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Page iii
20 Letter of Transmittal . vii Introduction ix - xiv PART I . - STATISTICS OF
MANUFACTURES — Introduction to , and Analysis of the General Table . . . . . . . .
. . 3 - 33 Statistical Comparisons , Character of Management of Industry , 1908 -
1909 .
20 Letter of Transmittal . vii Introduction ix - xiv PART I . - STATISTICS OF
MANUFACTURES — Introduction to , and Analysis of the General Table . . . . . . . .
. . 3 - 33 Statistical Comparisons , Character of Management of Industry , 1908 -
1909 .
Page iv
Table No . 4 - Average Number of Persons Employed . Average Number
Employed at Periods of the Greatest Number and the Least Number . . . . . . . . . 41
- 43 Table No . 5 – Average Number of Wage Earners Employed by Months , and
by ...
Table No . 4 - Average Number of Persons Employed . Average Number
Employed at Periods of the Greatest Number and the Least Number . . . . . . . . . 41
- 43 Table No . 5 – Average Number of Wage Earners Employed by Months , and
by ...
Page v
For the Twelve Months Ending September 30th , 1910 — Introduction 195 - 196
Table No . 1 - Accidents to Workmen While on DutyGeneral Review of Subject . . .
. . . . . 196 - 199 Summary of Accidental Injuries — Factory and Workshop ...
For the Twelve Months Ending September 30th , 1910 — Introduction 195 - 196
Table No . 1 - Accidents to Workmen While on DutyGeneral Review of Subject . . .
. . . . . 196 - 199 Summary of Accidental Injuries — Factory and Workshop ...
Page 6
This table contains also the selling value of goods made or work done . Fourth ,
the greatest , least , and average number of persons employed , classified as
men , 16 years old and over ; women , 16 years old and over ; and young
persons of ...
This table contains also the selling value of goods made or work done . Fourth ,
the greatest , least , and average number of persons employed , classified as
men , 16 years old and over ; women , 16 years old and over ; and young
persons of ...
Page 10
Comparisons are made in the table which follows , of the capital invested in
twenty - five of the leading industries of the State , and the increases or
decreases in 1909 , compared with 1908 , are given numerically and by
percentages .
Comparisons are made in the table which follows , of the capital invested in
twenty - five of the leading industries of the State , and the increases or
decreases in 1909 , compared with 1908 , are given numerically and by
percentages .
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Common terms and phrases
Accidents American August average body Brakeman broken building Camden capital Carpenter cent Children Receiving 16 Children under 16 Classification of Weekly Company compared crushed December decreases demand died of injuries electric employed Ending engine entire ESTABLISHMENTS factory February Fell firm fractured Hand hundred included increase increase in wages industries injured internally invested iron January Jersey City John July June killed instantly Laborer Leather less manufacturers March Metal mill Months Name Newark November Number Men Women Number of Persons occupations October October November December operation paid Pennsylvania Railroad Persons Receiving Specified plants Pound practically ranges Receiving Specified Total reported Results returned Rubber September severed shown Silk Specified Total Amounts steam strike Struck successful trade train Trenton twenty-five union wage earners wage loss week Weekly Earnings wire Women 16 Women Children Receiving worker workmen
Popular passages
Page ix - ... with headquarters in the state house. " The duties of such bureau shall be to collect, assort, systematize and present in annual reports to the legislature, on or before the first day of March in each year, statistical details relating to all departments of labor in the Commonwealth...
Page 193 - Part III. Industrial chronology of New Jersey; accidents to workmen while on duty; permanent or temporary suspension of work in manufacturing establishments; changes in working hours and wages; new manufacturing plants established and old ones enlarged; industrial property destroyed by fire or flood; trade and labor unions organized: strikes and lockouts (p.
Page 175 - The care and improvement of the animate machinery is at least as important to the manufacturer as the care and improvement of the immediate or inanimate machinery.
Page 170 - the ratio of cases of pulmonary consumption to those of all other diseases is highest where the amount of exertion is least, and lowest where it is greatest ; and the intermediate degree of exertion presents an intermediate ratio. The age at which pulmonary consumption makes its attack is earlier in employments requiring little exertion than in those requiring more, and in those requiring moderate exertion than in those demanding great effort.
Page 122 - TABLE No. 8. — Number of Days in Operation, Number of Hours Worked per Day, Number of Hours Worked per Week and Overtime, 1915.
Page 273 - The break shows itself sensationally in the bitter fight between the American Federation of Labor and the Industrial Workers of the World.
Page 174 - ... well-selected bill of fare is served at practically cost prices. The employes bring their own lunches and are served with the free hot dishes, or they may order their entire meal — and get a good one — for an average of eight or ten cents. Whenever night work is necessary during the busy season, special dinners are served in the rooms for all employes at the expense of the company.
Page 177 - ... exercise no paternal or patronizing control, but to create a club-plant fully equipped in every particular, and turn it over to the employes, on whom should devolve the entire responsibility of organization and administration — of success or failure. "The basic idea of this social experiment, however, was the conviction of the head of the concern that the weightiest question confronting the twentieth century is the relation between capital and labor; that there must be a drawing together, or...
Page 177 - ... established ; otherwise there must come between employer and employe a conflict more potential of disaster and destruction than any war this world has yet witnessed, and that, therefore, it is the duty of every employer to contribute by all reasonable means to a peaceful and satisfactory solution of the existing differences. It was hoped that the social and other plans of the Weston organization designed for the pleasure and welfare of its employes would not only shed a little sunshine day by...
Page 190 - ... manufacturing and every other form of productive industry, with a view to their permanent establishment on a prosperous basis, both to employers and employes.