MC 1148

Inventory to the Mary L. Dyckman Papers

By Bernadette A. Boucher

September 2013

Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries.

Finding aid encoded in EAD, version 2002 by Tara Maharjan, September 2013
Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University received an operating support grant from the New Jersey Historical Commission, a division of the Department of State.

Descriptive Summary

Creator: Dyckman, Mary L.
Title: Mary L. Dyckman Papers
Dates: 1903-1982 (bulk 1940-1972)
Quantity: 2.8 cubic feet (7 manuscript boxes and one oversize folder)
Abstract: This collection consists of the papers of Mary Lang Dyckman, social worker and former president of the Consumers League of New Jersey, from her late school years (1903) to her death in 1984. The collection is 2.8 cubic feet in size and is composed of seven manuscript boxes and one oversize, encapsulated broadside.
Collection No.: MC 1148
Language: English
Repository: Rutgers University Libraries. Special Collections and University Archives

Biographical Sketch

Little is known about Mary Lang Dyckman's youth. She was born in Sleepy Eye, Minnesota, on August 19, 1886, the first child of Frank and Louise (Heroy) Dyckman who were originally from Orange, New Jersey. The family moved back to Orange when Mary was four, and from 1891 to 1905, Mary, known as "Marie" by classmates and friends, attended Miss Beard's School for Girls at Clarendon Place and later Berkeley Avenue. Enjoying astronomy, Mary graduated from the Latin-Scientific course in 1905.

Though Frank Dyckman died in 1904, he wanted his children to have "a lot of varied experiences" and brought Mary to factories in town. At a young age, Mary witnessed the mercury-induced "mad hatter" disease of workers at a South Jefferson Avenue plant, an experience that doubtlessly informed her concerns for occupational hazards and industrial health as an adult. At the age of 16, she and her family also went on a tour of Europe, and it was in Italy that Mary began to develop a life-long interest in the problems of foreign workers. From 1909 to 1911 she trained as a visiting case worker for the Boston Associated Charities, and two years later, she enrolled as a part-time student at the New York School of Social Work. While she was a student, she also worked as a case work visitor in Orange, New Jersey, and in Brooklyn, New York.

Mary Dyckman accepted executive and managerial responsibilities in the field of social work quite soon after her training. Finding her work "exciting," she told one newspaper reporter, "The case-worker lives in the midst of constant crises. From the moment a woman stands before her desk and says, ‘my husband left me last night,' or ‘my daughter didn't come home last night,' there is need for her to act. Once you have done this kind of work you will miss it amazingly if you withdraw. You miss the stimulation, the contacts, the demands on your resourcefulness." From April 1914 to June 1917 she was the District Secretary of the Bureau of Associated Charities in Newark, where she sought out and trained both paid workers and volunteers for an Italian district in the city. Her office saw over 400 cases per year. She also aided in raising funds and spoke in various clubs and churches on behalf of the needy. From August 1917 to December 1921, Mary Dyckman served as Executive Secretary for the League for Friendly Service of Bloomfield and Glen Ridge, New Jersey. In this capacity she saw 170-200 families each year, as well as assisted the General Finance Committee and the Anti-Tuberculosis Committee in publicity and fund-raising. For three years, Dyckman was also the Assistant Financial Secretary for the New York Charity Organization Society. From the late 1920s through the early 1930s she acted as Chair of the Case Work Committee of the Family Welfare Association of America. By the Great Depression, Mary Dyckman was recognized for her political sway throughout northern New Jersey. In 1930, she helped organize a concerned group of citizens to urge the sale of Orange's municipal light plant, and this move was passed through referendum. As the Republican County Committeewoman of her district and a member of the state Republican Club and League of Women Voters, her voice was so influential that a newspaper article (circa 1932) acknowledged, "for eleven years a candidate not backed by Miss Dyckman was conceded no chance of success in the district."

Following her retirement from professional work in 1936, Mary Dyckman turned to volunteer work and began to focus especially on the plight of working children. At this point in her life, she also became heavily involved in the Consumers League of New Jersey. Under the slogan of "Know the facts -- then act!," this group, organized by Mrs. G.W.B. (Juliet) Cushing in 1900, sought to improve the working and living conditions of laborers through the influence of customers' patronage of manufacturers, businesses and political leaders. The League also supported protective legislation, such as a Night Work Bill (1923) which barred women in bakeries, laundries and factories from working after 10 pm Mary Dyckman was elected to the CLNJ's Executive Board in 1938 and chaired an inter-organization committee to address violations to children's physical, psychological and moral well-being allowed by contemporary child labor laws. Her efforts, and those of the committee, led to New Jersey's Child Labor Act of 1940, which both raised the minimum working age for children and also lessened the weekly number of hours children could work, stipulating that no children, even those employed in agriculture, could work if they were under the age of 12, and that both in- and out-of-state children under the age of 16 could not work in New Jersey during hours that school was in session.

Each decade brought new threats to the existing child labor law. Dyckman and the Consumers League of New Jersey, which Dyckman led as its president from 1944-1956, sought to combat these challenges by voicing their support and dissent for many key pieces of legislation that were proposed. From 1941 to 1945, labor shortages and the need for military manufacturers increased demands upon child labor, and Dyckman took it upon herself to oversee youngsters' involvement in the necessary wartime production. When the New Jersey State Commission on Student Service was established to provide programs for 14- and 15 year-olds to be released from school to work on farms, Mary Dyckman served on this commission and visited the camps. When another emergency act extended working hours for minors from 8 to 10 hours a day in essential wartime industries, Dyckman served as an appointee to the Emergency Child Labor Committee. In this capacity, she reviewed businesses' applications to employ youngsters during the extended hours and investigated, approved or revoked the petitions as she and other committee members saw fit. Dyckman and the Consumers League also vigorously opposed various New Jersey State bills that were introduced by legislators pressured by key industries in their districts. For example, S-88 proposed that boys of 15 should be allowed to work as pinsetters in bowling alleys until 12:30 am. The Consumers League believed that it was unjust that children's health and performance at school be endangered for the enjoyment of adults. Another argument of Dyckman's and the League's was that the health of older adolescents needed to be protected in case they were drafted into the armed forces if the war continued, leading them to campaign against A-210, which sought to allow the Commissioner of Labor to suspend the entire Child Labor Law for the canning industries.

Throughout the 1950s and 1960s, there were other campaigns to weaken child labor laws as a response to growing rates of child delinquency. Many educators, correctional officers and judges such as Judge William G. Long urged that maladjusted or idle youngsters be allowed to work so as to reduce the risk of their falling into delinquency. Such proponents of slackening the child labor law also pointed to technological and safety improvements in machinery and equipment which made working safer and thus rendered many of the protections of the child labor law unnecessary. Mary Dyckman and the Consumers League aggressively opposed these contentions, arguing, for one, that children were already allowed to work after school and during summer vacation, keeping them quite busy. In addition, the League felt it was unfair to thrust problem children into the hands of employers. Dyckman and the League also pointed to contemporary statistics and horror stories of children maimed and killed in the workplace. Mary Dyckman was in favor of a 1953 New Jersey bill (S-234) that set up an apprenticeship program to assist in the occupational adjustment of young adults. She also followed actions of the 1959 White House Conference on Education, as well as the subsequent New Jersey Citizens Committee on Children and Youth.

Another area that drew Mary Dyckman's attention was the predicament of migrant workers. Her interest in migrants can be seen to be related to her efforts to protect child workers, since agricultural establishments were often exempt from child labor law provisions. This exception to the law involved Dyckman in the other problems of agricultural migrant laborers, which included permanent injuries and disfigurements from accidents with equipment, unsanitary living conditions and the lack of schooling for migrant children. In 1944-1945 Mary Dyckman compiled a brief of recommendations and submitted it to then-Governor Walter E. Edge, leading to the Migrant Law of 1945 -- the first of its kind in the United States.

Dyckman also supported a minimum wage and increased provisions for worker's compensation. Although a state minimum wage bill was passed in 1954 (providing for 75 cents per hour and time and a half for overtime in non-agricultural pursuits) and this bill did not cover women and children, the battle over who would issue working permits for children remained contested throughout the 1950s and 1960s. The eligibility of young people to receive worker's compensation was also a hotly debated topic. A key example of both questions coming into play was the struggle over the status of 25,000 boys delivering newspapers in New Jersey. S-184 (1964) moved to shift the responsibility of issuing permits from schools and place it with the employers, a group who clearly had financial interests at stake. Dyckman and the Consumers League of New Jersey argued that this legislation would inhibit youngsters from reporting complaints about their employers since the employers could revoke the permits. S-134 of 1965 was also opposed by the League, since it defined newsboys as "merchants," who were by definition unable to receive worker's compensation. Such legislation, it was feared, would open the door for other industries to apply for similar treatment. Despite the League's opposition, however, these bills passed.

From the mid-1960s through the last days of her life, Mary Dyckman continued to be interested in the physical and social well-being of her neighbors in New Jersey. Among the issues on which she maintained files were gun control, taxes, identification cards for children and radiation. In the later years of her life, Dyckman saw many of the protections she and the Consumers League had secured erode -- particularly those for girls and women. In her eyes as well as those of many of her contemporaries, the social changes that admitted women into the workplace -- including the permitting of girls to deliver newspapers and women to work at night -- were an undoing of the early law that protected women's health, and, by extension, that of their families and society. During these years, the words she had shared with a news reporter in the 1930s echoed: "It is creative work. People don't change, but our understanding of them does. We are building with human material. Sometimes, to be sure, the house we have built up with such care falls down." Indeed, Mary Lang Dyckman was an architect, supplier, carpenter, maintenance worker and restorer, of both human health and the human spirit.

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Scope and Content Note

This collection consists of the papers of Mary Lang Dyckman, social worker and former president of the Consumers League of New Jersey, from her late school years (1903) to her death in 1984. The collection is 2.8 cubic feet in size and is composed of seven manuscript boxes and one oversize, encapsulated broadside.

The Mary Dyckman Papers are divided into four sections: personal correspondence and miscellany (13 folders), files documenting Dyckman's major involvements in social reforms (2.2 cubic feet), subject files (0.7 cubic feet) and reference publications (8 folders).

The files which document Mary Dyckman's personal interests and correspondence include biographical materials such as photographs, self-authored curriculum vitae, press clippings, papers of Louise Dyckman and Richard Dyckman (Mary's mother and brother), awards, letters of recognition and letters from friends and acquaintances.

The materials which document Mary Dyckman's substantial activity in social causes include files on child labor, migrant labor and worker's compensation. Papers concerning short-term or sporadically-documented interests, such as gun control and minimum wage, are preserved in the subject files. Many of the booklets, pamphlets, reports and other materials Dyckman used to inform herself and others about social concerns are found in the reference publication files.

The bulk of the Mary Dyckman papers pertains to her activities in the 1940s, 1950s and 1960s, after her retirement from professional work. The documentation of that period is enriched with copies of legislation, articles and press clippings, statements, and state and federal publications. Unfortunately, there is little evidence of her early work in social welfare and politics, such as with the Boston Associated Charities or as Republican Committeewoman of her district in Orange. Also, a key accomplishment for which Dyckman has been recognized, chairing an inter-organization committee to negotiate the 1940 Child Labor Act, is scantily represented in the collection. Further documentation of the child labor campaign, as well as Dyckman's advocacy of a minimum wage and improved conditions for migrant laborers, can be found in the Consumers League of New Jersey records (Manuscript Collection 1090) in Special Collections and University Archives.

Mary Dyckman composed several drafts of her letters and retained numerous copies of her correspondence and reference materials. When identical, one copy has been retained and the rest discarded. In order to preserve as much information about Dyckman as possible, brittle papers and small, loose notepad sheets have been photocopied and the originals discarded. Press clippings from various local papers which document Dyckman's activities and interests have also been photocopied.

Within this collection there are several photographs, maintained within their original files, including Mary Dyckman and friends at the Beard School, 1903 (filed under "Biographical Data"); students working under the Student Service Commission and Victory Farm Volunteers, circa 1942-1945; a migrant shack in Marlboro, New Jersey, circa late 1950s-early 1960s; and Dyckman attending a retirement party, 1964. In addition, there are four small, folded broadsides, 1936-1937, concerning local taxation, printed by the Princeton University Local Government Survey, and an oversize broadside pertaining to Richard Dyckman.

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Restrictions

No restrictions.

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Administrative Information

Preferred Citation

Mary L. Dyckman Papers. MC 1148. Special Collections and University Archives, Rutgers University Libraries.

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Detailed Description of the Collection/Container List

This section provides descriptions of the materials found within each series. Each series description is followed by a container list, which gives the titles of the "containers" (for example, folders, volumes, or cassettes) and their locations in the numbered boxes that comprise the collection. The availability of any digital items from a container is indicated with a hyperlink.

PERSONAL CORRESPONDENCE, 1936-1971
Arrangement: Arranged alphabetically by last name of correspondent in two sequences.
Summary: Primarily letters from individuals relating the Dyckman's personal concerns and involvement in various family, community and political issues, mostly unrelated to her work in the Consumers League of New Jersey. This series includes, for example, responses to her comments on President Lyndon B. Johnson's "Message on Improving the Political Process in America" (1967). These files also contain scattered materials from and about personal colleagues, acquaintances and friends, such as articles and publications they wrote, Christmas cards and friendly letters they sent, newspaper items mentioning them and obituaries. There are individual folders for the correspondence of Joseph A. Califano (Special Assistant to President Johnson), Richard Dyckman (Mary's brother), Samuel J. Ferster (a judge who served with Mary Dyckman on the Emergency Child Labor Commission), Doctor Alice Hamilton (president of the National Consumers League), Mrs. Ruth Manley, Carl Holderman (New Jersey Labor Commissioner) and James E. Siddell (a member of the National Committee on Child Labor), in addition to a "miscellaneous" folder of single items.
Of note in this series are two photographs of Mary Dyckman at the retirement party of Mrs. Thomas McCardle (1964). Also interesting are acknowledgments of Dyckman's financial contributions to the Brooklyn Bureau of Charities (1936), the Survey Committee on Case Work of the Welfare Federation of Oranges-Maplewood (1943), the Local Assistance Board of the City of Orange (1960) and the New Jersey Audubon Society (1967). There is also an oversize broadside advertizing a presentation to the given by Richard Dyckman to the Washington Club, discussing the state of Singapore before the Japanese invasion (1942).
Box Folder
1 1 Califano, Joseph A., Jr., 1967 and undated
2 Dyckman, Richard, 1918, 1947-1950 and undated
3 Ferster, Samuel J., 1950s and undated
4 Hamilton, Alice, Dr., 1950s and undated
5 Manley, Ruth, 1962-1964
6 Meyner, Robert, and Carl Holderman, 1958
7 Sidell, James E., 1940, 1945 and 1958-1960
8 Miscellaneous, 1930s-1970s
oversize Dyckman, Richard, 1942
PERSONAL MISCELLANY, 1903-1977
Arrangement: Arranged alphabetically by subject headings.
Summary: Primarily biographical data about Mary Dyckman as well as material relating to several personal, non-work related interests. Includes information about the Beard School in Orange, the 1910 play "Chanticler," Mrs. Frank H. Dyckman (Mary's mother) and Thomas Edison's estate and laboratory. The bulk of the papers in these files consists of press clippings and bulletins. Of special interest are several early photographs of Mary Dyckman and the grounds of the Beard School (1903) and a concise, self-authored "Experience Record" (1923) which highlights Dyckman's early training and experience in charity and social work. Also included are two statements of "Biographical Data" dating from 1957 and 1958.
Box Folder
1 9 Biographical Data, 1903-1977 and undated
10 Beard School, 1941-1970
11 “Chanticler” play, 1910
12 Mrs. Frank H. Dyckman, 1944-1945
13 Edison’s Home and Workshop, 1972-1975 and undated
CHILD LABOR FILES, 1940-1974
Arrangement: Grouped chronologically.
Summary: Materials documenting Mary Dyckman's involvement with working children, especially during World War II and during her 1944-1956 presidency of the Consumers League of New Jersey. Includes papers relating to her interest and service in the State Commission on Student Service (1941-1946), the Emergency Child Labor Committee (1941-1948), the correction of juvenile delinquency (1953-1959) and the protection of child newspaper deliverers (1947-1967), as well as her following of child-labor related issues such as workplace accidents and occupational hazards, changes in state and federal child labor law, apprenticeships and vocational schools, and various child labor and education conferences. The materials exist in many different formats, including incoming letters, copies of outgoing letters, meeting notes and minutes, reports, statements, and magazine and press clippings, as well as broadsides, pamphlets, administrative forms and other publications authored by federal and state authorities, the Consumers League and other concerned social and political organizations.
Rather than following a folder arrangement of strict chronological order, some folders are grouped together under subject heading names, rather than separated by individual folder dates. For example, papers regarding the Student Service Commission (1941-1946) and the Emergency Child Labor Committee (1941-1948) appear between a transcript of a 1941 hearing and a folder of press clippings from 1941-1945.
Of note are several photographs and negatives of farming camps set up by the Student Service Commission, and extensive coverage of the program at the Peddie School of Hightstown, New Jersey. Also recorded are the establishment and achievements of the Victory Farm Volunteers with photographs of the students. Documentation of Commissioner Harry Harper's controversial dismissal of members of the Emergency Child Labor Commission and accusations of conflict of interest may also prove interesting. The series also includes Dyckman's influential statement to the New Jersey Juvenile Delinquency Study Commission (November 30, 1955).
Box Folder
1 14 “Child Labor in Agriculture,” 1940
15 Children in Bowling Alleys and Other Places of Entertainment, 1940-1965
16 [Transcript of a Hearing on Children and Unemployment], 1941
17-19 Student Service Commission, April 1941-December 1942
Box Folder
2 1-4 Student Service Commission, July 1942-1946
5-7 Emergency Child Labor Committee, 1941-June 1944
8 Emergency Child Labor Committee, Controversy over Commissioner Harper and Food Stores, 1944 and 1948
9-10 Emergency Child Labor Committee, July 1944-1945
11 News Clippings, 1941-1945
12 Children and Accidents, 1942, 1947-1953 and 1955
13 Reports of YMCA Workshops, 1943
14 Victory Farm Volunteers, 1943-1946
15 Legislative Involvement, Especially Concerning Hazardous Materials, 1946-1959.
Box Folder
3 1 Occupational Adjustment, Apprenticeships and Vocational Schools, 1947-1958
2 White House Conference on Children and Youth, 1949-1950
3 Children and Farm Labor, 1950-1956
4 Legislative Debates over Changing Child Labor Laws, 1951-1957
5-6 Juvenile Delinquency, 1953-1955
7 Juvenile Delinquency, New Jersey Supreme Court Action, 1955-1957
8 Juvenile Delinquency, Judge Long and Reaction to his Statements, 1955-1958
9-10 Juvenile Delinquency, 1956-1959
11 Children and Gas Stations, 1955-1958
12 NJ 142 (Religious Organizations and Underage Payroll Carriers), 1956-1957
13 Correspondence, 1958-1960
14 White House Conference on Education, and Other Conferences, 1958-1960
Box Folder
4 1 News clippings, 1961-1963
2 Newsboys, Background Concerning NJ S-184, 1947-May 1964
3 Newsboys, May 1964-January 1965
4 Newsboys, NJ S-134, February-May 1965
5 Newsboys, NJ S-445, 1967
6-7 Occupational Hazards and Legislation, 1963-1968
8-9 McDonough (Identification) Bill, 1969-1971 and undated
10 Child Labor Laws, 1940s vs. 1966-1970
11 Legislation, 1969-1972
12 Public Conferences and Hearings, 1971-1974
MIGRANT LABOR FILES, 1932(1945)-1966
Arrangement: Grouped chronologically.
Summary: Documentation of Dyckman's work towards improving living and working conditions of migrant laborers, especially children. Included are articles and press clippings, booklets, studies and reports, as well as correspondence, meeting notes and conference records. Dates appearing on folders often overlap.
Of note in this series are the statements of New Jersey Senator Harrison A. Williams, Jr., and the New Jersey Farm Bureau at a 1959 Senate Public Hearing on Farm Labor, as well as Dyckman's notes on this event. Also interesting is the public's and Dyckman's own response to "The Forgotten People" (1959) and "Harvest of Shame" (1960), a report and a documentary both concerning the deprivations faced by migrant laborers. Included with materials about "The Forgotten People" is a photograph of a dwelling on a farm in Marlboro, Monmouth County, New Jersey, which was used in "The Forgotten People."
Box Folder
5 1 Migrant Labor Studies, 1932 and 1945
2 Recommendations to Governor Edge, 1940(1944-1945)1966
3 Newspaper clippings, 1940s, 1967 and undated
4 Reference Publications and Letters, 1945(1959)-1966
5 Peonage, 1950
6 Correspondence, 1957-1962
7 Hearing of the Senate Subcommittee on Migrant Labor, 1959
8 “The Forgotten People,” 1959
9 “Harvest of Shame,” 1960-1961
10 Meetings and Conferences, 1960-1961
11 Correspondence, 1963-1966
WORKER'S COMPENSATION FILES, 1936(1947)-1965
Arrangement: Arranged chronologically by date of a bill's introduction.
Summary: Materials documenting Dyckman's interest and involvement with various proposed New Jersey state laws and regulations regarding worker's compensation, particularly with the effects this legislation could have on children who delivered newspapers. These papers consist of notes, correspondence, press clippings and copies of legislative bills.
Box Folder
5 12 NJ S-278, 1948 and 1951
13 NJ S-101, 1957
14 NJ S-179 and S-184, 1959 and 1964
15 NJ S-184 and NJ S-134, 1964-1965
SUBJECT FILES, 1928-1982
Arrangement: Arranged alphabetically by subject headings.
Summary: Materials reflecting Dyckman's attention to a variety of community and social issues, such as gun control, public health services, minimum wage, women and night work, radiation, taxes and wards of the state. These papers exist in many formats, including minutes, notes, correspondence, article and press clippings, and pamphlets.
This series includes information on Mary Dyckman's involvement as chair of the Case Work Group of the Council of Social Agencies of the Oranges and Maplewood (late 1920s-early 1930s), including minutes and correspondence. The series also contains four small posters on the subject of taxes printed by the Princeton University Local Government Survey (1936-1937). Also of importance is a folder containing key papers regarding the Consumers League of New Jersey - its constitution, an 18-page draft ("How It Works," circa 1950) about the League's history and goals, and an "Executive Committee Report" (1950) and "Report of President" (1951) authored by Dyckman. The contents of this folder also document the ambitious drive for increased membership undertaken by Dyckman and the League in the late 1950s and early 1960s.
Box Folder
6 1 Black Lung, 1970 and 1982
2 Case Work Committee, 1928-1933
3 Community Involvements, Miscellaneous, 1941-1965
4 Consumers League, Important Papers and Membership Drive, 1930s-1960s
5 Consumers League, Annual Social Dinners, 1950s
6 Contact Committee and Other Early Community Involvements, 1929-1938
7 Equal Rights, 1942-1945 and 1972
8 Farm Security, 1944
9 Food Purity and Price-fixing, 1941-1942 and undated
10 Gun Control, 1968
11 Health Services for New Jersey, 1939-1952
12 League of Women Voters, 1945, 1977-1978 and undated
13-14 Minimum Wage, 1930s-1972
15 National Sharecropper’s Fund and Southwest Alabama Farmers Cooperative Association, 1965-1973
16 Night Work and Women, 1940s, 1958, 1960 and 1968
17 Occupational Diseases, 1928, 1944, 1946 and 1979
18 Orange Light and Power Referendum, early 1930s and 1949
19 Radiation, 1964-1976
20 Taxes, 1936-1937
21 Taxes, 1975-1978
Box Folder
7 1 Wage Payment, 1952, 1963 and 1965
2 Wards of the State, 1939 and undated
3 Welfare, 1943-1960
4 World War II, Soldiers and Society, 1940s
REFERENCE PUBLICATIONS AND CORRESPONDENCE, 1904-1976
Arrangement: Arranged alphabetically by subject headings.
Summary: A collection of pamphlets, booklets, letters and other items used as reference materials. These materials pertain to charity and case work, child labor and delinquency, child agricultural labor, newsboys and worker's compensation, and church sermons. Materials in many formats appear, including pamphlets, booklets, reprints of legislation, statistics, press releases, testimony, addresses, reports and clippings. The publications were issued by concerned individuals, organizations and governmental authorities.
Box Folder
7 5 Charity and Case Work, 1904-1915, 1955 and undated
6 Charity and Case Work, Charity Organization Bulletin, 1914-1916
7 Child Labor, Agricultural, 1935-1956
8 Child Labor, General, 1923-1950
9-10 Child Labor, Including Delinquency, 1951-1973
11 Newsboys and Worker’s Compensation, 1948-1965
12 Church Sermons, 1960 and 1976