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Women's Bureau Bulletins
- Proposed employment of women during the war in the industries of Niagara Falls, N.Y. 1919. 16 pages.
- Labor Laws for Women in Industries in Indiana. 1918. 29 pages.
- Standards for the Employment of Women in Industry. 1919. 7 pages.
- Wages of Candy Makers in Philadelphia in 1919. 1919. 46 pages.
- The eight-hour day in federal and state legislation: summary of the state and federal "eight-hour laws" in effect in the United States, 1920. 1921. 14 pages.
- The employment of women in hazardous industries in the United States; a brief resume of state and federal laws regulating the employment of women in hazardous occupations. 1919. 8 pages.
- Night-work laws in the United States; brief summary of state legislation regulating night work for women ... October 15, 1919. 1920. 4 pages.
- Women in the government service. Nienburg, Bertha Marie von der. 1920. 37 pages.
- Home work in Bridgeport, Connecticut. 1920. 35 pages.
- Hours and conditions of work for women in industry in Virginia. March 1920. 1920. 32 pages.
- Women street car conductors and ticket agents. 1921. 90 pages.
- The new position on women in American industry. 1920. 153 pages.
- Industrial opportunities and training for women and girls. Nienburg, Bertha Marie von der. 1920. 48 pages.
- A physiological basis for the shorter working day for women. 1921. 20 pages.
- Some effects of legislation limiting hours of work for women. 1921. 26 pages.
- State laws affecting working women. 1921. 51 pages.
- Women's wages in Kansas. 1921. 104 pages.
- Health problems of women in industry. 1921. 11 pages.
- Iowa woman in industry. 1922. 74 pages.
- Negro women in industry. 1922. 71 pages.
- Women in Rhode Island industries; a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1922. 79 pages.
- Women in Georgia industries, a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1922. 96 pages.
- The family status of breadwinning women; a study of material in the census schedules of a selected locality. 1922. 47 pages.
- Women in Maryland industries; a study of hours and working conditions. 1922. 96 pages.
- Women in the candy industry in Chicago and St. Louis; a study of hours, wages and working conditions in 1920-1921. 1922. 77 pages.
- Women in Arkansas industries; a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1923. 91 pages.
- The occupational progress of women; an interpretation of census statistics of women in gainful occupations. 1922. 43 pages.
- Women's contributions in the field of invention; a study of the records of the United States Patent office. 1923. 59 pages.
- Women in Kentucky industries; a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1923. 120 pages.
- The share of wage-earning women in family support. 1923. 179 pages.
- What industry means to women workers. Van Kleek, Mary. 1923. 13 pages.
- Women in South Carolina industries; a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1923. 133 pages.
- Proceedings of the Women's industrial conference, called by the Women's bureau of the United States Department of Labor, Washington D.C., January 11, 12, and 13, 1923. 1923. 207 pages.
- Women in Alabama industries; a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1924. 93 pages.
- Women in Missouri industries; a study of hours and wages. 1924. 135 pages.
- Radio talks on women in industry. 1924. 39 pages.
- Women in New Jersey industries; a study of wages and hours. 1924. 104 pages.
- Domestic workers and their employment relations : a study based on the records of the Domestic Efficiency Association of Baltimore, Maryland. 1924. 87 pages.
- Married women in industry. Winslow, Mary Nelson. 1924. 11 pages.
- State laws affecting working women: Hours, minimum wage, home work. 1924. 58 pages.
- Family status of breadwinning women in four selected cities. 1925. 154 pages.
- List of references on minimum wage for women in the United States and Canada. Stone, Edna Livingston. 1925. 47 pages.
- Standard and scheduled hours of work for women in industry: a study based on hour data from 13 states. 1925. 68 pages.
- Women in Ohio industries; a study of hours and wages. 1925. 144 pages.
- Home environment and employment opportunities on women in coal-mine worker's families. 1925. 66 pages.
- Facts about working women; a graphic presentation based on census statistics and studies of the women's bureau. 1925. 69 pages.
- Women in the fruit-growing and canning industries in the state of Washington; a study of hours, wages and conditions. 1926. 233 pages.
- Women in Oklahoma industries; a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1926. 126 pages.
- Bryn Mawr College. Summer school for women workers in industry. Women workers and family support; a study made by students in the economics course at the Bryn Mawr summer school under the direction of Prof. Amy Hewes. 1925. 10 pages.
- Effects of applied research upon the employment opportunities of American women. 1926. 61 pages.
- Women in Illinois industries; a study of hours and working conditions. 1926. 113 pages.
- Lost time and labor turnover in cotton mills; a study of cause and extent. 1926. 213 pages.
- The status of women in the government service in 1925. Nienburg, Bertha Marie von der. 1926. 111 pages.
- Bryn Mawr College. Summer school for women workers in industry. Changing jobs; a study made by students in the economics course at the Bryn Mawr summer school under the direction of Prof. Amy Hewes. 1926. 17 pages.
- Women in Mississippi industries; a study of hours, wages and working conditions. 1926. 95 pages.
- Women in Tennessee industries; a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1927. 127 pages.
- Women workers and industrial poisons. Hamilton, Alice. 1926. 8 pages.
- Women in Delaware industries, a study of hours, wages, and working conditions. 1927. 163 pages.
- Short talks about working women. 1927. 29 pages.
- Industrial accidents to women in New Jersey, Ohio, and Wisconsin. 1927. 323 pages.
- The development of minimum-wage laws in the United States, 1912 to 1927. Gordon, Mrs. Mildred Larcom (Jones). 1928. 644 pages.
- Women's employment in vegetable canneries in Delaware. 1927. 52 pages.
- State laws affecting working women. Hours, minimum wage, home work. 1927. 56 pages.
- The employment of women at night. Hopkins, Mary Della. 1928. 91 pages.
- The effects of Labor legislation on the employment opportunities of women. 1928. 498 pages.
- History of labor legislation for women in three states by Clara M. Beyer; and Chronological development of labor legislation for women in the United States by Florence P. Smith. Beyer, Mrs. Clara E (Mortenson). 1929. 296 pages.
- Women workers in Flint, Mich. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1929. 85 pages.
- Summary: the effects of labor legislation on the employment opportunities of women. 1928. 34 pages.
- Causes of absence for men and women in four cotton mills. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1929. 29 pages.
- Negro women in industry in 15 states. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1929. 80 pages.
- Selected references on the health of women in industry. March, 1929. Brown, Emily Clark. 1929. 8 pages.
- Conditions of work in spin rooms. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1929. 46 pages.
- Variations in employment trends of women and men. 1930. 150 pages.
- The immigrant woman and her job. Manning, Caroline. 1930. 188 pages.
- What the wage-earning woman contributes to family support. Peterson, Agnes Lydia. 1929. 24 pages.
- Women in 5- and 10-cent stores and limited-price chain department stores. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1930. 63 pages.
- A study of two groups of Denver married women applying for jobs. Brown, Emily Clark. 1929. 16 pages.
- A survey of laundries and their women workers in 23 cities. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1930. 173 pages.
- Industrial home work. Brown, Emily Clark. 1930. 25 pages.
- Women in Florida industries. 1930 121 pages.
- Industrial accidents to men and women. Brown, Emily Clark. 1930. 53 pages.
- The employment of women in the pineapple canneries of Hawaii. Manning, Caroline. 1930. 35 pages.
- Fluctuation of employment in the radio industry. Manning, Caroline. 1931. 71 pages.
- Fact finding with the Women's bureau. 1931. 42 pages.
- Wages of women in 13 states. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1931. 220 pages.
- Activities of the Women's bureau of the United States. Peterson, Agnes Lydia. 1931. 19 pages.
- Sanitary drinking facilities; with special reference to drinking fountains. Correll, Marie. 1931. 34 pages.
- The employment of women in slaughtering and meat packing. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1932. 219 pages.
- The industrial experience of women workers at the summer schools, 1928 to 1930. Palmer, Gladys Louise. 1931. 71 pages.
- Oregon legislation for women in industry. Gleason, Caroline Joanna. 1931. 45 pages.
- Women in industry; a series of papers to aid study groups. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1931. 87 pages.
- Wage-earning women and the industrial conditions of 1930; a survey of South Bend by Manning and Arcadia N. Phillips. Manning, Caroline. 1932. 90 pages.
- Household employment in Philadelphia. Watson, Amey Brown (Eaton). 1932. 93 pages.
- State requirements for industrial lighting; a handbook for the protection of women workers, showing lighting standards and practices. Correll, Marie. 1932. 73 pages.
- Bookkeepers, stenographers and office clerks in Ohio, 1914 to 1929. Maher, Amy G. 1932. 39 pages.
- Women office workers in Philadelphia. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1932. 22 pages.
- The employment of women in the sewing trades of Connecticut. 1932. 15 pages.
- Labor laws for women in the states and territories. Hours, home work, prohibited or regulated occupations, seats, minimum wage. Smith, Florence Patteson. 1932. 76 pages.
- The Installation and maintenance of toilet facilities in places of employment. 1933.
- The effects on women of changing conditions in the cigar and cigarette industries. Manning, Caroline. 1932. 194 pages.
- The employment of women in vitreous enameling. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1932. 74 pages.
- Industrial injuries to women in 1928 and 1929 compared with injuries to men. Correll, Marie. 1933. 41 pages.
- Bryn Mawr College. Summer school for women workers in industry. Women workers in the third year of the depression; study by students in Bryn Mawr summer school under direction of Amy Hewes. 1933. 20 pages.
- The occupational progress of women 1910 to 1930. Dempsey, Mary V. 1933. 95 pages.
- A Study of a change from 8 to 6 hours of work. Best, Ethel L. 1933. 18 pages.
- Household employment in Chicago. Johnson, Borghild, Eleanor. 1933. 69 pages.
- Technological changes in relation to women's employment. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1935. 44 pages.
- The effects of the depression on wage earner's families; a second survey of South Bend. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1936. 36 pages.
- The employment of women in the sewing trades of Connecticut; hours and earnings, employment fluctuation, home work, by Manning and Harriet A. Byrne. Manning, Caroline. 1935. 50 pages.
- The change from manual to dial operation in the telephone industry. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1933. 18 pages.
- Hours, earnings, and employment in cotton mills. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1933. 83 pages.
- Standards of Placement Agencies for Household Employees. Correll, Marie. 1934. 73 pages.
- Employment fluctuations and unemployment of women; certain indications from various sources, 1928-31. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1933. 247 pages.
- State reporting of occupational disease; including a survey of legislation applying to women. Mettert, Margaret Thompson. 1934. 104 pages.
- Women at work; a century of industrial change. 1933. 53 pages.
- A study of a change from one shift of 9 hours to two shifts of 6 hours each. Best, Ethel L. 1934. 17 pages.
- The age factor as it relates to women in business and the professions. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1934. 71 pages.
- The employment of women in Puerto Rico. Manning, Caroline. 1934. 39 pages.
- Hours and earnings in the leather-glove industry, by Smaltz and Arcadia N. Phillips. Smaltz, Rebecca Glover. 1934. 37 pages.
- The employment of women in offices. Erickson, Ethel. 1934. 133 pages.
- A survey of the shoe industry in New Hampshire. Peterson, Agnes Lydia. 1935. 105 pages.
- Variations in wage rates under corresponding conditions. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1935. 62 pages.
- Employment in hotels and restaurants. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1936. 112 pages.
- Women in Arkansas industries. Blair, Bertha. 1935. 50 pages.
- Employment conditions in department stores in 1932-33; a study in selected cities of five states. Sullivan, Mary Loretta. 1936. 29 pages.
- Women in Texas industries: hours, wages, working conditions, and home work, by Sullivan and Bertha Blair. Sullivan, Mary Loretta. 1936. 86 pages.
- Hours and earnings in tobacco stemmeries. Manning, Caroline. 1934. 34 pages.
- Potential earning of southern mountaineer handicraft. Nienburg, Bertha M. 1935. 61 pages.
- Industrial injuries to women in 1930 and 1931 compared with injuries to men. Mettert, Mrs Margaret Jane (Thompson). 1935. 62 pages.
- Employed women under N. R. A. codes. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1935. 152 pages.
- Industrial home work in Rhode Island, with special reference to the lace industry, by Byrne and Bertha Blair. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1935. 32 pages.
- Women who work in offices: I. Study of employed women. II. Study of women seeking employment. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1935. 32 pages.
- Employment conditions in beauty shops; a study of four cities. Erickson, Ethel. 1935. 51 pages.
- Summaries of studies on the economic status of women, compiled by the American association of university women. 1935. 23 pages.
- The commercialization of the home through industrial home work. 1935. 54 pages.
- The health and safety of women in industry. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1935. 28 pages.
- Summary of state hour laws for women and minimum-wage rates. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1936. 59 pages.
- Reading list of references on household employment. Brown, Mrs. Jean (Collier). 1936. 23 pages.
- Women unemployed seeking relief in 1933. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1936. 24 pages.
- Reemployment of New England women in private industry. Nienburg, Bertha Marie von der. 1936. 126 pages.
- Piecework in the silk-dress industry; earnings, hours, and production. Best, Ethel. 1936. 73 pages.
- Economic problems of the women of the Virgin Islands of the United States. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1936. 29 pages.
- Factors affecting wages in power laundries, by Nienburg and Bertha Blair. Nienburg, Bertha Marie von der. 1936. 90 pages.
- State labor laws for women; Hours, home work, prohibited or regulated occupations, seats, minimum wage. Smith, Florence Patteson. 1937. 98 pages.
- Special study of wages paid to women and minors in Ohio industries prior and subsequent to the Ohio minimum wage law for women and minors. 1936. 90 pages.
- A policy insuring value to the woman buyer and a livelihood to apparel makers. Bertha Nienburg. 1936. 29 pages.
- Summary of state reports of occupational disease with a survey of preventive legislation 1932 to 1934. Mettert, Mrs. Margaret Jane (Thompson). 1936. 47 pages.
- The employed woman homemaker in the United States; her responsibility for family support. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1936. 27 pages.
- Employment of women in Tennessee industries. Erikson, Ethel. 1937. 68 pages.
- Women's employment in West Virginia. Byrne, Harriet Anne. 1937. 32 pages.
- Injuries to women in personal service occupations in Ohio. Mettert, Mrs. Margaret Jane (Thompson). 1937. 28 pages.
- Differences in the earnings of women and men. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1938. 63 pages.
- Women's hours and wages in the District of Columbia in 1937, by Best and Arthur T. Sutherland. Best, Mrs. Ethel (Lombard). 1937. 49 pages.
- Reading list of references on household employment (October 1937). Brown, Mrs. Jean (Collier). 1938. 25 pages.
- Women in the economy of the United States of America; a summary report. Pidgeon, Mary Elizabeth. 1937. 147 pages.
- State labor laws for women. Smith, Florence Patteson. 1938. 28 pages.