- Abel, Mary Hinman. Practical Sanitary and Economic Cooking
Adapted to Persons of Moderate and Small Means. [Rochester,
N.Y.]: The American public health association, 1890. E 12mo
#5933
- Abel explains how to make the most of foods like stale bread,
sour milk, and tougher cuts of meat, as well as minimize fuel use
and organize shopping expeditions for optimum efficiency.
C, D
- Allen, Monfort B., M.D. and Amelia C. McGregor, M.D. The
Glory of Woman; or, love, marriage, and maternity. Chicago:
J.S. Ziegler, 1896. (not yet cataloged)
- Contains "full information on all the marvelous and complex
matters pertaining to women," including detailed medical advice,
anatomical diagrams, and hints on beauty, courtship, marriage, and
motherhood. E, F, H, M, MO
- Deshon, George. Guide for Catholic Young Women: especially
for those who earn their own living. New York: Columbus Pub.
Co., 1893. E 12mo #6495
- Advice and encouragement for working Catholic women: "...your
condition of life is one of the very best in which God could place
you, and it is a great privilege for you to be in it rather than in
any other." E, ED, M, R, W
- Household News [serial]. Philadelphia: Household News
Co., Ltd., 1895. E Pam #6895, v.3, no.6 Library has: v.3, no.5-6
(May-June 1895).
- Articles on cookery, current events, and self-development:
"...a woman who does her own housework need not be slow in
cultivating a taste for art and literature. Toward this end, if she
lives simply, though well, she can usually have restful intervals
for reading." C, H, P, PA

- The Ladies' World [serial]. New York: S.H. Moore &
Co., 1896. E Pam ff#139, v.17 no.3
- This women's magazine features an article entitled "Bicycling
as an Ideal Exercise": "To appeal to tired women with illness and
vexed with numberless cares, we must show them an exercise
combining the maximum of pleasure and the minimum of hard work.
This we find in the wheel." C, D, F, H, M, N,
PA
- Minnie Albright's Experience: or, a friendly warning to
young ladies forming acquaintance with strangers... Boston:
Cornhill Printing Company, 1895. E Pam 12mo #12277
- "Never be too hasty for a home or a husband; but know
thoroughly the character and family of the man you are to marry, or
else, like poor Minnie, you will make a perfect wreck of your
life." M, N
- Moss, Catherine. Every-Day Work in the Household: a book
for girls in domestic service... London: Bemrose, 1892. LSC
596
- "Remember that your mistress has many, very many things to
think about - more than you can possibly imagine very likely, for
you cannot know all she does." A manual for domestic servants with
advice on washing up, storing food, sweeping, waiting at table, and
general household conduct. D, E, SR
- Paine, Harriet Eliza. The Unmarried Woman. New York:
Dodd, Mead, 1892. E 12mo #5795
- "Is there...any intrinsic reason why it is better to marry than
to live alone?" Paine examines the difficulties and opportunities
of single life, the importance of friends, aging, and "the home
instinct." M, P
- Parloa, Maria. Miss Parloa's Young Housekeeper.
Boston: Estes & Lauriat, 1897. E 12mo #6153
- "A young woman who would create an ideal home must possess some
judgment, and a heart in which charity and sympathy have a large
place." Includes recipes and hints for furnishing a home, buying
and preserving food, and organizing household work. C,
D

- The Queen of Fashion [serial]. New York: McCall Co.,
1895. E Pam ff#140, v.22 no.7
- This serial contains fiction and fashion tips, as well as
social commentary: "The American woman, by her reading, is
developing marvelously in a political way and attaining such
knowledge as will make her a power in influencing the home circle
even if it has no effect on helping her to obtain suffrage."
F, H, N, P, PA
- Ryder, Annie H. Go Right On, Girls! Develop your bodies,
your minds, your characters. Boston: D. Lothrop Company,
[1891]. E 12mo #5932
- The author encourages girls to be confident and self-accepting:
"...great wrong lies in our being so blind, so dull, so indifferent
to ourselves as not to recognize the fact that we ourselves have
gifts, every girl of us." CH, E, ED, H, PA
- The Woman's Book. New York: C. Scribner's sons, 1894.
E #19588
- These two substantial volumes address "the modern conditions of
home-life, self-support, education, opportunities, and every-day
problems." D, ED, F, M, MO, PA, W
Subject Guide
Throughout this bibliography, these subject letter codes are
used to identify works relating to a particular topic. The guide is
displayed at the bottom of each page.
- C = Cookery
- CH = Children's prescriptive literature
- D = Domestic management
- E = Etiquette/conduct
- ED = Education
- F = Fashion/beauty
- H = Health
- M = Marriage
- MO = Motherhood
- N = Narrative/fiction/poetry
- P = Political and social issues
- PA = Pastimes
- R = Religious life/morality
- RF = Reference works
- S = Sexuality
- SR = Servants
- W = Work/employment outside the home