The Library of Congress > Linked Data Service
  Label Dataset Type Subdivision Identifier
81. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Going to work at 5:30 A.M. April 24, 09. Small boy names [i.e., named] Jo. is a sweeper in Mill Mfg. Co. Lewiston, Me. Been there 2 years. I saw him working inside. Said he didn't know how old he was and he couldn't spell his name. Lives 2 miles out in the country and his father drives him out and back every day

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82. [When their mothers work in the factories, the French school children have to get their noon day meal at school. American Red Cross doctors, working in the Villette district of Paris found that the school children weren't getting enough to eat, so the Red Cross is supplementing the school canteen ration with American flour, sugar, beans, ham, condensed milk, tinned beef and cheese]

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Instance 19511355
83. Delano, Jack, 1914-1997 Girls working at the Jones and Laughlin Steel Corporation going home after a day's work. Aliquippa, Pennsylvania

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Instance 19919647
84. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Michael Mero, 2 West 4th St. Bootblack, 12 years of age, working one year of own volition. Don't smoke. Out after 11 P.M. on May 21. Ordinarily works 6 hours per day

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Instance 20685404
85. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Bob Cook and Emmett Capps. Bob works in spinn[in]g room #2. Said he had been working about a year. Began at 35 cents a day, now makes 50 cents. Their family bible gave his birthday June 25, 1901, making him 10 years old. Small boy on left end Emmett Capps been doffing one year. Doesn't seem to be 12 years old. The boys are questionable.

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86. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 [Harry Silverstein, Newsboy, 703 W. 6th St., 7 years old. Sells papers, (selling 3 months average earnings 25 cents per week). Father working Morocco Mills, earns $18 weekly. Boy's earnings not needed at home. Don't smoke. Visits saloons. Works 8 hours per day. Edward F. Brown, Investigator]

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87. Hollem, Howard R. Mrs. Smuda's son. He used to drive a bakery wagon, but now he drives a truck for Uncle Sam. Private Edwin Smuda at camp "somewhere in the South" is one of America's many fighting men with mothers who are working just as hard for Victory as they are. Mrs. Eva Smuda, fifty-five, works eight hours a day in Frankford, Pennsylvania's arsenal where she tapers cartridge cases for 50mm shells. Another mother and son combination that means death to the Axis

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88. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 [Harry Silverstein, Newsboy, 703 W. 6th St., 7 years old. Sells papers, (selling 3 months average earnings 25 cents per week). Father working Morocco Mills, earns $18 weekly. Boy's earnings not needed at home. Don't smoke. Visits saloons. Works 8 hours per day. Edward F. Brown, Investigator]

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Instance 20686578
89. Balkan Pilgrims Applaud America. On St. Basil's Day at the Monastery of Ostrog, in Montenegro, the American Red Cross was loudly acclaimed by a crowd of several hundred pilgrimers, who listened intently to the words of the Priest in praise of the relief work done by the Americans. The group is typical of the people among whom the Red Cross is working, teaching lesson of sanitation as well as reliving the immediate cases of distressing want

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90. When their mothers work in the factories, the French school children have to get their noon day meal at school. American Red Cross doctors, working in the Villette district of Paris found that the school children weren't getting enough to eat, so the Red Cross is supplementing the school canteen ration with American flour, sugar, beans, ham, condensed milk, tinned beef and cheese

BIBFRAME Instances
Instance 19520476
91. When their mothers work in the factories, the French school children have to get their noon day meal at school. American Red Cross doctors, working in the Villette district of Paris found that the school children weren't getting enough to eat, so the Red Cross is supplementing the school canteen ration with American flour, sugar, beans, ham, condensed milk, tinned beef and cheese

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Instance 19511354
92. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Agricultural day laborer wiping the sweat from his neck after his return home from chopping cotton.This man had once been a tenant farmer and had quit farming because of repeated crop failures and inability to secure good farming land; he then became a day laborer, his entire family working with him in the fields. They chopped cotton, hoed corn, picked cotton, cut spinach and picked up potatoes. However, because they had this established tent home on the banks of the Arkansas River and because they worked in and around this neighborhood, they considered themselves a class above the migrant workers who came in to harvest the crops. This man had planted a small garden back of his tent not for the value of the garden since he said that the sun would get it before the vegetables were mature, but because it would prevent any of the migrant families from camping near them. He said, "Those migrants don't live the way we do, course they don't have anything to live with." Near Webbers Falls, Oklahoma

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Instance 19907043
93. Lee, Russell, 1903-1986 Family of migrant agricultural day laborers camped near Spiro, Oklahoma. The man and his wife had farmed in this vicinity for many years. However, they had always been renters. They have found it increasingly difficult to find land and house for rent. They had moved to the river bottom where they were camping out while working in the nearby fields. The mosquitoes were bad. They had to move to higher ground by the roadside. The entire family--mother, father and six children--had malaria. When the man was asked if there was much malaria among the people, he replied, "Yes, they have always started chillin' and they'll keep achillin' till frost, them that don't die." The father and two children were chopping cotton for a dollar a day. The father said "that as soon as they got a few dollars ahead it came a rain and they spent their money before it was dry enough to work again." They had a car and were going on to California as soon as they had enough money. The woman's sister is living in Bakersfield, California, and they want to get out there. "They ain't doing much, but he's making a living and I ain't making it here."

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Instance 19907285
94. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Some results of messenger and newsboy work. For nine years this sixteen year old boy has been newsboy and messenger for drug stores and telegraph companies. He was recently brought before the Judge of the Juvenile Court for incorrigibility at home. Is now out on parole, and was working again for drug company when he got a job carrying grips in the Union Depot. He is on the job from 6:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M. (seventeen hours a day) for seven days in the week. His mother and the Judge think[s] he uses cocaine, and yet they let him put in these long hours every day. He told me "There ain't a house in 'The Acre,' (Red Light) that I ain't been in. At the drug store, all my deliveries were down there." Says he makes from $15.00 to $18.00 a week. Eugene Dalton

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95. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Some results of messenger and newsboy work. For nine years this sixteen year old boy has been newsboy and messenger for drug stores and telegraph companies. He was recently brought before the Judge of the Juvenile Court for incorrigibility at home. Is now out on parole, and was working again for drug company when he got a job carrying grips in the Union Depot. He is on the job from 6:00 A.M. to 11:00 P.M. (seventeen hours a day) for seven days in the week. His mother and the judge think he uses cocaine, and yet they let him put in these long hours every day. He told me "There ain't a house in 'The Acre' (Red Light) that I ain't been in. At the drug store, all my deliveries were down there." Says he makes from $15.00 to $18.00 a week. Eugene Dalton

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96. Vachon, John, 1914-1975 Orange, Texas. Extended school day program in the public schools. These children of working parents, arrive at the schools as early as 6 a.m. to enable parents to get to work on time. They they go back to bed on cots in the school corridor until time for the regular school day to begin. After school, recreation is conducted on a hobby basis until their parents call for them at 6 p.m

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97. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Two families working together on Kimball farm near Waxahachie. The four year old picks nine pounds a day regularly and the eleven year old picks three hundred pounds a day

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98. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Eight-year-old Lizzie, earns 30 cents a day shucking oysters in the Dunbar Cannery. I saw her working steady all day, at top speed. Could not speak a word of English

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99. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 Two families working together on Kimball farm, near Waxahachie. The four year old picks nine pounds a day regularly and the eleven year old picks three hundred pounds a day

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20688455
100. Hine, Lewis Wickes, 1874-1940 I found a girl of 13 working at embroidery in a far corner of a dimly lighted room. The light came from a small gas jet which was high above the girl's head, in the center of the room. She was working on a black dress which was outlined in black pencil. For this dress elaborately embroidered, she received ninety cents. She could embroider one dress in about three or four days if she kept at it steadily. She had been working since 4 P.M., and it was the 7 P.M. She expected to stop at 10:30

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Instance 20689633


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