
- Benton, Caroline French. Woman's Club Work and Programs;
or, first aid to club women. Boston: D. Estes, 1913. E 12mo
#6192
- "[Women's clubs] have instructed those of limited education;
they have given a wider horizon to those hemmed in by
circumstances; ...and, of late years, they have prepared the way
for women of leisure and influence to take up what is called 'the
larger housekeeping,' the bettering of social and civic
conditions." ED, P
- Fryer, Jane Eayre. The Mary Frances Housekeeper, or,
Adventures Among the Doll People. Philadelphia: J.C. Winston,
1916. E #20298
- Mary Frances is a little girl who learns about housekeeping
while creating a home for her paper dolls: "The practical
explanations of household duties and management are woven in so
skillfully that as the story tells how Mary Frances learned to
dust, or sweep, or make beds, the little reader takes it all in
eagerly as part of the story." CH, D, N
- Klickmann, Flora. The Little Girl's Sweet Book.
London: Office of "The Girl's Own Paper and Woman's Magazine",
[191-]. E #20042
- This little book combines narrative, recipes, and charming
illustrations to show girls how to make candy: "Grown-up people
usually like [peppermint creams], so I expect Father and Mother
would enjoy them. And you want everybody to enjoy some of your
sweets, don't you?" C, CH, N
- Klickmann, Flora. The Mistress of the Little House: what
she should know and what she should do when she has an untrained
servant. London: The Girl's Own Paper & Woman's Magazine,
[1912]. E #19476
- This volume is "a collection of practical talks on domestic
topics for those educated women who cannot afford to keep a
properly trained servant, and have to do most of the housework
themselves." D, SR
- Murphy, Claudia Quigley. Wash Day. Chicago: Associated
Corn Products Manufacturers, [1910]. E Pam 12mo #12329
- Advertising ephemera in the form of a tiny booklet on
laundering clothes; topics include "First Aid to Stained Clothes,"
"Sorting," and "Starching." D
- Quale, Carle C. Thrilling Stories of White Slavery.
[s.l: s.n., 1912]. E Pam 12mo #12345
- Quale asserts that cases of white slavery are almost always a
result of some weakness in the woman's fortitude, for which he
condemns society's failure to protect motherhood as "the root of
civilization." N, P
- Rupp, Frederick Augustine. Purity and Truth; letters of a
physician to his daughters on the great black plague.
Philadelphia: Vir Pub. Co., 1910. E 12mo #6216
- The author asserts that ignorance is "the most important factor
in the dissemination of [venereal] diseases," and warns young women
against marrying a man who may have contracted them. H,
S
- Wood-Allen, Mary. Almost a Man. Cooperstown, N.Y.:
Arthur H. Crist Co., 1915. E 12mo #4175
- In this narrative, four teenage boys learn about sexual ethics
from a female doctor: "Sex comes as a wondrous gift from God - a
gift endowed with a marvelous power, and therefore to be held most
sacred." N, R, S
- Wood-Allen, Mary. What a Young Woman Ought to Know.
Philadelphia: Vir Pub. Co., 1913. E 12mo #6160
- "I was reading the other day that the first good lesson for a
young man to learn...is that he is of some importance...and that
the world cannot get along without him. Now if this is true of
young men, I do not see why it is not equally true of young women."
ED, H, M
- Your Daughter's Corset. Niagara Falls, N.Y.: Spirella
Company, [191-]. E Pam 12mo #12376
- "No greater mistake could be made than to assume that because
[your daughter] is young and slight of figure 'Any corset will do
for her.'" F, MO
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