. CHILD LABOR. 1 Bloomfield, Meyer. The school and the start in life; a study of the relation between school and employment in England, Scotland, and Germany. Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 143 p. 23cm. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1914, no. 4. Whole no. 575.) HF5381.B5 Bibliography: p. 133-142. 2 British association for labour legislation. Child labour in the United King dom. A study of the development and administration of the law relating to the employment of children. By Frederic Keeling. London, P. S. King & son, 1914. xxxii, 326 p. 25£cm. HD6250.G7B75 “ Bibliography of the employment of children in the United Kingdom” : p. [309]-319. 3 Bullock, Edna Dean, comp. Selected articles on child labor. 2d and enl. ed. White Plains, N. Y., and New York city, The H. W. Wilson company, 1915. xxvi, 238 p. 20°m. (Debaters’ handbook series) HD6250.U3B85 1915 Bibliography: p. [xi]-xxvi. 4 Clopper, Edward Nicholas. millan co., 1912. ix, 280 p. Child labor in city streets. IS01“ . New York, The Mac HD6231.C5 Bibliography: p. 245-254. 5 Freeman, Arnold. Boy life & labour; the manufacture of inefficiency. Lon don, P. S. King & son, 1914. 252 p. 22cm. HD6250.G75B5 “ Bibliography of juvenile labour” : p. 233-248. 6 K eeling, F rederic. The labour exchange in relation to boy and girl labour. London, P. S. King & son, 1910. 76 p. 21cm. Bibliography: p. 73-76. 7 Massachusetts. Bureau of statistics. Industrial home work in Massachu setts . . . Boston, Wright & Potter print, co., 1914. 183 p. 23em. (Its Labor bulletin no. 101) HCl07.M4A3,no.l01 Bibliography: p. 152-177. 8 ------------------ Labor bibliography. 1912-1914. Boston, 1913-1915. 3 v. 23£cm. Z7164.L1M4 Found also in Annual report on the statistics of labor, 1912,1914,1915. 1912: Child labor: p. 7-9. 1913: Child labor: p. 4-10. 1914: Child labor: p. 6-9. 9 Tennessee. State library, Nashville. Legislative reference dept. Index of legislative reference material. Nashville, Tenn.., McQuiddy printing com pany, 1915. 85 p. 22°” . Z7161.T38 Child labor: p. 67-69. 10 Texas. University. Dept, of extension. Public discussion and infor mation division. Compulsory education and child labor. Austin, Tex., University of Texas [1910] 11 p. 23om. (Bulletin of the University of Texas. Extension ser.) Z7161.T45,no.7a https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 7' L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR; 11 TJ. S. Bureau of labor statistics. Subject index of the publications of the United States Bureau of labor statistics up to May 1, 1915. September, 1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 233 p. 23$cm. (Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 174. Miscellaneous series, no. 11) library of Congress. Division of bibliography. List of books (with references to periodicals) relating to child labor. Comp, under the direc tion of Appleton Prentiss Clark Griffin, chief bibliographer. Washington, Z881.U5 Govt, print, off., 1906. 66 p. 25£cm. 12 RELATED SUBJECTS. A P P R E N T IC E S H IP . 13 Bray, Reginald Arthur. Boy labour and apprenticeship. & co., 1911. xi, 248 p. 19cm. London, Constable “ List of authorities” : p. 241-244. 14 Dunlop, Olive Jocelyn, and Richard D. Denman. English apprenticeship & child labour; a history, by O. J. Dunlop, with a supplementary section on the modern problem of juvenile labour, by O. J. Dunlop and R. D. Denman. London [etc.] T. F. Unwin, 1912. 390 p. 23cm, HD4885.G7D8 Bibliography: p. 355-363. 15 Wright, Carroll Davidson. The apprenticeship system in its relation to indus trial education. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1908. 116 p. 23cm. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1908, no. 6) Llll.A6,1908,no6 ■- “ List of references relating to the education of apprentices” : p. 87-92. C O M P U L S O R Y E D U C A T IO N . 16 Compulsory school attendance. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 137 p. 23cm. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1914, no. 2. Whole no. 573) Llll.A6,1914,no.2 Bibliography of compulsory education in the United States: p. 131-134. E IG H T -H O U R D A Y . 17 TJ. S. library of Congress. Division of bibliography. - List of books, with references to periodicals, relating to the eight-hour working day and to limita tion of working hours in general. Comp, under the direction of Appleton Pren tiss Clark Griffin, chief bibliographer. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1908. Z881.U5 24 p. 251cm IN D U ST R IA L E D U C A T IO N . 18 Brundage, Howard D., and Charles R. Richards. A selected bibliog raphy on industrial education. {In National education association. Journal of proceedings and addresses, 1910. Winona, Minn., 1910. p. 766-773.) L13.N4 1910 19 Columbia university. Teachers college. School of industrial arts. An notated list of books relating to industrial arts and industrial education. New York city, Teachers college, Columbia university, 1911. 50 p. 23cm. (TechZ7911.C73 nical education bulletin, no. 6) 20 Dean, Arthur Davis. The worker and the state ; a study of education for indus trial workers. New York, The Century co., 1910. 355 p. 20cm. “ Bibliography of vocational education” : p. 345-355. 21 Kansas City, Mo. Public library. A reading list on vocational education. Kansas City, Mo., Kansas City public library, 1915. 44 p. 16J x 9cm. (Special library list. no. 10) Z5814.T4K2 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABO R. a 22 Lapp, John A., and Carl H. Mote. Learning to earn; a pleaand a pian for voca tional education. Indianapolis, The Bobbs-Merrill company, [c1915] 9 p. 1., 421 p. 19Jcm. LC1045.L3 Bibliography: p. [379]-389. “ Organizations interested in vocational training” : p. [391]—394. 23 New York (State). Department of labor. A selected bibliography on industrial education. {In its Annual report. 8th, 1907-08. Albany, 1909'. p. 357-394) HD8053.N7A2,pt.3 24 — —— Education dept. Division of vocational schools. A list of helpful publications concerning vocational instruction. Prepared by Lewis A. Wilson. Albany, The University of the state of New York, 1914. 41 p. 23cm. (Uni versity of the state of New York bulletin. no. 569) Z7911.N52 25 Richards, Charles It. Selected bibliography on industrial education. [Asbury Park, N. J., Kinmonth press] 1907. 32 p. 23cm. (National society for the promotion of industrial education. Bulletin no. 2) : T61.N27.no.2 26 Sadler, Michael Ernest. Continuation schools in England & elsewhere; their place in the educational system of an industrial and commercial state. 2d ed. Manchester, University press, 1908. 779 p. 23cm. (Publications of the Uni versity of Manchester. Educational series, no. 1) LC5215.S25 “ Short bibliography” : p. 750-754. 27 IT. S. Bureau of education. Bibliography of industrial, vocational, and trade education. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913. 92 p. 23em. {Its Bulletin, 1913, no. 22. Whole no. 532) LC1043.U6 28 Bureau of labor. Industrial education. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1911. 822 p. 230m. (Annual report of the commissioner of labor. 25th. 191°) HD8051.A3 1910 “ Selected bibliography on industrial education” : p. 519-539. IN D U ST R IA L H Y G IE N E . 29 Bibliography on industrial hygiene. Trial list of references on occupational diseases and industrial hygiene prepared by the American association for labor legislation, United States Bureau of labor [and] Library of Congress. American labor legislation review, June, 1912, v. 2 : 367-417. HD7833.A55,v.2 30 Bambousek, Josef. Industrial poisoning from fumes, gases and poisons of manufacturing processes; . . . tr. and ed. by Thomas M. Legge. London, E. Arnold, 1913. xiv, 360 p. illus. 22em. HD7263.R4 “ References” : p.339-354. 31 IT. S. Bureau of labor statistics. Library. Books and periodicals on acci dent and disease prevention in industry in the library of the Bureau of labor statistics. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916] 23 p. 23|em. 32 Z7164.L1U667 Surgeon-general’s office. Library. Occupations and trades (Dis eases and hjigiene of). {In its Index catalogue. Washington, 1881-1916. 1st ser. v. 10, p. 67-83; 2d ser. v. 5, p. 481-482, v. 12, p. 69-74) Z6676.U6 References to current material will be found in tbe Index medicus. Z6660 14 M IN IM U M W A G E . 33 New York. Publie library. The minimum wage; a preliminary list of selected references. New York, 1913. 9 p. 26Jcm. Z7164.W1N5 Prepared by C. C. Williamson. “ Reprinted at the New York public library from the Bulletin, August 1913.” https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 10 L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 34 Reeder, Charles Wells. Bibliography on the minimum wage. {In Ohio. Industrial commission. Dept, of investigation and statistics. Report, no. L Columbus, 0 ., 1914. 24cm. p. 23-33) HD8053.O3A3,no.l 35 Ryan, John Augustine. A living wage; its ethical and economic aspects. New York, London, The Macmillan co., 1912. 346 p. 19cm. (The Macmillan standard library) HB301.R98 “ Works of reference” : p.333-340. 36 Verrill, Charles Henry. Minimum-wage legislation in the United States and foreign countries. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 335 p. 23em. (Bul letin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 167. Miscella neous series, no. 8) Z7164.W1V3 Issued also as House doc. 1676, U. S., 63d Cong., 3d sess. A select list of references to books and periodicals (in English) on the minimum wage: p. 321-328. 37 Williamson, Charles C. A list of selected references on the minimum wage. {In New York (State). Factory investigating commission. Third report, 1914. Albany, 1914. 23om. Legislature, 1914. Assembly doc. 28. p.383-413) HD8053.N7A5 1914 M O T H E R S ’ P E N S IO N S . 38 Meyer, H. H. B. Select list of references on pensions for mothers, motherhood insurance, etc. {In Special libraries, Nov. 1913, v. 4: 177-183.) ' Z671.S71,v.4 39 New York (State) Commission on relief for widowed mothers. A bibliography of mothers’ pensions. {In its Report. 1914. Albany, 1914. 23cm. Legislature, 1914. Senate doc. 64.p. 570-577) HV699.N52 40 TJ. S. Children’s bureau. Laws relating to “ Mothers’ pensions” in the United States, Denmark and New Zealand. Washington, Govt, p rin t, off., 1914. 102 p. 25em. (Dependent children series, no. 1. Bureau publication no. 7) HY697.U5 Prepared by Miss Laura A . Thompson, librarian of the Bureau. “ List of references on ‘ Mothers’ pensions’ p. 98-102. V O C A T IO N A L G U ID A N C E . 41 Bloomfield, Meyer. Youth, school, and vocation. Houghton Mifflin co. [1915].273 p. 19£cm. Boston, New York [etc.] HF5381.B63 Bibliography: p. 262-267. 42 Brooklyn. Public library. Choosing an occupation; a list of books and refer ences on vocational choice, guidance, and training, in the Brooklyn public library. Brooklyn, N. Y ., The Brooklyn public library, 1913. 63 p. 19cm. Z5814.T4B8 43 Chicago school of civics and philanthropy. Dept, of social investigation. Finding employment for children who leave the grade schools to go to work; report to the Chicago woman’s club, the Chicago association of collegiate alumnse, and the Woman’s city club. [Chicago, Manz engraving company, The Hollister press, 1911] 56 p. 26om. HF5381.C6 Selected bibliography relating to employment supervision, p. 53-56. 44 Hall, Mary E. Vocational guidance through the library . . . with select bib liography by John G. Moulton. Chicago, American library association pub lishing board, 1914. 22 p. 19^cm. Z7164.C81H2 Reprinted from the Massachusetts library club bulletin, January, 1914. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 11 45 Jacobs, Charles Louis, comp. A vocational guidance bibliography, prepared for school and public libraries and arranged especially for youths, teachers, and specialists. Comp, for the commissioner of industrial and vocational educa tion, by C. L. Jacobs. Jan. 1916. [Sacramento] California state print, off., 1916. 24 p. 22Jcm. (California. State board of education. Bulletin no. 12) 46 New York (State) Education dept. Division of vocational schools. A list of helpful publications concerning vocational instruction. Prepared by Lewis A. Wilson. Albany, The University, of the state of New York, 1914. cover-title, [3]-41 p. 23cm. (University of the state of New York bulletin, no. 569) Z7911.N52 47 Parsons, Frank. Choosing a vocation. Boston and New York, Houghton Mifflin company, 1909. 165, [I] p. inch tables. 21em. HF5381.P24 Bibliography: p. 10&-11Q. 48 Philadelphia. Board of public education. Pedagogical library. A work ing library on vocational guidance, with some additional titles on vocational education. [Philadelphia, Philadelphia trades school, 1913] 12 p. 23cm. (Library bulletin no. 2) Z5811.P45,no.2 49 XT. S. Bureau of education. Library. List of references on vocational guid ance, June, 1914- [Washington, 1914-.] 23cm. Z7164.C81U5 Supplementary editions pub. irregularly. U N I T E D S T A T E S A N D G E N E R A L .* 50 Abbott, Edith. A study of the early history of child labor in America. Ameri. can journalof sociology, July,1908, v. 14:15-37. HM l.A7,v .l4 51 —------ Women in industry; a study in American economic history. New York and London, D. Appleton and company, 1910. xxii, 408 p., 1 1. incl. tables. 20iem. HD6095.A2 Child labor in America before 1870, p. 327-351. 52 Abelsdorff, Walter. Frauen- und kinderarbeit in den Vereinigten Staaten von Nordamerika. Leipzig, 1914. p. 166-206. 22|om. “ Sonder-abdruck aus dem Archiv fur soziale hygiene und demographic, 9. bd., 2. hft.” Abolition of child labor possible. Journal of education, Feb. 18, 1915, v. 81: 182. Lll.J5,v.81 54 Adams, Thomas Sewall, and Helen L. Sumner. Labor problems; a text book. New York, London, The Macmillan company, 1905. xv, 579 p. 21cm. HD8072.A25 53 Bibliography: p . 15-16. Woman and child labor, by H. L. S.: p. 19-67.—Appendix a . Woman and child labor laws in the - United States. Addams, Jane. Child labor. (In National education association. Journal of proceedings and addresses, 1905. Winona, Minn., 1905 . 23Jcm. p.259-261) L13.N4 1905 56 --------- Child labor and pauperism. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings,1903.[Columbus,O.] 1903 . 23|cm. p. 114-121) HV88.A3 1903 57 --------- Child labor legislation, a requisite for industrial efficiency. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 542-550. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 130-138. HD6250.U3N2 no.2 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 13, 9 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l3 55 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis * For individual states see Subject index. 12 L IS T OF REFERENCES ON C H IL D LABOR. 58 Addams, Jane. Democracy and social ethics. New York, The Macmillan company [etc., etc.] 1902. ix, 281 p. 19£c,n. (The citizen’s library of eco nomics, politics, and sociology, ed. by R. T. Ely) HN64.A2 Child labor, p. 40-46, 167-170; Educational methods, p. 187-220. 59 — -— National protection for children. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29; 57-60. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee, Pamphlet no. 47. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.47 60 —----- - Newer ideals of peace. New York, London, The Macmillan company, 1907. xviii, 243 p. 19cm. (The citizen’s library of economics, politics, and sociology, ed. by R. T. Ely) HN64.A25 Protection of children for industrial efficiency, p. 151-179. 61 --------- A plea for more play, more pay, and more education for our factory girls and boys. [Chicago?] Printed for private distribution [the Chicago association of commerce, 1914?] 24 p. 17|CIU. HQ796.A25 62 —1------ The spirit of youth and the city streets. New York, The Macmillan com pany, 1909. 162 p. 19£cm. HQ796.A3 The spirit of youth and industry, p. 107-135. , 63 ---- — 7 Ten years experience in Illinois. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 114-148. Hl.A4,v.38 63a —---- - What does child labor reform cost the community. National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 155. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2, no.155 64 Adler, Felix. The attitude of society toward the child as an index of civiliza tion. American academy of political and social’ science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29; 135-141. Hl,A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 56. 7 p. HD5250.U3N2,no.56 65 --------- The basis of the anti-child labor movement in the idea of American civilization. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 1-3. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 70. 3 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.,70 gg ------ -- Child labor a menace to civilization. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 1-7. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 156. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l56 67 --------- Child labor in the United States and its great attendant evils. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 417-429. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 1-17; Pamphlet no. 11. 2d ed. 1907. 13 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2;no.ll Same. (In Louisiana. Bureau of statistics of labor. Report. New Orleans, La. 1906. 23om. p. 16-26) HC107.L8A2 1904-05 68 Adler, Nettie. Child employment and juvenile delinquency. (In Woman in industry from seven points of view. London, 1908. p. 121-141) HD6053.W7 69 Alabama. Dept, for inspection of jails, almshouses, cotton mills, fac tories, etc. Children eligible for employment in the mills, factories, and manufacturing establishments in the state of Alabama for the year 1913. W. H. Oates, M. D., inspector. Montgomery, Ala., Brown printing company [1913]. 41 p. 23cm. HD6250.U4A3 1913 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 13 70 Alabama. Department for inspection of jails, almshouses, cotton mills, factories, etc. Children ineligible for employment in the mills, factories, and manufacturing establishments in the state of Alabama. W. H. Oates, M. D., inspector.- Montgomery, Ala., Brown printing company [1913]. 30 p. 23em. HD6250.U4A3 1913a 71 -------------------Copies of reports of Dr. Bragg, inspector of jails, cotton mills, and almshouses. To the governor, July, 1907. Montgomery, Ala., Brown printing co. [1907] 15 p. 23Jcm. HD3663.A2A5 1907 7 2 --------- Governor, 1915— (Charles Henderson) Message to the Legislature of Alabama. Jan. 18, 1915. Montgomery, Brown printing co., 1915. 47 p. 23cm. J87.A22 1915 Jan.l8a Child labor: p. 43-44. 73 Alabama child labor committee. Child labor in Alabama; an appeal to the people and press of New England, with a resulting correspondence. Letters from Mr. J. Howard Nichols and Mr. Horace S. Sears, of Boston, and from Edgar Gardner Murphy, of Montgomery, Alabama, in relation to the child labor bill, [n. p., 1901?] 40 p. 15£cm. 74 American academy of political and social science. Social legislation and social activity. New York, Published for the American academy of political and social science of Philadelphia, by McClure, Phillips & company, 1902. vii, 304 p. 25em. HD8057.A5 Pt. IV. The child labor problem: Child labor legislation, by Mrs. Florence Kelley. Child labor in the department store, by F. N. Brewer. Necessity for factory legislation in the South, by H. Robbins. Child labor in New Jersey, by H. F. Fox. Child labor in Belgium, by E. Dubois. 75 Armstrong association of Philadelphia. A comparative study of the occu pations and wages of the children of working age in the Potter and Durham schools, Philadelphia. [Philadelphia, Printed by pupils at the Philadelphia HD6250.U5P4 trades school] 1913. 20 p. 23cm. 76 Aronovici, Carol. The Newport survey of social problems. [Fall River, Mass., Munroe press, 1912] cover-title, 59 p. incl. tables. 26cm. HN80.N67A7 Boy problem: Occupations, wages, unemployment, p. 3-4; Girl problem: Employment, p. 6, 42-43. 77 Atherton, Sarah H. Survey of wage-earning girls below sixteen years of age in Wilkes-Barre, Pennsylvania, 1915. New York city, National consumers’ league [1915] 65 p. 23£cm. (Women in industry series no. 11) 78 Bailey, Mrs. E. L. Conditions of child employing industries in the South: Mississippi. Child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 1:128-133. HD.6250.U3N4,v.2. 79 Baldwin, B. J. History of child labor reform in Alabama. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 111H3. Hl.A4,v.38 80 Barnard, Kate. The new state and its children. American academy of politi cal and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 173-175. Hl.A4,v.32 81 -------- Through the windows of destiny: how I visualized my life work. Good housekeeping, Nov. 1912, v. 55: 600-606. TXl.G7,v.55 Child labor banished from Oklahoma, p. 602. 82 Blascoer, Frances. The industrial condition of women and girls in Honolulu; a social study. Honolulu [Paradise of, the Pacific printers] 1912. 99, [1] p. 23Jcm. (Honolulu social survey, 1st study) HD6220.Z6H62 83 Boswell, Helen Varick, chairman. Industrial and child labor committee. Federation bulletin, Mar. 1909, v. 6: 165-166. HQl871.F3,v.6 84 --------- Industrial conditions and child labor. v. 7: 18-19. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Federation bulletin, Oct. 1909, ' HQl871.F3,v.7 14 L IS T O F R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 85 Boswell, M. Louise. Child labor and need. Child labor bulletin, v.2, no. 1: 17-26. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 194, 1913. 11 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l94 86 Bowen, Louise Hadduck (de Koven) “ Mrs. J. T. Bowen.” Safeguards for city youth at work and at play. New York, The Macmillan co., 1914. 241 p. 19£cm. HV1437.C4B6 Legal protection in industry: p. 52-93. 87 Britton, James A. Child labor and the juvenile court. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 111-115. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 95. 5 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.95 88 Brooks, John Graham. Past and present arguments against child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 281-284. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 23-26; Pamphlet no. 24. 4 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.20,no.20a;no.24 89 --------- The social unrest; studies in labor and socialist movements. New York, The Macmillan company; [etc., etc.] 1903. 4 p. 394 p. 20iem. HN64.B9 Child labor, p. 27-29, 207-208, 252-257. 90 Brown, Edwaxd F. The neglected human resources of the Gulf coast states. Child labor bulletin, v. 2, no.1: 112-116. HB6250.U3N4,v.2 91 Bullock, Edna Dean, comp. Selected articles on child labor. 2d and enl. ed. White Plains, N. Y ., and New York city, The H. W. Wilson company, 1915. xxvi, 238 p. 20°™. (Debaters’ handbook series) HD6250.U3B85 1915 92 Butler, Elizabeth Beardsley. Sharpsburg: a typical waste of childhood. (In Wage-earning Pittsburgh. New York, 1914, p. 279-304) HD8Q85.P6P6 “ The working children” : p. 287-302. 93 California. Bureau of labor statistics. Child labor. (In its Report, 1911-12, p. 21-88, 521-529; 1913-14, p. 20- 21, 41-45) HC107.C2A2 94 --------- Industrial welfare commission. Biennial report. 1st, 1913-1914. [Sacramento?] 1915. 1 v. 22£cm. HD6093.C2 95 Campbell, M. Edith. State child labor relief. American academy of political a n d social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 80-84. Hl.A4,v.38 96 Can Georgia do it? Outlook, Aug. 15,1914, v. 107: 888-889. AP2.08,v.l07 97 Carlton, Frank Tracy. The history and problems of organized labor. Boston, New York [etc.] D. C. Heath & company [°1911] xi, 483 p. 20cm. HD6508.C2 Child labor: p. 379-407. 98 --------- The industrial situation; its effect upon the home, the school, the wage earner and the employer. New York, Chicago [etc.] Fleming H. Revell com pany [c1914] 159 p. 19icm. HD8072.C26 Women and children, in industry: p. 78-92. 99 Catheron, Allison G. The Massachusetts committee on social welfare. Sur vey, Oct. 11, 1913, v. 31: 47-48. HVl.C4,v.31 100 Chicago. Child welfare exhibit, 1911. The child in the city ; a handbook of the Child welfare exhibit at the Coliseum, May 11-May 25, 1911. [Chicago, The Blakely printing co., 1911] 96 p. illus. 25>}em. HQ741.C6 Saving the barren years, p. 25-27. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T O F R E F E R E N C E S O N 101 C H IL D LABOR. 15 Chicago. Child w elfare exh ib it, 1911. The child in the city; a series of papers presented at the conferences held during the Chicago child welfare exhibit, pub. by the Department of social investigation, Chicago school of civics and philanthropy. [Chicago, Manz engraving company, The Hol lister press] 1912. xiii, 502 p. plates. 22cm. HV741.C4 Part V.—The working child: The standard for factory inspection in Illinois, by Mary E.Mc Dowell: p. 273-277; Efficiency in factory inspection, by Florence Kelley: p. 278-286; The Illinois department of factory inspection, by Edgar T. Davies: p. 287-289; The street trader under Illinois law, by Florence Kelley: p. 290-301; The artist child, by S. H. Clark: p. 302-309; The effect of irregular hours upon the health of the child, by F. S. Churchill: p. 310-312. 102 Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings of the Child labor conference held at Hartford, December 4,1908. [Hartford, Printed by the state] 1909. cover-title, 44 p. 22cm. HD6250.TJ4C8 1908 Held under the auspices of the Consumers’ league of Connecticut. From 23d annual report Connecticut Bureau of labor statistics. C ontents .—Child labor problem, by John Coleman Adams, p. 3; Actual present physical state of working children in Connecticut, by Julia Corcoran, p. 4-5; Future results of child labor, by Florence Kelley, p. 5-8; The critical character of the age period from fourteen to sixteen, by Oliver C. Smith, p. 8— 13; The effect of premature toil upon wages and standards of labor, by Owen R . Lovejoy, p. 13-16; State industrial supervision of children in Germany and in Connecticut, by E. "W. Lord, p. 16-18; Legislation advocated by theNational child labor committee, by OwenR; Lovejoy, p. 18-21; Legislation proposed by the labor unions, by Edward M. Roszelle, p. 21-23. Enforcement of factory laws in Connecticut, by Giles Porter, p. 23; Proper minimum age for working children, by John Mitchell, p. 26-32. 103 Child labor in New Jersey. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1904, v. 23: 183-184. , Hl.A4,v.23 104 Child labor in the District of Columbia. Charities, Dec. 2,1905, v. 15: 270-271. HVl.C4,v.l5 105 Child labor in the District of Columbia. Survey, Aug. 7, 1909, v. 22: 612. HVl.C4,v.22 106 Child labor in the South. Survey, July 12, 1913, v. 30: 493-494. HYl.C4,v.30 107 Child labor in the United States and Massachusetts. Massachusetts. Bureau of statistics of labor. Bulletin, July, 1904, no. 32: 161-167. HC107.M4A3,no.32 108 Child slavery in America. I. The child, the factory, and the state, by Alzina Parsons Stevens. II. Child labor an obstacle to industrial progress, by Alice L. Woodbridge. I l l , Data compiled and condensed from the original sources, by Thomas E. Will. IV. Bibliography of child labor, compiled by Thomas E. Will. Arena, June, 1894, v. 10: 117-144. AP2.A6,v.l0 109 Chute, Charles h . Child labor in Pennsylvania. Survey, Jan. 25,1913, v. 29: 541-542. HVl.C4,v.29 110 --------- The child labor problem in Pennsylvania. Child, Chicago, Oct. 1912, v. 1: 9-12. HQ750.A2C3, v .l \11 Clark, Davis Wasgatt. American child and Moloch of to-day; child labor primer. Cincinnati, Jennings and Graham; New York, Eaton and Mains [°1907] 81, [I] p. front.,ports. 19|cm. HD6250.U3C5 Bibliography: p. {731—81. 112 Cleland, E th el. Child labor: Indiana. May, 1911, v. 5 :235-236. ' American political science review,. JAl.A6,v.5 113 Clopper, E dw ard N. Child labor and compulsory education in rural Ken tucky. National child labor committee. New York, 1909. Pamphlet no. 120. 15 p, HD6250.U3N2,no.l20 114 --------- Child labor in Indiana. [New York? 1909?] 16 p. illus. 23cm. National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 91. HD6250.U3N2,no,91 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 16 L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H I L D LABOR. 115 Clopper, Edw ard N. Child labor in the Ohio Valley states. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33:79-85. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 97. 7 p. HD6250.XJ3N2.no.97 116 --------- Child labor in the smaller towns of Missouri. National child labor com mittee. New York, 1910. Pamphlet no. 144. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l44 117 --------- Child labor in West Virginia. National child labor committee. New York, 1908. Pamphlet no. 86. 24 p. HD6250.XJ3N2,no.86 118 --------- Child labor in West Virginia in 1910. National child labor committee. New York, 1910. Pamphletno. 142. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l42 119 --------- The forward movement in Missouri, West Virginia, and Indiana. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 149-153. Hl.A4,v.38 120 --------- The majesty of the law in Mississippi. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1914, v. 2, no. 4: 54-58. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 121 --------- Provided however, or a bill of exceptions. National child labor com mittee. New York, 1914. Pamphlet no. 217.. l i p. HD6250.U3N2,no.217 122 Colorado. 1915. B ureau of labor statistics. Biennial report. Denver, 1888HC107.C7A2 C ontents relating to child labo r : 1891-1892: The evils of child labor: p. 139-148; Education of children: p. 149-153. 1901-1902: Child labor: p. 280-292. 1903-1904: The women and children’s eight-hour law: p. 39-41. 1909-1910: Woman and child labor in Colorado: Our women and children labor laws: p. 248-252. 1913-1914: Child labor: p. 60. 123 Com m ons, John It. and H elen L. Sum ner. Labor movement, 1820-1840. Cleveland, The Arthur H. Clark co.; 1910. 392 p. 24|cm. (A Documentary history of American industrial society, v. 5) HC103.D63,v.5 Child labor: a. Children in the factories of Massachusetts, 1825; b. Children in Philadelphia fac tories, 1830; c. Child labor at Paterson, N. J., 1835: p. 57-66. 124 Commons, John R og e rs, ed. Trade unionism and labor problems; ed., with an introduction. Boston, New York [etc.] Ginn & company [°1905] 2 p. 1., iii-xiv, 628 p. 21£cm. (Selections and documents in economics, ed. by William Z. Ripley) HD6483.C7 Child labor: p. 242,345, 423, 501, 506. 125 C onnecticut. 1874-1914. B ureau o f labor statistics. Annual report. Hartford [etc.] HC107.C8A2 C ontents relating to child labor : .... . 5th report, 1889: Child labor by Florence ¿elley : p. 43-55. 8th report, 1892: Child labor: p. 175-216. Makes a comparison of census figures of 1880 and 1890 in textile industries, as to Connecticut, New England, and United States, showing rela tive increase or decrease in women and children employed. 10th report, 1894: Child labor: p. 265-291. Outlines an argument to raise age limit of chil dren from 13 to 14 years. 18th report, 1902: The appendix: Laws relating to labor and labor interests, contains the laws regulating the employment of children. 24th report, 1909-10: Child labor. Published by permission of American association for labor legislation. Summary of “ Child labor” laws by Laura Scott . . . dealing with fifty sovereign states . . . : p. 107-200. 1 2 6 ------------------ Report of the Bureau of labor on the conditions of wage-earning women and girls. Under authority of chapter 233, G. S. of 1913. Charlotte Molyneux Holloway, industrial investigator. Hartford, Published by the state, 1914. 139 p. 23om. HD6093.C8 1914 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T OF REFEREN CES ON C H IL D LABOR. 17 127 Connecticut. Commission to investigate conditions of wage-earning women and minors. Report presented to the General assembly of 1913. Hartford, Published b y the state, 1913. 297 p. inch tables. 23om. HD6093.C8 1913a Appendices: A. Report on the conditions . . . in the cotton, silk, corset, metal, and rubber industries in Connecticut.—b . Report on the conditions of women in alteration rooms of cloak and suit departments of department stores.—c. General tables. Another issue of the same year (80 p.) contains the report of the Commission and a part of Appendix A. 128 Coon, Charles L. The dinner toter. American academy of political arid social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 85-89. Hl.A4,v.38 129 Coulter, Ernest Kent. The children in the shadow; with an introduction by Jacob A. Riis. New York, McBride, Nast & company, 1913. xvii p., 3 1., 277 p. incl. front, plates. 19cm. HV9106.N6C7 The child of bondage: p. 177-198. 130 Daniels, Harriet McDoual. The'girl and her chance; a study of conditions surrounding the young girl between fourteen and eighteen years of age in New York city, prepared for the Association of neighborhood workers of New York city. New York, Chicago [etc.] Fleming H. Revell company [c1914] 95 p. incl. tables, diagrs. i9cm. HQ798.D3 The industrial situation: p. 44-66. 131 Davies, Edgar T. The present situation in Illinois. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 153-161. Hl.A4,v.33 132 Davis, Philip. 416-424. Child labor and vagrancy. Chautauquan, May, 1908, v. 50: AP2.C48,v.50 133 Dawley, Thomas Robinson. The child that toileth not; the story of a gov ernment investigation. New York, Gracia publishing co. [1912] 490 p. 21£om. HD6250.U3D3 134 Dawson, Lucile F. 433-438. Shall our children work? Square deal, Dec. 1914, v. 15: HD6500.S7,v.l5 135 Dealey, James Quayle. The child welfare movement in the United States. Child, Aug. 1913, v. 3: 1043-1048. HQ750.A2C4,v.3 135a Dean, Arthur D. Child-labor or work for children. Craftsman, Mar. 1914, v. 25: 515-521. Nl.C85,v.25 136 De Lacy, William Henry. Treatment of criminals by probation, etc. Message from the President of the United States, transmitting a communication setting forth some reasons why the more modem treatment of criminals by probation should be adopted into the federal procedure [and urging the early passage of an anti-child-labor law for the District of Columbia and the territories. Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1906] 5 p. 23cm. ([U. S.] 59th Cong;., 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 12) IIV9104.D3 137 Delaware. General assembly. Senate. Report of the Commission on child labor to the General assembly, 1913. (In Delaware. General Assembly. Senate. Journal. 1913. p. 79-87) J87..D3 1913b 138 Delaware and child labor. Outlook, Apr. 14, 1915, v. 109: 849. AP2.O8.V.109 139 De Leon, Edwin W. Accidents to working children. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 131-143. Hl.A4,v.33 44193°—16----- 2 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 18 LIST O F R E F E R E N C E S O N CHILD LABOR. 140 Devine, E dw ard T. The new view of the child. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 4-10. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 71. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.71 141 D oh erty , J. B. Child labor. (In Virginia. Child welfare conference, Rich mond, Va., May 22-25, 1911. Addresses and discussions. Richmond, 1911. 23Jcm. p. 76-78. Bound with Virginia. State board of charities and correc tions. Third annual report, 1911) HV86.V8 1911 142 D raper, A ndrew S. Conserving childhood. New York city, National child labor committee, 1909? 14 p. 23CJn. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 100) HD6250.U3N2,no.l00 143 Durland, Kellogg. 74: 124-127. Child labor in Pennsylvania. Outlook, May 9, 1903, v. AP2.08,v.74 144 Eastman, Crystal. Work-accidents and the law. New York, Charities pub lication committee, 1910. xvi, 345 p. 24cm. (The Pittsburgh survey; find ings in six volumes, ed. by P. U. Kellogg) HD8085.P6P6 Work accidents to children: p. 45, 79-80, 83, 87-89, 97, 102-103. 145 Eldm an, B enjam in W. Child labor in New York city. zine, Apr. 1908, v. 3: 73-88. 146 E m ployers campaigning against child labor. 129-130. Van Norden maga HGl.V3,v.3 Survey, May 8, 1915, v. 34: HV1.C4.V.34 147 Engel, Sigmund. The elements of child protection, b y Sigmund Engel . . . tr. from the German by Dr. Eden Paul. New York, The Macmillan co., 1912. xi, [1] 276 p. 22cm. Women’s labour and child labour: p. 155-177. 148 Eschenbrenner, Josephine J. What is a child worth? [New York, National child labor committee, 1914] 6 p. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 236) Reprinted from the Child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 1, May, 1914. . HD6250.U3N4,v.3 149 Field, Arthur Sargent. The child labor policy of New Jersey. Cambridge, Mass., American economic association; [etc., etc., c1909] vi, 229 p. 25om. (American economic association quarterly. Third ser., vol. xi, no. 3) HBl.A5,3d ser.,vol.ll,no.3 HD6250.U4N55 Health, p. 43-44, 49-52, 117, 121, 195, 215. Education, p. 52-58,. 157-167, 188,197. 150 Fish, Frederick P. The discipline of work. (In Child conference for research and welfare. Proceedings . . . 1910. New York city, 1910. 23^cm. v. 2 : 142-152.) HQ750.A3C5,v.2 151 Folks, Homer. Poverty and parental dependence as an obstacle to child labor reform. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29:1-8. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 41. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no 41 152 Forbush, William Byron. The coming generation. New York and London, D. Appleton and company, 1912. xix, 402 p. fold. tab. 19^cm. (The social betterment series, ed.by S.Matthews) HQ755.F7 Regulation of child labor, p. 275-285. 153 Fox, Hugh F. Child labor in New Jersey. American academy of political and social science, Annals, July, 1902, v.20: 189-200. Hl.A4,v.20 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABO R. 19 154 Frauen- und Kinderarbeit in den Vereinigten Staaten. Germany. Statisti sches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, Aug., Dec. 1912, v. 10: 596-601; 930-939. HD8441.A3,v.lQ 155 Frey, John P. Social cost of child labor. June, 1912: 113-120. Child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 1, HD6250.U3N4,v.l 156 Furman, Paul N. A school-master governor and the working children. Sur vey, Mar. 13, 1915, v. 33: 646-647. ' HVl.C4,v.33 157 Gibb, Spencer J. The irregular employment of boys. Aug. 1905, v. 10: 173-174; 208-209; 235-236. 158 Gompers, Samuel. The A. F. of L. ’s successful fight for child labor laws. American federationist, Mar., Sept. 1912, v. 19 : 209-214 ; 707-711. HD8055.A5A2, v .19 159 --------160 --------263. Commonwealth, JuneHN381.C7,v.l0 Child labor. American federationist, Mar. 1911, v. 18: 216-217. HD8055.A5A2, v. 18 Child labor in the South. American federationist, July, 1901, v. 8: 262HD8055‘.A5A2,v.8 161 --------- Children or parsimony—which shall prevail? Apr. 1914, v. 21:313-315. American federationist, HD8055.A5A2 Appropriation for Children’s bureau. 162 ----- — Making child labor laws effective. v. 17 : 331-332. American federationist, Apr. 1910, . HD8055.A5A2,v.l7 163 --------- Organized labor’s attitude toward child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, y. 27: 337-341. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 79-83; Pamphlet no 31. 5 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.31 164 --------- Subterfuge and greed in North Carolina [Editorial] American federa tionist, May, 1901, v. 8:163-164. HD8055.A5A2,v.8 165 Gordon, Jean M. The forward step in Louisiana. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 162-165. Hl.A4,v.33, National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 103. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l03 166 --------- Why the children are in the factory. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 67-71. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 76. 5 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.76 Same. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1908. Fort Wayne, Ind., 1908. 23£cm. p. 346-351) HV88.A3 1908 167 Granger, Mrs. A. O. The work of the General federation of women’s clubs against child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25 : 516-521. Hl.A4,v.25 168 Guild, Curtis. Address: The eight-hour day for children under sixteen, Bos ton, December-4, 1913. Boston, Mass., Anchor linotype printing co. [1913] 8 p. 23em. HD6250.U4M48 1913 Published by the Massachusetts child labor committee. 169 Gunton, George. Child labor in the South. 1901, v. 20: 253-254 ; 354-355. Gunton’s magazine, Mar., Apr. Hl.G9,v.20 170 Hale, Edward Everett. Child slavery reform: a mother’s fight. Woman’s home companion, Oct. 1906, v. 33: 11, 20. AP2.W714,v.33 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 20 L I S T OF D E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 171 Hall, George A. Unrestricted forms of child labor in New York state. (In New York state conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1911. Albany, 1911. p. 91-103) HV88.N7 1911 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 168. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l68 172 Harvey, George. Save the children and the nation. North American review, Dec. 7, 1906, v. 183: 1209-1211. AP2.N7,v.l83 Harper’s bazar, Feb. 1907, v. 41: 197-198. TT500.H3,v.41 173 Haworth, Paul Leland. America in ferment. Indianapolis, The Bobbs-Merrill company [c1915] 5 p. 1., 477 p. 19£cm. (Problems of the nations) UN64.1137 •Social justice for workers: Child labor: p. 193-200. 174 Henderson, Charles Hanford. Pay-day. Boston and New York, Houghton Mifflin company, 1911. vi, 338, [2] p. 20om. HN64.H43 An appeal for a radical readjustment of the relations of men educationally and industrially. The .case of the children: p. 61-70. 175 Henderson, Charles It. Duty of a rich nation to take care of her children. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 20-22. H1.A4.V.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 111. p. 6-8. HD6250.U3N2,no.lll 175 --------- Protective legislation. 207-210. American journal of sociology, Sept. 1908, v. 14: HM l.A7,v.l4 177 Hine, Lewis W. Present conditions in the South. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1914, v. 2, no' 4: 59-69. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 178 --------- “ Unto the least of these” : photographs and descriptions. With fore word by Charles Edward Russell. Everybody’s magazine, July, 1909, v. 21: 75—87. AP2.E9iV.21 179 Hirsch, E m il G. Child labor from the employer’s point of view. American academy of political and social science. Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 551-557. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 139-145; Pamphlet no. 4, 2d ed. 1907. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2,4 180 Holmes, John Haynes. Indifference of the church to child labor reform. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 23-32. H1.A4.V.35 181 Horton, Isabelle. Children’s work. (In her The burden of the city. New York [etc.], 1904. 20cm. p.149-193) HV530.H8 182 Hourwich, Isaac Aaronovich. Immigration and labor; the economic aspects of European immigration to the United States. New York and London, G. P. Putnam’s sons, 1912. xvii, 544 p.illus., diagrs. 22Jcm. HD8081.A5H6 Child labor and immigration: p. 26,107, 318-324. 183 Hubbard, Elbert. 161-178. White slavery in the South. Philistine, May, 1902, v. 14: AP2.P54,v.l4 American federationist, Apr. 1905, v. 12 : 205-209. Same article, Slaughter of the innocents. HD8055.A5A2,v.l2 184 Hunter, Robert. Child labor: A social waste. Independent, I?eb. 12, 1903, v. 55: 375-379. AP2.I53,v.55 185 ----- Poverty. New York, London, The Macmillan company, 1904. xi, 382 p. plan. 20£cm. HV31.H9 The child, p. 190-260. Appendix E: p. 351-358. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N 186 C H IL D LABOR. Illinois. Bureau of labor statistics. Biennial report. Springfield, 111., 1915. 131 p. tables. 22i?m. 21 Child labor. HC107.I3A2 “ The investigation was made principally to ascertain the number of employers favorable to a 17th. sixteen-year minimum age; the extent of education; the apparent physical and mental condition of the children; their cause for working and the income of the children and their families.” 187 --------- Office of inspectors of factories and workshops. Annual report. 20th-21st, 1912-1914. Springfield, 111., 1914. 2 v. in 1. 22cm. HD3663.I3A2 1912-1913: Child labor: p. 11-29. 1913-1914: Child labor: p. 11-32, 5&-73. 188. An Illustrated handbook of the industrial exhibit held under the auspices of the Pennsylvania child-labor committee, the Consumers’ league of Philadel phia, the New Century club, the Civic club; Horticultural hall, Philadelphia, Dec. 8-15, 1906. [Philadelphia, pub. by the executive committee of the In dustrial exhibit, 1906] 78 p. 21em. 189 Iseman, Myre St. Wald. Race suicide. New York, The Cosmopolitan press, 1912. 216 p. 19cm. HQ766.I7 Contains information concerning condition and statistics of child labor in the United States. 190 Jones, Herschel H. Child labor in Alabama, photographs by Lewis W. Hine. Birmingham, January, 1915. [Birmingham, Alabama child labor committee, 1915] 1 p. 1., 8, [1] p. illus. 23cm. HD6250.U4A3 1915 191 Jones, Jerome. Child labor and low wages. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 52-55. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 192 Kandel, I. L. Juvenile employment. U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1913, v. 57: 151-158. ' L lll.A 6,v .57 193 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. The child breadwinner and the dependent parent. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 1- 6. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 194 ------ Child labor in the Carolinas. Charities and the Commons, Jan. 30,1909, v. 21: 742. " HVl.C4,v .21 195 ------ Factory inspection in Pittsburgh, with special reference to the condi tions of working women and children. (In Wage-earning Pittsburgh. New York, 1914, p. 189-216.) HD8085.P6P6 196 ------ Judge-made ignorance in Pennsylvania. Charities and the Commons, May 5, 1906, v. 16: 189-190. HVl.C4,v .l6 197 ------ Minimum-wage boards. American journal of sociology, Nov. 1911, v.17: 303-314. HM l.A7,v .l7 198 ------ Modern industry in relation to the family, health, education, morality. New York [etc.] Longmans, Green, and co., 1914. 147 p. 19|cm. HD2326.K4 Child labor: See Index, p. 142. 199 200 201 :------ The moral dangers of premature employment. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1906. [Columbus, 1906] 23cm. p. 157-164) HV88.A3 1906 — — The responsibility of the consumer. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 108-112. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 81. 5 p. IID6250.U3N2,no.81 —-— Standards of life and labor: the standard minimum age for beginning to work for wages. Twentieth century magazine, Nov., Dec. 1911, Feb. 1912, v. 5: 30-34, 104-107, 370-373. AP2.T88 v 5 * https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 22 L I S T OP R E F E R E N C E S O K C H IL D LABOR. 202 Kelley, Mrs. Florence, and Abrina P. Stevens. Wage-earning children. (In Hull house maps and papers. New York, 1895. 22°m. Library of economics and politics, no. 5. p. 49-76.) IIV4196.C4H9 203 The Kentucky child labor association. Survey, Dec. 25,1909, v. 23:412. - HVl.C4,v.23 204 K ey, E llen Karolina Sofia. The century of the child. G. P. Putnam’s sons [1912] 339 p. 20om. New York & London, HQ755.K5 1912 Child labour and the crimes of children: p. 316-339. 205 Kinderarbeit in den Yereinigten Staaten. Soziale Praxis, Jan. 6, 1910, v. 19: 346-348. H5.S7,v.l9 206 Kinderarbeit in den Yereinigten Staaten. Germany. Statistisches Amt. Abteilung fur Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, May, 1912, v. 10: 353357 HD8441.A3,v.lO 207 Kingsbury, John A . Child labor and poverty: both cause and effect. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 27-34. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 208 Kirkland, Jam es H. Ethical and religious aspects of child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32:92-96. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee, Pamphlet no. 78. 5 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.78 209 Ladoff, Isador. American pauperism and the abolition of poverty. Chicago, C. H. Kerr & company, 1904. 230 p. 17£cm. (Standard socialist series) HV91.L15 The children of poverty, p. 50-92. Pennsylvania child labor, p. 93-102. 210 Leonard, Robert J. Some facts concerning the people, industries, and schools of Hammond and a suggested program for elementary industrial, prevocational, and vocational education. Hammond, Ind., 1915. v-viii, 165 p. diagrs. 23cm. LA285.H3L3 Work of young people under 17 years of age: p. 36-55, Leupp, Constance. A substitute for charity. Pearson’s magazine, Jan. 1915, v. 33:103-113. AP2.P35,v.33 212 Levasseur, fSmile. The American workman. An American translation by Thomas S. Adams ... ed. by Theodore Marburg. Baltimore, The Johns Hop kins press, 1900. xx, 517 p. 23^cm. [Johns Hopkins university studies in historical and political science. Extra volume] HD8072.L382 211 Child labor: p. 105,106,121,134,137,145-152,152-170,176,482. Wages of women and children: p. 336-358. ' 213 Ley, Frank T. The child labor problem in Michigan: address at Ann Arbor, Mich. Feb. 21, 1905. (In Michigan. Bureau of labor. Twenty-third an nual report. Lansing, 1906. 23Jem. p. 319-324.) HC107.M5A2 1906 214 Lindsay, Samuel McCune. Child labor: a national disgrace. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Sept. 1906, v. 28: 301-303. Hl.A4,v.28 Overland monthly, Sept. 1906, v. 48: 166-170. AP2.09,v.48 Federation bulletin, Oct. 1906, v. 4:5-6. HQ1871.F3,v.4 215 --------- Child labor a national problem. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 331-336. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 73-78; Pamphlet no. 30. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;30 216 --------- Child labor in the United States. American economic association. Publications, Feb. 1907, 3d ser. v. 8 : 256-259. HBl.A5,3d ser.,v.8 Discussion: Gilman, Charlotte Perkins, p. 260-262; McLean, Francis H. p. 262-267. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N 217 C H IL D LABOR. 23 Lindsay, Samuel McCune. Child labor. Report of the [National child labor] committee. (In National conference of charities and correction. Pro ceedings, 1906. [Columbus, 1906] 23cm. p.150-157.) HV88.A3 1906 Discussion on child labor, p. 520-525. 218 —------ Exploring the new world for children. National child labor committee. New York, 1909. Pamphlet no. 118.[4]p. HD6250.U3N2,no.ll8 Same. (In Child conference for research and welfare, Proceedings, 1909, New York, [1910] 24em. p.139-143.) HQ750.A3C5,v.l 219 Lindsey, Ben B. Juvenile delinquency and employment. Survey, Nov. 4, 1911, v. 27: 1097-1100. HVl.C4,v.27 220 ---------and George Creel. Children in bondage. Good housekeeping, July, 1913, v. 57: 14-22. TXl.G7,v.57 221 ------------------- The cost of child labor. Good housekeeping, Oct. 1913, v. 57: 505-512. TX.G7,v.57 222 ------------------- The great American cancer: Child labor is an evil; it is eating at the life of the nation. Good housekeeping, Dec. 1913, v. 57: 775-781. TXl.G7,v.57 223 ------------------- Why do children toil? Good housekeeping, Aug. 1913, v. 57: 168-177. TXl.G7,v.57 224 London, Jack. The apostate; a parable of child labor. Appeal to reason, 1906. cover-title, 15 [1] p. 19cm. 225 Lord, Everett W. Child labor in New England. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 31-39. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 74. 9 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.74 Louisiana. Bureau of statistics of labor. Report. Baton Rouge, 19021905. 3 v. fold, tables. 23cm. HC107.L8A2 226 Girard, Kan., The HD6250.U3L7 1900-01: Employment of children: p. 83-85; Children as gymnasts: p. 92. 1904-05: Child labor: p. 13-50: Child labor in the United Statqp and its great attendant evils, by Felix Adler: p. 16-26; Child labor legislation in the South, b y Neal L. Anderson: p. 26-40; What constitute effective child labor laws, by Florence Kelley: p. 40-46. 227 Lovejoy, Owen R. Aims and achievements of the National child labor com mittee. (In Child conference for research and welfare. Proceedings. 1910. New York city, 1910. 23£cm. v. 2: 160-171) HQ750.A3C5,v.2 228 ------ -v The child in industry. (In National education association. Journal of proceedings and addresses, 1909. Winona, 1909. 24cm. p. 726-733) L13.N4 1909 National child labor committee, New York. 1909. Pamphlet no. 119. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.ll9 229 -------- Child labor. Philadelphia, Boston [etc.] American Baptist publication society [c1912] 30 p. 20cm. (Social service series) HD6250.TJ3L8 Published for the Social service commission of the Northern Baptist convention. 230 --------- Child labor and family disintegration. Independent, Sept. 27, 1906, v. 61: 748-750. AP2.I53,v.61 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 58. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.58 231 --------- Child labor and philanthropy. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings. Minneapolis, 1907. p. 196-209) HV88.A3 1907 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 62. 12 p. HD6250,U3N2,no.62 232 ------ Child labor and the church. Methodist review, Oct. 1914, v. 63: 743-748. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 24 233 L IS T OF R E FE R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABO R. Lovejoy, Owen R. Child labor campaign. Proceedings, July, 1912, v. 4: 80-85. Academy of political science. H31.A4,v.4 234 ------- - Child labor in the United States. {In International congress of hygiene and demography. Transactions, 15th, 1912, v. 3: 1001-1010) RA422.I6 1912,v.3 235 ---- — The economic folly of child labor. Economic world, July 31, 1915, v. 96: 142-143. HG8011.M3,v.96 236 ---- a— ■ Eight hours for children [Massachusetts]. Survey, Oct. 11, 1913, v. 31: 58-59. HVl.C4,v.31 237 --------- The national child labor movement. {In National conference of chari ties and correction. Proceedings, 1910. Ft. Wayne, 1910. 23£cm. p.232-235) HY88.A3 1910 238 — — — Needs of the anti-child labor movement. {In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1908. Fort Wayne, Ind., 1908. 23|cm. p. 363-364) HV88.A3 1908 239- ——— Next steps in the child labor campaign. Proceedings, July, 1912, v. 2: 80-85. Academy of political science. H31.A4,v.2 240 --------- Seven years of child labor reform. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 31-38. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 161. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l61 241 —------ A six years’ battle for the working child. American review of reviews, Nov. 1910, v. 42: 593-596. AP2.R4,v.42 National child labor committee, New York. Leaflet no. 35. Dec. 1910. 15 p. 16om. HD6250.U3N18,no.35 242 --------- Social standards for industry. {In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1912. Fort Wayne, Ind., 1912. 23$em. p. 388-394) HV88.A3 1912 Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1912, v. 1, no. 3: 21-25. HD6250.U3N4,v.l 243 — -— Some unsettled questions about child labor. Charities and the Com mons, Jan. 16, 1909, v. 21: 673-675. HVl.C4,v.21 American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar., 1909, v. 33: 49-62. ■ Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 108. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l08 244 --------- Standards of living and labor. {In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1912. Fort Wayne, Ind., 1912. 23cm. p. 376-436) HY88.A3 1912 245 Luther, Seth. An address to the working-men of New-England on the state of' education and on the condition of the producing classes in Europe and America. With particular reference to the effect of manufacturing (as now conducted) on the health and happiness of the poor, and on the safety of our republic. De livered in Boston, Charlestown, Mass., Portland, Saco, Me., and Dover, N. H. By Seth Luther. Boston, The author, 1832. 39 p. 22%cm. Miscellaneous pamphlets, v. 1161, no. 2. AC901.M5,v.ll61 His pamphlet is valuable . . . cases of cruelty to children are described in detail . . . the amount of child labor . . . must have been relatively almost as great as at present. The labor movement in America. By Richard T. Ely. New York, 1905, p. 4S-49. 246 Macarthur, W., and others. The industrial crime, child labor. A symposium. American federationist, May, 1903, v. 10: 339-360. HD8055.A5A2,v.l0 ' https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 25 247 McCleary, G. F. The state as over-parent. Albany review, Oct. 1907, v. 2: 46-59. AP4.A343.V.2 248 McCullough, J. A. Conditions of child employing industries in the South: South Carolina. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 133-138. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 249 McEnnis, John T. The white slaves of free America: being an account of the sufferings, privations, and hardships of the weary toilers in our great cities as recently exposed by Nell Nelson, of the Chicago times. Female labor, child labor, contract and prison labor. By John T. McEnnis. Chicago, R. S. Peale & company, 1888. ix, 128 p. incl. illus. 23cm. HD8072.M2 250 Macfadyen, Irene M. Ashby. Abolish child labor. American federationist, Jan. 1902, v. 9: 19—20. HD8055.A5A2,v.9 251 —------ Child life vs. dividends. American federationist, May, 1902, v. 9: 215-223. HD8055.A5A2,v.9 In part in Current literature, July, 1902, v. 33: 77-79. AP2.C95,v.33 252 --------- The fight against child labor in Alabama. American federationist, May., 1901, v . '8 : 150-157. HD8055.A5A2,v.8 253 --------- Report to the Executive committee of the state, on the history of child labor legislation in Alabama. By Irene M. Ashby. Montgomery, Ala., 1901. cover-title, 35 p. 21x l0cin. (Child labor in Alabama. Document no. 1) HD6250.U4A3 254 M cKelway, A. J. The awakening of the South against child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 9-18. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 42. 10 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.42 255 -----— The child against the man. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1913, v. 2, no.3: 52-59. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 Answer to George F. Stratton. The man behind the child. 256 --------- Child labor and citizenship. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1908. Fort Wayne, Ind., 1908. 23Je“ . p. 351-363) HV88.A3 1908 257 ---------. Child labor and its attendant evils. Sewanee review, Apr. 1908, v. 16: 214-227. AP2 S5,v.l6 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 68. 16 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.68 258 --------- Child labor and poverty. Survey, Apr. 12, 1913, v. 30: 60-62. HVl.C4,v.30 259 --------- Child labor and social-progress. Charities and the Commons, Apr. 18, 1908, v. 20: 104-107. HVl.C4,v .20 260 --------- Child labor and the home. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, Memphis, Tenn., 1914. Fort Wayne, Ind., 1914. 23cm. p. 333-339) HV88.A3 1914 261 --------- Child labor and the minimum wage. (In National conference of chari ties and correction. Proceedings, Seattle, 1913. Fort Wayne, Ind. 1913. 23cm. p. 246-248) 1IV88.A3 1913 262 --------- Child labor campaign in the South. Survey, Oct. 21, 1911, v. 27: 10231026. IIVl.C4,v.27 263 - — r,rrf- Child labor: history and present status. Methodist review, July, 1907, v. 56: 468-481. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 26 L IS T o p referen ces on c h il d labor . 264 McKelway, A. J. Child labor in Georgia. National child labor committee, New York, 1910. Pamphlet no. 138. 20 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.l38 265 --------- Child labor in Georgia. p. 53-79. Child labor bulletin, Aug. 1913, v. 2, no. 2, HD6250.U3N4,v.2 266 --------- Child labor in Mississippi. National child labor committee, New York, 1911. Pamphlet no. 169. 20 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.l69 267 --------- Child labor in southern industry. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25 : 430-436. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 20-24; Pamphlet no. 12^ 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2;no.l2 268 --------- Child labor in Tennessee. National child labor committee. New York, 1911. Pamphlet no. 150. 16 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l50 269 —------ Child labor in the Carolinas; account of investigations made in the cotton mills of North and South Carolina, by Rev. A. E. Seddon, A. H. Ulm, and Lewis W. Hine, under the direction of the southern office of the National child labor committee. [New York? 1909] [20] p. illus. 23om. (Pam phlets] no. 92) HD6250.U3N2,no.92 270 --------- Child labor in the Carolinas. Charities and the Commons, Jan. 30, 1909, v. 21: 743-757. HVl.C4,v.21 271 --------- Child labor in the South. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1910, v.35: 156-164. Hl.A4,v.35 272 --------- Child labor in the South. {In National conference of charities and cor rection. Proceedings. 1909. Fort Wayne, [1909]. 23cm. p. 38-42) HY88.A3 1909 273 ------ 274 ------ Child labor in Virginia. National child labor committee, New York. 1911. Pamphlet no. 171. 12 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.l71 ------ The child labor problem—a study in degeneracy. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 312-326. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 54-68. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.20a 275 276 277 278 Child labor in the South. Outlook, Apr. 27, 1907, v. 85: 999-1000. AP2.08,v.85 ------ The extent of child labor in the South and needed legislation. {In Southern sociological congress. 2d, Atlanta, 1913. The South mobilizing for social service; addresses delivered at the Southern sociological congress . . . 1913. Nashville, 1913. 24cm. p. 234-241.) HN79.A2S7 1913 ------ The fight for child labor reform in the Carolinas. Charities and the Commons, Mar. 20, 1909, v. 21: 1224-1226. HVl.C4,v.21 ---- - The fight to save the children. World to-day, Apr. 1907, v. 12: 427-430. AP2.W75,v.l2 279 -----498. 280 ------ How the fight for the children was won in Georgia. Woman’s home com panion, Oct. 1906, v. 33: 18-19. 21. AP2.WT714,v.33 ------ The leadership of the child. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 19-30. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 73. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.73 281 The Florida child labor campaign. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Survey, July 12,1913, v. 30: 497HVl.C4,v.30 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 27 282 McKelway, A . J. New territory. American academy of political and social science, Annals, July, 1911, supplement, v. 38: 139-143. Hl.A4,v.38 283 --------- Protecting negro child workers in Virginia. v. 32: 496. Survey, Aug. 15, 1914, HVl.C4,v.32 ’ 284 Ten years of child labor reform. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, Memphis, Tenn., 1914. Fort Wayne Ind 1914 2 3 - . p. 138-146) HV88.A3 ' 1914 ' 285 --------- Ten years of child labor reform in the South. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1914, v. 2, no. 4: 35-39. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 286 --------- Two corrections: twelve-year states. Survey, Mar. 9,1912, v. 27: 1918. HVl.C4,v.27 287 McLeod, Malcolm J. The child labor question: address at Detroit, Aug. 22, 1905. (In Michigan. Bureau of labor. Twenty-third annual report. Lan sing, 1906. 23|— . p. 315-319) HC107.M5A2 1906 288 --------- Women wage earners and child labor in Michigan. (In Michigan. Bureau of labor. Twenty-fourth annual report, 1907. Lansing 1907. 23icm- p. 323-329) HC107.M5A2 *1907 An address . . . before the State federation of women's clubs at Benton Harbor Mich 18,1906. • ’ Oct 289 Magruder, Julia. The child-labor problem: fact versus sentimentality. North American review, Oct. 1907, v. 186 : 245-256. AP2.N7,v.l86 290 Maine. Bureau of industrial and labor statistics. Annual report of the Bureau of industrial and labor statistics . . . lst-24th, 1887-1910. Augusta 1888-1910. 24 v. plates, maps, tables. 23— . HC107.M2A3 21st, 1907: Women and children in sardine factories, by Eva L. Shorey: p. 121-137; Child labor [Portland} by Eva L. Shorey: p. 159-160; Report of the Inspector erf factories: Child labor- n 500-503. ‘ 22d, 1908: Child labor: p. x i-xiv; Industrial conditions surrounding women and children in the textile industry: p. 1-83. Early factory labor in New England: p.63-81; Shorter workday for women and minors: p. 340-355. J 23d, 1909: Statistics of children employed in various mills, with number of certificates filed; p. 465.. 291 --------- Dept, of labor and industry. Biennial report. Waterville, Me., 1913-1915. 2 v. plates. 24cm. lst-2d. 1911-1914. HD8053.M2A3 Continuation of the “ Annual report of the Bureau of industrial and labor statistics ” 1st, 1911-12: Child labor, p. 13-18. 2d, 1913-14: Child labor, p. 160-183. (Includes results of investigation of the home conditions of all 14-year-old minors employed on June 10,1913.) 292 Mangold, George Benjamin. Child problems. New York, The Macmillan company, 1910. xv, 381 p. 19cm. (The citizen’s library of economics, politics, and sociology, ed. by R. T. Ely) HQ769.M25 * Child labor, p . 159-217; Street trades, p . 198-199,232. 293 --------- Problems of child welfare. New York, The Macmillan company, 1914. xv, 522 p. 20|cm. (Social science text-books, ed. by R. T. Ely) Chad labor: p. 269-341. HV713 .M3 294 Markham, Edwin. Children in bondage; a complete and careful presenta tion of the anxious problem of child labor—its causes, its crimes, and its cure, by Edwin Markham, Benjamin B. Lindsey, and George Creel, with an intro duction by Owen R. Lovejoy. New York, Hearst’s international library co., 1914. 411 p. front., plates. 21e™. HD6250.U3M3 ’ “ A brief bibliography ” : p. 403-405. 295 Marot, Helen. Progress in Pennsylvania. Protection for children in mills and mines. Charities, June 10, 1905, v. 14 : 834-836. HV1.C4 v.14 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 28 L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 296 Marx, David. Some ancient standards of child protection. Child labor bul letin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 42-51. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 198. 11 p. IID6250.U3N2,no.l98 297 Maryland. Bureau of industrial statistics. Report. lst-24th, 1893-1915. Baltimore, 1894-1916. 24 v. tables, maps. 23-23Jcm. HC107.M3A15 C ontents relating to child labo r : 1893: Childlabor: p.179-199. An investigation undertaken at the suggestion of the Knights Of Labor in Baltimore as to the effects of child labor in that city; with letters on the subject from Cardinal Gibbons, Sidney Sherwood, and others. 1901: Employment of children: p. 175-178. 1906: The new child labor law: Results of the work for first five months: p. 11-45. 1907: Results of work in enforcing the child labor law: p. 13-70. 1908: Child labor law: p. 9-10, 193-244, 256. 1909: Child labor: p. 7-8,13-67, 81. 1910: Child labor: p. 7-8, 11-32; Law against messenger service: p. 8, 14-15. 1911: Child labor: p. 7-8,12-67. 1912: Child labor: p. 14-28; New child labor law: p. 29-46; Children on the stage: p. 46-47 1913: Childlabor: Statistics and information: p.7-75; Child labor inspection of the canning industry: p.76-84; General child-labor inspection: p.85-92; Newsboy regulations: p.93-106; Children on the stage: p.107-122. 1914: Special report on child labor: Issuance of employment certificates: p.9-67; A study of the fifteen largest child employing industries, by Mildred Rankin: p. 68-99; Report of medical examiner for female applicants, by Anna S. Abercrombie: p. 100-107; Report of medical examiner for male applicants, by John C. Travers: p. 108-138; Issuance of employment cer tificates in the counties, by Marie L. Rose: p. 139-161; Child labor inspection: p. 162-190; Street traders: p. 191-197; Children on the stage: p. 198-214. 1915: Maryland child laborers: General summary and introduction, p. 1-14; Retrospect of three years’ work under the present child labor law, p. 15-35; The bureau s stewardship during 1915, p. 36-39; The contribution of the children of Baltimore tothe world’s work of 1915,by Airnee Guggenheimer, p. 40-75; W hy children seek new jobs, p. 76-88; Report of medical examiners, p. 89-100; Newsboys and other street traders, by Lettie L. Johnston, p. 101-129; Children on the stage, p. 130-148; Control of child labor in western Maryland (Allegany, Washington, and Frederick counties), by Marie L. Rose, p. 149-179; Issuance of employment certificates in the counties other than western Maryland, by Mathilde L. Selig, p. 180-191; Thebureauinspection during 1915, b y Anna Herkner, p. 192-201; Child labor inspection of the eastern shore of Maryland, by Mathilde L. Selig, p. 202-217. 298 Massachusetts. Commission on minimum wage boards. Report of the Commission on minimum wage boards. January, 1912. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1912. 326 p. 23cm. ([General court] House [doc.] 1697.) HD4918.M4 Includes statistics on the employment of children. 299 --------- Commission to investigate the inspection of factories, work shops, mercantile establishments, and other buildings. Report, Janu ary, 1911. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1911. 112 p. 23<=m HD3663.M4A5 1911 The appendix includes the inspection systems of Great Britain, Germany, New York, New Jersey,. Pennsylvania, Ohio, Illinois, and Wisconsin. The enforcement of child labor laws is one of the duties in all of the systems.. 300 3;I ----- j— Constable of the commonwealth. Report of the Hon. Henry K. Oliver, deputy state constable, especially appointed to enforce the laws regulating the employment of children in manufacturing and mechanical establishments. Boston, Wright & Potter, state printers, 1868. 95 p. 23cm. ([General court, 1868] Senate [doc.] no. 21) IID6250.TJ4M4 ——— ---- Factory children. Report upon the schooling and hours of labor of children employed in the manufacturing and mechanical establish ments of Massachusetts. By George E. McNeill, deputy state constable. Boston, Wright & Potter, state printers, 1875. 76 p. 23icin. ([General court, 1875] Senate. [Doc.] no. 50) HD6250.1T4M47 1875 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 29 302 Massachusetts. General court. House of representatives. Report of the special committee appointed . 1913 to investigate the conditions under which women and children labor in the various industries and occupa tions. January, 1914. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., 1914. 194 p. 25om. (House. [Doc.] no. 2126) . . “ Labor laws of other states relating to women and children” : p. 107-194. 303 --------- Minimum wage commission. Annual report. Boston, 1914-15. 2 v. in 1. tables (part fold.) diagrs. 23cm. 1ID4918.M5 ------------- —— Bulletin No. 1- 11. Boston, 1914-16. HD4918.M55 304 Massachusetts child labor committee. Report . . . Jan. 1, 1912, 1914, 1915. [Boston, 1912-1915.] 3 v. 23cm. 305 Miller, Marion Mills, ed. Great debates in American history, from the debates in the British Parliament on the colonial Stamp act (1764-1765) to the debates in Congress at the close of the Taft administration (1912-1913). [The national ed.] New York, Current literature publishing company [c1913] 14 v. fronts., illus., plates, ports. 24cm. E173.M64,v.ll Child labor, v. 11, p. 288-320. 306 Miller, W allace E . The child labor situation in Ohio and border states. Amer ican academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 71-76. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 49. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.49 307 Minnesota. Bureau of labor. Biennial report. St. Paul [etc.] 1888-1915. fold, charts. 23em. HC107.M6A2 C ontents relating to child labo r : 1889-1890: The second chapter, p. 154-233, is devoted to child labor and presents from the “ Report on the factory system of the United States,” by Carroll D. Wright, a short review of English legislation, with a synopsis of the Factory act of 1898, as far as it applies to textile factories. 1901-1902: Child labor: p. 405-419. 1903-1904: Child labor: v. 1, p. 83-91. A general review of the conditions of employment of children in the various industries. 1905-1906: Child labor in Minnesota: p. 269-342. 1907-1908: Child labor: p. 11-23; Statistics: p. 235-237. The child woman: the girl away from home: p. 235-240. 1909-1910: Child labor: p. 7-8,58-123; Messenger service: p. 609-610; Compulsory education law: p. 611-613. 1911-1912: Child labor: p. 310-317. 1913-1914: Child labor legislation: p. 23-25; Report on women and children: p. 122-144. 308 ------------------- Child labor bulletin no. 2. pam. 23cm. March, 1908. St. Paul, 1908. 1 HD6250.U4M63 309 — -------------- Special report of child-labor in Minnesota. 1905. Minneapolis, Press of Murphy-Travis co. [1905] cover-title, 8 p. 22|em. HD6250.U4M65 1905 310 Missouri. Bureau of labor statistics and inspection. Toilers of Missouri. Statistics covering organized labor. Jefferson City [1911]. 236 p. plates, ports,(partly fold.) 23cm. HD6517.M8A4 Child labor problem, p. 145-147. 311 --------- Senate wage commission for women and children. Report to the Senate of the 48th General assembly of Missouri. [Jefferson City?] 1915. 108 p. 23cm. HD6061.M8 Michael Kinney, chairman. 312 M itchell, John. Organized labor, its problems, purposes, and ideals, and the present and future of American wage earners. Philadelphia, Pa,, American book and Bible house [1903] xii, 436 p. front., plates, ports. 23£cm. HD6508.M6 The work of women and children: p. 131-141. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis so L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 313 Montgomery, Louise. The American giri in the stockyards district. Chi cago, III., The University of Chicago press [1913] vi, 70 p. illus. (plan) plates, diagrs. 24om. (A study of Chicago’s stockyards community . . . An investigation carried on under the direction of the Board of the University of Chicago settlement and the Chicago alumnae club of the University of Chi cago. i i ) HN80.C5B6 314 Morgan, John H. Essentials in factory inspection. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 101-107. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 80. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.80 315 Mosby, Thomas Speed. The problem of child idleness. North American review, July 5, 1907, v. 185: 515-517. AP2.N7,v.l85 316 Murdoch, Mrs. W. L. Conditions of child employing industries in the South: Alabama. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 124-128. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 317 Murphy, Edgar Gardner. The child labor question in Alabama: a plea for immediate action. National child labor committee. New York,-1908. Pam phlet no. 59. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.59 318 --------- Problems of the present South; a discussion of certain of the educational, industrial and political issues in the southern states. New York [etc.] Long mans, Green, and co., 1909. xi, 335 p. incl. tables. 20om. HC107.A13M8 The industrial revival and child labor: p. 95-125; Child labor and the industrial South: p. 127, 149, 309-329. 319 Mussey, Mabel Hay B. Holding the mirror up to industry: The Philadelphia exhibit. Charities and the Commons, Jan. 5, 1907, v. 17 : 591-598. HVl.C4,v.l7 320 National child labor committee, New York. [Child labor. Proceedings of the fiyst annual meeting.] Philadelphia, American academy of political and social science, 1905. I p . L, 221 p. 26em. (The annals of the American acad emy of political and social science, vol. xxv, no. 3) Hl.A4,v.25 C ontents.—Child labor in the United States fbyj F . Adler.—Child labor in southern industry [by] A. J. McKelway.— Children in American street trades [by] M. E. Adams.— The test of effective ¿hits labor legislation [by] G. R . Lovejoy.— Child labor legislation and methods of enforcement in northern central states [by] H . Erickson.—Child labor legislation and enforcement in New England and the middle states [by] Mrs. Florence Kelley.—Child labor legislation in the South [by] N. L. Anderson.—Child labor legislation and methods of enforcement in the western states [by] B. B. Lindsey.—The work of the General federation of women’s clubs [by] Mrs. A . O. Granger.—The operation of the new child labor law in New Jersey [by] H. F. Fox.—Child labor legislation [by] Jane Addams.—Child labor from the employer’s point of view [by] E. G. Hirseh.— The school as a force arrayed against child labor [by] J. H. Kirkland.— Proceedings of the annual meeting of the National child labor committee.—Book department.—Municipal indebtedness: a symposium. Also published as National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2. HD6250.U3N2,no.2 321 --------- [Child labor a menace to industry, education and good citizenship. Proceedings of the second annual meeting.] Philadelphia, American academy of political and social science, 1906. 203 p. 26cm. (The annals of the Ameri can academy of political and social science, vol. x x v i i , no. 2) Hl.A4,v.27 C ontents.— Child labor in the southern cotton mills [by] A. J. McKelway.— Child labor at the national capital [by] C. P. Neill.— Past and present arguments against child labor [by] J. G. Brooks.—The physical and physiological effects of child labor [by] G. M. Kober.—The federal government and the working children [by] Florence Kelley.— Child labor in the coal mines [by] O. R. Lovejoy.— Child laborinthe glass industry [by] O. R. Lovejoy.— The child labor problem— https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 31 a study in degeneracy [by] A. J. MeKelway.—The operation of the Illinois child labor law [by] Jane Addams.—Child labor a national problem [by] S. McC. Lindsay.—Organized labor’s attitude toward child labor [by] S. Gompers.—Overwork, idleness or industrial education [by] W . Noyes.— Parental responsibility for child labor [by] G. Taylor.—The operation of the Wisconsin child labor law [by] E. W . Frost.—A business man’s view of child labor [by] S. W . Woodward.— The essentials of a child labor law for the District of Columbia [by] H. J. Harris.—Proceedings of the second annual meeting of the National child labor committee.—Civic organizations and municipal parties—a symposium on reform organizations.— Book department.—Department of philanthropy, charities and social problems. 322 Also published as National child labor committee, Pamphlet no. 20. HD6250.U3N2,no.20 National child labor committee, Child labor. Proceedings of the third annual meeting. Philadelphia, American academy of political and social science, 1907. 243 p. illus. 26cm. (The annals of the American academy of political and social science, vol. xxix, no. 1) Hl.A4,v.29 C ontents .—Poverty and parental dependence as an obstacle to child labor reform [by] H. Folks.—The awakening of the South against child labor [by] A. J. McKelway.— Some of the ulti mate physical effects of premature toil [by] A. H. Freiberg.— Child labor in the soft coal mines [by] O. R. Lovejoy.—The extent of child labor in the anthracite coal industry [by] O. R . Lovejoy.— Obstacles to the enforcement of child labor legislation [by] Florence Kelley.— National protection for children [by] Jane Addams.—The child labor laws of the Ohio Valley [by] J. H. Morgan.— The child labor situtationin Ohio and border states [by] W . E. Miller.—Children in the glass works of Illinois [by] Harriet Van der Vaart.—Child labor and the public schools [by] N. C. Schaeffer.—The value of publicity in reform [by] A. T. Vance.—The enforcement of child labor legislation in Illinois [by] E. T. Davies.—Child labor and the public schools [by] S. McC. Lind say.—Child labor and the public schools [by] C. W . Dabney.—Child labor and the nation [by] A . J. Beveridge.—The difficulties of a factory inspector [by] E. T. Davies.—The enforcement of child labor legislation [by] S. Cadwallader.—The attitude of society toward the child as an index of civilization [by] F. Adler.—Reports from state and local child labor committees and consumers’ leagues.—The struggle against preventable diseases.—A symposium. Also published as National child labor committee, Pamphlet no. 40. HD6250.U3N2,no.40 323 --------- Child labor and social progress. Proceedings of the fourth annual meet ing of the National child labor committee. Philadelphia, The American academy of political and social science, 1908. iv, 177 p. 26cm. (Supple ment to the Annals of the American academy of political and social science. July, 1908.) Hl.A4,v.32 Contents.—The basis of the anti-child labor movement in the idea of American civilization [by] F. Adler.—The new view of thé child [by] E. T. Devine.—Social cost of accident, ignorance and exhaustion [by] C. R. Henderson.—The leadership of the child [by] A. J. McKelway.—Child labor in New England [by] E . W . Lord.—Compulsory education, the solution of the child labor problem [by] L. W. Parker.— Compulsory education in the South [by] G. F. Milton.—W hy the children are in the factory [by] J. M. Gordon.— The education of mill children in the South [by] A. E. Seddon.—The function of education in abolishing child labor [by] O. R . Lovejoy.— Ethical and religious aspects of child labor [by] J. H. Kirkland.— The duty of the people in child protection [by] H. Smith.— Essentials in factory inspection [by] J. H. Morgan.—The responsibility of the consumer for child labor [by] Florence Kelley.—Children on the streets of Cincinnati [by] E. N. Clopper.—Reports from state and local child labor committees.—National child labor committee: Abstract of secretary’s report and treasurer’s report. For the year ending Sept. 30, 1907.— Proceedings of the fourth annual meeting. Also published as National child labor committee, Pamphlet no. 69. HD6250.U3N2,no.69 324 --------- The child workers of the nation. Proceedings of the fifth annual con ference, Chicago, Illinois, January 21-23, 1909. New York, 1909. iv, 256 p. 23cm [Pamphlet no. 94] HD6250.U3N2,no.94 “ The papers in this volume are reprinted from the March, 1909, supplement to the Annals of the American academy of political and social science, in which they were originally published as the Proceedings of the fifth annual conference on child labor held under the auspices of the National child labor committee, Chicago, 111., January 21-23,1909. ” C ontents.—Conserving childhood, by A . S. Draper.—(1) Duty of a rich nation to take care of her children, by I. N. Seligman. (n) Duty of a rich nation to take care of her children, by C. R . Hen- https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 32 LIST OF REFERENCES OFT CHILD LABOR. derson.—The federal Children’s bureau, a symposium, by L. D. Wald, Jane Addams, Leo A m stein, B. B. Lindsey, H. B. Favill, C. R . Henderson, Florence Kelley, S. MeC. Lindsay.—Some unsettled questions about child labor, by O. R . Lovejoy.—The child and the law, by A. J. McKelway.—Child labor in the textile industries and canneries of New England, by E. W . Lord.— Child labor in the Ohio Valley states, by E. N. Clopper.—Practical restrictions on child labor in textile industries; higher educational and physical qualifications, by Howell Cheney.—Scholar ships for working children, by Mrs. Florence Kelley.—Some effects of improper posture in factory labor, by A. H. Freiberg.—Child labor and the juvenile court, by J. A. Britton.—Overworked children on the farm and in the school, b y Woods Hutchinson.—Handicaps in later years from child labor, by W . E. Harmon.—Accidents to working children, by E. W . De Leon.—Uniform systems of child labor statistics, by John Williams.—The present situation in Illinois, by E. T. Davies’ —The forward step in Louisiana, by J. M. Gordon.—The difficulties of child-labor legis lation in a southern state, by J. R . McDowell.—Reports from state and local child labor com mittees.—National child labor committee, fourth annual report of the general secretary and treasurer.—The proceedings of the fifth annual conference on child labor.—State and local com mittees in co-operation or affiliation with the National child labor committee.—Recent publica tions of the National child labor committee.—Members of the National child labor committee. 325 National child labor committee. Child employing industries. Proceedings of the sixth annual meeting of the National child labor committee. Phila delphia, The American academy of political and social science, 1910. v, 274 p. 26em. (Supplement to the Annals of the American academy of political and social science. March, 1910) Hl.A4,v.35 HD6250.U3N2 Contents .— Annual address, by Felix Adler.—Child labor legislation in Massachusetts, by Curtis Guild, jr .— Antagonistic forces—a symposium: 1. False economic ideas, by Charles F. Smith; 2. Unequal laws an impediment to child labor legislation, by S. McC. Lindsay; 3. Indif ference of the church to child labor reform, by John Haynes Holmes; 4. Inadequate schools, by Everett W . Lord.—Justice to the child, by Stephen S. Wise.—Children in the textile industry, by John Golden.—The cotton mill a factor in the development of the South, by Mrs. J. Borden Harriman.—The mill or the farm, by A. J. McKelway.—“ Poor white folks,” by Hooper Alexander.— The Federal children’s bureau, by Owen R . Lovejoy.—Vocation—a symposium, by Everett W. Lord, David Snedden.—Enforcement of child labor laws, by Homer Folks.—Enforcement of child labor laws in South Carolina, by E. J. Watson.—Enforcement of child labor laws in New Hamp- • shire, by Henry C. Morrison.—The health of young persons in Massachusetts factories, by William C. Hanson.—Child labor statistics, by Fred S. Hall.—Proof-of-age records, by Jeanie V. Minor.— The Providence school census system, by Gilbert E. Whittemore.—The Massachusetts bureau of statistics, by Frank S. Drown.—Child labor in street trades, by Edward N. Clopper.—Child labor in home industries, by Mary Van Kleeck.—New England’s lost leadership, by Mrs. Florence Kelley.—Child labor in canneries, by Pauline Goldmark.—Relation of National child labor com mittee to state and local committees, by Edward W . Frost.—Reports from state and local child labor committees.—Reports from Southern states, by A. J. McKelway.—Annual report of the general secretary. 326 -----— Uniform child labor laws. Proceedings of the seventh annual confer ence of the National child labor committee. Philadelphia, The American academy of political and social science, 1911. v, 224 p. 25cm. (Supplement to the Annals of the American academy of political and social science. July, 1911) Hl.A4,v.38 HD6250.U3N3 C ontents .—Child labor a menace to civilization—Annual addross, by Felix Adler.—The con servation of childhood, by Theodore Roosevelt.—Standards proposed by United States commis sion on uniform laws, by A. T . Stovall.—What should we sacrifice to uniformity? by Florence Kelley.—Seven years of child labor reform, by Owen R . Lovejoy.—The cotton mill: The Herod among industries, by A. J. McKelway.—The public school and the day’s work, by Herman Schneider.—Child labor on the stage—a symposium, by Jane Addams, Henry B. Favill, and Jean M. Gordon.—Poverty and parental dependence in relation to child labor reform—a symposium: 1, Scholarships, by George A . Hall; 2. State child labor relief, by M. Edith Campbell; 3. The dinner toter, by Charles L. Coon.—Exclusion of children from dangerous trades, by William C. Hanson.—Child labor in street trades and public places—a symposium: 1. The nickel theatre, by Maurice Willows; 2. The newsboy, by George A. Hall; 3. The night messenger boy, by Edward N. Clopper; 4. Street trades and reformatories, by Richard K . Conant; 5. Street trades, by Florence Kelley.—History of child labor reform in Alabama, by B . J. Baldwin.—Child labor legis lation in the Carolinas, by John P. Hollis.—Child labor in the Gulf coast canneries, by Lewis W. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOE. 33 Hine.—The glass industry and child labor legislation, by Charles L. Chute.—The coal mines of Pennsylvania, by Owen R. Lovejoy.—New territory, by A. J. McKelway.-—Ten years’ experience in Illinois, by Jane Addams.—The forward movement in Missouri, West Virginia, and Indiana, by Edward N. Clopper.—The state and the nation in child labor regulation, by William E. Borah.—Reports from state and local child labor committees.—Annual report of the general • secretary. 327 National child labor committee. Child labor and education. [Proceedings of the eighth annual conference] New York, National child labor committee [1912] cover-title, 31., 223 p. diagrs. 23em. (The child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 1) HD6250.U3N4 C ontents .— National aid to education, by Felix Adler.—A substitute for child labor, by P. P. Claxton.—Child labor and vocational work in the public schools, by E. O. Holland.—Child labor and vocational guidance, by Helen T. Woolley.—Child labor and the future development of the school, by C. G. Pearse.—The dangers and possibilities of vocational guidance, by Alice P. Barrows.—Relation of industrial training to child labor, by W . E. Elson.—Economic value of educa tion, by M. Edith Campbell.—Need of compulsory education in the South, by W . H. Hand.—A federal children’s bureau, by A. J. Peters.—Federal aid to education a necessary step in the solu-tion of the child labor problem, by S. McC. Lindsay.—Part time schools, by Florence Kelley.— Social cost of child labor, by J. P. Frey.—Child labor and democracy, by A. J. McKelway.— Extending medical inspection from schools to mills, by G. F. Ross,M. D.—Child labor in the can neries of New York state, by Z. L. Potter.—How to interest young people, by Mrs. Frederick Crane.—The educational test for working children, by R . K. Conant.—A legislative program for South Carolina, by J. P. Hollis.—Rejuvenation of the rural school, by Ernest Burnham.—Rural child labor, by J. M. Gillette.—Symposium: Unreasonable industrial burdens on women and children, by Florence Kelley, Millie R . Trumbull, J. A. Ryan, Jean M. Gordon.—Report of the general secretary for seventh fiscal year.—Proceedings of the eighth annual conference. 328 --------- Child labor and poverty; the papers and addresses and discussions of the ninth National conference on child labor, held at Jacksonville, Fla., March 1317,1913, under the auspices of the National child labor committee. New York city, National child labor committee [1913] 2 p. 1., 174 p. front. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 1) HD6250.U3N4 C ontents .— The child breadwinner and the dependent parent [by] Mrs. Florence Kelley.— Child wages in the cotton mills [by] Dr. A. J. McKelway.—Child labor and need [by] M. L. Bos well.—Child labor and poverty: both cause and effect [by] J. A. Kingsbury.—Shall charitable societies relieve family distress by finding work for children. Asymposium: i [by] R .T .S olensten. n [by] M. H. Newell.—Ancient standards of child protection [by] Rabbi David Marx.— Child labor and low wages [by] Jerome Jones.—The federal Children’s bureau [by] J. C. Lathrop.— How to make child labor legislation more effective [by] Dr. S. McC. Lindsay.—From mountain cabin to cotton mill [by] J. C. Campbell.—Social welfare and child labor in southern cotton mills [by] Rev. C. E. Weltner.—The textile industry and child labor [by] R . K . Conant.—The campaign in North Carolina. The mountain whites, by one of them [by] W. H. Swift.—The burden on children in shrimp and oyster canneries [by] L. W . Hine.—Neglected human resources of Gulf coast states [by] E. F. Brown.—Child labor and health [by] Dr. W. H. Oates.—Developing normal men and women [by] J. M. Gordon.—Conditions in child employing industries in the South. A symposium: Alabama: i [by] Mrs. W . L. Murdoch, n Mississippi: [by] Mrs. E. L. Bailey. South Carolina: m [by] J. A. McCullough, iv [by] E. F. Brown.—An eight-hour day in a tenhour state [by] Henry Nichol.—Proceedings of the ninth National conference on child labor. 329 ---------Child labor a national problem; proceedings of the tenth annual con ference on child labor, held at New Orleans, La., March 15-18,1914, under the auspices of the National child labor committee. New York city, National child labor committee (incorporated) 1914. 2 p. 1., 200 p. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 1) IID6250.U3N4 C ontents .—The child labor movement: a movement in the interests of civilization, by Felix Adler; The need of a constructive appeal, by Jane Addams; Protection for American children, by Florence Kelley; The abolition of child labor a national duty, by Felix Adler; National child labor standards, by Samuel McCune Lindsay; Law without enforcement, by A. J. McKelway; Child labor, a menace, by Pauline M. Newman; Enlightening the public, by Mrs. Percy V . Pennypacker; The child in the street, b y James H. Blenk, Archbishop of New Orleans; Why overlook the street worker? by Edward N. Clopper; Cutting child labor out of the vicious circle, by Owen R . Lovejoy; The high cost of child labor, by Lewis W . Hine; Neglected childhood and defectiveness, by Alexander Johnson; W hy it is hard to get good child labor laws in the South, by Wiley H. Swift; A report from South Carolina, by Joseph A. McCullough; Child labor reform 44193°—16----- 3 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 34 L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H I L D LABOR. in Alabama, by Mrs. W. L . Murdoch; The last stand of the one business which opposes child labor legislation in the South [cotton manufactures] by Wiley H. Swift; The eight-hour day in Massachusetts factories, by Richard K . Conant; Tasks in the tenements, by Lewis W . Hine; Ideal child labor in the home, by Jessie P. Rich; Sixteen years of childhood for Ohio girls, by Ella M. Haas; Proper issuance of work permits, by George A. Hall; Woman’s place in law enforce* ment, by Anna Herkner; European and American methods of training factory inspectors, by Herschel H. Jones; Enforcing officials and the courts, by Mornay Williams; Newspapers and child labor, b y Anna Rochester; Cooperation of the schools in reducing child labor, by Frank M. Leavitt; Heckling the schools, by Edward N. Clopper; Agricultural labor and school attendance, by Harry M. Bremer; What is a child worth? by Josephine J. Eschenbrenner; Present needs and activities of the National child labor committee, by Owen R . Lovejoy; Proceedings of tenth annual conference; Directory of state and local child committees. 330 National child labor committee. Proceedings of the eleventh annual con ference. Part 1, held at Washington, D. C., Jan. 1915. Part 2, held at San Francisco, Cal., May, 1915. New York, National child labor committee, 1915. 131 p. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 4, no. 1, 2) HD6250.T73N4 C ontents .— Part 1. Child labor and illiteracy, by Mrs. Florence Kelley; Cooperative administra tion of child labor laws, by A. Herkner; Effect of uniform labor standards on interstate competi tion, by H. P. Kendall; Demand for a square deal for the cotton manufacturers of the South, by David Clark, with discussion; Symposium on a national child’s charter; Some secondary con siderations, b y W. H. Swift; Precedents for federal child labor legislation, by T. I. Parkman. Part 2, The child labor movement, by Felix Adler; Social responsibility for child labor, by Bishop Edwin H. Hughes; Enforcement in Wisconsin, by James D. Beck; Federal control of child labor, byO w en R . Lovejoy; Responsibility of the federal government, by Mrs. Florence, Kelley; Child labor in the West; Some local child labor problems in California, by Lewis W. Hine; A charter for childhood: New ideals in the schools, Jessica B. Peixotto; The right to play, by E. D. DeGroot; The seven sins of child labor, by Felix Adler. 330a--------- Proceedings of the twelfth annual conference on child labor, Asheville, N. C., February 3-6, 1916. New York, National child labor committee, 1916.. 78 p. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 5, no. 1.) C ontents .—Vocational scholarships, by Lillian D. Wald; Attempted child labor legislation in North Carolina, by Zebulon Weaver; True preparedness in greater protection to childhood, by Samuel McCune Lindsay; Moving forward in Alabama, by Mrs. W. L. Murdoch; The effects of child labor on social standards, by Mrs. Thomas W. Lingle; The effect of child labor upon com munity life, by Eunice Sinclair; Pan-American child welfare, by Edward N. Clopper; Organized labor and child labor reform, by James F. Barrett; The citizen and the National child labor commit tee, b y Josephine J. Eschenbrenner; Two conceptions of child employment, b y Wiley H. Swift; Federal child labor legislation, by Edward Keating; Child labor in North Carolina, b y Dr. George T. Winston; What will be left for the States to do after the Keating bill becomes a law? by Florence Kelley. 831 8th -llth annual reports of the general secretary. Owen R. Lovejoy. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1912, v. 1: 1-25; Nov. 1913, v. 2 : 12-32; Nov. 19l4, v. 3: 8-29; Nov. 1915, v. 4: 144-154. HD6250.U3N4 For earlier reports see Proceedings of the committee. 332 --------- An address to the citizens of twelve states on the child labor laws you should enact in 1914. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1918, v. 2, no. 3: 33-43. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 333 --------- The campaign against child labor; a monthly department officially fur nished. Woman’s home companion, Jan.-Oct. 1907, v. 34: 24; 58-59 ; 46-47; 28; 24, 57 ; 22; 20; 22; 25; 13. AP2.W714,v.34 334 --------- Can we afford child labor? Including the exhibit handbook prepared to accompany the twenty-five panel exhibit at the exposition in San Francisco. New York city, National child labor committee, incorporated, 1915. 48 p. illus., diagre. 22^cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 4) HD6250.U3N4 C ontents .—Notes.—Book review [by] Aima Rochester.—Girls at work and why they work [by} Helen C. Dwight.—Child flower-makers in New York tenements [by] Eleanor H. Adler.—What the government says about cotton mills [by] Anna Rochester and Florence Taylor.—The high cost of child labor; exhibit handbook, with photographs by the staff photographer, Lewis W. Hine. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T 335 or REFERENCES ON C H IL D LABO R. 35 National child labor committee. Child labor, a study course on its extent, causes, effects, and prevention. New York city, National child labor com mittee [1912?] 40 p. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 183) 336 --------- The child labor bulletin. Pub. by National child labor committee. v. 1, June, 1912-v. 5, May, 1916. New York, 1912-1916, 5 v. 23cm. HD6250.U3N4 337 --------- Child labor facts for sermon use. New York city, 1915. 4 p. 23em. (Its Pamphlet no. 239, Jan. 1915) ED6250.TJ3N2,no.239 338 ------ — Child labor in 1912. New York, National child labor committee, 1912. 84 p. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 3) HD6250.U3N4,v.l Contexts .—Child labor in 1912. Eighth annual report of National child labor committee.— Home work in the tenement houses of New York city, by Owen R . Lovejoy; Elizabeth C. Wat son.—Employment of children on the stage, by Owen R . Lovejoy. A study course on child labor. 339 --------- Child labor, statistics, causes, effects, prevention. New York city [1912?] 22 p. 23ein. (Its Pamphlet no. 185) 340 --------- Child labor stories for children. New York city, National child labor committee [1913] 81 p. illus. (1 col.) 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 2) HD6250.U3N4,v.2 C ontents .— A song of the factory [by] J. F. Montague.—The story of the medicine bottle.— Hymn for the working children [by] Fanny J. Crosby.—The stpry of my cotton dress.—Dolly dear.—Mr. Coal’s story.—“ To little sister.” —Declaration of dependence.—The toll.—Two little members.—What some children have done for the working children.—The story of old [by] Jemima Luke.—We need love’s tender lesson taught [by] Whittier.—Child labor in Georgia, a story for grownups [by] A. J. McKelway. 341 --------- Child labor ten years after. New York, National child labor committee, 1914. 75 p. 23cm. (Child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 3) HD6250.U3N4,v.3 Contents .— Editorial notes; Tenth annual report of the General secretary; The extent of child labor officially measured, by Edward N. Clopper; Child labor and delinquency, by Fred S. Hall; Children who weave silk, b y Eleanor H. Adler; Mortality among cotton operatives, by Florence Taylor; Dangerous machines in the metal trades, by Helen C. Dwight. 342 --------- Child labor in canneries . . . with other special articles. New York city, National child labor committee, 1913. 3 p. 1., 95 p. incl. plates, maps. 23em. (The child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 4) HD6250.U3N4,v.l C ontents .— Child labor and poverty: advance program of the 9th National conference on child labor .—The important provisions of existing child labor laws.—Child labor in New York canning factories [by] E. F. Brown.— Day and night in a vegetable canning factory: a personal experi ence [by] J. J. Eschenbrenner.—Photographic reproductions of children in fruit and vegetable, oyster, and shrimp canneries.—Child labor and health [by] O. R . Lovejoy.—Some dangers in the present movement for industrial education [by] John Dewey.—Overwork, idleness or industrial education [by] William Noyes.—The child that toileth not; a reply to Mr. Dawley. 343 ----- — The clinker, and some other children. New York, National child labor committee, incorporated, 1914. 62 p. illus., pi. 23cm. “ Stories and verse about children who work. ” — Foreword. HD6250.TJ3N5 1914 344 --------- Constitution. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38:202-207. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 148. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.148 345 --------- The eight-hour day and prohibition of night work. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35:239-274. Hl.A4,v.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 137. 36 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l37 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 36 346 L I S T -OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. National child labor committee. The federal child labor bill; program of, tenth annual conference on child labor, New Orleans, La., March 15-18,1914, with a copy of the federal child labor bill and a memorandum on its constitu tionality. New York city, National child labor committee, 1914. 79 p. illus., col. diagr. 23em. (The child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 4) HD6250.U3N4 Contents .—Editorial notes.—Program of tenth annual conference on child labor.—Federal government and child labor, and memorandum on the Palmer child labor bill [by] O .R . Lovejoy .—Ten years of child labor reform in the South [by] A. J. McKelway.— The eight-hour day [by] Anna Rochester.—The majesty of the law in Mississippi [by] E. N. Clopper.—Present condi tions in the South [by] L. W . Hine.—Strawberry pickers of Maryland [by] H. M, Bremer.—The work of England’s certifying surgeons [by] H. H. Jones. 347 --------- High cost of child labor . . . exhibit handbook. [New York city, 1915] 20 p. 23cm. (Its Pamphlet no. 241, Jan. 1915) HD6250.U3N2,no.241 High cost of child labor. Reprint of exhibit handbook. Child labor bulle tin, Feb. 1915, v. 3: 25-45. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 348 --------- How to obtain foreign birth certificates. National child labor commit tee, New York, 1909. Pamphlet no. 116. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.ll6 349 ----- 1— Leaflets] New York, 1904-1913. 38 pams. illus. 15Jcm. HD6250.TJ3N19 350 —----- - Little comrades who toil. New York city, 1914. 84 p. 23cm. (Child labor bulletin, Aug. 1914, v. 3, no. 2, pt. 1) HD6250.U3N4,v.3 351 --------- Pamphlet[s]. National child labor committee. New York, 1905-1916. 260 pams. illus. 23-24cm. IID6250.U3N2 The pamphlets, which are consecutively numbered, comprise addresses and proceedings (reprinted from the “ Proceedings” ), annual reports, etc. 352 --------- Stories about the other child. [New York, 1913] 79 p. 25cm. (Sup plement to the Child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 3, Dec. 1913) HD6250.U3N4,v.2 353 --------- The voice of the church against child labor. National child labor com mittee. New York, 1908. Pamphlet no. 89. [4] p. HD6250.U3N2,no.89 354 National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings. Boston [etc.] 1875-1915. ports.,.map, tables. 22£~24cm. --------- A guide to the study of charities and correction by means of the Pro ceedings of the National conference of charities and correction, using thirty-four volume 1874 to 1907. Comp, by Alexander Johnson. [Indianapolis?] 1908. xi, 353 p. 23cm. HY88.A3 Child labor: p. 144-150. See also Indexes to subsequent volumes. 355 National consumers’ league. The consumer’s control of production: the work of the National consumers’ league. Philadelphia, The American acad emy of political and social science, 1909. 1 p. 1., 83 p. 25^cm. (Supplement to the Annals of the American academy of political and social science. July, 1909) HD6957.U6N3 Hl.A4,v.34 P artial contents .— Work at night by girls and boys under 21 years. The eight hours day for working children. Investigations, (a) The standard of living of working girls and women away from home, (b) Children illegally at work. 356 National federation of settlements. Young working girls; a summary of evidence from two thousand social workers, ed. by Robert A. Woods and Albert J. Kennedy, its secretaries; with an introduction b y Jane Addams. Boston and New York, Houghton Mifflin company, 1913. xiii, 185, [1] p. 19^em. ’ IIQ798.N3 357 Nearing, Scott. The history of a Christmas box. Dec. 29, 1906, v. 17: 555-558. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Charities and the Commons, HV1.C4.V.17 L IS T 358 OF R E F E R E N C E S O N N earing, Scott. Social adjustment. 1911. x v ip ., 1 1., 377 p. 19icm. C H IL D LABOR. 37 New York, The Macmillan company, HN64.N42 Child labor, p.243-265. 359 _i— Social religion; an interpretation of Christianity in terms of modern life. New York, The Macmillan company, 1913. xvi p., 2 1., 227 p. 19£om. The factory child: p. 73-88. H N 3 1 .N 4 360 — ----- The solution of the child labor problem. New York, Moffat, Yard and company, 1911. viii, 145 p. 18Jcm. HD6231.N4 361 Neill, Charles Patrick. Child labor at the national capital. [Philadelphia? 1906?] 11 p. 23cm. HD6250.U4D6 1906a Also published as National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 12-22; Pamphlet no. 21. 11 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20,21 Charities and the Commons, Mar. 3, 1906, v. 15: 795-800. HVl.C4,v.l5 (In U. S. Congress. House. Committee on the District o f. Columbia. Report of hearings . . . 1906, . . . to regulate child labor in the District of Columbia . . . Washington, 1906. 23cm. p. 55-59) LC132.D6A3 362 New Jersey. Bureau of statistics of labor and industries. 26th Annual report, 1903. Trenton, 1903. illus. 23\om. HC107.N5A2 The social aspect of child labor in New Jersey, 1903: p. 241-421. 363 --------- Inspector of child labor. Annual report, 1st, 1883. Trenton, N. J., 1883. 1 v. 22icm. ■ IID6250.U4N5 364 New York (State) Bureau of labor statistics. Conditions of entrance and advancement in individual industries. (In its 26th annual report, 1908. Pt. 1: p. 51-189) HC107.N7A3 1908 365 --------- Factory investigating commission. Preliminary report. Trans mitted to the Legislature March 1, 1912. Albany, The Argus company, printers, 1912. 3v. plates (part fold.) diagrs. 23cm. HD8053.N7A4 1912 Robert F. Wagner, chairman. The appendices are issued also separately, as reprints. Child labor: Extent of child labor in New York state: v. 1, p. 101-106; Appendix V II: Home work in the tenement houses of New York city, Memoranda b y Owen R . Lovejoy, Elizabeth C. Watson; Photographs: p. 571-584. Answers to Questionnaire on Employment of women and children: p. 646-649. See also Index of witnesses: v. 2, p. iii-x x v i for references to child labor. 366 ------------------- Second report. Transmitted to the Legislature January 15,1913. Albany, J. B. Lyon company, printers, 1913. 2 v. plates, plans, diagrs. (part fold.) 23cm. [Legislature, 1913. Senate doc. 36] HD8053.N7A5 1913 Robert F. Wagner, chairman. Report: Child labor in the canneries: p. 127-143; Child labor: p. 176-192. Report on manu facturing in tenements in New York state, b y Elizabeth C. Watson, v. 2, p. 667-755; Industrial conditions in the canning industry of New York state, by Z. L. Potter, v. 2, p. 757-915; Prelimi nary report on employment of women and children in mercantile establishments, by Pauline Goldmark and George A. Hall, v. 2, p. 1193-1270. See also Indexes to Third and Fourth reports. 367 New York child welfare exhibit, 1911. Handbook of the New York child welfare exhibit in the 71st regiment armory from Jan. 18 to Feb. 12, 1911. [New York, Blanchard press, 1911] 82 p. illus. 24cm. HV709.N5 1911 Work and wages, p. 33-35. 368 Newell, Mary H. Shall charitable societies relieve family distress by finding work for children? Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 39-41. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 369 Nichol, H enry. An eight-hour day in a ten-hour state [Tennessee], Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 142-144. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 38 L I S T OP R E F E R E N C E S ON C H I L D LABOR. 370 North. Carolina. Bureau of labor and printing. 27th. 1906-1913. Raleigh, N. C. [etc.] 1906-1913. 24icm. Annual report. 20th8 v. plates, tables. HC107.N8A2 1906-1908: Contain letters from wage-earners, manufacturers, mill men, editors and publishers, and farmers in regard to child labor. 1913: Statistics of average wages paid children, 1899-1912: p. 210-212. 371 Noyes, William. Overwork, idleness, or industrial education? American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 342-353. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 84-95; Pamphlet no. 32. 2d ed.1907. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.32 372 Obenauer, Marie Louise, and Mary Conyngton. Employment of children in Maryland industries. (In U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, Sept. 1911, no. 96 : 466-487) HD8051.A5,no.96 373 —------ and Bertha von der Nienburg. Effect of minimum-wage determi nations in Oregon. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 108 p. 23cm. (Bul letin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 176. Women in industry series, no. 6) HB8051.A62,n©.176 Issued also as House doc. 1709, U. S., 63d Cong., 3d sess. Rates of pay before and after minimumwage determinations of girls under 18 years o f age: p. 19-20. 374 Ohio. Industrial commission. Dept, of investigation and statistics. Industrial accidents in Ohio, January 1, 1914, to June 30, 1915. Columbus, O ., 1916. 231 p. 23Jcm. (Its Report no. 21) Also forms Bulletin of the Industrial commission, v. 3, no. 1, Mar. 1,1916. Includes statistics of accidents to minors under 18 years of age. 375 Oregon. Board of inspectors of child labor. Report. Salem, Or. 1913-15. 2 v. 23cm. HD6250.U4O7 376 --------- Child welfare commission. Biennial report, 1913-14. [Portland? Or.] 1915. 23em. 377 --------- Industrial welfare commission. Biennial report. 1st, 1913-14, Salem, Or., 1915. 15 p. 23cm. HD6093.072 378 Pennsylvania. Governor, 1915. (Martin G. Brumbaugh) Inaugural address, Jan. 19, 1915. Harrisburg, Pa., W. S. Ray, 1915. 11 p. 23cm. Child labor recommendations: p. 9. ' J87.P42 1915 Jan. 19 379 Pennsylvania child labor committee. Child labor and the people of Penn sylvania. Third annual report, 1906-7. Philadelphia, Pennsylvania child labor committee 1907. 31 p. 15fcm. (Child labor leaflet, no. 2) HD6250.U4P6 380 Pennsylvania three-ply child labor campaign. Survey, Mar. 18, 1911, v. 25: 993-994. HVl.C4,v.25 Olass factories: messengers: mines. 381 Pratt, E. E. Child labor: a rational statement. Arena, June, 1907, v. 37: 613-619. AP2.A6,v.37 382 Pray, K. L. M. Child labor, mothers, and manufacturers. Survey, Mar. 27, 1915, v. 33:865. HVl.C4,v.33 383 The Problem of child labor with special reference to Philadelphia. Addresses by Samuel Zane Batten; Charles Edwin Fox; Henry J. Gideon; Joseph H. Hegedorn; and Mrs. Florence Kelley. City club of Philadelphia. City club bulletin, Feb.5, 1913, v. 6: 216-224. JS1216.C47,v.6 384 Progressive party. New York. Legislative committee. Statement as to the official proposal of the National progressive party in the state of New York for a minimum wage act (also containing the text of the party’s official bill) prepared for introduction into the Legislature of the state of New York. [New York] The Legislative committee of the National progressive party in the state of New York, 1913. 14 p. 23cm. [Its Publications, 6] HD4918.P8 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H I L D L A B O R - 39 385 Rauchberg, Heinrich. Die Erhebung über Frauen- und Kinderarbeit in den Vereinigten Staaten. Archiv für soziale Gesetzgebung und Statistik, 1898, v. 12: 135-147. H5.A8,v.l2 386 Rhode Island. Bureau of industrial statistics. Fifth annual report, 1891. Providence: E. L. Freeman & son, 1892. xiv, 191 p. 23cm. HC107.R4A2 1891 C ontents.— Laws of the several states relative to the employment and education of chüdren, p. 3-21; Opinions and remarks of superintendents, members of committees, principals and teachers of schools, clergymen, and physicians relative to child labor, p. 22-62; Census of children employed by occupations, age, place of birth, parent nativity, and sex, p. 63-165; Wages of children, p. 166-181; School attendance and absentees, p. 185-188. 387 Richmond, Mary Ellen. The good neighbor in the modern city. Philadel phia and London, J. B. Lippincott company, 1907. 152 p., 1 1. 16|om. (Sage foundation publication) HV4028.R53 The child at work, p. 44-53. 388 Roberts, Peter. Child labor in eastern Pennsylvania. Outlook, Dec. 17, 1904, v. 78 : 982-985. AP2.08, v.78 389 Robinson, Clarence C. The wage-earning boy. New York [etc.] Association press, 1912. 108 p. 17£cm. Bibliography: p. [106]-108. 390 Rochester, Anna. The eight-hour day for children. National child labor committee. New York, 1914. Pamphlet no. 212. 16 p. HD6250.IT3N2,no.212 Reprinted from Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1914, v. 2, no. 4. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 391 --------- What do American people want for their children? Survey, Apr. 11, 1914, v. 32: 49. HVl.C4,v.32 392 Roosevelt, Theodore. The conservation of childhood. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 8-16. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 163. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l63 393 --------- The conservation of womanhood and childhood. Outlook, Dec. 23, 1911, v. 99: 1013-1019. AP2.08,v.99 394 --------- The conservation of womanhood and childhood. New York and London, Funk & Wagnalls company, 1912. 2 p. 1., 84 p. 14|cm. [The leather-bound pocket series] HD6095.R7 395 —------ Where I stand on child labor reform. Woman’s home companion, Jan. 1907, v. 34: 15. AP2.W714,v.34 396 Roseboro, Viola and Marie Best. Nora Mahoney—a human document: a true story of child slavery in Philadelphia. Woman’s home companion, Aug. 1906, v. 33: 3-4. ' AP2.W714,v.33 397 Ross, William Edward. What do you care? Pearson’s magazine, Apr. 1913, v. 29: 482. AP2.P35,v.29 National child labor committee, New York. Leaflet no. 49, Sept. 1913. HD6250.U3Nl9,no.49 398 Sanville, F. L. Daybreak for Pennsylvania’s working children. Survey, Feb. 6, 1915, v. 33: 481-486. R V l.C 4,v .33 399 Seligman, Isaac N. Duty of a rich nation to take care of her children. Ameri can academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 15-19. H l.A 4,v .33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 111. 5 p. HB6250.U3N2,no.lll https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 40 L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S OFT C H I L D LABOR. 400 Sewall, Hannah R. Child labor in the United States. Bulletin, May, 1904, no. 52: 485-637. 401 Smith, Charles F. False economic ideas: an obstacle to child labor reform. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 13-15. Hl.A4,v.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 133. 3 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l33 Smith, Hoke. The duty of the people in child protection. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 97-100. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 79. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.79 402 403 404 405 406 407 U. S. Bureau of labor. HD8051.A5,no.52 Smyth, Ellison A. Child labor in the South. Outlook, Mar. 30, 1907, v. 85: 769-771. AP2.08,v.85 Solensten, R. T. Shall charitable societies relieve family distress by finding work for children? Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 35-39. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 Sorge, F. A. Frauen- und Kinderarbeit in den Vereinigten Staaten. Neue Zeit, Mar. 5, 12, 1904, 22. Jahrg.: 716-723; 757-765. H X 6.N6,v .22 Southern conference on woman and child labor. [Proceedings] 1913. [Memphis, 1913] 24 p. 23cm. Spahr, Charles B. America’s working people. New York, London, and Bom bay, Longmans, Green and co., 1900. vi p., 11., 261 p. 20cm. HD8072.S72 Factory towns in New England: Child labor: p. 8-9; Child labor at the South: p. 36-41. 408 Spargo, John. The bitter cry of the children; with an introduction by Robert Hunter. New York, London, The Macmillan company, 1906. xxiii, 337 p. front., plates, facsim., diagrs. 20cm. HV713.S7 The working child: p. 125-217; Remedial measures: Child labor: p. 256-260; A commissioner of charities on child labor: p. 305-306; Notes and authorities; The working child: p. 314-319. 409 Stratton, George Frederic. 1913, v. 105: 137-140. 410 Sumner, Mary Brown. What the government found when it broadened out its interest in boll-weevils and began to study children. Survey, Dec. 16, 1911, v. 27: 1375-1377. HVl.C4,v.27 Swan, Charles Herbert. Le travail des enfants aux Etats-Unis d ’Amérique. Revue économique internationale, July, 1906, v. 3: 69-115. HB3.R5,1906,v.3 Swift, W. H. The campaign in North Carolina. The mountain whites—by one of them. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 96-104. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 200, 1913. HD6250.U3N2,no.200 Talbert, Ernest Lynn. Opportunities in school and industry for children of the stockyards district. Chicago [University of Chicago press] 1912. vi, 64 p. 24iom. (A study of Chicago’s stockyards community . . . an investigation carried on under the direction of the Board of the University of Chicago settlement. 1) HN80.C5B6 Taylor, Graham. Parental responsibility for child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 354-356. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 96-98; Pamphlet no. 33. 2d ed. 1907. 3 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.33 The man behind the child. Outlook, Sept. 20, AP2.O8,v.l05 Answered by A. J. McKelway. The child against the man. 411 412 413 414 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 41- 415 Tennessee. Dept, of shop and factory inspection. First annual report.v. 1 and suppl. Nashville, Tenn., Benson ptg. co., 1914. 2 v. 2 2 f » . HB3663 .T2A2&suppl. Special child labor report—Results of enforcement of minor labor laws: suppl. p. 6-13. 416 Todd, Helen M. Why the children work. magazine, Apr. 1913, v. 40: 68-79. The children’s answer. McClure’s AP2.M2,v.40 417 Tompkins, Juliet Wilbor. Turning children into dollars. Success magazine, Dec. 1905, v. 8: 799-801, 859-860; Jan. 1906, v. 9: 15-17, 45-56. IlF5386.A2S4,v.8,9 418 Towson, C. R. The employer of boys. (In Applied ideals in work with boys, by C. W. Crampton, and others. New York, 1910. 18cm. p. 239-256) HQ797.A7 419 Ulm, Aaron Hardy. The plea of the child laborer. North American review, June, 1909, v. 189: 890-899. AP2.N7,v.l89 420 TT. S. Bureau of labor. Index of all reports issued by bureaus of labor statis tics in the United States, prior to March 1,1902. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1902. 287 p. 23|cm Z7164.L1U6 IID8053.A25 1902 Contains references to the material on child labor contained in the various reports. 4 2 1 ------------ ------- Report on condition of woman and child wage-earners in the United States. In 19 volumes. Prepared under the direction of Chats. P. Neill, commissioner of labor. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1910-13. 19 v. tables. 23cm. (61st Cong., 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645) HD6093.A4 Contents .—i. Cotton textile industry. 1910.—n. Men’s ready-made clothing. 1911.—nx. Glass industry. 1911.—iv. The silk industry. 1911— v. Wage-earning women in stores and fac tories. 1910.— vi. The beginnings of child labor legislation in certain states; a comparative study . . . by Elizabeth Lewis Otey. 1910.— vn. Conditions under which children leave school to go to work. 1910.—vm. Juvenile delinquency and its relation to employment. 1911.—ix. History of- women in industry in the United States . . . by Helen L. Sumner. 1910.—x . History of women in trade unions . . . by John B. Andrews and W . D. P. Bliss. 1911.—xi. Employment of women in the metal trades . . . by Lucian W . Chaney. 1911.—xn. Employment of women in laundries. 1911.—xm. Infant mortality and its relation, to the employment of mothers. 1912.— xrv. Causes of death among woman and child cotton-mill operatives . . . by Arthur R . Perry, M. D. 1912.—x v . Relation between occupation and criminality of women, by Mary Conyngton. 1911.—xvi. Family budgets of typical cotton-mill workers . . . by Wood F. Worcester and Daisy Worthington Worcester. 1911.— xvn. Hookworm disease amgng cotton-mill operatives . . . by Ch. Wardell Stiles. 1912.—xvin. Employment of women and children in selected industries. 1913.—x ix . Labor laws and factory conditions. 1912. 422 ------------- — - Work and wages of men, women, and children. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1897. 671 p. 23em. (Annual report of the commissioner of labor, 11th, 1895-96) . HD8051.A3 1895-96 Carroll D. Wright, commissioner. Issued also in the Congressional series, no. 3545, as House Doc. 341, 54th Cong., 2d sess. Contains statistics relative to the occupations and earnings of women and children; relative efficiency of women and children and of men engaged in same occupations; comparison of earn ings of women and children and of men of the same grade of efficiency; reasons for the employment of women and girls. 423 --------- Bureau of labor statistics. Summary of the report on condition of woman and child wage earners in the United States. December, 1915. Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1916. 445 p. 23cm. (Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 175. Women in industry series, no. 5) HD8051.A62,no.l75 424 —;— - Children’s bureau. Annual report. lst-3d, 1913-1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914-16. 3 v. 23cm HV741.A3 1913: Child labor studies: p. 9-10,14-15. 1914: Child labor: p. 11-12. 1915: Physical standards for industry: p. 21-24. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N 42 C H IL D 425 IT. S. Industrial commission. Reports. ing office, 1900-1902. 19 v. 23em. LABOR. Washington, Government print HC101.A3 Vols. 5, 7,9,12-17,19, contain Evidence, etc., on child labor. 426 Valesh, Eva McDonald. Three notable lines of labor work. American federationist, Nov. 1901, v. 8: 457-462. HD8055.A5A2,v.8 Child labor, p. 459-462. 427 Van Vorst, Bessie “ Mrs. John Van Vorst. ” The cry of the children; human documents in the case of the new slavery. Saturday evening post, Mar. 10, Apr. 14, 28, May 5, 19, July 7, 28, Aug. 18, 1906, v. 178: 1-3, 28-29: 3-5: 10-11; 11-13; 12-13; 26-27; v. 179: 12-13; 17-18; 17-18. AP2.S2,v.l78,179 428 --------- The cry of the children; a study of child-labor; with an introduction by Albert J. Beveridge. New York, Moffat, Yard and company, 1908. xiii, 9-246 p. 19icm HD6250.U3V3 429 ---------and Marie Van Vorst. The woman who toils; being the experiences of two ladies as factory girls. New York, Doubleday, Page & company, 1903. ix p., 3 1., 303 p. front., plates, ports. 20Jcm. HD6068.V2 Contents.—Van Vorst, Mrs. J.: Introductory. In a Pittsburg factory. Perry, a New York mill town. Making clothing in Chicago. The meaning of it all.—Van Vorst, M.: Introductory. A maker of shoes at Lynn. The southern cotton mills. The child in the southern mills. The Library of Congress has also the French ed. HD6068.V23 430 Wald, L. D. Children and work. Atlantic monthly, June, 1915, v. 115: 806817. AP2.A8,v.ll5 431 Walling, William English. Child labor in the North: a great national evil. Ethical record, Dec. 1902-Jan. 1903, v. 4: 39-42. BJl.E6,v.4 432 Watson, E. J. South Carolina and the child labor problem. An address at Boston, Jan. 14, 1910, before the National child labor conference. (In South Carolina. General assembly. Reports and resolutions. Columbia, S. C., 1910. 24°». v. 3, p. 379-388.) J87.S6 1910p,v.3 433 Watson, Frank D. The child labor situation in Pennsylvania. Charities and the Commons, Mar. 30, 1907, v. 17: 1110- 1112., HVl.C4,v.l7 434 Waudby, William S. Children of labor. Apr. 1903. v. 55: 545-556. Frank Leslie’s popular monthly, AP2.A346,v.55 435 Wayne, Flynn. Shall our children be foot-pounds of mechanical power? National magazine, Boston, Apr. 1914, v. 40: 147-150. AP2.N34,v.40 436 Weaver, Eli W. Getting in touch with the employer. Apr. 10, 1913, v. 77: 396-398. Journal of education, Lll.J5,v.77 437 Wells, Emilie Louise.' Woman and child wage earners in the United States. American economic review, June; 1912, v. 2: 436-442. HBl.E26,v.2 438 Weyl, Walter Edward and A. M. Sakolski. Conditions of entrance to the principal trades. (In U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin 67. Washington, 1906, p. 680-780) HD8051.A5,no.67 The employment of women and children: p. 720-731. 439 White, Frank Marshall. The babies who work. Harper’s weekly, Jan. 8, 1910, v. 54: 12-13. AP2.H32,v.54 440 White child slavery; a symposium: I. Helen Campbell. II. Solomon Schind ler. III. Florence Kelley Wischnewetzsky. IV. Jennie June (Jane C. Cooley) V. A. A. Chevaillier. VI. C. Orchardson. Arena, April, 1890, v. 1: 589-303. AP2.A6,v.l https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H I L D LABOR. 43 441 Willoughby, William Franklin, i. Child labor, by William F. Willoughby. ii . Child labor, by Miss Clare de GrafEenried. [Baltimore]: American economic association, 1890. 149 p. 23cm. (Publications of the American economic association. [Monographs] v. 5, no. 2) HBl.A5,v.5,no.2 The first paper b y William F. Willoughby is treated under the following divisions: Introduc tion. Child labor in England. Child labor in the United States. The political economy of child labor, and Social aspect of child labor. 442 Wilmarth, Raymond O. 1909, v. 22: 813-814. Child labor, District of Columbia. Survey, Sept. 11, HVl.C4,v .22 443 Wilmer, C. B. Humanity and economics, with special reference to child labor. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, *1903. [Columbus, 0 .] 1903. 23om. p. 166-180) HV88.A3 1903 444 Wisconsin. Bureau of labor and industrial statistics. Madison, 1884-1911. 23£C1“ . Biennial report. HC107.W6A2 8th, 1897-98: Special inspections; Child labor: p. 490-554. 9th, 1899-1900: Child labor in the United States: p. 264-406. 14th, 1909-1910: Child labor in Wisconsin: p. 499-574. 15th, 1910-11: Child labor: p. 59-96. 445 ------------------- Child labor. [From the Ninth biennial report of the Bureau of labor and industrial statistics of Wisconsin] Madison, Democrat printing com pany, state printer, 1900. cover-title, [263]-406 p. 22\cm. Child labor in England, p. 275-286. HD6250.U4W6 1900 Child labor in Wisconsin during 1898 and 1899, p. 287-384.' “ The child labor law and the state as parens patriae. B y August Charles Backus” : p. 385-404. 446 ------- - Industrial commission. Bulletin, v. i. Madison, Wis., 1912. 300 p. 22%cm. HD8053.W6A3 P artial contents .— No. 2. Child labor law: Essential points of the law; Opinions of courts and experts; List of books and articles. No. 4. The Industrial commission and its predecessors; Child labor: p.183-188; Street trades, p. 189-190; Compulsory education, p. 191-201; Apprenticeship, p. 202-206. No. 4A. Apprenticeship law. No. 5. Compulsory school attendance. Essential points of the law; Comment and explanation; Opinions of the courts. ,447 —---------------- Women and children in industry. Data for women’s clubs and other civic organizations. [Madison, 1914] 22 p. 23cm. HD6095.W6 Bibliography: p. 11-22. 448 Wise, Stephen S. Justice to the child. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35 : 35-41. H l.A 4,v .35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 135. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l35 449 --------- United States should abolish child labor. Pacific monthly, Aug. 1909, v. 22: 127-130. AP2.Pl5,v.22 450 Worrier, P arley Paul. The church and the labor conflict. New York, The Macmillan company, 1913. x p., 1 1., 302 p. 20°m. HD6338.W7 The protection of the wage-earning woman and child: p. 162-183. 451 Wood, Mi’s. Mary I. (Stevens) The history of the General federation of women’s clubs for the first twenty-two years of its organization. New York, The History department, General federation of women’s clubs [c1912] x, 445 p. front., ports., facsims. 21cm. HQ1903.G6W7 Arousing sentiment for the working child, p. 144-148, 173-174,201, 233. 452 Woodward, Margaret. 1914, v. 18: 42-43. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Welfare of the child who works. Suburban life, Jan. AP2.S93.V.18 4 4 ‘ LIST 01" REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 453 Woodward, S. W. A business man’s view of child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 361-363. Hl.A4jV.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 103-105; Pamphlet no. 35. 3 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.35 Charities and the Commons, Mar. 3, 1906, v. 15: 800-801. HVl.C4,v.l5 454 Woolley, Mrs. Helen (Thompson). Charting childhood in Cincinnati. Survey, Aug. 9, 1913, v. 30: 601-606. IIVl.C4,v.30 455 --------- The supervision of working children under the Ohio law. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, Baltimore, 1915. Chi cago, 1915. 23cm. p. 526-528) HV88.A3 1915 456 Worcester, Daisy Worthington. New champions of an old evil. Pearson’s magazine, July, 1914, v. 32: 53-63. AP2.P35,v.32 LEGISLATION. S T A T E L E G ISL A T IO N A N D E N F O R C E M E N T . 457 Addams, Jane. The operation of the Illinois child labor law. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 327-330. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 69-72; Pamphlet no. 29. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.20a;no.29 458 Alabama. Dept, for inspection of jails, almshouses, cotton mills, fac tories, etc. Annual report 1909. Montgomery, Ala.,'1910. 23cm. I1D3663.A2A3 HV8320.A17 Compulsory education: p. 9-11; Child labor laws and means of enforcement: p, 11-13. 459 —---------------- Annual report of the factory inspector, 1912. 1913. 144 p. 22£cm. Montgomery, Ala., HD6250.U4A2 Devoted to the enforcement of the Child labor law. American association for labor legislation. Child labor legislation, 19111915. {In American labor legislation review, Oct. 1911, v. 1: 69-86; Oct. 1912, v. 2: 456-464; Oct. 1913, v. 3: 364—378; Nov. 1914, v. 4: 451-461; Dec. 1915, v. 5: 694-721) HD7833.A55,v.l-5 461 The American year book; a record of events and progress 1915. New York and London, D. Appleton and company, 1916. 862 p. 20|em. Child labor: p.392-393; Legislation: p. 275,442-443. E171.A585 1915 460 Published annually since 1910. 462 Anderson, Neal L. Child labor legislation in the South. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 491-507. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2. p. 79-95. HD6250.U3N2,no.2 {In Louisiana. Bureau of statistics of labor. Report. New Orleans, La. 1906. 23cm. p. 26-40.) , HC107.L8A2 1904-05 463 Barnard, J. Lynn. Factory legislation in Pennsylvania: its history and ad ministration. Philadelphia, Pub. for the University, 1907. xi, 178 p. 25£cm. (Publication of the University of Pennsylvania. Series in political economy and public law. no. 19) HD3626.U6P42 Early child labor laws, p. 18-24; Child labor campaign 1903-1905, p. 86-105; Child labor code, p. 135-163. 464 Breckinridge, Sophonisba P. Beginnings of child labor legislation. Survey, Oct. 21. 1911. v. 27: 1044-1045. HVl.C4,v.27 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O i l C H I L D LABOR. 45 4G5 Breckinridge, Sophonisba P. Child-labor legislation. Elementary school teacher, June, 1909, v. 9: 511-516. L ll.E 6,v.9 466 B rem er, H. M. Iowa’s gains in child labor laws and a woman’s reformatory. Survey, May 8, 1915, v. 34: 145-146. HVl.C4,v.34 467 Bureau of municipal research, New York. A report on the Division of child hygiene, Department of health, with constructive suggestions. Prepared for the committee of the Board of estimate and apportionment on health, hospitals and charities inquiries, by the Bureau of municipal research, New York city. [New York, M. B. Brown printing & binding co.] 1911. 69, [6] p. incl. forms (2 fold.) 23cm. RA609.B8 Employment certificates: p. 27, 42,49-51,71. 468 Cadwallader, Starr. The enforcement of child labor legislation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 132-134. Hl.A4,v.29 469 California child labor law sustained. Charities and the Commons, Feb. 3,1906, v. 15: 573-574. HVl.C4,v .l5 470 Campbell, Robert Argyll. Child labor law—District of Columbia. American political science review, Feb. 1909, v. 3: 56-58. JA l.A 6,v .3 471 --------- Labor legislation—Oklahoma. American political science review, Aug. 1909, v. 3: 404-406. JA l.A 6,v .3 472 Campbell, Willard A. Pennsylvania’s new child labor law. American indus tries, Sept. 1915, v. 16: 21- 22. HD4802.A6,v.l6 Editorial comment: p. 8-9. 473 Carrigan, Thomas Charles. The law & the American child. [Worcester, Mass., 1911] [121J-183 p. 24cm. HV723.C2 Bibliography: p. 181-183. 474 Reprinted from the Pedagogical seminary, June, 1911, vol. xviii, p. 121-183. L ll.P 4 ,v .l8 Chandler, H. A. E. With Arizona’s first legislature. Survey, Aug. 17, 1912, v. 28: 647-648. HVl.C4,y.28 Child labor law, p. 648. 475 Child labor. 476 477 478 479 Elementary school journal, Jan. 1915, v. 15: 232-233. L11.E6.V.15 Child labor and legislation in Pennsylvania. Addresses by Rudolph Blankenburg; Julia C. Lathrop; Mrs. Florence Kelley; Charles L. Chute; and Owen R. Lovejoy. City club of Philadelphia. City club bulletin, Feb. 5, 1913, v. 6: 228-240. JS1261.C47,v.6 Child labor bills pending in twenty-seven legislatures. Survey, Mar. 6, 1915, v. 33: 601-602. HVl.C4,v.33 Child labor legislation. Schedules of existing statutes and the standard child labor law, embodying the best provisions of the most effective measures now in force. Handbook 1908. Comp, by Josephine Goldmark, National consumers’ league, New York city. Philadelphia, The American academy of political and social science [1908] cover-title, 68 p. 24Jem. (Supplement to the Annals of the American academy of political and social science. May, 1908) Hl.A4,v.31 Supplement containing changes in laws, May, 1908, to August, 1909. Pre pared by Josephine J. Eschenbrenner. National child labor committee, New York. Pamphlet no. 117. 16 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.ll7 Chute, Charles L. Child labor laws of Illinois unchanged. Survey, May 27, 1911, v. 26: 332-333. HV1.C4.V.26 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 46 L IS T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 480 Chute, Charles B. The enforcement of child labor laws. Child labor bulle tin, Aug. 1912, v. 1 : 108—113. HD6250.U3N4,v.l 4 8 1 --------- Uniform law for night work in Pennsylvania. Survey, Apr. 15, 19 1 1, v. 26: 1 1 2 -1 1 3 . x HVl.C4,v.26 482 Clopper, Edward N. The needs of Indiana in child labor legislation. National child labor committee. New York, 1910. Pamphlet no. 143. 11 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l43 483 --------- Ohio’s child labor relief law. Survey, Mar. 26, 1910, v. 23: 981-982. HVl.C4,v;23 484 Commons, John Rogers and John B. Andrews. Principles of labor legisla tion. New Y o r k and London, Harper & brothers [1916] 7 p. l.,5 2 4 p . diagrs. 21cm. [Harper’s citizens series, ed. by W. F. Willoughby] HD7834.C65 See Index under Child labor: p. 500. 485 Compulsory school attendance. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 137 p. 23cm. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1914, no. 2. Whole no. 573) Llll.A6,1914,no.2 Tables showing child labor—employments prohibited, hours of labor, certificates, etc. : p. 56-77. 486 Conflicting reports on child labor law of Massachusetts. Survey, Jan. 24, 1914. v. 31:483. ' HVl.C4,v.31 487 Connecticut. Board of education. Report of the Board of education, 19121913. Hartford [etc.] 1913. 587 p. 24cm. L128.B14 Summary of the important features of the enforcement of the child labor law: p. 73-93. 488 Construction of child labor statutes. Yale law journal, Dec. 1913, v. 23: 175-179. 489 Davies, Edgar T. The enforcement of child labor legislation in Illinois. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 93-103. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 54. 11 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.54 490 --------- and Barney Cohen. Proposed Illinois child labor law. Child, Chicago, Mar. 1913, v. 2: 29-36. HQ750.A2Ç3,v.2 491 Denson, Daisy. The first child labor law enacted in North Carolina. Chari ties, Apr. 25,1903, v. 10: 410-411. HVl.C4,v.lO 492 Dewavrin, Maurice. La protection légale du travail des femmes et des enfants aux États-Unis. Revue politique et parlementaire, Oct. 10, 1910, v. 66: 102-115. H3.R4,v.66 493 Downey, Ezekiel Henry. History of labor legislation in Iowa. Iowa City, la., State historical society of Iowa, 1910. x p., 1 1., 283 p. 24^em. (Iowa economic history series) HD7835.I6D7 Child labor legislation: p. 110-147. Notes and references: p. 239-246. 494 Edwards, Alba M. The labor legislation of Connecticut. [New York, Pub. for the American economic association by the Macmillan company; etc., etc., 1907] viii, 322 p. 25Rm. (Publications of the American economic association. Third series, vol. vni, no. 3) HD7835.C8E2 HBl.A5,3d ser.v.8 Child labor, p. 1-73; Hours of labor, and the economic effects of the restrictions on child and woman labor, p. 74-99; Digest of the child labor laws of Connecticut, p. 319-322. 495 Erickson, Halford. Child labor legislation and methods of enforcement in northern central states. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 467-479. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 55-67; Pamphlet no. 7, 13 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2;no.7 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OP REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR, 496 Evans, Orrena Louise. The children’s code of Ohio. science review, Nov. 1913, v. 7: 647-650. 47 American political JAl.A6,v.7 Child labor, p. 649-650. 497 Fairchild, Fred Rogers. The factory legislation of the state of New York. London, For the American economic association by the Macmillan company; [etc., etc.] 1905. iv p., 1 1., 218 p. 24fcm. (Publications of the American economic association. 3d series, vol. vi, no. 4) H B l.A5,3d ser.v.6 Child labor, p. 109-143. 498 Famam, Henry W. The relation of state and federal legislation to the child labor problem. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hartford] 1909. 22cm. p. 32-39) HD6250.F4C8 1908 499 Folks, H om er. Enforcement of child labor laws. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 91-95. Hl.A4,v.35 500 F ox, Hugh F. The operation of the new child labor law in New Jersey. Ameri can academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25 : 522-541. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 110-129; Pamphlet no. 15. 20 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2;no.l5 501 Freem an, William. The legal regulation of labor. Lawyer and banker, June, 1914,v. 7: 188-203. Construction of child labor statntes, p. 193-197. 502 Frost, Edward W. The operation of the Wisconsin child labor law. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 357-360. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 99- 102; Pamphlet no. 34. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.34 503 Gordon, Jean M. New Louisiana child labor law. Charities and the Com mons, Dec. 26, 1908, v.21:480-481. HVl.C4,v .21 504 Guild, Curtis. Child labor legislation in Massachusetts. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 7- 12. . . . Hl.A4,v.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 129. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l29 505 Hall, Fred S. Pennsylvania’s child labor laws. Survey, May 29, 1909, v. 22: 321-324. HVl.C4,v .22 506 --------- “ Poverty exceptions” in child labor laws. National child labor com mittee, New York, Leaflet no. 26. Mar. 1909. 15 p. 15£em. HD6250.U3Nl9,no.26 507 Hall, George A. New child labor legislation in New York. Survey, Oct. 25, 1913, v. 31: 89-90. HVl.C4,v.31 508 --------- Proper issuance of work permits. National child labor committee, New York. The child labor bulletin, May, 1914, v. 3, no. 1: 107-115. HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.l 509 Harris, Henry J. The essentials of a child labor law for the District of Co lumbia. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27 : 364-370. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 106-112; Pamphlet no. 36. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20,no.36 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 48 510 Haynes, Frederick E m ory. Child labor legislation in Iowa. Iowa City, la., State historical society of Iowa, 1914. 79 p. 23|cm. (Iowa applied history series, ed. by B. F. Shambaugh. [vol. n, no. 10]) On cover: Reprinted from volume two of the Iowa applied history series published at Iowa .City in 1914 by the State historical society of Iowa. ' HC107.I7A6,v.2 HD6250.U4I8 1914 511 Hollis, John P orter. Child labor legislation in the Carolinas. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 114-117. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 159. 5 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l59 512 Huber, Mrs. C. J. Enforcing the child labor law in Florida. Charities and the Commons, Jan. 9, 1909, v. 21: 652. HVl.C4,v .21 513 K elley, Mrs. F loren ce. Child labor legislation. American academy of politi cal and social science, Annals, July, 1902, v. 20: 153-164. ,IIl.A4,v.20 514 ------ — Child labor legislation. (In La Follette, Robert Martin, ed. The mak ing of America. Chicago, 1906. 25cm. v. 8, p. 56-69) HCl03.L25,v.8 515 ------ — Child labor legislation. Case and comment, Jan. 1911, v. 17: 379-382. 516 — ----- Child labor legislation and enforcement in New England and-the Middle states. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25 : 480-490. IIl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 68-78. HD6250.U3N2,no.2 517 --------- An effective child-labor law. American academy o f political and social science, Annals, May, 1903, v. 21: 438-445. H l.A 4,v .21 518 --------- Die gesetzliche Regelung der Kinderarbeit im Staate Illinois. Archiv fur soziale Gesetzgebung und Statistik, 1898, v. 12: 530-550. H5.A8,v.l2 519 --------- Has Illinois the best laws in the country for the protection of children? American journal of sociology, Nov. 1904, v. 10: 298-314. HMl.A7,v.l0 520 --------- The Illinois child-labor law. American journal of sociology, Jan. 1898, v. 3 : 490-601. HM l.A7,v .3 ’ 521 --------- Illinois child labor law. Survey, June 10, 1911, v. 26: 414. HVl.C4,v.26 522 --------- Laws for the children’s welfare. An ideal attainable in 1920: Child labor; Compulsory education. (In National education association, Journal of proceedings and addresses . . . 1908. Winona, Minn. 1908. 23-lcm. p. 1222-1228) L13.N4 1908 523 --------- Obstacles to the enforcement of child labor legislation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 50-56. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 46. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.46 524 --------- Onsome changes in the legal status of the child since Blackstone. Inter national review, Aug. 1882, v. 18: 83-98. AP2.l78,v.l8 525 ---------• Some ethical gains through legislation. New York, London, The Mac millan company, 1905. x, 341 p. 19cm. (The citizen’s library of economics, politics, and sociology, ed. by R. T. Ely) HN64.K29 “ The right to childhood: Young children working in tenement houses; Young children in domestic work; Children in street occupations; Telegraph and messenger hoys; Children in retail trade; Children in manufacture; The glass bottle industry; ” p . 3-57; « The child, the state, and the nation;” p . 58-104. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 49 526 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. What constitute effective child labor laws. (In Louisi ana. Bureau of statistics of labor. Report, 1904-05. New Orleans, La. 1906. 23cm. p. 40—46) HC107.L8A2 1904-5 527 Kingsbury, Susan Myra, ed. Labor laws and their enforcement, with special reference to Massachusetts, by Charles E. Persons, Mabel Parton, Mabelle Moses, and three “ fellows” ; ed. by Susan M. Kingsbury. New York [etc.] Longmans, Green, and co., 1911. xxii, 419 p. pi., fold, tables, fold, diagr. 23£em. (Women’s educational and industrial union, Boston. Dept, of re search. Studies in economic relations of women, vol.n ) HD6083.U6M2 4 i Contents .— Preface, by E. F. Gay.—Introduction, by S. M. Kingsbury.—The early history of factory legislation in Massachusetts, by C. E . Persons.—Unregulated conditions in women’s work, by Mabel Parton and Caroline Manning.—Weakness of the Massachusetts child labor laws, by Grace F. Ward.—Administration of labor legislation in the United States, wi*h special reference te Massachusetts, by Edith Reeves and Caroline Manning.—Labor laws of Massachusetts, 1902-1910, by Edith Reeves.—The regulation of private employment agencies in the United States, by Ma belle Moses. See Index under Child labor and Child labor legislation. Lindsay, Samuel McCune. How to make child labor legislation more effec tive. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 63-73. HD6250.TJ3N4,v.2 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 197. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l97 529 --------- When Congress acts as a state legislature. [Child labor law for the District of Columbia] Charities and the Commons, Mar. 3, 1906, v. 15: 755757. HVl.C4,v.l5 528 530 Lindsey, Ben B. Child labor legislation and methods of enforcement in the Western states. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 508-515. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 96-103; Pamphlet no. 6. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2;no.6 531 Loos, Isaac A. Child labor legislation in Iowa. Iowa journal of history and politics, Oct. 1905, v. 3 : 562-582. F616.I5,v.3 - 532 Lovejoy, Owen It. Better child labor laws in 1911. New York, 1911. 8 p, tab. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 167) HD6250.U3N2,no.l67 533 --------- Child labor laws not drastic. Independent, June 26, 1913, v. 74: 14441445. AP2.I53,v.74 “ Protest to an editorial on the Florida child labor bill.” 534 ----- — The duty of superintendents in the enforcement of child labor laws (In National education association. Journal of proceedings and addresses, 1912. Ann Arbor, Mich. 1912. 24em. p. 401-408) L13.N4 1912 535 --------- The employment certificate the keynote of child labor reform. Wom an’s home companion, Nov. 1906, v. 33: 16, 74-75. AP2.W714,v.33 536 --------- Legislation advocated by the National child labor committee. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hartford] 1909. 22ein. p. 18-21) HD6250.U4C8 1908 537 --------- The test of effective child-labor legislation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 459-466. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet, no. 2, p. 47-54; no. 5. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2;no.5 44193°— 16——4 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 50 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 538 McDowell, James It. The difficulties of child labor legislation in a southern state [Mississippi]. American academy of political and social science, An nals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 166—171. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 109. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l09 539 McKelway, A. J. Arkansas child labor law secured by the initiative. Survey Oct. 10, 1914, v. 33: 44. HVl.C4,v.33 540 --------- The child and the law. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 63-72. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 110. 10 p: HD6250.U3N2,no.ll0 541 --------- Child labor and child labor legislation in the South. (In National con ference of charities and correction. Proceedings, Baltimore, 1915. Chicago, 1915. 23cm. p. 514-518.) HV88.A3 1915 542 --------- Standards of legislation for women and children in the southern states. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1911. Fort Wayne, 1911. 23cm. p. 186-190) HV88.A3 1911 543 Maryland. Bureau of statistics and information. 23d-24th annual report ...1 9 1 4 -1 9 1 5 . Baltimore, 1915-16. 2v. 23cm HC107.M3A15 1914, 15 1914: Issuance of employment certificates: p. 9-47. Issuance of employment certificates in the counties: p. 139-161. 1915: Contribution of children of Baltimore to world’ s work of 1915, p. 40-75; Issuance of em ployment certificates in counties other than western Maryland, p. 180-191. 544 Massachusetts. State board of labor and industries. Brief on the laws relating to employment of women and children. Boston, 1914. 4 p. 545 ____________ Bulletin no. 1-3. August, 1913-November, 1913. Boston, 1913. 3 v 23£cm C ontents .— 1. Laws relating to the employment of women and children; with a summary for the information of employers of labor. 63 p.—2. Laws relating to school attendance and the em ployment of minors; with an explanation for the use of school authorities. 49 p.—3. Laws relating to labor enforced by the State board of labor and industries. 1913. 104 p. 54g ____________ Report on the effect of the child labor law of 1913 to the State board of labor and industries. March 27, 1914. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1914. 94 p. 23cin. ([General court, 1914] House. [Doc.] 2552) HD6250.U4M48 1914 The report of an investigation made under the supervision of Mr. Robert A. Woods, of Boston by direction of the State board of labor and industries, and issued as a supplement to its annual report. 547 The Massachusetts child labor law. 45. 65 548 Mending the Maryland child labor law. Textile world record, Sept. 1913, v. TSl300.T36,v.45 Survey, Apr. 25, 1914,' v. 32: 87. HVl.C4,v.32 549 Minor, Jeanie V. Proof-of-age records. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 127-129. Hl.A4,v.35 550 Morgan, J. H. The child labor laws of the Ohio valley. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29 : 61—70. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 48. 10 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no .48 551 Morrison, Henry C. Enforcement of child labor laws in New Hampshire. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 103-110. Hl.A4,v.35 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 51 552 National child labor committee, New York. Child labor laws in all states. New York, National child labor committee [1912] cover-title, 3 1., 124 p. 22icm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 2) HD6250.U3N4 HD6243.U5N3 C ontents.— Summary of state laws.—The uniform child labor law.—The enforcement of child labor laws [by] Charles L. Chute.—Street trades and their regulation: a symposium [by] Edward N. Clopper, Zenas L. Potter, Lillian A . Quinn. For later compilation see no. 571 in this list. 553 —------ More protection for working children. v. 2, no. 3. 72 p. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1913, HD6250.U3N4,v.2,no.3 Summary of laws enacted in 1913, supplements issue of bulletin for Aug. 1912. 554 N ew child labor law for Pennsylvania. Survey, May 15, 1915, v. 34: 149. HVl.C4,v.34 555 New Hampshire. Children’s commission. Report of the Children’s com mission to the governor and legislature, January, 1915. Concord, N. H. [Printed by J. B. Clarke co., Manchester] 1914. 136 p. 22Jcm. HV742.N4A5 1914 Child labor conditions: p. 43; Digest of child labor laws: p. 127-129. 556 New York (City) Bureau of child hygiene. The Bureau of child hygiene of the Department of health of the city of New York, by S. Josephine Baker . . . 3d ed., rev. and enl. [New York] 1915. 160 p. 23em. (Dept, of health of the city of New York. Monograph series, no. 4, Jan. 1915) Issuance of employment certificates: p. 147-157. RA122.N585 n o 4 557 New York (State) Bureau of factory inspection. Children’s employ ment certificates issued by local boards of health. (In its Annual report, 1908, p. 134-143; 1909, p. 164-173; 1910, p. 172-181; 1911, p. 224-235) HC107.N7A2 558 —------ Department of labor. Bureau of inspection. Number of chil dren’s employment certificates issued by Boards of health in first and second class cities. New York. Dept, of labor. Bulletin, Sept. 1913, v. 15: 458. HC107.N7A5 559 Nicholes, Anna E. From school to work in Chicago; a study of the central office that grants labor certificates. Charities and the Commons, May 12, 1906, v. 16 : 231-235. HVl.C4,v .l6 560 Ogbum, William Fielding. Progress and uniformity in child-labor legislation; a study in statistical measurement. New York, Columbia university; [etc., etc.] 1912. 219 p. incl. tables, diagrs. 25cm. (Studies in history, economics, and public law, ed. by the Faculty of political science of Columbia university, vol. xlvin, no. 2, whole no. 121) H31.C7,v.48,no.2 HD6243.U505 “ A description of the child-labor laws of theUnited States during the past third of a century.” 561 Ohio. Industrial commission. Schooling certificates and the employment of minors. (In its Bulletin, Dec. 1, 1913, v. 1, p. 4-5) HD8053.O3A4 562 Pennsylvania. Bureau of vocational education. A digest of the decisions of the attorney general interpreting the child labor act of 1915, and directions for the issuance of employment certificates. Harrisburg, Pa., 1916. 16 p. 23cm. (Bulletin 6) 563 ------------------- The Pennsylvania child labor act and continuation schools. Harrisburg, Pa., 3915. 26 p. 230m. (Bulletin 5) 564 Pennsylvania child labor association. 1913. 5 v. 15|-23cm. [Pamphlets] Philadelphia, 1912- Pennsylvania’ s problem; A proposed child labor law; Outline of the Walnut child labor bill; On the firing line; Some facts relating to the child labor bill. 1913. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 52 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 565 Roszelle, Edward M. Legislation proposed by the labor unions, (in Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hartford] 1909. 22cm. p.21-23.) HD6250.U4C8 1908 566 Scott, Laura. Summary of laws in force 1910; child labor. New York, 1910. 139 p. 230111. (Legislative review no. 5. American association for labor legislation) HD7833.A5 567 Sheets, Nellie F. Notes on current legislation: Child labor: Mississippi and Kentucky. American political science review, Nov. 1908, v. 2 : 569-571. JA l.A 6,v .2 Stimson, Frederic Jesup. Handbook to the labor law of the United States. New York, C. Scribner’s sons, 1896. 2 p. 1., [vii]-xxii, (2), 385 p. 19om. Treats of laws regulating child labor in the various states. HD7834.S8 568 569 --------- Popular law-making; a study of the origin, history, and present tenden cies of law-making by statute. New York, C. Scribner’s sons, 1911. xii p., 11., 390 p. 22£cm. JF432.U6S8 1911 Child labor, p. 221-226. 570 ; Swift, W. H. Why it is hard to get good child labor laws in the South. New . York city, National child labor committee [1914?] 6 p. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 235) Reprinted from the Child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 1, May 1914. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 571 Taylor, Florence I. comp. Child labor laws in all the states. Comp, by Florence I. Taylor, July, 1915. New York, National child labor committee, 1915. 64 p. 23cm. (Pamphlet no. 249) 572 U. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States, v. 6. The beginnings of child labor legislation in certain states; a comparative study. By Elizabeth Lewis Otey. Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1910. 225 p. 23cm. (61st Cong. 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645. v. 6) HD6093.A4,v.6 C ontents .— Employment of children in the colonies; Public opinion and child labor in the nineteenth century; Children in the cotton industry; a historical sketch; Child labor legislation prior to 1860: Introduction; Massachusetts; Rhode Island; Connecticut; Vermont; New Hamp shire; Maine; New York; New Jersey; Pennsylvania; Delaware; Maryland, and Ohio; Child labor legislation in four Southern states: North Carolina, South Carolina, Georgia, Alabama; Con clusion. 573 ----------------------------- v. 19. Labor laws and factory conditions. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1912. 1125 p. 23cm. (61st Cong. 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645. v. 19.) HD6093.A4,v.l9 574 --------- Bureau of labor statistics. Decisions of courts affecting labor. 1912, 1913, 1914, 1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913-1916. 4 v. 23cm. (Its Bulletin no. 112,152,169, 189.) HD8051.A62 See Indexes for decisions relating to the employment of children. 575 ------------------- Labor laws of the United States, with decisions of courts relating thereto. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 2 v. (Its Bulletin no. 148) HD7833.A4 1914 See Index, v. 2, p. 2450-2453 for laws relating to employment of children in various trades, age limit, certificates, night work, horns of labor, etc. etc. Labor legislation of 1914. Labor legislation of 1915. 1915. 1916. 290 p. 494 p. (Its Bulletin, no. 166) (Its Bulletin, no. 186) 576 --------- Children’s bureau. . Administration of child labor laws. Pt. 1. Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 69p. fold, diagrs., forms. 24Jcm. (Industrial series, no. 2. Bureau publication, no. 12.) HD6250.U3A4 1915a HY741.A32 Pt. 1. Employment certificate system, Connecticut, by Helen L. Sumner and Ethel E. Hanks. Pt. 2. Employment certificate system, New York, by Helen L. Sumner and Ethel E. Hanks. In press.—Reports on Maryland, Massachusetts, Ohio, and Wisconsin, in progress. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 53 577 XL 8 . Children’s bureau. Child labor legislation in the United States, b y Helen L. Sumner and Ella A. Merritt. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 1131 p. tables (part fold.) 24|cm. (Industrial series, no. 1. Bureau pub lication, no. 10) HD6243.U5A4 1915 HV741.A32,no.lO ‘.‘ Analytical tables” : p. 27-475. “ Text of laws” [of the several states and territories, the District of Columbia, the Philippine Islands and Porto Rico]: p. 477-1106. Separates, numbered 1 to 54, have also been issued, as reprints. No. 1 contains the “ Analytical tables” and no. 2-54 contain the laws of the several states, etc., arranged alphabetically: no. 2, Alabama; no. 3, Alaska; No. 10, District of Columbia, etc., etc., g --------- Congress. House. Committee on the District of Columbia. Child labor in the District of Columbia. Report. Apr. 6,1906. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1906.] 5 p. 23£cm. (59th Cong. 1st'seas. House. Rept. 2949.) Her. no. 4907 579 ------------- — -------- Employment of child labor in the District of Columbia . . . Report. [To accompany H. R. 16063] [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1908] 8 p. 23cm. (60th Cong., 1st sess. House. Rept. 1524) HD6243.U5A4 1908 57 580 ----------------------------- Report of hearings of March 13 and 16, 1906, on S. 1243, providing for compulsory education in the District of Columbia; and H. R. 375 and 5974, to regulate child labor in the District of Columbia . . . Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1906. 62 p. 23cm. LC132.D6A3 581 ——— Laws, statutes, etc. 59th Cong. 1st sess. H. R. 17838. A bill to regulate the employment of child labor in the District of Columbia. Apr. 6, 1906. 7 p. 23£cjn. 582 Valesh, Eva McDonald. Child labor. American federationist, Mar. 1907, v. 14: 157-173. HD8055.A5A2,v.l4 Abstract of state laws, p. 158-1G1. 583 --------- Child labor legislation. American federationist, Aug. 1909, v. 16: 672675. . HD8055.A5A2,v.l6 584 Van der Vaart, Harriet. Has the Illinois child labor law brought distress? Charities, Sept. 5,1903, v. 11:191-192. H V l.C 4,v.ll 585 Watson, E. J. Enforcement of child labor laws in South Carolina. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: ,96-102. Hl.A4,v.35 586 White, Sophie D. Court decisions affecting child labor: 1902-1914. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1916,v. 4, no. 4:207-212. HD6250.U3N4,v.4,no.4 587 Whitin, Ernest Stagg. Factory legislation in Maine. New York, Columbia university, Longmans, Green & co., agents; [etc., etc.] 1908. 145 p. 25cm. (Studies in history, economics, and public law, ed. by the Faculty of political science of Columbia university, vol. x x x m , no. 1) HD7835.M2W5 H31.C7,v.33,no.l Early child labor laws, 1847-1855, p. 26-46. Expansion of factory legislation, 1887-1903: Employment of children, p. 85-101. Child labor campaign, 1905-1907, p. 102-122. Administration and the factory law, 1908: Child labor, p. 130-138. Street trades, p. 137-138. 588 Whittelsey, Sarah Scovill. Massachusetts labor legislation; an historical and critical study . . . with an introduction by A. T. Hadley. [Philadelphia, American academy of political & social science, 1900] 157 p. table. 24|cm. HD7835.M4W6 American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Jan. 1901. Bibliography: p. 145-157. Early child labor laws, 1867, p. 9-12; Later child labor laws, 1876-1890, p. 16-21, 66-67, 83-85; “ Digest of the labor laws of Massachusetts: I. Regulation of child labor,” p. 113; n. “ Hours ol labor of women and children,” p. 113-116. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 54 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 589 Williamson, E m i ly E . Child labor legislation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1903, v. 21: 446-451. Hl.A4,v.21 A synopsis of a report to tire National conference of charities and correction held at Atlanta, May 6-13, 1903, arranged by states. 590 Woolley, Mrs. Helen Bradford (Thompson). The issuing of working permits and its bearing on other school problems, [n. p., 1915] 7 p. 27cjn. “ Reprinted from School and society, v. 1, no. 21, p. 726-733, May 22,1915” . U N IF O R M L E G IS L A T IO N . 591 Conference of commissioners on uniform state laws. Proceedings. Danbury, Conn, [etc.] 1910-1913. 4 v. 22Jcm. JK2439.A3 1910: Report of the Special committee on a uniform child labor law: p. 190-214. 1911: Second report: p. 175-176. 1913: Committee continued: p. 58. 592 --------- The uniform child labor law as approved and recommended by the Con ference of commissioners on uniform state laws. 4th ed. rev. Feb., 1912. New York, 1912. 24 p. 23cm 593 --------- Special committee on a uniform child labor law. Report of the Special committee on a uniform child labor law. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1910. 30 p. 23fcm. HD6250.U3C6 Hollis R . Bailey, chairman. Submitted “ to the Commissioners on uniform state laws in twentieth national conference.” Also printed in American bar association. Report, 1910, p. 1154-1178. 594 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. What should we sacrifice to uniformity? American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v.' 38: 24-30 Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 160. 8 p. HD6250.U3N 2,no.160 595 Kendall, Henry P. The effect of uniform labor standards on interstate compe tition. Child labor bulletin, May, 1915, v. 4: 27-35. HD6250.U3N4,v.4 596 Lindsay, Samuel McCune. Unequal laws an impediment to child labor legis lation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supple ment, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 16-22. Hl.A4,v.35 597 Lovejoy, Owen R. Uniform child labor laws. 2d ed., rev. to Aug. 1911. New York, 1911. 24 p. 23°m. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 147) HD6250.U3N2,110.147 598 Massachusetts. Commissioners for promotion of uniformity of leg islation in the United States. Annual report. Boston, 1910-1913. 5 v. 23cm. JK2430.M4 1st report, 1909: Child labor law: p. 9. 2d report, 1910: Report of the Special committee on a uniform child labor law: p. 13-38. 3d report, 1911: Uniform child labor law: p. 4. 4th report, 1912: Uniform child labor law: p. 3-4. 5th report, 1913: Uniform child labor law: p. 3-4. 599 Stovall, A. T. Standards proposed by United States commission on uniform laws. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supple ment, July, 1911,’ v. 38: 17-23. Hl.A4,v.38 600 Uniform child labor law; an act to regulate the employment of children and to make uniform the laws relating thereto. Child labor bulletin, Aug. 1912, v. 1, no. 2, p. 80-107. HD6250.U3N4,v.l FE D E R A L CONTROL. 601 Beveridge, Albert J. Child labor and the nation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 115-124. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 55. 10 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.55 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 602 55 B everid ge, A lb e rt J. Child labor and the constitution. (In National con ference of charities and correction, Proceedings. Minneapolis, 1907. p. 188-196) HV88.A3 1907 603 --------- Employment of child labor; States, January 23, 28, and 29, 1907: Speech in the Senate of the United Washington, 1907. 170 p. 23cm. HD6250.U3B5 Also printed in his “ The meaning of the times, and other speeches,” Indianapolis, 1908, p. 308367. H35.B5 604 --------- The need of a national child labor law. Feb. 1907, v. 34: 17-18. 605 ------— The position of child labor legislation. v. 62: 434H136. Woman’s home companion, AP2.W714,v.34 Independent, Feb. 21, 1907, AP2.I53,v.62 606 B orah, William E . The state and the nation in child labor regulation. Ameri can academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 154-155. Hl.A4,v.38 607 B rinton, Jasper Y e a te s. The constitutionality of a federal child labor law. University of Pennsylvania law review and American law register, May, 1914, v. 62: 487-503. 608 Bruce, Andrew Alexander. The Beveridge child labor bill and the United States as parens patriae. Michigan law review, June, 1907, v. 5: 627-638. 609 Bryan, William Jennings. The child labor bill. [Editorial] Commoner, Dec. 1906, v. 6 : 2. 610 Child, R ichard Washburn. Child-toil and the Constitution. Ridgway’s, Dec. 22, 1906, v. 1: 35. AP2.R557,v.l 611 Child labor and the federal government. Outlook; Jan. 13, 1915, v. 109: 56. AP2.O8,v.l09 612 The Children’s chance before Congress. Survey, Jan. 16, 1915, v. 33; 413-415. HVl.C4,v.33 613 Emery, James A . Argument in opposition to form and validity of H. R. 8234, commonly known as Keating child labor bill, interstate commerce in products of child labor [hearing before Senate Committee on interstate commerce] Feb. 21, 1916. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916] 41 p. 23cm. HD6250.U2A4 1916 Found also in the Hearings: p. 241-282. 614 Farnam , H enry W. The relation of state and federal legislation to the child labor problem. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn. 1908. Re port of the proceedings [Hartford] 1909. 22cm. p. 32-39) HD6250.U4C8 1908 615 F ederal child labor bill passes the House. Survey, Feb. 27, 1915, v. 33: 569. HVl.C4,v.33 616 F ederal con trol over “ anti-social labor.” Survey, Aug. 16, 1913, v. 30: 615-616. HVl.C4,v.30 617 F ederal p ow er and child labor. Nation, Feb. 12, 1914, v. 98: 150-151. AP2.N2,v.98 618 K elley, Mrs. F loren ce. The federal government and the working children. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 289-292. f Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 31-34; Pamphlet no. 26. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.26 019 --------- Responsibility of the federal government. Child labor bulletin, Aug. 1915, v. 4, no. 2 : 107-110. HD6250.U3N4,v.4,no.2 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 56 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 620 Kitchin, William Walton. Child labor bill. Statement before the Committee on labor, House of representatives, 64th Cong., 1st sees, on H. R. 8234. Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1916. 20 p. 23em. HD6250.U3A4 1916a Found also in the Hearings: p. 139-157. 621 Lewis, William D. Child labor and interstate commerce. 1914, v. 32: 35^-37. Survey, Apr. 4, HVl.C4,v.32 622 --------- The federal power to regulate child labor in the light of Supreme Court decisions. University of Pennsylvania law review and American law register, May, 1914, v. 62 : 504-508. 623 Lindsay, Samuel McCune. The national remedy for child labor. Woman’s home companion, Apr. 1907, v. 34: 28. AP2.W714,v.34 624 ------ — Why a national crusade against child labor? Woman’s home companion, Sept. 1906, v. 33:8, 49. AP2.W714,v.33 625 Love joy, Owen It. Federal government and child labor, and memorandum on the Palmer child labor bill. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1914, v. 2, no. 4: 19-34. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 626 --------- The federal government and child labor. A brief for the Palmer-Owen child labor bill. New York, National child labor committee, 1914. 23 p. 23eln. (Pamphlet no. 216) HD6250.U3N2,no.216 627 MacChesney, Nathan William. Constitutionality of the federal child labor law. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1915, v. 4, no. 3: 155-163. Cases cited in footnotes. HD6250.U3N4,v.4,no,3 _ 628 McKelway, A. J. The evil of child labor: why the South should favor a national law. Outlook, Feb. 16,1907, v. 85:360-364. AP2.08,v.85 629 ——— Why the South should favor a national child labor law. Woman’s home companion, Apr. 1907, v. 34: 28. AP2.W714,v.34 630 Maxey, Edwin. The constitutionality of the Beveridge child labor bill. Green bag, May, 1907, v. 19: 290-292. 631 Murphy, Edgar Gardner. Child labor as a national problem, with especial ref erence to the southern states. (In National conference of charities and correc tion. Proceedings, 1903. [Columbus, O.], 1903. 23cm. p. 121-134) HY88.A3 1903 632 --------- The federal regulation of child labor, a criticism of the policy represented in the Beveridge-Parsons bill. [New Haven?Conn., Tuttle press? 1907] 38 p. 20Jcm. HD6243.U5M8 In part, a reprint of an article written for the Evening post, of New York city, and published March 9th, 1907 . . . An earlier criticism had appeared in the Advertiser of Montgomery, Ala bama, under date of Jan. 13th . . . In the present publication . . . the more important sections of both statements . . . have been preserved, certain passages have been rewritten, and a number of new paragraphs have been introduced. 633 National child labor committee, New York. The Federal child labor bill; program of tenth annual conference on child labor, New Orleans, La., March 15-18,1914, with a copy of the federal child labor bill and a memorandum on its constitutionality. New York city, National child labor committee, 1914. 79 p. illus., col. diagr. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 4) HD6250.U3N4,v.2 C ontents .— Editorial notes.— Program of tenth annual conference on child labor.— Federal government and child labor, and memorandum on the Palmer child labor bill [by] O. It. Lovejoy.—Ten years of child labor reform in the South [by] A. J. McKelway.—The eight-horn day [by] Anna Rochester.—The majesty of the law in Mississippi [by] E. N. Clopper.—Present conditions in the South [by] L. W . Hine.— Strawberry pickers of Maryland [by] H. M. Bremer.—The work of England’s certifying surgeons [by] H. H. Jones. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 5¥ 634 National child labor committee, New Yorh. Supporters of the KeatingOwen bill. New York city, 1916. 7 p. 23cm. (its Pamphlet no. 256, Jan. 1916) HD6250.U3N2,no.256 635 --------- What the newspapers say about the Keating-Owen bill. New York city, 1916. 4 p. 23cm. (Its Pamphlet no. 258, Jan. 1916) HD6250.U3N2,no.258 636 --------- Why you should support the Paliner-Owen bill. Pamphlet no. 240. Jan. 1915. 4p . HD6250.U3N2,no.240 637 Palmer-Owen child labor bill. Outlook, Oct. 10, 1914, v. 108: 8. AP2.O8,v.l08 638 Parkinson, Thomas I. A brief for the Keating-Owen bill. Child labor bulle tin, Feb. 1916, v. 4, no. 4: 219-265. HD6250.U3N4,v.4,no.4 639 ------ — Constitutionality of a federal child labor law . . . [by] Thomas I. Park inson . . . and Nathan W. MacChesney. New York city, National child labor committee, 1916. 20 p. 23cm. (Its Pamphlet no. 250, Jan. 1916) Reprinted from Child labor bulletin, v. 4, no. 1, May 1915, and v. 4, no. 3, Nov. 1915. HD6250.U3N2,no.250 640 --------- Constitutionality of Keating-Owen child labor bill. Statement . . . delivered before House Committee on labor, Jan. 13,. 1916. Washington, Oovt. print, off., 1916. 27 p. 23cm. HD6250.TJ3A4 1916b Found also in Hearings, p. 176-201. 641 --------- Constitutionality of the Keating-Owen child-labor bill. A brief in sup port of the constitutionality of the bill. Congressional record, 64th Cong., 1st sess., v. 53, no. 33 (current file): 2058-2066. 642 ---------Interstate commerce in products of child labor. [Statement before Senate Committee on interstate commerce] Feb. 17, 1916. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916] 18 p. 23cm Found also in the Hearings: p. 113-130. 643 --------- Precedents for federal child labor legislation. Child labor bulletin, May, 1915, v. 4: 72-82. HD6250.U3N4,v,4 644 Pierce, Franklin. Federal usurpation. New York, D. Appleton and com pany, 1908. xx, 437 p. 21cm. JK311.P5 “ This book is a plea ior the sacredness oi the Constitution of the United States. ” Unconstitutionally of federal control of child labor: p. 289-291. 645 Rochester, A. The consumer and the federal child labor law. Survey, July 18, 1914, v. 32: 412-413. * HVl.C4,v.32 Survey [Editorial], Progress of the federal child labor bill. Survey, Sept. 19, 1914, v. 32: 606. HVl.C4,v.32 647 To prohibit interstate trade in child labor. Survey, Feb. 7, 1914, v. 31: 539. HVl.C4,v.31 648 Troutman, Robert B. Constitutionality of a federal child labor law. Green bag, Apr., 1914, v. 26:154-160 646 An argument in favor of the constitutionality of a federal child labor law. 649 TT. S. Congress. House. Committee on labor. Child labor bill. Hear ings before the Committee on "labor, House of representatives, Sixty-third Congress, second session, on IT R. 12292, a bill to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor, and for other purposes. February 27 [and March 9] 1914. Washington, Govt, print. off., 1914. 9, ii, 11-83 p. 23cm. David J. Lewis, chairman. HD6250.IT3A4 1914 — ---------------- February 27 and March 9 [also May 22] 1914. Washington, Govt, print, off!, 1914. 83, ii, 85-147 p. 23icm. HD6250.U3A4 1914a https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 58 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 650 IT. S. Congress. House. Committee on labor. Child-labor bill. Report. < T o accompany H. R. 12292.]> Feb. 13,1915. [Washington, Govt, print,, off., 1915.] 50 p. 23£cjn- (63d Cong. 3d sess. House. Kept. 1400.) HD6250.U3A4 1914c Appendix: Statements of Mrs. Florence Kelley, Julia C. Lathrop, Arthur Reed Perry, and A fc J. McKelway; The eight-hour day for children, b y Anna Rochester; The operation of the eight« hour law for children in Massachusetts, b y Richard K. Conant; Medical opinions upon eight* hour day; Constitutionality of Palmer bill, b y Jasper Y . Brinton; The federal power to regu late child labor in the light of Supreme court decisions, b y William Draper Lewis; Constitution ality of a federal child labor law, b y Owen R. Lovejoy. 651 ----------------------- Report amending by substitute H. R. 12292, to prevent interstate commerce in products of child labor. Aug. 13, 1914. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914.] 2 p. 2Sem. (63d Cong. 2d sess. House. Rept. 1085.) 652 ----------------------------- Child labor bill. Hearings . . . on H. R. 8234, a bill to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor and for other pur poses. Jan. 10, 11, and 12,1916. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916. 317 p. 23-|cm. HD6250.H3A4 1916 Child labor laws in all the states: p. 208-234. 653 ----------------------------- To prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor. Report. Jan. 17, 1916. To accompany H. R. 8234. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916.] 41 p. 23£cm. (64th Cong. 1st sess. House. Rept.46.) HD6250.U3A4 1916c, pt. 1 Same. Views of the minority. Jan. 24, 1916. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916.] 14 p. 23£cm. (64th Cong. 1st sess. House. Rept. 46, pt. 2.) HD6250.U3A4 1916c,pt.2 The appendix to pt. 1, p. 17-41, contains statements by A. J. McKelway, Mrs. Florence Kelley, Julia C. Lathrop; The eight-hour day for children, by Anna Rochester; The operation of the eight-hour law for children in Massachusetts, b y Richard K- Conant; Medical opinions upon eight-hour day; Summary of investigations made by Penn. Child labor assoc.; Constitutionality of Keating bill, b y Jasper Y . Brinton; The Federal power to regulate child labor in the light of Supreme court decisions, by William Draper Lewis. The views of the minority deal mostly with the constitutionality of the bill. 654 ------------------- Committee on the judiciary. Jurisdiction and authority of Congress over the subject of woman and child labor. Report. < T o accompany H. res. no. 807> [Washington, Govt, print, off.] 1907 . 8 p. 23e:m. (59th Cong., 2d. sess. House. Rept. no. 7304) 655 --------- Senate. Committee on interstate commerce. Interstate com merce in products of child labor. Report. < T o accompany H. R. 12292> [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915] 2 p. 24|cm. (63d Cong., 3d sess. Senate. Rept. 1050) HD6250.U3A4 1915 656 ----------------------------- Interstate commerce in products of child labor. Hearings before the Committee on interstate commerce, IT. S. Senate, Sixty-fourth Con gress, first session, on H. R. 8234, an act to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor, and for other purposes. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916. 290, ii, 291-319 p. 23cm. HD6250.U3A41916g 657 ------------- —=-------------To prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor. Report. < T o accompany H. R. 8234^> [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916] 23 p. 23cin. (64th Cong., l§t sess. Senate. Rept. 358) Submitted by Mr. Robinson. Ordered printed April 19,1916. HD6250.U3A41916d 658 -------- r Laws, statutes, etc. 63d Cong., 3d sess. H. R. 12292. An act to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor, and for other pur poses. Feb. 19 (calendar day, March 1) 1915. 4 p. J301913-15,v.33 659 ------------------- 64th Cong. 1st sess. H. R. 8234. A bill to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor, and for other purposes. Introduced in the House of representatives, Jan. 7, 1916, by Mr. Keating. 5 p. 27^CH>. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 5$ LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 660 Villard, O. G. The federal child labor bill. Nation, Jan. 31, 1907, v. 84: 98. AP2.N2,v.84 Speeches in Congress as printed in the Congressional Record. 59TH C O N G ., 1ST S E S S . 661 V O L . 40. XT. S. Congress. House. Child labor in the District of Columbia. in the House, Apr. 9, 1906. pt. 5: 4967-4971. Debate Messrs. Morrell, Fitzgerald, Tawney, Madden, and Crumpacker. 662 —------ Senate. Child labor in the District of Columbia. Senate, June 6, 1906.' pt. 8: 7914-7915. Debate in the Senators Dubois, Hale, Lodge, Scott, and Tillman. 59TH C O N G ., 2D S E S S . V O L . 41. . . } 663 Bacon, Augustus O. Remarks in the Senate, Feb. 4, 1907, on employment of child labor, pt. 3: 2214-2216. Contains text of the Georgia law. 664 B everidge, A lbert J. Speeches in the Senate, Jan. 23, 28, 29, 1907, on employment of child labor in the District of Columbia, pt. 2: 1552-1557, 1792-1826, 1867-1883. 665 Crumpacker, Edgar D. Woman and child workers in the United States. Speech in the House of representatives, Jan. 21, 1907. pt. 2, p. 1458-1460, 1461, 1473. j 666 Gardner, Augustus P. Woman and child workers in the United States, Speech in the House of representatives, Jan. 21, 1907. 60TH C O N G ., 1ST S E S S . 667 V O L . 42. Fulton, Charles W. Employment of child labor. May 6, 1908. Appendix, p. 474-475. 668 U. S. Congress. House. pt. 6: 6030-6035. pt. 2, p. 1462-1463. Speech in the Senate Child labor in District of Columbia. May 9, 1908, Text of bill. 669 --------- Senate. Employment of child labor [in the District of Columbia] May 6, 1908. pt. 6: 5785-5802. 670 ------------- ------ Employment of child labor in the District of Columbia. Debate in Senate, May 21, 1908. pt. 7: 6982-6985. 671 ---------- -----— Conference report on child-labor law. May 22, 1908. pt. 8: 7077-7078. 63D C O N G ., 2D S E S S ., V O L . 51. 672 Rogers, John Jacobs. Out-Heroding Herod. House, Sept. 29, 1914. Appendix: 1046-1054. Extension of remarks in the Gives a summary of the legislation enacted in the various states. 673* U. S. Congress. House. Debate in the House, Mar. 18, 1914, on an amend ment relating to child labor to bill H. R. 14330, relating to convict-made goods, pt. 5: 5055-5066. Messrs. Kelley (Mioh.), Bartlett, Mann, McLaughlin, Howard, Fordney, Madden, and others. 63D C O N G ., 3D S E S S ., V O L . 52. 674 Clark, David. A demand for a square deal. Speech before the National child labor conference, recently held in the city of Washington. Appendix: 169-170. Introduced into the Record, Jan. 23,1915, by Mr. Webb. Opposed to federal bill. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis j i 60 675 L IS T OF R E FE R E N C E S ON C H IL D LABOR. Georgia. Laws, statutes, etc. An act regulating the employment of chil dren. Aug. 14, 1914. pt. 4: 4122-4123. Introduced, with a few remarks, by Mr. Palmer. 676 Know land, Joseph R . Child-labor. Speech in the House, Feb. 18, 1915. pt. 4:. 4022-4023. 677 News & Observer, Raleigh, N. C. Editorial, “ Trying to push back the ocean” , pt. 5: 5338. Introduced by Mr. Norris. 678 XT. S. Congress. House. Child labor. Debate in the House, Feb. 15,1915, on the bill (H. R. 12292) to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor, and for other purposes, as amended, pt. 4: 3827-3836, _ The rules were suspended and the bill passed. 64TH C O N G ., 1ST S E S S . 679 680 681 682 683 684 685 686 687 688 689 V O L . 63 (C U R R E N T F IL E ). Ayres, William A. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 36 (current file): 2270. Blackmon, Fred L. Child labor. Speech in the House, Feb, 2, 1916. no. 39 (current file): 2541. Borland, William P . The child-labor bill. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 31 (current file): 1937-1938. Carter, William H. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 30 (current file): 1843. Cary, William J. The child labor bill. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 39 (current file): 2542. Church, Denver S. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 40 (current file): 2610-2611. Cline, Cyrus. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26,1916. no. 36 (current file): 2269. Cooper, John G. Child-labor bill. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 28, 1916. no. 31 (current file): 1937. Cox, William E. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 33 (current file): 2055-2056. Doughton, Robert L. Child labor. Speech in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 36 (current file): 2268-2269. Gallivan, James A. Child labor in mills, factories, and mines. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 33 (current file): 2056. Includes an editorial from Boston Post of Sunday, Jan. 23,1916, on “ Child-labor Sunday.” Gray, Finly H. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2,1916. no. 39 (current file): 2538-2539. • 691 Green, William R. The constitutionality of law forbidding the transportation in interstate commerce of the products of child labor. Speech in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 38 (current file): 2476. 692 Hicks, Frederick C. Right of Congress to regulate the shipment of the prod ucts of child labor as a part of interstate commerce. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 39 (current file): 2544. 693 Johnston, A . S. Child labor. Letter favoring the passing of the Keating child-labor bill. Jan. 11, 1916. no. 29 (current file): 1785. 690 Introduced into the Record by Mr. Dyer, Jan. 26,1916. 694 Keating, Edward. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916, on the bill (H. R. 8234) no. 35 (current file): 2189-2195. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L IS T O F R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABO R. 61> 695 Kennedy, Ambrose. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 33 (current file): 2048-2049. 696 Kenyon, William S. National child labor law. 1916. no. 56 (current file): 3661-3694. Speech in the Senate, Feb. 24, Contains digest of comparative state legislation, and digest of child labor laws of Austria, . Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, and Switzerland. 697 Lenroot, Irvine L. Child labor. (current file): 1843-1844. 698 London, Meyer. Child labor. (current file): 2537-2538. Speech in the House, Jan. 26,1916. no. 30 Speech in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 39 699 McCracken, Robert M. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 44 (current file): 2855-2856. 700 McCulloch, Roscoe C. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 33 (current file): 2066. 701 Nolan, John I. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2,1916. no. 39 (current file): 2539-2540. 702 P age, R o b e rt N. Child labor. (current file): 2465-2466. Speech in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 38 703 Platt, Edmund. The child-labor bill. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 40 (current file): 2613-2614. 704 Randall, Charles H. Child labor and humanitarian laws. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 39 (current file): 2541, 705 Ricketts, Edwin D. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 27, 1916. no. 30 (current file): 1845-1846. 706 Schall, Thomas D. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 38 (current file): 2470-2471. 707 Scott, J ohn R. K. Child-labor bill. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 39 (current file): 2543-2544. 708 Sears, William J. Child labor. (current file): 2475. 709 Shouse, Jouett. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 28, 1916. no. 35 (current file): 2203. 710 Siegel, Isaac. Child labor—Keating bill. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 35 (current file): 2204-2205. 711 Smith, Addison T. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 36 (current file): 2262-2264. Speech in the House, Feb. 2, 1916. no. 38 712 U. S. Congress. House. Keating child-labor bill. Remarks in the House, Jan. 19, 1916, on the bill (H. R. 8234). no. 22 (current file): 1424-1425. Messrs. Lewis of Md., Ragsdale, Watson of Va., Mann. 713 ------------------- Child labor. Debate in the House, Jan. 26, 1916, on the bill (H. R. 8234) to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor, and for other purposes, no. 29 (current file): 1744-1768. Messrs. Lewis, Mann, Moore of Pa., Keating, Vare, Byrnes of S. C., Britt, Tague, Nicholls of S. C., Quin, Rogers, Sherley, Ragsdale, Cannon, Pou, Austin, Hardy, Howard, Dallinger, Adamson, Watson of Va. 7 1 4 ------------------ Child-labor bill. Debate in the House, Feb. 2, 1916, on the bill (H. R. 8234) no. 35 (current file): 2149-2174. The bill was passed: p. 2174. 715 Van Dyke, Carl C. Child-labor bill. Extension of remarks in the House,-Jan. 29,1916. no. 33 (current file): 2049-2050. 716 Vare, William S. Child labor. Extension of remarks in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no.,29 (current file): 1789-1790. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 62 L IS T o f referen ces on c h il d labor . 717 W atson, W alter A . Child labor. Speech in the Houae, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 40 (current file): 2601-2606. 718 Webb, Edwin Y . Child labor in mills, factories, and mines. Speech in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 32 (current file): 1986-1993. 719 W ood, William R . Child labor. Speech in the House, Jan. 26, 1916. no. 30 (current file): 1846. STATISTICS. 720 Bliss, H. L. Census statistics of child labor. Journal of political economy, Mar. 1905, v. 13: 245-257. • HBl.J7,v.l3 721 Clopper, Edward N. Child worker in the Census report of 1910. Survey, Sept. 26, 1914, v. 32: 628-629. HVl.C4,v.32 722 --------- The extent of child labor officially measured. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1914, v. 3, no. 3: 30-36. HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.3 Also printed as National child labor committee, Pamphlet no. 237. 8 p. 723 Devine, E. T. Some statistics of child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1903, v. 21: 505-506. Hl.A4,v.21 724 Drown, Frank S. The Massachusetts bureau of statistics. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 134-136. Hl.A4,v.35 725 Hall, F re d S . Child labor statistics. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 114-126. Hl.A4,v.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 130. 13 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l30 726 N ational child labor com m ittee, New York. What state laws and the fed eral census say about child labor. New York city, 1915. 4 tables. 23c™. (Its Pamphlet no. 248, July, 1915) HD6250.U3N2,no.248 727 Sargent, Frank B. Census statistics on employment of children in manufac tures. Journal of political economy, Oct. 1910, v. 18: 628-633. HBl.J7,v.l8 728 H. S. Bureau of the census. Child labor in the District of Columbia, based on unpublished information derived from the schedules of the Twelfth census, 1900. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1906. 21 p. 30x23£em. Bulletin 68) HA201.1900. A12, no .68 HD625Q.U4D6 1906 729 --------- Child labor in the United States, based on unpublished information de rived from the schedules of the Twelfth census, 1900. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1907. 200 p. 30x23Jcm. (Bulletin 69) HA201.1900.A12,no.69 • HD6250.U3A3 729a------------------- Manufactures, 1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1907-08. 4 v. diagrs. 30om. 730 ------------------- Thirteenth census of the United States, 1910. Vol. IV. Popu lation, 1910. Occupation statistics. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 615 p. 40cm. HA201.1910.A15,v.4 Contains statistics of children by age periods of 10 to 13, 14 to 15 years, arranged by specified occupations, states, and cities. See also volumes on Manufactures, and Mines and quarries. 7 3 1 ------------------ Index to occupations, alphabetical and classified. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 414 p. 23cm. HA201.1910.Z4 732 Whittemore, Gilbert E. The Providence school census system. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 130-133. Hl.A4,v.35 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis L I S T OF B E F E B E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOB. 63 733 Williams, John. Uniform systems of child labor statistics. American, academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 144-152. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 112. 9 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.ll2 FOREIGN COUNTRIES. GENERAL. 734 AbelsdorfF, W. Kinderarbeit (gewerbliche) (In Grotjahn, A. and J. Kaup; Handwörterbuch der sozialen Hygiene. Leipzig, 1912. 274cm. v. 1, p . 591-610) RA425.G8,v.l Deutschland; Österreich; Italien; Schweiz; Niederlande; Gross-britannien; Frankreich; Japan; Dänemark; Vereinigte Staaten; Literatur. 735 Annuaire de la législation du travail, publié par l ’Office du travail de Belgique. 1-16. année; 1897-1912. Bruxelles, 1898-1914. 16 v. 24£cm. HD7806.A5 Contains texts of the laws of the various countries regulating child labor; see subject index to each volume. 736 Arendt, Henriette, sister. Kleine weisse Sklaven. Vita, deutschesverlagshaus [°1911]208 p. 19cm. Berlin-Charlottenburg, HV763.A7 737 Brooke, Emma Frances. A tabulation of the factory laws of European coun tries in so far as they relate to the hours of labour, and to special legislation for women, young persons, and children. London, G. Richards, 1898. 52 p. 22iem. HD6081.B8 738 Congrès international du patronage de la jeunesse ouvrière, Paris, 1900. Congrès international du patronage de la jeunesse ouvrière tenu à Paris du 10 au 13 juin 1900; procès-verbaux sommaires, par M. Pierre Griffaton. Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1901. 27 p. 26£cm. HD6229.C7 739 [Ducpétiaux, Edouard] De la condition des ouvriers mineurs dans la GrandeBretagne et en Belgique. Analyse de l ’enquête ordonnée par le Parlement anglais sur le travail des enfants dans les mines. Bruxelles, Impr. de Vandooren frères, 1843. 64 p. illus. 23cm. HD6250.G7D8 “ Extrait des Annales des travaux publics de Belgique,” v. 1, p. [35D]—420. 740 Fischer, Alfons. Die Nachtarbeit der Jugendlichen. Annalen für soziale Politik und Gesetzgebung, 1911-1912, v. 1: 321-324. HD6951.A6,v.l 741 France. Ministère des affaires étrangères. Conférence internationale de Berlin. 15-29 mars 1890. Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1890. 3 p. 1., 128 p. 32«“ . JX683.A25 1890 “ Protocoles et annexes” ; p. [25]—128. 742 Germany. Statistisches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Ge biete und Methoden der amtlichen Arbeitsstatistik in den wichtigsten Indus triestaaten. Berlin, Carl Heymanns Verlag, 1913. vii, 695 p. 25ein. (Bei träge zur Arbeiter-Statistik, 12) HD8441.A25,12 Statistik der Frauen-und Kinderarbeit: Grossbritannien; Vereinigte Staaten von Amerika; Italien; Niederlande; Österreich; Deutsches Reich: p. 378-433. 743 Gt. Brit. Home dept. International conference on labour. Return to an address of the honourable the House of commons, dated 28 March, 1905. Home office, 3 August 1905. Thomas Cochrane. (Mr. Herbert Samuel.) Ordered, by the House of commons, to be printed, 3 August 1905. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode [1905] 39 p., 11. inch fold. tab. 33£e“ . ([Parliament, 1905. H. of C. Repts. and papers] 291) HD7260.I6 1890b Extracts and reports regarding employment of women, children, and young persons. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis §4 L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LABOR. 744 Holland, Robert Wolstenholme. The law relating to the child, its protec tion, education, and employment; with introduction on the laws of Spain, Germany, France, and Italy, and bibliography. London, New York [etc.] Sir I. Pitman & sons, [1914] xxiv, 142 p. 22e1“ . Restrictions on the employment of children and young persons: p. 116-136. 745 International association for labor legislation. Memorandum on the international establishment of a ten-hour maximum working day for women and young persons in industrial employment. Washington [Govt, print, off.] 1913. 63 p. 27icm. HD6064.I5 Issued also as Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 118, Miscellar neous series, no. 3; and as House doc. 1463, 62d Cong. 3d sess. 746 --------- Memorandum on the international prohibition of the industrial night work of young persons. Washington [Govt, print, off.] 1913. 66 p. 28cm. HD5113.I6 Issued also as Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 117, Miscella neous series, no. 2; and as House doc. 1462, 62d Cong. 3d sess. 747 The International congress of women, London, 1899. The International congress of women of 1899; ed. by the Countess of Aberdeen, vi. Women in industrial life. London, T. F. Unwin, 1900. 252 p. 20£cm. Special labour legislation for children, p. 59-85. HQ1106 1899 748 International labor office. Bulletin, v. 1, 1906—v. 10, 1915. London, The Pioneer press, ltd., 1906-1915. 10 v. 24£cni. HD7801.I6 Contains the laws and decrees relating to the protection of children, young persons and women; apprenticeship. 74g -- ------ First comparative report on the administration of labour laws. Inspec tion in Europe. London, P. S. King & son, 1911. xv, 109 p. fold, tables. 230» . HD3656.I7 750 Kenyon, William S. National child labor law. Speech in the Senate, Feb. 24,1916. Congressional record, 64th Cong., 1st sess., v. 53, no. 56 (current file): 3661-3694. Contains digest of child labor laws of Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain, Italy, and Switzerland. 751 Page, Anna B. Labour laws for women and children at home and abroad. Women’s industrial news, no. 63, Oct. 1913, p. 171-186. 752 Ramaix, de. La réforme sociale et économique en Europe et dans les Etats Unis de l ’Amérique du Nord. (In Belgium. Ministère des affaires étrangères. Recueil des rapports des secrétaires de légation de Belgique. Bruxelles, 1889. v. 6, p. 321-674.) HC5.B5,v.6 Réglementation du travail des femmes et des enfants: Germany, p. 382-387; Austria, p. 410413; Hungary, p. 419-420; Great Britain, p. 440-447; France, p. 471-478; Italy, p. 489-491; Switz erland, p. 508-513; The Netherlands, p. 524-529; Luxemburg, p. 535-537; Spain, p. 541-544; Portu gal, p. 549-554; Denmark, p. 560-561; Sweden, p. 572-574; Norway, p 585-587; Russia, p. 592-594; Roumania, p. 602; United States, p. 613-623. A summary of all laws relating to child labor in the various countries. 753 Rich, Edith J. Child labor in Europe: American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1903, v. 21: 499-502. Hl.A4,v.21 754 Shadwell, Arthur. Industrial efficiency; a comparative study of industrial life in England, Germany and America. London, New York and Bombay. Longmans, Green and co., 1906. 2 v. 23|cm. HC53.2.S5 Protection of children: Factory laws in England, v. 2, p. 7-19; in Germany, v. 2, p. 19-27; in the United States of America, v. 2, p. 35-46. 755 Soziale R undschau. Hrsg. vom Arbeitsstatistischen Amte im K. K. Handelsministerium. 1900-1914. Wien, A. Holder [1900-1914] 23icm< monthly. HD8401.A2 Contains translations in German of laws of various countries relating to child labor. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON C H IL D LABOR. 756 65 Stieda, Wilhelm. Jugendliche Arbeiter. (Zn Handwörterbuch der Staats wissenschaften. Hrsg, von J. Conrad. 3. Auf!. Jena, 1910. v. 5, p. 725740) H45.H22,v.5 Literatur: p. 740. 757 TT. S. Bureau of labor. Laws relating to child labor in European countries. (In its Bulletin. July, 1905, no. 59: 302-319) HD8051.A5,no.59.. A résumé of the laws regulating child labor in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Great Brit ain, Italy, and Switzerland. 758 ---------Bureau of labor statistics. Administration of labor laws and factory inspection in certain European countries. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 310 p. 23£cm. (Bulletin, whole no. 142. Foreign labor laws series, no. 1) U. S. 63d Cong. 2d sess. House. Doc. 905. HD8051.A62,no.l42 For information concerning child labor in Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Great Britain and Switzerland, see Index, p. 303. 759 Veditz, Charles William A. Child labor legislation in Europe. U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, July, 1910, no. 89: 1-413. HD8051.A5,no.89 760 Zanten, J. H. van. Die Arbeiterschutzgesetzgebung in den europäischen Ländern. Jena, G. Fischer, 1902. xii, 338 p. ' 26cm. HD7874.Z2' AUSTRIA. 761 Agahd, Konrad. Kinderarbeit und gesetzlicher Kinderschutz in Österreich und Deutschland. Zeitschrift für Socialwissenschaft, May, 1904, v. 7: 330335. Hö.Z6,v.7 762 Austria. Arbeitsstatistisches Amt. Erhebung über die Kinderarbeit in , Österreich im Jahre 1908. Wien, A. Holder, 1910-1913. ^ 3 v. 30Jcin. HD6250.A9A3 Also printed in Soziale Rundschau, 1907, v. 2, p. 395-397; 1908, v. 2, p. 353-357,414-449,500-61% 1909, v. 1, p. 64-87,218-327,539-570,733-761,995-1027; 1909, v. 2, p. 56-81,375-445, 561-608,749-802; 1911, v. 1, p. 17-21, 95-131; 1912, v . l , p . 14-15. HD8401.A2 763 Die Erhebung über die Kinderarbeit in Österreich im Jahre 1908. Germany. Statistisches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, Feb. 1912, v. 10: 113-116. HD8441.A3,v.lO 764 E rhebung über die Kinderarbeit (Bayern). v. 2, p. 614-615. Soziale Rundschau, Nov. 1908, HD8401.A2 1908,v.2 From Zeitschrift des königlich bayerischen statistischen Bureaus, 1908. 765 Fehlinger, Hans. Child labor in Austria. American federationist, July, 1903, v. 10 : 565. HD8055.A5A2,v.l0 766 Freundlich, Emmy. Kinderarbeit in Österreich. Neue Zeit, Mar. 10, 1911, v. 29, pt. 1: 810-818. HX6.N6,v.29,pt.l 767 Hauck, Karl. Die Nachtarbeit der Jugendlichen in der österreichischen In dustrie. Wien, F. Deuticke, 1907. 59 p. diagrs. 23|cm. (Schriften der Österr. Gesellschaft für Arbeiterschutz, xi. Hit.) HD5113.H36 768 Herbst, Rudolf. Die gewerbliche Nachtarbeit der jugendlichen Arbeiter und Kinder in Österreich. Wien, F. Deuticke, 1906. 45 p. 24em. (Schriften der Österr. Gesellschaft für Arbeiterschutz, vm . Hft.) HD5113.H53 - Bibliography: p. [5]. 769 Jeuschik, A . L ’organisation la jeunesse ouvrière én Autriche. Mouvement socialiste, July-Aug. 1913, v. 34:77-89. HX5.M9,v.34 770 Die K inderarbeit in Österreich. 44193°—16------5 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Soziale Praxis, May 2, 1912, v. 21: 969-971. H5.S7,v.21 66 l is t of r e f e r e n c e s o n c h il d labor. 771 Kraus, Siegmund. Kinderarbeit und gesetzlicher Kinderschutz in Öster reich. Wien und Leipzig, F. Deu ticke, 1904. vi, 203 p. 24ienl. (Wiener staatswissenschaftliche Studien. 5. Bd., 3. Hft.) HB41.W6,v.5 “ Literaturnachweis” : p. [200]-203. 772 Lederer, Max. Zur gesetzlichen Regelung der Kinderarbeit in Österreich, Soziale Praxis, July 17, 1913, v. 22: 1175-1176. 'H5.S7,v.22 773 Mises, L udw ig von. Zur Geschichte der österreichischen Fabrikgesetzge bung. Zeitschrift für Volkswirtschaft, Sozialpolitik und Verwaltung, 1905. v. 14: 209-271. KB5.Z5,v.l4 774 Popp, Adelheid. Die Kinderarbeit in Österreich. Neue Zeit, Sept. 26, 1913, r. 31, pt. 2: 1012-1021. HX6.N6,v.31,pt.2 775 Schiff, Walter. Die Kinderarbeit in Oesterreich. Archiv für Sozialwissen schaft und Sozialpolitik, July, Sept. 1913, v. 37: 131-174; 483-520. H5.A8,v.37 776 Trauttmansdorff, Ferdinand Graf von. Kinderarbeit. Österreichische Rundschau, July 15,1914, v. 40: 121-133. AP30.03,v.40 777 Veditz, Charles William August. Child-labor legislation in Austria. (In U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, July, 1910. no. 89. Washington, 1910. p 3-92) HD8051.A5,no.89 HUNGARY. 778 Heller, Wolfgang. Die Kinderarbeit in Ungarn. Jena, G. Fischer, 1912. 38 p. 24cm. (Schriften der ungarischen Vereinigung für gesetzlichen Arbeiterschutz, Hft. 10.) HD6250.A97H7 ~R.iT.ffy, Paul de. La protection de l ’enfance par l ’état et le travail des enfants. Revue de Hongrie, Sept. 15, 1909, v. 4: 302-317. AP25.R4,v.4 780 --------- La protection de l ’enfance par l ’état et le travail des enfants. (In Bosnyék, Zoltán. Le droit de l ’enfant abandonné et le système hongrois de protection de l ’enfance. Budapest, 1909, p. 165—180) HV759.H8B7 781 Schwimmer, Bosika. Staatlicher Kinderschutz in Ungarn. Deutschland, Jan., 1905, v. 5 : 429-435. AP30.D6,v.5 BELGIUM. 779 782 Belgium. Corps législatif. Chambre des représentants. Documents relatifs au travail des enfants et des femmes dans les manufactures, les mines, etc. État de la question en Belgique et à l ’étranger. Bruxelles, F. Gobbaerts, imprimeur du roi, 1871. 462 p. incl. tables. 32V m. HD6250.N3A4 783 --------- Laws, statutes, etc. Act to amend the act of 13th December, 1889, relating to the employment of women, young persons, and children. (Dated May 26, 1914.) International labor office. Bulletin, 1915, v. 10, nos. 1, 2: 14_16. ' HD7S01.l6,v.l0 784 ---------------- — Lois et règlements concernant la poliee du travail et le régime des établissements classés. Bruxelles, Office de publicité, J. Lebègue et cie [etc.) 1909. 374 p. 19£cni. HD7896.A5 Travail des femmes, des adolescents et des enfants dans les établissements industriels: p. 5^83. 785 ------------------- Wetten en verordeningen betreffende den arbeid der vrouwen en kinderen, de politie der ingedeelde inrichtingen en der open groeven, het betalen van het loongeld aan de werklieden, de werkplaatsverordeningen, de arbeidsovereenkomst en het arbeidsopzicht. Brussel, J. Lebègue en cie, 1903. 313 p. 19cm. HD6083.N3A5 1903 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFEREX CES ON CHILD LABOR. 67 Belgium. Ministère de l ’intérieur. Enquête sur les conditions du travail des enfants et des femmes dans les manufactures. [Bruxelles, 1860} At head of title (No. 41) Chambre des représentants. Session de 1859-1860. 116 p. 31cm. HD6156.A5 1860 787 --------- Office du travail. Rapports annuels de l ’Inspection du travail. 1.-17. année, 1895-1911. Bruxelles, 1896-1912. 8 v. pi. (partly col.) plans, diagr. 24J0™. HD8501.A5 786 Included, 1895-1904: Administration des mines. Rapport général sur l’applieation . . . de la loi du 13 décembre 1889 sur le travail des femmes, des adolescents et des enfants. 788 -----— (Territory under German occupation, 1914-) Laws, statutes, etc. Notification by the Governor-General in Belgium with respect to the text of the act relating to the employment of women and children. Dated Dec. 15, 1914. International labor office. ’Bulletin, 1915, v. 10, nos. 1, 2: .61-64. HD7801.I6.V.10 789 Dubois, E. Child labor in Belgium. American academy of political and social science, Annals, July, 1902, y. 20 : 201-220. H i.A4,v .20 790 Ducpétiaux, Édouard. De la condition physique et morale des jeunes ouvriers et des moyens de l ’améliorer. Bruxelles, Meline, Cans et compagnie, 1843. 2 v. 24e” . HD6231.D8 791 McLean, Francis H., and Emile Waxweiler. Child labor in Belgium. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Sept. 1906, v. 28: 303-313. Hl.A4,v.28 792 Ramaix, de. La législation du travail en Belgique. (In Belgium. Ministère des affaires étrangères. Recueil des rapports des secrétaires de légation de Belgique.Bruxelles, 1890. v. 7, p. 1-53) HC5.B5,v.7 Réglementation du travail des femmes et des enfants: p. 41-43. 793 Rowntree, B. Seebohm. Land & labour; lessons from Belgium. London, Macmillan and co., limited, 1910. xx, 633 p. plates, maps, plans, tables, diagrs. 23ora. HC315.R8 See Index under Child labour and Juvenile workers. 794 Veditz, Charles William August. Child-labor legislation in Belgium. (In IT. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, July, 1910, no. 89. Washington, 1910. p. 93-143) HD8051.A5,no.89 795 V ermeersch, Arthur. Manuel social, la législation et les oeuvres en Belgique, avec une préface de M. Gérard Cooreman. Nouv. éd., entièrement refondue. Louvain, A. TJystpruyst; [etc., etc.] 1904. xxxix, 1009 p. 23|cm. La loi sur le travail des femmes et des enfants: p. 185-193. HD8506.Y3 FRANCE. 796 Bouquet, Louis. La réglementation du travail dans l ’industrie. 5. éd. en tièrement refondue et mise à jour. Paris [etc.] Berger-Levrault & cie, 1904. viii, 398 p. 22Ÿm. HD7883.B7 Enfants . . . employés à des travaux agricoles, p. 16-18; Age d’admission au travail, p. 37-46; Durée du travail des enfants, p. 49-57; Travail de nuit des enfants, p. 63-89; Réglementation des travaux soutterrains: Travail des enfants, p. 105-117; Interdiction aux enfants . . . d’effectuer certains travaux dangereux, p. 135-153. 797 Brunhes, H. J., and F. H. McLean. 22, 1905, v. 14: 676-682. Child labor in France. Charities, Apr. H Vl.C4,v.l4 798 Bry, Georges Ernest. Cours élémentaire de législation industrielle; lois du travail et de la prévoyance sociale, questions ouvrières. 4. éd. entièrement rev. Paris, L. Larose & L. Tenin, 1909. viii, 778 p. 22iom. HD3621.B82 Réglementation du travail des enfants et des femmes: p. 318-356. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 68 : LIST ÖF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 799 Courcelle, Louis. Code annoté des lois ouvrières. 1902. xxiv, 321 p. 19£cm. Paris, Marchai et Billard, ' “ Loi du 2 novembre 1892. Sur le travail des enfants, des ûlles mineures et des femmes dans les établissements industriels” : p. 263-304. 800 --------- Traité de législation ouvrière. Avec une préface de Paul Beauregard.. Paris, Y. Giard & E. Brière, 1902. (2), iii, (1) xv, (1), 584 p. 23cm. “ Surveillance, hygiène et sécurité des ouvriers: Enfants, filles mineures et femmes” : p. 115-189. 801 Dagan, Henri. Les enfants “ industrialisés” . Nouvelle revue, June 15, 1903, v. 22: 433-444. . AP20.N8,v.22 802 France. Assemblée nationale, 1871. Chambre des députés. Com mission du travail. Rapport fait au nom de la Commission du travail chargée d ’examiner la proposition de loi de M. Lemire tendant à supprimer le travail de nuit des enfants dans les usines à feu continu, par M. Lemire, député. [Paris, Martinet, imprimeur de la Chambre des députés, 1910] 13 p. 26em. (Chambre des députés. 10. législ.. Sess. extr. de 1910, no. 599. Annexe au Procès-verbal. 16 décembre 1910) HD6250.F8A5 803 --------- Bureau des manufactures. Rapport du Bureau des manufactures sur les réponses à la circulaire du 31 juillet relative à l ’emploi des enfants dans les fabriques. [Paris, Imprimerie royale, 1837] 17 p. 22|cm. [With France. Conseil général de l ’agriculture, des manufactures et du commerce. Procèsverbaux. Paris, 1838] HC271.A2 1837-8 804 ------- - Conseil supérieur du travail. Age d ’admission au service de la clientèle dans les auberges, hôtels, etc. Rapport de M. Abel Craissac, au nom de la Commission permanente. Procès-verbaux, enquête et documents. Paris, Imprimerie nationale. 1913. x, 82 p., 11. incl. tables. 27hcm. •HD6073.W3F8 805 --------- Laws, statutes, etc. Code du travail et de la prévoyance sociale, avec renvois aux ouvrages de MM. Dalloz, pub. sous la direction de MM. Gaston Griolet . . . [et] Charles Vergé . . . avec la collaboration de M. Henry Boürdeaux. 5. éd., rev., cor. et augm. Paris, Dalloz, 1914. vii, [1], 330, 32 p. 15Vm. (Petite collection Dalloz) See Index: p. 22-23, under Enfants. 806 -------- Ministère du travail et de la prévoyance sociale. L ’application, en 1912, .des lois réglementant le travail. Travail des femmes et des enfants. (In its Bulletin, Oct.-Dec. 1913, v. 20 : 976-985; 1073-1090; 1206-1215.) HD8421.A17,v.20 807 ------------------- Décret concernant les travaux dangereux interdits aux enfants et aux femmes. (In France. Journal officiel, Mar. 26, 1914. p. 2777-2783.) J7F2A,Mar.,1914 An English translation of this decree is contained in the Bulletin of International labor office for, Oct. 1915, v. 10: 103-105., 808 — — Parlement, 1910. Chambre des députés. Proposition de loi tendant à la répression de l ’exploitation de l ’enfance, présentée par M. Georges Berry, député. (Renvoyée à la Commission relative au vagabondage et à la mendicité) Dec. 5,1910. (In its Documents parlementaires, 1911. Annexe no. 547. [Paris, 1911] F°. p. 170-174.) 809 [Hutchins, Miss B. Leigh] Labour laws for women in France. [London] Women’s industrial council, 1907. cover-title, 11, [1] p. 2l£cm. HD6083.F8H8 810 Laufer, René. La protection de l ’enfance ouvrière. Les données scientifiques sur le développement des apprentis et jeunes ouvriers. Nouvelle'revue, Apr. 15, 1911, 3d ser. v. 20: 433-451; May 1, 1911, 3d ser. V. 21: 3-18. AP20.N8,v.20,21 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF PREFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR» 69 811 Massé, Daniel. Législation du travail et lois-ouvrières; classification, com mentaire, jurisprudence, législation comparée, projets et propositions de lois. Paris, Nancy, Berger-Levrault et cie, 1904. xii, 974 p. tables. 25Jcm. "Protection générale des enfants, des filles mineures et des femmes,” p. 253-303. 812 P andectes françaises. Nouveau répertoire de doctrine, de législation et de jurisprudence, v. 57. Paris, F. Pichon et Durand-Auzias, 1905. 855 p. 27^cm Titre I, chapitre deuxième: Travail des enfants et des femmes: p. 480-548. Titre II, chapitre troisième, Droit comparé (Comparative law) p. 800-831, contains a summary of the principal laws relating to child labor in Germany, Great Britain, Austria-Hungary, Bel gium, Denmark, Spain, United States, Italy, Luxemburg, Norway, the Netherlands, Portugal, Russia, Sweden and Switzerland. 813 Payen, Édouard. L ’application de la loi de 1892 sur le travail dés enfants et des femmes. Économiste français, Oct. 23, 1909, v. 37: 599-601. HB3.E3,v.37 814 Renard, Georges. L ’enfant dans l ’industrie modem: Le droit de l ’enfant. Revue politique et littéraire, Revue bleue, Dec. 17, 23, 1910, 48.année: 780-783; 809-812. AP20.R64,48.année 815 Veditz, Charles William August. Child-labor legislation in France. (In TJ. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, July, 1910, no. 89. Washington, 1910. p. 143-231) IID8051.A5,no.89 816 Villermé, Louis René. Tableau de l ’état physique et moral des ouvriers em-_ ployés dans les manufactures de coton, de laine et de soie. Paris, J. Renouard et cie, 1840. 2 v . 22cm. HD8039.T42F89 Durée journalière du travail: v. 2, p. 83-109; Enfants employés dans les manufactures: v. 2, p. 110-125. 5 1 1 G ERM A N Y. 817 Abelsdorff, Walter. Gewerbsmässige Kinderarbeit. Leipzig, Felix Diet rich, 1913. 26 p. 20?cm. (Kultur und Fortschritt, no. 455-56) Inhalt: Einleitung.—1. Deutschland. 2. Oesterreich, 3. Italien. 4, Schweiz. 5. Nieder lande. 6. Grossbritannien. 7. Frankreich. 8. Japan. 9. Dänemark. 10. Vereinigte Staaten. Literatur. 818 Adler, Georg and Bernard Harms. Jugendliche Arbeiter. (In Elster, Ludwig. Wörterbuch der Volkswirtschaft. 3. Aufl. Jena, 1911. 27OIn. v. 1, p. 1392-1397) HB61.E53,v.l Literatur: p. 1397. Contains statistics for the year 1907. Agahd, Konrad. [Child labor in Germany.] (In United States. Report of' the Commissioner of education, 1899-1900, v. 1, p. 816-825. Washington, 1901. 23|cm.) L111.A3 1899-1900 820 J-------- Die Erwerbsthätigkeit schulpflichtiger Kinder im Deutschen Reich. (In Archiv für soziale Gesetzgebung und Statistik, v. 12, p. 373-428. Berlin, 1898. 8°) H5.A8,v.l2 821 — ----- Die gewerbliche Kinderarbeit in Kiel. (In Soziale Praxis, v. 12, Aug. 6, 1903, cols. 1184-1186) H5,S7,v.l2 822 --------- Kinderarbeit in Chemnitz. (In Soziale Praxis, v. 11, Jan. 16, 1902, cols. 404-406) H 5.S7,v.ll 819 823 --------- Kinderarbeit und Gesetz gegen die ausnutzung kindlicher Arbeitskraft in Deutschland. (Unter Berücksichtigung der Gesetzgebung des Auslandes und der Beschäftigung der Kinder in der Landwirtschaft) Jena, G. Fischer, 1902. xii, 206 p. 2 4 ° « M HD6243.G3A4 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 70 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. Agahd, Konrad. Zu den Grundzügen der gesetzlichen Regelung der gewer blichen Kinderarbeit ausserhalb der Fabriken. {In Soziale Praxis, v. 10, Sept. 12, 1901, cols.1257-1262) H5,S7.vlO 825 --------- Zur Würdigung der Statistik über die gewerbliche Kinderarbeit ausser halb der Fabriken in Deutschland. {In Soziale Praxis, v. 10, Oct. 18, 1900, cols. 52-56) H5.S7,v.lO 826 ---------and M. von Schulz. Gesetz betreffend Kinderarbeit in gewerblichen Betrieben. Vom 30. märz 1903. 3. Aufl. Jena, G. Fischer, 1905. xvi, 408 p. 22em. (Schriften der Gesellschaft für soziale Reform. Hrsg, von dem Vorstande. Hft. 10) HD6243.G3A44 827 Anton, Günther Kurt. Geschichte der preussischen Fabrikgesetzgebung bis zu ihrer Aufnahme durch die Reichsgewerbeordnung. . . . Leipzig, Duncker & Humblot, 1891. xvi, 202 p. 8°. (Staats- und .socialwissen schaftliche Forschungen. Bd.11.hft. 2) HB41.S7,v.ll,pt.2 824 Geschichte der preussischen Gesetzgebung zum Schutze der jugendlichen Fabrikarbeiter, p. 1-132. 828 Berger, T. Ph. and L. Wilhelmi, Gewerbeordnung für das Deutsche Reich, nebst den für das Reich und Preussen erlassenen Ausführungsbestimmungen. 18. veränderte Aufl. bearb. von Karl Flesch . . . in Verbindung mit Friedrich Hiller [und] Hermann Luppe. Berlin, J. Guttentag, 1910. 1 p. 1., 15]—971, [1] p. 13-pm. (Guttentag’sche Sammlung deutscher Reichsgesetze. Nr. 6) j - ------ Ergänzungsheft zur achtzehnten Auflage der Gewerbeordnung für das Deutsche Reich. Berlin, J. Guttentag, 1912. 103 p. 13£cm. 829 Bierer, Willy. Die hausindustrielle Kinderarbeit im Kreise Sonneberg; ein Beitrag zur Kritik des Kinderschutzgesetzes. Tübingen, J. C. B. Mohr (P . Siebeck) 1913. vi p ., 11., 167 p . 24cm (Archiv für SozialWissenschaft und Sozialpolitik. Ergänzungsheft xi) HD6250.G4B5 “ Gesetz betr. Kinderarbeit in gewerblichen Betrieben. Vom. 30. März 1903” : p. 159-165. 830 Bloomfield, Meyer. The school and the start in life; a study of the relation between school and employment in England, Scotland, and Germany. Wash ington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 143 p. 23cm. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1914, no. 4. Whole no. 575) HF5381.B5 Bibliography: p. 133-142. 831 Child labor in Germany. Square deal, July, 1914, v. 14: 547-548. HD6500.S7,v.l4 Shows number of children employed in various mills and factories during 1910 and 1911. 832 Child labor in Germany outside of factories. {In United States. Report of the commissioner of education, 1900-1901, v. 1, p. 54-80. Washington, 1902. 23£CB1) L111.A3 1900/01 “ Translatedfrom Vierteljahrshefte des Kaiserlichen Statistischen Amts. 1900, Heft III.” Results of an official inquiry (1898) b y the Imperial Chancellery. Contents.—Purpose and nature of inquiry; Results of the inquiry: Number of children employed outside of factories; Kinds of occupation of children; Age of wage-earning children; Daily working hours; Arrangement of workrooms; Legal conditions of child labor; Wages of children ; Police regulations concerning child labor; Propositions for the future régula tion of indus trial child labor; Supplement 1. Regulations concerning industrial occupation of school children in some foreign countries: England; France; Austria; Other countries; Supplement 2. Dis cussion (A translation of an article b y Dr. Wiese in the Berlin Tägliche Rundschau, No. 275,1899). 833 D au m ay, M axim e. L ’enquête allemande sur le travail des enfants hors de la fabrique. (In Questions pratiques de législation ouvrière et d ’économie sociale, v. 2, 1901, p. 105-109. Paris, 1902. 23cm) https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 834 De Voss, Emilia V. Kanthack. v. 1: 25-35. The child in Germany. 71 Child, Oct. 1910, HQ750.A2C4,v.l State measures regarding the employment of children, p. 33. 835 Edlmann, Edith. Juvenile labour exchanges and apprenticeship bureaux in Germany. Contemporary review, Aug. 1913, v. 104: 230-239. AP4.C7,v.l04 836 Esche, Arthur. Der gesetzliche Arbeitsschutz der gewerblich beschäftigten Jugend. Vortrag gehalten im Ferienkursus der Gehe-stiftung zu Dresden (26. april 1905) Dresden: v. Zahn & Jaensch, 1905. 52 p. 23£cm. (In Neue Zeit und Streitfragen, hrsg. von der Gehe-stiftung zu Dresden. Dresden, 1905. 2. jahrg.) H5.N4 Jahrbuch der Gehe-stiftung zu Dresden, bd. x i, p . [247J-298. 837 Falkenbach, Joseph. Employment of children in German factories. (In United States. Consular reports, v. 30, no. 106, July, 1889, p. 380-381) HCl.R2,v.30 838 Feld, Wilhelm. Die Kinder der in fabriken arbeitenden Frauen und ihre Verpflegung, mit besonderer Berücksichtigung der Crimmitschauer Arbei terinnen. Dresden, O. V. Böhmert, 1906. 4 p. 1., 87, [1] p. inch tables. 25£cm. (Probleme des Fürsorge; Abhandlungen der Centrale für private Für sorge in Frankfurt am Main. 3. Bd.) HV764.F8F5 839 Findeisen, H. Das Reichsgesetz betreffend Kinderarbeit in gewerblichen Betrieben vom 30. März 1903 systematisch dargestellt nebst Ausführungsbe stimmungen aus dem Reich, den königreichen Preussen, Bayern und Sachsen, sowie den thüringischen Staaten. Leipzig, Duncker & Humblot, 1904. viii, 104 p. 224cm. HD6243.G3F4 “ L iteraturverzeichnisp. [vii]-viii. 840 Francke, Schutz) E. Die “ Jugendlichen” . (Kinderarbeit-, Soziale Praxis, May 11, 1911, v. 20: 986-988. Kriminalität undH5.S7,v.20 841 Fürth, Henriette. Gewerbliche Kinderarbeit in Deutschland. der Frauen, Dec. 1, 1900, v. 4, p. 533-541. 842 Germany. Laws, statutes, etc. Gewerbeordnung für das Deutsche Reich in ihrer neuesten Fassung, mit sämtlichen Ausführungsbestimmungen für das Reich und für Preussen, sowie mit dem Kinderschutzgesetz, dem Stellenver mittlergesetz, dem Hausarbeitsgesetz und dem Gewerbegerichtsgesetz. 2. Aufl. Berlin, F. Vahlen, 1912. 2 v. 25cm. 843 The following laws relate to the employment of children and are published in the Reichsgesetzblatt as follows: March 30, 1903, p. 113. Feb. 17, 1904, p. 62. June 16, 1905, p. 548. Feb. 17, 1907, p. 36. Feb. 21, 1907, p. 65. May 16, 1907, p. 235. July 1, 1907, p. 404. Dec. 28, 1906, p. 667. May 31, 1909, p. 471. July 3, 1909, p. 546. 844 Dokumente Nov. 25, 1909, p. 968. Dec. 8, 1909, p.969. Nov. 24, 1911, p. 958. Dec. 20,1911, p. 976. May 20,1912, p . 311. Dec. 13, 1912, p. 565. March 7,1913, p. 125. March 9,1913, p. 129. Dec. 8,1913, p. 777. Nov. 11,1914, p. 474. Prepared b y the Leg. Ref. Div ------ Statistisches Amt. Statistisches Jahrbuch für das Deutsche Reich. 1914. Berlin, Puttkammer & Mühlbrecht, 1914. 472, 138* p. 24em. HA1232.A3 1914 Die in den Jahren 1911 und 1912 im Deutschen Reich in Betrieben mit mindestens 10 Arbeitern und in den diesen gleichgestellten Betrieben beschäftigten Arbeiter (erwachsene und jugendliche beiderlei Geschlechts): p. 64-65: https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 72 845 L I S T OF R E F E R E N C E S O N C H IL D LA BO E» Gesellschaft für Soziale Reform, Berlin. Die jugendlichen Arbeiter in Deutschland, i- v i . Jena, G. Fischer, 1910-12. 6 v . 21^cm. (Schriften der Gesellschaft für Soziale Reform, iv. Bd., Hft. 1-7; Hft. 34-40 der ganzen Reihe) HD6250.G3G4 C ontents ; I. Arbeitsverhältnisse der den §§135-139» der Gewerbeordnung unterstellten minderjährigen Arbeiter. Von Dr. Karl Bittman. 1910. II. Kriminalität und sittliches Verhalten der Jugendlichen. Von Dr. Paul Köhne. 1910. III. Schädigung von Leben und Gesundheit der Jugendliche. Von Dr. J. Kaup. 1911. IV . Bildung und Erziehung ausserhalb der Schule (jugendpflege) Von Hans Weicher. 1911; V . Verhandlungen der 5. Generalversammlung der Gesellschaft für Sociale Reform am 12. u. 13. Mai 1911 in Berlin. 1911. V I. Die Fortbildungsschule. Von D r.'Alfred Kühne. 1912. 846 Görres, K[arl] Handbuch der gesammten Arbeitergesetzgebung des Déutschen Reiches. Freiburg im Breisgau: Herder ’sehe Verlagshandlung; St. Louis, Mo. [etc.] B. Herder, 1893. xxxv, [i], 765 pp. 8°. HD7888.G7 847 Juvenile labor in Germany. Jugendliche Arbeiter: p. 114, 295, 579, 619, 637-645, 647-652. Economic review, Jan. 1913, v. 23: 14-23. HBl.E4,v.23 Die Kinderarbeit in gewerblichen Betrieben. Arbeiterwohl, July-Déc. 1903, v. 23: 193-209. HD4809.S7,v.23 849 Lesser, Ernest. Juvenile labour in Germany. Economic review, Jan. 1913, v. 23: 14-23. HBl.E4,v.23 850 London. County council. Education committee. Report b y education officer submitting a report by Miss Durham . . . on juvenile labour in Ger many and how it is being dealt with. [London, Printed, for the London county council by Southwood, Smith & co., ltd.] 1910. cover-title, 14 p. 33em. HD6250.G4L7 848 Reviewed by N. B. Dearie, Economic journal, Dec. 1910, v. 20: 652-655. 851 HBl-.E3,v.20 Lord, E. W. State industrial supervision of children in Germany and in Con necticut. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hartford] 1909. 22om. p. 16-18.) HD6250.U4C8 1908 852 Muench, Hugo. Employment of children in Germany. (In United States. Consular reports, v. 75, no. 283, Apr. 1904, p. 121-124) HCl.R2,v.75 853 Niczky, Walther. Die Entwicklung des gesetzlichen Schutzes der gewerblich tätigen Kinder und jugendlichen Arbeiter in Deutschland. (Unter besonderer Berücksichtigung des Kinderschutzgesetzes vom 30. März 1903.) . . . BornaLeipzig, Buchdr. R. Noske, 1905. vi, 130 p. 23cja. HD6243.G3N5 “ Literaturverzeichnis” ; p. [128J-130. - , 854 Pieper, August, and Helene Simon. Die Herabsetzung der Arbeitszeit für Frauen und die Erhöhung des Schutzalters für jugendliche Arbeiter in Fa briken. Jena, G. Fischer, 1902. 164 p. 21§cm. (Schriften der Gesellschaft für Soziale Reform, hft. 7-8) HD6064.P4 855 Prelle de la Nieppe, E. de. Rapport sur le projet de réglementation en Alle magne du travail des enfants dans les industries autres que les fabriques et usines. (In Belgium. Ministère des affaires étrangères. Recueil des rap ports des secrétaires de légation de Belgique, Bruxelles, 1905. y. 12, p. 91-100) HC5.B5,v.l2 856 Rühle, Otto. Das proletarische Kind, eine Monographie. München, A. Langen [clftll] xiv p., 11., 262 p., 11. 19cm. HD4853.R8 Die Barbareider Kinderarbeit: p . 130-161. 857 Schultze. Das Kinderschutzgesetz in der Praxis. 1912, v. 21: 1057-1063; 1090-1094. . https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Soziale Praxis, May 23, 30, H5.S7,v.21 LIST OF REFEREN CES 0 1ST C H IL D LABOR* 858 859 860 73 Spangenberg, Hans. . Reichsgesetz, betreffend Kinderarbeit in gewerblichen Betrieben. Vom 30. März 1903. Berlin, J. Guttentag, 1903. 148 p. 1 3 p “ . (Guttentag^che Sammlung deutscher Reichsgesetze, Nr. 71.) Stieda, W. Child laborers and their protection in Germany. Chautauquan, Oct. 1893, v. 18: 88-91. AP2.C48 v.18 Veditz, Charles William August. Child-labor legislation in Germany. (In U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, July, 1910, no. 89. Washington, 1910. p. 231-312) HD8051.A5,no.89 GREAT BRITAIN. Adler, Nettie. Child workers and wage-earners. Royal society of arts, Journal, June 12, 1908, v. 56: 738-747. . . Tl.S64,v.56 * 862 --------- Children as wage-earners. Fortnightly review, May 1, 1907, v. 73: 918-927. AP4.F7,v.73 863 Alden, Mrs. Margaret (Pearse) Child life and labour. 3d ed. rev. I Lon don, Headley brothers [1913] 4 p. 1., 19i p. diagr. 17Jcm. (Social service handbooks, no. 6) ' HQ751.A6 861 “ Bibliography on child life. Compiled for.the author by the British institute of social service” * p . 172-184. 804 —------ Women and children and the labour market. (In An Encyclopaedia of industrialism. London, T. Nelson and sons [1914?] p. 516-532.) Bibliography: Child labour: p. 529-532. HD2321.E6 865 Baggallay, F. W. Child labour in factories and workshops. Economic review July 15, 1909, v. 19: 293-308. H B l.E 4v.19 ’ ’ 866 Die B esch äftigu n g jugendlicher Personen im Dienste der britischen Postver waltung. Deutsche Verkehrs-Zeitung, Dec. 8, 1911, v. 35: 531-533! HE6007.D5,v.35 867 Black, Clementina. Sweated industry and the minimum wage. London, Duckworth & co., 1907. xxiv, 281 p., 11. 19°m. HD2339.G7B7 Wage-earning children: p. 104-131. 868 Bloomfield, Meyer. The school and the start in life; a study of the relation between school and employment in England, Scotland, and Germany. Wash ington, Govt, print. off., 1914. 143 p. 23cm. (U S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1914, no. 4. Whole no..575) HF5381 B5 Bibliography: p. 133-142. 869 Bosanquet, Helen, “ Mrs. Bernard Bosanquet” . Little drudges and trouble some boys. (In her The standard of life and other studies. London 1898 20cm: P* 174-182) HN389!B78 ’ 870 — r. The strength of the people; a study in social economics. London, New York, Macmillan and co„, limited, 1902. xii, 345, [1] p. 23cm. The children: p . 211-228. HN309.B8 871 Bray, Reginald Arthur. 'B oy labour and apprenticeship. 2d impression. London, Constable & co., 1912. xi, 248 p. 19cm. "L ist of authorities” : p. 241-244. — The town child. London, T. F. Unwin, 1907. viii, 333, [1] p. 221/™. Minimum wage, 85^92; Entrance to a trade, p. 182-203. ’ HT2Ö6.B7 873 British association for labour legislation. Child labour in the United Kingdom. A study of the development and administration of the law relating to the employment of children. By Frederic Keeling. Prepared on behalf of the British section of the International association for labour legislation. London, P. S. King & son, 1914. xxxii, 326 p. 25Jcm. HD6250.G7B75 872 " Bibliography of the employment of children in the United Kingdom” : p. [309]-3l9. Reviewed in Political science quarterly, Mar. 1915, v . 30: 151-153. H 1 JP8 v .30 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 74 874 British association for labour legislation. Report on the employment of children in the United Kingdom. By Constance Smith (co-hon. sec. of the Committee on wage-earning children). 2d ed. London, Issued by the British association for labour legislation [pref. 1909] 32 p. 2l%cm. HD6250.G7B8 875 Buckmaster, Stanley Owen. Employment of children act, 1903. Report to His Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home department, on the byelaws made on the 29th of January, 1910, by the London County council under the Employment of children act, 1903. Presented to Parliament by command of his Majesty. London, Pub. by H. M. Stationery off., printed by Darling and son, limited, 1911. 18 p. 33cm. ([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 5497) HD6250.G7A4 1911 Found also in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1911, v. 64. J301.K6 1911, v.C4 Chamberlain, Norman. Labour exchanges and boy labour. Economic review, Oct. 15, 1909, v. 19 : 400-409. H Bl.E4,v.l9 877 Child labour: i. Minimum age for labour of children, by Henry Edward, Cardinal Manning, n. The half-timers, by Henry Dunckley.. Contem porary review, June, 1891, v. 59: 794-802. AP4.C7,v.59 878 Clark, V ictor S. Woman and child wage-earners in Great Britain. (In U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, no. 80, Jan., 1909, p. 1-85. Washington, 1909 . 23cm.) HD8051.A5,no.80 876 Clarke, Allen. The effects of the factory system. Written 1895-6; rev. 1897-8. London, G. Richards, 1899. 2 p. 1., vii-viii, 178 p. 171cm. Effects of the factory system on children: p. 92-118. HD2356.G7C6 880 Collet, Clara Elizabeth. Report b y Miss Collet on the statistics of employ ment of women and girls. Presented to both houses of Parliament b y command of Her Majesty. London, Printed for H . M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1894. vii, 152 p. incl. tables. 25cm. ([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by command] C. 7564) HD6136.C7 879 Found also in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1894, v. 81, pt. 2. J301.K6 1894,v.81 881 Committee on wage-earning children. London. Report. A statement of the existing laws for their protection, with suggestions of possible amendments. [London, G. Reynolds, printer], 1900. 12 p. 23cn\ HD6243.G8C7 gg2 -------- llth-12th annual report . . . 1911-1912. London, 1911-1912. 2 v. 21£ c3n. 883 Condy, George. An argument for placing factory children within the pale of the law. London, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green & Longman; [etc., etc.] 1833. 60 p. 20%em. > HD6243.G8C75 884 Cox, Iren e. Factory laws affecting women and children. Charity organiza tion review, Feb. 1914, n. s. v. 35: 70—79. HVl.C6,n.s.v.35 885 Cranston, Mary Rankin. Child wage-earners in England: why the “ half tim e” system has failed to solve the problem. Craftsman, July, 1907, v. 12: 424-430. * Nl.C87,v.l2 886 Cunningham, William. The growth of English industry and commerce. Cambridge, University press, 1896—1903. 3 v. 23eni. HC253.C96 [v. 3] Modern times: Pt. 2. Laissezfaire. “ Conditions of children’s work” : p. 775-790. See also Index: p. 1005. 887 D ew ar, David. The Children act, 1908, and other acts affecting children in the United Kingdom. Edinburgh and London, W. Green & sons, 1910. vii, 418 p 22cm. HV751.A4 1910 888 D rage, G eoffrey. The labour problem. xv, 424 p. 23CItt. London, Smith, Elder & co., 1896. HD8390.D8 The employment of children: 1. The present law with regard to the employment of children, p. 246-261; The lines of suggested reform: p . 261-269. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 75 889 Dunlop, Olive Jocelyn. English apprenticeship & child labour; a history with a supplementary section on the modern problem of juvenile labour, by O. Jocelyn Dunlop and Richard D. Denman. London [etc.] T. F. Unwin, 1912. 3 p.l., 9-390 p., 11. 23cm. HD4885.G7D8 Bibliography: p. 355-363. 890 Freeman, Arnold. Boy life & labour; the manufacture of inefficiency. Preface by Dr. M. E. Sadler . . . London, P.'S. King & son, 1914. xiii p., 11., 252 p. 22om. HD6250.G75B5 “ Bibliography of juvenile labour” : p. 233-248. Reviewed in American economic review, Dec. 1914, v. 4: 921-922. HB1.E26 v.4 891 Garnett, William Hubert Stuart. Children and the law . . . with an intro duction by the Rt. Hon. Walter Runciman, London; J. Murray, 1911. xiv (i. e. 24), 255 p. 19^cin. HV731.G7G3 Appendixes: i. Bye-laws. it. County of London. Employment of children and street-trading b y young persons. By-laws. 892 Gaskell, P. Artisans and machinery: the moral and physical condition of the manufacturing population considered with reference to mechanical substitutes for human labour. London, J. W. Parker, 1836. xv, 399, [1] p. 17C1“ . HD2356.G7G4 Pub. also under title: The manufacturing population of England. Infant labour, p. 135-173; Education, p. 239-253. 893 894 895 Goli and the caddie question. English review, July, 1914, v. 17: 531-539. AP4.E523,v.l7 Gordon, Mrs. Maria Mathilda (Ogilvie). Juvenile employment bureaux. Women’s industrial news, no. 56, Jan. 1912, p. 1-11. Gt. Brit. Board of education. Correspondence relating to school attendance between the Board of education and certain local education authorities since the outbreak of the war . . , London, H. M. Stationery off., Eyre & Spottisl woode, 1915. 19p. 33Jcm. ([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by command-] Cd. 7803) 896 --------- Board of trade. Abstract of labour statistics, 1912-13. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Harrison and sons, 1915. xxii, 348 p. 24om. [Parliament. Papers by command] HD8381.A2 1912-13 Occupations of children under 14 years of age: p. 318-319. 897 --------- Census office. Census of England and Wales. 1911. Vol. X . Occu pations and industries. London, Pub. by H. M. Stationery off., printed by Harrison and sons, 1914. 2 v. tables. 33cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 7018, 7019) HA1121.1911.C,v.lO Contains statistics of children from 10 years of age upwards; see especially Grouped occupations of children, pt. 1, p. 462-467. 898 --------- Children’s employment commission. First report of the commis sioners. Mines. Appendix, part 1-2. Reports and evidence from sub commissioners. Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. 1842. 4 v. 33cm. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1842, v. 15, 16, 17.) J301.K6 1842,v.l5-17 Second report. Trades and manufactures. Appendix and index to second report. Presented to both Houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. 1843-1845. 4 v. Folded map. 33cm. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1843, v. 13, 14, 15; 1845, v. 42.) J301.K6 1843, v .13-15; 1845,v.42 Reviewed in Christian remembrancer, May, 1843, v. 5: p. 674-704. Edinburgh review, Jan. 1844, v. 79: 130-156. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis AP4.E3 v.79 76 899 L I S T O F R E F E R E N C E S OIT C H I L D LABOE. Gt. B rit. Children’s em ploym ent com m ission report, with appendix. 1863-1867. 6 v. 33em. (1 8 6 2 ). First-[sixth] J301.K6 First report in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1863, v. 18. Second report, Same. 1864, v. 22. Third report, Sam e. 1864) v. 22. Fourth report, Sam e. 1865, v. 20. Fifth report, Same. 1866, v. 24. Sixth report, Same. 1867, v. 67, V. 1, p. 325-336, contains “ Laws and regulations of foreign countries respecting the labour and education of children and young persons employed in trades and manufactures. ” Reviewed in Meliora, 1864, v. 6: 224-250; -1865, v. 8: 102-120. Christian remembrancer, Apr. 1865, v. 49: 332-356. Quarterly review, Apr. 1866, v , 119: 364-393. See also article by H. S. Tremenheere in National association for the promotion of social science. Transactions, Oct. i865, p. 291-301. H11.N2 -1865 900 --------- F actories inquiry com m ission. First [second and supplementary] report of the Central board, . . . as to the employment of children in factories and as to the propriety and means of curtailing the hours of their labour; with minutes of evidence and reports by the District [and medical] commis sioners. Ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed, 28 June, 1833 [15 July, 1833, 25 March, 1834]. 5 V. 33cm. • HD6250.G67 1833 Also found in Great Britain. Parliament. Sessional papers. First report, 1833, v. 20, pt. 1. Second report, Same. 1833, v. 21. Supplementary report, Same. 1834, v. 19,20, pt. 1-2. JK301.K6 1833,v.20,21 1834,v.l9,20 901 — —— F oreig n office. Correspondence respecting the introduction into and employment in this country of Italian children. Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. 1877. London, Harrison and sons, [1877] >5 p. 33em. (Parliament. Sessional papers, 1877, v. 88. C. 1764.) J301.K6 1877, v.88 902 ----- -— H om e dept. Form no. 39. Factory and workshop acts, 1901 to 1911. Form prescribed by the Secretary of state for certificates of school attendance. London, 1912. Authorized ed. HD6250.G67 1912 The L. of C. has many other editions. 903 — ---------------Employment of children act, 1903. Report to His Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home department on the byelaws made by the London County council under the Employment of children act, 1903, by Chester Jones. Presented to both houses of Parliament b y command of His Majesty. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., b y Darling & son, ltd., 1906. 28 p. 32£cm. ([Parliament. Papers b y command] Cd. 2809) HD6243.G8A5 1906 Also found in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1906, v. 90. J301.K6 1906,v.90 904 .-------------------Factory and workshop orders. (1914 ed.) London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Darling & son, ltd., 1914. (8), 220 p. 24Jcm. HD7875.A4 1914 9 0 5 ------------------- Factories and workshops. Summary of returns under S. 130 of the Factory and workshop act, 1901, of persons employed in 1907 in textile factories [and in non-textile factories, and in workshops] (including statistics of marriagestate of women over 18) . . . London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Darling & son, ltd., 1909-11. 3 v. in 1. 33cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 4692, 5398, 5883) HD8381.A5 1907 906 ------------------- Form no. 71, Oct. 1908. Factory and workshop act, 1901. Pt. II of the General register, being the prescribed form of register of young persons (under 18 years of age) employed full time, and certificates of fitness for em ployment, in case of those under 16 years of age. Authorized ed. London, 1908. HD3705.A4,no.71 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 77 907 Gt. Brit. Home dept. Committee on Employment of children act, 1903. Report of the Departmental committee on the Employment of children fact, 1903, appointed by His Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home department [and Minutes of evidence . . ... with appendices and index] Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of His Majesty. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off;, b y Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd. [1910] 2 v. in 1. 33^cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cds. 5229, 5230) . HD6250.G7A4 1910 908 ------------------- Committee on employment of school children. Report of the inter-departmental Committee'on the employment of school children, appointed by H. M. principal secretary of state for.the Home department . . . [and Minutes of evidence . . . with appendices and index . ...] London, Printed for H. M, Stationery off., by Wyman and sons, limited, 1901-02. 2 v. i n i . folddiagr. 33cm. ([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 849, 895) HD6250.G7A4 ; 1901 Also found in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1902, v. 25.) J301.K6 1902,v.25 909 —----------------Night work committee. Report of tile departmental com mittee on the night employment of male young persons in factories and work shops. Minutes of evidence and appendices. London, Pub. by H. M. Stationery off., printed b y Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1912-1913. 2 v. in 1. 33cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 6503,6711) HD5113.G7 Found also in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1912-13, v. 26; 1913, v. 23 . , ...... J301.K6 9 1 0 -------------------Van boys and warehouse boys committee. Report of the departmental committee on the hours and conditions of employment of van boys and warehouse boys, appointed by His Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home department [with Minutes of evidence] . . . London, Pub. by H. M. Stationery off., printed b y Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1913. 2 v. in 1. 33£cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 6886-6887) . HD6250.G7A4 1913 911 --------- Inter-departmental committee on partial exemption from school attendance. Report of the Inter-departmental committee on partial exemption from school attendance . . . Presented to both houses of Parlia ment by command of His Majesty. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by J. Truscott & son, ltd., 1909. 2 v. in 1. tables. 33om. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 4791, 4887) HD6250.G7A4 1909 912 —------ Laws, statutes, etc. The following laws relate to the employment of children: Factory and workshop act, 1891,54 and 55 Viet. c. 75; 1895,58 and 59 Viet. c. 37; 1901,1 Edw. VII C. 22; 1907, 7 Edw. V II c. 39. Prohibition of Child labor underground act, 1900,63 and 64 Viet. c. 21. Employment of Children act, 1903,3 Edw. VII. c. 45. Prevention of Cruelty to children act, 1904,4 Edw. V II c. 15. » Children act, 1908,8 Edw. V II c. 67. Dangerous performances act, 1897,60 and 61, Viet. c. 52. Children (Employment abroad) act 1913. 3 and 4 Geo. V , c. 7. Prepared by the Leg. Ref. Div. 9 1 3 ----------------- - Children. A bill to provide for the more effectual treatment and prevention of destitution and sickness among children, and to regulate the hours and conditions of labour among children. March 25, 1914. London, Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1914. 12 p. 33cm. ([Parliament, 1914. H. of C. Bills] Bill 142.) 914 ------ —------— Children (employment and school attendance). A bill to amend the law in respect of the employment of children and their attendance at school. Feb. 13, 1914. London, Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1914. 6 p. 33cm. ([Parliament, 1914. H. of C. Bills] Bill 11.) https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 78 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 915 Gt. Brit. Parliament. House of commons. Select committee on the state of children employed in the manufactories of the United King dom. Report of the minutes of evidence. (In Great Britain. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1816, v. 8.) J301.K6 1816,v.3 9 1 6 -------------- -------------- Committee on employment of hoys in sweeping of chimnies. Report, together with the minutes of evidence taken before the Committee and an appendix. , Ordered b y the House of Commons, to be printed, 23 June 1817. 51 p. 33cm. (Gr. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1817, v. 6, 400) J301.K6 1817.v.6 917 ------------ --------------- Committee appointed to examine the several petitions . . . against the employment of hoys in sweeping of chimneys. A copy of the report presented to the House of commons b y the Com mittee appointed to examine the several petitions, which have been presented to the House, against the employment of boys in sweeping of chimneys. The Pamphleteer. London, 1817. 22icm. v. 10, p. [483]-491. AP4.P2,v.lO 9 1 8 _______________ Committee on Bill to regulate labour of children in mfflg and factories. Report ; with the minutes of evidence, appendix and index. Ordered, b y the House of commons, to be printed, 8 August 1832. [London, 1832] 682 p. 33em. ([Parliament, 1832. H. of C. Reports and papers] 706) HU6250.O67 1832 Also found ia Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1831-32, v. 15. 706. JK301.K6 1831-32,v.15 ----------------------------- Select committee on the act [to regulate the labour of children and young persons in] mills and factories. First[sixth] report, together with the minutes of evidence taken before them, appendices, and index. Ordered, by the House of commons, to be printed 3 April, 1840-17 July, 1840. 6 pts. Facsimiles. 33e111. (Gt. Brit. Parlia ment. Sessional papers, 1840, v. 10) J301.K6 1840, v .10 ' £------------------------ - Report. Ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed 18 February, 1841. vi, 33 p. 33cm. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Ses sional papers, 1841, v. 9) J301.K6 1841,v .9 920 ----------------------------- Standing committee on bills, A. Report on the Children (employment and school attendance), bill with the proceedings of the committee. Ordered, b y the House of commons to be printed, 16th April, 1914. London, J. B. Nichols and sons, 1914. 13 p. 33cm. (Reports and papers. 1914. 190.) 921 --------- Post office. Standing committee on boy labour. Report[s] of Standing committee on boy labour in the Post office, together with instruc tions issued by the postmaster general in connection therewith. London, Pub. by H . M. Stationery off., printed by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1911-15. 5 v 32£cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 5504, 5755, 6959, 7556, 8019.) HE6939.E5A4 1912 1912a 9 1 9 922 --------- Royal commission on labour. Reports], [minutes of evidence, indexes, answers to questions] London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., b y Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1892-94. 35 v. in 14. tables, diagrs. 33em. [Parlia ment. Papers by command] HD8381.C3 1892 Contains much valuable information on child labor in the various industries. Consult the Indexes under Apprentices, Boy labour, Child labour, etc. 923 ______ Royal commission on poor laws and relief of distress. Report by Mr. Cyril Jackson on boy labour together with a memorandum from thé general post-office on the conditions of employment of telegraph messengers . . . London, printed for H. M. Stationery off., b y Wyman & sons, 1909. 230 p. 33|®m. '([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers b y command] Cd. 4632) Appendix v. 20to reports of thé Poor law commission. B ® 6250.G7A4 1909a https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 924 79 Greenwood, Arthur. Juvenile labour exchanges and after-care. With an introduction by Sidney Webb. London, P. S. King & son, 1911. xi, 112 p. 21^m. HD6250.G7G7 Bibliography: p. [1011-112. 925 --------- Juvenile labour problems. Child, Oct. 1911, v. 2: 25-34. HQ750.A2C4,v.2 926 --------- Next steps in factory and workshop reform. Political quarterly, Sept. 1914, no. 3: 38-70. Short bibliography on the factory acts, p. 69-70. 927 --------- and John E. Kettlewell. Some statistics of juvenile employment and unemployment. Royal statistical society. Journal, June, 1912, v. 75: 744-753. HAl.R8,v.75 928 Hall, William Clarke. The Queen’s reign for children; with an introduction by Benjamin Waugh. London, T. F. Unwin, 1897. xvi, 208 p. front, (port.) 19£cm. HV751.A6H2 C ontents .—i. The employer and the child.—n. The state and the child.—m. The parent and the child.—Appendices: a . Cases of cruelty, b . Chronological table of statutes. 929 Halsey, O. S. Directing the work life of English children. 1914, y. 32: 195-196. Survey, May 16, HVl.C4,v.32 930 Hanway, Jonas. A sentimental history of chimney-sweepers, in London & Westminster. Shewing the necessity of putting them under regulations to prevent the grossest inhumanity to the climbing boys. With a letter to a London clergyman, on Sunday schools calculated for the preservation of the children of the poor. London, Dodsley [etc.] 1785. 1 p. 1., xl, 191 p. front., pi. 16£cm. HV887.G7L87 931 H arvey, E. C. Labour laws for women and children in the United Kingdom. [London] The Women’s industrial council, 1909. cover-title, 24 p. 21cm. Bibliography: p. 23-24. HD6083.G8H2 932 Harwood, W. Child labour. Child, Nov. 1912, v. 3: 131-133. HQ750.A2C4,v.3 933 Hoffman, Frederick Ludwig. Industrial accident statistics . . . March, 1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 210 p. 23om. (Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 157. Industrial accidents and hygiene series, no. 5) HD8051.A62,no.l57 Children and young persons, killed or disabled, United Kingdom, 1908-1913: p. 166-167. 934 Holland, Robert W. The law relating to the child, its protection, education, and employment. London, Pitman, 1914. xxiv, 142 p. 22cm. 935 Hutchins, Miss B. Leigh, and Amy H. Spencer. A history of factory legisla tion. With a preface by Sidney Webb. 2d ed. rev., with a new chapter. London, P. S. King & son, 1911. xvi, 298 p. 22cjn. (Studies in economics and political science. Ed. by . . . W. P. Reeves . . . no. 10 in the series of monographs by writers connected with the London school of economics and political science) HD7876.H92 Appendices: a . Orders in council: p. [273]-278. B. Select bibliography: p. [279]-284. Children’s labour in the 18th century, p. 3-13; Cotton mills before 1831, p. 19, 22, 26, 31, 37, 41; Education of factory children, p. 76-81; Children’s employment commission, p.150-157, 170-172. 936 Independent labour party. London branch. Commercialism and child labour. An indictment and some remedies. London, City branch, Inde pendent labour party, 1900. 16 p. 224xllicin. (City branch pamphlets, no. 4) HD6250.G714 937 Jackson, Cyril. Unemployment and trade unions; with a preface by Rt. Hon. Viscount Milner. London, New York [etc.] Longmans, Green, and co., 1910. xiii, 92 p. 19Jcm. HD5767.J2 Boy labour, p. 55-67. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 8Q, LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 938 Jevons, H. W. Industrial prospects for boys and girls. review, Sept. 1906, n. s. v. 20: 125-138. Charity organisation HVl.C6,n.s.v.20 Bibliography: p. 139. 939 Keeling, Frederic. The present position of child labour regulation. Women’s industrial news, no. 66, July, 1914, p. 259-267. 940 Kittermaster, D. B. Unemployment and boy labour. Saint George, Jan. 1907, v. 10: 1-10. HN381.S2,v.l0 941 [Kydd, Samuel] The history of the factory movement, from the year 1802 to the enactment of the ten hours’ bill in 1847. By Alfred [pseud.] London, Simpkin, Marshall, and co., 1857. 2 v. 22cm; HD2356.G7K4 942 The Labour year book. [v. 1] 1916. Issued under the auspices of the Parlia mentary committee of the Trades union congress, the Executive committee of the Labour party, the Fabian research department . . . London [etc.] Co operative printing society limited [1916?] 704 p. 1901“ . HD8385.L3 Child labour and the factory acts: p. 86-91. Child and juvenile labour and apprenticeship: p. 279-302. 943 Leeds, Eng. Education committee. Employment of children. Report on children attending school full time and working out of school hours, [n. p., 1910] 7 p. 24cm. 944 Lightbody, W. M. The problem of unskilled labour. 15, 1909, v. 19 : 423-431. Economic review, Oct. H Bl.E4,v.l9 945 Love joy, Owen R. Child labor legislation in England. Chautauquan, Apr. 1907, v. 46: 217-225. AP2.C48,v.46 946 McMillan, Margaret. Child labour. (In Oliver, Sir Thomas, ed. Dangerous trades. London, J. Murray, 1902. p. 91-97) HD7262.05 947 Minton-Senhouse^ Robert Metcalfe. Work and labour: being a compen dium of the law affecting the conditions under which the manual work of the working classes is performed in England. London, Sweet & Maxwell, Id., 1904. xcviit, 379 p. 25|em. HD7875.M5 See Index under Child. 948 Moulder, Priscilla E . Factory girls’ life in England. World’s work (London) Oct. 1910, v. 16: 469-472. AP4.W85,v.l6 949 Mundella, A. J. The fight for the child. Review of reviews, London, Mar. 1915, v. 51: 207-209. AP4.R4,v.51 Die Nachtarbeit von Knaben in Fabriken und Werkstätten in Grossbritannien. Germany. Statistisches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Ar beitsblatt, Sept. 1913, v. 11: 687-689. HD8441.A3,v.ll 951 National conference on the prevention of destitution. 1st, London, 1911. Report of the proceedings of the National conference on the prevention of destitution, held at the Caxton hall, Westminster, on May 30th and 31st, and June 1st and 2nd, 1911, president: the Rt. Hon. the Lord Mayor of London. London, P. S. King & son, 1911. xxvi, 766 p. incl. tables, diagrs. 25tcm. HV244.N3 1911 950 The public organisation and control of juvenile employment: Juvenile employment: the Edinburgh method of co-operation between the education authorities and the labour exchange, by J. W . Peck: p. 219-237; Working of the London juvenile advisory committee, by R. D. Den man: p. 238-246; The limitation of juvenile labour, by N. Adler: p. 247-253; The social organisa tion of adolescence, by Mrs. Ogilvie Gordon: p. 253-264; Discussion: p. 265-272. 952 --------- 2d, London, 1912. Report of the proceedings of the unemployment & industrial regulation section . . . London, P. S. King & son, 1912. 147 p., 11. 24iem. HD8384.N3 The care and training of juvenile workers. Papers by R. A. Bray, W, Main, R. H. Tawney. Miss G. Smith, and A. Greenwood: p. 78-112. Discussion: p. 113-118. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF EEFEBENCES ON CHILD LABOE. 81 953 Pelham, Herbert Sidney. The training of a working boy. London, Macmil lan and co., limited, 1914. xv, 165 p. front., plates. 19em. HQ775.P4 Child employment: p. 55-68; Boy labour: p. 69-86. 954 Pope, Samuel. Employment of children act, 1903. Report to His Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home department on the byelaw made b y the Devon County council under the Employment of children act, 1903, and on the objections thereto. London, H. M. Stationery off., by Darling and son, ltd., 1913. 15 p. 33em. ([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by commandJ, Cd. 6988) IID6250.G73A5 1913 “ Byelaw as recommended for approval” : p. 15. Also found in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1913, v. 23. J301.K6 1913,v.23 955 Porter, George Richardson. The progress of the nation in its various social and economic relations from the beginning of the nineteenth century. A completely new ed., rev. and brought up to date by F. W. Hirst , . . Lon-, don, Methuen & co. ltd. [1912] xvi p., 1 1., 735, [1] p. incl. tables. 23om. HC255.P86 1912 Child labour: occupational statistics: p. 23-28; Effect on unemployment: p. 56; Child labour in agriculture: p. 200; Cotton: p. 302, 315, 318; Silk: p. 347; Wool, p. 327. 956 Rowntree, B. Seebohm and Bruno Lasker. Unemployment, a social study . . . London, Macmillan and co., limited, 1911. xx, 317 p. tables (partly fold). 23£cm. HD5768.Y6R6 Youths under 19 years of age, p. 1-28. 957 Sandiford, Peter. The half-time system in the textile trades. (In Sadler, M. E., ed. Continuation schools in England & elsewhere. 2d ed. Manches ter, 1908, p. 318-351) LC5215.S25 958 Sherard, Robert Harborough. The child-slaves of Britain. London, Hurst and Blackett, limited, 1905. 3 p. 1., [ix]-xix p., 2 1., 267, [1] p. 8 pi. 21em. HD6250.G7S4 C ontents .— 1. On child-slavery in London in general; 2. On child-slavery in London in detail; 3. On the alien immigration and its effects; 4. On child-slavery in Manchester; 5. In Birming ham; 6. In Grimsby; 7. In Scotland; 8. In Liverpool and other large towns; Appendix. 959 960 Simson, Frau. Child labour outside the factory laws. (In International con gress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20Jcm., v. 6, p. 76-81) HQ1106 1899, v.6 Sm ith, A . E . Stanley. The child and the [English] law. Child, Jan. 1911, v. 1: 363-369. HQ750.A2C4,v.l 961 Tawney, R. H. “ Blind alley” occupations and the way out, an educational policy for the government. Women’s industrial news, no. 52, Oct. 1910, p. 1-10. 962 --------- The economics of boy labour. Economic journal, Dec. 1909,, v. 19: 517-537. H Bl.E3,v.l9 963 Tuckwell, Gertrude M. The state and its children. London, Methuen & co., 1894. vi p., 11., 164 p. 18Jom. (Social questions of to-day) HV751.A6T8 Canal and van children, p. 90-101; Post office and telegraph boys, p' 151-154; Circus and theatre children, p. 118-126; Half-timers and full-timers, p. 137-157. 964 ITrwick, Edward Johns, ed. Studies of boy life in our cities, written by various authors for the Toynbee trust. London, J. M. Dent & company, 1904. xv, 320 p. 19|cm. HQ775.U83 Cloete, J. G. The boy and his work. I. The general conditions of boy labour. II. Special occupations: messenger-boys, office-boys . . . van-boys, and street traders . . . p. 103-138. TJrwick, E. J. The boy^s physique and physical training: The boy's mind and education . . . Home, school, and street, p. 255-318. 44193°—16-----6 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 82 LIST OP REEERËNCES OK CHILD LABOE. 965 Webb, Beatrice (Potter) “ Mrs. Sidney Webb,” ed. The case for the factory acts, London, G. Richards, 1901. xvi, 233 p., 1 1. 19Jcm. HD7876.W3 Children’s labour, p. 76-108,113-114. 966 Webb, Sidney, and Beatrice Webb. Industrial democracy. London, New York [etc.] Longmans, Green, and co., 1897. 2 v. diagrs. (1 fold.) 22icm. Bibliography: p. 879-900. HD6664.W4 Boy-labor: v. 2, p. 482-489, 573, 704-715, 768-789, 811. 967 Whitehouse, John Howard, ed. son, 1912. viii, 342 p. 22°“ . Problems of boy life. London, P. S. King & HQ797.W5 The economics of boy labour, by R. H. Tawney: p. 17-51; Boy labour: some studies in detail, by Spencer J. Gibb: p. 52-78; Boy labour: towards reform, by Spencer J. Gibb and J. H. Whitehouse: p. 79-96; Boy labour and the factory system, by À. K. Clark Kennedy: p. 97-122. 968 Williamson, Robert. Training the “ dead-ender” . World’s work, London, Mar. 1914, v . 23 : 443-446. AP4.W85,v.23 969 W om an in industry from seven points of view, by Gertrude M. Tuckwell, Con stance Smith [and others] . . . with a preface by D. J. Shackleton, M. P. London, Duckworth and co., 1908. xiv, 217 p. 19om. HD6053.W7 v. Child employment and Juvenile delinquency. By Nettie Adler: p.121-141; vr. Factory and workshop law. By Adelaide M. Anderson: p. 143-181. 970 Wood, George Henry. Factory legislation, considered with reference to the wages, &c., of the operatives protected thereby. Royal statistical society, Journal, June, 1902, v. 65: 284-324. HAl.R8,v.65 971 --------- An outline of the ljjstory of the employment of women and children in industry. (In Co-operative wholesale societies limited. Annual, 1904. Glasgow [1904] 8°. p. 209-238) HD3325.C76 1904 972 The Year-book of social progress . . . 1914-15, being a summary of recent legislation, official reports, and voluntary effort, with regard to the welfare of the people. London, New York [etc.] T. Nelson and sons [1915] 19cm. H9.Y5 1914-15 Boy and girl workers (Statistics): p. 26-28; Juvenile labor exchanges: p. 414-416; Boys and the post office: p. 420; Children employment and school attendance: p. 551,626. GREAT BRITAIN: COLONIES. 973 Edwards, Mrs. Henrietta (Muir) Labour laws in Canada that affect women and children. Women’s industrial news, no. 55, Oct. 1911, p. 117-127. 974 France. Direction du travail. Législation ouvrière et sociale en Australie et NouvelIe-Zélande. Mission de M. Albert Métin. Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1901. vii, 200 p. 24em. HD7960.F8 , Lois pour protéger les femmes et les enfants employés dans l’industrie: p. 77-81; Lois pour protéger les femmes et les enfants employés dans les magasins: p. 81-84. 975 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. Child labor in Ontario. Charities and the Commons, Apr. 27,1907, v. 18: 116. HVl.C4,v.l8 976 New South Wales. Royal commission of inquiry into the hours and general conditions of employment of female and juvenile labour in factories and shops. Report. 1912. lix, 58 p. 977 --------- Statistician’s office. The official year book of New South Wales. 1914. [Sydney] W. A. Gullick, 1915. illus., plates, fold. maps. 25£cm. Child labour [W ith statistics}: p. 357-366,662. DU150.N5 1913 978 N ova Scotia. F a ctories inspector. Child labor. (In its Report, 1912, p. 24-28) 979 Ontario. Laws, statutes, etc. An act for the protection of persons employed in factories, shops, and office buildings. Assented to 6th May, 1913. Inter national labour office. Bulletin, Aug. 1914, v. 9: 133-157. HD7801.l6,v.9 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 83 980 Page, Anna B. Labour laws for women and children at home and abroad. Women’s industrial news, no. 63, Oct. 1913, p. 171-186. 981 Smart, G. Bogue. Juvenile emigrants in Canada. 1914, v. 27: 310-315. Empire review, June, DA10.E4,v.27 982 Victorian year-book, 1914-15, by A. M. Laughton . . . government statist. 35th issue. Melbourne, A. J. Mullett, govt, printer [1916?] 912 p. 22cm. Child labour in factories: p. 793. DU200.V6 1914-15 ITALY. 983 Baudoin, Lionel. La règlementation légale du travail des femmes et dea enfants dans l ’industrie italienne. Paris, H. Paulin et eie, 1905. 2 p. 1., 160 p. 25£em. HD6083.I8B2 “ Bibliographic” : p. [157J-158. C ontents.—Texte de la loi du 19 juin 1902.—Introduction.—1. ptie. La loi du 19 juin 1902.—2. ptie. La Convention franeo-italienne du 15 avril 1904 et la règlementation légale du travail indus trie! en France à l’égard des femmes et des enfants italiens. 984 Brants, V. La législation italienne sur le travail des enfants. Réforme sociale, Mar. 1, 1890, v. 19: 273-282. H3.R3,v.l9 985 Ferraris, Carlo F. Das neue italienisehe Gesetz betr. die Frauen- und Kinderarbeit. {In Archiv fiir soziale Gesetzgebung und Statistik, v. 18, p. 564-577. Berlin, 1902. 8°) H5.A8,v.l8 9*86 G iretti, E doardo. La legge sul lavoro . . . forzato delle donne. Giornale degli economisti, Oct. 1903, ser. 2, v. 27: 399-401. HB7.G5,2d,v.27 On the Italian law oi July 19,1902, in regard to the labor of women and children. Italy. Laws, statutes, etc. Royal decree relating to the temporary suspen sion of the prohibition of night-work for women and children. Dated Aug. 30, 1914. International labor office. Bulletin, 1915, v. 10, nos. 1, 2: 73. HD7801.I6,v.l0 988 ------------------- Uniform text of the Act relating to the employment of women and children, sanctioned by Royal decree no. 818. (Nov. 10, 1907) Inter national labor office. Bulletin, 1907, v. 2, no. 4: 578-582. 987 HD7801.I6,V.2 989 --------- Ministero di agricoltura, industria e commercio. Relazione sull’ applicazione della legge 11 febbraio 1886, N. 3657 (Serie 3.) sul lavoro dei fanciulli nelle fabbriche e nelle miniere dal 1. luglio 1896 al 31 dicembre 1898. Roma, Tip. della Camera dei deputati, 1901. 51 p. 28em. (Atti parlamen tari. Legis. x x i, Prima sessione 1900-1901. Camera dei deputati, Doc. 24) Same. 1 gennaio 1899 al 31 dicembre 1900. Roma, Tip. della Camera dei deputati, 1901. 80 p. 28cra. (Atti parlamentari. Legis. xxi, Prima sessione 1900-1901. Camera dei deputati, Doe. 26) HD6250.I8A4 990 —----------------Relazione sulP applicazione della legge 19 giugno 1902, N. 242 sul’ lavoro delle donne e dei fanciulli (1° luglio 1903-25 luglio 1907) Presentata dal ministro di agricoltura, industria e commercio (Cocco Ortu) nella seduta del 10 luglio 1909. Roma,. Tip. della Camera dei deputati, 1909. 208 p. incl. tables. 29em. HD6152.A5 1909 991 -------- Ufficio del lavoro. Operai ed orari negli opifìci soggetti alla legge sul lavoro delle donne e dei fanciulli (anno 1907) Roma, Officina poligrafica Italiana, 1908. 16, cv p. 31jcm. (Pubblicazioni dell’ Ufficio del lavoro, 8 « . B. n. 21) HD8471.A32,no.21 Reviewed by Meerwarth, in Archiv fiir SoziatwisseDschaft und Soziaipolitik, Sept. 1909, v. 29: 630-040. H5.A8,v.29 992 Loriga, Giovanni. Lavoro dei fanciulli e crescenza del corpo. (Italy. Pubblicazioni dell’ Ufficio del lavoro. Ser. B. n. 26) Reviewed in Rassegna nazionale, Mar. 1,1911, v. 178: 127-132. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Roma, 1910. AP37.R2.V.178 84 993 LIST OF BEFERENGES OFT CHILD LABOR. Okey, Mrs. Thomas. Labour laws for women in Italy. [London, The Women’s industrial council] 1908. cover-title, 11 p. 21om. HD6083.I8O6 994 Ortu, F. Cocco. Circolare e istruzioni per l ’applicazione della legge sul lavoro delle donne e dei fanciulli. Italy. Bollettino dell’ Ufficio del lavoro, Nov. 1909, v. 12: 806-821. HD8471.A4,v.l2 995 Profumo, L. G-. Le assicurazioni operaie nella legislazione sociale. Torino Fratelli Bocca, editori, 1903. xxi, (1), 402 p. 8°. (Biblioteca di scienze sociali, voi. 43) HD7091.P8 “ Le leggi sul lavoro delle donne e dei fanciulli, ” p. 122-132. 996 Reina, Ettore. I pubblici spettacoli e le provvidenze di legislazione sociale Roma, L. Cecchini, 1915. 153 p. 31om. (Pubblicazioni dell’ Ufficio del lavoro, serie B, n. 46) Part I gives the results of an investigation into the employment of children in theatrical per formances. 997 Rossi, Alessandro. Perchè una legge? Osservazioni e proposte sul progettò di legge per regolare il lavoro delle donne e dei fanciulli. Firenze, Tip. di G. Barbèra, 1880. ix, 269 p., 1 1. 23om. HD6083.I8R8 998 Veditz, Charles William August. Child-labor legislation in Italy. (In U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, July, 1910. no. 89. Washington, 1910. p. 313-326) HD8051.A5,no.89 THE NETHERLANDS. 999 Kramers, Martina G-. Special legislation for children under the factory laws. [Holland] (In International congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20£om. v. 6, p. 66-71) HQ1106 1899,v.6 1000 Netherlands (Kingdom) 1 8 1 5 - Commissie belast met het onderzoek naar den toestand der hinderen in fabrieken arbeidende. Rapport. Uitgegeven op last van den minister van binnenlandsche zaken . . . ’s Gravenhage, Algemeene landsdrukkerij, 1869-72. 4 v . tables (partly fold.) diagrs. (partly fold.) 27£x23cm. HD6250.N2A4 2001 --------- Directie van den arbeid. Onderzoekingen naar de toestanden in de Nederlandsche huisindustrie . . . Uitg. voor rekening van het Departe ment van landbouw, nijverheid en handel. ’s-Gravenhage, Ter Algemeene landsdrukkerij, 1911-14. 3 v. plates, 26£cm. [Uitgaven no. 7a, 7b, 7c] IID2336.N2A3 C ontents .— deel I. Voedings-en genotmiddelen.— deel II. Diamantbewerking. Drukkèrsbedrijf. Chemische industrie. Hout- en stroobewerking. Metaalbewerking. Papierbewerking. Schoenmakers.—deel 3. Textielindustrie. Kleeding enreiniging. 2002 ----- — — Laws, statutes, etc. Text of the labour act, 1911. International labor office. Bulletin, 1912, v. 7, no. 1, 2: 47-91. HD7801.I6,v.7 The following laws relate to the employment of children: Staatsblad, 1889, No. 48; 1895, No. 138; 1896, No. 259; 1902, No, 185; 1903, No. 107; 1900, No. 97, 204,243; 1909, No. 244, 290,1911, No. 319, 352, 353, 355, 356; 1912, No. 282, 283, 284. Prepared by the Leg. Kef. Div. 1003 Ort, Jan. Die Beschäftigung jugendlicher Arbeiter in den Niederlanden. Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik, June, 1910, in. Folge, v. 39: 815-817: HB5.J3,3d ser.,v.39 RUSSIA. 1004 The Russian year-book for 1914. Compiled and edited by Howard P. Kennard, M. D., assisted by Netta Peacock. London, Eyre and Spottiswoode [1914?] 753 p. 20|em. HC331.R7 1914 Child labour: p. 622. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFEREN CES ON CHILD LABOR. 1005 85 Schroeter, Jakob. Zur russischen Fabrikschutzgesetzgebung und ihrer Ge schichte. Darmstadt, H. Uhde, 1904. 184 p. 24em. HD7905.S38 “ Literaturverzeichnis” : p. 177-180. “ Schutz der jugendlichen Arbeiter,” p. 71-82. 1006 Schwittau, G. Russland. Der gesetzliche Schutz der Kinderarbeit. An nalen für soziale Politik und Gesetzgebung, 1913, v. 2: 644-654. HD6951.A6,v.2 1007 Woycicki, Alexandre. La protection du travail des femmes et des mineurs dans l'industrie russe. Mouvement social, Jan. 15, 1914, v. 77: 84-87. H3.M6,v.77 NORW AY AND SW EDEN. Legge, James G. Children’s workshops in Sweden. Monthly review, Oct. 1901, v. 5: 103-113. AP4.M882,v.5 1009 --------- and M. E. Sadler. Note on children’s workshops in Sweden. (In Great Britain. Board of education. Special reports on educational subjects, v. 8, p. 143-147. London, 1902. 230to.) L341.A7,v.8 1008 1010 Norway. Laws, statutes, etc. The following laws relate to the employment of children: Norsk Lovtindende: Sept. 10, 1909, p. 418; July 25, 1910, p. 453; April 24, 1906, p. 189; July 29, 1911, p. 426. Prepared by the Leg. Ref. Div. 1011 Sweden. Kvinnors och minderârigas anvandandé vid fabriker och bergverk i Sverige âr 1912. (Die Beschäftigung der Frauen und Minderjährigen in den Fabriken und Bergwerken in Schweden 1912) Sweden. Socialstyrelsen. Sociala meddelanden, 1914, no. 4: 299-309. (Statistiska meddelanden, ser. F. Bd. Y: 4) HD8571.A25 1914 Annual since 1901. 1012 ——— Kommitté för ordnande af fosterbamsvârden, 1894. Underdänigt förslag till ordnande af fosterbamsvârden m. m. afgifvet af den af Kongl. Maj:t för ândamâlet tillsatta komité. Stockholm, K. L. Beckmans boktryckeri, 1897. 1 p. 1., [2], 198 p. incl. tables. 234 x 19Y mHY790.A4 1897 1013 --------- Laws, statutes, etc. Act in regard to the protection of labour. (Dated June 29, 1912) International labor office. Bulletin, 1913, v. 8, no. 2: 84-97. HD7801.I6,v.8 Special directions as to the employment of minors: p. 87-89. SPAIN. 1014 Chauvet, Émile. La protection légale des travailleurs en Espagne. Paris: Société nouvelle de librairie et d ’édition (G. Bellais).1903. 132 p. 25cm. HD7916.C5 “ Bibliographie” : p. [127]-129. Appendice: Loi du 15 mars 1900réglementant le travail des femmes et des enfants: p.[119J-126. 1015 Délas, Joseph-Marie. La réglementation du travail des enfants et des femmes en Espagne. (In Congrès international dé législation du travail tenu à Bruxelles du 27 au 30 septembre 1897, p. 121-Ï27. Bruxelles, 1898. 23cm.) 1016 Marmel, Tarrida del. Children’s work in Spain. (In International congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20Jcm. v. 6, p. 82-84) HQ1106 1899,v.6 1017 Spain. Instituto de reformas sociales. Sección primera. Legislación del trabajo. Madrid, Impr. de la sucesora de M. Minuesa de 16s Ríos, 1905. 4 p. 1., [3]—358 p. 24cm. HD7916.A5 Apéndice 1-8, Julio, 1905-1912. Madrid, 1906-1913. 8 v. 24cm. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 86 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1018 Spain. Instituto de reformas sociales. Proyecto de reglamentación especial del trabajo de la mujeres y niños [redactado por la Sección segunda técnico-administrativa] Madrid, Impr. de la Compañía arrendataria de la “ Gaceta dé Madrid,” 1905. 2 p. 1., [7}-29 p. 22£om. HD6083.S7A4 1019 --------- Laws, statutes, etc. The following laws relate to the employment of children: March 13, 1900; July 26, 1878; July 23, 1903; Aug. 12, 1904; Jan. 24, 1908; March 21, 1909; Feb. 8,1911. Prepared b y Leg. ref. dir. 1020 ------------------- Consejo superior de protección á la infancia; leyes y disposi ciones vigentes de protección á la infancia. Madrid, imprenta del Asilo de Huérfanos, 1908. 128 p. 1021 Villota y Presilla, Isidro de. El trabajo industrial de los menores de 18 años en España; . . . con notas estadísticas por Antonio Revenga y Alzamora. Madrid, lmp. de la suc. de M. Minuesa de los Ríos, 1908. 50 p., 11. 23cm. (Asociación internacional para la protección legal de los trabajadores. Sec ción española.—núm. 8) HD6250.S7Y6 SWITZERLAND. 1022 Bertoni, B. La protezione dell’infanzia nella nuova legislazione svizzera. Rivista italiana di sociología, May-Aug. 1909, v. 13: 389-405. H7.R7,v.l3 1023 Deutsch, Julius. Die Kinderarbeit und ihre Bekämpfung. Zürich, Rascher & co., Meyer & Zeller’s naehf., 1907. 3d, 247 p. 21|cm. (Zwei von der Universität Zürich preisgekrönte Arbeiten über Kinderschutz . . .[1]) HD6250.S9D6 Die Erwerbstätigkeit der Schulkinder im Kanton St. Gallen. Germany. Statistisches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, June, 1912, v. 10: 441-444. HD8441.A3,v.lO 1025 Goldstein, Fanny. Der Arbeiterschutz zu gunsten der Kinder und Frauen in der Schweiz. Zeitschrift für schweizerische Statistik, 1904, v. 40, Bd. 1: 306-359. HAl.Z5,v.40 1024 Literaturverzeichnis: p. 357-359. 1026 L a.TidTna.Tm, Jul. Die Nachtarbeit der jugendlichen Arbeiter in der Schweiz. Schweiz. Blätter für wirtschaft-und soziale Politik, 1906, p. 523-533. 1027 Morant, B . L. The national organisation of education of all grades as practised in Switzerland. {In Great Britain. Board of education. Special reports on educational subjects. London, 1898 . 24|cm. v. 3, p. 1-82) L341.A7,v.3 “ Federal law in compulsory primary education; Federal law on child labour, ” pp. 13-14. 1028 R yff, Mme. Children under the factory laws of Switzerland. {In Inter national congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20^cm. v. 6, p. 60-66) HQ1106 1899,v.6 1029 Schwyzer, Eugen. Die jugendlichen arbeitskräfte im handwerk und gewerbe, in der hausindustrie und in den fabriken. Zürich, E. Leemann, 1900. Separatabdruck aus der “ Schweiz. Zeitschrift für gemeinnützigkeit” x x x ix . jahr, heft.m 1030 Veditz, Charles William August. Child-labor legislation in Switzerland. {In U. 8. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, July, 1910, no. 89. Washington, 1910. p. 326-413) HD8051.A5,no.89 1031 Wirth, M ax. Aperçu des législations suisse et anglaise, sur le travail des enfants dans les manufactures. Revue de droit international, 1869, v. 1: 172-189. JX3.R 4,v.l https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 87 1032 Zinsli, Plu Die Beschäftigung der schulpflichtigen Kinder in Hausindustrie und andern Erwerbsarten im Kanton Appenzell A.-Rh. Zeitschrift für schweizerische Statistik, 1905, v. 41, bd. 1: 164-183. HAl.Z5,v.41 Literatur: p. 181. 1033 Zürcher, E. Die Gesetzgebung über die Arbeit von Kindern und Jugend lichen. Bericht, erstattet an der 10, Generalversammlung der Schweizer. Vereinigung zur Förderung des internationalen Arbeitersschutzes am 18. Juni 1909 in Zürich, Schweiz. Blätter für Wirtschafts-und Sozialpolitik, 1910, p. 417-430. 1034 --------- Die Gesetzgebung über Kinderarbeit und die intern. Vereinigung für gesetzlichen Arbeiterschutz. Schweiz, Blätter für Wirtschafts-u. Sozialpolitik, 1912, no. 20, u. 21. OTHER COUNTRIES. 1035 Argentine Republic. Departamento nacional del trabajo. Trabajo de mujeres y de menores. (In its Boletín, Dec. 31, 1913, no. 25: 858-875) HD8261.A3,no.25 1036 ------------------- El trabajo de los menores en la via publica. (In ils Boletín, Dec. 31, 1913, no. 25: 836-843) HD8261.A3,no.25 1037 Regelung der Frauen-Kinder-und Jugendlichenarbeit (Argentinien, Gesetz und Verordnung). Soziale Rundschau, Feb. 1914, v. 1, p. 58-61; v. 2, p. 61-73. HD8401.A2 1914 1038 Kinderarbeit in Brasilien. Soziale Praxis, Jan. 11, 1912, v. 21: 456-457. H5S7,v.21 1039 Bulgaria. Laws, statutes, etc., 1905. Loi sur le travail des femmes et des enfants dans les établissements industriels. Votée et adoptée par l ’Assem blée nationale, ratifiée par oukaze princier du 25 mars 1905. Sofia, Impri merie “ Sainte-Sophie,” 1906. 12 p. 18¿em. HD6083.B9A5 1905 1040 Denmark. Laws, statutes, etc. The following laws relate to the employ ment of children: Lovtidendet Apr. 29, 1913, p. 481; Apr. 11, 1901, p. 317; Nov. 1, 19Ö2, p. 554; June 11, 1904, p. 518; Apr. 6,1906, p. 635; May 7, 1906, p. 523; June 4, 1908, p. 680; July 17,1907, p. 226; July 22,1908,p. 759; Jan. 23, 1908, p. 25; May 10,1912, p. 104; June 8,1912, p. 16&. Prepared b y Leg. Ref. Div. 1041 ---- ------------— Gesetz über die Arbeit in Fabriken und damit gleichgestellten Betrieben sowie über deren öffentliche Ueberwaehung. Bulletin des Inter nationalen Arbeitsamts, Jan.-Mar. 1902, v. 1: 13-21. HD7801.B9,v.l 1042 -----------*------- Act regulating work in bakeries and confectionery businesses. (No. 171, 1906) Apr. 6, 1906. International labor office. Bulletin, 1906, •v. 1, nos. 4-8: 177-182. HD7801.I6,v.l 1043 ------------------- Notification of an Order for the commercial town of Esbj erg . . . relating to the employment of children and young persons for purposes of gain in certain specified classes of occupations. Dated July 17,1907. Inter national labor office. Bulletin, 1908, v. 3, no. 2: 145-146. HD7801.I6,v.3 1044 ------------------- Act (No. 155) respecting work in bakeries and confectionery businesses. (Dated June 8, 1912.) International labor office. Bulletin, 1913, V . 8, no. 6, 7 : 272-277. HD7801.I6,v.8 1045 -------------------Act relating to work in factories, etc., and the public inspection of the same. (Dated April 29, 1913.) International labor office. Bulletin, 1913, v. 8, no. 8; 324-343. HD7801.I6,v.8 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 88 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1046 Greece. Laws, statutes, etc. Act no. 4029 concerning the work of women and minors. (Dated 24th Jan.-6th Feb. 1912.) International labor office. Bulletin, Nov. 1912, v. 7: 285-290. HD7801.I6,v.7 ------------------- Royal decree, respecting the execution of the act no. 4029, concerning the work of women and minors in factories, workshops, com mercial firms, and stores of any kind. (Dated 14th-27th Aug. 1913.) Inter national labor office. Bulletin, Sept. 1914, v. 9: 219-225. IID7801.I6,v.9 1047 The Legislative efforts of England and Greece for the regulation of child labor. Craftsman, July, 1912, v. 22: 457-458. Nl.C87,v.22 1048 Portugal. Laws, statutes, etc. Act no. 297 to amend various sections of the order relating to the employment of minors and women in industrial un dertakings. (Dated 22nd Jan. 1915.) International labor office. Bulletin, Oct. 1915, v. 10: 109-111. HD7801.I6,v.l0 IN D U ST R IE S. AGRICULTURE. 1049 Adams, M. Bridges. Rural child workers and free school meals. Nation, London, Feb. 13, 1915, v. 16 : 620. AP4.N15,v.l6 1050 A gahd, Konrad. Die gesetzliche Regelung der Kinderarbeit in Landwirt schaft und Haushalt. {In Soziale Praxis, June 22, 29, 1905, v. 14, cols. 985989; 1009-1012) H5.S7,v.l4 Albrecht, Otto. Kinderarbeit in Gärtnereien Generalkommission der Ge werkschaften Deutschlands. Correspondenzblatt, Aug. 9, 1913, v. 23; 487-489. HD8443 G3,v.23 1052 Die Beschäftigung von Schulkindern mit gewerblichen landwirtschaftlichen und sonstigen Arbeiten in Österreich. Soziale Rundschau, Aug. 1903, v. 1, p. 277-285. HD8401.A2 1903,v .l 1053 B rem er, H arry M. Agricultural work and school attendance. Child labor bulletin, May, 1914, v. 3, no. 1: 153-158. HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.l 1051 1054 —------ People who go to tomatoes; a study of four hundred families. New York, National child labor committee, 1914. 16 p. 23cm. (Pamphlet no- 215) . HD6250.U3N2 1055 --------- Strawberry pickers of Maryland. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1914, v. 2, no. 4: 70-75. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 1056 Carleton, Ernest E. Agricultural training for British lads oversea. Empire review, Apr. 1914, v. 27: 170-176. D A l0.E5,v .27 1057 Child labor in agriculture. Nation, London, Mar. 13, 1915, v. 16: 735-736. AP4.N15,v.l6 1058 Child labor in agriculture. New statesman, Feb. 13, 1915, v. 4 : 453-454. AP4.N64,v.4 1059 Chute, Charles L. The cost of the cranberry sauce. Survey, Dec. 2, 1911, V. 27: 1281-1284. HYl.C4,v.27 1060 Clopper, Edward N., and Lewis W. Hine. Child labor in the sugar-beet fields of Colorado. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1916, v. 4, no. 4; 176-206. HD6250.U3N4,v.4,no.4 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 259. 34 p. 1061 Gillette, John M. Rural child labor. 1912, p. 154-160. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 1, June HD6250.U3N4,v.l ’ LIST OF REFEREXCES OX CHILD LABOR. 89 1-062 Gt. Brit. Commission on employment of children* young persons, and women in agriculture (1867). Report[s, with appendices] London, Printed by G. E. Eyre and W. Spottiswoode, for H. M. Stationery off., 1868-70. 7 v. in 3. 33cm. [Parliament. Papers by command] HD6073.A4G7 Found also in Gt. Brit. v. 13. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1867-68, v. 17; 1868-69, v. 13; 1870, J301.K6 1063 ------- - Poor law commissioners. Reports of special assistant poor law commissioners on the employment of women and children in agriculture. London, Printed b y W. Clowes and sons, 1843. xiv p., 1 1., 378 p., 1 1. illus. 22cm. HD6135.A5 1843 Also found in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1843, v. 12. 510 JK301.K6 1843,v. 12 1064 --------- Royal commission on labour. The agricultural laboured . . . [Assistant commissioners’ reports] Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., b y Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1893-94. 5 v .in 4 . fold, map, diagrs. 34om. ([Par liament. Papers by command] C. 6894—i- v i , x in -x x n , xxiy - x x v ) HD 1532 .A3 1893 Contains much general information and statistics relating to child labor in agriculture in England, Scotland, Ireland, and Wales; and vol. 5, pt. 2, contains “ Memorandum on the reports and proceedings of the Children’s employment commission, 1862, and the Commission on the employment of children, young persons, and women in agriculture, 1867, by William C. Little. ’ ’ Also found in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers. 1893-94, v. 35-37. J301.K6,v. 35-37 1065 Greenwood, Arthur. Agriculture and child labour. Political quarterly, London, May, 1915, no. 6:119-144. JA8.P7 May, 1915 1066 Hasbach, Wilhelm. A history of the English agricultural labourer. Newly ed. by the author and tr. b y Ruth Kenyon. With a preface b y Sidney W ebb. London, P. S. King & son, 1908. xvi, 470 p. 22|em. (Studies in economics and political science, no. 15 in the series of monographs b y writers connected with the London school of economics and political science) HD1534.H34 See Index under Child-labour: p. 452-453. 1067 Hine, Lewis W. Children or cotton? Raising the question of cotton picking in Texas. Survey, Feb. 7, 1914, v. 31: 589-592. HVl.C4,v.31 1068 Hutchinson, Woods. Overworked children on the farm and in the school. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 116-121. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 105. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l05 Lennard, Reginald. Child labor in the counties. Nation, London, Feb. 20, 1915, v. 16: 648-649. AP4.N15,v.l6 ' 1070 Lovejoy, Owen R. The cost of the cranberry sauce. Survey, Jan. 7, 28, 1911, v. 25: 605-610, 711. HV1.C4.V.25 1069 1071 --------- Jersey cranberry bogs. Survey, Dec. 26, 1914, v. 33: 342. HVl.C4,v.33 1072 MacCulloch, Campbell. Who picked your cranberries? Good housekeeping, Nov. 1913, v. 57:' 669-677. TXl.G7,v.57 1073 Macdonald, N. C. The case of the country boy. Interview with N. C. Mac donald, state inspector of rural and graded schools, [n. p.] 1912. “ In the Fargo Courier-news of February 4th, 1912. ” . 1074 McKelway, A. J. The mill or the farm? American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35:52-57. I l l .A4,v .35 1075 Sanger, Robert C. v. 25: 711. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis “ Cost of the cranberry sauce. ” Survey, Jan. 28, 1911, HVl.C4,v.25 LIST OF REFEREECES OK CHILD LABOR. 90 1076 Selley, Ernest. Employment of boy labor of farms. 3, 1915, v. 17: 17-18. CANNERIES. 1077 Baehe, René. Shrimps and babies. v. 16: 497-504. Nation, London, Apr. AP4.N15,v.l7 Technical world magazine, Jan. 1912, T l.T2,v.l6 1078 Brown, Edward F. The neglected human resourea of the Gulf Coast states. National child labor committee, New York. The child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. I : 112-116. HD6250.U3N4,v.2,no.l 1079 --------- The toiling children of the Gulf coast canneries: a field investigation, January-March, 1913. National child labor committee, New York. 1913. Pamphlet no. 193. p. 14-29. HD6250.U3N2,no.l93 1080 California. Bureau of labor statistics. Special report of the Bureau of labor statistics, state of California. Labor conditions in the canning industry. Sacramento, Cal., F. W. Richardson, superintendent of state printing, 1913. 34 p. incl. tables, diagrs. 22|om. HD6073.C32U73 Children—Employment, p. 4, 7-16,18. 1081 Chamberlain, Mary Louise. Children in bondage: baby toilersin New York canneries. Good housekeeping, May, 1913, v, 56 : 618-625. TXl.G7,v.56 1082 --------- The new bean bag. Survey, Feb. 15, 1913, v. 29: 664-665. H Y 1 .C 4 , V.29 Literary digest, Dee. 14,1912, v. 45: AP2.L58,v.45 Brief note on child labor in the canneries of New York. 1083 Child labor in the canneries [New York] 1110-1112. 1084 Goldmark, Pauline. Child labor in canneries. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 152-154. H i.A4,v .35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 128. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l28 1085 Gompers, Samuel. Child labor in the New York canneries, American federationist, Feb. 1913, v. 20: 133-136. HD8055.A5A2,v.20 1086 Hine, Lewis W. Baltimore to Biloxi and back: The child’s burden in oyster and shrimp canneries. Survey, May 3,1913, v. 30: 167-172. HYl.C4,v.30 1087 --------- Baltimore to Biloxi and back. National ehild labor committee. New York. 1913. Pamphlet no. 193. p. 6-13. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.l93 1088 --------- Child labor in Gulf coast canneries. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 118-122. HI. A4, B. 38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 158. 6 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.l58 1089 --------- The child’s burden in oyster and shrimp canneries. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 105-111. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 1090 --------- Not a vacation farm: just a Maryland cannery. v. 31: 765. 1091 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. A privileged industry. sumers’ league [1912] 7 p. illus. 24cm. Survey, Mar. 21,1914, HVl.C4,v.31 New York city, National con HD5119.C2K4 “ Reprinted from the Twentieth century magazine, Boston, July, 1912,” v . 6: 32-37. AP2.T88,v.6 1092 Lord, Everett W. Child labor in the textile industries and canneries of New England. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supple ment, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 73-78. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 107. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l07- https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 91 1093 Maryland. Bureau of statistics and information. Child labor inspection of the canning industry. (In its Report, 1913, p. 76-84) HC107.M3A15 1913 1094 National child labor committee, New York. Child labor in canneries . . . with other special articles. New York city, National child labor committee, 1913. 3 p. I., 95 p. incl. plates, maps. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 4) HD6250.U3N4 C ontents.—Child labor and poverty: advance program of the 9th National conference on child labor.—The important provisions of existing child labor laws.—Child labor in New York canning factories [by] E. F. Brown.—Day and night in a vegetable canning factory: a personal experience [by] J. J. Eschenbrenner.—Photographic reproductions of children in fruit and vege table,oyster, and shrimp canneries.—Child labor and health [by] O. R. Lovejoy.—Some dangers in the present movement for industrial education [by] John Dewey.—Overwork, idleness, or industrial education [by] William Noyes.—The child that toileth not: a reply to Mr. Dawley. 1095 --------- The child’s burden in oyster and shrimp canneries. [New York, 1913] 32 p. 23cm. (Pamphlet no. 193) HD6250.U3N2,no.l93 C ontents.—Baltimore to Biloxi and back, by Lewis W. Hine; Toiling children of the Gulf coast canneries, by Edward F, Brown; Needs in Mississippi and Florida, by Owen R. Lovejoy; Interstate commerce, by Owen R. Lovejoy. 1096 New York (State) Bureau of labor statistics. Report on the work of children and women in canneries. (In New York (State) Bureau of factory inspection. Annual report, 1908, p. 333-507) HC107.N7A2 1908 1097 --------- Bureau of statistics and information. Special report on can neries and day of rest law. (In New York (State) Dept, of labor. 14th annual report of the commissioner of labor, 1914, p. 132-175) HD8053.N7A2 1914 1098 Obenauer, Marie L., and Mary Conyngton. Employment of children in Maryland industries. U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, Sept. 1911, v. 23, no. 96: 466-487. HD8051.A5,v.23,no.96 Deals principally with the canning industry, but indudes some information concerning the candy, biscuit, and paper-box factories. 1099 Potter, Zenas L. Child labor in the canneries of New York state. Child labor bulletin, June, 1912, v. 1: 135-139. HD6250.U3N4,v.l 1100 --------- Industrial conditions in the canning industry of New York state. (In New York (State) Factory investigating commission. Second report, 1913. Albany, 1913. 23cm. v. 2, p. 757-915. [Legislature, 1913. Senate doc. 36]) HD8053.N7A5 1913 See also Report, v. 1, p. 127-143: Child labor in the canneries. 1101 Shorey, Eva L. Women and children in sardine factories. (In Maine. Bu reau of industrial and labor statistics. Annual report . . . 21st, 1907. Augusta, 1907 . 23em. p. 121-137) HC107.M2A3 1907 1102 Three bits of testimony for the consumers of shrimp and oysters. [Canneries at Pass Christian, Miss.] Survey, Feb. 28,1914, v. 31: 663, HVl.C4,v.31 1103 XT. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States, v. 18. Employment of women and children in selected industries. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913. 531 p. 230in. (61st Cong., 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645. v. 18) HD6093.A4,v.l8 Canning and preserving: p. 39-56. 1104 ----- -— Bureau of the census. Thirteenth census of the United States: 1910. Bulletin. Manufactures: 1909. Statistics for canning and preserving. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913] 23 p. incl. tables, diagr. 31em. HD9321.1.A3 1909 Contains the statistics of employment of children under 16 years of age. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 92 1105 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. TJ. S. Congress. House. Committee on rules. Investigation of can neries. Hearings . . . on H. Res. 738 providing for the investigation of canneries of the United States. Jan. 11, 1913. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913. 42 p. 23cm. RA601.U6 1913 Alfred G. Allen, Chairman. Statements of Mary Boyle O’ Reilly, Frank C. Praete, J. Harry Covington, and Frank E. Gorrell. 1106 Washington (State) Bureau of labor. Biennial report. 9th, 1913-1914. Olympia, Wash., 1914. 320 p. plates, tables, diagrs. -23$om. HC107.W2A2 1913-1914 Female and child labor in canneries: p. 94-96. Child labor violations: p. 171-178. 1107 Whitin, E. S. Children in the canning industry. v. 79: 177-179. CLOTHING. Outlook, Jan. 21, 1905, AP2.08,v.79 1108 Dodd, Edward Arthur. Die Wirkung der Schutzbestimmungen für dio jugendlichen und weiblichen Fabrikarbeiter und die Verhältnisse im Kon fektionsbetriebe in Deutschland. Jena, G. Fischer, 1898. 236 p. 23em. (Sammlung nationalökonomischer und statistischer Abhandlungen. 16. Bd.) "Litteratur” : p. 235-236. . HD6083.G3D6 1109 Merriman, C. Searchlight turned on child labor and the tailoring trades. Survey, June 13, 1914, v. 32: 303-304. IIVl.C4,v.32 1110 Rochester, Anna. Children at work on men’s clothing. Child labor in the glass industry. A summary of volumes II and III of the federal Report on the condition of woman and child wage-earners in the United States, 61st Congress, 2d session, Senate document 645. New York city, National child labor committee, incorporated, 1914. 2 p. 1., p. 93-129. 23em. (The child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 2, pt. ii) IID6250.U3N4,v.3 1111 U. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States. v. 2. Men’s ready-made clothing. Washing ton, Govt, print, off., 1911. 878 p. 23cm. (61st Cong. 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645, v. 2) HD6093.A4,v.2 1112 Van Kleeck, Mary. Women and children who make men’s clothes. Survey, Apr. 1, 1911, v. 26: 65-69. HVl.C4,v.26 GLASS. 1113 Beschäftigung von Arbeiterinnen und jugendlichen Arbeitern in Glashütten usw. .Generalkommission der Gewerkschaften Deutschlands. Correspondenzblatt, June 14, 1913, v. 23: 355-357. HD8443.G3,v.23 1114 Chute, Charles L. The glass industry and child labor legislation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 123-132. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 157. 11 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l57 H 15 --------- Women and children in the glass industry. v. 26: 437-438. Survey, June 17, 1911, IIVl.C4,v,26 1116 Germany. Bekanntmachung, betreffend die Beschäftigung von Arbeiterin nen und jugendlichen Arbeitern in Glashütten; Glasschleifereien und Glasbeizereien sowie Sandbläsereien. Vom 9. März 1913. Germany. Statis tisches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, May, 1913, v. 11: 381-383. HD8441.A3,v.ll 1117 Gesellschaft für Soziale Reform. Das Verbot der Nachtarbeit jugendlicher Arbeiter in den Glashütten. Soziale Praxis, Oct. 12, 1911, v. 21: 50-52., https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis H5.S7.V.21 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 93 Grünzel, H. Die Nachtarbeit der Jugendlichen in den Glasfabriken. Gener alkommission der Gewerkschaften Deutschlands. Correspondenzblatt, Aug. 16, 1913, v. 23: 500. HD8443.G3,v.23 1119 Hall, Fred S., comp. What the government says about child labor in glass factories. National child labor committee, New York, 1911. Pamphlet no. 152. 4 p. . HD6250.U3N2,no.l52 1120 Hayes, Denis A. Length of the trade life in the glass bottle industry. Ameri can academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1906, v. 27: 496499. H i.A4,v .27 1121 International association for labor legislation. Prohibition of night work of young persons. April 10, 1913. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913. 74 p. 23Jcm. (Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 117. Miscellaneous series, no. 2) HD8051.A5,no.ll7 1118 Night work of young persons in the glass industry: p. 28-41. 1122 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. Boy-destroying trade; the glass bottle industry of New Jersey, Pennsylvania, Ohio, Indiana, and Illinois. Charities, July 4, 1903, v. 11: 15-19. H V l.C 4,v.ll 1123 Kestner, Fritz. Die Nachtarbeit jugendlicher Arbeiter in Walzwerken, Ham merwerken und Glashütten. Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Sta tistik, Sept. 1910, 3. Folge, v. 40: 353—374. HB5.J3,3d ser.v.40 1124 Lovejoy, Owen R .. Child labor in the glass industry. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 300-311. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 42—53; Pamphlet no. 28. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20; no.28 1125 --------- Children in the glass industry in, Pennsylvania. [3d ed. rev.] New York, 1909. 15 p. illus. 15jx8^em. (National child labor committee. [Publications. Smaller series] Leaflet no. 14) IID6250.U3Nl9,no 14 1126 Markham, Edwin. Child-wrecking in the glass-factories. azine, Oct. 1906, v. 41:567-574.* Cosmopolitan mag AP2.C8,v.41 The hoe-man in the making series. 1127 National child labor committee, New York. Child labor bulletin, Aug. 1913,v. 2: 10-17. Story of the medicine bottle. IID6250.U3N4,v.2 1128 Rochester, Anna. Child labor in the glass industry. National child labor committee, New York. Child labor bulletin, Aug. 1914, v. 3, no. 2, pt. 2: 108-125. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 Compiled from vol. 3 of the Report on the condition of woman and child wage-earners in the United States. - 1129 17. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States, v. 3. Glass industry. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1911. 970 p. 23em. (61st Cong. 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645. v. 3) HD6093.A4,v.3 1130 --------- Bureau of the census.. Thirteenth census of the United States: 1910. Bulletin. Manufactures: 1909. Statistics for the manufacture of glass. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913] 12 p. incl. tables. 30fcm. HD9623.U45A5 1909 Contains statistics of the employment of children under 16 years of age. 1131 Van der Vaart, Mrs. Harriet. Children in the glass works of Illinois. Amer ican academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29 : 77-83. 'Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 50. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2.no.50 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 94 1132 Zum Schutze der Jugendlichen und Arbeiterinnen in der deutschen Glas industrie. Genesalkömmission der Gewerkschaften Deutschlands. Correspondenzblatt, Nov. 23, 1912, v. 22: 703-704. HD8443.G3,v.22 / HOME WORK. 1133 Adler, Eleanor H. Child flower-makers in New York tenements. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1915, v. 3, no. 4: 17-19. IID6350. U3N4, v .3 1134 Adler, Nettie. Child workers and wage-earners. Journal, June 12, 1908, v. 56: 738-747. Royal society of arts, Tl.S64,v.56 1135 Alden, Percy. The problem of sweating. Chautauquan, Nov. 1910, v. 60: 337-355. AP2.C48,v.60 1136 Ballantyne, A. Home-work.. (In Oliver, Sw Thomas, ed. Dangerous trades. London, J. Murray, 1902. p. 98-103) HD7262.05 1137 Betts, Lillian W. Child labor in shops and homes. Outlook, Apr. 18, 1903, v. 73: 921-927. AP2.08,v.73 1138 Bierer, Willy. Die hausindustrielle Kinderarbeit im Kreise Sonneberg, ein Beitrag zur Kritik des Kinderschutzgesetzes. Tübingen, J. C. B. Mohr (P. Siebeek) 1913. vi p., 11., 167 p. 24cm. (Archiv für Sozialwissensehaft und Sozialpolitik . . .Ergänzungsheft xi) HD6250.G4B5 “ Gesetz betr. Kinderarbeit in gewerblichen betrieben. Vom 36. märz 1 9 9 3 p. 159-165. 1139 Booth, Charles, ed. Labour and life of the people. London and Edinburgh, Williams and Norgate, 1891. 2 v. in 3. maps (partly fold.) tables. 22om. HV4088.L8B7 Sweating, by Charles Booth, v. 1, p. 481-509. 1140 Brussels. Exposition du travail à domicile, 1910. Documents—mono graphies—statistiques. Bruxelles, Misch & Throa, 1911. Ixi, 459 p. plates. 27cm. . HD2336.N3B82 “ Notes médicales sur la condition hygiénique de certaines catégories de travailleurs à domicile” p. [265J-300. 1141 Collet, Clara E. Home-work. (In Booth, Charles, ed. Labour and life of the people . . . London and Edinburgh, Williams and Norgate, 1891. 2 v. v. 1, p. 445-461) HY4088.L8B7 1142 Daniels, Annie S. The causes, evils and remedy for tenement-house manu facturing. (In International congress of hygiene and demography. Trans actions, 15th, 1912, v. 3r 1911-1014) RA122.N585,1912, v. 3 1143 Dorr, Kheta C. The child who toils at home. Hampton-Columbian mag azine, Apr. 1912, v. 28: 183-188, 221-223. AP2.ILLS2, v. 28 1144 Goldmark, Pauline. Art work in tenements. Survey, Apr. 15,1911, v. 26: 114-115. HVl.C4,v.26 1145 Gottsehalk, Alfred. Die Mitgabe von Hausarbeit an Arbeiterinnen und jugendhche Arbeiter. Soziale Praxis, Apr. 4, 1912, v. 21: 840-843, H5.S7,v.21 1146 Gt. Brit. Parliament. House of commons. Select committee on home work. Report; together with the proceedings o f the committee, minutes of evidence, appendix, and Index. Ordered, by the House of com mons, to be printed, 8 August 1907. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Wyman anc| sons, limited, 1907-08. x , 247 p . 1 L, 249-290 p. 33|em. ([Parliament, 1967. H. of C. Bepts. and papers] 290) See Index under CbMTea,. Employment of. HD2336.G6A4 1907 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES OK CHILD LABOR. 1147 95 Gt. Brit. Parliament. House of commons. Select committee on home work. Report, together with the proceedings of the Committee minutes of evidence, and appendix [also Index] Ordered, by the House of commons, to be printed 22d July, 1908. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Vacherand sons, 1908. l, 234 p. 33^em. ([Parliament, 1908. H. of C. Repts. and papers] 246) HD2336.G6A4 1908 With this are bound: Home work regulation bill [Bill 90] and Home work bill [Bill 200] See Index under Children, Employment of. 1148 Hall, George A. Unrestricted forms of child labor in New York state. (In New York state conference of charities and correction. Proceedings. Twelfth. Albany, 1911. p. 91-103) HY88.N7 1911 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 168. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l68 1149 --------- comp. What the United States government says about child labor in tenements. National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 151. 16 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l51 1150 H ine, L ew is W. Child work in the home; what it is, what it should be. By Lewis W. Hine and Jessie P. Rich. New York city, National child labor committee [1914?] 8 p. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pam phlet no. 232) Reprinted from the Child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 1, May, 1914. HD8250.U3N4,v.3 1151 --------- Photographs taken in the tenements. v. 1, no. 3: 35—65. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1912, HD6250„U3N4,v.l 1152 Hard, Frank. The cry of the children* and exposure of certain British in dustries in which children are iniquitously employed. London, J. Bowden; New York, M. F. Mansfield, 1898. 96 p. illus., plates. 19°m HD6250.G7H4 1153 Hogg, Mrs. Edith F. Children outside the factory laws. (In International congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20$em. v. 6, p. 71-76) IIQ1106 1899,v.6 1154 Hopkins, Mary Alden. Children in bondage: turning children’s homes into factories. Good housekeeping, June, 1913, v. 56 : 743-752. TXl.G7,v.56 1155 --------- Our other children. Collier’s, July 20, 1912, v. 49: 12-13. AP2.C65,v.49 1156 Independent [Editorial] Sweating industries. Independent, Dee. 12,1912, v. 73: 1391-1392. AP2.I53,v.73 1157 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. Insanitary conditions amongst home workers. (In In ternational congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 204cm. v. 6, p . 21-25.) HQ1106 1899,v.6 1158 —------ Minimum-wage boards. American journal of sociology, Nov. 1911, v. 17r 303-314. H M l.A7,v.l7 1159 Lovejoy, Owen R. Memorandum on tenement-house work in New York city. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1912, v . 1, no. 3: 26-31 HD6250.U3N4,v,l 1160 -------- Some unsettled questions about child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v . 33: 49-62. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 108. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l08 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 96 1161 Love joy, Owen R. and Elizabeth C. Watson. Home work in the tene ment houses of New York city, (/n New York (State) Factory investigating commission. Preliminary report, 1912. Albany, 1912. 23om. v. 1, p. 571-584) HD8053.N7A5 1912 1162 Markham, Edwin. The blight on the Easter lilies. Cosmopolitan magazine, Apr. 1907, v. 42: 667-673. AP2.C8,v.42 The hoe-man in the making series. 1163 --------- The smoke of sacrifice. 391-397. Cosmopolitan magazine, Feb. 1907, v. 42: AP2.C8,v.42 The hoe-man in the making series. 1164 --------- The sweat-shop inferno. 327-333. ► Cosmopolitan magazine, Jan. 1907, v. 42: AP2.C8,v.42 The hoe-man in the making series. 1165 Massachusetts. Bureau of statistics. Industrial home work in Massa chusetts; the results of an inquiry made in co-operation with the Women’s educational and industrial union, Department of research. June 12, 1914. Boston, Wright & Potter printing company, state printers, 1914. 183 p. inch tables, plates. 23om.(Labor bulletin no. 101) HC107.M4A3,n0.101 Part v. of the Annual report on the statistics of labor for 1914. Bibliography: p. 152-177. “ A conspicuous evil found was that of child labor, approximately one-fifth of thehòme workers whose ages were reported being under 14 years of age . . .” 1166 Mény, Georges. Le travail à domicile, ses misères, les remèdes. Paris, M. Rivière et eie, 1910. 463, [1] p. 25cm. (Systèmes et faits sociaux) “ Index bibliographique” : p. [423]-440. HD2331.M4 “ Table des auteurs cités” : p. [441J-448. L ’emploi des enfants mineurs: p. 85-92. 1167 1168 1169 National child labor committee, New York. Children who work in the tenements. New York, 1908. Pamphlet no. 84. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.84 Nearing, Scott. On the trail of the Pittsburg stogie. Independent, July 2, 1908, v. 65: 22-24. AP2.I53,v.65 Netherlands (Kingdom, 1 8 1 5 ) Directie van den arbeid. Onderzoekingen naar de toestanden in de Nederlandsche huisindustrie , . . Uitg. voor rekening van het Departement van landbouw, nijverheid en handel. ’s-Gravenhage, Ter Algemeene landsdrukkerij, 1911-14. 3 v . plates. 26|cm. [Uitgaven no. 7a, 7b, 7c] HD2336.N2A3 Contents .— deel I. Voedings- en genotmiddelen.—deel II. Diamantbewerking. Drukkers. bedrijf. Chemische industrie. Hout- en stroobewerking. Metaalbewerking. Papierbewerking. Schoenmakers.—deel 3. Textielindustrie. Kleeding en rèiniging. 1170 New York (State) Bureau of labor statistics. Annual report. Albany, 1890, 1902. 2 v. tables. 23£em. HC107.N7A3 8th, 1890: Child labor, pt. 1, p. 37-103. 20th, 1902: Earnings in home industries: p. 37-289. 1171 Riis, Jacob A . The children of the poor. New York, C. Scribner’s sons, 1892. xi, 300 p. inch illus., plates, diagrsi 20em. HV885.N49R6 “ Thelittle toilers” : p. 92-117. 1172 --------- How the other half lives; studies among the tenements of New York. New York, C. Scribner’s sons, 1903. xv, [1], 304 p. inch front., illus., plans, 19|cmHV4046.N6R58 1173 Schwyzer, Eugen. Die jugendlichen Arbeitskräfte im Handwerk und Ge werbe, in der Hausindustrie und in den Fabriken. Zürich, E. Leemann. 1900. Separatabdruck aus der “ Schweiz. Zeitschrift für Gemeinnützigkeit” X X X I X . Jahr. Heft III. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1174 Sergeant, Elizabeth Shepley. 448-453. In chains. 97- Outlook, June 24, 1911, v. 98: AP2.08,v.98 Chain making in England as a form of home work. 1175 --------- Toilers of the tenements. 231-248. 1176 1177 McClure’s magazine, July, 1910, v. 35: AP2.M2,v.35 Sigg, Jean. L ’enfant dans l ’industrie domestique en Suisse. La Revue socialiste, Sept. 1903, v. 38: 346-369. HX5.R4,v.38 Simson, Frau. Child labour outside the factory laws. (In International con gress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20Jein. v. 6, p. 76-81.) HQ1106 1899 v.6 1178 A Sweat shop: Rag-stripping: A court tailor shop. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 238-243 Hl.A4,v.29 1179 Tuckwell, Gertrude M. The “ sweated industries” exhibition. Progress, July, 1906, v. 1: 193-203. HN381.P9,v.l Van KLeeck, Mary. Artificial flower makers. New York, Survey associates, 1180 inc., 1913. xix, 261 p. incl. front., tables, charts, plates. 20Jem. (Russell Sage foundation. [Publications]) * HD6073.A7V3 Children: home workers: p. 94-107; shop workers: p. 25-27. 1181 --------- Child labor in home industries. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 145-149. Hl.A4,v.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 134. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l34 1182 --------- Child labor in New York city tenements. Charities and the Commons, Jan. 18, 1908, v. 19: 1405-1420. HVl.C4,v.l9 1183 Watson, Elizabeth C. Home work in the tenements. Survey, Feb. 4, 1911, v. 25: 772-781. HVl.C4,v.25 1184 --------- Memorandum on some phases of home-work in the New York tene ments. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1912, v. 1, no. 3, p. 32—34. HD6250.U3N4,v.l 1185 --------- Report on manufacturing in tenements in New York state. (In New York (State) Factory investigating commission. Second report, 1913. Al bany, 1913. 23cm. p. 667-755. [Legislature, 1913. Senate doc. 36]) HD8053.N7A5 1913 1186 White, Henry. Perils of the home factory. Harper’s weekly, Feb. 11, 1911, v. 55: 10. AP2.H32,v.55 1187 Willis, W. N. White slaves of toil; how women and children are sweated. London, Pearson, 1914. 208 p. 1188 Wirth, Clara. Hie Kinderheimarbeit in der aargauischen Tabakindustrie. Würzburg, Franz Staudenraus, 1912. 241 p. 22Jcm. Inaugural-dissertation . . . Universität Zurich. Quellen und Literatur: p. v-viii. 1189 Zinsli, Ph. Die Beschäftigung der schulpflichtigen Kinder in Hausindustrie und andern Erwerbsarten im Kanton Appenzell A .-R h. Zeitschrift für Schweizerische Statistik, 1905, v. 41; Bd. 1: 164-183. HAl.Z5,v.41 Literatur: p. 181. 44193°—16-----7 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 98 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. MERCANTILE ESTABLISHMENTS. 1190 B etts, Lillian W. v. 73: 921-927. Child labor in shops and homes. Outlook, Apr. 18, 1903, AP2.08,v.73 1191 B ow en , Louise Hadduck (de K oven ) “ Mrs. J. T . B o w e n ” . The depart ment store girl; based upon interviews with 200 girls. Issued by the Juvenile protective association of Chicago. Text by Louise de Koven Bowen. [Chi cago] 1911. 15 p. 18cm. 1192 B rew er, Franklin N. Child labor in the department store. American academy of political and social science, Annals, July, 1902, v. 20: 165-178. Hl.A4,v.20 _ 1193 B utler, E lizabeth B eardsley. Saleswomen in mercantile stores, Baltimore, 1909. New York, Charities publication committee, 1912. 217 p. 20^em. (Russell Sage foundation [publications]) HD6070.B8 Cash girls and wrappers, p. 50-52; 105-106. 1194 Cranston, M. It. Girl behind the counter. World to-day, Mar. 1906, v. 10: 270-274. ' AP2.W75.V.10 1195 D orr, Mrs. R h e ta C. Christmas from the counter. Independent, Dec. 5, 1907, v. 63: 1340-1347. AP2.I53,v.63 1196 Goldmark, Pauline, and G eorge A . Hall. Preliminary report on employ ment of women and children in mercantile establishments. {In New York (State) Factory investigating commission. Second report, 1913. Albany, 1913. 23cm. v. 2, p. 1193-1270. [Legislature, 1913. Senate doc. 36]) HD8053.N7A5 1913 1197 Gt. B rit. H om e dept. V an boys and w arehouse boys com m ittee. Report on the hours and conditions of employment of van boys and warehouse boys, appointed by His Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home department [with Minutes of evidence] London, Pub. by H. M. Stationery off., printed by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1913. 2 v. in 1. 33Jcm. ([Par liament. Papers b y command] Cd. 6886-6887) HD6250.G7A4 1913 1198 Hopkins, M. A . Girls behind the counter. Collier’s weekly, Mar. 16, 1912, v. 48: 16-17. , AP2.C65,v.48 1199 M edley, K . I. M. Van-boy labour. Economic review, Jan. 1911, v. 21: 5762. HBl.E4,v.21 1200 N ational civic fed era tion review . Department store number. Working conditions in New York stores. A report upon welfare activities in twentytwo retail concerns—Wrongs to be righted and specific recommendations for improvements—Length of workday—Women’s wages—Relation of wage scale to white slavery. National civil federation review, July 15, 1913, v. 4: 1-32. 1201 Ohio. Industrial com m ission. D ept, o f in vestigation and statistics. Wages and hours of labor of women and girls employed in mercantile estab lishments in Ohio in 1913. Columbus, O., 1914. 33 p. 23|cm. (Its Report no. 1) HD8053.03A3,no.1 1202 Pennsylvania. D ept, of labor and industry. Conditions of women in mer cantile establishments in Philadelphia. (In its Monthly bulletin, Jan. 1915, v. 2, no. 1, p. 15-98) 1203 TJ. S. B ureau o f labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States, v. 5. Wage-earning women in stores and fac tories. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1910. 384 p. 23cm. (61st Cong. 2d sess. Senate. Doc.645, v. 5) HD6093.A4,v.5 1204 V an Kleeck, M ary. Working conditions in New York department stores. Survey, Oct. 11, 1913, v. 31: 50-51. HVl.C4,v.31 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 99 1205 What it means to be a department store girl, as told by the girl herself. Ladies’ home journal, June, 1913, v. 30: 8. AP2.L135,v.30 1206 Wilcox, W. It. Women in New York department stores: a reply. Survey, Nov. 15, 1913, v. 31: 181-183. HVl.C4,v.31 1207 Williamson, Robert. Training the “ dead-ender ” . World’s work, London, Mar. 1914, v. 23: 443-446. AP4.W85,v.23 M IN ES AN D QUARRIES. 1208 [Ducpétiaux, Édouard] De la condition des ouvriers mineurs dads la Grande-Bretagne et en Belgique. Analyse de l ’enquête ordonnée par le Parle ment anglais sur le travail des enfants dans les mines. Bruxelles, Impr. de Vandooren frères, 1843. 64 p. illus. 23om. HD6250.G7D8 “ Extrait des Annales des travaux publics de Belgique,” v. 1, p. [359]—420. 1209 Child labor in mines. American federationist, Jan. 1913, v. 20: 32-33. HD8055.A5A2',v.20 1210 Chute, Charles L. The child labor problem in Pennsylvania. Child, Chi cago, Oct. 1912, v. 1:9-12. HQ750.A2C3,v.l 1211 Clopper, E. N. Child labor in West Virginia. National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 86. 24 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.86 1212 Durland, Kellogg. Child labor in Pennsylvania. Outlook, May 9, 1903, v. 74: 124-127. AP2.08,v.74 . 1213 The Employment of pit girls. 1214 1215 Manchester guardian, Jan. 27, 1914, p. 7. Germany. Bekanntmachung, betreffend die Beschäftigung jugendlicher •Arbeiter auf Steinkohlenbergwerken in Preussen, Bayern, Sachsen und Elsass-Lothringen. Vom 7. März 1913. Germany. Statistisches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, Mar. 1913, v. 11: 222-223. HD8441.A3,v.ll Gt. Brit. Children’s employment commission. First report of the Com missioners. Mines. Appendix, part 1-2. Reports and evidence from sub commissioners. Presented to both Houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. 1842. 4 vols. 33cm. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1842, v. 15, 16, pt. 1-2, 17, pt. 1-2) J301.K6 1842,v.l5-17 1216 --------- Home dept. Mines and quarries: General report and statistics . . . 1914. Part II. Labour. London, Harrison & son, 1915. 52-100 p. tables, diagrs., chart. 34Jcm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 8135) Statistics of boys employed in mines: p. 68-71, 98. TN57.A48 1914 1217 --------- Laws, statutes, etc. An act to consolidate and amend the law relating to coal mines and certain other mines. 16th Dec., 1911. Interna tional labor office. Bulletin, Mar. 1914, v. 9: 9-12. HD7801.I6,v.9 Pt. 6: Employment of boys, girls, and women. 1218 Lovejoy, Owen R. Child labor in the coal mines. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 293-299. H i.A4,v .27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 35-41; Pamphlet no. 27. 7p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.27 1219 --------- Child labor in the soft coal mines. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 26-34. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. 9 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.44 1220 --------- The coal mines of Pennsylvania. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 133-138. Hl.A4,v.38 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Pamphlet no. 44. 100 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1221 Lovejoy, Owen R. The extent of child labor in the anthracite coal indus try. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29:35-49. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 45. 15 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.45 1222 --------- In the shadow of the coal-breaker. Woman’s home companion, Sept. 1906, Y. 33: 9-11, AP2.W714,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 61. 15 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.61 1223 -------- School-house or coalbreaker. Outlook, Aug. 26, 1905, v. 80: 10111019. AP2.O8,v.80 1224 Marot, Helen. Progress in Pennsylvania: Protection for children in mills and mines. Charities,June10, 1905, v. 14: 834-836. HVl.C4,v.l4 1225 M arkham, Edwin. Children in bondage. New York, Hearst’s international * library co., 1914. 411 p. 21cm. HD6250.U3M3 The cost of coal, p. 94-113. 1226 --------- Little slaves of the coal-mines. v. 42: 20-28. Cosmopolitan magazine, Nov. 1906, AP2.C8,v.42 The hoe-man in the making series. 1227 Mitchell, John. Proper minimum age for working children. {In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings , . . [Hartford] 1909. 22cm. p.26-32.) . HD6250.U4C8 1908 1228 Montessori, Maria. Children working in mines and dangerous trades. (In International congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20£cm. v. 6, p. 81-82) HQ1106 1899,v.6 Brief outline of address by Madame Montessori, who spoke in Italian. 1229 Nichols, Francis H. Children of the coal shadow. McClure’s magazine, Feb. 1903, v. 20: 435-444. AP2.M2,v.20 Same cond. American review of reviews, Feb. 1903, v. 27: 214-215. AP2.R4,v.27 1230 Roberts, Peter. Anthracite coal-communities; a study of the demography, the social, educational and moral life of the anthfacite regions. New York, The Macmillan company; London, Macmillan & co., ltd., 1904. xiii, 387 p. incl. 2 maps, plan. 22 pi. 23cm. HD8039.M62U65 Our educational apparatus: 1. Schoolhouses in mining towns; 2. The men and women who teach; 3. The boys and girls in school; 4. The boys in the breakers; 5. Can our educational system be improved? p. 151-187. 1231 Seidl, E. Die Beschäftigung jugendlicher Arbeiter beim Steinkohlenbergbau in Ostrau-Karwin und die damit gemachten Erfahrungen. Zeitschrift für Berg-Hütten und-Salinenwesen im preussischen Staate,1911, v. 59: 186-212., TN3.Z4,v.59 1232 Waudby, William S. Children of labor. Frank Leslie’s popular monthly, Apr. 1903, v. 55: 545-556. AP2.A346,v.55 1233 Washington, Booker Taliaferro. The man farthest down; a record of obser vation and study in Europe, by Booker T. Washington, with the collabora tion of Robert E. Park. Garden City, N. Y ., Doubleday, Page & company, 1912. 4 p. 1., 3-390 p., 11. fold. map. 20Jcia. HD4851.W3 Child labour and the sulphur mines, p. 192-216. Same in Outlook, June 17,1911, v. 98:342-349. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis AP2.08,v.98 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 101 TEXTILES. 1234 Adler, Eleanor H. Children who weave silk. 1914, v. 3, no. 3, 52-61. Child labor bulletin. Nov. HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.3 1235 Allen, Carrie W. Child slaves of the cotton mills. International socialist review, Mar. 1911, v. 11: 521-524. H X l.I6 ,v .ll 1236 Bacon, Mary Applewhite. The problem of the southern cotton mill. At lantic monthly, Feb. 1907, v. 99: 224-231. AP2.A8,v.99 1236a --------- Child labor in the cotton mills of Georgia. Charities, July 18, 1903. v. 11: 60-61. H V l.C 4,v.ll 1237 Beeks, Gertrude. Welfare work and child labor in southern cotton mills. National civic federation review, July-Aug. 1906, v. 2: 14-21. HD4802.N2,v.2 1238 [Brown, Frederic Kenyon] Through the mill, the life of a mill-boy, b y A1 Priddy \nseudA Boston, New York [etc.] The Pilgrim press [°1911] xi, 289 p. front., 7 pi. 21cm. HD6250.U3B8 1239 Byington, Margaret F. Making income equal outgo: what the struggle means to cotton mill workers. Survey, Apr. 19, 1913, v. 30: 109-111. HY1' C4,v.30 1240 Campbell, John C. From mountain cabin to cotton mill. Child labor bul letin, v. 2, no. 1: 74-84. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 Pamphlet no. 195, 1913. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l95 1241 Chapman, Sydney John. The Lancashire cotton industry; a study in eco nomic development. Manchester, University press, 1904. 2 p. 1., vii p., 1 1., 309, [1] P- 23Jcm. (Publications of the University of Manchester. Economic series, no. 1) HD9881.7.L2C5 "Select bibliography of authorities” : p. 277-304. Children in factories, p. 85-95. 1242 Cheney, Howell. Practical restrictions on child labor in textile industries; higher educational and physical qualifications. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 86-99. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 96. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.96 1243 Child workers in North Carolina cotton mills. 573. Survey, Feb. 27, 1915, v. 33: HVl.C4,v.33 1244 Collet, Clara Elizabeth. Report by Miss Collet on changes in the employ ment of women and girls in industrial centres. Pt. 1. Flax and jute centres. Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. Lon don, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1898. iv, 113 p. 24em. ([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by command] C. 8794) HD6136.C75 Also found in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1898, v. 88. J301.K6 1898, v. 88 1245 Conant,B.K. Eight-hour day for children in Massachusetts factories. National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 226. 1246 --------- The textile industry and child labor. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 91-95. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 1247 Crosby, Ernest Howard. Broad-cast. New York, Funk and Wagnalls com pany, 1905. 126 p. 20cm. The cotton mill, p. 31-35. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 102 1248 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. D aw ley, Thom as Robinson. The child that toileth not; the story of a gov ernment investigation. New York, Gracia publishing company [c1912] xii, 490 p. front, (port.) illus. 21£cm. HD6250.U3D3 Reviewed by William Leavitt Stoddard. Survey, Feb. 15,1913, v. 29: 705-708. Pamphlet no. 186. HVl.C4,v.29 See also National child labor committee. 1249 Dorr, Mrs. Rheta Childe. The twentieth child. zine, Jan. 1912, v. 27: 793-806. Hampton-Columbian maga AP2.H152,v.27 1250 --------- When is a factory not a factory? Hampton magazine, Feb. 1912, v. 2834-49, 63. AP2.Hl52,v.28 1251 Ellis, Leonora Beck. The factory children of Georgia. Era magazine, July, 1903, v. 12: 49-57. AP2.E8,v.l2 1252 --------- A study of southern cotton-mill communities. Child labor. The operatives in general. American journal of sociology, Mar. 1903, v. 8: 623-630. HMl.A7,v.8 1253 Fahey, Charles P. No children in Tennessee factories. American federationist, Oct. 1901, v. 8: 401. HD8055.A5A2,v.8 1254 Foster, Thomas. Observations on the state of the children in cotton mills. [By Thomas Foster and David McWilliams] London [1825] 15 p. 21cm. 1255 Gerard, Claire. Une enquête officielle sur le travail des femmes et des enfants dans les industries textiles aux États-Unis. Le Musée social, Annales, Oct. 1910, v. 15: 326-329. H3.M8,v.l5 1256 Golden, John. Children in the textile industry. American academy of po litical and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 42-46. HI. A4, v .35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 127. 5 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l27 1257 Gordon, F. G. R. Child labor in textiles decreasing. Protectionist, Feb. 1915, v. 26: 667-668. HF1750.P8,v.26 1258 Guild, Curtis, jr. Child labor and the cotton industry. Voter, Aug. 1904, v. 2; 16-18. JKl.V6,v.2 1259 Harriman, Mrs. J. Borden. The cotton mill a factor in the development of the South. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Sup plement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 47-51. H i.A4,v .35 1260 Hine, Lewis W. Child or cotton? raising the question of. cotton picking in Texas: Photo-story. [New York city, National child labor committee, 1914?] 6 p. 30em. Reprinted from the Survey, Feb. 7,1914, v. 31: 589-592. HVl.C4,v.31 1261 --------- Girl workers in a cotton mill. [New Orleans] Survey, Mar. 14, 1914, v. 31: 737. HVl.C4,v.31 1262 --------- Hiding behind the work certificate. [Cotton mills of Georgia] Sur vey, Mar. 7, 1914, v.31:691. HVl.C4,v.31 1263 Hopkins, Mary Alden. New England mill slaves. Good housekeeping, Sept. 1913, v. 56:323-330. TXl.G7,v.56 1264 Johnston, John. Wastage of child-life, as exemplified by conditions in Lan cashire. London, A. C. Fifield, 1909. 95 p. 19om. (The Fabian socialist series, no. 7) HQ769.J7 “ References” : p. 94-95, 1265 Kohn, August. The cotton mills of South Carolina; a series of observations and facts as published in letters written to the News and courier. Charleston, S. C., 1903 . 40 p. 23cm. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1266 103 Kohn, August. The cotton mills of South Carolina, 1907; letters written to the News and courier. Charleston, S. C., Press of the Daggett printing company, c1907. 228 p. 23em. HD9877.S6K8 “ Reprinted from the News and courier, Charleston, S. C., October-December, 1907.” 1267 Larcom, Lucy. ix, [11]—183 p. An idyl of work. 18cm. Boston, J. R. Osgood and company, 1875. “ In her poem, An Idyl of work, Miss Larcom, in her most graceful and popular style, tells the story of her life as a Lowell factory girl.” 1268 Lord, Everett W. Child labor in the textile industries and canneries of New England. American academy of political and social science. Annals, Sup plement, Mar. 1909, v. 33 : 73-78. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 107. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l07 1269 The Lowell offering. Written, ed. and pub. by female operatives employed in the mills . . . Lowell, Powers & Bagley; [etc., etc., 1841J-45. 5 v. illus., plates. 21-22£cm. Monthly. AP2.L88 1270 [Macfadyen] Irene M. Ashby-. Child-labor in southern cotton mills. World’s work, Oct. 1901, v. 2: 1290-1295. AP2.W8,v.2 1271 McKelway, A. J. Child labor and “ Education” in southern cotton mills. Woman’s home companion, May, 1907, v. 34: 24, 57. AP2.W714,v.34 1272 --------- Child labor in the Carolinas; account of investigations made in the cotton mills of North and South Carolina, by Rev. A. E. Seddon, A. H. Ulm, and Lewis W. Hine, under the direction of the southern office of the National child labor committee. [New York? 1909] [20] p. illus. 23cm. (Pam phlet no. 92) HD6250.U3N2,no.92 1273 --------- Child labor in the southern cotton mills. American academy of politi cal and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 259-269. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20. 11 p.; Pamphlet no. 23. 11 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.23 1274 --------- Child wages in the cotton mills: our modem feudalism. Child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 1: 7-16. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 199, 11 p, HD6250.U3N2,no.l99 1275 ---------•The cotton,mill: the Herod among industries. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 39-52. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 162. 15 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l62 1276 --------- The mill or the farm? American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 52-57. Hl.A4,v.35 1277 --------- Welfare work and child labor in southern cotton mills. Charities and the commons, Nov. 10, 1906, v. 17: 271-273. HVl.C4,v.l7 1278 Maine. Bureau of industrial and labor statistics. Industrial conditions surrounding women and children in the textile industry. (In its 22d annual report, 1908, p. 1-83) HC107.M2A3 1908 1279 Markham, Edwin. The child at the loom. Cosmopolitan magazine, Sept. 1906, v. 41: 480-487. AP2.C8,v.41 The hoe-man in the making series. 1280 --------- Spinners in the dark: Child labor in the silk mills. Cosmopolitan, July, 1907, v. 43: 310-314. AP2.C4,v.43 1281 Moore, John Trotwood. The Bishop of Cotton town; a story of the southern cotton mills. Philadelphia, The J. C. Winston company, 1906. 644 p. col. front., 4 pi. 19£cm. PZ3.M784B The theft of a childhood, p. 258-274. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 104 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1282 National child labor committee, New York. The child in thé cotton mill. New York city, 1916. 10 p. 23cm. (Its Pamphlet no. 260, Mar. 1916) 1283 Nearing, Scott. The power behind our silk mills. Independent, Feb. 1, 1912, v. 72: 255-256. AP2.I53,v.72 1284 New York (State) Dept, of labor. Annual industrial directory of New York state. lst-2d. 1912-1913. Albany, 1913-1914. 2 v. 23cm. Contains statistics of children employed in factories. HC107.N7A4 1285 Otey, Mrs. Elizabeth (Lewis). Children in the cotton industry: a historical sketch. (Inker The beginning of child labor legislation in certain states; a comparative study. Washington 1910. 23cm. p. 43-72. V. 6 of the IT. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wage-earners in the United States) HD6093.A4,v.6 1286 Palmer, Walter B . Woman and child workers in cotton mills. American statistical association. Publications, June, 1911, n. s., v. 12: 588-617. HAl.A6,n.s.,v.l2 1287 The Proposal to lower the factory age in Lancashire. New" statesman, Aug. 21, 1915, v. 5:465-466. AP4.N64.V.5 1288 Roberts, Peter. Employment of girls in the textile industry of Pennsyl vania. (In Commons, John R., ed., Trade unionism and labor problems. Boston, 1905. 21Jcm. p. 423-434) HD6483.C7 “ From the Annals, American academy of political science, v. 23, 1904, p. 434-444.” Hl.A4,v.23 1289 Robinson, Harriet Jane, “ Mrs. W, S. Robinson.” Loom and spindle:, or, Life among the early mill girls. With a sketch of “ The Lowell offering ” and some of its contributors. New York, Boston, T. Y . Crowell & company [1898] vii, 216 p. facsim. 18cm. HD6096.L9R7 Child life in the Lowell cotton mills, p. 25-39. 1290 Rochester, Anna, and Florence Taylor. What the government says about cotton mills. Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1915, v. 3, no. 4: 20-24. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 1291 Sandiford, Peter. The half-time system in the textile trades. (In Sadler, M. E. ed., Continuation schools in England and elsewhere. 2d ed.,-Manches ter, 1908, p. 318-351) .LC5215.S25 Sanville, Florence L. Children and textiles: a record of experience. North American review, Apr. 1909, v. 189: 573-584. ' AP2.N7,v.l89 1293 --------- Silk workers in Pennsylvania and New Jersey. Survey, May 18,1912, v. 28: 307-312. HVl.C4,v.28 1294 Seddon, Alfred A. The education of mill children in the South. American academy-of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 72-79. Hl.A4,v.32 1292 1295 Swift, W. H. The last stand of the one business which opposes child labor legislation in the South. Child labor bulletin, May, 1914, v. 3, no. 1: 85-89. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 1296 Taylor, Florence I. Mortality among cotton operatives. Child labor bulle tin, Nov. 1914, v. 3, no. 3 : 62-65. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 1297 Thompson, Holland. From the cotton field to the cotton mill; a study of the industrial transition in North Carolina. New York, London, The Mac millan company, 1906. ix, 284 p. 20cm. HD9877.N8T5 T h e ch ild in t h e m ill, p . 219-247. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 105 1298 TT. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States. In 19 volumes. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1910-13. 19 v. tables. 23cm. (61st Cong., 2d sees. Senate. Doc.645) I. Cotton textile industry. 1910. 1044 p. HD6093.A4 IV . The silk industry. 1911. 592 p. X IV . Causes of death among woman and child cotton-mill operatives, by Arthur R. Perry. 1912. 430 p. X V I. Family budgets of typical cotton-mill workers, by Wood F. Worcester and Daisy Worthington Worcester. 1911. 255 p. X V II. Hookworm disease among cotton-mill operatives, by Ch. Warden Stiles. 1912. 45 p. 1299 -------— Bureau of the census. Thirteenth census of the United States: 1910. Bulletin. Manufactures: 1909. Statistics for silk manufactures. [Washing ton, Govt, print, off., 1913] 25 p. incl. tables. 31cm. HD9914.A3 1910 Contains statistics of the employment of children under 16 years of age. 1300 ------------------- Thirteenth census of the United States: 1910. Bulletin. Man ufactures: 1909. Statistics for the manufacture of cotton goods, including cotton small wares. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913] 30 p. incl. tables, chart. 31cm. HD9874.A3 1909 Contains statistics of the employment of children under 16 years of age. Van Vorst, Bessie, “ Mrs. John Van Vorst.” The cry of the children; a study of child-labor, . . . with an introduction by Albert J. Beveridge. New York, Moffat, Yard and company, 1908. xxiii, 9-246 p. 19^cm. HD6250.U3V3 1302 --------- and Marie Van Vorst. The woman who toils; being the experiences of two ladies as factory girls. New York, Doubleday, Page & company, 1903. ix p., 3 1., 303 p. front., plates, ports. 20£cm. HD6068.V2 1301 “ A portion of the material in this book appeared serially under the same title in Everybody’s magazine. ” The southern cotton mills. The child in the southern mills: p. 276-303. 1303 Villermê, Louis Bene. Tableau de l ’état physique et moral des ouvriers employés dans les manufactures de coton, de laine et de soie. Paris, J. Renouard et cie., 1840. 2 v. 22em. HD8039.T42F89 Durée journalière du travail, v. 2, p. 83-109; Enfants employés dans les manufactures, v. 2, p. 110-125. 1304 W eltner, C. E . Social welfare and child labor in South Carolina cotton mill communities. Child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 1: 85-90. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 National child labor committee, New York. Pamphlet no. 201,1913. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.201 1305 Williams, Talcott. Child labor and the textile factory. (In National asso ciation of cotton manufacturers, Transactions, no. 81. 1906. [Boston] 1907. 25cm. p. 302-317) TS1550.N5,no.81 1306 Woolley, R. W. The mill child’s advantages. Pearson’s magazine, Mar. 1910, v. 23: 359-367. AP2.P35,v.23 “ The mill child, at least the Southern mill child, has advantages—advantages of good food, education, and better hygienic conditions—infinitely better—than he would have on the farm from which he came.” 1307 Young, Thomas M. The American cotton industry; a study of work and workers, contributed to the Manchester guardian. London, Methuen & co.; New York, C. Scribner’s sons, 1902. xvi, 146 p. 19em. HD9875.Y8 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 106 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. M ISCELLANEOUS IN DU STR IES. 1308 Beschäftigung von jugendlichen Arbeitern und Arbeiterinnen in Werk stätten mit Motorbetrieb (Deutsches Reich). Soziale Rundschau, July, 1910, v. 2, p. 12-19. HD8401.A2 1910,v.2 1309 Bowen, Louise Hadduek (de Koven) “ Mrs. J. T. Bowen” . The girl em ployed in hotels and restaurants. By the Juvenile protective association of Chicago. Text by Louise de Koven Bowen. [Chicago] 1912. 21 p. 18cm. 1310 Child slavery in Chicago [in candy factories] Public policy, Dec. 20, 1902, v. 7: 394. Hl.P9,v.7 1311 Dwight, Helen C. Dangerous machines in the metal trades. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1914, v. 3, no. 3: 66-75. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 1312 Gesellschaft für Soziale Reform. Das Verbot der Nachtarbeit jugendlicher Arbeiter in Walz- und Hammerwerken. Soziale Praxis, Oct. 5, 1911, v. 21: 21-22. H5.S7,v.21 Gt. Brit. Children’s employment commission. Second report of -the Commissioners. Trades and manufactures. Appendix and index to second report. Presented to both Houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. 1843-1845. 4 v. Folded map. 33em. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1843, v. 13, 14, 15; 1845, v. 42) J301.K6 1843,v.l3-15 1845,v.42 1314 Kestner, Fritz. Die Nachtarbeit jugendlicher Arbeiter in Walzwerken, Hammerwerken und Glashütten. Jahrbücher für Nationalökonomie und Statistik, Sept. 1910, 3. Folge, v. 40: 353-374. HB5.J3,3d ser.v.40 1315 Luetgebrune, Walter. Die Beschäftigung der jugendlichen Ziegeleiarbeiter nach geltendem Recht. Tonindustrie-Zeitung, Feb. 28,1914, v. 38: 407-409. TP785.T67,v.38 1313 1316 M arkham, Edwin. The grind behind the holidays. Dec. 1906, v. 42: 143-150. Cosmopolitan magazine, AP2.C8,v.42 The hoe-man in the making series. 1317 The Pittsburgh survey; findings in six volumes, ed. b y Paul Underwood Kel logg. New York, Charities publication committee, 1909-14. 6 v. fronts., plates. 23£cm. (Russell Sage foundation. [Publications]) HD8085.P6P6 v. 6. Wage-earning Pittsburgh. 1914. Factory inspection in Pittsburgh, with special reference to the conditions of working women and children, b y Florence Kelley: p. 189-216. Sharpsburg: A typical waste of childhood, b y Elizabeth Beardsley Butler: p. 279-304. 1318 Price, W. D. 8-19. Greasy Olivers. Technical world magazine, Sept. 1913, v. 20: Tl.T2,v.20 Child labor in the Oliver iron and steel plant in Pittsburgh. 1319 U. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States, v. 11. Employment of women in the metal trades. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1911. 107 p. 23cm. (61st Cong., 2d sess. Senate Doc. 645. v. 11.) HD6093.A4,v.ll Number and rate of accidents to children: p, 73-76. 1320 --------------------------- v. 18. Employment of women and children in selected industries. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913. 531 p. 23cm. (61st Cong., 2d sess. Senate Doc. 645. v. 18) HD6093.A4,v.l8 The following industries have been investigated: Canning and preserving; Cans and boxes, tin; Cigar boxes; Cigarettes; Cigars; Clocks and watches; Confectionery; Core making; Corsets; Crackers and biscuits; Hardware and metal specialties; Hosiery and knit goods; Jewelry; Needles and pins; Nuts, bolts, and screws; Paper boxes; Pottery; Rubber and elastic goods; Shirts, overalls, and underwear; Stamped and enameled ware; Tobacco (smoking and chewing) and snuff; Woolen and worsted goods. A statement of the general sanitary conditions is given for most of the industries. Reviewed b y Louise C. Odencrantz in Survey, Jan. 24,1914, v. 31: 498-499. HVl.C4,v.31 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES, ON CHILD LABOR. 107 1321 Women’s educational and industrial union, Boston. Dept, of research. The boot and shoe industry in Massachusetts as a vocation for women. Octo ber, 1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 109 p. 23cm. (Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 180. Women in in dustry series, no. 7) HD8051.A5,no.l80 Employment of minors as related to women’s earnings in shoe factories: p. 96-98. STAG E. Addams, Jane. Children on the stage. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 60-65. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 165. p. 1-7. HD6250.U3N2,no.l65 1323 ------- — Stage children. Survey, Dec. 3, 1910, v. 25: 342-343. HVl.C4,v.25 1324 Barker, Henry A. Stage children. Survey, Aug. 12, 1911, v. 26 : 703-704. HVl.C4,v.26 1322 1325 Bates, Blanche. 635-636. Child labor on the stage. Survey, Aug. 5, 1911, v. 26: HVl.C4,v.26 1326 --------- The stage and stage children. New York dramatic mirror, May 3, 1911, v. 65: 5. PN2000.N6,v.65 1327 --------- Stage children. New York, National child labor committee, 1912. 7 p. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 176) HD6250.U3N2,no.l76 1328 Blydenburgh, Benjamin B. The child and the theater. Case and comment, Mar. 1912, v. 18: 584-586. 1329 Children barred from the Baltimore stage. 1913, v. 57:21. New York dramatic mirror, Jan. 18, PN2000.N6,v.57 1330 Children of the stage. Facts about illogical laws. Mar. 15, 1911, v. 65: 8. • 1331 New York dramatic mirror, PN2000.N6,v.65 Children on the Colorado stage. Survey, Oct. 14, 1911, v. 27: 995. HVl.C4,v.27 1332 Children readmitted to Louisiana’s stage. Survey, Aug. 10, 1912, v. 28: 629630. HVl.C4,v.28 1333 Clark, S. H. The artist child. (In Chicago. Child welfare exhibit, 1911. The child in the city. Chicago, 1912. 22°m. p. 302-309) HV741.C4 1334 Concerning the stage child. 65: 3. New York dramatic mirror, June 21, 1911, v. PN2000.N6,v.65 1335 Favill, Henry Baird. Child labor as related to the stage. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 66-73. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 165. p. 8-15. HD6250.U3N2,no.l65 1336 Gordon, Jean M. Child labor on the stage. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 74-76. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 165. p. 16-18. HD6250.U3N2,no.l65 1337 Great Britain. Laws, statutes, etc. An act to prohibit and restrict chil dren and young persons being taken out of the United Kingdom with a view to singing, playing, performing, or being exhibited, for profit. 15th Aug., 1913. [Children (Employment abroad) act, 1913] International labor office, Bulletin, Mar. 1914, v. 9: 12-14. HD7801.I6,v.9 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 108 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1338 Interview with Francis Wilson concerning child actors. mirror, July 9, 1910, v. 64: 5. New York dramatic PN2000.N6,v.64 1339 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. Colorado’s stage and field children. Survey, Oct. 14, 1911, v. 27: 996. HVl.C4,v.27 1340 Krows, A. E. Francis Wilson’s definition of the stage child. New York dramatic mirror, Sept. 11, 1912, v. 68: 8. PN2000.N6,v.68 1341 Lord, Everett W. Child labor on the stage. Survey, May 21, 1910, v. 24: 317-320. HVl.C4,v.24 1342 --------- Children of the stage. National child labor committee, 1910. Pam phlet no. 137a, 31 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l37a 1343 Lovejoy, Owen R. Employment of children on the stage. Child labor bul letin, Nov. 1912, v. 1, no. 3, p. 72-82. HD6250.U3N4,v.l 1344 MacGowan, K. Liberating the stage child. Theatre, Oct. 1914, v. 20: 173175,196. PN2000.T5,v.20 1345 Maryland. Bureau of statistics and information. Children on the stage. (In Us Report, 1912, p. 46-47; 1913, p. 107-122; 1914, p. 198-214; 1915, p. 130-148.) HC107.M3A15 1346 Mason, John. Education of the stage child. New York dramatic mirror, Mar. 8, 1911, v. 65: 5. PN2000.N6,v.65 1347 National alliance for the protection of stage children. mirror, Mar. 1, 1911, v. 65: 14. 1348 New York dramatic PN2000.N6,v.65 Quimby, Harriet. Shall children be barred from the stage? Leslie’s weekly July 21, 1910, v. I l l : 55. A P2.L52,v.lll 1349 Reina, Ettore. I pubbliei spettacoli e le prowidenze di legislazione sociale . . . Roma, L. Cecchini, 1915. 153 p. 31em. (Pubblicazioni dell’ Ufficio del lavoro, serie B, n. 46) At head of title: Ministero di agricoltura, industria e commercio. Consiglio superiore del lavoro. Part I gives the results of an investigation into the employment of children in theatrical performances. 1350 Royle, E. M. A plea for the stage child. New York dramatic mirror, May 24, 1911, v. 65: 5-6. PN2000.N6,v.65 1351 Stage children. Dial, Mar. 1, 1911, v. 50: 145-147. AP2.D48,v.50 1352 Stage children barred in Louisiana. Survey, Sept. 18, 1909, v. 22: 817. HVl.C4,v.22 1353 To save children from the stage. 798. Literary digest, Nov. 12, 1910, v. 41: 797AP2.L58,v.41 1354 Why children play in the theaters. Survey, June 10,1911, v. 26: 401. HVl.C4,v.26 1355 Wilson, Francis. Child labor on the stage. v. 24: 496-498,635-636. 1356 --------- The child on the stage. 1357 --------- Defending the child actors. Survey, June 18, July 23, 1910, HVl.C4,v.24 Collier’s, May 21, 1910, v. 45: 19. AP2.C65,v.45 Literary digest, Nov. 12,1910, v. 41: 861. AP2.L58,v.41 1358 --------- Persecution of the stage child. 1911, v. 65: 5. New York dramatic mirror, Feb. 1, PN2000.N6,v.65- 1359 Wolff, Solomon. The child on the stage. National child labor committee New York. 1912.Pamphlet no. 177. 10 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l77 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 109 STR EET TRAD ES. 1360 Ackroyd, Thomas R. v. 3: 158-161. Child welfare work in Manchester. Child, Nov. 1912, HQ750.A2C4,v:3 Street trading, p. 159. 1361 Adams, Myron E. Children in American street trades. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25 : 437-458. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 25-46. HD6250.U3N2,no.2 1362 -------- - Municipal regulations of street trades. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1904. [Columbus, O.] 1904. 23em. p. 294-300) HY88.A3 1904 1363 Addams, Jane. The spirit of youth and the city streets. New York, The Macmillan company, 1909. 6 p. 1., 3-162 p. 19Jcm. HQ796.A3 The spirit of youth and industry, p. 107-135. 1364 Adler, Nettie. Child workers and wage-earners. Journal, June 12, 1908, v. 56: 738-747. Royal society of arts, Tl.S64,v.56 1365 --------- Juvenile wage-earners and their work. Progress, July, 1906, v. 1: 204210. HN381.P9,v.l 1366 --------- \and others]. Boy labour. Child, Mar. 1912, v. 2: 522-523. HQ750.A2C4,v .2 1367 Aronvia, B. C. The newsboy problem in New York city. Kindergarten primary magazine, Mar. 1907, v. 19: 483-491. LB1141.K5,v.l9 1368 Benedict, Leonard. Waifs of the slums and their way out. New York, Chicago [etc.] F. H. Revell company [°1907] 234 p. incl. front. Plates, map, chart, tab. 20om. HV878.B5 The newsboy and his real life, p. 99-115. 1369 Blenk, James H., archbishop. The child in the street. Child labor bulletin, May, 1914, v. 3, no. 1: 52-55. HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.l National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 225. 4 p. 1370 The Bootblack: a city problem. Woman’s home companion, Sept. 1907, v. 34:25. AP2.W714,v.34 1371 Boston. Public schools. Regulation of street trades in Boston. School document no. 15, 1909, p. 34-37; no. 14, 1910, p. 42-44; no. 19, 1910, p. 132138. 1372 Brown, Edward F. The demoralizing environment of night messengers in southern cities. Child labor bulletin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 138-141. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 1373 --------- The night messenger service: A child labor problem. Editorial review, Jan. 1911, v. 4: 31-41. AP2,E26,v.4 1374 Brown, Emma Elizabeth. The child toilers of Boston streets. Boston, D. Lothrop & co. [1879] 45 p. front., illus., plates. 23icm. HD2350.U5B72 1375 Brown, John George. [Pictures of street boys. Quoted interview on “ street boys” ]. Survey, June 14, 1913, v. 30: facing p. 364, 380-381. HVl.C4,v.30 1376 Burke, Thomas. The street-trading children of Liverpool. Contemporary review, Nov. 1900, v. 78: 720-726. AP4.C7,v.78 1377 Butler, Elizabeth B. New Jersey children in the street trades. Charities and the Commons, Mar. 16, 1907, v . 17: 1062-1064. HVl.C4,v.l7 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 110 1378 1379 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. Campagnac, E. T., and C. E: B. Bussell. The education, earnings, and social condition- of boys engage'd in street-trading in Manchester. (In Gt. Brit. Board of education. Special reports on educational subjects, v. 8. London, 1902. 24Jcm. p. 653-670) L341.A7,v.8 Chicago. Vice commission. The social evil in Chicago . . . Chicago, Gunthrop-Warren print, co., 1911. 399 p. 24cm. HQ146.C4V5 Newsboys, street venders, messenger boys: p. 241-245. 1380 --------- Child w elfare exhibit, 1911. The child in the city; a handbook of the Child welfare exhibit at the Coliseum, May 11-May 25, 1911. [Chicago, The Blakely printing co., 1911] 96 p. illus. 25£cm. HQ741.C6 Saving the barren years, p. 25-27. 1381 Chute, Charles L. Protection for the newsboys and other street workers in Philadelphia . . . Philadelphia, Pennsylvania child labor association, 1912. 10 p. 23£em. (Leaflet no. 30, June 5, 1912) . 1382 Clopper, Edw ard Nicholas. Child labor in city streets. Macmillan company, 1912. ix, 280 p. incl. pi. 18em. Bibliography: p. 245-254. Reviewed by A. S. Henry in Book news, May, 1913, v. 31: 696. New York, The HD6231.C5 Z1219.B77,v.31 1383 --------- Child labor in street trades. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 137-144. Hl.A4,v.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 126. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l26 1384 ----------- The child merchants of the streets. Child (Lond.) July, 1913, V. 3, 924-926. HQ750.A2C4,v.3 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 203. 8 p. 1385 --------- Children on the streets of Cincinnati. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 113-132. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 82. 11 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.82 1386 --------- Effects of street trading on the health of school children. New York, National child labor committee [1913] 8 p. 23cm. (Pamphlet no. 218) HD6250.U3N2,no.218 1387 --------- The night messenger boy. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38:103-104. Hl.A4,v.38 1388 ------ — Street trades regulation. p. 114-118. Child labor, bulletin, Aug. 1912, v. 1, no. 2, HD6250.U3N4,v.l,no.2 Child labor laws in all states. 1389 --------- Street work and juvenile delinquency. New York, National child labor committee [1913] 6 p. 23em. (Pamphlet no. 221) HD6250.U3N2 1390 --------- Why overlook the street worker? Child labor bulletin, May, 1914, v. 3, no. 1: 56-58. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 1391 Conant, Richard K. Night messenger service. New; Boston, Jan. 1911, v. It 379-382. 1392 --------- Street trades and reformatories. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 105-107. Hl.A4,v.38 1393 Davis, Philip. Child life on the street. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1909. Fort Wayne [1909] 23°m. p. 250254) HY88.A3 1909 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. Ill 1394 Davis, Philip. Street-land, its little people and big problems . . . assisted by Grace Kroll; illustrated from photographs. Boston,-Small, Maynard & company [°1915] xviii p., 1 1., 291 p. front., plates. 19£cm. (Welfare series, ed. by R. T. Hale) HT206.D33 Bibliography: p. 277-291. 1395 Dow dall, H. Chaioner. The new Liverpool bye-laws regulating street trad ing. Economic review, Oct. 1899, v. 9: 503-514. HBl.E4,v.9 1396 D w igh t, H elen C. The menace of street trading by children. American city, Jan. 1915, v. 12: 23-24. HT101.A5,v.l2 1397 The E m ploym ent of children, and street trading. Child, Nov. 1911, v. 2: 179-180. HQ750.A2C4,v.2 Survey, Feb. 17,1912, v. 27:1774. HYl.C4,v,27 Digest of by-laws b y the London county council. 1398 Forbush,. William. B yron. A western newspaper and its newsboys. [Grand Rapids Evening Press] Charities and the Commons, Oct. 5, 1907, v. 19: 798-802. HVi.C4,v.l9 1399 G arnett, William H ubert Stuart. Children and the law. ray, 1911. xiv (i. e. 24), 255 p. 19£cm. 1400 Germ an regulation of child labour. London, J. Mur HV731.G7G3 Street trading, p. 231-234. Progress, Jan. 1911, v. 6: 48. HN381.P9,v.6 1401 Goldmark, Josephine C. Street labor and juvenile delinquency. Political science quarterly, Sept. 1904,v.19: 417-438. H l.P8,v.l9 1402 Goldmark, Pauline. What Boston has done in regulating the street trades for children. Charities, Feb. 14, 1903, v. 10: 159-160. HVl.C4,v.lO 1403 Gt. Brit. Home dept. Committee on employment of school chil dren. Report of the inter-departmental Committee on the employment of school children, appointed by H. M. principal secretary of state for the Home department . . . [and Minutes of evidence . . . with appendices and index . . .] London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., b y Wyman and sons, limited, 1901-02. 2 v. in 1. fold, diagr. 33em. ([Gt. Brit. Parlia ment. Papers b y command] Cd. 849, 895) HD6250.G7A4 1901 Appendix no. 36. Memorandum on the regulation of street trading b y children at Liverpool and elsewhere. By A . J. Eagleston, p. 411-413.—App. no. 37-38. Report of the Children trading in streets subcommittee of the Liverpool town council [and] form of application for licence. B y Capt. J. W. Nott Bower, p. 414r-417.—App. 44. A return of street hawkers found in the streets of Manchester, week ended 9th March, 1901. By Robert Peacock, p. 450-455.—App. 45. The education, earnings, and social condition of boys engaged in street-trading in Manchester. By C. E. B. Russell, p. 456-461.—App. 51. Statistics of juvenile offences and offences committed by juvenile street traders in Birmingham. By Charles H. Rafter, p. 470-471. 1404 ----------------------------- Report of the Departmental committee on the Employ ment of children act, 1903, appointed by His Majesty’s principal secretary of state for the Home department [and Minutes of evidence . . . with appen dices and index] Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of His Majesty. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd. [1910] 2 v. in 1. 33icm. ([Parliament. Papers b y command] Cds. 5229, 5230) HD6250.G7A4 1910 “ The present report is mainly a report on street trading.” 1405 --------- Royal commission, on the poor laws and relief of distress. Report by Mr. Cyril Jackson on boy labour, together with a memorandum from the General post office on the conditions of employment of telegraph messengers. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Wyman and sons, limited, 1909. iv, 230, 2 p. 33cm. [Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 4632. HD6250.G7A4 1909a Appendix, v. 20 to reports of the commission. HV241.H3 1909a, v .20 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 112 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1406 Gunckel, John Elstner. Boyville; a history of fifteen years’ work among newsboys.' Toledo, O., The Toledo newsboys’ association [c1905] 7 p. 1., [3}-219p. front., 32 pi. 20cm. HY878.G9 1407 “ Gunck” of Toledo. Technical world magazine, Dec. 1913, v. 20: 585-586. Tl.T2,v.20 John E. Gunckel. President of the Toledo newsboys association. 1408 Hall, George A. The newsboy. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 100-102. Hl.A4,v.38 1409 Hard, William. “ De kid wot works at night.” Jan. 1908, v. 18: 25-37. Everybody’s magazine, AP2.E9,v.l8 1410 Hartford regulates child street-trades. 1411 1412 1413 1414 Survey, Dec. 31, 1910, v. 25: 511-512. HVl.C4,v.25 Heaton, J. Henniker. The express letter and the express messenger. Cornhill magazine, Dec. 1910, v. 102: 751-757. AP4.C8,v.l02 Living age, Jan. 7, 1911, v. 268: 28-32. AP2.L65,v.268 Hogg, Mrs. Edith F. Children outside the factory laws. (In International congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900 . 20|cm. v.6, p.71-76) HQ1106 1899,v.6 —------ School children as wage earners. Nineteenth century, Aug. 1897, v. 42: 235-244. AP4.N7,v.42 Ihlder, John. The Press and its newsboys. World to-day, July, 1907, v. 13: 737-739. . AP2.W75,v.l3 Evening Press, of Grand Rapids, Mich. Inglis, William. Yuxtree-yuxtor! Harper’s weekly, Feb. 15, 1913, v. 57 7-8. AP2.H32,v.57 1416 Ireland. Street-trading children committee. Report of the Inter departmental committee on the employment of children during school age, especially in street trading . . . in Ireland, appointed by His Excellency the Lord Lieutenant of Ireland, together with minutes of evidence and appen dices. Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of His Majesty. Dublin, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by A. Thom & co. (limited) 1902. xv, 187, [1] p. 33Jom. ([Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 1144) HD6250.G8A5 1902 1415 Found also in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1902, v. 49. - J301.K6 1902,v.49 1417 Johnston, Lettie L. Street trades and their regulation. (In National con ference of charities and correction. Proceedings, Baltimore, 1915. Chicago, 1915. 23cm. p. 518-526) HV88.A3 1915 1418 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. Some ethical gains through legislation. New York, London, The Macmillan co., 1905. x , 341 p. 19ein. (The citizen’s library o f economics, politics, and sociology, ed. by R. T. Ely) HN64.K29 Children in street occupations, telegraph and messenger boys: p. 11-26. 1419 -------- - Standards of life and labor: the standard minimum age for beginning to work for wages. Twentieth century magazine, Nov., Dec. 1911, Feb. 1912, v. 5: 30-34, 104-107, 370-373. AP2.T88,v.5 1420 --------- The street trader under Illinois law. (In Chicago. Child welfare exhibit, 1911. The child in the city. Chicago, 1912. 22cm. p.290-301) HY741.C4 1421 --------- Street trades. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 108-110. Hl.A4,v.38 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 113 1422 Kildare, Owen Fraw ley. My Mamie Rose; the story of my regeneration. New York, The Baker & Taylor company [1903] 303 p. incl. map. front, (port.) 4 pi. 20°m. PS3521.I355Z5 1903 A nomad of the streets, p. 43-58. 1423 King, Frederick A. Influences in street life, {In University settlement of society of New York, 1900. Report. 1900. New York, n. d. 22cm. p. 29-32) HV4196.N6U6 1900 1424 Kuechle, B. E. Newsboys’ republic, Milwaukee. Survey, Mar. 22, 1913, v. 29: 859. HVl.C4,v.29 1425 London. County council. Employment of children and street trading by young persons. By-laws made by the London county council, pursuant to the provisions of sections 1 and 2 of the Employment of children act, 1903. [London, 1911] 2 p. 33cm. HD6250.G67 1911 1426- --------- Legal and statutory announcement. Employment of children act, 1903. By-laws. London county council gazette, Aug. 21, 28, 1911 v 1289-90; 118-119. JS3551.L3,v.l2 * 1427 Lord, Everett W. Child labor in New England. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 31-39. National child labor committee. 1428 1429 1430 1431 Pamphlet no. 74. 9 p. ’ HD6250.U3N2,no.74 Love joy, OwenB. Child labor and the night messenger service. Survey, May 21,1910, v. 24: 311-317. HVl.C4,v.24 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 141. 15 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l41 —------ Night messenger service. Survey, Dec. 24, 1910, v. 25: 504-505. HVl.C4,v.25 --------- Some unsettled questions about child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 49-62. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 108. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l08 McKelway, A. J. Child labor and crime. {In American prison association. Proceedings, 1913, p. 144-154) HY8987.A1 1913 1432 --------- Child labor at the national capital. New York city, National child labor committee [1914?] 15 p. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 213) 1433 Mangold, George B. Child welfare and street trades in the United States of America. Child, London, Aug. 1911, v. 1: 956-961. HQ750.A2C4,v.l 1434 Markham, Edwin. Children in bondage. New York, Hearst’s international library co., 1914. 411 p. 21cm. HD6250.U3M3 Perils of the streets, p. 216-251. 1435 Maryland. Bureau of statistics and information. Newsboy regulations [and street trades] {In its Report, 1913, p. 93-106; 1914, p. 191-197) HC107.M3A15 1913,1914 1436 --------------------Newsboys and other street traders, by Lettie L. Johnston. {In its Report, 1915, p. 101-129.) HC107.M3A15 . 1915 44193°—16----- 8 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF BEFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR, 114 1437 Massachusetts child labor committee. Child scavengers. Report of the Massachusetts child labor committee, January 1, 1915. [Boston, GriffithStillings press, 1915] cover-title, 12 p. illus., diagr. 22°m. HD6250.U4M48 1915 Reviewed in Survey, Jan. 23,1915, v. 33: 435-436. HVl.C4,v.33 1438 Messenger boys can work at night [Pennsylvania]. Survey, Jan. 8, 1910, v. 23 : 490. HVl.C4,v.23 1439 Messenger boys should have attention. Editorial review, Jan. 1911, v. 4: 42-43. AP2.E26,v.4 1440 Milwaukee regulates its street trades: Other Wisconsin child labor advances. Survey, July 31,1909, v. 22: 589. HYl.C4,v.22 1441 M ilw aukee’s newsboys’ republic. Outlook, Apr. 5,1913, v. 103: 743-744. AP2.O8,v.l03 1442 National child labor committee, New York. Child labor laws in all states. New York, National child labor committee [1912] cover-title, 3 1., 124 p. 22§cjn. (The child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 2) HD6250.U3N4 HD6243.U5N3 Street trades and their regulation: a symposium [by] Edward N. Clopper, p. 114-118; Zenas L. Potter, p. 119-121; Lillian A. Quinn, p. 122-124. 1443 --------- The child workers of the nation. Proceedings of the fifth annual con ference, Chicago, Illinois, January 21-23,1909. New York, 1909. iv, 256 p. 23cm. [Pamphlet no. 94] HD6250.TT3N2, no.94 Children engaged in street trades, p. 230-240. National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 114 12 p. 2444 --------lip . Street workers. New York, National child labor committee, 1915. (Pamphletno. 246) HD6250.U3N2,no.246 1445 Nearing, Scott. v. 34: 13. The city newsboy. Woman’s home companion, Oct. 1907, AP2.W714,v.34 1446 --------- The newsboys at night in Philadelphia. Charities and the Commons, Feb. 2, 1907, v. 17: 778-784. HVl.C4,v.l7 1447 .-------- One district messenger. Independent, Feb. 22, 1912, v. 72: 412-413. AP2.I53,v.72 1448 New South Wales. State children’s relief dept. Street-trading by chil dren. (In its Report, 1909, p. 40-42; 1910, p. 39-40; 1911, p. 42-43; 1912, p. 43-45; 1913, p. 39-41; 1915, p. 54-56.) HV802.N5A3 1449 New York state in the lead: a victory for child labor legislation. Woman’s home companion, Aug. 1907, v. 34: 22. AP2.W714,v.34 Boys who sell papers on the streets, p. 22. 1450 New York’s newsboys licensed. Charities, Sept. 5, 1903, v. 11: 188-189. H V l.€ 4 ,v .ll 1451 The Newsboy, v. 1-3. Feb. 1909-Apr. 1910. Pittsburgh, M. D. Hays co., 1909-1910. 2 v. in 3. illus. 25£cm. monthly. HV880.N4 1452 [Newsboy-bootblack] Survey, June 14, 1913, v. 30: 380-381. HVl.C4,v.30 1453 Newsboys* and children’s aid society, Washington, D . C. Annual report. 1889-1892-93. Washington, D. C. 1890-1893. 3 pamphlets. 17-19cm. HV885.W3N5 1454 Newsboys elect their own judge. Survey, Nov. 26, 1910, v. 25: 312-313. HVl.C4,v.25 1455 News boys’ home association, Washington, D . . C. Washington, 1864. 1 pamphlet. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Report. 1863-64. HV885.W3N4 LIST OP REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 115 1456 Oates, Austin. Street-trading children and the Act of 1903. Month, Apr. 1911, v.'117: 383-395. AP4.M65,v.ll7 1457 Paulding, Jam es K. Enforcing the newsboy law in New York and Newark. Charities, June 10, 1905, v. 14: 836-837. HVl.C4,y.l4 1458 P eacock, R ob ert. Employment of children with special reference to street trading. {In International congress for the welfare and protection of chil dren. 3d, London, 1902. Report of proceedings held in London, 15th-18th, July, 1902. London, 1902. 24iem. p. 191-202) HY707 1902 1459 Philadelphia. V ice com m ission. .Report. [Philadelphia] 1913. 164 p. 23cm. HQ146.P5A5 1913a Children on the stage: p. 76-78; Messenger boy service: p. 78-83. 1460 P oole, E rnest. Child labor—the street, n. d.] 28 p. 20cm. [New York, Child labor committee, Contents .—The newsboy.—Bootblacks.—Peddlers. 1461 --------- Newsboy wanderers are tramps in the making. 1903, v. 10: 160-162. 1462 --------- Charities, Feb. 14, HV1.C4,v.10 Waifs of the street. 1463 P orter, H. F. J. v. 25 : 431-432. McClure’s magazine, May, 1903, v. 21: 40-48. AP2.M2,v.21 The strike of the messenger boys. Survey, Dec. 10, 1910, HVl.C4,v.25 1464 P otter, Z en a sL . Street trading and the school. 1912, v. 1, no. 2, p. 119-121. Child labor bulletin, Aug. HD6250.U3N4,v.l,no.2 Child labor laws in all states. 1465 P rotection for the child street worker. 350-351. School and society, Mar. 6, 1915, v. 1: 1466 Quinn, Lillian A. Enforcement of street trades regulation. Child labor bul letin, Aug. 1912, v. 1, no. 2, p. 122-124. HD6250.U3N4,v.l,no.2 Child labor laws in all states. 1467 Riis, Jacob A. The New York newsboy. v. 85: 247-255. 1468 Russell, Charles E. B. Century magazine, Dec. 1912, AP2.C4,v.85 Child, London, Apr. 1911, v. 1: 587-594. HQ750.A2C4,v.l 1469 --------- Some reflections on Home office schools and juvenile street trading. Charity organisation review, Nov. 1910, n. s., v. 28: 322-335. HVl.C6,n.s„v.28 1470 Sherard, R o b e rt H arborough. The child-slaves of Britain. London, Hurst and Blackett, limited, 1905. 3 p. 1., [ix]-xix p., 21., 267, [1] p. 8 pi. 21cm. On street trading, p. 247-249; On street gambling, p. 250-251. HD6250.G7S4 1471 1472 City lads. [Smith, E lizabeth Oakes, “ Mrs. Seba S m ith .” ] The newsboy. New York, J. C. Derby; Boston, Phillips, Sampson & co.; [etc., etc.] 1854. 527 p. front. 18icm. PZ3.S6459N Spargo, John. The bitter cry of the children, with an introduction by Robert Hunter. New York, London, The Macmillan company, 1906. xxiii, 337 p. front., plates, facsim., diagrs. 20cm. HV713.S7 Street trades, p. 184-188, 258-260. 1473 Stelzle, Charles. Boys of the street; how to win them. [etc ] F. H. Revell company [1904] 96 p. 19cm. 1474 Stow e, Lym an B eech er. Boy judges in a boys’ court. Outlook, Mar. 1, 1913, v. 103: 495-496. AP2.O8,v.l03 S treet trades and delinquency. Survey, May 20, 1911, v. 26: 285. HV1.C4.V.26 1475 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis New York, Chicago HV878.S8 116 LIST: OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1476 Terhune, Leola Benedict. v. 26: 852-854. The Greek bootblack. Survey, Sept. 16, 1911, HVl.C4,v.26 1477 17. S. Bureau of labor. Report on condition of woman and child wageearners in the United States. v. 8. Juvenile delinquency and its relation to employment. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1911. 177 p. 23em. (61st Cong. 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645, v. 8) HD6093.A4,v.8 1478 --------- Immigration commission. Abstract of the report on the Greek padrone system in the United States. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1911. 24 p. 23£cm. ------------------The Greek padrone system in the. United States. {In its 1479 Reports, 1911, v. 2: 387-408) JV6417.C07,v.2 1480 TTrwick, Edward Johns, ed: Studies of boy life in our cities, written by various authors for the Toynbee trust. London, J. M. Dent & company, 1904. xv, 320 p. 19Jcm. HQ775.U83 Cloete, J. G. The boy and his work. I. The general conditions of boy labour. II. Special occupations; messenger-boys, office-boys, van-boys, and street traders, p. 102-138. 1481 Verwendung von Kindern beim Strassenhandel (England) Soziale Rund schau, Aug. 1910, v. 2, p. 245-247. HD8401.A2 1910,v.2 1482 Washington university, St. Louis. St. Louis school of social economy. The newsboy of Saint Louis; a study. Saint Louis, Missouri. [St. Louis, 1913?] cover-title, 15 p. 23cm. HD6247.N5W2 From Board of trade labour gazette, July, 1910. Prepared by the Research department of the School of social economy and pub. by the Alumni association. Based Upon a report made by Miss Ina Tyler, in 1910. Waugh, Benjamin. Street children. Contemporary review, June, 1888, v. 53: 825-835. AP4.C7,v.53 1484 What of the newsboy of the second cities? Charities, Apr. 11,1903, v. 10: 368371. HVl.C4,v.lO 1485 Williams, Momay. The street boy—who he is, and what to do with him. {In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1903, p. 238244) HY88.A3 1903 1486 Willows, Maurice. The nickel theatre. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 95-99. Hl.A4,v.38 1483 1487 Winship, A. E . John E. Gunckel of Toledo, the newsboys’ evangelist. World to-day, Nov. 1908, v. 15: 1169-1173. 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Contemporary review, Feb. 1914, v. 105: 227-235. AP4.C7,v.l05 1516 Brown, H. Maughan. Schoolboys as wage earners. Child, London, Sept. 1912, v. 2: 1026-1030, HQ750.A2C4,v.2 1517 Burke, Thomas. Wage-earning school children in England. Forum, May, 1902, v. 33: 283-292. AP2.F8,v.33 1518 Busser, Ralph C. The German system of industrial schooling. Philadelphia, Public education association, 1913. 63 p. 23cm. (Public education asso ciation study, no. 40) T123.B75 1519 Campagnac, E. T. and C. E. B. Bussell. The school training and early employment of Lancashire children. London, 1903. iii, 39 p. 24£cm. (Gt. Brit. Board of education. Special reports on educational subjects, Supple ment to v. 8) L341.A7,v.8,suppl. 1520 Canada. Boyal commission on industrial training and technical education. Report. Ottawa, C. H. Parmelee, 1913. 4 v. illus. 24^cm. ([Parliament, 1912-1913] Sessional paper no. 191d. A. 1913) T76.A4 1521 Cape of Good Hope. Laws, statutes, etc. Laws regulating the relative rights and duties of masters, servants, and apprentices in the Cape Colony, including the Workmen’s compensation act, 1905. Annotated with decisions under the different sections. By H. Tennant. [Revised up to date] [Cape Town] J. C. Juta co., 1906. 2 p. 1., 136 p. 22em. 1522 Capen, Edward Warren. The historical development of the poor law of Con necticut. New York: The Columbia university press, The Macmillan com pany, agents; London, P. S. King & son, 1905. 520 p. 25cm. (Studies in history, economics, and public law, ed. b y the Faculty of political science of Columbia university, v. 22) H31.C7,v.22 Laws regulating education and employment of minors, p. 444-451. 1523 Chapman, Sydney John. Work and wages , in continuation of Lord Brassey’s “ Work and wages” and “ Foreign work and English wages.” Part III. Social betterment. London, New York [etc.] Longmans, Green and co., 1914. viii, 382 p. 23Jcm. HC255.B7£2,v.3 Training and boy and girl labour: p. 151-209. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OP REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 119 1524 Chenery, William L. Children out of school and without work. Child, Chi cago, May, 1913, v. 2: 21-22. HQ75Q.A2C3,v.2 1525 Cherouny, Henry W[illiam] The burial of the apprentice; a true story from life in a union workshop, and other essays on present political and social prob lems. New York, The Cherouny print. & pub. eo., 1900. 193, [1] p., 11. 8°. • HB8072.C4 1526 Chesser, Elizabeth Sloan. Half-timers in the factories. Westminster review, Oct. 1909, v. 172: 406—409. AP4.W5,v.l72 1527 Child labor and child illiteracy. Chautauquan, Sept. 1912, v. 68: 10-11. AP2.C48,v.68 1528 Child labor and the schools in Austria. Journal of political economy, Mar. 1905, v. 13: 303-306. HBl.J7,v.l3 1529 City club of Chicago. A report on vocational training in Chicago and in other cities. Chicago, City club of Chicago, 1912. 315 p. 24Jem LC1045.C5 1530 Clopper, Edward N. Child labor and compulsory education in rural Ken tucky. National child labor committee. New York. 1909. Pamphlet no. 120. 15 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l20 1531 --------- The education of factory children in the South. National child labor committee, New York. 1911. Pamphlet no. 172. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l72 1532 —------ Heckling the schools. 148-152. Child labor bulletin, May, 1914, v. 3, no. 1: HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.l 1533 Columbia typographical society, Washington, D. C. Apprentices to the printing business. [Report of committee on that subject] •Washington, 1835. sheet. 47J x 15cm. fold, to 16 x 12cm. Z120.C72 1534 Com pulsory part-time schooling. Journal of education, Feb. 20, 1913, v. 77: 206-207. L llJ5,v.77 1535 Com pulsory school attendance. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 137 p. 23cia. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1914, no. 2. Whole no. 573) L111.A6 1914,no.2 C ontents .—i. Compulsory attendance laws in the United States, b y W . S. Deffenbaugh.— n. Compulsory attendance in foreign countries, by Anna T., Smith.—m . Compulsory educa tion in Germany, by W . C. Ryan, jr.—iv. The need of compulsory education in the South, by W. H. Hand.—v. Laws of Ohio and of Massachusetts relating to compulsory attendance and child labor.—vi. Bibliography. 1536 Conant, Richard K. The educational test for working children. Child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 1,June, 1912, p.145-148. HD6250.U3N4,v.l 1537 Cooley, Edwin Gilbert. Vocational education in Europe: report to the Commercial club of Chicago. Chicago, The Commercial club of Chicago, 1912-15. 2 v. fronts, (v. 2, port.) plates, double chart. 23$cm. Bibliography: v. 1, p. 7: v. 2, p. 7-8. LC1047.G3C6 1538 Craighead, Erwin. Compulsory education and the southern states. Sewanee review, Jan. 1908, v. 16:306-308. AP2.S5,v.l6 Cranston, Mary Rankin. Child wage-earners in England: why the “ half time” system has failed to solve the problem. Craftsman, July, 1907, v. 12: 424-430. Nl.C87,v.l2 1540 Cunnington, B. Apprenticeship. Charity organisation review, July, 1905, n. s. v. 18: 39-47. HVl.C6,n.s.,v,18 1541 Dabney, Charles W. Child labor and the public schools. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 110-114. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 53. 5 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.53 1539 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 120 LIST OF BEFEREN CES ON CHILD LABOR. 1542 Dean, Arthur Davis. The worker and the state; a study of education for industrial workers. New York, The Century co., 1910. 355 p. 20om. “ Bibliography of vocational education” : p. 345-355. T73.D3 1543 Dearie, Norman Burrell. Industrial training with special reference to the conditions prevailing in London. London, P. S. King & son, 1914. xiii 596 p. 22cm. (Studies in economics and political science . . . no. 39 in the series of monographs b y writers connected with the London school of eco nomics and political science) T107 .D35 1544 Dooley, L. W. The educational scrap heap and the blind alley job. Scien tific American supplement, Mar. 13, 1915, v. 79: 170-171. Tl.S52,v.79 1545 Dorr, Mrs. Rheta Childe. The twentieth child. Hampton-Columbian maga zine, Jan. 1912, v. 27: 793-806. AP2.H153,v.27 1546 Draper, Andrew S. Conserving childhood. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 1-14. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 100. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l00 1547 Dunlop, Olive Jocelyn. English apprenticeship and child labour; a history with a supplementary section on the modern problem of juvenile labour, by O. Jocelyn Dunlop and Richard D. Denman. London [etc.] T. F. Unwin, 1912. 3 p. 1., 9-390 p., 1 1. 23cm. HD4885.G7D8 Bibliography: p. 355-363. Reviewed by J. H . Clapham in English historical review, Jan. 1913, v. 28: 164-166. DA20.E58,v.28 1548 Dutton, Samuel Train, and David Snedden. The administration of public education in the United States. New York, The Macmillan company, 1908. viii p., 11., 601 p. 20Jcm. LB2805.D9 Compulsory education and child labor legislation: p. 492-510; Educational statistics: p. 535-558. 1549 Ellis, Leonora B. Educating southern factory children. Gunton’s maga zine, May, 1903, v. 24: 259-270. Hl.G9,v.24 1550 Die Erhebung über Erwerbsarbeit von Schulkindern in Dänemark. Germany Statistisches Amt. Abteilung für Arbeiterstatistik. Reichs-Arbeitsblatt, Mar. 1912, v. 10: 210-215. HD8441.A3,v.lO 1551 Flexner, Mary. A plea for vocational training. Survey, Aug. 7, 1909, v. 22:650-655. HVl.C4,v.22 1552 France. Commission de Renseignement professionnel. Rapport et notes. Paris, Imprimerie impériale, 1865. 4 p. 1., [3J-186 p. 311cm. T121.A3 1865a ----- — Conseil général de l ’agriculture, des manufactures et du com merce. Notice sur la législation relative aux dessins de fabrique. Session des Conseils généraux de l ’agriculture, des manufactures et du commerce. 1841-1842. Paris, Imprimerie royale, 1841. 26, 23, 7 p. 24em. [With its Procès-verbaux. Paris, 1838] HC271.A2 1837-8 1554 --------- Conseil supérieur du travail. Apprentissage: rapport de M. Briat au nom de la commission permanente. Enquête et documents. Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1902. 2 p. 1., xlviii p., 2 1., 489 p. 27x21cm. HD4885.F8A2 1553 1555 -------- Direction du travail. L ’apprentissage industriel; rapport sur l ’apprentissage dans les industries de l ’ameublement. Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1905. xxiii, 655 p. plates. 24cm. HD4885.F8A3 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFEREN CES ON CHILD LABOR. 121 1556 France. Direction du travail. Rapport sur l ’apprentissage dans l ’impri merie, 1899-1901. Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1902. xcvi, 320 p. 25cm. Z122.5.F7 1902 1557 — :------------------------ Rapport sur l ’apprentissage dans l ’industrie de l ’horlo gerie. Paris, Imprimerie nationale, 1911. xviii, 290 p. 23em. HD4885.F8A4 1558 --------- Laws, statutes, etc., 1 9 0 6 -1 9 13 (Fallieres) . . . Proposition de loi sur l ’organisation de l ’apprentissage par les cours de perfectionnement, (renvoyée à la Commission du commerce et de l ’industrie) presentee par M. Gustave Dron, député. [Paris, Martinet, imprimeur de la Chambre des députés, 1909] 41 p. 26£cm. (Chambre des députés. 9. législ. sess. 1909, no. 2601. Annexe au Procès-verbal . . . 24 juin 1909) HD4885.F8D8 1559 ------------------- Same. [Paris, Martinet, imprimeur de la Chambre des députés, 1911] 85 p. 26£em. (Chambre des députés. 10. législ. sess. 1911, no. 795. Annexe au Procès-verbal . . . 27 février 1911) HD4885.F8D82 1560 Fraser, Patrick Fraser, lord. Treatise on the law of Scotland relative to master and servant and master and apprentice. 2d ed. Edinburgh, T. & T. Clark, 1872. xix, 818 p. 25C5n. Appendix of statutes: p. [481]-727. 1561 From school to job in Philadelphia. Survey, Apr. 19, 1913, v. 30: 98-100. HV1.C4,y .30 1562 Germany. Kommission fiir Arbeiterstatistik. . . . Bericht über die Erhebung betreffend die Arbeitszeit, Kixndigungsfristen und die Lehrlingsverhaltnisse im Handelsgewerbe. Berlin, C. Ileymanns Yerlag, 1896. 2 p. 1., 36 p. 32Y m- (Verhandlungen. nr. 8.) HD8441.A53 1563 Giddings, Franklin H. The social and legal aspect of compulsory education and child labor. (In National education association. Journal of proceedings and addresses . . . 1905. Winona, Minn., 1905. 23£cm. p. 111-113) L13.N4 1905 1564 Gilman, Charlotte P. Child labor in the schools. Independent, May 21, 1908, v. 64: 1135-1139. AP2.I53,v.64 1565 Gray, Benjamin Kirkman. A history of English philanthrophy, from the dissolution of the monasteries to the taking of the first census. London, P. S. King & son, 1905. xv, 302 p. 22cm. IIV245.G77 Child labour and education, p. 101-123. Gt. Brit. Board of education. Abstract of school attendance bye-laws in force in England and Wales on 1st January, 1910. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Wyman and sons, limited, 1910. 32 p. 24cm. LB2584.A4 1567 -------------------Annual report of the chief medical officer of the Board of edu cation . . . 1911-1914. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1912-1915. 4 v. 25em. [Parliament. Papers by command] LB3413.G6A2 1566 1911: Medical inspection and juvenile employment: p.245-268. 1912: Medical inspection and juvenile employment: p. 309-327. 1913: The examination of leavers: II. Relation to juvenile employment: p.271-284. 1914: Juvenile employment and the war; Examination of leavers; employment of school children out of school hours: p. 223-239. 1568 --------------- — Correspondence relating to school attendance between the Board of education and certain local education authorities since the outbreak of the war. London, H. M. Stationery off., Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1915. 19 p. 33Jem. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Papers by command. Cd. 7803) https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 122 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. Gt. Brit. Board of education. Consultative committee. Report of the Consultative committee on attendance, compulsory or otherwise, at continua tion schools. Presented to Parliament by command of His Majesty. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1909. 2 v. 24£cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 4757-4758) LC5556.G6A7 1570 ------------------- Office of special inquiries and reports. Memorandum on compulsory attendance at school in certain European countries and American states. London, Printed under the authority of H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1913. 75 p. 24cm. (Imperial education con ference papers, ii ) LC129.A3 1913 1569 1571 ---------Board of trade. Sea fishing trade committee. Report of a com mittee appointed under a minute of the Board of trade, to inquire into and report whether any and what legislation is desirable with a view to placing the relations between the owners, masters, and crews of fishing vessels on a more satisfactory basis. Together with the minutes of evidence taken on the in quiry. Presented to both houses of Parliament by command of Her Majesty. London, Printed by G. E. B. Eyre and W. Spottiswoode, for H. M. Stationery off., 1883. xxi, 237, [1] p. 33cm. ([Parliament. Papers b y command] C. 3432) HD8039.F65G7 ' 1572 --------- Education dept. Elementary schools (children working for wages). Return (in part) to an Order of the honourable the House of commons, * dated 28 April 1898; for, return “ for England and Wales, giving (1) the number of children attending elementary schools who are known to be work ing for wages ” . . . and, “ (2) the different classes of employment into which the boys and girls attending elementary schools in England and Wales went on leaving school during some complete year . . .” Ordered, by the House of commons, to be printed, 1 June [and 9 February] 1899. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, 1899. 2 v. 24Jcm. ([Parliament, 1899. H. of C. Reports and papers] 205, 23) HD6250.G67 1899 Also found in Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1899,v. 75. J301.K6 1899, v.75 1573 --------------- — ' Return “ showing the number of half timers in the inspected schools of each county of England and Wales . . . in the year ending 31st day of August 1896 (in continuation of Appendix E of the Report of the De partmental committee on school attendance and child labour, 1893)” Or dered, b y the House of Commons, to be printed, 8 February 1898. 4 p. 33c3n. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1898. v. 70) J3Q1.K6 1898, v. 70 1574 --------- Home dept. Report of departmental committee appointed to inquire into the conditions of school attendance and child labour. Ordered, by the House of Commons, to be printed 6 July, 1893. 46 p. 33cm. (Gt. Brit. Parliament. Sessional papers, 1893-94. v. 68) J301.K6 1893-94,v.68 Reports on foreign countries: France, Germany, Switzerland, p. 30-33. 1575 --------- Inter-departmental committee school attendance. . . . Report of the partial exemption from school attendance Parliament b y command of His Majesty. tionery off., by J. Truscott & son, ltd., ([Parliament. Papers b y command] Cd. Also found in Gt. Brit. 1576 Greenwood, Arthur. v. 22 : 309-314. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis on partial exemption from Inter-departmental committee on . . . Presented to both houses of London, Printed for H. M. Sta 1909. 2 v. in 1. tables. 33em. 4791, 4887) HD6250.G7A4 1909 Parliament. Sessional papers, 1909, v. 17. Blind-alley labour. J301.K6 1909,v.17 Economic journal, June, 1912, HBl.E3,v.22 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 123 1577 Hall, Fred S. Scholarships for working children. [New York, 1908] 4 p. 23ein. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 85) HD6250.U3N2,no.85 Reprinted from Charities and the commons 11-14-1908. 1578 Hall, George A. Scholarships. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 77-79. Hl.A4,v.38 1579 Hall, Granville Stanley. Adolescence; its psychology and its relations to physiology, anthropology, sociology, sex, crime, religion, and education. New York, D. Appleton and company, 1904. 2 v. illus. 25em. HQ26.H2 1580 Hampke, Thilo. Der Befähigungsnachweis im Handwerk. Jena G. Fischer, 1892. viii, 192 p. 24cm. (Sammlung nationalökonomischer und statisti scher Abhandlungen des Staatswissenschaftlichen Seminars zu Halle a. d. S., hrsg. von Dr. Joh.-Conrad . . . 8. Bd. 1. Hft.) HD4895.H23 1581 Hand, William H. Compulsory education and the southern states. Sewanea review, July, 1908, v. 16: 298-306. AP2.S5 v.16 1582 --------- Need of compulsory education in the South. National child labor committee, New York. 1913. Pamphlet no. 192. 16 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l92 1583 Hanus, Paul H. Industrial education in Massachusetts. Charities and the Commons, Oct. 5, 1907, v. 19: 820-823. HVl.C4,v.l9 1584 Harvey, Lorenzo D. The need, scope, and character of industrial education in the public-school system. {In National education association. Journal of proceedings and addresses, 1909. Winona, Minn., 1909. 23£cm. p.49-70) L13.N4 1909 1585 Hedges, Anna Charlotte. Wage worth of school training; an analytical study of six hundred women-workers in textile factories. New York city, Teachers college, Columbia university, 1915. 173 p. 23icm. (Teachers col lege, Columbia university. Contributions to education, no. 70) LC1503.H4 1586 Hine, Lewis W. A school which opens at six o’clock in the morning. [Hunts ville, Ala.] Survey, Feb. 21, 1914, v. 31: 637. HVl.C4,v.31 1587 Hochfelder, Julius. Attendance officer, examination instruction, truant officer. 450 questions and answers. Reports, school and legal forms, rules for attendance officers, causes of truancy, views of distinguished educators, compulsory education law, newsboy, child labor and mercantile laws, New Jersey and Chicago, specimen questions. Answers to previous exam, ques tions. New York, Civil service chronicle, °1914. cover-title, 82 p., 1 1. illus. (port.) 25c“ . LB3081.H6 1588 Hogg, Mrs. E dith F. School children as wage earners. Aug. 1897, v. 42: 235-244. '> . Nineteenth century AP4.N7,v.42 * 1589 Hutchinson, Woods. Overworked children on the farm and in the school. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement Mar. 1909, v. 53: 116-121. Hl.A4,v.33 ’ National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 105. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l05 1590 Indiana. Commission on industrial and agricultural education. Re port made pursuant to the provisions of chapter 152, laws of 1911. December, 1912. Indianapolis, W. B. Burford, 1912. 133 p. 22Jcm. LC1046.I4A4 1591 Is compulsory law merciless? https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Journal of education, Oct. 30, 1913, v. 78: 429. L11.J5.V.78 124 LIST OF BEFEBElSfCES ON CHILD LABOE. 1592 Jackson, Cyril. Apprenticeship and the training of the workman. Edin burgh review, Oct. 1912, v. 216: 411-427. AP4.E3,v.216 1593 Jevons, H. W inefrid. The industrial training and placing of juveniles in England. Journal of political economy, Mar. 1913, v. 21: 243-254. HBl.J7,v.21 1594 --------- The relation of schools to employment in the United States. London, Eyre & Spottiswoode, 1914. 225 p. fold, table. 24Jom. (Gt. Brit. Board of education. Special reports on educational subjects, v. 28) L341.A7,v.28 Some recent American reports dealing with the relation ol the schools to employment: p. 186189. Appendix I. The school system of Gary, Indiana, by R . H . Crowley; p . 190-210; Ap pendix II. A.note on vocational schools in the for west, by Hilda Wilson: p. 211-225. 1595 Johnston, John. Wastage of child life, as exemplified by conditions in Lan cashire. London, A. C. Fifield, 1909. 95 p. 19cm. (The Fabian socialist series, no. 7) HQ769.J7 The half-time system: p. 63-70. 1596 K elley, Mrs. F loren ce. Laws for the children’s welfare. An ideal attainable in 1920: Child labor; Compulsory education. (In National education associa tion, Journal of proceedings and addresses . . . 1908. Winona, Minn., 1908. 23£om. p. 1222-1228) L13.N4 1908 1597 --------- Scholarships for working children. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 100-103. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 106. 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l06 1598 K ennedy, Janies B. Does South Carolina need a compulsory school system? Charities and the Commons, Feb. 13, 1909, v. 21: 961-964. HVl.C4,v.21 1599 K ingsbury, Susan M . What is ahead for the untrained child in industry? Charities and the Commons, Oct. 5, 1907, v. 19: 808-813. HVl.C4,v.l9 1600 Kirkland, Janies H. The school as a force arrayed against child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, May, 1905, v. 25: 558-562. Hl.A4,v.25 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 2, p. 146-150; Pamphlet no. 3. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.2;no.3 1601 Lapp, John A ., and Carl H. M ote. Learning to earn; a plea and a plan for vocational education. Indianapolis, The Bobbs-Merrill company [c1915] 9 p. 1., 421 p. 19^®. LC1045.L3 Bibliography: p . [379]-389. “ Organizations interested in vocational training” : p. [391]-394. 1602 L eake, A lbert H. Industrial education, its problems, methods, and dangers. Boston and New York, Houghton Mifflin company [1913] xi, 205 p. incl. forms, diagrs. 21CD1. (Hart, Schaffner & Marx prize essays, xv) “ List of authorities c o n s u l t e d p . 196-198. LC1081.L3 1603 L eavitt, Frank M. Cooperation of the schools in reducing child labor. Child labor bulletin, May, 1914, v. 3, no. 1: 141-147. HD6250.U3N4,v.3 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 231. 14 p. Vocational education, May, 1914, v. 3: 344-350. T61.V5,v.3 1604 • —------ Examples of industrial education. company, [1912] viii, 330 p. 20c®. Boston, New York [etc.] Ginn and LC1081.L4 Contains bibliographies. 1605 Leonard, R o b e rt J. Some facts concerning the people, industries, and schools of Hammond and a suggested program for elementary, industrial, prevocational, and vocational education. Hammond, Ind., 1915. 1 p. 1., v-viii, 165 p. diagrs. 23cm. LA285.H3L3 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 125 1606 Lewis, Ervin E. Work, wages, and schooling of eight hundred Iowa boys in relation to the problems of vocational guidance. Iowa City, Iowa, 1915. [34] p. 23cm. (University of Iowa. Extension bulletin no. 9) HF5381.L45 1607 Lindsay, Samuel McCune. Child labor and the public schools. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29: 104-109. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 52. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.52 Logue, Charles H. A successful apprenticeship system in a large plant; development of the boy the chief aim—production secondary. American machinist, Apr. 21, 1910, v. 33: 723-724. TJl.A5,v.33 1608 1609 London. County council. Legal and statutory announcement. Employ ment of children act, 1903. By-laws. London county council gazette, Aug. 21, 28, 1911, v. 12: 89-90; 118-119. JS3551.L3,v.l2 1610 --------- --------- Education committee. The apprenticeship question. Re port of the section of the Education committee appointed to consider the question of apprenticeships. London, Printed for the London County coun cil, 1906. cover-title, 45 p. 33e,n. (London. County council. [Publica tion] no. 925) HD4885.G7L8 "Sources of information” : p. 45. 1611 — ---------- :------------- . Report on eight years of technical education and con tinuation schools (mostly evening work) in two parts. London, Printed for the London County council, by J. Truscott and son, ltd. [1912] cover-title, 120 p. diagrs. (part fold.) 33cm. T173.L83A4 1912a 1612 ------------------- Education dept. Training and employment of boys in the building trades in London. Report by education officer submitting a report by Mr. J. C. Smail, organizer of trade schools for boys, on the training and employment of boys in the building trades in London. [London, Printed for the London County council by J. Truscott and son, ltd., 1914] 2 p. 1., 26 p. 19 charts. 33^cm. TH64.L6A5 1914 1613 ------------------- Technical education board. Report of the special sub committee on the building trades. (Adopted by the Technical education board, 20th February, 1899) London, Printed b y J. Truscott and son [1899] cover-title, xii, 63 p. 33CD1. T107.A47 1899 1614 Lord, Everett William. Child labor and the public schools. New York [The Emerson publishing co., Ansonia, Conn.] 1909. 12 p. 23cm. (National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 93) HD6250.U3L8 1615 -------- - Child labor and trade schools. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hartford] 1909. 22em. p. 23-26) . HD6250.U4C8 1908 1616 --------- Inadequate schools. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 33-34. Hl.A4,v.35 Louisiana needs school law too. Survey, Oct. 30, 1909, v. 23: 138-139. HVl.C4,v.23 1618 Lovejoy, Owen R. Child labor and compulsory education. (In Southern sociological congress, Nashville, Tenn., 1912. The call of the new South . . . Nashville, 1912. 23JCB1. p. 67-83) HN79.A2S7 1912 1619 --------- Child labor and education. Survey, Feb. 17,1912, v. 27:1780-1784. HV1.C4.V.27 1617 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 126 LIST OF BEFEEENCES ON CHILD LABOE. 1620 Lovejoy, Owen R. Child labor vs. the conservation of school children. (In American academy of medicine. Conservation of school children. Papers and discussions of a conference at Lehigh University, 1912. Easton, Pa., 1912. 24cm. p. 63-70) LB3403 1912b Discussion: p . 70-72. HQ750.A2C3,v.l 1621 --------- Same. Child, Chicago, Sept. 1912, v. 1: 23-26. 1622 --------- The function of education in abolishing child labor. American acad emy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 80-91. Hl.A4,v.32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 77. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.77 1623 --------- School-house or coalbreaker. Outlook, Aug. 26; 1905, v. 80:1011-1019. AP2.08,v.80 1624 —------ Vocational guidance and child labor. v. 2, no. 3: 60-69. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1913, HD6250.U3N4,v.2,no.3. 1625 --------- Vocational guidance and child labor. With a review of survey of girls at work in Wilkesbarre, Pa. National child labor committee, New York. Pamphlet no. 244. March 1915. 15 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.244 Reprinted from Child labor bulletin, v. 3, no. 4. 1626 --------- Will trade training solve the child-labor problem? review, June, 1910, v. 191: 773-784. Cond. in American review of reviews, July, 1910, v . 42:95-96. North American AP2.N7,v.l91 AP2.R4,v.42 1627 McKelway, A. J. Child labor and “ Education” in southern cotton mills. Woman’s home companion, May, 1907, v. 34: 24, 57. AP2.W714,v.34 1628 McMillan, Margaret. Child labour and the half-time system. London, The “ Clarion” newspaper company, limited, 1896. cover-title, 12 p. 21cm. (Clarion pamphlet, no. 15) . HN389.C6 1629 --------- The economic aspects of child labour and education. London, P. S. King & son [1905?] cover-title, 16 p. diagrs. 21^cm. (National liberal club political and economic circle. Transactions, vol. v., pt. 9) HD6250.G7M3 1630 Maine. Committee on industrial education. Report of the Committee on industrial education. 1910. Augusta, Kennebec journal print, 1910. 2 p. 1., [3]-72 p. fold, diagr. 22£om. T74.M2A4 1910 Bibliography: p. 70-72. 1631 M ansie, A lexander. The apprenticed labourer’s manual; or, An essay on the apprenticeship system, and the duties of the apprenticed labourers, in cluding several of the personal and relative duties binding on mankind in general. British Guiana, Society for the instruction of the labouring classes, 1837. xiii, [1], 215, [2], 13 p. 23cm. HD4881.M2 1632 Marshall, Florence M. The public school and the girl wage earner. Chari ties and the Commons, Oct. 5, 1907, v. 19: 848-851. HVl.C4,v.l9 1633 Martin, George H. Child labor and compulsory education: the school aspect. (In National education association. Journal of proceedings and addresses . . . 1905. Winona, Minn., 1905. 23£cm. p. 103-111.) L13.N4 1905 1634 Maryland. Commission on industrial education. Report of the Com mission to make inquiry and report to the Legislature of Maryland respecting the subject of industrial education, 1908-1910. (Chapter 367, laws of 1908) Baltimore, Md., G. W. King ptg. co., state printers [1910] 121 p. front., plates, ports. 23cm. T74.M3A4 1910 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 127 1635 Massachusetts. Board of education. 75-77th annual reports, 1911, 1912, 1913. Boston, Wright & Potter print co., 1911-1913. 23caa. L160.B15 1911-1913 Massachusetts state-aided vocational schools. Charles A. Prosser. 1910 - 1911 , p. Massachusetts state-aided vocational education. 1911-1912, p. 110-129. Vocational education: State-aided education. 1912-1913, p . 151-159. 48 - 65 . 1 G 3 6 ------------ ------- A special report on the needs and possibilities of part-time education. January, 1913. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1913. 164 p. 28°*. LC5252.M3A2 1637 —---- - Bureau of statistics of labor. The apprenticeship system. Part i of the annual report for 1906. Pages 1 to 86. Boston, Wright <fc Potter print ing co., 1906. cover-title, 85 p. 23£cm. HD4885.U5M3 1638 --------- Commission on industrial and technical education. Report of the Commission on industrial and technical education. Submitted in ac cordance with resolve approved May 24, 1905. April, 1906. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co,, state printers, 1906. 2 p. 1., 196 p. 23^m. T74.M4A5 Contents. Report of the Commission.—Report of the subcommittee on the relation of chil dren to the industries.—Appendices: 1. Industrial education in Europe. 2. Address before the Commission . . . b y Sir Wm. Mather. 3. Address before the Commission . . . b y E . Swaysland. 4. Letter to the Commission . . . b y C . F. Warner. 1639 Commission on. industrial education. Bulletin . . . no. 1-6. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1907. 6 v. 23cm. T74JJ4A7 Contents. 1. Industrial continuation schools, Munich. Jewelers’ and gold and silver work ers’ apprentices. 2. Mai© commercial employees, 3. Machinists’ apprentices. 4. Mechani cians’ apprentices. 5. Bookbinders’ apprentices. 6. Gardeners’ apprentices. 1640 Michigan. State commission on. industrial and agricultural education. Report . . . to the governor, superintendent of public instruction, and com missioner of labor. Lansing, December, 1910. [n. p., printed b y the com mission, 1910?] 95 p. 1641 Miles, H. E . Pennsylvania’s new compulsory continuation schools. Ameri can industries, Nov. 1915, v. 16: 28-29. HD48G2J l6,v .16 1642 M ilton, G eorge P. Compulsory education and the southern states. Sewanee review, Jan. 1908, v. 16: 25-42. AP2.S5 v 16 1643 --------- Compulsory education in the South. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 3908, v. 32: 57-66. •. National child labor committee. Hl.A4,v.32 Pamphlet no. 75. 10 p. HD6250.TJ3N2,no.75 1644 Motley, James Marvin. Apprenticeship in American trade unions. Balti more, The Johns Hopkins press, 1907. vii, 9-122 p. 24Jcm. (Johns Hop kins university studies in historical and political science . . . Series xxV, nos. 11-12) HD4885.TJ5M8 1645 M oulder, Priscilla E. The half-timer. World’s work (London) Oct. 1911 v. 18: 496-504. AP4.W85,v.l8 1646 M uensterberg, H ugo. Vocational guidance. (In University settlement society of New York. 25th annual report, 1911. [New York] 1912. 22icm. P- 30_37) HV4196.N6U6 1911 1647 Musick, Sam uel H. Apprentice instruction in the Manila Bureau of printing: a description of a new system of cooperative vocational training and what it has accomplished. Manila, Bureau of printing, 1913. cover-title, 1 p 1 22 p. illus. (part, col.) 26cm. Z122.5.P6M 1913 ’ Reprinted from the Philippine craftsman, November, 1912. (Second printing) https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 128 LIST OF REFEKENCES ON CHILD LABOE. 1648 Nation (London) [Editorial] The waste of child labor. Nation (London) Feb. 28, 1914, v. 14 : 891-892. AP4.N15,v.l4 1649 National association of manufacturers of the United States of America. Committee on industrial education. Industrial education, continuation and trade schools, apprenticeship, state and local control, pre-vocational courses in elementary schools. Report of the Committee on industrial edu cation, H. E. Miles, chairman, at the seventeenth annual convention, New York city, May 21,1912 . . . [n. p., 1912] 39 p. 23x10°“ . (No. 28) T61.N25 1912 1650 ------------ .------ Same. H. E. Miles, chairman, at the eighteenth annual con vention. Detroit, Michigan, May 21, 1913. New York, N. Y . [1913] 29 p. 23xl0°m. (National association of manufacturers of the United States of America . . . [Bulletin] no. 34) T73.N17 “ Vocational education in Wisconsin, b y H .E , Miles” : p. 23-29. 1651 ------ ------------- Same. H. E. Miles, chairman, at the twentieth annual con vention, New York city, May 25,1915. New legislation in Pennsylvania and Wisconsin. New York city, Issued from the Secretary’s office [1915] 30 p. Reprinted for distribution by Bureau of education, Washington, D. C. 1652 National child labor committee, New York. Child labor and education. New York, National child labor committee [1912] cover-title, 3 1., 223 p. diagrs. 23cm. (The child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 1) HD6250.U3N4 Contents.—National aid to education, by Felix Adler.—A substitute for child labor, by P. P. Claxton.—Child labor and vocational work in the public schools, by E . O. Holland.—Child labor and vocational guidance, by Helen T. Woolley.—Child labor and the future development of the school, b y C. G. Pearse.—The dangers and possibilities of vocational guidance, b y Alice P. Barrows.—Relation of industrial training to child labor, by W . E . Elson.—Economic value of educa tion, b y M. Edith Campbell.—Need of compulsory education in the South, by W . H. Hand — A federal children’s bureau, by A. J. Peters.—Federal aid to education a necessary step in the solution of the child labor problem, by S. McC. Lindsay.—Part time schools, by Florence Kel ley.—Social cost of child labor, by J. P. Frey.—Child labor and democracy, b y A . J. McKelway.— Extending medical inspection from schools to mills, by G. F. Ross, m . d .—Child labor in the can neries of New York state, b y Z. L. Potter.—How to interest young people, by Mrs. Frederick Crane.—The educational test for working children, by R . K . Conant.—A legislative program for South Carolina, by J. P. Hollis.—Rejuvenation of the rural school, by Ernest Burnham.—Rural child labor, b y J. M. Gillette.—Symposium: Unreasonable industrial burdens on women and children, b y Florence Kelley, Millie R. Trumbull, J. A. Ryan, Jean M. Gordon.—Report of the general secretary for seventh fiscal year.—proceedings of the eighth annual conference. 1653 National conference on vocational guidance. 2d, New York, 1912. Pro ceedings. New York, October 23 to 26, 1912, under the auspices of the Cen tral committee on vocational guidance. New York, The Secretary, 1913. vii, 206 p. 23£cm. For 3d and 4th conferences see nos. 1658 and 1659 in this Lst. 1654 National education association. Committee on the place of industries in public education. Report. (In its Journal of proceedings and addresses, 1910. Winona, Minn., 1910. 23icm. p.652-777) L13.N4 1910 Historical statement; The industrial factor in social progress, by Frank T. Carlton; Theindustrial factor in education, b y Ernest N. Henderson; History^of industrial education in the United States, b y Charles R. Richards; Selected bibliography, by Howard D. Brundage. 1655 ______ Dept, of manual training. Committee on vocational education and vocational guidance. Report . . . [at the] Salt Lake city meeting, July 7-11,1913. [n. p., 1913?] 30 p. Also published in Journal of proceedings and addresses, 1913, p. 573-580. L13.N4 1913 1656 National society for the promotion of industrial education. Bulletin no. 1-20. New York city, National society for the promotion of industrial education, 1907-1915. 20 pamphs. 23°m. T61.N27 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF BEFEREN"CES ON CHILD LABOR. 129 1657 National society for the promotion of industrial education. Proceed ings of annual meeting, lst-8th, 1908-1914. New York city, National society for the promotion of industrial education, 1908-1915. 8 v. 23cm. (Its Bulletin no. 5-6, 9, 10, 13, 15,. 16, 18, 20) T61.N27 1658 National vocational guidance association. Vocational guidance; papers presented at the organization meeting of the Vocational guidance association, Grand Rapids, Mich., October 21-24, 1913. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 94 p. 23Jom. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1914, no. 14. Whole no. 587) L111.A6 1914,no.14 1659 --------- Proceedings of . . . the fourth national conference on vocational guid ance, held at Richmond, Va., Dec. 7-9, 1914. [Grand Rapids] Pub. by the assoc., 1915. 64 p. 1660 N earing, Scott. Child labor and the child. Education, Mar., Apr. 1910, v. 30: 407-415, 494-499. Lll.E2,v.30 1661 New Jersey. Commission on industrial education. Report submitted to the Senate and General assembly of the state of New Jersey, in accordance with joint resolution no. 11, approved April 14,1908. Trenton, MacCrellish & Quigley, state printers, 1909. 177 p. 22£cm. T69.N46 Issued also in “ Governor’s message transmitting report of the Commission on industrial education.” 1662 New York (State) Bureau of labor statistics. 26th report, 1908. Parti. Industrial training, a report on conditions in New York state, by Charles R. Richards. Albany, State department of labor, 1909. vi, 394 p. 23om. HC107.N7A3 1908,p t.l A selected bibliography on industrial education: p. 357-394. 1663 --------- Education dept. Attendance division. Digest of compulsory education and child labor laws as amended by laws of 1913, with annotations, department rulings and legal forms for the use of school authorities, attend ance officers and teachers. Rev. ed. with index, comp, by James D . Sullivan. Albany, N. Y ., 1913. 32 p. 23em. (University of the state of New York bulletin, no. 540) HD6243.U6N7 1913 1664 —--------------------------- A summary of the compulsory attendance and child labor laws of the states and territories of the United States, comp, b y James D. Sullivan. Albany, New York state education dept., 1907. cover-title, 1 p. 1., 5-112 p. 23em. (New York state library. Bulletin 114. Legislation 34) Z881.N61BL,no.34 1665 Noyes, William. Overwork, idleness, or industrial education? American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 342-353. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 84-95; Pamphlet no. 32. 2d ed. 1907. 12 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.20a;no.32 1666 Nudd, Howard W. How New York city registers its children. Survey, Feb17, 1912, v. 27: 1777-1780. HVl.C4,v.27 1667 Ogbum, William Fielding. Progress and uniformity in child-labor legis lation; a study in statistical measurement. New York, Columbia uni versity; [etc., etc.] 1912. 219 p. incl. tables, diagrs. 25cM. (Studies in history, economics and public law, ed. by the Faculty of political science of Columbia university, vol. x l v i i i , no. 2, whole no. 1 2 1 ) Educational requirements: p. 128-143. H31.C7,vol.48,no.2 HD6243.U505 1668 [O’Leary, Wesley Alvah] Short-unit courses for wage earners and a factory school experiment. April, 1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1915. 93 p. 23cm. (Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 159. Miscellaneous series, no. 6) ' HD6051.A62,no.l59 44193°—16-----9 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 130 1669 Paeuw, Leon de. La cooperation des instituteurs primaires allemands ä la loi d ’empire sur le travail des enfants. Revue sociale catholique, Mar. 1911, v. 15: 133-143. H3.R5,v.l5 1670 Page, Arthur W. Training for the trades; the next step in. public school work. World’s work, Feb. 1907, v. 13: 8552-8557. AP2.W8,v.l3 1671 Parker, Lewis W. Compulsory, education, the solution of the child labor problem. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supple ment, July, 1908, v. 32: 40-56. , Hl.A4,v.32 1672 Perrin, John W. Indirect compulsory education: the factory laws of Massa chusetts and Connecticut. Educational review, Apr. 1906, v. 31; 383-394. Lll.E5,v.31 1673 Philippine Islands. Bureau of printing. A brief description of the Bureau of printing plant, its productions and apprentice instruction. The govern ment of the Philippine Islands. 1915. [Manila, Bureau of printing, 1915] 19 p. illus. 20£em. Z232.P54B 1674 Pollitzer, Johann. Die Lage der Lehrlinge im Kleingewerbe in Wien. Tübingen und Leipzig, J. C. B. Mohr, 1900. 2 p. 1., 132 p. 24cm. (Wiener staatswissenschaftliche Studien. 2. Bd., 3. Hft.) HB41.W6 1675 Puffer, Joseph Adams. Vocational guidance; the teacher as a counselor . . . Chicago, New York [etc.] Rand, McNally & company [1914] 306 p. incl. front, illus.j diagrs. 19cm. HF5381.P8 1676 Reed, Mrs. Anna Y . Seattle children in school and in industry with recom mendations for increasing the efficiency of the school system and for decreasing the social and economic waste incident to the employment of children 14 to 18 years of age. Seattle, Wash., Board of school directors, 1915. 103 p. I9icm. HD6250.U5S65 1677 Reigart, John F. Enforcement of school attendance in London. Survey, Oct. 23, 1909, v. 23: 123-125. HVl.C4,v.23 1678 Rhode Island. Commissioner of public schools. Special report of the commissioner of public schools relating to industrial education as authorized by a resolution of the General assembly, approved April 20,1911. Providence, E. L. Freeman company, printers to the state, 1911. 102 p. 234cm. T74.R4A5 1911 1679 Sadler, Michael Ernest. Continuation schools in England & elsewhere; their place in the educational system of an industrial and commercial state. Man chester, University press, 1907. xxvi, 779 p. incl. fold, tables, diagrs. fold tab. 23cm. (Publications of the University of Manchester. Educational series, no. 1) LC5215.S25 1680 Savoy, Emile. L ’apprentissage en Suisse. Louvain, C. Peeters; [etc., etc.] 1910. viii, 616 p. incl. tables. 24cm. (Eeole des sciences politiques et sociales de Louvain) HD4885.S9S3 1681 Schaeffer, Nathan C. Child labor and the public schools. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Jan. 1907* v. 29: 84-86. Hl.A4,v.29 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 51. 3 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.51 Schneider, Herman. The public school and the day’s work. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 53-59. Hl.A4,v.38 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 164. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l64 “ Short bibliography” : p . 750-754. “ Bibliographie” : p. 597-616. 1682 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 131 1683 Scott, Jonathan French.. Historical essays on apprenticeship and vocational education. [Ann Arbor, Mich.] Ann Arbor press, 1914. 96 p. 23cm. HD4885.G7S4 1684 Seddon, Alfred A. The education of mill children in the south. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32:72-79. Hl.A4,v.32 Snedden, David. Child labor. Compulsory attendance. (In Monroe, Paul, ed. A cyclopedia of education. New York, 1911. 27£cm. v. 1, p. 607-611; 285-295) LBl5.M 6,v.l Spalding, John L. Child labor. The meaning and worth of education. (In Minnesota. Bureau of labor. Ninth biennial report, 1903-04. Minneapolis, 1904. 23icm. v. 1,' p. 69-83) HC107.M6A2 1903-04 Bibliography: p. [83]-96. 1685 1686 1687 1688 Spaulding, F. E. Problems of vocational guidance. (In National education association. Proceedings and addresses, 1915. Ann Arbor, Mich. p. 331335.) L13.N4 1915 Stephens, George Asbury. Influence of trade education upon wages. Chicago, 1911. I p. 1., p. 17-35. 24£cm. HD4885.U5S7 Reprinted from the Journal of political economy, v. xix, no. 1, p. 17-35. HBl.J7,v.l9 1689 Trade scholarships for boys, 1912. London county council gazette, Nov. 13, 20, 1911, v. 12: 304; 321. JS3551.L3,v.l2 1690 TJ. S. Bureau of labor. Industrial education. Washington, Govt, print. off., 1911. 822 p. 23Jcm. (Twenty-fifth annual report of the commissioner of labor. 1910) HD8051.A3 1910 “ Selected bibliography on industrial education” : p. 519-539. 1 6 9 1 ------------------ Report on condition of woman and child wage-earners in the United States, v. 7. Conditions under which children leave school to go to work. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1910. 309 p. 23cm. (61st Cong. 2d sess. Senate. Doc. 645. v. 7) HD6093.A4,v.7 1692 --------- Commission on national aid to vocational education. Voca tional education. Report together with the Hearings held on the subject, made pursuant to the provisions of Public resolution no. 16, Sixty-third Congress (S. J. res. 5) Washington, Govt, print, off., 1914. 2 v. 23om. (63d Cong., 2d sess. House. Doc.1004) T73.A5 1914 1693 --------- Congress. House. Committee on the District of Columbia. Report of hearings of March 13 and 16, 1906, on S. 1243, providing for com pulsory education in the District of Columbia; and H. R. 375, and 5974, to regulate child labor in the District of Columbia . . . Washington, Govt, print, off., 1906. 62 p. 23cm. LC132.D6A3 1694 Urwick, Edward Johns, ed. Studies of boy life in our cities, written by various authors for the Toynbee trust. London, J. M. Dent & company, 1904. xv, 320 p. 19£cm. HQ775.U83 Urwick, E .J. The boy’s physique and physical training: The boy’s mind and education . . . Home, school, and street, p. 255-318. 1695 Vaiden, V. Agricultural development and vocational education. Finan cial age, June 27, 1914, v. 29: 1139-1140. HGl.F4,v.29 1696 Vocational guidance survey, New York. Report of the Vocational guid ance survey, by Alice P. Barrows . . . [New York] 1912. 15 p. 22|cm. (Bulletin no. 9. Public education association of the city of New York) LC1045.V6 Reprinted from the fourteenth Annual report of the city superintendent of schools, New York city. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 132 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1697 Watson, Prank D. What the scholarships are doing. Woman’s home com panion, Aug. 1907, v. 34: 22. AP2.W714,v.34 1698 Weaver, Eli W. Getting in touch with the employer. Journal of education, Apr. 10, 1913, v. 77:396-398. Lll.J5,v.77 1699 Welpton, W. P. Primary artisan education. New York, Bombay [etc.] Longmans, Green and co., 1913. xix, [1], 252 p. 19£em. 1700 Weyl, W. E., and A. M. Sakolski. Conditions of entrance to the principal trades. U. S. Bureau of labor. Bulletin, Nov. 1906, no. 67: 681-780. HD8051.A5,no.67 1701 White, Prank Marshall. School children who want to work. Harper’s weekly, June 17, 1911, v. 55: 24. AP2.H32,v.55 1702 Whittemore, Gilbert E. The Providence school census system. American academy of political and social science. Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 130-133. Hl.A4,v.35 1703 Winslow, Charles Henry. Report on the relations of European industrial schools to labor. Boston, Wright & Potter printing co., state printers, 1908. 22 p. 23cm. (Massachusetts commission on industrial education. Bulletin no. 10) T74.M4A7,no.lO 1704 Wisconsin. Commission upon the plans for the extension of industrial and agricultural training. Report of the Commission . , . submitted to the governor January 19, 1911 . . . Madison, Wis., Democrat printing com pany, state printer, 1911. 135 p. 23cm. S534.W6A5 1911 1705 --------- State board of industrial education. Bulletin, no. 1-7. Madison, 1912. 7 v. Contents .— 1. Laws of Wisconsin relating to employment of women and children, industrial education and truancy, by C. P. Cary. LB2529.W6 2. Wisconsin legislation governing industrial and continuation education, by H .E . Miles. LC1046.W 5M5 3. Industrial education. The impending step in American educational policy; its significance to the boy, the parent, the community, the state, the nation, by H. E. Miles. LC1081.M5 4. The education of the girl. The necessity of fitting her education to her life, by L. D . Harvey. LC1481.H2 5. Industrial and continuation schools. Their foundation, organisation, and adjustment to the life of the community, by Louis E. Reber. , LG5215.R4 6. Public school manual arts. An agency for vocational education, by F. D. Crawshaw. LC1043.C82 7. Annual report of the public continuation schools of Wisconsin, 1912-13. 1706 Woolley, Mrsi Helen T. Facts about the working children of Cincinnati, and their bearing upon educational problems. Elementary school teacher, Oct., Nov. 1913, v. 14: 59-72; 132-139. L ll.E 6,v.l4 . 1707 Wright, Carroll Davidson, The apprenticeship system in its relation to indus trial education. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1908. il6 p. 23om. (U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1908: no. 6) L111.A6 1908,no.6 ■ “ List of references relating to the education of apprentices” : p.87-92. 1708 Zentralstelle für Volkswohlfahrt. 5. Konferenz, Elberfeld, 1911. Das Lehrlingswesen und die Berufserziehung des gewerblichen Nachwuchses; Yorbericht und Verhandlungen am 19. und 20. Juni 1911 in Elberfeld. Berlin, C. Heymann, 1912. xii, 506 p. 22|cm. (Schriften der Zentralstelle für Volks wohlfahrt; hft. 7 der neuen Folge der Schriften der Zentralstelle für Arbeiter wohlfahrtseinrichtungen) HD7707.Z5,v.7 “ Literaturverzeichnis” : p. [ix]-xii. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES OFT CHILD LABOR. 133 JUVENILE OCCUPATIONS AN D EM P LO YM E N T BUREAUS. 1709 Apprenticeship and skilled employment association, London. Trades for London boys and how to enter them, comp, by the Apprenticeship and skilled employment association . . . London, New York [etc.] Longmans, Green, and co., 1908. vi, 170 p. 21£cm. HF5381.A8 1710 ------------------- Trades for London girls and how to enter them; a companion book to Trades for London boys . . . London, New York [etc.] Longmans, Green, and co., 1909. xxi, 145 p. 21icm. HD6058.A7 1711 Ayres, Leonard Porter. Constant and variable occupations and their bear ing on problems of vocational education . . . New York city, Division of education, Russell Sage foundation [1914] 11 p. 23cm. ([Russell Sage foundation, New York. Pamphlet] E 136) LC1045.A9 1712 Birmingham, Eng. Education committee. Report of the special subcom mittee on the institution of a juvenile employment bureau and care com mittee in Birmingham. Adopted by the Education committee, Dec. 16, 1910. Birmingham, Percival Jones, 1910. 36 p. 1713 -------------------Report on the Birmingham system of care committees and juvenile employment bureaux. Birmingham [1912?] 35 p. 24£cm. 1714 ------------------- Central care committee. Explanatory statement of the scheme for school care committees and juvenile employment exchanges. June, 1912. 10 p. 21iom. 1715 ----------------------------- lst-2d annual report . . . 1912-1913. Birmingham [1912?—1913?] 2 v. 24Jcm. 1716 ----------------------------- Information concerning certain trades for women and girls, [n. p., n. d.] 13 p. 21%cm. 1717 Bradford, Eng. Education committee. Occupations open to young peo ple in Bradford. Building trades; clerks, butchers, grocers, photographers, tailors, [n. p., n. d.] 26 p. 23cm. 1718 —---------------------------Engineering trade section, [n. p., n. d.] 23 p. 24|om. 1719 ---------------------------— Printing trade, shop assistants, sheet metal workers, tramway employees, boot and shoe trade, saddlers, leather goods manufac turers [etc.] [n. p., n. d.] 38 p. 24£cm. 1720 ----------------------------- Professions. Accountants, architects, auctioneers, bank ers, chemists, dentists, solicitors, teachers, civil service, [n. p., n. d.] 29 p. 24cm.------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- . 1721 ----------------------------- Women’s section. Nurses, dressmakers, milliners, ma chinists, laundresses, waitresses, domestic servants. [n. p .,n . d.] 23 p. 23cjn. 1722 ----------------------------- Woollen and worsted trade section, [n. p., n. d.] 16 p. 24em. 1723 -------------------Juvenile employment special sub-committee. Report of work for the period ended 31st Dec. 1913. [n. p., 1914?] 24 p. 23CB1. 1724 Campbell, M. Edith. The vocation and employment bureau of Cincinnati. National child labor committee, New York, 1910. Pamphlet no. 132, p. 17-20. HD6250.U3N2,no.l32 1725 Cardiff. Education committee. Juvenile employment and central care committee. 1st annual report of the Juvenile employment committee. 1912-13. Cardiff [1913?] 28 p. 32£cm. 1726 Chamberlain, Norman. Labour exchanges and boy labour. Economic review, Oct. 15, 1909, v. 19: 400-409. H B l.E4,v.l9 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 134 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1727 Chicago school of civics and philanthropy. Dept, of social investiga tion. Finding employment for children who leave the grade schools to go to work. [Chicago, Manz engraving company, The Hollister press, 1911] 56 p. 26om. HF5381.C6 C ontents .—The school and the working-child: a plea for employment supervision in city schools [by] S. P. Breckinridge and E. Abbott.—Preliminary report on opportunities of employ ment in Chicago open to girls under sixteen [by] A. S. Davis.—Public care of working-children in England and Germany: some notes on juvenile labour exchanges, by E. Abbott.—Trade and technical classes for girls in Chicago.—Selected bibliography relating to employment super vision (p. 53-56) 1728 Cincinnati. Chamber of commerce and merchants’ exchange. Sur vey committee. Printing trades. Cincinnati, O., Cincinnati chamber of commerce [1915] 141 p. chart. 22-|em. Z122.C56 At head of title: Industrial survey of Cincinnati Vocational section. Bibliography: p. 140-141. 1729 Davis, Anne. Occupations and industries open to children between fourteen and sixteen years of age. Chicago, Board of education, 1914. 19 p. 18Jcm. 1730 Dearie, N. B. Report of the special subcommittee of the City of Birmingham education committee on the institution of a juvenile employment bureau and care committees in Birmingham (adopted by the Education committee, De cember 16,1910) Economic journal, June, 1911, v. 21: 301-305. HBl.E3,v.21 1731 Dodge, Harriet Hazem Survey of occupations open to the girl of fourteen to sixteen years. Boston, Mass., Girls trade education league, c1912. 39 p. 23cm. HD6058.D7 1732 Edlmann, Edith. Juvenile labour exchanges and apprenticeship bureaux in Germany. Contemporary review, Aug. 1913, v. 104: 230-239. AP4.C7,v.l04 1733 Gordon, Mrs. Maria Matilda. A handbook of employments specially pre pared for the use of boys and girls on entering the trades, industries, and pro fessions. Aberdeen, The Rosemount press, 1908. 3 p. 1., 444 p. 21icm. HF5381.68 1734 --------- Juvenile employment bureaux. v. 99: 723-732. 1735 Gt. Brit. Board of trade. Handbooks on London trades . . . Prepared on the behalf of the Board of trade for the use of advisory committees for juvenile employment in Greater London. London, 1914-15. 13 pam. 24£cm. HF5381.G83 Contemporary review, June, 1911, AP4.C7,v.99 Contents .—Clothing trades, pt. 1. Girls; pt. 2. Boys. 1915. Commercial occupations. 1914. Engineering. 1914. Food, drink, and tobacco trades. 1915. Gas and electricity supply trades. 1915. The Glass trades. 1914. Laundry work, dyeing and cleaning. 1915. Leather, fur, brush making, and feather trade. 1915. Precious metal, instrument making and sport trades. 1914. Printing, bookbinding and stationery trades. Pt. 1. Boys. Pt. 2. Girls. 1915. Vehicle making and miscellaneous metal trades. 1915. 1736 ------------------- Labour exchanges act, 1909. Special rules with regard to regis tration of juvenile applicants in England and Wales made in pursuance of regulation no. ix of the general regulations for labour exchanges managed by the Board of trade. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd. [1910] 3 p. inel. form. 33cm. HD5915.A5 1910a 1737 Greenwood, Arthur. Juvenile labour exchanges and after-care. London, P. S. King & son, 1911. xi, 112 p. 21£cm. HD6250.G7G7 Bibliography: p. [101]—112. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1738 135 Greenwood, Arthur. The organisation of the juvenile labour market. Progress, Apr. 1911, v. 6: 97-105. HN381.P9,v.6 1739 Hartford vocational guidance committee. Report of the Vocational guidance committee, Hartford, Conn., January, 1914. [Hartford, 1914] 22 p. 20°“ . HF5381.H2 1740 Hiatt, James Smith. The child, the school, and the job. [Philadelphia, 1912] 13 p. 25cm. (Public education association. Study no. 39) Reprinted from the “ City club bulletin,” Dec. 27,1912. JS12Gl.C47,v.6 1741 Iowa state teachers’ association. Committee on vocational education and vocational guidance. Vocational education and vocational guidance; a survey and preliminary report by a committee appointed by the Iowa teachers’ association. Issued by the Department of public instruction. [Des Moines?] 1914. 96 p. 23cm. [Iowa. Dept, of public instruction. Bulletin no. 13] LB1046.I7 * 1742 Jevons, H. Winefrid. Apprenticeship and skilled employment committees; with an account of the work of the Cambridge boys’ employment registry b y Eglantyne Jebb. (In Sadler, M. E. ed. Continuation schools in England & elsewhere. 2d ed. Manchester, 1908, p. 454-471) LC5215.S25 1743 Juvenile labor bureaus and vocational guidance in Great Britain. U. S. Bureau of education. Bulletin, 1912, v. 11: 13-17. L lll.A 6 ,v .ll 1744 Keeling, Frederic. The labour exchange in relation to boy and girl labour. London, P. S. King, 1910. 76 p. Bibliography: p. 73-76. 1745 Kelley, Mary R. G. Juvenile workers’ bureau. court. 2d annual report, 1915, p. 145-151) (In Philadelphia. Municipal 1746 Knowles, G. W. Junior labour exchanges (a plea for closer cooperation between labour exchanges and education authorities) London, Sherratt & Hughes, 1910. 32 p. 22cm. 1747 Laselle, Mary Augusta, and Katherine E. Wiley. Vocations for girls. Boston, New York [etc]. Houghton Mifflin company [°1913] x, 139 [1] p. 18cm. HD6058.L3 Bibliography: p. [130J-132. 1748 Mangold, George Benjamin. Industrial opportunities of children in St. Louis. [St. Louis? n. d.] p. 66-83. 28cm. “ Reprinted from Washington university studies, v. 1, pt. 2, no. 1, Oct. 1913.” 1749 Minneapolis vocational survey committee. A vocational survey of Minne apolis, pub. by the Minneapolis teachers’ club, 1913. [Minneapolis, 1913] 90 p. diagrs. 23cm. 1750 Parsons, James. Skilled employment committees. Charity organisation review, July, 1907, n. s. v. 22: 19-35. HVl.C6,n.s.v.22 1751 Peck, J. W. Juvenile employment: the Edinburgh method of co-operation between the education authorities and the labour exchanges. (In National conference on the prevention of destitution. 1st, London, 1911. Report of the proceedings. London, 1911. 25^cm. p.219-237) HV244.N3 1911 1752 Richmond, Va. Vocational education survey. Vocational education survey of Richmond, Va. August, 1915. Washington, Govt, print, off., 1916. 333 p. fold, tables. 23cm (Bulletin of the United States Bureau of labor statistics, whole no. 162. Miscellaneous series, no. 7) HD8051.A62,no.l62 1753 Russell, Charles Edward B., and Lilian M. Rigby. Working lads’ clubs. London, Macmillan and co., limited, 1908. xii p., 11., 445 p. illus., 23 pi. (incl. front., plan) tables (1 fold.) 19em. HV878.R8 Labour bureaux, p. 286-304. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 136 LIST OF EEFEEENCES ON CHILD LABOE. 1754 Talbert, Ernest Lynn. Opportunities in school and industry for children of the stockyards district. Chicago [University of Chicago press] 1912. vi, 64 p. 24Jem. (A study of Chicago’s stockyards community -. . . an investigation carried on under the direction of the Board of the University of Chicago settlement. I) HN80.C5B6 1755 TJeland, E. Juvenile employment exchanges. American labor legislation review, June, 1915, v. 5: 203-237. HD7833.A55,v.5 1756 IT. S. Bureau of labor. Vocational guidance. Washington, Govt, print. off., 1911. iii, 411-497 p. 23Jcm. HF538LU6 Part of 25th Annual report of the commissioner of labor, 1910. 1757 Vocation bureau, Boston. Vocational guidance and the work of the Voca tion bureau of Boston. Boston, 1915. 15 p. 23cm. 1758 ------------------- Vocations for Boston boys, issued by the Vocation bureau of Boston. [Bulletin no. 1-7] [Boston? °1911- ] 7 v. 20iem. HF5381.V5 C ontents.— No. 1, The machinist; no. 2, Banking; no. 3, The baker; no. 4, Confectionery manufacture; no. 5, The architect; no. 6, The landscape architect; no. 7, The grocer. 1759 — --------------- Vocations for boys and young men. Boston, 1911-1913. 3 v. C ontents.— Banking. 1911. The department store and its opportunities. 1912. Allen, F.J. The law as a vocation. 1913. 1760 Vocation office for girls, Boston. Vocations for Boston girls, issued by the Vocation office for girls . . . [Bulletin no. 1-14] Boston, Mass., The Girls trade educational league, °1911-1912. 14 pam. 20Jcm. HD6058.V7 Contains “ References." C ontents .— 1, Telephone operating; 2, Bookbinding; 3, Stenography and typewriting; 4, Nursery maid; 5, Dressing; 6, Millinery; 7, Straw hat making; 8, Manicuring and hairdressing; 9, Nursing; 10, Salesmanship; 11, Clothing machine operating; 12, Paper box making; 13, Confec tionery manufacture; 14, Knit goods manufacture. 1761 Weaver, Eli Witwer, and J. Frank Byler. Profitable vocations for boys. New York and Chicago, The A. S. Barnes co., 1915. 282 p. 19cm. (The vocational series) HF5381.W3 Contains bibliographies. 1762 ---------ed. Profitable vocations for girls, prepared by a committee of teachers under the direction of E. W. Weaver. New York and Chicago, The A. S. Barnes co., 1915. 212 p. 19cm. (The vocational series) HD6058.W27 A new edition of “ Vocations for girls," pub. 1913. Contains bibliographies. HEALTH OF WORKING CHILD. 1763 Adler, Felix. Conservation of the human assets of the nation. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910, v. 35: 1-6. Hl.A4,v.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 125. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l25 1764 Alden, Percy. The child and the state. Chautauquan, Oct. 1910, v. 60: 183-202. AP2.C48,v.60 1765 Bruere, Robert W. Physiological age and child-labor. (In National educa tion association, Journal of proceedings and addresses . . . 1908. Winona, Minn. 1908. 23£em. p. 924-932) L13.N4 1908 1766 Brown, H. Maughan. Schoolboys as wage earners. 1912, v. 2: 1026-1030. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Child, London, Sept. HQ750.A2C4,v.2 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 137 1767 Cheney, Howell. Practical restrictions on child labor in textile industries; higher educational and physical qualifications. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 86-99. . Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 96. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.96 1768 Churchill, F. S. The effect of irregular hours upon the child’s health. (In Chicago. Child welfare exhibit, 1911. The child in the city. Chicago, 1912. 22cm. p. 310-312) HV741.C4 1769 Clopper, Edward N. Effects of street trading on the health of school children. New York, National child labor committee, [1913] 8 p. 23cm. (Pamphlet no. 218) HD6250.TJ3N2,no.218 1770 Corcoran, Julia. Actual present physical state of working children in Con necticut. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hartford] 1909. 22em. p. 4-5) HD6250.U4C8 1908 1771 Crampton, Charles Ward. The signifiqance of physiological age in educa tion. [Washington, Govt, print, off., 1913] 13 p. 23em. Reprinted from the Transactions of the fifteenth International congress on hygiene and de mography, [v. 3: 224-235] RA122.N585 1912,v.3 1772 De Leon, Edwin W. Accidents to working children. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 131-r 143: Hl.A4,v.33 1773 Dwight, Helen C. Dangerous machines in the metal trades. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1914, v. 3, no. 3: 66-75. HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.3 1774 Frankel, Lee K., and Louis I. Dublin. Heights and weights of New York city children 14 to 16 years of age; a study of measurements of boys and girls granted employment certificates. New York, Metropolitan life insurance co., 1916. 53 p. 1775 Freiberg, Albert, H. Some effects of improper posture in factory labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar 1909, y. 33: 104-110. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 102. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l02 1776 --------- Some of the ultimate physical effects of premature toil. American academy of political and social science. Annals, Jan. 1907, v. 29:19-25. H1.A4, v. 29 National child labor committee, Pamphlet no. 43. 7 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.43 1777 Goldmark, Josephine Clara. Fatigue and efficiency; a study in industry. Containing also the substance of four briefs in defense of women’s labor laws by Louis D. Brandeis and Josephine Goldmark. New York, Charities publi cation committee, 1912. xvii, 302 p., 1 1., 591 p. incl. illus., charts. 24cia. (Russell Sage foundation [publication]) HD5106.G7 1778 Gordon, Jean M. Developing normal men and women. Child labor bulle tin, May, 1913, v. 2, no. 1: 121-123. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 1779 Gt. Brit. Board of education. Ann'ual report of the chief medical officer of the Board of education. 1911-1914. London, Printed for H . M. Stationery off., by Eyre and Spottiswoode, ltd., 1912-1915. 4 v. 25em. [Parliament. Papers by command] 1911: Medical inspection and juvenile employment: p. 245-268. 1912: Medical inspection and juvenile employment: p.309-327. 1913: Examination of leavers: II. Relation to juvenile employment: p. 271-284. 1914: Juvenile employment and the war; examination of leavers: p. 223- 239 . https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 138 1780 LIST OF BEFEBENCES OFT CHILD LABOB. Gfc. B rit. Inter-departmental committee on partial exemption from school attendance. Report. Presented to both houses of Parliament bycommand of His Majesty. London, Printed for H. M. Stationery off., by J. Truscott& son, ltd., 1909. 2 v . i n i . tables. 33cm. ([Parliament. Papers by command] Cd. 4791, 4887) HD6250.G7A4 1909 Educational results, v. 1, p. 7-8.Effect on health of the children, v. 1, p. &-7. Physical effects of m ill life: Extract from report by Dr. Arthur Greenwood. Appendix no. 16, p. 282-285. 1781 Greenwood, A rthur. The medical supervision of juvenile workers. (In National conference on the prevention of destitution. 2d, London, 1912. Report of the proceedings of the unemployment and industrial section. London, 1912. 244cm. p. 98-106.) HD8384.N3 1782 Hall, George A. Physical examination for working papers in New York. Survey, Dec. 13, 1913, v. 31: 297. HVl.C4,v.31 1783 Hanson, William C. Exclusion of children from dangerous trades. American academy of political and social science. Annals, Supplement, July, 1911, v. 38: 90-94. Hl.A4,v.38 1784 --------- The health of young persons in Massachusetts factories. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1910,v. 35: 111-113. H1.A4,V.35 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 131. 3 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l31 1785 Harmon, William E. Handicaps in later years from child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 122-130. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 104. 8 p. HD6250.U3N 2, no.104 1786 Henderson, Charles It. Social cost of accident, ignorance, and exhaustion. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, July, 1908, v. 32: 11-18. Hl.A4,v,32 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 72. 8 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.72 1787 Hoffman, Frederick L. The social and medical aspects of child labor. (In National conference of charities and correction. Proceedings, 1903. [Co lumbus, O.] 1903. 23|cm. p. 138-157) HV88.A3 1903 1788 Hutchinson, Woods. Overworked children on the farm and in the school. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 116-121. H1.A4.V.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 105. 6 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.105 1789 Johnston, John. Wastage of child life, as exemplified by conditions in Lancashire. London, A. C. Fifield, 1909. 95 p. 19cm. (The Fabian socialist series, no. 7) HQ769 J7 “ References” : p. 94-95. 1790 Jones, H. H. The work of England’s certifying surgeons. Child labor bul letin, Feb. 1914, v. 2, no. 4: 76-79. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 1791 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. Insanitary conditions amongst home workers. (In International congress of women, London, 1899. London, 1900. 20|-cm. v. 6, p. 21-25) . HQ1106 1899,v.6 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 139 1792 Kober, George M. The physical and physiological effects of child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Mar. 1906, v. 27: 285-288. Hl.A4,v.27 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 20, p. 27-30; Pamphlet no. 25, 4 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.20;no.20a;no.25 1793 Loriga, Giovanni. Lavoro dei fanciulli e crescenza del corpo, per il Prof. Giovanni Loriga. Roma, Officina poligrafica italiana, 1910. 107 p. 31cm. (Italy. Ufficio del lavoro. Pubblicazioni, serie B, n. 26) “ Bibliografia” : p. 73-74. 1794 Lovejoy, Owen It. Child labor and health. National child labor committee, New York. 1913. Pamphlet no. 189. 13 p. Reprinted from Child labor bulletin, Feb. 1913, v. 1, no. 4, p. 57-68. HD6250.U3N2,no.l89 1795 --------- A six years’ battle for the working child. American review of reviews, Nov. 1910, v. 42: 593-596. ' AP2.R4,v.42 1796 --------- Some unsettled questions about child labor. American academy of political and social science, Annals, Supplement, Mar. 1909, v. 33: 49-62. Hl.A4,v.33 National child labor committee. Pamphlet no. 108. 14 p. HD6250.U3N2,no.l08 1797 Luther, Seth. An address to the working-men of New-England, on the state of education, and on the condition of the producing classes in Europe and America. With particular reference to the effect of manufacturing (as now conducted) on thé health and happiness of the poor, and on the safety of our republic. Delivered in Boston, Charlestown, Mass., Portland, Saco, Me., and Dover, N. H. By Seth Luther. Boston, The author, 1832. 39 p. 22Jem. Miscellaneous pamphlets, v. 1161, no. 2. AC901.M5,v.ll61 1798 McKelway, A. J. Child labor and its consequences. By A. J. McKelway. [New York? 1908?] 16 p. 23£cm. (National child labor committee. Pam phlet no. 68) HD6250.U3N2,no.68 “ Reprinted from the Sewanee review for April, 1908” . 1799 McMillan, Margaret. The effects of monotonous toil in the years preceding adolescence. (In International congress of hygiene and demography. Trans actions, 15th, 1912, v. 3: 985-1000) RA122.N585 1912,v.3 1800 Malcolm, A. G. The influence of factory life on the health of the operative, as founded upon the medical statistics of this class at Belfast. Royal statistical society, Journal, June, 1856, v. 19: 170-181. H Al.R8,v.l9 1801 Maryland. Bureau of industrial statistics. Report of medical exam iners, 1913, 1914, 1915. (In its Annual report, 1913, p. 40-47; 1914, p. 100138; 1915, p. 84-100, 174-179) HC107.M3A2 1913-1915 1802 Medical testimony of the evils of child labor. Charities, April 14,1906, v. 16: 92-93. HYl.C4,v.l6 1803 Mitchell, John. Proper minimum age for working children. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hart ford] 1909. 22cm. p. 26-32) HD6250.U4C8 1908 1804 Montgomery, Louise. The American girl in the stockyards district. Chicago, 111., The University of Chicago press [1913] vi, 70 p. illus. (plan) plates, diagrs. 24em. (A study of Chicago’s stockyards community . . . An investigation carried on under the direction of the Board of the University of Chicago settlement and the Chicago alumnae club of the University of Chicago, n) HN80.C5B6 Health, p. 28-32, 55-57. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 140 LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 1805 Mosso, Angelo. Fatigue. Tr. by Margaret Drummond and W. B. Drum mond. New York, G. P. Putnam’s sons; London, S. Sonnenschein & co., ltd.’, 1904. xiv, 334 p. illus. 19cm. (The science series) QP421.M91 1806 Nation (London) [Editorial] The waste of child labor. Feb. 28, 1914, v. 14: 891-892. , Nation (London), AP4.N15,v.l4 1807 National child labor committee, New York. Night-work and day-sleep; what it means to a man, woman, or child to invert nature’s order for work and sleep. [New York] 1911. 15 p. 23cm. (Pamphlet no. 149) HD6250.U3N2,no.l49 1808 N earing, S cott. Can the state afford to pay the cost of overworking its chil dren? Charities and the Commons, Feb. 3,1906, v. 15: 602-606. HV1.C4.V.15 1809 Noble, D. On the influence of the factory system in the development of pul monary consumption. Royal statistical society, Journal, Oct. 1842, v. 5: 274-280. HAl.R8,v.5 1810 Oates, W. H. Child labor and health. Child labor bulletin, v. 2, no. 1: 117-120. HD6250.U3N4,v.2 1811 Ohio. State board o f health. A survey of industrial health-hazards and occupational diseases in Ohio, by E. R. Hayhurst. Columbus, The F. J. Heer printing co., 1915. 2 p. 1„ iii-xviii, 438 p. illus. 22em. RA787.04 HD7263.04 1812 Oliver, Sir Thomas, ed. Dangerous trades: the historical, social, and legal aspects of industrial occupations as affecting health, b y a number of experts. London, J. Murray, 1902. xxiii, 891, [1] p. inch illus., tables, diagrs. plates. 24em. _ HD7262.05 1813 --------- Diseases of occupation from the legislative, social, and medical points of view. . . .. London, Methuen & co. [1908] xix, 427, [1] p. 2 pi. 22Jcm. (The new library of medicine; ed. b y C. W. Saleeby) RA787.06 1814 Pearson, Robert H. Occupational diseases. New York, N. Y ., The Weekly underwriter [1915] 32 p. illus. 18Jcm. RA787.P4 1815 Roberts, Charles. The physical requirements of factory children. Royal statistical society, Journal, Dec. 1876, v. 39: 681-733. HAl.R8,v.39 1816 Ross, George F. Extending medical inspection from schools to mills. Child labor bulletin, v. 1, no. 1, June 1912, p. 128-134. HD6250.U3N4,v.l 1817 Rotch, Thomas Morgan. Child labor and work of children should be adapted to the individual child. (In International congress of hygiene and demog raphy. Transactions, 15th, 1912, v. 3: 975-984) RA122.N585 1912,v.3 1818 Royal society o f arts, London. Shaw lectures on industrial hygiene. De livered before the Royal society of arts in November and December, 1907; and February and March, 1908. London, Printed by W. Trounce, 1908. 63 p. incl. illus., tables, diagrs. 25ejn. ' RA787.R88 Also publ. in Royal society of arts, Journal, June, 12, 1908, v. 56: 738-747. 1819 1820 Tl.S64,v.56 Smith, Oliver C. The critical character of the age period from fourteen to six teen. (In Child labor conference. Hartford, Conn., 1908. Report of the proceedings . . . [Hartford] 1909. 22cm. p. 8-13) HD6250.U4C8 1908 Stetson, George R. Industrial classes as factors in racial development. Arena, Feb. 1909, v. 41: 177-189. AP2.A6,v„41 1821 Taylor, Florence. Mortality among cotton operatives. Child labor bulletin, Nov. 1914, v. 3, no. 3: 62-65. HD6250.U3N4,v.3,no.3 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis LIST OF REFERENCES ON CHILD LABOR. 141 1822 Teleky, Ludwig. Altersprobleme gewerblicher Hygiene. (In International congress of hygiene and demography. Transactions, 15th, 1912, v. 3: 957974) RA122.N585 1912,v.3 1823 --------- Altersprobleme gewerblicher Hygiene. [Wien, 1913?] 17 p. “ Sepa ratabdruck aus heft 2, I. jahrg. (1913) der Zeitschrift für öffentliche gesundheitspflege ” . 1824 Thackrah, Charles Turner. The effects of arts, trades, and professions, and of civic states and habits of living, on health and longevity: with suggestions for the removal of many of the agents which produce disease, and shorten the duration of life. 2d ed., greatly enl. London, Longman, Rees, Orme, Brown, Green, & Longman; [etc., etc.] 1832. 1 p. 1., [vii]-viii p., 11., 238 p. 22icm. RA787.T37 Children: p. 35-37; 77-84; 148-149; 177-179. 1825 Thompson, William Gilman. The occupational diseases; their causation, symptoms, treatment, and prevention. New'York and London, D. Appleton and company, 1914. xxvi, 724 p. illus., diagrs. 24£cni. RC964.T4 1826 Travers, J. C. Some physical effects of industry upon the working children of Maryland. Maryland medical journal, Mar. 1914, v. 57: 59-64. Rll.M32,v.57 1827 TT. S. Bureau of labor. Laws relating to factory inspection and the health and safety of employees. (In its Bulletin, Nov. 1907, no. 73: 817-986.) HD8051.A5,no.73 1828 Woolley, Mrs. Helen (Thompson), and Charlotte Bust Fischer. Mental and physical measurements of working children. Princeton, N. J., and Lan caster, Pa., Psychological review company [1914] 2 p. 1., 247 p. incl. tables, diagrs. 25em. (Psychological review publications. The psychological monographs . . . vol. x v i i i , no. 1; whole no. 77. Dec. 1914) BFl.P8,vol.l8,no.l https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis i I ' I ■ : ■■ ! AUTHOR INDEX. {The numbers reier to items, not to pages.J Abbott, Edith.......................................... '50.51.1727 Baker, S. Josephine................ *53 Abelsdorff, Walter................................... 52,734,817 Baldwin, B .J ................................................. 79,326 Abercrombie, Anna S ...................................... 297 BaUantvne. A ....... 110« Aberdeen, I. M. Gordon, countess o î............... 747 Barker, Henrv A ......... 1304 Ackroyd, Thomas R ........................................ 1360 Barnard, H enrv............ 4393 Adams, John C............................................ . 102 Barnard, J. L vnn......... 453 Adams, M. Bridges.......................................... 1049 Barnard. Kate___ on 01 Adams, Myron E ................................ 320,1361,1362 Barrett, J. F ................... 330a Adams, Thomas S.......................................... 5 4 ,2 1 2 Barrows, Alice P ................................ 327, 1652,1696 Adamson, William C ..................................... 713 073 Bartlett, Charles L .............. Addams, Jane.............. 55-63a,320,321,322,324,326, Bates, Blanche........................................... 1325-1327 329,356,457,862,1322,1323,1363,1494-1496,1498 Batten, Samuel Z . . 303 Adler, Eleanor H ......................... 334,341,1133,1234 Baudoin, Lionel....... 000 Adler, Felix.............................................. 64-67,226, Beauregard. Paul....... onn 320,322,323,325,326,327,329,330,1652,1763 Beck, James D ........... -3 3 0 Adler, Georg.................................... 818 Beckwith, H olm es... , Adler, Nettie........................... 68 , 951, 969 , 1364-1366 Beeks, Gertrude......... 4037 Agahd, Konrad.................. ........... 761,819-826,1050 Belgium. Corps législatif.............. 732 Alabama. Department for inspection o f jails, Laws, statutes, etc........... 783 785 e tc..................................................... 69-71,458,459 Ministère de l'intérieur. _. 73g Alabama. Governor, 1915............................... 72 Office du travail....... ~ov Alabama child labor c ommittee.................. 73 Belgium (Territory under German occupaA1 Priddy, pseud. See Brown, F. K . 788 tion,1914-). Laws, statutes, etc....... Albrecht, Otto........................................... iron Benedict, Leonard___ iqbo Alden, Mrs. Margaret P ............................... 8 6 3 ,8 6 4 Berger, T. P h .................. 8og Alden, Percy.............................................. 1135,1764 Berry, Georges..................... gpg Alexander, Hooper..................... asis Bertoni, B ..................... 4^00 Allen, Alfred G............ ................ lia i Best, Marie.................. one Allen, Carrie W ................................... 1235 Best, R obert H .......... ' Allen, F .J ......................................................... 1759 American academy o f political and social Beveridge, Albert J ................ 322,601-605,664j 1301 science........................................................ 74,1499 Beveridge. William Ti 45^ American association for labor legislation___ 29,460 Bierer, W illy................................................829, 1138 American federation o f labor.................. 150Q 1501 Birmingham, England. Education commitAmerican year book........................... 4 «i Anderson, Adelaide M........................ oao Bittman, K arl.............. 345 Anderson, Neal L ................................... 226,320,462 Black, Clementina............... ««7 Andrews, John B ...................... 4 «4 Blackmon, Fred L ................ aao «27 Blankenburg, Rudolph............ Anton, Günther Kurt................ Apprenticeship and skilled employment as Blaseoer, Frances............. go sociation, L ondon................... I 7OP \ Blenk, James H., archbishop............... 329 1369 Arendt, Henriette, sister....... 739 : Bliss, H. L .......................... 720 Argentine Republic................................... 1035,1036 Bloomfield, Meyer............... 1,41,830,868,1507 1512 Armstrong association 0 f Philadelphia... 75 4328 Blydenburgh, Benjamin B ............ Arnstein, Leo..................... .............. 324 Aronovici, Carol............ ................... 7« Borah, William E ............................... 326 606 Aronvia, B . C ................................. 13*57 Ashby, Irene M. See Macfadyen, Irene M. A. Bosanquet, Helen, Mrs. B ................ sro rto Astor, Waldorf............................... 1 ¡a» Ather ton, Sarah H ........................ 77 Austin, Richard W ................... 713 Boswell, Helen V ........................... 8384 Austria. Arbeitsstatistisches A m t___ 762 Boswell, M. Louise........................... 85 328 Ayres, Leonard P ............................ 1711 Bouquet, Louis .1 .......................... 799 Ayres. William A ............................ 670 Bowen, Louise H .................................. 86,1191.1309 Bâché, R ené............................................. 1077 Backus, August C....................................... 445 Bradford, Eng. Educationeommittee... 1717-1723 Bacon, Augustus O............................... 663 Bragg, Shirley................................................. 74 Bacon, Mary A ......................................... 1236,1236a Brants, V ...................................... 934 Baggallay, F. W .............................................. 865 Bray, Reginald Arthur... 13,871,872,952,1513,1514 Bailey, Mrs. E. L ................................... 78 328 Breckinridge, S. P ................... ........... 464,465,1727 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 143 144 AUTHOR INDEX. Bremer, Harry M ................. 329,346,466,1053-1055 Brereton, Cloudesley....... - ............. ................. 1515 Brewer, Franklin N ...................................... 74,1192 Br inton, J asper Y .................................. 607,650,653 British association for labour legislation. . 2,873,874 Britt, J âmes J ................................................... 713 Britton, James A ............................................ 87,324 Brooke, Emma F ............................................. 737 Brooklyn. Public library............................... 42 Brooks, John G . . ...................................... 88,89,321 Brown, Edward F .......................................... 9°» 328,342,1078,1079,1094,1095,1372,1373 Brown, Emma E ........................................... 1374 Brown, Frederic K ........................................... 1238 Brown, H. Maughan.................................1516,1766 Brown, J ohn George........................................ 1375 Bruce, Andrew A ............................................. 693 Bruére, Robert W ....................... 1765 Brumbaugh, Martin G ................................- - 378 Brundage, Howard D ......... . ........... ........... 18,1654 Brunhes, H. J .................................................... 797 Brussels. Exp. du travail à domicile.. . . . . . . 1140 Bry, Georges Ernest......................... 798 Bryan, William J . . . . . . .................................. 609 Buckmaster, Stanley O ................................... 875 Bulgaria. Laws, statutes, etc........................ 1039 Bullock, Edna D .............................................. 3,91 Bureau of municipal research, New Y ork.. . . 467 Burke, Thomas................................- ........ 1376,1517 Burnham, Ernest....................................... 327,1652 Busser, Ralph C.......................... 1518 Butler, Elizabeth B .............. - ............. 92,1193,1377 1239 Byington, Margaret F ............ Byler, J. Frank ................................................. 1761 Byrnes, James F ; ............................................. 713 Cadwallader, Starr........................................ 322,468 California. Bureau of labor statistics........ . 93,1080 . Industrial welfare commission..................... 94 Campagnac, E. T ....................................... 1378,1519 * Campbell, Helen................ - ............................ 440 Campbell, J ohn C ......... ............................. 328,1240 Campbell, M. Edith................ 95,326,327,1652,1724 Campbell, Robert A ............ . ....................... 470,471 Campbell, Willard A — .................................. 472 Canada. Royal commission on industrial training.........................’................................. 1520 Cannon, Joseph G ......................... 713 Cape of Good Hope. Laws, statutes, etc----- 1521 Capen, Edward W .......................................... 1522 Cardiff. Education committee..... .......... 1725 Carleton, Ernest E ........................................... 1056 Carlton, Frank T ....................... 97,98,1654 Carrigan, Thomas C ......................................... 473 Carter, William H .......................................... 682 Cary, C. P ...................... I...... ........................... 1705 Cary, William J . . . . . ............... 683 Catheron, Allison G ..................- ..................... 99 Chamberlain, Mary L ............................... 1081,1082 Chamberlain, Norman................................ 876,1726 Chandler, H. A. E ............................................ 474 Chapman, Sydney J .- ............................... 1241,1523 Chauvet, Émile................................................ 1014 Chenery, William L ......................................... 1524 Cheney, Howell......... ........................ 324,1242,1767 Cherouny, Henry W ........»............................. 1525 Chesser, Elizabeth S.......... ............................. 1526 Chevaillier, A. A .............................................. 440 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Chicago. Child welfare exhibit, 1911.. 100,101,1380 : Chicago school of civics and philanthropy----43, 101,1727 1379 Chicago. Vice commission................... Child, Richard W ....................................... 610 Child labor conference, Hartford, Conn. . . . . . 102 Church, Denver S ...................................... 684 Churchill, F. S ....... - ........................... 101,1768 Chute, Charles I* .. ...................................... 109,110, 326,476,479-481,1059,1114,1115,1210,1381 Cincinnati. Chamber of commerce, etc......... 1728 City Club of Chicago........................................ 1529 1547 Clapham, J. H ............ Clark, David................................................. 330,674 Clark, Davis W ................................................ m Clark, S. H .......................... ....................•— 101,1333 Clark, Victor S ......................... 878 Clarke, Allen..................................................... 879 Claxton, P. P ............................................... 327,1652 Cleland, Ethel........................................ H2 Cline, Cyrus....................................................... 685 Cloete, J. G........................................ - ........ 964,1480 Clopper, Edward N ......................... . 4,113-121,323, 324, 325, 326, 329, 330a, 341, 346, 482, 483, 721, 722, 1060,1211,1382-1390,1442,1530-1532,1769 Cochrane, Thomas............................................ 743 Cohen, Barney.................................................. 490 Collet, Clara E ............................ . 880,1141,1244 Colorado. Bureau of labor statistics.............. 122 Columbia typographical society, Wash.......... 1533 Columbia University. Teachers’ college....... 19 Committee on wage-earning children, London^..................................................... 881,882 Commons, John R ..................... 123,124,484 Conant, Richard K ......................... 326, 327,328,329,650,653,1245, 1246, 1391, 1392, 1536,1652 Condy, George................................ 883 Conference of commissioners on uniform state laws............................................................. 591-593 Congrès inter, du patronage de la jeunesse ouvrière...................... . ................ 738 Connecticut. Board of education................ 487 Bureau of labor statistics................... 102,125,126 Commission to investigate conditions of 127 wage-earning women and minors, . . . . . . . 102 Consumers’ league of Connecticut.... ........... 372,421,1098 Conyngton, Mary................................ Cooley, Edwin G . . . . .......................... . . . . . . . 1537 440 Cooley, Jane C .................................... ........... Coon, Charles L ................................- ....... 128,326 686 Cooper, John.G ................................. ....... . 795 Cooreman, Gérard— . ...................... ........... Corcoran, Julia.................................... ___ 102,1770 129 Coulter, Ernest K ............................... ___ . . . Courcelle, Louis.................................. ....... 799,800 Covington, J. Harry........................... .......... 1105 884 Cox, Irene........................................... ............ 687 Cox, William E ......... ........................ ........ . Craighead, Erwin............................... .......... 1538 Craissac, A bel...................................... ............. 804 Crampton, Charles W ......................... ............ 1771 Crane, Mrs. Frederick......... ............ . ....... 327,1652 Cranston, Mary R ............................... 885,1194,1539 Crawshaw, F. D ................................. ............ 1705 Creel, George..................................... . .. 220-223,294 Crosby, Ernest H .............................. ............ 1247 AUTHOR INDEX, Crosby, Fanny ! . . ........................................... 340 Crowley, R. H ................ ........... ..................... 1594 Crumpaeker, Edgar D ....... ....... ................. 661,665 886 Cunningham, William.......... ................ Cuxmington, B ........................ ..................... 1540 Dabney, Charles W .................................... 322,1541 Dagan, Henri............................. 801 Dallinger, Frederick W . . .....................................713 Daniels, Annie S .............. . . . . . . . . . . . . ___ : ___ 1142 130 Daniels, Harriet M c D . . . . . : . ___ Daurnay, Maxime................... ......................•. 833 Davies, Edgar T ........... . 101,131,322,324,489,490 Davis, A. S ........................................... 1727 Davis, A n n e................................... 1729 Davis, P hilip... .................................. 132,1393,1394 Dawley, Thomas R ..................... 133,342,1094,1248 Dawson, Lucile F ................................... 134 135 Dealey, James Q .......................................... :. Dean, Arthur D .................................. . 20,135a, 1542 Dearie, Norman B .............................. 850,1543,1730 Deffenbaugh, W . S....... 1535 DeGroot, E. D ............................. 330 De Lacy, W illiam H . . . . . . .v..... ............... . . 136 Delas, Joseph M................................... 1015 Delaware. General assembly. Senate........ 137 De Leon, Edwin W ............................. 139,324,1772 Denman, Richard D ....................... 14,889,951,1547 Denmark. Laws, statutes, e t c ............... 1040-1045 Denson, Daisy........... • ............................. 491 Deutsch, Julius. ; ........................... 1023 Devine, Edward T ................................ 140,323,723 Devon. County council............. 954 834 De Voss, Emilia V. Kanthack.................... Dewar, David.................................... : ___. . . 887 Dewavrin, Maurice.......................................... 492 Dewey,‘John................................................ 342,1095 Dodd, Edward A . 1108 Dodge, Harriet H ............................. . : . . . . . 1 . 1731 Doherty, J. B ................... .........•.................... 141 Dooley, L. W .................... 1544 Dorr, Rheta C ........ . 1143,1195,1249,1250,1545 Dough ton, Robert L ........... ........... 688 Dowdall, H. Chaloner...................................... 1395 Downey, E zekiel H ........................... 493 Drage, Geoffrey............................................ 888 Draper, Andrew S................................ 142,324,1546 Dron, Gustave.................................... 1558 Drown, Frank S ................................. . ...... 325,724 Drummond, Margaret............. 1805 Drummond, W . B ........................................... 1805 Dublin, Louis.1................................................ 1774 Dubois, E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ........ 74,789 662 Dubois, Fred. T . ..... .. . . . . . ........................... Ducpétiaux, Édouard.......................... 739,790,1208 Dunckley, Henry............................................. 877 Dunlop, Olive J . . . . . . . .......................... 14,889,1547 Durham, M iss ................................................... 850 Durland, Kellogg......................................... 143,1212 Dutton, Samuel T ............................................ 1548 Dwight, Helen C ............ . 334,341,1311,1396,1773 Eagleston, A . J................ 1403 Eastman, C rystal.. , ........ 144 Edlmann, E dith......................................... 835,1732 Edwards, Alba M ................... 494 Edwards, Mrs. H. M .............................. 973 Eldman, Benjamin W ........................'............ 145 Ellis, Leonora B ................................ 1251,1252,1549 Elson, W . E ................ 327,1652 44193°—16----- 10 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 145 613 Emery, James A . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ...... Engel, S ig m u n d ............................................ 147 Erickson, Halford............... 320,495 Esche, Arthur................................................... 836 Eschenbrenner, Josephine J...-.................. 148, 329,330a, 342,478,1094 Evans, Orrena L . ................ 4% Fairchild, Fred R ...................... 497 Fahey, Charles P...................... 1253 Falkenbach, Joseph................. 837 Farnam, Henry W ....................................... 498,614 Favill, Henry B .................................. 324,326,1335 Fehlinger, Hans...................... 765 Feld, Wilhelm........................ 838 Ferraris, Carlo F ....................... 985 Field, Arthur S................................................. 149 839 Findeisen, H ...... ..................... Fischer, A lfo n s ................ .............................. 740 Fischer, Charlotte R . . . . .................................. 1828 Fish, Frederick P ___ •_________ 150 Fitzgerald, John J........................... 661 Fleisher, Alexander......................................; . 1488 Flesch, Karl................................................... 828 Flexner> Mary.............. 1551 Folks, Homer............................... .. 151,322,325,499 Forbush, William B .................... ............. . 152,1398 673 Fordney, Joseph W ...................... Foster, Thomas. 1254 Fox, Charles E ............... 383 Fox, Hugh F............... . . . . . I . . . . . . . . 74,153,320,500 France. Assemblée nationale, 1871, Chambra des députés...................... ; ___ 802t Bureau des manufactures.......................... •. 803 Comm. de l’enseignement professionnel. . . . 1552' Conseil général de l’agriculture.................... 1553 Conseil supérieur du travail..................... 804, ,1554 Direction du travail........................ 974,1555-1557 Laws, statutes, e tc................. ....... 805,1558,1559 Ministère des affaires étrangères........ .. 741 Min. du travail et de la prévoyance sociale. 806,807 808 Parlement, 1910. Chambre des députés___ Francke, E........................................................ 840 Frankel, Lee K ......................................... 1774 Fraser, Patrick F .............................................. 1560 Freeman, Arnold................................................ 5,890 Freeman, William.............................. 501 Freiberg, Albert H ..................... 322,324,1775,1776 Freundlich, E m m y....... . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ___ 766 Frey, John P................_________ ____ 155,327,1652 Frost, Edward W ................. 321,325,502 Fultbn, Charles W ............................................ 667 Furman, P a u lN ................................ 156 Furth, Henriette.................. 841 Gallivan, James A.............................. 689 Gardner, Augustus P....................................... 666 Garnett, William H. S................................ 891,1399 Gaskell, P.......................................................... 892 Gay, E. F .............................. 527 Georgia. Laws, statutes, etc.......................... 675 Gérard, Claire................................................... 1255 Germany................................................ 1116,1214 Komm. für Arbeiterstatistik....................... 1562 Laws, statutes, etc....................... .. ....... 842,843 Statistisches Amt....................................... 742,844 Gesellschaftfür Soziale Reform......... 845,1117,1312 Gibb, Spencer J .................... 157,967 Gibbons, James, Cardinal................................ 297 146 AUTHOR INDEX. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis . Giddings, Franklin H ............................. - — 1563 Gideon, Henry J .............................................. 383 Gillette, J. M....................................... 327,1061,1652 Gilman, Charlotte P......................................216,1564 Giretti, E doardo.............................................. 986 GSrres, Earl...................................................... 846 Golden, John...................................... 825,1256 Goldmark, Josephine C................ 325,478,1401,1777 Goldmark, Pauline............ 366,1084,1144,1196,1402 Goldstein, Fanny............................................. 1025 Gompers, Samuel........................... 321,158-164,1085 Gordon, F. G. R .............................................. 1257 Gordon, Jean M ................................................ 165, 166,323,324,326,327,328,503,1336,1652,1778 Gordon, Mrs. Martha M. 0 ......... 894,951,1733,1734 Gorrell, Frank E .............................................. 1105 Gottschalkr, Alfred......................................... 1145 Graffenried, Clare de........................................ 441 Granger, Mrs. A. O ............................... : . . . 167,320 Gray, Benjamin K ........................................... 1565 Gray, Finly H ................................................... 690 Gt. Brit. Board of education__ 895,1566-1570,1779 Board of trade.. . : ........................... 896,1735,1736 Sea fishing trade c o m ............................ 1571 Census office.................... V ........................... 897 : Children’s employment commission (1842) .................................................... 898,1215,1313 ( 1 8 6 2 ) ...,... ........ ........................ 899,1064 (1867)........ 1062,1064 Education dept....................................... 1572,1573 Factories inquiry commission................................ 901 I Foreign office................................................. Home dept. .743,902-910,1197,1216,1403,1404,1574 Interdepartmental com................... 911,1575,1780 Laws, statutes, etc......................912-914,1217,1337 Parliament, House of Commons select committees............... 915-919,1146,1147 , Standing committee on bills..................... 920 Poor law comm.................. 1063 Post office............................................. 921 Royal comm, on labour.......................... 922,1064 Royal comm, on poor laws..................... 923,1405 Greece. Laws, statutes, etc........................... 1046 Green, William R ....... .................................... 691 Greenwood, Arthur..................................... 924-927, 952,1065,1576,1737,1738,1780,1781 Griffin, Appleton Prentiss Clark..................... 12,17 Griinzel,H............................. . ......................... 1118 Guggenheimer, A im ee.................................... 297 Guild, Curtis.................................. 168,. 325,504,1258 Gunckel, John E ......................................... 1406 Gunton, George................................................ 169 Haas, Ella M ..................................................... 329 Hadley, A. T .......... ......................................... 588 Hale, Edward Everett..................................... 170 662 Hale, Eugene..................... Hall, Fred S............. 325,341,505,506,725,1119,1577 Hall, George A ...................................... 171,326,329, 366,507,508,1148,1149,1196,1408,1578,1782 Hall, Granville S .............................................. 1579 Hall, Mary E ..................................................... 44 Hall, William C ..................................... 928 Halsey, O. S ...........: ........................................ 929 Hampke, Thilo................................................. 1580 Hand, W . H ....................... 327,1535,1581,1582,1652 Hanks, Ethel E ................................................ 576 Hanson, William C .................... 325,326,1783,1784 Hanus, Paul H .................................................. 1583 Hanway, Jonas................................................. 930 Hard, W illiam ................................................. 1409 Hardy, Rufus. . : ............................................ 713 Harmon, William E .................................... 324,1785 Harms, Bernard................................................ 818 Harriman, Mrs. J. Borden.......................... 325,1259 Harris, Henry J ........................................... 321,509 Hartford vocational guidance com .. .■............ 1739 Harvey, E. C........................... 931 Harvey, George................................................. 172 Harvey, Lorenzo D .......................... 1584,1705 Harwood, W ..................................................... 932 Hasbach, W ilhelm. . . ...................................... 1066 767 Hauck, Karl.......................... 173 Haworth, Paul L .............................................. Hayes, Denis A ................................................. 1120 Hay hurst, E. R , ............................................. 1811 Haynes, Frederick E ........................................ 510 Heaton, J. Henniker......................................... 1411 Hedges, Anna C.................. 1585 Hegedom, Joseph H ......................................... 383 Heller, W olfgang.............................................. 778 72 Henderson, Charles........................ ................. Henderson, Charles H ..................... .. ............. 174 Henderson, Charles R ............ 175,176,323,324,1786 Henderson, Ernest N ................. ............. 1654 Henry, A. S......... .............. 1382 768 Herbst, R udolf................................................. Herkner, Anna................................ 297,329,330 Hiatt, James S ....................................., .......... 1740 900 Hicks, Frederick C ........................................... 692 Hiller, Friedrich................................................ 828 Hine, Lewis W ............................................... 177,178 190, 269, 326, 328, 329, 330,334, 346,1060,1067, 1086-1090,1095,1150,1151,1260-1262,1272,1586 Hird, Frank...................................................... 1152 Hirsch, Emil G.............................................. 179,320 Hirst, F. W . . . . . . ............................................. 955 Hochfelder, Julius............... 1587 Hoffman, Frederick L ............................ 933,1787 Hogg, Mrs. E. F ...................... 1153,1412,1413,1588 Holland, E. 0 .............................................. 327,1652 Holland, Robert W ....................................... 744,934 Hollis, John P .................. 326,327,511,1652 Holloway, Charlotte M ......... .............. 126 Holmes, John H ..................................... 180,325 Hopkins, Mary Alden... 1154,1155,1198,1263 Horton, Isabelle................................................ 181 Hourwich, Isaac A ............................................ 182 Howard, William S....................................... 673,713 Hubbard, Elbert.............................................. 183 Huber, Mrs. C. J .......................................... 512 Hughes, Edwin H., bishop .............................. 330 Hunter, Robert.............................. 184,185,408,1472 Hutchins, M iss B. Leigh............................. 809,935 Hutchinson, W oods...... 324,1068,1589,1788 Ihlder, John....................................................... 1414 Illinois. Bureau of labor statistics................ 186 Office of inspectors of factories and work shops........................................................ 187 Independent labour party............ .................. 936 Indiana. Comm, on ind. and agri.educ____ 1590 Inglis, W illiam.................................................. 1415 International association for labor legisla tion ........................................ 745,746,1121 International congress of women, London, 1899 747 AUTHOR INDEX, International labor office.............................. 748,749 Iowa state teachers’ association...................... 1741 Ireland. Street-trading children com ............ 1416 Iseman, Myre St. W ........................................ 189 Italy. Laws, statutes, etc........................... 987,988 Ministero di agri., ind., e comm............ 989-990 Ufficio del lavoro.. ...........*....................... 991 Jackson, Cyril............................... 923,937,1405,1592 Jacobs, Charles Louis........ .............................. 45 Jebb, Eglantyne............................................... 1742 Jeusehik, A ........................................................ 769 Jevons, H. Winefrid................... 938,1593,1594,1742 Johnson, Alexander...................................... 329,354 693 Johnston, A. S ............................................ Johnston, John.................................. 1264,1595,1789 Johnston, Lettie L .............................. 297,1417,1436 Jones, Chester................................................... 903 Jones, Hersehel H ............................190,329,346,1790 Jones, Jerome................................................ 191,328 June, Jennie, pseud. See Cooley, Jane C. Kandel, I. L ...................................................... 192 Kansas City, Mo. Public Library.1................. 21 Kaup, J ............................................................. 845 Keating, Edward................................ 330a, 694,713 Keeling, Frederic........ .................. 2,6,873,939,1744 Kelley, Mrs. Florence.................................... 74,101, 102,125,193-202,226,320,321,322,323,324,325, 326,327,328,329,330,330a,383,440,476,513-526, 594,618,619,650,653,975,1091,1122,1157,1158, 1317, 1339, 1418-1421, 1596, 1597, 1652, 1791 Kelley, Mary R. 6 ........................................... 1745 673 Kelley, Patrick H ............................................ Kellogg, Paul U .................. 1318 Kendall, Henry P ......................................... 330,595 Kennard, Howard P ........................................ 1004 Kennedy, A. K. Clark..................................... 967 Kennedy, Albert J ........................................... 356 Kennedy, Ambrose.......................................... 695 Kennedy, James B ........................................... 1598 Kenyon, R uth.................................................. 1066 Kenyon, William S ................ ..................... 696,750 Kestner, Fritz.......................................... 1123,1314 Kettlewell, John E ............... 927 Key, Ellen K. S................................................ 204 Kildare, Owen F ............... : ............................ 1422 King, Frederick A ................... 1423 Kingsbury, John A ....................................... 207,328 Kingsbury, Susan M ................................... 527,1599 Kinney, Michael............................................... 311 Kirkland, James H ........................ 208,320,323,1600 Kitchin, William W ......................................... 620 Kittermaster, D. B .......................................... 940 Know land, Joseph R ....................................... 676 Knowles, G. W ................................................ 1746 Kober, George M ......................................... 321,1792 Köhne, Paul........................................ 845 Kohn, August............................................ 1265,1266 Kramers, Martina G........................................ 999 Kraus, Sigmund............................................... 771 Kroll, Grace..................... 1394 Krows, A. E .................................................... 1340 Kuechle, B. E .................................. 1424 Kühne, Alfred..................................................' 845 Kydd, Samuel.................................................. 941 Labour year book............................................ 942 Ladofl, Isador........................................... 209 Landmann, Jul................................................ 1026 Lapp, John A ................................................ 22,1601 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 147 Lareom, L ucy.................................................. 1267 Laselle, Mary A ................. 1747 Lasker, Bruno................... 956 Lathrop, Julia C....................... 328,424,476,650,653 Laufer, R ené.................................................... 810 Laughton, A. M................................................ 982 Leake, Albert H .............................................. 1602 Leavitt, Frank M ............................... 329,1603,1604 Lederer, Max.................................................... 772 943 Leeds, Eng. Education committee___.'.......... Legge, James G ...................................... .. 1008,1009 Legge, Thomas M ......... ................................... 30 Lemire, Jules A ................................................ 802 Lennard, Reginald................................... 1069 Lenroot, Irvine L ............................................. 697 Leonard, Robert J.................... ................. 210,1605 Lesser, Ernest.................. 849 Leupp, Constance................... , ....................... 211 Levasseur, Émile.......... ............................1... 212 Lewis, David J....................................... 649,712,713 Lewis, Ervin E ................................................ 1606 Lewis, William D ............................ 621,622,650,653 Ley, Frank T ................................................... 213 Lightbody, W . M ............................................. 944 Lindsay, Samuel McCune............................. 214-218, 321,322,324,325,327,328,329,330a, 528, 529, 596, 623, 624, 1607, 1652 Lindsey, Benjamin B ........ 219-223,294,320,324,530 330a Lingle, Mrs. T. W .................. Little, W illiam C............ ............................... . 1064 Lodge, Henry C ............. 662 Logue, Charles H .................................... 1608 London, Jack................... 224 London, Meyer................................................. 698 London. County council....... ........................ 850, 1397,1425,1426,1609-1613 Loos, Isaac A . . . ....................................... 531 Lord, Everett W ............................ 102,225,323,324, 325,851,1092,1268,1341,1342,1427,1614-1616 Loriga, Giovanni......................................... 992,1793 Louisiana. Bureau of statistics of labor........ 226 Lovejoy, Owen R ........................... 102,227-244,294, 320,321,322,323,324,325,326,329,330,331,338, 342,346,365,476,532-537,597,625,626,633,650, 945,1070,1071,1094,1095,1124,1125,1159-1161, 1218-1223,1343,1428-1430,1618-1626,1794-1796 Lowell offering. . .*............................................ 1269 Luetgebrune, Walter....................................... 1315 Luke, Jemima................................................... 340 Luppe, Hermann............................................. 828 Luther, Seth................................................ 245,1797 Macarthur, W ................................................... 246 MacChesney, Nathan W ............................... 627,639 McCleary, G. F ................ 247 McCracken, Robert M...................................... 699 MacCulloch, Campbell..................................... 1072 McCulloch, Roseoe C ........................................ 700 McCullough, Joseph A ....... . .................. 248,328,329 Macdonald, N. C ............................................... 1073 McDowell, James R ...................................... 324,538 McDowell, Mary E ........................................... 101 McEnnis, John T .............................................. 249 Maefadyen, Irene M. Ashby................ 250-253,1270 Mac Gowan, K .................................................. 1344 McKelway, A. J ........................................... 254-286, 320, 321, 322, 323, 324, 325, 326, 327, 328, 329,340,346,409,539-542,628,629,650,653, 1074,1271-1277,1431,1432,1627,1652,1798 148 AUTHOR INDEX» McLaughlin, James C ..............»- .673 McLean, Francis H . . .......... 216,791,797 McLeod, Malcolm J . . . . . . . . . . . . . 287,288 946,1628,1629,1799 McMillan, Margaret.. McNeill, George E ..», 301 .................... 1254 McWilliams, D avid .. Madden, Martin B . . . ............. -.. 661; 673 ........ 289 Magruder, Julia.......... Main, W . . . . .............. ................ 952 Maine. Bureau of industriakand labor statis tics. 290,291,1278 Committee on industrial education......... .. 1630 Department of labor and industry.............. 291 1800 Malcolm, A. G ........................ Mangold, George B .. . . . . . . . . . . . . 292,293,1433,1748 Mann, James R ..................................... 673,712,713 Manning, Caroline.......................................... 527 Manning, Henry Edward, cardinal............... 877 Mansie, Alexander.......................... 1631 Marburg, Theodore.......................................... i 212 Markham, Edwin....................................... : . . . 294, 1126,1162-1164,1225,1226,1279,1280,1316,1434 Marmel, Tarrida del........................... . . . . 1016 Marot, Helen............................................. 1... 295 Marshall, Florence M...................................... 1632 Martin, George H .......................................... 1633 Marx, David....- L ....... ................. 296,328 Maryland. Bureau of industrial statistics 297,1801 Bureau of statistics and information....... ;. 543, 1093,1345,1435,1436 Commission on industrial education........... 1634 . 1346 Mason, John...................... . ^ Massachusetts. Board of education..........1635,1636 Bureau of statistics............................... 8,1165 Bureau of statistics o f labor. .■.-............... 1637 Commissioners for promotion of uniformity of legislation...................... 598 Commission on industrial education. . . 1638,1639 Commission on minimum -wage-boards....... 298 Commission to investigate the inspection of factories, workshops, etc...........; ............... 299 Constable of the commonwealth.............. 300,301 General court. House o f representatives.. 302 Minimum wage commission................... .. 303 State board of labor and industry............ 544-546 Massachusetts child labor committee. . . . . 304,1437 Massé, Daniel.................................. 811 Mather, Sir William......................................... 1638 Maxey, E d w in ................................................. 630 Medley, K. I. M ..........................: .................... 1199 Meerwarth......................................................... 991 Mény, Georges.................................................. 1166 Merriman, C ...................................................... 1109 Merritt, Ella A .................. 577 Meyer, H. H. B ................................................ 38 Michigan. State commission on industrial education........... ........................................... 1640 Miles, H. E ................................ 1641,1649-1651,1705 Miller, Marion Mills......................................... 305 Miller, Wallace E ...................................... 306,322 Milton, George F ................................ 323,1642,1643 Minneapolis vocational survey comm ittee.. . 1749 Minnesota. Bureau of labor....................... 307-309 Minor, Jeanie V ............................. ............ . 325 ,549 Minton-Senhouse, Robert M............................ 947 Mises, Ludwig v o n ...................................... 773 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Missouri. Bureau of labor statistics and in■ spection..................................................... 310 Senate wage committee for women and children..... ............. .-....- '.....'..r. . . . . v . ; 311' Mitchell, John.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 102,312,1227,1803 Montague, J. F .................................. . . . . . . . . ^ 340 Montessori, M a r ie ...;....... ........ 1228 . Montgomery, Louise. . . . . . . . . ___313,1804 Moore, J. H a m p t o n » . . . : . . . . . . . . ; . . . . . . . . . . . 713 Moore, John T ..................... . ................ ......... 1281Morant, R . L .................... .................. . ; . . . . . . 1027Morgan, John H ............................. 314,322,323,550 Morrell, E. de V ............................................... 661Morrison, Henry C ..................... .................. 325,551 Mosby,-Thomas S ............................. •315 Moses, Mabelle...................... 527 Mosso, Angelo................................................... 1805 Mote, Carl H ................................................. 22,1601 Motley, James M ................. ............................ 1644 Moulder, Priscilla E ....... ........................... 948,1645 ;Moulton, John G ......... ........................ ........... 44 Muench, Hugo . . J ......................... 852 Muensterberg, Hugo............................ 1646 Mundella, A. J .................................................. 949 Murdoch, Mrs. W. L .................... 316,328,329,330a Murphy, Edgar G ...................... 73,317,318,631,632 Musick, Samuel H ................................ .-........ 1647 Mussey, Mabel H. B ............................... 319 National association of manufacturers of the United States......................................... 1649-1651 National child labor committee, N . Y ___ 320-353, 552,553,633-636,726,1094,1095,1127, 1167,1272,1282,1442-1444,1652,1807 National civic federation review. . . . . . . . . ___ 1200 National conference of charities- and correc tion........................................................ 354 National conference on prevention of desti tution........................................................ .- 951,952 National conference on vocational guidance.. 1653, 1658,1659 National consumers ’.league............................. 355 National education association............... . 1654,1655 National federation of settlements................. 356National society for the promotion of indus trial education........................................ 1656,1657 National vocational guidance association. 1658,1659 Nearing, Scott............ ...........................; . . . 357-360, 1168,1283,1445-1447,1660,1808 Neill, Charles P ..................................... 321,361,421 Nelson, Nell....................... 249 Netherlands (Kingdom), 1815......................... 1000 Directie van der arbeid..........................looi, 1169 Laws, statutes, etc........................................ 1002 New Hampshire. Children’s commission.... 555 New Jersey. Bureau of statistics of labor and 362,363 industries........................................ Commission on industrial education........... 1661 New South Wales. Royal commission........ 976 State children’s relief department............... 1448 Statistician’s office.................... 977 New York (City). Bureauuf child hygiene... 556 New York (State). Bureau of factory inspec tion...................................................... 557 Bureau of labor statistics......... 364,1096,1170,1662 Bureau of statistics and information ___ 1097 Commission on relief for widowed mothers.. 39 Department of labor......................... 23,558,1284 AUTHOR INDEX, New York (State).- Education department. 24,46,1663,1664 Factory investigation commission ....... 365, 366 New York. Public library.................... . . . . . . 33 New York child welfare exhibit, 1911.......... . 367 Newell, Mary H ............................................ 328,368 Newman, Pauline M ...................... ............. .. 329 News and Courier, Charleston, S. C . . . . . . 1265,1266 News and Observer, Raleigh, N. C ............... 677 Nichol, Henry............ . ................................ 328,369 Nicholes, Anna E ............................................. 559 713 Nicholls, SaraueLJ........................................... Nichols, Francis H ........................................... 1229 Nichols, J. Howard........................................ 73 Niozky, Walther........................ 853 Nienburg, Bertha von der............................... 373 Noble, D ...........■ ................... 1809 Nolan, John I ......................................... j* ___ . 701 North Carolina. Bureau of labor and print i n g . . . . ............................................ . . . . . . . . . . 370 Norway. Eaws, statutes, etc............... 1010 Nova Scotia. Factories’ inspector................. 978 -N oyes, William..................... 321,342,371,1094,1665 Nudd, Howard W .................... 1666 Oates, Austin................................ 1456 Oates, W . H ...... ............................... 69,70,328,1810 Obenauer, Marie Louise................. 372,373,1098 Odencrantz, Louise C................ . . . . . . . .......... 1320 Ogburn, William F ......... .......................... 560,1667 Ogden, C. K .............. 1505 Ohio. Industrial commission___ , . . . 374,561,1201 State board of h e a lt h ................................ 1811 Okey, Mrs. Thomas..................-. . .................. 993 O’Leary, Wesley A ........ 1668 Oliver, Henry K . . .............................. t .......... 300 Oliver, Sir Thomas.................................... 1812,1813 O ntario. Laws, statutes, etc..... ................... 979 Orchardson, C.................................................. 440 Oregon. Board of inspectors of child labor... 375 Child welfare commission......................... 376 377 Industrial welfare commission..................... O’Reilly, Mary B oyle........................... 1105 Ort, Jan................ 1003 Ortu, F. C o c c o .. ........................................ 990,994 Otey, Elizabeth L .................................. .. 572,1285 Paeuw, Ldonde....... ....................................... 1669 Page, Anna B ................................................ 751,980 Page, Arthur W ................................................ 1670 Page, Robert N .............................................. , 702 Palmer, W alter B ....... . ................................... 1286 Park, Robert E .............. . . . . . . . . . . . ........... 1233 Parker, Lewis W ................... ..................... 323,1671 Parkinson, Thomas 1.................................... 638-643 Parkman, T . I . . . . . . ........... 330 Parsons, Frank......... 47 Parsons, James..1............................................ 1750 Parton, Mabel....... .............................. *.......... 527 Paul, Eden....... ................................................. 147 Pauling, James K ....... ..................................... 1457 Payen, Edouard___ . . . : . . .............................. 813 Peacock, Netta................................................. 1004 Beaeock, Robert........................................ 1403,1458 Pearse, C. G................................................. 327,1652 Pearson, Robert H ...................... 1814 Peck, J. W ................................................... 951; 1751 Peixotto, Jessica B ........................ 330 Pelham, Herbert S ........................................... 953 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis im Pennsylvania. Bureau of vocational educa............ .............. ......................... 562,563 tion Department of labor and industry......... . 1202 Governor.... 378 Pennsylvania child labor committee....... . 188, 379,564,653 Pennypaeker, Mrs. Percy V ............... ........... 329 Perrin, John W ................................................ 1672 Perry, Arthur R ......................................... 650,1298 527 Persons, Charles E . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ................ Peters, A . J .................................... . ........... 327,1652 Philadelphia. Board of public-education. •• Pedagogical library.. . .......... 48 Vice commission............................................ 1459 Philippine Islands. Bureau of printing. . . . . 1673 Pieper, August.................................... 854 Pierce, Franklin................................... 644 Platt, Edmund........ . ......... . . . . . . . . . ___ 703 Pollitzer, Johann.............................. 1674 Poole, Ernest................ 1460-1462 Pope, Samuel................................................... 954 Popp, A d e lh e id ............................................. 774 Porter, George R ................... 955 Porter, Giles............................................... 102 Porter, H. F. J ........................................... . . . 1493 Portugal. Laws, statutes,etc....... a . . . . . . . .1048 Potter, Zenas L . . 327,366,1099,1100,1442,1464,1652 FOU, E. W . . . ; . ¿ . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . r .. . . . . 713 Praete, F r a n k C . . . . . . . ___......................... -.. n o s Pratt, E . E . . . . . . . . . . ......................................... 381 Pray, K . L . M . . . . . . 382 Prelie de la Nieppe, E . de......................... 855 Price, W. D ....... ... . v . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1318 Profum o,L. G ..................... 995 Progressive party, New Y o r k . . . . . : . . ........... 384 Prosser, Charles A .. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 1635 Puffer, Joseph Adams............................ 1675 Quimby, H a r r i e t . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ............ . 1348 Quin, Percy E ..___. . . . . . . . . . . . . ___ . . . . . . . . . 713 Quinn, Lillian A . ................................. 1442,1466 Rafter, Charles H ........................................ 1403 Ragsdale, J. Willard...................................... 712,713 Ram aix,de............................. . . . : ............. . 752,792 30 Rambouseb, Josef....... ......... Randall, Charles H ____ 704 Rankin, M i l d r e d . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ..................... 297 Rauchberg, Heinrich....................................... 385 Reber, Louis E .............................: . . . . . ___ __ 1705 Reed, Mrs. Anna Y ....... ................................. 1676 Reeder, Charles Wells....... ............................. 34 Reeves, Edith................................... 527 Reigart, John F ................................................ 1677 . Reina, Ettore............................................... 996,1349 Renard, Georges............................................... 814 Revenga y Alzamora, Antonio................ 1021 Rhode Island. Bureau of industrial statistics. 386 Commissioner of public schools.................. 1678 Rich, Edith J ..................................... 753 Rich, Jessie P — ....................................... 329,1150 Richards, Charles R ................... . 18,25,1654,1662 Richmond, Mary E .......................................... 387 Richmond, Va. Vocational education sur vey.............. 1752 Ricketts, Edwin D .................... 705 Rigby, Lilian M.............................. 1753 Riis, Jacob A ....... ........129,1171,1172,1467 Robbins, H ..................................... 74 Roberts, Charles.............. ................................ 1815 150 AUTHOR INDEX, Roberts, Peter..................................... 388,1230,1288 Robinson, Clarence C....................................... 389 Robinson, Harriet J ......................................... 1289 Robinson, Joseph T ......................................... 657 Rochester, Anna.............................................. 829, 334,346,390,391,645,650,653,1110,1290 Rogers, John J ................................................ 672,713 Roosevelt, Theodore............................. 326,392-395 Rose, Marie L ................................................... 297 Roseboro, V iola................................................ 396 Ross, G. F ........................................... 327,1652,1816 Ross, William E ............................................... 297 Rossi, Alessandro............................................. 997 Roszelle, Edward M..................................... 102,565 Rotch, Thomas M............................................ 1817 Rowntree, B. Seebohm................................ 793,956 Royal society of arts, London......................... 1818 Royle, E. M....................................................... 1350 Rühle, Otto................................ 856 Ruffy, Paul d e.............................................. 779,780 Runciman, Walter........................................... 891 Russell, Charles E ............................................ 178 Russell, C. E . B ....... 1378,1403,1468,1469,1519,1753 Russian year b o o k ........................................... 1004 Ryan, John Augustine.......................... 35,327,1652 Ryan, W .C .,jr................................- ............... 1535 Ryff, M m e .. ....................................... ........ . 1028 Sadler, Michael E ........................... 26,890,1009,1679 Sakolski, A .M .............. ..................... ....... 438,1700 Samuel, Herbert............................................... 743 Sand iford, Peter........................................... 957,1291 Sanger, Robert C...................................... 1075 Sanville, Florence L ........................... 398,1292,1293 Sargent, Frank B .............................................. 727 Savoy, Emile................................. 1680 Schaeffer, Nathan C .................................... 322,1681 Schall, Thomas D ............................................ 706 775 Schiff, Walter................................................... Schindler, Solomon.......................... 440 Schneider, Herman................................... 326,1682 Scbroeter, Jakob............................................... 1005 Sehultze.......... .................................................. 357 Schulz, M. von ............ ........ . ........................... 826 Schwimmer, Rosika......................................... 781 Schwittau, G......................................- ............. 1006 Schwyzer, Eugen............*......................... 1029,1173 Scott, John R . K .............................................. 707 Scott, Jonathan French................................... 1683 Scott, Laura.................................................. 125,566 Scott, Nathan B ............................................... 662 Sears, Horace S................................................. 73 Sears, William J................................................ 708 Seddon, A. E ......................................... 269,323,1272 Seddon, Alfred A ...................................... 1294,1684 Seidl, E .............................................................. 1231 Selig, Mathilde L .........................................- - 297 Seligman, Isaac N ......................................... 324,399 Selley, Ernest.................................................. 1076 Sergeant, Elizabeth S................................ 1174,1175 Sewall, Hannah R ........................................... 400 Shadwell, Arthur............................................. 754 Sheets, Nellie F ................................................ 567 Sherard, Robert H .................................. - - 958,1470 Sherley, Swagar................................................ 713 Sherwood, Sidney.................. 297 Shorey, Eva L ............................................. 290,1101 Shouse, Jewett.................................................. 709 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Siegel, Isaac................................................. . - 710 Sigg, Jean......................................... ............. - - H76 Simon, Helene ................... .................. ........ 854 Simson, F r a u ..................... ......................... 959,1177 Sinclair, Eunice............................................. 330a Smail, J. C ........................................................ 1612 Smart, G. B ........................................ - ........... 981 Smith, A. E. Stanley................................. 960 Smith, Addison T ............... 711 Smith, Anna T ................................................- 1535 Smith, Charles F .................... ................... 325,401 Smith, Constance................................... 874,952,969 Smith, Elizabeth Oakes................. 1471 Smith, H oke............. 402 Smith, Oliver C ........................................... 102,1819 Smyth, Ellison A ............................................. 403 Snedden, David.................................. 325,1548,1685 Solensten, R . T ............................................. 328,404 405 Sorge, F. A........................................................ Southern conference on woman and child labor....................................................- ........ 406 Spahr, Charles B ................................ 407 Spain. Institute de reformas sociales... 1017,1018 Laws, statutes, etc.......................... . 1019,1020 Spalding, John L ............................................. 1686 Spangenberg, Hans........................................... 858 Spargo, John....................................... 408,1472 Spaulding, F.. E .............................................. 1687 Spencer, Amy H ............................................... 935 Stelze, Chas............................. *....................... 1473 Stephens, George A .......................................... 1688 Stetson, George R ............................................ 1820 108,202 Stevens, Alzina P .................................... . Stieda, Wilhelm............................................. 756,859 Stiles, Ch. Wardell............................. 1298 Stimson, Frederic J ....................................... 568,569 Stoddard, William L ........................................ 1248 Stovall, A. T .................................................. 326,599 Stowe, Lyman B ............................ 1474 Stratton, George F............................ 255,409 Sullivan, James D ...........- ......................... 1663,1664 Sumner, Helen L ............................... 54,123,576,577 Sumner, Mary B ............................................... 410 Swan, Charles H ............... 411 Swaysland, E ............ ....................................... 1638 Sweden....................................................... 1010,1012 Laws, statutes, etc........................................ 1013 Swift, W . H ............. 328,329,330,330a, 412,570,1295 Tague, Peter F .................................................. 713 Talbert, Ernest L ..........................................413,1754 Tawney, James A ....... ..................................... 661 Tawney, R. H ................................. 952,961,962,967 Taylor, Florence I ....... ........ 341,571,1290,1296,1821 Taylor, Graham.............................................. 321,414 Teleky, Ludwig......................................... 1822,1823 Tennessee. Dept, of shop and factory in spection . : .............. - ................................... 415 State library, Nashville................................ 9 Terhune, Leola B ............................................. 1476 Texas. University. Department of exten sion................ 1® Thackrah, Charles T ........................................ 1824 Thompson, Holland......................................... 1297 Thompson, Laura A ........................................ 40 Thompson, William G ..................................... 1825 Tillman, Benjamin R ...................................... 662 Todd, Helen M.................................................. 416 AUTHOR INDEX, 151 Tompkins, Juliet W ....................................... ." 417 Watson, Elizabeth C . . . 338,365,366,1161,1183-1185 Towson, C. R .................................................... 418 Watson, E. J........................... .............. 325,432,585 Trauttmansdorff, Ferdinand, Graf v o n .................... 776 Watson, Frank D ..................................... 433 ,1697 Travers, John C........................................... 297,1826 Watson, Walter A .................................. 712,713,717 Tremenheere, H. S ........................................... 899 W audby, William S.................................... 434,1232 Troutman, Robert B ....................................... 648 Waugh, Benjamin............................................ 1483 Trumbull, Millie R ...................................... 327,1652 Waxweiler, Emile............................................ 791 Tuckwell, Gertrude M .......................... 963,969,1179 435 Wayne, Flynn.................................................. Tyler, Ina.......................... .............................. 1482 Weaver, Eli W ........................... 436,1698,1761,1762 Ueland, E ....................................... ’. ................ 1755 Weaver, Zebulon.......................................... 330a Ulm, Aaron H . . . ................................ 269,419,1272 Webb, Beatrice P ......................................... 965,966 United States. Bureau of education. 16,27,485,1535 718 Webb, Edwin Y . ............................................. Library..,......... r........................................ 49 Webb, Sidney......................................... 924,935,966 Bureau of labor....... 28,29,420-422, 572,573, 757, Weicker, Hans................................... 845 1103, 1111, 1129, 1203,1298,1319, Wells, Emilie L ................................................ 437 1320, 1477, 1690, 1691, 1756, 1827 Welpton, W. P ................................................. 1699 Bureau of labor statistics....... 11,423,574,575,758 Weltner, C. E ................................ ............ 328 ,1304 Library....................................................... 31 Wentworth, Laura F .......... 1511 Bureau of the census................................ 728-731, Weyl, Walter E .......................................... 438,1700 1104,1130,1299,1300 White, Frank M.......................................... 439 ^1701 Children’s bureau.......................... 40,424,576,577 White, Henry................................................... U86 Commission on national aid to vocational White, Sophie D .............................................. 586 education.................................................... 1692 Whitehouse, John H ........................................ 967 Congress. House............ 661,668,673,678,712-714 Whitin, Ernest S......................................... 587,1107 Committee on labor............................ 649-653 Whittelsey, Sarah S ..................................... 588 Committee on rules................................ 1105 Whittemore, Gilbert E ................. . 325,732,1702 Committee on the District of Colum Whittier, John G............................... i ............. 340 b i a . . . . ...................................... 578-580,1693 Wiese, D r ............ ............................................. 832 • Committee on the judiciary.................. 654 Wilcox, W . R ................................................... 1206 Senate.................................... 662,669-671 Wiley, Katherine E ......................................... 1747 Committee oninterstatecommerce... 655-657 Wilhelmi, L ...................................................... 828 Immigration commission........... .......... 1478,1479 W ill, Thomas E ................................................ 108 Industrial commission.................................. 425 Williams, John.............................................. 324,733 Laws, statutes, etc.................... 581,658,659 Williams,Mornay................................ . 329,1485 ■Library of Congress. Division of bibliog Williams, Talcott.......................... 1305 raphy..................................... 12,17,29,38 Williamson, Charles C................. .............. 3 3 ,3 7 Surgeon-general’s office. Library.............. 32 Williamson, Emily E ....................................... 589 Urwick, Edward J ............................. 964,1480,1694 Williamson, R obert.................................... 968,1207 Vaiden, V .......................................................... 1695 Willis, W. N ..................................................... U 87 Valesh, Eva M cD ....................... 426,582,583 Willoughby, William F ................. ,................ 441 Van der Vaart, M rs . Harriet..... 322,584,1131 Willows, Maurice................................ 326,1486 Van Dyke, Carl C ............................................. 715 Wilmarth, Raymond O ................................... 442 Van Kleeck, Mary.............. 325,1112,1180-1182,1204 Wilmer, C. B ..................................................... 443 Van Vorst, Bessie........................ 427-429,1301,1302 Wilson, Francis................................. 1338,1355-1358 •Van Vorst, Mrs. John. See Van Vorst, Bessie. Wilson, H ilda..................................... 1594 Van Vorst, Marie......................................... 429,1302 Wilson, Lewis A,............................................... 24,46 Vance, A. T ....................................... : ........... 322 Winship, A. E ................... 1487 Vare, William S............................................ 713,716 Winslow, Charles H ................................ 1501,1703 Veditz, Charles William A .............................. 75^ Winston, G. T .................................................. 330 a 777,794,815,860,998,1030 Wirth, Clara.................................................... 1188 V ermeersch, Arthur......................................... 795 Wirth, M ax....................................................... 1031 Verrill, Charles Henry...................................... 36 Wischnewetzsky, Florence Kelley. See Victorian year book......................................... 982 Kelley, Mrs. Florence. Villard, O. G..................................................... 660 Wisconsin. Bureau of labor and industrial Villermo, Louis René.................................. 816,1303 statistics......................................... 444,445,1488 Villota y Presilla, Isidro de............................. 1021 Commission upon plans for experiments of V ocation bureau, B oston.......................... 1757-1759 industrial and agricultural training......... 1704 Vocation office for girls, B oston...................... 1760 Industrial commission............................... 446,447 Vocational guidance survey, N. Y ................. 1696 Laws, statutes, etc........................................ 1489 Wagner, Robert F......................................... 365,366 State board of industrial education............. 1705 Wald, L. D............................................ 324,330a, 430 Wise, Stephen S .................................... 325 ,448,449 Walling, William E ......................................... 431 Wolff, Solomon................................................. 1359 Ward, Grace F ................................................. 527 Women’ s educational and industrial union, Warner, C. F ..................................................... 1638 Boston..................................... 1321 Washington, Booker T .................................... 1233 Womer, Parley P ....................................... 450,1490 Washington (State) Bureau o fla b o r ........... 1106 Wood, George H ........................................... 970 971 Washington University, St. Louis................. 1482 Wood, Mrs. Mary I. S................................ 451 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 152 AUTHOR INDEX. W ood, William R ............................................ 719 Woodbridge, Alice L ....................................... 108 Woods, Robert A ........... (. . .................. 356,546 Woodward, Margaret....................................... 452 Woodward, S. W ........................................... 321,453 Woolley, Mrs. Helen B. T ............................. i 327, 454,455,590,1652,1706,1828 Woolley, R . W ................................................. 1306 Woolston, Florence........, ................................ 1491 Worcester, Daisy W ............................ 456,1298 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Worcester, Wood F .......................................... 1298 Woycicki, Alexandre................ 1007 Wright, Carroll D .......................... 15,307,422,1707 Wright, Livingston....................................... .1493 Y ear-book of social progress............................ 972 Young, Thomas M .................................... 1307 Zanten, J. H. v a n . . . . . . . . . ............................... 760 Zentralstelle für V olkswohlfahrt..................... 1708 Zinsli, P h ............... 1032 Zürcher, E . ....................... 1033,1034 SUBJECT INDEX. ¡Numbers refer to items, not to pages.) Accidents......... .................. 31,139,144,374,933,1319 Age, physiological............ 1765,1771,1793,1817,1832 Age limit....... ................. 201,285,575,577,1227,1287 125 Connecticut........................................ Illinois............ ......................... ....... , ........ 186 France..................................................... 796,804 Germany..................................................... 832 See also Legislation. Agricultural work...................................... 1049-1076 Austria..................... 1052 France..................................................... ... 796 Germany....................................... 823,1050,1051 Gt. B rit................ 895, 955,1049,1056-1058,1062-1066,1069,1076 U. S... 1053-1055,1059-1061,1037,1068,1070-1075 Alabama. . . . 69-73,79,190,252,253,317,328,329,330a Comp, educ............................................ 458,577 Cotton.............................................................1301 Inspection.....................................................69-71 Legis...................... 253,458,459,572,573,575,577 Alaska, legislation........................................ 577 American Federation of Labor....................... 97, 102,124,158-164,312,565 Apprenticeship................................................. 364, 438,1513,1514,1525,1533,1540,1571,1592,1683 Bibl.................... 13-15,1680,1683 Austria........................................................ 1674 British Guiana........................................... 1631 Cape of Good Hope.................................... 1521 F rance............................. 1552-1559 G erm any.......................... 1562,1580,1639,1708 Great Britain......................................... 871,872, 889,922,942,1547,1571,1610,1612,1613 Massachusetts............................................ 1637 364 New Y ork................... Phil. Is...................... 1647,1673 Scotland............................................. 1560 Switzerland................................................ 1680 United States. . . 1608,1644,1649-1651,1700,1707 446 Wisconsin............................ Argentine Republic........................... 1035,1036.1037 Arguments, pro and con.................................... 88,91 Arizona, legis................... .............. 474,573,575,577 Arkansas, legis................................. 539,573,575,577 Artificial flowers: Great Britain.............................................. 1152 New York City................................... 1133,1180 Artist child. See Stage children. Australia........................................... 974,976,977,982 Austria................... 696,734,742,752,758,761-777,817 Agri............................................................. 1052 B ib l........... 768,771 Coal............................................................. 1231 Legis............................. . 735,750,757,777,812 Night work................... 767,768 School children..................................... 832,1528 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Bags, paper....................................................... 1152 Baltimore.............................................. 297,543,1826 Agri............................................................. 1054 Mer. estab.................... 1193 Stage....................................................... 297,1329 Beet fields of Colorado...................................... 1060 Belgium................................................... 758,782-795 Home work.......................... 1140 Legis...................... 696,757,783-786,788,792,795 Mines............................ 782,1208 Beveridge child-labor bill........ 601-605,608,630,632 Bibliographies: Apprenticeship.......................... 13-15,1680,1683 Child lab or................................................ 1-12, 108, i l l , 294,389,420,446,447,473,734,756, 817,818,839,853,863,864,873,889,890,1027 Comp, educ............................................. 16,1535 Cont. schools....... ............. 1679 Eight-hour day.......... ................................ 17 Indus, educ................. 18-28, 1504,1537,1602,1604,1630,1654,1683 Indus, hyg....................................................29-32 Juv. employ, bur................................. 1737,1744 Minimum wage............................................ 3 3 -3 7 Mothers’ pensions........................................ 38-40 Vocational guidance................. 41-49,1508-1510 Street trades........................................ 1382,1394 Birth certificates............................... 348,549 Birmingham, Eng......................................... 890,958 Juv. employ, bur............... 1712-1716,1730,1737 Street trades............................................... 1403 Biscuit factories, Maryland............................. 1098 “ Blind alley” occupations. 961,1506,1544,1576,1696 See also Juvenile occupations. Boot and shoe industry, Mass.................... 429,1321 Bootblacks....... 1370,1382,1394,1452,1460,1476,1479 Boston: Employ, cert.............................................. 576 Juv. occup.......................... 1731,1758,1759,1760 Newsboys’ court................ 1382,1394,1454,1493 Newsboys’ Republic................................. 1394 Street trades....................... 1371,1374,1394,1402 Voc. bureau................................................ 1757 See also Massachusetts. Box factories.............. 357,1098,1152,1316,1317,1320 Bradford, Eng.: Juv. employ, bur................................... 1723 Juv. occup................ .......................... 1717-1722 Brazil....................... 1038 Bricks and tiles.......................................... 1315,1316 British Guiana.................................................. 1631 Building trades.................................. 1612,1613,1752 Bulgaria............................................................. 1039 Caddies, Great Britain..................................... 893 California................................................... 93,94,330 Canneries.......................... 1080 153 154 SUBJECT INDEX, https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis . Compulsory education, Connecticut.............. 167? California, legis.......... ..................... 469,573,575,577 Cambridge, Eng., Juv. emp. bu r.............................. 1742 District of Columbia............................. 580,1693 European countries.................................... 1570 Canada................................................., ........ 975,981^ France.................................................... 1685 Indus, educ................................................ 1520 Germany............................... 1685 Legis................................................. 973,979,980 Great Britain. 895,920,1566,1568,1569,1574,1685 Candy factories.......... 357,1098,1310,1316,1317,1326 K e n tu ck y ..............................................113,1530 Canneries.................................................. 1077-1107 Louisiana.................................................... 1617 Statistics.............................................. 1103,1104 545,1672 Massachusetts.................................. C a l i f o r n i a ....................................1080,1091 Minnesota............ ................................ 307 Florida........................................... 1095 South.................. 1538,1581,1582,1642,1643,1652 Gulf coast................... 1078,1079,1086-1088,1095 South Carolina........................................... 1598 Illinois........................................................ 1091 Switzerland................................................ 1027 Maine.......................................................... 1101 United States....................................... 577] 1548, Maryland.............................. 297,1090,1093,1098 1570,1587,1591,1596,1618, Mississippi................. 1095,1102 1619,1633,1667,1671, 1685 New England............................................. 1092 Legis.................................. , . 1535,1663,1664 New York State................................. 1081-1085, Wisconsin............................ 446 1091,1094,1096,1097,1099,1100,1105 Washington (State)...................... 1106 Confectionery. See Candy factories. Cans and boxes, tin .......................................... 1320 Connecticut.......................................... 102,125-127 Age limit........................................ 125 Cape of Good Hope............ .............................. 1521 Comp, educ......................................... 1522,1672 Cardiff, Wales................................................... 1725 576 Employ, cert......................... Juv. employ, bur....................................... 1725 Legis............ .......... 125,487,494,572,573,575,577 Care committees. See Juvenile employment Physical condition........ ............................ 1770 bureaus. See also Hartford. Cash girls. See Mercantile establishments. Conservation of childhood............. 142,392-394,1546 Causes of child labor........................................ 186, Constitutionality of Federal law..................... 602, 294,335,338,339,422,1142,1.691 607,608,610,613,622,627,630,638Parental dependence................................. 151, 643,644,648, 650, 653, 654,691,692 193,223,230,260,326,368,404 Consumer and child labor............................. 200 Poverty. . . . 56,151,185,207,209,258,326,328,506 Continuation schools......... ............... 1679 Certificates. See Birth certificates; Employ Bibliography............................................. 1679 ment certificates. Germany................................................ 845,1505 Chain making: Great Britain....................................... 1569,1611 Great Britain............................................. 1174 Pennsylvania........................... 563,573,575,1641 Massachusetts............................................ 1165 United States...................................... 1649-1651 Chemnitz, Germany...................... , ................ 822 Wisconsin............................ 1705 Chicago.................................................... 100,101,429 Candy factories........ ................................. 1310 Core making...................................................... 1320 Employ, cert.............................................. 559 Corset manufacture..................................... 127,1320 Juv. employ, bur....................................... 1727 Cotton mills___ . . . . . . . ...... ....................... 572,1094, 1235,1238,1239,1240, 1247,1248,1249, Juv. occup.................................. 1727,1729,1754 1254, 1258,1275,1282,1286,1290, 1295 Stockyards................................................313,413 H istory......................................... 1285 Street trades.................................... 1379,1380 Mortality of operators......................... 1296,1298 Voc. train................................................... 1529 Statistics....................................... 729,1298,1300 315 Child idleness................................................... Workers’ budgets....................................... 1298 Chimney sweeps : Alabama................................... 1301 Great Britain.......................... 916,917.930,1547 Connecticut................................................ 127 Church and child labor. . . . 180,229,232,353,386,450 France......... ........................ *......... 816,1303 Cigars and cigarettes................................. 1168,1320 Cincinnati..................................................... 454,1706 Georgia...................................... 1236a, 1262,1301 Great Britain.............. 955 Juv. employ, bur....................................... 1724 Lancashire, Eng......................... 1241,1264,1287 Street trades............................................... 1385 New Orleans.............................................. 1261 Yoc. guid.................................................... 1724 North.......................................................... 1301 Clocks and watches...................................... 1320 North Carolina............................ 1243,1272,1297 Clothing.......... ................... 429,1108-1112,1178,1320 South................ 1236,1237,1252,1259,1260-1262, Coal. See Mines. 1270-1277,1281,1294,1295,1302,1306 Colonies, Great Britain................................ 973-982 South Carolina.................. 1265,1266,1272,1304 Colorado................ 122 United States...................................... 1298,1307 Beet fields.................................................. 1060 Legis................................................. 573,575,577 Cotton picking, Texas............................... 1067,1260 Stage....................................... : ........... 1331,1339 Court decisipns. See Decisions of courts. Crackers and biscuits..... ................................. 1320 Compulsory education..................................... 485, 522,1534,1535,1563,1566 Cranberries................................ 1059,1070-1072,1075 Bibliography............................................ 16,1535 Crime, and child labor. See Juvenile delinquency. ’ Alabama.................................. 458 SUBJECT INDEX, Dangerous occupations........................ 706,807, 912,1228,1311,1773,1783,1811-1814 Employments prohibited...................... 485,577 See also Accidents; Occupational diseases. Decisions of courts.................................. 574,575.586 Delaware.......................................................... 137,138 Agri.'....................................... 1054 L egis.......................................... 572,573,575,577 Democracy and child labor.................................327 Denmark......................................... 734,752,817,1550 Legis............... 812,1040-1045 Department stores. See Mercantile establish ments. Devon, Eng..................................... 954 Dinner toters....................................., ............. 128 District of Columbia....................... 104,105,136,361, 442,453,578-580,661,662,664,668-671,1432 Comp, ed u c........................................... 580,1693 I^gis...................... 470,509,529,573,575,577,581 Statistics..................................................... 728 Edinburgh........................................................ 951 Juv. employ, bur....................................... 1751 Educational aspects......................................... 58, 122,149,186,198,327,386,1491,1708 Educational test for working children............ 1536 See also Employment certificates. Effects of child labor........................................ 66 , 67, 122, 155,184, 214. 215, 221, 222, 226, 257, 275,294,321,329,330,335,338,339,1142,1808 Adult wages............................... 102,191,212,422 Health...................... 1768-1770,1774-1781, 1784-1788,1791-1794,1798-1802,1807,1810, 1812,1813,1815,1817,1819,1822-1826,1828 Morals... 199,790,1372,1379,I4Q3,1423,1459,1816 See.also Juvenile delinquency; Social cost of child labor. Efficiency, relative, of men, women, and children...................... 422 Eight-hour day. See Hours. Employers’ attitude.................... 146, 179,186,370,382,436,928,1698 Employment certificates.......... 485,508,535,575,590 Chicago........... ............................................ 559 Connecticut................................................ 576 Great Britain........ .............. 906 M aine......................................................... 296 Maryland.......................................... 297,543,576 Massachusetts............................................ 576 New York City...................... 467,556,1774,1782 New York State.............................. 557,558,576 Ohio..................... . ................................. 561,576 Pennsylvania..................................... . . . . 562 Wisconsin................................................... 576 Employment offices. See Juvenile employ ment bureaus. Employment prohibited. See Dangerous oc cupations. England. See Great Britain. Entrance to trades. See Apprenticeship. Ethical aspects.............................. 208 European countries................................ 734-760,899 Comp, educ........................................ 1535,1570 Indus, educ......................................... 1537,1638 Statistics.................................................... 817 See also under names of countries. European war and child labor................. 1567,1568 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 155 Factories........................................................ 689,718 France..................................................... 799,803 - Germany............................................ . 837,854 Great Britain.................... 865,879,883,892,898, 900,905,915,918,919,926,941,942,948,965,967 See also under name of industry. Factory inspection.............. .........................314,749 Alabama....................................................... 69-71 France........................................................ 800 299 Germany..... .......................................... Great Britain............................................. 299 Illinois___ ’. ....... 101,299 Maine.......................................................... 290 Maryland.................................................... 297 Massachusetts......................................... 299,300 299 New York State......................................... N ewJersey.................. 299 Nova Scotia................................................ 978 Ohio......................................................... 299,455 Pennsylvania..................................... 299 Pittsburgh...............................................195,1317 United States............................................. 1827 Wisconsin................................................... 299 Factory schools................................................ 1668 See also Continuation schools; Industrial education. Fatigue....................................................... 1777,1805 Federal control..................................... 330a, 601-660 Speeches in Congress...................... 661-719 Flax................................................................. 1244 Florida.................. 279 Canneries.................................................... 1095 Legis.................................... 512,533,573,575,577 Flower makers. See Artificial flowers. France................................................... 796-816,1685 Apprent........................... 1552-1559 Comp, educ................................................ 1685 Home work................................................ 1166 Indus, educ......................................... 1558,1559 Legis................................... 696,734,744,752,757, 758,798-800,805-809,811-815,817 School children............ ........................ 832,1574 1303,1553 Textiles.......................................... Furniture.................................................... 1152,1555 Gary, In d .............................................. 1.......... 1594 General Federation of Women’s Clubs....... 167,451 Georgia............................................... 96,264,265,280 Cotton....................................... 1236a, 1262,1301 Factories.................................. 1251 Legis............................. 572,573,575,577,663,675 Germany......................................... 734,742,744,752, 754,758,817-860,1315,1685 Agri............... 823,1050,1051 Apprent.............................. 1562,1580,1637,1708 Comp, educ.......................................... 1535,1685 Cont. schools......................................... 845,1505 Fact, insp................................ ............... 299,758 Glass........................... 1113,1116-1118,1123,1132 Home work.......................... 829,1138,1145,1188 Ind. educ..................................... 1504,1518,1708 Juv. employ, bur................................ 1727,1732 Legis..................... 696,757,812,823,824,826-829, 832,836,839,812,843,845,846,857-860 Mines................... 1214 Night work........................... 950,1117,1118.1123 Statistics........................................... 825,831,844 156 SUBJECT INDEX. Germany, Street trades . : ....... ...................... 1400 School attend............................................. 1574 Glass industry..................... 340,525,1110-1132,1735 1113,1116-1118,1123,1132,1314 , Germany____ _ Illinois...................................................... 1131 New Jersey................................................ 1122 O h io .......... ................................ 1122 Pennsylvania............................... 380,1122,1125 Grand Rapids, Mich., n e w s b o y s .......... 1308,1414 Great Britain................................... 441,445,861-972 Accidents.................................................... 933 Agri........................................................ — 395, 955,1049,1056-1058,1062-1066,1069,1076 Apprent............. 871,872,889,922,942,1547,1571 Chimney sweeps.............................. 916,917,930 Commissions............................. 898-900,922,923 Comp, educ. . 895,920, -1566,1568,1569,1574,1685 Cont. schools....................................... 1569,1679 906 Employ, cert.......................................... - Factories..................... 865,879,883,892,898,900, 905,915,918,919,926,941,942,948,965,967 Factory inspec........................................ 299,758 “ Half-timers” ........................................... 377, 885,908,911,914,943,957,964,1291,1526, 1567, 1572, 1573, 1575, 1595, 1629, 1645 History.............................. 883,889,892,898-900, 915-919,928,930,935,941,955,971,1066 Home work............... 1134,1136,1139,1141,1146, 1147,1152,1153,1157,1174,1177,1179,1187 Hours.....................: ......................... 900,910,913 lnd. educ.................................................. - 1693 Juv. employ, bur.................... 868,876, 877, 951, 972, 1593, 1726, 1727, 1733, 1734,1738,1743,1744,1746,1750,1753 Juv. occup___ 896,897,922,1709,1710,1733,1735 696,734,744,752, Legis....................... 754,757,758,812,817,873,874,881,883,884, 887,888,891,902-904,912-914,928,931,934, 935, 942, 945, 947, 960, 969, 970,1047,1217 Medical super............................. 1779,1781,1790 Mess, boys............................................... 923,964 Mines..................... 739,912,1208,1213,1215-1217 Min. wage......................................... 867,872,877 Night work..................... 909,950 Office boys.................................................. 664 Post-office b o y s.................. 866,921,923,963,972 Stage............................................... 901,963,1337 Statistics....... 880,896,897,905,927,955,972,1216 Street trades . 891,964,1403-1405,1468-1470,1481 T e x tile s......................... 905,955,957,1241,1244 Unemploy......................... »27,937,940,955,956 Van boys.................................. 963,964,968,1199 Voc. guid............................ 1508,1593,1742,1743 See also Blind-alley occupations; Bir mingham, Bradford, Cambridge, Lan caster, London, Manchester. Great Britain, colonies.............. 973-982 Greece, legislation...........- ........... - ........... 1046,1047 Greek padrone system...................... 1476,1478,1479 Grimsby, Eng................................................... 958 Gulf Coast States.............................................. 90 Canneries.................... 1078,1079,1086-1088,1095 See also South, and names of States. Gunckel, John E., and newsboys. . . 1406,1407,1487 Gymnasts.......................................................... 226 See also Stage children. https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis “ Half-timers:” See Great-Britain, “ Halftimers.” 210 Hammond, Jnd.................................. Hartford, Conn..................................................... 1410 - Voc. guid.................................................. ; 1739 Hawaii, legislation................................. 573,575.577 See also Honolulu. Health of working children.................. 102,149,186,, 245,297,386,845,964,1188,1546,1763-1828 History: Great Britain............ 307,883,889,892,898-900, 915-919,928,930,935,941,955,971,1066 United States................................ 50, 51,123,245,263,463,464,572,587,588 Home work.................................. 329,525,1133-1189 Belgium............................. 1140France.....................................................-- H66 Germany............................... 829,1138,1145; 1188 Great Britain........... 1134-1136,1139,1141,1146, 1147,1152,1153,1157,1174,1177,1179,1187 Massachusetts.......................................... 1165. Netherlands....... .......................................- U69 New York City................ 1133 , 1144 , 1148, 1149, 1151,1159,1161,1167,1171,1172,1175,1182-1185 New York State......................... 1148,1170,1185 Switzerland................................. 1173,1176,1189 United States......................................1133,1137, 1143,1144,1148-1151,1154-1165,1167, 1170-1172,1174,1175,1178,1180-1186 Honolulu........................ ^2 Hosiery and knit goods.................................... 1320 Hotels and restaurants............................. 804,1309 Hours of labor. ...................... —. 485,575,577,1091 Eight-hour day___ 168,345,355,369,390,650,653 Bibl................................. 17 Ten-hour day.............................................. 745 Colorado............................................. - — 122 494 Connecticut........................... France........................... 796 Germany...................... ............................... 832 Great Britain.................................... 900,910,913 Maine................................ 290 Massachusetts........................... 236,588,650,653 Ohio................... 1201 Hours, irregular, effect on health............ 1768,1807 Hungary........................... 752,778-781 Idaho, legis.............................................. 573,575,577 Illinois.................................. - ........... 63,131,186,187 Fact, insp................................................ 101> 299 Glass..................................................... 1122,1131 Legis............................... - .......................... 457, 479,489,490,495,518-521,550,573,575,577,584 Street trades............................................101,1420 See also Chicago. Immigration, Child labor a n d ....................... 182 Indiana.................................................. - 112,114,119 G l a s s ...................................................... U22 Indus, educ........... 1690 Legis. *................- ........ 482,495,550,573,575,577 See also Hammond. Industrial education......................... — 1499-1501, 1551,1601,1602,1604,1683,1699 B ibl.. 18-28,1504,1537,1602,1604,1630,1654,1683 Infl. on wages............................................. 1687 Canada............ ■........................................... 1®20 Europe.......... ................. 1537,1638 SUBJECT INDEX.. Industrial education, F r a n c e ....... 1358,1559 Germany...................... ............... 1504,1518,1708 Great Britain...................... 1543,1593,1609-1613 Illinois................................................ . 1529 Indiana.......................... ............ 1590,1594,1605 M ain e.!......................... .............. ! . . ____ 163d Maryland.............................. . . . . . . . . ......... 1634 Massachusetts............ 1583,1605,1635,1638,1639 Michigan .r 4 ....... 1640 New Jersey........................ ._..................... 1661 New York........ . . . . . ; ................ . . . . . . 1662 Pennsylvania.. . . . . . •... 1651 1678 Rhode Island............................... Switzerland.. ............................ 1680 United States............. .............. 1542,1583,1594, 1649-1651,1654-1657,1665,1670,1690,1692 Wisconsin............................ 1650,1651,1704,1705 Industrial hygiene, foibl.....................................29-32 See also Occupational diseases. Inspection. See Factory inspection. Iowa............................................ 1606 Legis...................... 466,493,510,531,573,575,577 Voc. guid......... J................................. 1606,1741 Ireland: Agriculture..... ........................... 1064 Street trades.................................... 1416 See also Great Britain. Irregular employment...................................... 157 I t a l y ; ; . . . . . . . . 734,742,744,752,817,983-998 Glass.................................................................696 Legis............................. 757,812,983-991,993-998 S ta g e ............................................................1349 Japan................................................734,817 Jewelry.. . . ............................................... il«5 ,1320 Jute............— ................................ 1244 Juvenile delinquency............................................ 68 , 87,204,219,421,840,845,969,1431,1579 Rel. to street trades.................................. 1389 1392,1394,1399,1401,1403,1475,1477 Juvenile employment bureaus................. 1506,1755 B ib l.............................................. 1737,1744 Cooperation with schools........... 830,1506,1508, 1512,1515,1524,1594,1727,1730,1751 Birmingham, Eng...................... 1712-1715,1730 B oston.................................... 1757 Bradford, Eng............................................ 1723 Cambridge, Eng................................... 1742 Chicago.................................... 1727 Cincinnati................................................... 1724 1751 Edinburgh............................................. Germany.............................................. 1727,1732 Great Britain........................... 876,877,951,972, 1593,1709,1710,1726,1727,1733,1734, 1736, 1738,1743,1744,1746,1750,1753 Philadelphia.............. ....... •................. 1745 Juvenile occupations.................................. 75 896,897,922,1709-1762 Occupations for boys....... 1709,1717-1720,1722, 1729,1733,1735,1748, 1754, 1758, 1759, 1762 Occupations for girls................................. 1710 1716,1721,1727,1729,173l[ 1733,1735,1747,1760,1762 See also Juv. employ, bur.; Voc. guid. Kansas, legis...................... 573,575,577 Keating-Owen bill...................... .................; . 330 a, 613,620,634,635,638,640,641,653,659 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 157 Keating-Owen bill, Speeches in Congress.. 679-719 K entucky............................. 203 Comp, educ ......................... .. 113,1530 L e g i s . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . 550,567,573,575,577 Kiel, Germany................................................. 821 Knit goods............ ........................................... 1320 Lancashire, Eng......................................... 1519,1595 C o t t o n ........................................... 1241,1264 Legal status of child......................................... 524 Legislation, foreign countries. See under names of countries. Legislation, United States..................... 652,672,696 494 Econ. effects.............................................. State legislation and enforcement......... 457-590 Uniform legis..................... 591-600 See a lso Names of states. Licenses, Street trading. See Street trades. Linen, France.................. ............................816,1303 Liverpool, Eng................. •............................. 958 Street trades............... ................ 1376,1395,1403 L o n d o n ......:....... ............... I.. 951,952,958 Apprent...................... ................ 1610,1612,1613 Cont. schools,............ 1611 Home work. . . . . . . . . . ............................... 1139 Ind. e d u c..;___ ; . . . . . ....... . 1543,1609-1613 Juv. employ, bu r:___ ........................ 1709,1710 Juv. occup. 1709,1710,1735 School attend : .................. 1677 Street trades ................ 1397,1425,1426 L ouisiana.;...................... ........................... 165; 226 Comp, educ.............. ............ ......... . . . . ; 1617 Legis........................... ............ 503,573,575,577 S t a g e . ....... ....... 1332,1352 See also New Orleans. Lowell, Mass 1267,1269,1289 Luxemburg. ............ 752 Legis.. . . ----- . . . . 812 Lynn, Mass.. 429 Maine: Canneries................................................ noi E m p.cert......................... 290 Fact. in s p ................. 290,291 Ind. edüc..................................................... 1630 Legis................................... 572,573,575,577,587 Stat.................... 290 Textiles..... ....................................................1278 See also Portland. Manchester, Eng............... 1........ ............ . 958 Street t r a d e s ......... 1360,1378,1403 M a r y la n d ....:................................ 297,372,1826 A g ri................................................. ;. 1054,1055 Canneries. . . 297,1086,1087,1090,1093-1095,1098 Employ, cert................................... 297,543,576 F a c t o r i e s ................... 1098 Factory insp........................... 297 76 Ind. educ..................................... 1634 Legis............................ 297,548,572,573,575,577 1801 Med. super...................................... Stage..................................... 1345 Street trades....................................... 1435,1436 Massachusetts..................................................... 99 107,123,236,301-304,1321,1437,1638,1784 Appren t ..................................................... 1637 Comp, educ.......... 545,1535,1672 Emp. cent.............................. 576 Factory insp................. . . . . ....... . . ___ 299-300 H 6h Home work............................................ ..................:.. 158 SUBJECT INDEX, Massachusetts, Hours.......................... 650,653,1245 Ind. educ........................ 1583,1635,1638,1639 Legis..................................- ..................... . 486, 504,527,544-547,572,573,575,577,588,1535 Sch ool attend................................... 545 Statistics.......................... 298,724 Street trades.............. 1371,1374,1394,1402,1437 Medical supervision......................................... 1774, 1779,1781,1782,1790,1801,1816,1828 Men’s clothing. See Clothing. Mercantile establishments.. 127,357,1190,1207,1759 Messenger boys.................................. 357,1372,1373, 1379,1382,1387,1391,1405,1409,1411,1418, 1428, 1429, 1438,1439,1447,1459,1463,1480 Great Britain.......................................... 923,964 Minnesota................................................... 307 Pennsylvania............................................. 380 Metal trades........................ 341,1311,1313,1317-1320 127 Connecticut........................ '...................... Germany............. 1123,1312 Michigan................................................. 213,287,288 Ind. educ.................................................... 1640 Legis.......................................... 495,573,575,577 Mills. See Factories. Milwaukee: Newsboys’ Republic........................... 1424,1441 Street trades........................................ 1440,1488 Mines and quarries...................... 689,718,1208-1233 Austria.................................... 1231 Belgium................................................. 739,1208 France.................................................... 796 Germany..................................................... 1214 Great Britain........ 739,912,1208,1213,1215-1217 Pennsylvania............................................. 295, 380,1210,1212,1220,1221,1224,1230 United States..................................... 1209-1212, 1218-1227,1229,1230,1232 Minimum age. See Age limit. Minimum wage......................... 197,261,303,373,384 Bibliography................................................33-37 Great Britain................................... 867,872,877 Minneapolis...................................................... 1749 Minnesota...................................................... 307-309 Comp, educ........, ...................................... 307 573,575,577 Legis............... Messenger boys.......................................... 307 S t a t i s t i c s ..................................... 307 See also Minneapolis. Missouri............................................ 116,119,310,311 Legis................................................. 573,575,577, Mississippi........................................ 78,120,266,328 Canneries............. 1095,1102 Legis..................... 538,567,573,575,577 Montana, legis........................................ 573,575,577 Mothers’ pensions, bibliography...................... 38-40 Mountain whites.............................................. 412 National child labor committee: Aims........................................................... 227 Constitution............................................... 344 Proceedings........................................... 320-330a Secretary’s reports..................................... 331 Nebraska, legis...................................... 573,575,577 Needles and pins.............................................. 1320 Netherlands. ..................... 734,742,752,817,999-1003 H om ework................................................ 1169 Legis........................................................ 812,1002 Nevada, legis..................... 573,575,577 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis New England............................ 125,225,245,290,407 Canneries................................................... 1092 Street trades............................................... 1427 Textiles............................... 1263,1267-1269,1289 See also names of states. New Hampshire, legis. . . . . 551,555,572,573,575,577 New Jersey................................ 103,149,153,362,363 Fact, insp.................................................. 299 Glass........................................................... 1122 Ind. educ.................................................... 1561 Legis.................................... 500,572,573,575,577 Silk............................ 1293 Street trades.............................................- 1377 See also Newark, Paterson. New Mexico, legis.................................. 573,575,577 New Orleans, La., cotton mills....................... 1261 New South W ales........................................ 976,977 Street trades.............................................. 1448 New York City.......... ........................... 130,145,367 Employ, cert................... 467,556,576,1774,1782 Hom ework......................................... 1133,1144, 1148, 1149, 1151, 1159, 1161, 1167, 1171, 1172, 1175, 1180, 1182-1185 Mer. est.......................... ............ 1200,1204,1206 N ewsboys........................... 1367,1368,1457,1467 School census............................................. 1666 Voc. guid. survey...................................... 1696 New York State...................................... 171,365,366 Apprent.........................................- ........... 364 Canneries............................................ 1081-1085, 1094,1096,1097,1099,1100,1105 Employ, cert.................................. - 557,558,576 Fact, insp....................... 299 Home work................... ............. 1148,1170,1185 Ind. educ.. 1.............................................. 1662 Legis............... ............. 497,507,572,573,575,577 Mer. est...............................................: ----- 1196 New Zealand, legis........................................... 974 Newark, N. J., newsboys................................ 1457 Newport survey................................................ 76 Newsboys........................................... 577,1408,1415, 1445,1451,1452,1460,1461,1471,1484,1587 Boston................................... 1493 Chicago....................................................... 1379 Grand Rapids, Mich........................... 1398,1414 Maryland...................................... 297,1435,1436 Milwaukee................................... 1424,1441,1488 Newark....................................................... 1457 New York City................... 1367,1368,1457,1467 New York State.................................. 1449,1450 Philadelphia: ...................................... 1381,1446 St. Louis..................................................... 1482 Toledo........................................ 1406,1407,1487 Wash. D. C ...................................... .. 1453,1455 Newsboys’ Court, Boston........ 1382,1394,1454,1493 Newsboys’ Republic, Boston.......................... 1394 Newsboys’ Republic, Milwaukee............ 1424,1441 Night work........................ 345,355,575,740,746,1121 Austria..................................................... 767,768 France..................................................... 796,802 Germany.................... 950,1117,1118,1123 Great Britain.......................................... 909,950 Pennsylvania....................................7___ 481 Switzerland.......................... ..................... 1026 Northern States................................................ 431 See also New England, and names of states. SUBJECT INDEX. N orth Carolina.................................................. 164, 194,269,270,277,330,330a, 370,412 Cotton................................. 1243,1272,1297,1301 Legis............................. 491,511,572,573,575,677 North Dakota, legis............................... 573,575,577 Norway............................................................. 752 Legis........................................................ 812,1010 Nova Scotia...................................................... 978 Occupational diseases....................................... 1809, 1811-1814,1821,1824,1825 Bibl................................ 29-32 Occupations. See Juvenile occupations. Office hoys, Great Britain............................... 964 Ohio............. 306 Accidents.................................................... 374 Comp, educ.............. 1535 Employ, cert........................................... 561,576 Fact, insp................................................ 299,455 Glass........................................................... 1122 Hours...........................................j-............. 1201 Legis....... 483,495,496,550,572,573,575,577,1535 Mer. estab................................................... 1201 Wages.......................................................... 1201 See also Cincinnati. Ohio Valley states ................................. 115,306,550 See also names of states. Oklahoma.......................................................... 80,81 Legis............................ 471,573,575,577 Ontario........................................................... 975,979 Oregon.....................................................'.... 375-377 Legis............................................. 573,575,577 Min. wage................................................... 373 97, Organized labor and child labor..................... 102,124,158-163,312,330a See also American Federation of Labor; Trade unions, Great Britain. Palmer-Owen b ill................... 625, 626,633,636,637,649,650,651,655,658 Speeches.................................................. 672-678 Paper boxes. See Box factories. Parental dependence. See Causes of child labor. Parental responsibility................................. 382,414 Part time schools....................................... 1636,1652 See also Continuation schools, Great Britain “ Half-timers.” Paterson, N. J................................................... 123 Pauperism. See Causes of child labor. Peddlers. See Street trades. Pennsylvania.................................. 109,110,143,156, 196,209,295,378-380,388,398,433,564,653 Cont. schools......................................... 563,1641 Employ, cert....... ...................................... 562 Fact, insp................................................... 299 Glass..................................................... 1122,1125 Ind. educ......................... 1651 Legis................................................ 463,472,476, 505,550,554,563,564,572,573,575,577 Mines. . . 295,380,1210,1212,1220,1221,1224,1230 Night work................................................. 481 Street trades............................................... 1438 Textiles........................................ 1288,1293 See also Philadelphia, Pittsburgh, WilkesBarre. Perry, N. Y .................................. ................... 429 Philadelphia............................ 123,188,383,396,1561 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis 159 Philadelphia, Juv. employ, bu r.____ . . . . 1561,1745 Juv. occup................................... .'........... 75 Mer. est....................................................... 1202 Stage........................................................... 1459 Street trades................................ 1381,1446,1459 Philanthropy and child labor................... 231 Philippine Islands: Apprent................................................ 1647,1673 577 Legis.................................................... Physical standards.................................... 424,1765, 1771,1774,1793,1817,1819,1822,1823,1828 Physiological age. See Age, physiological. Pittsburgh, P a................ 92,195,429,1168,1317,1318 Portland, Me..................................................... 290 577 Porto Rico, legis............................................... Portugal............................................................ 752 Legis........................................................ 812,1048 Post-office boys, Great Britain. 866,921,923,963,972 Pottery................................ 1320 Poverty. See Causes of child labor. Preserving. See Canneries. Printing trades......... 1533,1556,1647,1673,1735,1752 Providence, R. I., School census..................... 1702 Rag stripping................................................... 1178 Religious aspects. See Church and child labor. Remedial measures.......... 294,335,338,339,408,1142 Restaurants. See Hotels and restaurants. Rhode Island.................................................... 386 Ind. educ................................................... 1678 Legis......................... 572,573,575,577 See also Newport, Providence. Richmond, Va., Voe. educ. su rvey............... 1752 Rolling mills, Germany......................1123,1312,1314 Roumania........................................................ 752 Rubber abd elastic goods................. .......... 127,1320 Russia......................................................... 1001-1007 Legis........................ ............................... 752,812 St. Louis, Mo.: Juv. occup.................................................. 1748 Newsboys................................................... 1482 Scavengers, child.............................................. 1437 School attendance: France............................................. 1574 Germany............................................. 1571 Great Britain................. ................ 868,892,895, 908,914,920,943,972,1566-1569,1572-1575,1677 See also Great Britain, “ Half-timers. ’ ’ New York.......................................... 1666 386 Rhode Island............................................. Switzerland................................................ 1574 See also Compulsory attendance; Contin uation schools. School children as wage earners..... ................ 1498 Austria........................................................ 832 France..................................................... 832 Germany................................ .................... 820 Great Britain.. . . . 832,1516,1517,1572,1588,1766 See also Gt. Brit. “ Half-timers;” Street trades. Switzerland................................................ 1189 Schools, relation to employment.'... 534,1230.1508, 1512,1515,1519,1524,1541,1600,1603,1607,16141616,1618-1623,1632,1666,1669,1677,1681,1682 See also Comp, educ.; Cont. schools; In dus. educ.; Juv. employ, bur.; Voc. guid. 160 SUBJECT nsTDEX. Scholarships for working children.................. 330a, 1577,1578,1597,1689,1697 Scotland...... . .................................................... 958 Agri............................................................. l®®^ Apprent.................... ......... ; .................... 13®® Voc. guid............................................. 1733,1751 See also Edinburgh, Great Britain. .Seattle, Wash...... ............................................ 1676 Sharpsburg, Pa........................................ ........ 1317 Shoes. See Boot and shoe industry. Silk mills................................... 1234,1280,1283,1298 Statistics.............................................. 1298,1299 Connecticut......................... 127 France......................................... - ........ 816,1303 Great Britain............i «................. - .......... ,955 New Jersey.........................................- — 1203 Pennsylvania............................................. 1293 Social cost of child labor___ 64,155,184,221,235,259, 347,441,1563* 1785,1786,1808 See also Effects of child labor. Sonneberg, Germany................................ 829 South................................................ 106,160,169, 177,183,226,254,262,267, 271-273,276,285,316, 318, 320, 329, 403,406,407,429,628,629,631,633 Comp, educ................. 1531, 1535,1538,1549,1581,1582,1642,1643,1652,1684 Cotton................................- ................ 1252, 1259,1260-1262,1270-1277,1281,1302,1306 . 462,541,542,570 Legis................................ See also names of states. South Carolina___ 194,248,269,270,277,328,329,432 Comp, educ..............................- ................ 1598 Cotton.................... ............ 1265,1266,1272,1304 Legis............. 511,573,575,577,585 South Dakota, legis...................... 573,575,577 Spain;................ 744,752 Legis................................ 812,1014-1021 Speeches in Congress.............. 305,661-719 Stage children.................. 1322-1359 Legis.......................................... 577 Baltimore____ - ........: . . . .......................... 1329 Colorado.......- ...................................... 1331,1339 Great Britain.................................. 901,963,1337 Italy.............................. 1349 Louisiana......................................... - 1332,1352 Maryland............................ 297 State and child labor............................ 525,9218,963 State and Federal legislation, relation of 498,606,614 See also Federal control. State laws. See Legislation, United States. Statistics: Austria........................................................ 762 817 European countries................................... Germany............................ 818,825,831,844 Great Britain. 880,896,897,905,927,955,972,1216 Massachusetts............................................ 298 Minnesota................................................... 307 New South Wales.............................. 977 New Y ork State................................... 1284 Rhode Island.............................................. 386 Russia.............. 1004 Switzerland................................................ 1188 United States.................................. 189,339,422 720-733,1104,1129,1130,1285,1286,1298,1300 Victoria....................................................... 982 Stockyards, Chicago...................................... 313,413 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis Stores, department. See Mercantile estab lishments. Stories, Child labor.................. 340,343,350,352 Strawberry pickers.. . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . . ----- 1055 Street trades................................. 292,329,1360-1493 B i b l ......................................... ..... .. 1382,1394 Effect on health........................................ 1769 Regulation.................. 577,1388,1395,1397,1399, 1400,1403,1404,1417,1418,1420,1425,1426,1435, 1442,1449,1450,1456,1458,1464-1466,1481,1489 Boston................................. 1371,1374,1394,1402 Cincinnati........................................... 1385 Hartford................................................. HI® Great Britain........................... . . . . . . . ----- 891, 964,1360,1376,1378,1403,1404,1425 Illinois.............................................. - ........ H20 14.1® Ireland....... ........................... Maryland............................................. 1435,1436 Milwaukee............................................ 1440,1488 New Jersey..................................... ,....... - - 1377 New South Wales.................. ................... 1448 Wisconsin.............................................. 446,1488 See also Bootblacks; Messenger boys; Newsboys. Sugar beet industry. See Beet fields of Col orado. Sulphur mines.................................................. 1233 Sweden................................ 752,1008,1009,1011,1012 Legis.....................................- .............- 812,1013 Switzerland. 734,752,758,817,1023,1024,1027 Apprent.......... ...............v......... - ............... 1®80 Bibl.......... .................................................. 1025 Comp, educ............. .................................. 1027 Home work........... ............ 1173,1176,1188,1189 Indus,, educ................................... 1®80 Legis............... - ........... 696,757,812, 1022,1025,1027,1028,1030,1031,1033,1034,1680 Night work................................................. 1026 School attend............................................. 1574 Tailoring. See Clothing. . Telegraph boys. See Messenger boys. Tenement-house manufacture. See Home work. Tennessee....................................... 208,369,415,1253 L e g i s . 573,575,577 Texas; Cotton picking......................... 1260 Legis........................................... .. 573,575,577 T e x tile s............................................ 729a, 1234-1307 France.................................. — ................ 1353 Gt. Brit...................- ....................... 905,955,957 See also Cotton; Linen; Silk; Woolen. Tobacco. See Cigars and cigarettes. Toledo, Ohio, Newsboys ......................... 1406,1407 Tomatoes.......................................................... 1054 Trade unions, U. S. See American Federation of Labor. Trades. See Juvenile occupations. Unemployment, Gt. Brit......... 927,937,940,955,956 Uniform legislation.......................... 552,560,591-600 United States and general............................ 50-456, 734,742,752,754,817,1685 A gri... 1053-1055,1059-1061,1067,1068,1070-1075 Apprent.............. 1608,1644,1649-1651,1700,1707 Canneries............................................. 1077-1107 SUBJECT INDEX, 161 United States, Comp, ed u c.................... 1535,1548, Vocational guidance, New York City............ 1696 1570,1587,1591,1596,1618,1619, Philadelphia................................ 1561,1740,1745 1633,1663,1664,1667, 1671, 1685 Richmond, V a............................... 1752 Cotton.................................................. 1298,1307 St. Louis..................................................... 1748 Glass.......... 1114,1115,1119,1120,1122,1124-1131 Seattle......................................................... 1676 Hom ework....................... 1133,1137, United States............. 1594,1624,1625,1652,1655 1143,1144,1148-1151,1154,1165,1167, Wages........................................................... 212,1188 1170-1172, 1174,1175,1178, 1180-1186 Boot and shoe ind..................................... 1321 Ind. educ............................................ 1542,1583, Cotton .mills................................................ 1274 1594,1605,1649-1651,1654Germany............................................... 832 1657, 1665, 1670,1690,1692 Illinois........................................................ 186 54,302,457-590,812 Legis................. Iowa............................................................ 1606 Uniform............................................... 591-600 Newport..................................................... 76 Mer.est................. 1190-1207 Ohio..................... 1201 Mines......... 1209-1212,1218-1227,1229,1230,1232 North Carolina........................................... 370 Statistics. . . 189,339,422,720-733,1104,1129,1130 Oregon........................................................ 373 Voc. guid............................ 1624-1626,1652,1655 Phila.......................................... 75 See also names of states. 386 Rhode Island.................. Utah, legis............................................... 573,575,577 United States......................................... 421,422 Vermont, legis................................. 572,573,575,577 Wages, effects on adults. Sec Effects of child Vagrancy and child labor.................................. 132 labor. Van boys, Gt. B rit........................ 963,964,968,1199 . Wales, Agri....................................................... 1064 Victoria...........^................................................ 982 See also Cardiff; Great Britain. Vienna............................................................... 1674 Washington, D. C. See District of Columbia. Virginia................................................... 141,274,283 Washington (State): 573,575,577 Legis.............................. Canneries.................................................... 1106 Vocational education. See industrial educaLegis................................................. 573,575,577 tion. West Virginia..........................................117-119,1211 Vocational guidance.......................... 325,1507-1512,. Legis............................. 550,573,575,577 1646,1675,1696,1747,1756,1761,1762 Western States............................................. 530 B ibl............................................ 41-49,1508-1509 See also names of states. National conferences................... 1653,1658,1659 Wilkes-Barre, Pa............................................. 77 Birmingham, Eng....... .................1712-1716,1730 Wisconsin............................................... 340,441-417 Boston......................................... 1731,1757-i 760 Apprent...................................................... 446 Bradford, Eng..................................... 1717-1722 Comp, educ................................................ 446 Cardiff, Wales............................................ 1725 Employ, cert.................................... 576 Chicago........................................ 1727,1729,1754 299 Fact, insp................................................... Cincinnati................................................... 1724 Ind. educ............................. 1650,1651,1704,1705 Edinburgh.................................................. 1751 Legis..................... 446,495,502,573,575,577,1705 Germany..................................................... 1508 Street trades............................................... 1489 Gt. Brit........... 1508,1593,1742,1743 See also Milwaukee. Hartford, Conn. ....................... 1739 Woolen and worsted goods......................... 955,1320 Iowa................ ................ 1606,1741 Work permits. See Employment certificates. London. . . ___ ___ 1709,1710,1735 Wyoming, legis.......... ........................... 573,575,577 Minneapolis___ ..................... 1749 44193°—16----- 11 https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis o https://fraser.stlouisfed.org Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis ADDITION AL COPIES OF THIS PUBLICATION MAY BE PKOCURED FROM THE SUPERINTENDENT OF DOCUMENTS GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE WASHINGTON, D. C. AT 20 CENTS PE R COPY A