THE FARMERS IN CONTROL 



injured and crippled persons to industry, to 

 find work for them if possible, and to co- 

 operate for that purpose with the Federal 

 Board of Vocational Education. 



House Bill No. 184 takes the "lives, health, 

 and morals of women and minor workers" 

 under the protection of the Workmen's Com- 

 pensation Bureau, which is authorized to fix 

 for such workers standard conditions and 

 hours of employment and a standard mini- 

 mum wage. House Bill No. 186 forbids the 

 employment of women in manufacturing and 

 similar enterprises for more than 8^/2 hours 

 in any one day nor more than 48 hours in 

 any week. 



House Bill No. 57, approved February 14, 

 1919, forbids the issuing of an injunction or 

 restraining order in a labor dispute "unless 

 necessary to prevent irreparable injury to 

 property or to a property right of the party 

 making the application, for which injury 

 there is no adequate remedy at law." House 

 Bill No. 163 requires the use of the union 

 label on all the state printing. Senate Bill 

 No. 85 is the so-called Full Train Crew law 

 that has been enacted in Illinois and other 

 states. 



One of the bills of this session that attracted 

 wide attention among sociologists was House 

 Bill No. 55, "An Act to Regulate the opera- 

 tion of all coal mines in the state of North 



2G9 



