Some Ethical Gains Through Legislation
By MRS. FLORENCE KELLEY.
The book has grown out of the author’s experience as Chief Inspector of Factories in Illinois from 1893 to 1897, as Secretary of the National Consumers’ League from 1899 till now, and chiefly as a resident at Hull-House, and later at the Nurses’ Settlement, New York.
“Mrs. Kelley’s primary aim is to set forth the results achieved by the agitation and education of the past decade or so in certain social directions—in the recognition of the children’s right to childhood and to instruction and to opportunity, of the adult’s right to leisure, of woman’s right to the ballot, and of the purchaser’s right to genuine honest products. Her secondary aim is to show how much remains to be achieved, and what obstacles the friends of anti-child-labor legislation, eight-hour laws, pure food and correct label laws, woman suffrage and so on, have to surmount.”—The Record-Herald, Chicago.
Cloth, leather back, 341 pp., 12 mo., $1.25 net. Citizen’s Library.
ON SOME CONDITIONS OF CHILD LIFE
The Bitter Cry of the Children
By JOHN SPARGO, Author of “Socialism.”
“‘There have been many books written about the children of the poor, but none of them gives us so impressive a statement as is contained here of the most important and powerful cause of poverty.’ This prefatory judgment of Robert Hunter will be handed on by everyone who reads.... The book will live and set hundreds of teachers and social workers and philanthropists to work.... School teachers need this book, social workers, librarians, pastors, editors, all who want to understand the problem of poverty or education.”—William H. Allen in The Annals of the American Academy.
16 + 257 pages, 12 mo., $1.25 net.