Millinery as a trade for women
Source:
Perry, Lorinda
Millinery as a trade for women
New York, New York: Longmans, Green, and Company, 1916
xi, [8], 134 p. illus. 24 cm.
URL to cite for this work: http://digital.library.wisc.edu/1711.dl/HumanEcol.MBPerryTrade
Contents
[Cover] Millinery as a trade for women
Women's Educational and Industrial Union, Boston. Department of research. Studies in economic relations of women., pp. [i]-[iii] ff.
[Title page] Millinery as a trade for women, p. [vi]
Preface, Kingsbury, Susan M. pp. [vii]-xi ff.
[Contents] Table of contents, pp. [xiii]-[xiv]
[Contents] List of tables, pp. [xv]-[xvii] ff.
[Contents] List of charts, pp. [xix] ff.
Chapter I: Introduction, pp. [1]-11
Chapter II: Description of the millinery trade and of its processes, pp. [12]-26
Chapter III: Classification of shops according to stages of industrial evolution, pp. [27]-43
Chapter IV: The seasons and their problems, pp. [44]-68
Chapter V: Wages, pp. [69]-92
Chapter VI: Millinery workers, pp. [93]-104
Chapter VII: Ways of learning millinery, pp. [105]-127 ff.
Index, pp. 129-134 ff.
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