Service Monographs of the United States Government, Issue 21D. Appleton & Company, 1925 |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 21
Page 2
... June 4 , 1912 , and the legislative bill carrying the first appropriation for the new bureau was approved August 23 , 1912 . At that time the Children's Bureau became the twelfth bureau of the Department of Commerce and Labor , where it ...
... June 4 , 1912 , and the legislative bill carrying the first appropriation for the new bureau was approved August 23 , 1912 . At that time the Children's Bureau became the twelfth bureau of the Department of Commerce and Labor , where it ...
Page 5
... June 3 , 1918. The deficiency act approved April 17 , 1917 ( 40 Stat . L. , 24 ) , appropriated $ 150,000 for the enforcement of the act for the fiscal years 1917 and 1918 , and , the Secretary of Labor having designated the Children's ...
... June 3 , 1918. The deficiency act approved April 17 , 1917 ( 40 Stat . L. , 24 ) , appropriated $ 150,000 for the enforcement of the act for the fiscal years 1917 and 1918 , and , the Secretary of Labor having designated the Children's ...
Page 6
... June 3 , 1918 , and April 24 , 1919 , inspections were made of 1187 manu- facturing establishments in twenty - six states and fifteen mines in two states . The work of the Child Labor Division of the Chil- dren's Bureau was discontinued ...
... June 3 , 1918 , and April 24 , 1919 , inspections were made of 1187 manu- facturing establishments in twenty - six states and fifteen mines in two states . The work of the Child Labor Division of the Chil- dren's Bureau was discontinued ...
Page 11
... June 30 , 1922 , had been accepted by forty - two states , a consid- erable amount of opposition to it also developed . The Commonwealth of Massachusetts refused to accept the act , and , believing that its rights as a state were in ...
... June 30 , 1922 , had been accepted by forty - two states , a consid- erable amount of opposition to it also developed . The Commonwealth of Massachusetts refused to accept the act , and , believing that its rights as a state were in ...
Page 46
... June , 1919. 459 pp . 1919 . Separates which comprise the same material are as follows : Separate No. 1. The Economic and Social Basis for Child - Welfare Separate No. 2 . Standards . Child Labor . * Separate No. 3. The Health of ...
... June , 1919. 459 pp . 1919 . Separates which comprise the same material are as follows : Separate No. 1. The Economic and Social Basis for Child - Welfare Separate No. 2 . Standards . Child Labor . * Separate No. 3. The Health of ...
Common terms and phrases
37 Stat 40 Stat activities administration agencies annual Assistant Associate Director authorized Baby Week based on births birth registration Bureau Publication Chief Chil Child Hygiene Division Child Labor Division child labor law Child Welfare Children in Need Commerce and Labor committee Cong Congress County Department of Labor District of Columbia effect Emma employment certificate establishment Factors in Infant Federal Board federal child labor Federal children's bureau field study fiscal Grace Abbott Helen hygiene of maternity Illegitimacy Industrial Infancy Act Infant Mortality investigate and report Juvenile Court Legal legislation Lundberg Maternal Mortality maternity and infancy Max West Mental Defect methods monographs Mothers national Children's bureau November 23 organization pamphlet Pensions plans problems Promotion protection of maternity provisions revised Robert Morse Robert Morse Woodbury Rural Secretary-Stenographer Standards Stenographer survey Territory of Hawaii tion U. S. Children's Bureau U. S. Department United welfare and hygiene welfare of children
Popular passages
Page 64 - That no dealer shall be prosecuted under the provisions of this act when he can establish a guaranty signed by the wholesaler, jobber, manufacturer, or other party residing in the United States, from whom he purchases such articles, to the effect that the same is not adulterated or misbranded within the meaning of this act, designating it.
Page 65 - In discussing the subject of compulsory education, it may be well to quote the following congressional act to prevent interstate commerce in the products of child labor, and for other purposes: Be it enacted by the Senate and House of Representatives of the United States of America in Congress assembled.
Page ix - To lay the basis for such a comprehensive study of the organization and operations of the national government as President Taft outlined, the Institute for Government Research has undertaken the preparation of a series of monographs, of which the present study is one, giving a detailed description of each of the fifty or more distinct services of the government. These studies are being vigorously prosecuted, and it is hoped that all services of the government will be covered in a comparatively brief...
Page 43 - It is hardly necessary to point out the value of such information in planning for future work and in considering the problem of the better distribution and coordination of the work of the government. The Institute contemplates attempting such a general listing and classification of the activities of the government upon the completion of the present series.
Page 64 - ... years have been employed or permitted to work more than eight hours in any day, or more than six days in any week, or after the hour of 7 o'clock PM or before the hour of 6 o'clock AM?
Page 63 - No producer, manufacturer, or dealer shall ship or deliver for shipment in commerce any goods produced in an establishment situated in the United States in or about which within thirty days prior to the removal of such goods therefrom any oppressive child labor has been employed...
Page 70 - Congress has adopted no uniform plan of appropriations for the several services and that the latter employ no uniform plan in respect to the recording and reporting of their receipts and expenditures, it is impossible to present data of this character according to any standard scheme of presentation. In the case of some services the administrative reports contain tables showing financial conditions and operations of the service in considerable detail; in others financial data are almost wholly lacking....
Page 43 - Under this head would appear the specific lines of investigation under way and the services in which they were being prosecuted. It is hardly necessary to point out the value of such information in planning for future work and in considering the problem of the better distribution and coordination of the work of the government. The Institute contemplates such a general listing and classification of the activities of the government upon the completion of the present series.
Page 63 - Columbia shall present satisfactory evidence of any such violation, to cause appropriate proceedings to be commenced and prosecuted in the proper courts of the United States, without delay, for the enforcement of the penalties as in such case herein provided. SEC. 6. That the term "drug...
Page 63 - Large, .... be, and the same hereby are transferred from the Department of Commerce and Labor to the Department of Labor, and the same shall hereafter remain under the jurisdiction and supervision of the last-named department.