About This Book
This booklet provides a directory of social agencies that existed in the United States in 1941.
BERTHA F. HULSEMAN was the librarian at the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet provides a directory of social agencies that existed in the United States in 1941.
BERTHA F. HULSEMAN was the librarian at the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet provides a summary of a film about a clerk in need of money after his child falls ill. The clerk borrows money from a loan company at ruinous rates and ends up having to mortgage his furniture. With an attorney’s help, he prevents his furniture from being seized, and thorough membership in a cooperative savings and loan association, he can put money away for the future. The booklet ends by explaining how the film may be obtained.
ARTHUR H. HAM was director of the remedial loans division of the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet reprints an address delivered before the National Conference of Charities and Correction in Indianapolis, Indiana, on May 15, 1916. It includes a list of publications on cooperative credit published by the Russell Sage Foundation. The author argues that it cooperative credit associations are best suited to advancing money to the workingman. He notes that in the United States this type of association is known as a credit union and is designed to encourage thrift, promote industry, and train its members in business methods and self-government.
ARTHUR H. HAM was director of the remedial loans division of the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet provides statistical information, in the form of many tables, on school centers—a school that is used regularly at least one evening a week for two or more activities.
CLARENCE ARTHUR PERRY worked in the Department of Hygiene at the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet presents the draft of the Uniform Small Loan Law, regulating lending in the amounts of $300
This booklet reprints an article published in The Family of July 1930. It notes that during the summer of 1929, at the request of the Family Welfare Association of America, the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation studied the salaries paid by the member agencies of the association. The study included information on the number of weeks of vacation allowed with pay to each worker on the staff. The booklet reports the results of the study.
RALPH G. HURLIN was director of the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet reprints an article from the Proceedings of the Sixtieth Annual Session of the National Conference of Social Work in Detroit in June 1933. The article notes that in 1930, for the first time, the federal census of occupations included in its classification a separate category for social workers. One purpose of the article was to comment on the quality of the data. A second purpose was to present data derived from this first countrywide enumeration concerning the relative number of social workers in different parts of the country in comparison with other professional or near-professional groups.
RALPH G. HURLIN was director of the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet presents the results of a study of salaries and certain related work conditions in the field of medical social work made by the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation in 1937. The study's main purpose was to estimate the current salary levels for various positions in this type of social work and to indicate the variations in these levels. The study was a sequel to one made in 1933, which recorded a general decline in medical social work salaries from 1930 to 1933, and it was planned to show how much improvement, if any, had been realized by these workers during four years of recovery.
RALPH G. HURLIN was director of the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet summarizes statistics of casework operations in 1937 reported monthly to the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation by a selected group of private family welfare agencies. It includes information on the quality of the data, month-to-month changes, active cases per month, and amount of relief per case, among other topics.
RALPH G. HURLIN was director of the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation.
This booklet continues a series of similar annual summaries of operating statistics of private family welfare agencies issued since 1936. It is based on data reported monthly and made available to the reporting agencies and others in a monthly table of comparative statistics.
RALPH G. HURLIN was director of the Department of Statistics of the Russell Sage Foundation.