SweatingHeadley Brothers, 1907 - 145 pages |
From inside the book
Results 1-5 of 8
Page 24
... carding hooks and eyes . It is said that a machine has been invented to do this work , but as2 1 These particulars were first prepared for the Handbook of the Daily News Sweated Industries Exhibition . 2 ( See page 35 ) . Remarks ...
... carding hooks and eyes . It is said that a machine has been invented to do this work , but as2 1 These particulars were first prepared for the Handbook of the Daily News Sweated Industries Exhibition . 2 ( See page 35 ) . Remarks ...
Page 29
... Carding hooks and eyes all day 3s . 3d . 3 d . per gross . Steel and covering material supplied . 2ąd . to 3d . per gross . Id . per gross slips . per hour . IS . Can do 2 gross 6d . per gross . Fairly regular ; worker's age 65. Rent 2s ...
... Carding hooks and eyes all day 3s . 3d . 3 d . per gross . Steel and covering material supplied . 2ąd . to 3d . per gross . Id . per gross slips . per hour . IS . Can do 2 gross 6d . per gross . Fairly regular ; worker's age 65. Rent 2s ...
Page 30
... Carding buttons all day 5s . 3d . MILITARY AND RAILWAY , Embroidered badges ( Bugles , Crown , Red- Cross , L. & N. R. , etc. ) Lining Chin Chains ( Sol- diers ' and Firemen's helmets ) This is an average on 24 cases investi- gated ...
... Carding buttons all day 5s . 3d . MILITARY AND RAILWAY , Embroidered badges ( Bugles , Crown , Red- Cross , L. & N. R. , etc. ) Lining Chin Chains ( Sol- diers ' and Firemen's helmets ) This is an average on 24 cases investi- gated ...
Page 33
... carding , etc. 6s . - 7s . the Money rarely passes between worker and the merchant , payment generally being made in general stores . If money is asked for 3d . or 4d . in the shilling is deducted . 41d . to 10d . per 1,150 . Less cost ...
... carding , etc. 6s . - 7s . the Money rarely passes between worker and the merchant , payment generally being made in general stores . If money is asked for 3d . or 4d . in the shilling is deducted . 41d . to 10d . per 1,150 . Less cost ...
Page 37
... carding than for hooks and eyes , as the cases investigated averaged 5s . 3d . per week for constant work , as against 3s . 31d . for hooks and eyes . Pearl buttons are considered the best work , though they are trying for the eyes ...
... carding than for hooks and eyes , as the cases investigated averaged 5s . 3d . per week for constant work , as against 3s . 31d . for hooks and eyes . Pearl buttons are considered the best work , though they are trying for the eyes ...
Common terms and phrases
Alien Immigration amongst Arbitration better Bill Bread and butter buttons Cadbury carding charity Charles Booth Chief Inspector Co-operative Wholesale Society competition cost district domestic workshops dozen economic efficiency employed employers evil fact factories and workshops Factory Act Fifth Report fixed GEORGE CADBURY girls gross Home Industries hooks and eyes House of Lords Ibid income increased inefficient insanitary Inspector of Factories Inter-Departmental Committee lard or dripping legislation less living wage London long hours machinery meal means Meat minimum wage necessary obtain organise outworkers overcrowded paid persons poor law poverty present production proposed rate of wages regulation of wages remedy result Rowntree's sanitary conditions sanitation School Children Select Committee Sir Charles Dilke skilled Special Boards sweated workers TABLE OF HOURS tion trade unions unskilled labour Victoria Wages Boards week woman women WOMEN'S INDUSTRIAL COUNCIL WOMEN'S WAGES Workshop Act Zealand ΙΟ
Popular passages
Page 99 - Act for the regulation of factories or bakehouses), not kept in a cleanly state, or not ventilated in such a manner as to render harmless as far as practicable any gases vapours dust or other impurities generated in the course of the work carried on therein that are a nuisance or injurious to health, or so overcrowded while work is carried on as to be dangerous or injurious to the health of those employed therein : 7.
Page 20 - Families whose total earnings would be sufficient for the maintenance of merely physical efficiency were it not that some portion of it is absorbed by other expenditure, either useful or wasteful.
Page 113 - Special boards may be appointed to fix wages and piecework rates for persons employed either inside or outside factories in making clothing or wearing apparel or furniture, or in bread-making or baking, or in the business of a butcher or seller of meat.
Page 86 - The development of the three main industries — tailoring, cabinet-making, and shoemaking — in which the aliens engage, has undoubtedly been beneficial in various ways ; it has increased the demand for, and the manufacture of, not only goods made in this country (which were formerly imported from abroad), but of the materials used in them, thus indirectly giving employment to native workers.
Page 99 - Any factory, workshop, or workplace (not already under the operation of any general Act for the regulation of factories or bakehouses), not kept in a cleanly state, or not ventilated in such a manner as to render harmless as far as practicable any gases vapours dust or other impurities generated in the course of the work...
Page 12 - We may say that the income of any class in the ranks of industry is below its necessary level, when any increase in their income would in the course of time produce a more than proportionate increase in their efficiency.
Page 12 - The necessaries for the efficiency of an ordinary agricultural or of an unskilled town laborer and his family, in England, in this generation, may be said to consist of a well-drained dwelling with several rooms, warm clothing, with some changes of underclothing, pure water, a plentiful supply of cereal food, with a moderate allowance of meat and milk, and a little tea, etc., some education...
Page 12 - England, in this generation, may be said to consist of a well-drained dwelling with several rooms, warm clothing, with some changes of underclothing, pure water, a plentiful supply of cereal food, with a moderate allowance of meat and milk, and a little tea, etc., some education, and some recreation, and lastly, sufficient freedom for his wife from other work to enable her to perform properly her maternal and her household duties.
Page 11 - ... income which is necessary for merely sustaining its members, while there is another and larger income which is necessary for keeping it in full efficiency.
Page 68 - ... dividend is at once the aggregate net product of, and the sole source of payment for, all the agents of production within the country: it is divided up into earnings of labour; interest of capital; and lastly the producer's surplus, or rent of land and of other differential advantages for production. It constitutes the whole of them, and the whole of it is distributed among them...