The Child Workers of the Nation: Proceedings of the Fifth Annual Conference, Chicago, Illinois, January 21-23, 1909American academy of political and social science, 1909 - 244ÆäÀÌÁö |
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... moral compact . No one can waive it for himself , through his youth or his ig- norance , because of the mutuality of all the obligations of the universal compact . He cannot lose it by misfortune for which he is not responsible . If he ...
... moral compact . No one can waive it for himself , through his youth or his ig- norance , because of the mutuality of all the obligations of the universal compact . He cannot lose it by misfortune for which he is not responsible . If he ...
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... moral relations with all the world , and to assure peace , security , equality of right and the utmost of opportunity to every soul in the republic . All that is inbred in us , but there is one thing that is not , and that is regard for ...
... moral relations with all the world , and to assure peace , security , equality of right and the utmost of opportunity to every soul in the republic . All that is inbred in us , but there is one thing that is not , and that is regard for ...
7 ÆäÀÌÁö
... moral one we will not forever hesitate at the point where it is necessary to compel people to do some things as well as not to do other things . Resources alone can never provide the ballast necessary to the equipoise of a nation . The ...
... moral one we will not forever hesitate at the point where it is necessary to compel people to do some things as well as not to do other things . Resources alone can never provide the ballast necessary to the equipoise of a nation . The ...
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... moral purpose have been the warp , as much as the wealth of a new continent has been the woof , of our civilization . There was something in the blood of our fathers ; there is something in the blood which all the nations are ...
... moral purpose have been the warp , as much as the wealth of a new continent has been the woof , of our civilization . There was something in the blood of our fathers ; there is something in the blood which all the nations are ...
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... moral one to quicken their interest in the conservation of American child- hood . It has been the political assumption of the Republic that none other is necessary . But it must begin to be evident that even the economic interests of an ...
... moral one to quicken their interest in the conservation of American child- hood . It has been the political assumption of the Republic that none other is necessary . But it must begin to be evident that even the economic interests of an ...
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age limit amendments attendance badges bill boys census cent Chairman charity Chicago chil Child Labor Committee child labor law children under fourteen children under sixteen Children's Bureau compulsory education conference cotton mill delinquency discussion district dren duty effect employer employment certificates employment of children enacted enforcement establishments evil exemptions fact factory inspector farm Federal Children's Bureau FLORENCE KELLEY fourteen and sixteen girls Government grade Hull House Illinois important industry inspection interest investigation Isaac N JANE ADDAMS Juvenile Court Kentucky legislation legislature manufacturers ment Mississippi moral National Child Labor newsboys newspapers night number of children o'clock organization parents permits physical present problem prohibition protection public schools question record regulation result Secretary secure selling papers session South Carolina statistics street trades things tion truant officers twelve wages week women York young
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92 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... occupations by which selfish man makes his living. But if what I have said is true, you will at once challenge my statements by demanding an explanation of the presence of child labor in these trades. Frankly admitting the selfish motives of manufacturers, I will endeavor to show the influences which are at work on this problem, and you will please bear in mind that I am speaking of the Northern and Eastern states, where only children who are over fourteen years of age, working not more than...
44 ÆäÀÌÁö - The said bureau shall investigate and report to said Department upon all matters pertaining to the welfare of children and child life among all classes of our people, and shall especially investigate the questions of infant mortality, the birth rate, orphanage, juvenile courts, desertion, dangerous occupations, accidents and diseases of children employment, legislation affecting children in the several States and Territories.
173 ÆäÀÌÁö - No child under fourteen years of age shall be employed, permitted or suffered to work in or in connection with any factory, workshop, mine, mercantile establishment, store, business office, telegraph office, restaurant, hotel, apartment house, or in the distribution or transmission of merchandise or messages.
5 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... which was expecting to continue indefinitely and was always looking for profits, its officers would do all they could to enlarge the efficiency of boys and girls, because they would know that such efficiency was the thing above all others to reinforce life and assure the repetition of dividends. If we had a king whom we sustained in the delusion or pretense that he was a sort of father to us all, he would be likely to...
28 ÆäÀÌÁö - Does not the importance of this call for the best statesmanship that our country can produce? I ask you to consider whether this call for the children's interests does not imply the call for our country's interests? Can we afford to take it? Can we afford not to take it? For humanity, for social well-being, for the security of the Republic's future, let us bring the child into the sphere of our national care and solicitude.
180 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... able to read and write simple sentences in the English language, and has received during such period instruction in reading, spelling, writing, English grammar and geography and is familiar with the fundamental operations of arithmetic up to and including fractions.
141 ÆäÀÌÁö - It is competent for the state to forbid the employment of children in certain callings, merely because it believes such prohibition to be for their best interest, although the prohibited employment does not involve a direct danger to morals, decency, or of life or limb. Such legislation is not an unlawful interference with the parents' control over the child or right to its labor, nor with the liberty of the child.
50 ÆäÀÌÁö - It is the purpose of this paper to review a few of the typical questions that have not been solved, as an introduction to the discussions that are to follow. Perhaps the questions requiring most immediate attention may be divided for convenience as follows : — (1) What classes of children should be entirely eliminated as a factor in the industrial problem? (2) From what industries should all children be eliminated? (3) What regulations should govern the conditions of the children who may wisely...
25 ÆäÀÌÁö - Evils that are unknown or underestimated have the best chance for undisturbed existence and extension, and there where light is most needed, there is still darkness. Ours is, for instance, the only great nation which does not know how many children are born and how many die in each year within its borders ; still less do we know how many die in infancy of preventable diseases ; how many blind children might have seen the...
184 ÆäÀÌÁö - ... more than forty-eight hours in any one week, nor more than eight hours in any one day ; or before the hour of seven o'clock in the morning or after the hour of seven o'clock in the evening. Every employer shall post in a conspicuous place in every room where such minors are employed a printed notice stating the hours required of them each...