[6] That the ephemeral character of work available for children of fourteen to sixteen years of age is not peculiar to New York City is shown by the following figures from the report of the Maryland Bureau of Statistics for the year 1914. In Maryland, working papers are issued for each separate employment. The number of original applications in one year was 3,580 and the total of subsequent applications, 4,437. Of the 3,580 children 2,006 came back a second time, 1,036 a third time, 561 a fourth, 363 a fifth, 194 a sixth, 116 a seventh, 53 an eighth, 29 a ninth, 18 a tenth, and one child came back for the eighteenth time in a twelvemonth, for working papers. Many of the children told stories of long periods of idleness between employments.—The Author.
[7] While writing this we learn that a child attending a settlement club has been involved in practices that indicate a perversion, but she cannot properly be included in the above classification because of her extreme youth.—The Author.
[8] We have been popularly known as the Nurses’ Settlement, but our corporate name is The Henry Street Settlement.—The Author.
[9] Hat and coat checked without charge.
[10] January 22, 1905.
[11] U. S. Commissioner S. M. Hitchcock’s decision, delivered March 30, 1909.
[12] Now published, with considerable additions, as “Memoirs of a Revolutionist” (Houghton Mifflin Co.).
[13] See “The Life Story of a Russian Exile,” by Marie Suldoff (The Century Co.).
[14] See the sympathetic sketch, “Katharine Breshkovsky,” by Ernest Poole (Charles H. Kerr & Co., Chicago).
[15] Report of the Federal Bureau of Education for 1913 shows 500 of these schools in New York City.