Annual Report, 5. köide |
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Page xiv
... quantity . " " 6 Page 234 , line 16 , read " spat " instead of " spot . " 66 Page 237 , line 1 , " Littlewood " instead of " Littlenow ; " line 23 , bill instead of " nib . " Page 243 , line 2 from bottom , read " endowed " instead of ...
... quantity . " " 6 Page 234 , line 16 , read " spat " instead of " spot . " 66 Page 237 , line 1 , " Littlewood " instead of " Littlenow ; " line 23 , bill instead of " nib . " Page 243 , line 2 from bottom , read " endowed " instead of ...
Page xix
... quantities of fruit , etc. , for the market . These settlements are all new , the oldest one of them being only about twenty years old , and the grounds upon which they are located were in forest until that time . The settlers are now ...
... quantities of fruit , etc. , for the market . These settlements are all new , the oldest one of them being only about twenty years old , and the grounds upon which they are located were in forest until that time . The settlers are now ...
Page 1
... QUANTITY PRODUCED , AND THE NUMBER OF HOURS CONSTITUTING A DAY'S LABOR . CHAPTER 2. - RATE OF WAGES OF FARM LABORERS IN THE UNITED STATES . CHAPTER 3. - COMPARATIVE RATES OF WAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND OTHER COUNTRIES . CHAPTER 4 ...
... QUANTITY PRODUCED , AND THE NUMBER OF HOURS CONSTITUTING A DAY'S LABOR . CHAPTER 2. - RATE OF WAGES OF FARM LABORERS IN THE UNITED STATES . CHAPTER 3. - COMPARATIVE RATES OF WAGES IN THE UNITED STATES AND OTHER COUNTRIES . CHAPTER 4 ...
Page 4
... quantity produced , and the wages received by the different classes of employes in many of our industrial establishments , can be ascertained . These statistics were obtained from the wage - workers themselves , who returned answers to ...
... quantity produced , and the wages received by the different classes of employes in many of our industrial establishments , can be ascertained . These statistics were obtained from the wage - workers themselves , who returned answers to ...
Page 5
... ( quantity produced ) in each subdivision ? ..................... . 5. Whether wages have been increased or decreased during the past year , and how much ? ............ 6. The wages received by day , week or piece in each subdivision by ...
... ( quantity produced ) in each subdivision ? ..................... . 5. Whether wages have been increased or decreased during the past year , and how much ? ............ 6. The wages received by day , week or piece in each subdivision by ...
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Common terms and phrases
$2 per day 2-CONTINUED 50 per day acres amount association average Baptisttown bivalve Blacksmiths bottom boys BUILDING AND LOAN Burlington Burlington County bushels Camden Camden County Cape Cape May County carp carp culture cents Constitutes a Day's cost County All employes cultivation Cumberland Dues paid earnings eggs embryo employer Essex County factory feet female fibre Firemen fish flax Frenchtown HANDS EMPLOYED helper hemp hundred Hunterdon County inches industry iron Jersey jute Keyport Kingwood labor Locktown loom machine Machinists makers male manufacture Mercer mills mollusks months Morris County Mount Pleasant natural beds Number of Hands Office number oyster oystermen paid per share Passaic County persons plants pond pounds Profits per share quantity River seed Sergeantsville shell sluice spawn statistics sugar TABLE tion tons Total United value per share WAGES RECEIVED Warren County Weavers Week or Piece women workmen young oysters
Popular passages
Page 91 - ... by reason of the negligence of any person in the service of the employer who has the charge or control of any signal points, locomotive engine or train upon a railway...
Page 87 - ... kept in a cleanly state and free from effluvia arising from any drain, privy, or other nuisance...
Page 91 - ... (1.) By reason of any defect in the condition of the ways, works, or machinery connected with or used in the business of the employer, which arose from or had not been discovered or remedied owing to, the negligence of the employer, or of any person in the service of the employer and intrusted by him with the duty of seeing that the ways, works, or machinery were in proper condition...
Page 91 - ... by one of Her Majesty's Principal Secretaries of State, or by the Board of Trade or any other department of the Government, under or by virtue of any Act of Parliament, it shall not be deemed for the purposes of this Act to be an improper or defective rule or by-law.
Page 182 - And the flax and the barley was smitten : for the barley was in the ear, and the flax was boiled. But the wheat and the rye were not smitten ; for they were not grown up.
Page 91 - ... the workman, or in case the injury results in death, the legal personal representatives of the workman, and any persons entitled in case of death, shall have the same right of compensation and remedies against the employer as if the workman had not been a workman of nor in the service of the employer, nor engaged in his work.
Page 82 - It shall not be lawful for any person, firm, company, corporation or association, engaged in the business aforesaid, their clerk, agent, officer or servant, in this State, to issue for the payment of labor, any order or other paper whatsoever, unless the same purports to be redeemable for its face value, in lawful money of the United States...
Page 286 - ... dainty between the teeth brings these two bodies together, and the glycogen is at once digested without other help by its own diastase. The oyster in the uncooked state, or merely warmed, is, in fact, self-digestive. But the advantage of this provision is wholly lost by cooking, for the heat employed immediately destroys the associated ferment, and a cooked oyster has to be digested, like any other food, by the eater's own digestive powers.
Page 91 - ... the same right of compensation and remedies against the employer as if the employee had not been an employee of nor in the service of the employer nor engaged in his work.
Page 308 - American oyster reaches this stage in from twenty-four hours to six days after the egg is fertilized, the rate of development being determined mainly "by the temperature of the water. Soon after the mantle has become connected with the stomach this becomes united to the body wall at another point a little behind the mantle, and a second opening, the anus, is formed.