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UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
W. N. DOAK, Secretary

BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
ETHELBERT STEWART, Commissioner

MONTHLY

LABOR REVIEW
VOLUME 31
JULY TO DECEMBER, 1930

UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON : 1931

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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

UNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
W. N. DOAK, Secretary

BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

ETHELBERT STEWART, Commissioner


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In d e x t o V o lu m e 31— J u ly t o D e c e m b e r , 1930
N ote.—T his is a subject index . Names of authors do not appear as main entries
A ccident prevention, general:
Page
Cost of industrial accidents to the State, the employer, and the man (Heinrich)______
Nov. 72-80
July 79-80
Reduction of accidents in industry (Bowers)....... ...... ....................... ................................
Safety. Legislation affecting mines, etc., boiler and factory inspection, 1929, review of,
by State------------------- _■....................... ............................................................. ................
Aug. 83-4
-----Standards and use of codes, in industry (Ainsworth)....................................................
Nov. 80-5
Accident prevention, by industry:
Coalmining. China______________ ____________ _________ ___________________
Dec. 62
Accident statistics, by industry:
Coke ovens. Fatalities and injuries, 1916 to 1928____________________ . __________
July 80-3
Mining. Idaho mining and milling, 1929___ ___________________________________
July 85-6
-----• Missouri, fatal accidents, by kind of mine, 1929_____________________________
Aug. 62
---- - Responsibility of management and of workers, Bureau of Mines report____________
July 77-8
Mining, coal. Colorado, fatal accidents, 1920 to 1929_____________________________
Aug. 62
-----Fatalities in 1928, rates by cause of accident and by State______________________
July 83-5
— Fatality rates, United States, 1911 to 1928__________________________________
Sept. 55
-----Illinois, accidents and production, 1929_____________________________________
Sept. 56
Mining, metal. Fatality rates, United States, 1911 to 1928___________ _____________
Sept. 55
Quarries. F atality rates, United States, 1911 to 1928____________ . . . . . ____________
Sept. 55
-----United States, in 1928 (Bureau of Mines Bui. No. 325)_________________
Sept.54-5
Accident statistics, by locality:
Canada. Fatal accidents, by industry, 1928 and 1929____________________________
July 86
Idaho. Mines and mills, 1929___________________________________________ ___
July 85-6
Italy. Agricultural and industrial accident cases handled by National Institute for
Social Assistance, 1926 to 1929_______________________________________________
Aug. 70
Age distribution:
Ford Motor Co. employees, River Rouge plant, February 20, .1930_____________ ____
Dec. 55-7
Unemployed, Bloomington (Ind.), February, 1930___ ____________________________
July 37-8
Agreements. (See Collective agreements.)
Agriculture (except Wages and hours, which see):
China. Farmers’leagues, development of (Ta Chen;____________________________
July 10-13
Cooperative societies. (See Cooperation.)
France. Special system of insurance for agricultural workers, provisions of law effec­
Sept. 84-5
tive July 1, 1930_______________________________________________ __________
Great Britain (England). Labor efficiency in potato harvesting, milking cows, hop
picking, and poultry work, 1926-1928----------------------- ------------ ------------------------Oct. 119-22
Korea. Agrarian situation, tenancy disputes, 1920 to 1928________________________
Nov. 30-2
Labor supply and demand, index numbers, by State, October 1,1929 and 1930_______
Dec. 161
Porto Rico. Measures to aid the small farmer, 1929-30____________ _______________
Dec. 59
American Federation of Labor. Railway Employees’ Department, stabilization program
for shop crafts employment____________________________________________________
Aug. 24-6
Antiunion contracts, constitutionality. (See Decisions of courts: Contract of employ­
ment.)
Apprenticeship (except Wages and hours, which see):
Australia (Queensland). Apprentices and minors act of 1929, provisions of__________
July 150-1
International Labor Office, director of, report, 1929_______________________________ Aug. 128-30
Asbestos dust. Hazards from, and results of exposure, study (Oliver).................. ................
July 74-6
Asbestos workers:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against_______________ ______
Sept. 9
Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions---------------- ------ -----------Nov. 129
Asbestosis, pulmonary. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Assembly, freedom of, Austria, law providing for protection of-----------------------------------Oct. 136
Automobile industry. (See Motor-vehicle industry.)
Automobile repair shops. Employment fluctuations, by sex, Ohio, 1923 to 1928-..................
July 45-6
Awards. (See Conciliation and arbitration; also specific industry.)


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Bakeries, cooperative. (See Cooperation.)
Bakery and confectionery workers:
Page
Aug. 2
Holidays provided by collective agreements___________ ____________________ ____
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions__________________ _____
Nov. 128
Banks, labor. (See Cooperation.)
Barbers:
Holidays provided by collective agreements-_______ ____________________________
Aug. 2-3
July 109-10
North Carolina act, constitutionality upheld____________ _________________ - ___ _
Barbers’ International Union of America, Journeyman. Chicago, Local No. 548, arbitration
award________________ ____ _________________ ________________________________
Dec. 124
Benefits and benefit funds:
Australia (Victoria). Friendly societies, statistics of operations, 1926-27.to 1928-29___ Nov. 107-8
Trade-unions, national and international, expenditures, by type of benefit, 1929. Nov. 121; Dec. 106-8
Benzene (ethyl) vapors. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Bibliographies:
Cooperation. Publications since March, 1925_____________________________ ______ Sept. 230-49
Industrial hygiene. Current literature and organizations (I layhurst) ____ ________ _
Nov. 91-3
Blacksmiths, drop forgers and helpers. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement
provisions._________ ______________________________________________________ _
Nov. 130
Boarding houses, cooperative. (See Cooperation.)
Boilermakers and iron shipbuilders. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement pro-.
Nov .130
visions...................................................................... ............ .......................... ............. •_______
Bonuses and premiums:
Cigarette manufacturing, 1930____________ ____________________________________
Oct. 168
Aug. 168-9
Portland-cement plants, by kinds, 1929_________________ ______________________
Bookbinders. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions___________ _
Nov. 131
Bookkeepers, stenographers, and typists. Holidays provided by collective agreements__
Aug. 7
Borrowers from small-loan companies, economic and social status, 1922-23, study____ ___
Aug. 42-4
Brewery, flour, cereal and soft drink workers:
Holidays provided by collective agreements______________ ______________________
Aug. 3
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions______ _____ ___________
Nov. 128
Nov. 128-9
Brick and clay workers. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions____
Bricklayers, masons, and plasterers:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against______ ________________
Sept. 10
Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions____________ ____ ______
Nov. 129
Broom makers. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions_______ _____
Nov. 129
Budgets, cost-of-living. Porto Rico. Family budgets, items and weekly cost___________
Aug. 49
Building and loan associations. Status of, 1929, report of U. S. Building and Loan League.. Nov. 114-15
Building construction industry (except Wages and hours, which see)-.
Costs, new work, repairs, etc. (See Housing.)
Operations in principal cities of the United States, first half of 1930.................................. Sept. 122-32
Permits issued. By city (25,000 population or over) and geographic division, M ay to
October, 1930________July 121-32; Aug. 142-53; Sept. 105-17; Oct. 149-61; Nov. 149-63; Dec. 125-39
-----By city (100,000 population or over) and geographic division,first half of 1930_____
Aug. 154-6
-----By city (500,000 population or over), nonresidential buildings, 1921 to 1929______
July 133-5
-----St. Louis (Mo.) and Washington (D. C.) comparison of dwelling-unit costs, first
six months of 1929_______________________ _____________ ______ ___ __________
Dec. 140-2
Building permits. (See Building construction industry.)
Building trades (except Wages and hours, which see):
Great Britain (England). Rationalization, policy of, tendency and effect............... .
Sept. 47
Holidays provided by collective agreements....... .......
Aug. 11-12
C am ps, labor. Evils of, regulation and control (Eldridge)............................. ............... ........
Canneries. (See Food canning and preserving.)
Carpenters and joiners:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against__ _______ ___________
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions_______________________
“ Cellosolve” vapors. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Cement finishers. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions______ ____
Cement industry (except Wages and hours, which see). Portland cement, production 1890
to 1927........................................................................ .................. ........... ....................................
Census, industrial:
Manufactures. 1929, results, preliminary report....................... ..........................................
Unemployment. 1930, preliminary returns__________________________ ______ ___
Chauffeurs. (See Teamsters and chauffeurs.)


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Sept. 36-40

Sept. 10
Nov. 129
Nov. 129
Aug. 171-2
Dec. 52-4
Oct. 74-6

1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Child labor and welfare, United States:
Canneries, fruit and vegetable. Survey in seven States, seasons of 1923, 1925, and 1926..
Employment certificates. Wisconsin, child labor permits issued, 1925 to 1929-----------Illegal employment, fruit and vegetable canneries, survey in seven States, 1923, 1925,
and 1926------ -------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Legislation. Review of, 1929, by State----- --------------- ------------------.--------------------- Maryland. Canneries, child workers in, report, 1929------------------ ------------------------Miniature golf courses, California, covered by law, report of department of industrial
relations, July 29 and 30, 1930------ ------------------------------------------- ---------------------Minors, illegally employed, injury to. (See Workmen’s compensation.)
New Jersey. Migratory children, employment of, survey commission appointed-------Night work. Cotton mills, gradual elimination of, plan of Cotton Textile In stitu te...
-----Laws governing, provisions of, by State--------------------- ------ ---------------------------Occupations and industries prohibited, legislative provisions, by State--------------------Physical examination of employment-certificate applicants, Milwaukee (Wis.), results..
Social statistics, collection of, program, Children’s Bureau (Steele).............................
Wages and hours. (See Wages and hours.)
Child labor and welfare, foreign countries. Great Britain. Juvenile employment, report
of advisory committees on, 1928-------------------------------------------------------------------------Cigar makers. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions------------------- Cleaners, dyers, and pressers:
Holidays provided by collective agreements-------------------------------------------------------Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions......................... -.............
Cleaning powder. Silicosis caused by exposure to, London factory, two cases---- -----------Clerks and freight handlers, railway and steamship. Holidays provided by collective agree­
ments---- ------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Clerks, retail. Holidays provided by collective agreements---------------------------------------Cloth hat, cap, and millinery workers. Holidays provided by collective agreements-------Clothing workers, men’s. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions...
Clothing Workers of America, Amalgamated:
Holidays provided by collective agreements------------------------------------------------------Milwaukee (Wis.) factory, union-operated, marks of success, etc----------------------------Coal mining. (See Mine Workers of America, United; Mining.)
Coffee growing, Brazil, labor conditions on plantations---------------------------------------------Coke ovens. Accident statistics (fatality and injury rates), 1916 to 1928-------------- ---------Collective agreements, general:
Contracting by union members, provisions against, by industry-----------------------------Holiday observance, provisions for, by industry---------------------------- --------------------Payment of wages, time and method, provisions for, by occupation............. ..................
Collective agreements, United States, by industry:
Electrical workers. Insurance provisions........................................ ....................... —........
Hosiery workers. Full-fashioned, national agreement, August 1, 1930, terms of----- ----Mining, anthracite. Districts 1, 7, and 9, September 1, 1930, to April 1, 1936, terms of..
Mining, coal. Rocky Mountain Fuel Co. and United Mine Workers. District No. 15,
September 1, 1930------------------ --------------------------------------------------------- ---------Collective agreements, foreign countries:
Austria. Act of April 5, 1930 (antiterror law), principal provisions------------------ -........
Collective bargaining, right of. (See Decisions of court: Labor organizations.)
Collection of wage claims. (See Wage claims.)
Colleges, village. (See Workers’ education.)
Commercial telegraphers. (See Telegraphers.)
Conciliation and arbitration, United States:
Arbitration awards (decisions). (See specific industry.)
Department of Labor. (See article Conciliation work of the Department of Labor, each
issue of Renew.)
Conciliation and arbitration, foreign countries:
Australia (Queensland). Act of 1929 (effective January 23, 1930), principal features----Germany. Metal workers’ unions, Minister of Labor award, wage reduction................
Conventions, meetings, etc. :
American Federation of Labor. Annual convention, October 6-17,1930------------ ------Commercial Employees, Association of. Brazil (Rio de Janeiro), March, 1930— .........
Cooperation. Cooperative League of the U. S. A., October 20-22,1930.......................
— -International Cooperative Alliance, thirteenth congress, Vienna, August 25-28,
1930.________________ _________ ______ ---................ ........... ..................AuS- 116!
Engineers, Brotherhood of Locomotive. Convention (triennial), Cleveland, June 2July 24,1930____________ ________________________________________________
Family-allowance funds. France, tenth congress, May 19, 1930- —
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Page
Sept. 51-3
July 57
Sept. 52-3
Aug. 83
Aug. 57-8
Sept. 64
Oct. 129
Nov. 70-1
Oct. 123-8
Nov. 53-70
July 57
Oct. 111-15

July 59-61
Nov. 130
Aug. 4
Nov. 130
Dec. 93-5
Aug. 10
Aug. 5
Aug. 3
Nov. 130
Aug. 4
Dec. 108-11
July 169-71
July 80-3
Sept. 8-11
Aug. 1-12
Nov. 128-31
Nov. 105-6
Sept. 103
Sept. 103-4
Nov. 132
Oct. 135-6

Aug. 94
Nov. 132-3
Nov. 119-25
Nov. 125
Nov. 111-14
Nov. 116-17
Sept. 92-3
Sept. 88-9

M ONTHLY

LABOR

R E V IE W

[1930

Conventions, meetings, etc.—Continued.
Page
Governmental Officials in Industry, Association of, of the United States and Canada.
Annual convention___________________________________ _____ ______________
July 33-4
Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions, International Association of, annual
meeting, 1930--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Nov. 101-3
International Labor Conference. Fourteenth session, June, 1930___________________
Sept. 92-3
Safety Council, National. Annual congress, September 29, 1930___________________
Nov. 86-7
Trades and Labor Congress. Canada, annual meeting, September 8, 1930___________ Dec. 111-13
Trades-Union Congress. Great Britain, annual meeting, September 1-5, 1930________ Nov. 126-7
Cooperation, United States:
Bakeries, study of activities, 1929_____________________________________________
Oct. 21-34
Banks, labor. Statement of condition June 30, 1930, and development of, 1920 to 1930.. Nov. 115-16
Sept. 230-9
Bibliography. Material published since March, 1925____________________________
Boarding houses, study of activities, 1929__ _____ ______________________________
Oct. 21-34
Building and loan associations. Development, by State, 1929_____________________ Nov. 114-15
Consumers’ societies. Legislation, summary as of June, 1930______________________ Aug. 100-12
Oct. 21-34
——Study of activities, by type of society, 1929_________________________________
Cooperative League of the U. S. A. Biennial congress, October 20-22, 1930__________ Nov. 111-14
-----Development since 1915__________________________________________________
July 116-19
Creameries, study of activities, 1929___ _______________________________________
Oct. 21-34
Credit unions. Affiliated with Cooperative League of U. S. A., status of, December 31,
July 119
1928______ ____ __________________________________________________________
-----Franklin Cooperative Creamery, activities, 1927 to 1929____________ __________
Aug. 114
-----Movement in 1929____________________ __________________________________
Nov. 1-11
Distributive and housing societies affiliated with Cooperative League of U. S. A., status
July 118
of, December 31, 1928______________ _______ ______________________ _________
Franklin Cooperative Creamery, Minneapolis, activities and development, 1920 to 1929. Aug. 112-14
Gasoline stations in 1929, survey of activities____________________________ Sept. 11-18; Oct. 21-34
Insurance societies affiliated with Cooperative League of U. S. A., status, December 31,
1928___________________________________________________________
July 119
Laundries, study of activities, 1929____________________________________________
Oct. 21-34
Legislation. Consumers’ societies, summary as of June, 1930______________________ Aug. 100-12
------ Credit unions, etc., review of, 1929, by State________________________________
Aug. 86
Marketing associations, distributive departments, study of activities, 1929___________
Oct. 21-34
Milk. Marketing associations, business during 1928_________ ____ ________________
Aug. 122
Restaurants, study of activities, 1929___________________________________________
Oct. 21-34
Retail store societies, study of activities, 1929_____________ _______________________
Oct. 21-34
Shoe shops, Massachusetts, Relation of employer and employee, investigation author­
ized--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Oct. 107
Workers’ productive associations in 1929, survey of activities________________ _____
Dec. 25-32
Cooperation, foreign countries:
Sept.239
Argentina. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925________________________
Australia. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925____________________________
Sept.239
-----Butter (export) trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively_________________________
Aug.116
Austria. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925_______________________________ Sept. 239
-----Seed potato trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively_________________________
Aug. 115
-----(Vienna). Labor Bank, report, 1929, and activities of_______________ July 119-20; Nov. 117-18
Belgium. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925_______________ __________ Sept. 239-40
Bulgaria. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925__________________________
Sept.240
-----Sugar trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively_______________________________
Aug. 115
Canada. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925___________________________ Sept. 240-1
-----Marketing apples, grain, and wool, per cent of trade handled cooperatively______
Aug. 116
China. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925_____________________
Sept.241
-----Society for native industries being organized_________________________________
Aug. 123
Czechoslovakia. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925______________________
Sept.241
---- - Saltpeter trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively______________________________
Aug.115
Denmark. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925___________________________
Sept.241
-----Labor bank, annual report, 1929_____
July 119
-----Marketing butter and eggs (export), per cent of trade handled cooperatively______
Aug. 116
-----Retail trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively, by commodity___________________
Aug.115
Sept.2
Estonia. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925._________________
-----Marketing butter and eggs (export), per cent of trade handled cooperatively______
Aug. 116
Finland. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925________________ ____ _____
Sept. 241-2
-----Marketing butter and cheese, per cent of trade handled cooperatively______________
Aug.116
France. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925___________________________
Sept. 242-3
-----Familistère of Guise, Society of the. Organization, history, and status__________ Aug. 116-19
Germany. Bank of Workers, Salaried Employees, and Civil Servants, report, 1929___
July 120


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1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Cooperation, foreign countries—Continued.
Page
Sept. 243
Germany. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925..................................................
-----Boatmen’s cooperative societies, development-.............................................................
Aug. 122-3
-----Retail trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively, by commodity.................... .............
Aug. 115
Aug. 115
Great Britain. Retail trade, per cent of, cooperatively handled, by commodity______
-----(and Ireland). Bibliography, publications since March, 1930_______ ___________ Sept. 243-4
----- (Scotland). Agricultural cooperation movement, committee report, 1930________ Aug. 119-22
Hungary. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925_________________________
Sept. 244-5
----- Honey (export) trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively___________________
Aug.116
-----Retail trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively, by commodity___________________
Aug.115
Iceland. Farm products (export) trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively___________
Aug. 116
Sept. 245
India. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925__________________ __________
International Cooperative Alliance,thirteenth congress, Vienna, August25-28,1930- Aug.116; N ov.116-17
Italy. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925________________ ____________
Sept. 245
Japan. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925______ ____ _______________ _
Sept. 245-6
-----Marketing raw silk, per cent of trade handled cooperatively____________________
Aug. 116
Latvia. Agricultural supply trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively, by commodity.
Aug. 115
-----Bibliography, publications since March, 1925________________________
Sept.246
-----Butter and bacon (export) trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively______________
Aug.116
Lithuania. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925_________________________
Sept. 246
Sept. 246
Netherlands. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925____________ ____ _____
—:— Marketing butter, cheese, and eggs, per cent of trade handled cooperatively________
Aug.116
------ Societies, number of, 1929___________________________________________________
Aug.123
New Zealand. Marketing butter, per cent of trade handled cooperatively_____________
Aug.116
Norway. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925__________________________
Sept. 246
Palestine. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925_________________________
Sept. 246
-----Marketing trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively, by commodity_______________
Aug.116
Poland. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925__________________ . _______
Sept. 247
-----Retail trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively, by commodity___________________
Aug.115
Rumania. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925________________________
Sept.247
Sept. 247-8
Russia (U. S. S. R.). Bibliography, publications since March, 1925________________
Spain. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925____________________________
Sept. 248
Sweden. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925___________________ _______
Sept. 248
----- Bread grains trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively__________________________
Aug.115
-----Superphosphates trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively_______________________
Aug.115
Switzerland. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925_______________________
Sept. 248-9
-----Flour (production) trade, per cent of, handled cooperatively_____________________
Aug.115
Ukrainia. Bibliography, publications since March, 1925____________________________
Sept.249
Nov.130
Coopers. Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions____________________
Cost of living, United States. Changes (index numbers and per cent), by city and item of
expenditure, 1913tol930—.........__........................................................................... .......... Aug. 248-63
Cost of living, foreign countries:
Australia. Index numbers, food, clothing, rent, 1911 to 1930____________________ Aug. 268-70, 274
Belgium. Commission to investigate appointed, membership_____________________
Nov. 242
-----Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1921 to 1930_________________ Aug. 265-73
Canada. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1913 to 1930___________
Aug. 265-73
Czechoslovakia. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930_____ Aug. 265-73
Denmark. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930__________ Aug. 265-73
Finland. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930___________ Aug. 265-73
France. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930____________ Aug. 265-73
Germany. Index numbers, by family budget items, July, 1930____________________
Oct. 228
— —Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1913-14 to 1930_____________
Aug. 265-73
Great Britain (United Kingdom). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent,
1914 to 1930__________________________________________________ ___________ Aug. 266-74
India (Bombay). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930____ Aug. 266-74
Ireland. Index numbers, food, 1914 to 1930_____________________________________ Aug. 265,267
Italy (Milan). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930---------- Aug. 265-73
Netherlands. Index numbers, food, 1911-1913 to 1930________________________ ____Aug. 266, 268
New Zealand. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930- . Aug. 266-74; Dec. 167
Norway. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930___________ Aug. 266-74
Poland (Warsaw.) Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930___ Aug. 266-74
South Africa. Index numbers, food, 1914 to 1930________________________________ Aug. 266, 268
Sweden. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930___________
Aug. 266-74
Switzerland. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930________ Aug. 266-74
Uruguay. Index numbers, worker’s family, 1914 to 1929....................................................
Nov. 242
Costs. (See specific subject.)

37934°— 31------2


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Cottage industries. Sweden. Revival of handicrafts, 1930............................_____ — ___ __
Cotton manufacturing (except Wages and hours, which see):
Great Britain (England). Cotton-textile industry, committee of inquiry, report, 1930..
Night work. Gradual elimination of, for women and minors, plan of Cotton Textile
Institute____ ___________ __________________ _______________ ______________
Weavers. Great Britain. Fines for poor work, illegal_______________________ ____
Cotton-textile industry. (»See Cotton manufacturing.)
Country and town workers, Porto Rico, survey____________________ _______________
Craftsmen. (See Handicrafts.)
Creameries, cooperative. (See Cooperation.)
Credit unions. (See Cooperation.)

[1930
Page
Nov. 49-52
Sept. 47-50
Nov. 70-1
July 110-11
Aug. 46-51

D an g ero u s trades. Minors, occupations and industries prohibited, legislative provisions,
by S ta te ...................................... .................................................................................. ...........
Nov. 53-70
Decasualization, port. (See Docks and harbors.)
Decisions of courts, United States:
Barbers’ acL N orth Carolina, constitutionality of, upheld_______________ ________
July 109-10
Collective bargaining, right upheld, railroad employees, Texas________ ____________
Aug. 88-91
Contract of employment. Massachusetts, antiunion contract unconstitutional, ad­
July 107-8
visory opinion of court to legislature_____ ______________________ _____________
Workmen’s compensation. Applicable in city ordinance violation, Tennessee____ _
Nov. 109-10
— Coverage regardless of hazard, employer entitled to, Texas..-____ _____________
Oct. 133-5
—— Lump-sum payment contrary to policy of law, Rhode Island_________ _____ _
Sept. 66-7
•— - Maritime employments, ironworker repairing vessel, coveredby Federal longshore­
Aug. 93
men’s act_________________________________________ _____ ___________
-----Maritime employments, railroad car float, covered by Federal longshoremen’s act.
Aug. 91-3
• - Refusing proper medical aid defeats claim for compensation.______ ___________
Dec. 104-5
• -- Salesman held not an employee, Massachusetts_____________ _____________ _
Oct. 133
Decisions of courts, foreign countries:
Great Britain (England). Fining weavers for poor work, illegal___________________
July 110-11
Directories:
Labor officials. Foreign countries— _____ ____________________________________ July 253-59
—— United States, State, and T erritorial........ ................ .............................................. .
July 238-52
Personnel Research Agencies (Bureau of Labor Statistics Bui. No. 518)..___ ________
Sept. 46-7
Diseases. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Dismissal wage:
Goodyear Tire & Rubber Co. plan_____________ ____________________ (correction)
July 172
Japan. Factory law and temporary workers____________________________________
Aug. 182
Lay-off problem, experience of a group of employers___ _____ ____________________
Sept. 22
Docks and harbors, United States:
Baltimore. Longshore labor conditions______ _________________________________
Oct. 18-20
Boston. Longshore labor conditions._________ ________________________________
Oct. 15-16
Oct. 3-7
Decasualization of ports, employment conditions under__________________________ ;
Houston and Galveston. Longshore labor conditions________ ____________________ Nov. 14-15
Longshoremen. Employment, conditions of_________________________ __________
Oct. 2-7
-----Holidays provided by collective agreements____________________ __________ . . .
Aug 11,12
•— —Labor conditions in major ports____________________________________ Oct. 7-20; Nov. 11-25
----- Nature of work described...______________________________________________
Oct. 1-2
-— - Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions___________________
Nov. 130
-----‘ ‘ Shape ” or gathering of, seeking work, description___________________________
Oct. 4
Los Angeles. Longshore labor conditions____ „_______ ___________ _____________
Nov. 21-4
New Orleans. Longshore labor conditions_____________________________________
Nov. 11-14
New York. Longshore labor conditions_____ ______ _______________________ ___
Oct. 7-14
Philadelphia. Longshore labor conditions_____________________________________
Oct. 16-18
Portland. Longshore labor conditions_______________________________ _________
Nov. 17-19
Nov. 19-21
San Francisco. Longshore labor conditions____________________________________
Seattle. Longshore labor conditions.1 _____________________ ______ ____________
Nov. 15-17
Docks and harbors, foreign countries:
Antwerp (Belgium). Employment stabilization plan, dock labor______ ___________
Aug. 39-41
-----Society (pool) formed to improve conditions at port and promote insurance______
July 169
Hamburg. Employment stabilization plan, dock labor___ ______________________
Aug. 34-6
Liverpool (England). Emplojunent stabilization plan, dock labor_________________
Aug. 36-7
-----Labor conditions of dock workers, decasualization, etc________________________
Dec. 43-9
Rotterdam. Employment stabilization plan, dock labor________ ________________
Aug. 38-9
Dopolavoro, Italy. Movement for utilization of workers’ leisure time, and activities, 1926
Nov.. 48
and 1929__ ____________ ____________ ___________ __________ ___________ _____


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1530]

1930]

IN D E X

TO

VOLUM E

31

Dusts. Asbestos, hazards from, and results of exposure, study (Oliver),________________
Dyers. (See Cleaners, dyers, and pressers.)

Page
July 74-6

E arn in g s. (See Wages and hours.)
Economic conditions. Korea. Factory workers and miners___ _____________________
Nov. 27-30
Education. (See Vocational education; Workers’ education.)
Efficiency. (See Production and productivity.)
Eight-hour day, foreign countries. Great Britain (England). Bill embodying Washington
Convention principles before Parliament______________________ __________________
July 171
Electrical workers:
Sept. 10
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against________________ _____
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions_______________________
Nov. 129
Insurance features (new), in agreements with employers__________ , ________ _____
Nov. 105-6
Electrotypers. (See Stereotypers and electrotypers.)
Elevator constructors. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions______
Nov. 129
Emigration:
July 52-3
Italy. Interprovincial organization for distribution of labor____ _______________ . . . .
(See also Immigration.)
Employment agencies, United States:
Legislation. Review of, 1929, by State____ _______ _________ ______ ________ ____
Aug. 82
Public, free, Boston (Mass.), applicants (543) during January, 1930, study of (Wilke)...
Sept. 1-7
San Francisco, The Employment Aid of. Philanthropic placement bureau, work of,
eight months, 1929-30_____________________________________________________
Sept. 31-4
Employm ent agencies, foreign countries:
Great Britain (England). Employment exchanges, work of, 1927, 1928, and 1929_____
Sept. 28-30
Italy. Employment exchange system, changes in, by decrees, 1928 and 1929______. . . .
July 51-2
Employment exchanges. (See Employment agencies.)
Employment of foreigners. Portugal. Employment of nationals compulsory, decree (No.
18415), effective June 3, 1930____________ _______________________________________
Oct. 136
Employment offices. (See Employment agencies.)
Employment, stabilization of:
Baltimore & Ohio Railroad and Shop Craft System Federation No. 30 agreement, Feb­
ruary 10, 1930______________ _________ ________ _____________ _______________
Aug. 26
Dock labor, Antwerp, Hamburg, Liverpool, and Rotterdam, plans in operation, sum ­
mary----- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Aug.'33-41
General Electric Co., new plan, June 16, 1930___________________________________
Aug. 31-2
Lay-off problem, experience of a group of em ployers....__________________________
Sept. 19-23
New York. Advisory Committee on Employment Problems, report, June 20, 1930___
Sept. 23-5
-----Committee on Stabilization of Industry for the Prevention of Unemployment, re­
ports of---------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------Aug. 26-31
Railroad shop crafts, program of Railway Employees’ Department of American Federa­
tion of Labor_______________________ _____________________________________
Aug. 24-6
Steady employment plan, joint company, Fond du Lac, Wis________ _____________
Dec. 70-1
Employment statistics, United States:
Arkansas. October, 1930_________ ________ _______ ______ ...____Dec. 193
Automobile manufacturing. Fluctuation of employment in, Ohio, 1923 to 1928 (Croxton
and Croxton)_________________ _____ ____________ ____ _____ ____ _________
July 40-7
California. April to September, 1930__________________________________________
July 205;
Aug. 217; Sept. 197; Oct. 215; Nov. 225; Dec. 193,197
July 199;
Canning and preserving. May to October, 1930________________________________
Aug. 210; Sept. 190; Oct. 209; Nov. 218-19; Dec. 189-90
Electric railroads. May to October, 1930..________________ ___________ ...:______
July 196;
Aug. 207; Sept. 187-8; Oct. 206-7; Nov. 215-16; Dec. 187
July 45-6
Garages and automobile repair shops. Ohio, 1923 to 1928.___ _____________________
Hotels. May to October, 1930____ _______________________ ___ ____________ . . .
July 198-9;
Aug. 209; Sept. 189-90; Oct. 208-9; Nov. 217-18; Dec. 189
Illinois. April to September, 1930_____________________ ______________________
July 202;
Aug. 213; Sept. 194; Oct. 212; Nov. 222; Dec. 193-4, 197-8
Iowa. May to October, 1930. ..................................................... .............. .......... . . . . . . . .
J uly 202;
Aug. 213; Sept. 194; Oct. 212; Nov. 222; Dec. 194
Manufacturing industries, selected. May to October, 1930____ ’. _______ ___________ July 174-92;
Aug. 185-203; Sept. 172-83; Oct. 189-202; Nov. 199-211; Dec. 168-83
Maryland. May to October, 1930____________________________________________
July 202;
Aug. 213-14; Sept. 194; Oct. 212-13, Nov. 222-3; Dec. 194
Massachusetts. April to September, 1930_____ ___________ _____ _______________ July 202, 205;
Aug. 214, 217; Sept. 194, 197; Oct. 213, 215-16; Nov. 223, 225-6; Dec. 194, 198


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1531]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1930

Employment statistics, United States—Continued.
Page
Michigan. September, 1930___________________________________ __________ ___
Dec. 194-5
Mining and quarrying. Ohio, fluctuation of employment (Croxton and Croxton)____
Aug. 12-23
Mining, anthracite and bituminous coal. May to October, 1930___________________ July 192-3;
Aug. 203-4; Sept. 183-4; Oct. 202-3; Nov. 212; Dec. 183-4
Mining, metalliferous. May to October, 1930__ _______________________________
July 193-4;
Aug. 204; Sept. 184-5; Oct. 203-4; Nov. 213; Dec. 184
New Jersey. April to September, 1930__________ ______________________________
Aug. 214;
Sept. 195; Oct. 213; Nov. 223; Dec. 195
New York. May to October, 1930__________________________________________ July 203, 205-6;
Aug. 214-15, 217-18; Sept. 195, 197-8; Oct. 213-14, 216; Nov. 223-4, 226; Dec. 195, 198
Ohio. Fluctuations in employment in 1929, by industry and by county, and compari­
Dec. 1-24
son with 1924 to 1928 (Croxton and Croxton)__________________________________
Oklahoma. May to October, 1930________________________________________ ____ July 203, 206;
Aug. 215, 218; Sept. 195-6, 198; Oct. 214, 216-17, Nov. 224, 226-7, Dec. 196, 199
Pennsylvania. May to October, 1930___________ ______ ______________________ July 204, 206;
Aug. 215, 218; Sept. 196, 199; Oct. 214, 217; Nov. 224, 227; Dec. 196,199
Petroleum (crude) producing. May to October, 1930____________________________
July 194-5;
Aug. 205; Sept. 185-6; Oct. 205; Nov. 214; Dec. 185
Power, light, and water. M ay to October, 1930_________________________________
July 196;
Aug. 206-7; Sept. 187; Oct. 206; Nov. 215; Dec. 186-7
Public utilities. May to October, 1930______________ ■_________________________
July 195-6;
Aug. 206-7; Sept. 186-8; Oct. 205-7; Nov. 214-16; Dec. 186-7
Quarrying and mining. Ohio, fluctuation of employment (Croxton and Croxton)____
Aug. 12-23
Quarrying and nonmetallic mining. May to October, 1930________________________
July 194;
Aug. 205; Sept. 185; Oct. 204; Nov. 213; Dec. 185
Railroads, steam. By month, 1923 to 1930_____________________________________
July 201;
Aug. 212-13; Sept. 192-3; Oct. 211-12; Nov. 221-2; Dec. 192-3
Rubber industry, automobile tires and tubes, manufacture of. Ohio, 1923 to 1928____
July 44-5
July 195;
Telephone and telegraph. May to October, 1930________________________________
Aug. 206; Sept. 186-7; Oct. 205-6; Nov. 214-15; Dec. 186
Texas. May to October, 1930_______________________ _________________________ July 204, 206;
Aug. 216, 218; Sept. 196, 199; Dec. 196, 199
Trade, wholesale and retail. May, 1930________________________________________
July 197-8;
Aug. 207-8; Sept. 188-9; Oct. 207-8; Nov. 216-17; Dec. 187-8
Trends of employment. Male and female workers, variations. (Women’s Bureau Bui.
No. 73)---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------July 19-28
Wisconsin. April to September, 1930__________________________________________
July 204;
Aug. 216; Sept. 196-7; Oct. 214-15; Nov. 225; Dec. 197, 200
Employment statistics, foreign countries:
Argentina, 1929_____________________________________________________________
Dec. 71
Great Britain. Insured persons in employment, 1928 to 1930______________________
July 47-9
Employment trends. (See Employment statistics.)
Engineers, Brotherhood of Locomotive. Convention (triennial), Cleveland, June 2-July 24,
1930---------------------------------------------------------------------------- --------------------------------Sept. 92
Engineers, hoisting and portable. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provi­
sions -----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Nov. 129
Engineers, steam and operating. Holidays provided by collective agreements__________
Aug. 5
Engravers, photo:
Holidays provided by collective agreements_______ _____________________________
Aug. 10
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provision____________ __ _________
Nov. 131
Engravers’ Union of North America, International Photo. Cincinnati Local No. 13, arbi­
tration award________________________________________________________________
Dec. 123
Ethyl benzene vapors. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
F am ilistère of Guise, Society of the, France, organization, history, and status__________ Aug. 116-19
Family allowances:
Australia. Commonwealth uniform legislation, demand for______________________
July 70
-----(New South Wales). Child endowment act of 1927, provisions of, and controversy __
July 70-1
Austria. State service, coal mining and salaried clerical employees__________ ______
July 70
Belgium. Act of August 4, 1930, principal provisions_______________________ ___
Dec. 83-5
—— Developments of system and statistics for 1929______________________________
July 64-7
Bulgaria. State service_____________________________________________________
July 70
Canada. Opinion on introduction of system___________________________________
Sept. 90-1
Czechoslovakia. Developments of system, recent______ _________________________
July 69-70
Denmark. State service_____________________________________________________
July 70
Estonia. State service_____ r _______________________ ____ _________ _________ July 70


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

f15321

1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Page
Family allowances—Continued.
July 62-4
France. Developments of system and statistics for 1929............ ........................................
Sept. 88-9
-----Funds. Progress reported from 1929 to 1930, congress and resolution------------------July 67-8
Germany. Developments of system and statistics for 1927-------- ---------------------------Great Britain. Family Endowment Society memorandum to Royal Commission on
Sept. 89
the Civil Service, 1929-30....... - ........ - ------------------------------------------------------------Sept. 90-1
-----Labor Party and Trades Union Congress joint committee, interim report------------July 70
Greece. State service---- -------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------July 70
Hungary. State service---------------- ------ ---------------------------------------------------------July 70
Italy. Autonomous public services and ministries----------------------------------------------July 70
Latvia. State service---------------------- ------- -----------------------------------------------------July 70
Netherlands. State service, individual employers and equalization------------------------July 71-2
New Zealand. Act of 1926, statistics of operation, biennium ending March 31,1929-----July 68-9
Poland. Development of system and statistics for 1928------- --------------------------------July 70
Sweden. State service------------------------------ ---------------------------------------------------July 70
Switzerland. Federal State service, official and manual workers----------------------------July 70
Yugoslavia. State service------------------------- ----------------------------------------------- ----Family welfare and relief, trend of expenditures, 1928 and 1929----- -------------------------------- Oct. 112-15
July 10-13
Farmers’ leagues. China. Development of (Ta Chen).....................-............................ ........
Farms. (See Agriculture.)
Fatalities, accident. (See Accident statistics.)
Aug. 59-61
Fatigue, industrial. Feeling of, as affected by intense mental effort..................... , ----------Federal employees. (.See Public service.)
Five-hour day. American Federation of Labor resolution, fiftieth annual convention, Octo­
Nov. 124
ber, 1930_________________________________________ __________________________
Fluctuation, employment. (See Employment statistics.)
Food canning and preserving (except Wages and hours, which see):
Sept. 51-3
Child labor. Survey of fruit and vegetable canneries, seasons of 1923, 1925, and 1926---Aug. 57-8
Maryland. Child workers in canneries, report, 1929--------------------------------------------Sept. 93
Forced labor. International Labor Conference, draft convention on, June, 1930-------------Dec. 162-3
Forty-hour week, foreign countries. Germany. Trade-unions resolution---------------------Forty-eight-hour week, foreign countries:
Australia (New South Wales). Act of June 16,1930, 8-hour bill, and unemployment re­
lief, provisions------------------------- ------ ---------------------------------------------------- Sept. 160; Nov. 43
Sept. 165
-----( Queensland). Railway service and public service, return to 48-hour standard week.
Friendly societies, foreign countries. (See Benefits and benefit funds.)
Oct. 121
Fruit and hop picking England, efficiency of labor, study of, 1926-1928----------------------Fruit canneries. (See Food canning and preserving.)
Funds, pension. (See Old-age pensions and retirement.)
Fur workers:
Aug. 3-4
Holidays provided by collective agreements-------------------------------------------------------Nov. 130
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions--------------------- ------- -----Garages, commercial (except Wages and hours, which see). Employment fluctuations, by
sex, Ohio, 1923 and 1928-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Garment workers, ladies:
Holidays provided by collective agreements-------------------------------------------------------Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions-----------------------------------Gasoline stations. (See Cooperation.)
Glass-bottle workers. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions----------Glass cutters, window. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions-------Glass industry (except Wages and hours, which see). Holidays provided by collective agree­
ments----------------------------------- ------ ---------------- -----------------------------------------------Golf courses, miniature, labor law held applicable to, California----------------------------------Governmental Officials in Industry, Association of, of the United States and Canada:
Conventions, annual. (See Conventions, meetings, etc.)
Wage-collection model statute, interest in ---------------------------------------------------------Granite cutters. Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions----------------Group life insurance. (See Life insurance.)
Guilds. China. Disintegration of, and development of modern labor union (Ta Chen),.
H an d icrafts:
Germany. Census of persons engaged in, and development of industry-------------------Sweden. Revival of, and organization and activities of Handicraft Association---------Hat, cap, and millinery workers, cloth. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement
provisions___________________________________________________________________


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1533]

July 45-6
Aug. 4-5
Nov. 130
Nov. 130
Nov. 130
Aug. 11,12
Sept. 64

Oct. 70-3
Nov. 131
July 2-5

Oct. 107-8
Nov. 49-52
Nov. 130

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1930

Health and hygiene, general:
Page
Bibliography. Industrial hygiene, current literature and organizations (Hayhurst)___
Nov. 91-3
Health and hygiene, United States:
Health, National Institute of. Act of May 20, 1930, establishing, provisions_________
Nov. 97
Mental efforts, intense, energy requirements of_____________________ ____________
Aug. 59-61
Noise, effect on hearing of industrial workers_________ __________________ ____ ___
Dec. 92-3
Porto Rico. Problems and campaign against disease, governor’s report, 1929-30______
Dec. 57-60
Public Health Service. (See United States Government, work of, by department,
bureau, etc.)
Unemployment, effect on health, Philadelphia, study of March, 1930_______________
Dee. 88-9
Health insurance, foreign countries:
Australia. Statistics, by sex and age groups, 1927-28___________ __________________
Aug. 55-6
France. Sick benefits and invalidity insurance, law effective July 1, 1930___________
Sept. 79-81
Great Britain. National health insurance fund, analysis of claims, cost of administra­
tion, etc., 1921 to 1927______________________________________________________
July 93-6
Italy. Invalidity pensions, eases handled, 1926 to 1929___________________________
Aug. 70
Netherlands. Sickness insurance for wage earners, scope of law (in force January 17,
1930), contributions, benefits, etc.--___ ____, ________________
July 96-102
Hod carriers and building laborers. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement
provisions________________________________ ___________ ______________________
Nov. 129
Holiday work. (See Sunday and holiday work.)
Homeless, temporary shelter provided, January, 1929, to June, 1930____________
Oct. 115
Hop and fruit picking. ‘England, efficiency of labor, study of, 1926-1928________________
Oct. 121
Hosiery Workers, American Federation of Full-Fashioned:
Agreement. Unemployment insurance provisions, effective August 1, 1930__________
Sept. 103
Hospital service. (See Medical and hospital service.)
Hotel and restaurant employees:
Holidays provided by collective agreements____________________________________
Aug. 7
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions______________________ _
Nov. 130
Hours of labor, general:
Germany. Forty-hour week, trade-unions resolution______ ___________ ___________
Dec. 162-3
International Labor Conference, draft convention on, June, 1930____ _______________
Sept. 93
Legislation. Private employment and public works, review of, 1929, by State_______
Aug. 83
(See also Wages and hours.)
Housing, United States:
Building permits issued. (See Building construction .ndustry.)
Costs (estimated). By city (100,000 population or over), first half of 1930____________
Aug. 154-6
—— Dwellings, average per family and families provided for, by city and kind of building. Sept. 117-22
-----Dwellings, St. Louis, Mo., and Washington, D. C., comparison, fust six months of
1929_____ ____________________________ ________ __________________________
Dec. 140-2
-----New buildings and total construction, by city (2',000 population or over) and
geographic division, May to October, 1930____ ________________________________ July 121-32;
Aug. 142-53; Sept. 105-17; Oct. 149-61; Nov. 149-63; Dec. 125-39
-----New buildings and total construction, and per capita expenditure, by city (popu­
lation 100,000 or over), 1930.___ _____ _____ ______ __________________________ Sept. 123-32
-----Nonresidential buildings, by kind and by city (500,000 population or over), 1921 to
1929___________________________________________ _______ _________________
July 133-5
New York. State board of housing, annual report, 1930__________________________
July 135-7
New York City. Present situation, East Side rear houses, etc___________ 1_____
July 136-7
Porto Rico. Rural housing, country workers, survey__________________ __________
Aug. 47-8
Housing, foreign countries:
Great Britain (England and Wales). New laws, provision for grants, “ clearance” and
“ improvement” areas________________________________________
Oct. 162
-----(Scotland). New law providing grants “ clearance” and “ improvement” areas___
Oct. 162
-----(Scotland). State-assisted housing, report of, 1920-1929.............................................
July 137-9
Hygiene. (See Health and hygiene.)
Im m ig ra tio n , United States:
Statistics. (See section Immigration and emigration, each issue of Review.,
Immigration, foreign countries:
Brazil. Agricultural type of immigrants (colonos) encouraged by coffee plantation
owners.___ _____________________________________________________________
Canada. Statistics, 1929-30, by sex, occupation, and destination___________________
Incomes:
Rural families, Porto Rico, 1929_______________________________________________
Southern States. Study of income and wages_______________________________ . . . .


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1534]

July 169-71
July 236-7
Aug. 48-9
Aug. 179-81

1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Industrial diseases and poisons, United States:
Page
Asbestosis, pulmonary. Results of exposure to asbestos dust (Oliver)--------------------- July 74-6
Benzene (ethyl). Guinea pigs exposed to vapors of, acute effects---------------------------Sept. 60-1
“ Cellosolve.” Guinea pigs exposed to vapors of, physiological response-------------------Sept. 61-2
Occupational diseases. Massachusetts, 554 cases investigated, 1929-------------------------Sept. 62-3
Tuberculosis. Prevalence of, in industry (Lanza and V ane).--------------------- ----------Sept. 57-8
Industrial diseases and poisons, foreign countries:
Great Britain. Factories and workshops, report of chief inspector, 1929-------------------- Nov. 97-100
---- Poisoning cases, statistics, 1900, 1910, 1920, and 1925 to 1929..---------------------------- Nov. 97-100
■
---- -(London). Acute silicosis, two cases of, cleaning-powder factory----------------------Dec. 93-5
Industrial disputes, United States, general:
Statistics. (See section Strikes and lockouts in the United States, each issue of Review.)
Industrial disputes, United States, by industry and locality:
Automobile workers. (See Industrial disputes: Motor-vehicle industry.)
Barbers. New York City, Negro barbers in Harlem, strike, August 11-15, 1930---------Oct. 140
-----New York City, strikes, M ay 19-24, and July 30-31, 1930------July 142
Clerks, retail. B utte (Mont.), Silver Bow Employers’ Association, strike, July 14-19,
1930.-.------------------------------------ ------- ------ --------------------- --------------------------Sept. 97
Clothing workers. New York City, children’s clothing workers, “ stoppage,” August
11-16, 1930___ - ------------ --------- -----------------------------------------------------------------Oct. 140
---- - New York City, children’s dressmakers, strike, August 26-September 4, 1930-------Oct. 140
-----New York City, knee-pants makers, “ stoppage,” August 4-7, 1930-------- -----------Oct. 139-40
-----New York City, raincoat makers, strike August 25-September 3, 1930.. —----------Oct. 140
Cooks, waiters and waitresses. Cleveland (Ohio) Hotels Association (Inc.), strikelockout, July 15-21,1930________________________________________Sept, 97-8; Oct. 141; Nov. 137
Cotton mills. Bessemer City (N. C.), American Cotton Mills (Inc.) workers, strike,
August 18-23, 1930___________________________ _____________________________
Oct. 141
-----Danville (Va.), Riverside and Dan River Cotton Mills (Inc.), strike, September
29_____ ______ _______________ _____________________________ . . . . . ____ , Nov. 137; Dee. 117
Garment workers. Baltimore (Md.), strike, July 23-August 4, 1930-------...------------—
Sept. 98
Garment workers, ladies’. New York City, Locals Nos. 38 and 10, strike, September
25, 1930_________ _______ __________________________________________Nov. 136-7; Dec. 117
Longshoremen, Texas, Lykes Bros. Steamship Co. strike, October 30-November 3,1930. Dee. 116-17
Metal workers, McKeesport (Pa.), Columbian Radiator Co. strike, July 1—11, 1930----Sept. 97
Mining, anthracite. Ashley (Pa.), Glen Alden Coal Co. strikes, August 18-19 and
September 16-18, 1930______ _____ .'____________________________________ Oct. 141; Nov. 136
-----Pennsylvania. Alden Coal Co. strike, June 17 to July 3, 1930--------------Aug.
134
-----Pennsylvania. Glen Lyon, Susquehanna Coal Co. strike, October 25-November
15, 1930________________ ______ __________- ------ ----------- ----------------------------Dec. 116
---- - Pennsylvania. Glen Alden Coal Co., Wilkes-Barre, Loomis Colliery, strike
Dec. 116
October 22-23, 1930_______ __________ ------------ ---------------------------------------------- -Pennsylvania. Hudson Coal Co. strike, June 17 to 20,1930-----------------Aug.
134
-----Pennsylvania. Mount Carmel district, strike, June 10 to 12, 1930..-----Aug. 134
-----Pennsylvania. Pittston Coal Co., June 21 to July 2,1930------------Aug. 134
---- - Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co. Burnside Colliery, strike, July 15-17,
1930____________________________________________________________________
Sept. 97
---- - Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., Shamokin district, strike, August 27September 4, 1930-------- -------------------- --------------------------------------------------------Oct. 141
Mining, bituminous coal. Fairmont (W. Va.), Continental Coal Co. strike, July
1-19, 1930...._____ _______ _______________________________ ____ ___________
Sept. 97
-----Ward (W. Va.), Kelly’s Creek Colliery Co., strike, August 21 to October 6,1930. Oct. 141; Nov. 137
Mining, coal. Illinois, strike, Bell & Zoller Coal & Mining Co. employees, June 13 to 16,
1930___________________ _____ ______ ____ _____ _____ ___________ ____Aug. 134
Motor-vehicle industry. Flint (Mich.), Fisher Body Corporation, strike, June 26 to
July 7, 1930_____________________________ — ------- ---------------- ------- -------------Aug. 135
Nov. 136
Neckwear makers. New York City, strike, September 3-12, 1930--------------------------Statistics. (See section Strikes and lockouts in the United States, each issue of Review.)
Taxicab drivers. New York City, Black Beauty Cab Corporation drivers, strike, May
6 to 19, 1930------------------------- -------------------------------------------- -----------------------July 142
Teamsters and chauffeurs. New York City, strike, M ay 1 to 9, 1930----------------------July 142 ---- - Philadelphia (Pa.), strike, May 5 to 31, 1930----------------------- ------------------------July 142
Textile workers. North Carolina, strike August 18-23, 1930----------------------------------Oct. 141
-----Pennsylvania, Stewart Silk Co., of Easton, strike, June 9 to July 12, 1930................
Aug. 135
Industrial disputes, foreign countries:
Australia (New South Wales). Lost time, 1929, by industry............ ............ ................. Aug. 139-41
France. Strikes against social insurance act, in effect July 1,1930------------------- -------Dec. 120-2
Germany. Metal workers, Berlin, October 15-30, 1930---------------------- ------ -----------Nov. 133


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1535]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1930

Industrial disputes, foreign countries—Continued.
p age
Great Britain (and Northern Ireland). Statistics, by industry, cause, result, and mode
of settlement, 1929_____________ ________ _______ _________________
July 147-9
-----(England). Wool-textile industry, dispute of April 12 ending July 16, 1930_______
Sept. 102
Korea. By cause and result, 1912 to 1928______ _____ _____ _____________________
Nov. 33
Netherlands. Royal Aviation Co. pilots (17), strike, August 29, 1930_____ _________ .
Dec. 122
Industrial education. (See Vocational education.)
Industrial medicine. (See Medical and hospital service.)
Industrial survey. London (England), new survey in progress, scope of (Marsh)________
Oct. 39-41
Inspection, factory, mine, and shop. (See Sanitation, working conditions, and factory in­
spection.)
Insurance. (See Health insurance; Life insurance; M aternity allowances and insurance;
Unemployment insurance; Workmen’s compensation.)
International Labor Conference. Fourteenth session. Forced labor and hours of work,
draft conventions on______________________ ____ ____________________
gep^ 92-3
Invalidity insurance. (See Health insurance.)
Investigative commissions. Legislation, review of, 1929, by State_______________ ____Aug. 88
Iron and steel industry (except Wages and hours, which see);
Conditions in the industry, certain European countries___________________________
Oct. 180
Germany. Metal workers’ unions, Minister of Labor award, wage reduction________
Nov. 132-3
Ironworkers. (See Structural and ornamental iron workers.)
Ju venile employment. (See Child labor and welfare.)
L abor banks. (See Cooperation.)
Labor camps. Evils of, regulation and control, paper read (Eldridge)__________________ Sept. 36-40
Labor conditions, United States:
Alaska. Annual report of governor, year ending June 30, 1929_____________________
July 162-4
Longshoremen. Major ports, 1928_____________________________________ Oct. 1-20; Nov. 11-25
Porto Rico. Report of Governor, 1929-30______________________________________ ’ Dec! 57-60
----- Town and country workers, survey_____ ________ __________________________
Aug. 46_51
Labor conditions, foreign countries:
Brazil. Coffee plantations.-______ ______________________________ ______
July 169-71
China. Farmers’ leagues, development of (Ta Chen)____________________________
July 10-13
-----Labor, during the civil wars (Ta Chen)____________________________________
July i_ig
-----Radicalism and labor (Ta Chen)________ __________________________________
j ujy 9
Germany. Automobile industry (Kummer)............ ....................... ........... ...... ..............
July 29-33
Korea. Labor movement and unrest, disputes, by cause and result, 1912 to 1928........ .
Nov. 32-4
-----Labor situation in (Ta Chen)_______ ______ ________ _____________________
Nov 26-36
Liverpool (England). Dock workers, decasualization, earnings, etc________________
Dec. 43-9
Straits Settlements. Wages and, in 1929..._______ _____________________________
Nov 196
Labor contract. Legislation, review of, 1929, by State________________________ _____
Aug 81-2
Aug. 87
Labor offices, Governmental. Legislation, review of, 1929, by State___________________
Labor organizations, United States:
Amalgamated Clothing Workers’ factory, Milwaukee, organization, operation, etc____ Dec. 108-11
Benefits. (See Benefits and benefit funds.)
Holidays provided by agreements. (See specific occupation.)
Legislation. Labels, trade-marks, injunctions, Nebraska and Minnesota, 1929_______
Aug. 86
Labor organizations, foreign countries:
General. International Federation of Trade-Unions, membership statistics, by country
and sex, December 31, 1928______________________________________________
Aug 124
-----International Trade Secretariats, membership, by trade, December 31,1928.,_____
Aug. 125
-----Workers’ organizations, membership, by country, December 31, 1927 and 1928____
Aug. 125-6
Australia. Unemployment among trade-union members, March 31 and June 30, 1930_.
Nov. 46-7
Canada, Membership statistics, 1929______________________ ____________
_
gep 4 93.4
China. Labor-union movement and disintegration of guild system (Ta Chen)_______
July 2-5
-----Miners’ unions, development............... .........................................................................
Dec. 64-5
Great Britain. Membership, by group of organizations, 1929 and 1930, represented at
Trades-Union Congress___________________________ ______ _______________
j^ov 126
Korea. Development and growth.......................... ..............................................................
Nov. 32
Labor productivity. (See Production and productivity.)
Labor situation. (See Labor conditions.)
Labor turnover. M onthly rates. (See section Labor turnover, each issue of Review.)
Lacquers and lacquer thinners, manufacture of. ‘ ‘ Cellosolve ” vapors, exposure to, physi­
ological response of animals_____________________________________________
gep4 g]_2
Land settlement. Italy. Uncultivated district, rural development policy in campaign
against unemployment_______________________________________ _____________
j uly 52> 53


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1536]

1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Lathers:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against______________________
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions_______________________
Laundries, cooperative. (See Cooperation.)
Laundry workers:
Holidays provided by collective agreements______________ . _____________________
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provision________________________
Laws and legislation, United States, Federal and general:
Child labor. Dangerous trades for minors, legislative provisions, by State-------------Cooperation. Consumers’ societies, summary as of June, 1930------------- ------ ---------------Credit unions, review of, by State, 1929_____________________________________
Health, National Institute of. Act of M ay 26, 1930, establishing, provisions_________
Labor legislation. Review of, for 1929_________________ ------- --------------------------Night work, minors, laws governing, provisions of, by State_______________________
Public Health Service. Act (Parker bill) of April 9,1930, reorganizing, summary.........
Saturday half holiday, laws pertaining to, by State_______________ _____ _________
Sunday labor, statutory provisions relating to, by S ta te ..------------------ ------ -----------Wage-collection model statute, text_______________ __________ ______ ___________
Laws and legislation, United States, by State:
Louisiana. Workmen’s compensation, 1930______________ ______________________
Massachusetts. Old-age assistance act of May 28, 1930 (effective July 1,1931), analysis.

Page
Sept. 10
Nov. 129

Aug. 8
Nov. 130
Nov. 53-70
Aug. 100-12
Aug. 86
Nov. 97
Aug. 81-8
Oct. 123-8
Aug. 59
Sept. 67-9
Sept. 69-74
Oct. 70-3
Dec. 100
July 103;
Aug. 52-3
Dec. 100

-----Workmen’s compensation, 1930.____ ______________________________________
New York. Grade-crossing elimination work declared to be public work, subject to
Sept. 65-6
8-hour law, April 25, 1930..------------------------------------------- ----------------------------------Half holiday, female employees, factories and mercantile establishments, effective
April 28, 1930____________ _________ ______________________________________
July 108-9
-----Safety law for window cleaners, amendment effective July 1, 1930.._____________
Sept. 64-5
-----Workmen’s compensation, 1930__________________ _______ _________________
Dec. 100-1
Porto Rico. Workmen’s compensation, 1930.------- ----------------- ---------------------------Dec. 101
Dec. 101
Virginia. Workmen’s compensation, 1930.............................................................. .............
Laws and legislation, foreign countries:
Australia (New South Wales). Unemployment relief, and 48-hour week, act of June 16,
1930______________________________________________________________ Sept. 166; Nov. 43-5
-— (Queensland). Apprentices and minors, act of 1929 (effective February 20, 1930),
provisions of_____________________________________________________________
July 150-1
— (Queensland). Conciliation and arbitration, act of 1929 (effective January 23, 1930),
principal features__ ______________________________________________________
Aug. 94
---- -(Queensland). Unemployment relief, 1930-------------------------------------------------Nov. 45-6
-----(Victoria). Unemployment relief, 1930_____________________________________
Nov. 46
Vustria. Collective agreement and free assembly (antiterror law), act of April 5, 1930,
Oct.135-6
principal provisions________________________________________________
Belgium. Family allowances, act of August 4, 1930---------------------------------------------Dec. 83-5
-----Salaried employees, insurance against old age and premature death, 19301aw revising
1925 act_________________________________________________________________
Dec. 75-8
-----Seamen, compensation act of December 30,1929, effective July 1,1930, provisions of.
Oct. 131-2
-----Wage earners, insurance against old age and premature death, 1930 law revising 1924
act____________________________________________________________
Dec.78-82
-----Workmen’s compensation act of December 24, 1903, revised June 18,1930__________
Dec.102-3
China. Arbitration act of 1928, principal features_________________________________
June 14-16
---- - Factory act of 1929, principal features______________________________________
July 16-18
-----Labor-union law of 1929, principal features__________________________________
July 16
Sept. 76-87
France. Social insurance law of March 14,1928, amended, effective July 1, 1930--------Great Britain. Public works, construction of, to be facilitated____________________
Nov. 47
------ (England). Coal mines act of August 1,1930, principal provisions_____________
Oct. 108-10
---- - (England). Eight-hour day, bill embodying Washington Convention principles
before Parliament_________________________________________________________
July 171
------ (England and Wales). Housing grants for, “ clearance” and “ improvement”
areas_________ _•____________________________________________________ ____Oct. 162
-----(Scotland). Housing, grants for, “ clearance” and “ improvement” areas------------Oct. 162
Netherlands. Sickness insurance act (in force January 17, 1930), scope and analysis'.. . . July96-102
Nicaragua. Workmen’s compensation act of May 13, 1930, principal provisions--------Nov. 103-4
Portugal. Compulsory employment of nationals, decree No. 18415, effective June 3,
1930____________________________________________________________________
Oct. 136
Salvador. Retirement of Government and municipal employees, act of May 24,1930—
Dec. 82
Lay-off problem. (See Employment, stabilization of.)


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1537]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW
Legal aid:
Free agencies for. Work of, statistics, by city, 1929 (American Bar Association)...........
Organizations, National Association of, cooperation of, in model wage-collection statute
Leisure time, workers’, utilization of:
International Labor Office, director’s report, 1930._______ ____
Italy. Dopolavoro movement and activities, 1926 and 1929.........................
London (England). Working-class life and use of leisure time, new survey (Marsh).
Life insurance:
Electrical Workers, International Brotherhood of, new provisions in agreements______
Group insurance. Statutes enacted on, 1929, reviewed, by State____
Linemen (electrical workers). Payment of wages, time and method, agreement'provisions
Living conditions:
China. Mine workers, coal and iron_____________________
Porto Rico. Rural workers, survey________________
Loans:
Firms to employees_________________________
(See also Small-loan companies and borrowers.)
Lockouts. (See Industrial disputes.)
London life and labor, new survey in progress, scope and character of (Marsh)
Longshoremen. (See Docks and harbors.)
Lost time. Australia (New South Wales), through industrial disputes and other causes
1929_______ ______________ ______________ _______
Lump-sum payments. (See Workmen’s compensation.)
M ach in ery . Coal mining, Great Britain, increasing mechanization, 1929_________
Machinists. Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisionsMailers’ union. Holidays provided by collective agreements_______ _____ __
Maintenance-of-way employees. Holidays provided by collective agreements
Manufactures, census of. (See Census, industrial.)
Marble and terrazzo workers. Contracting by union members, agreement provisions
against____________ ________________________
Marketing associations, distributive departments. (See Cooperation.)
Masters, mates, and pilots. Holidays provided by collective agreements____
M aternity allowances and insurance, foreign countries:
Australia. Claims allowed and rejected and amounts paid, 1913________
France. Law effective July 1, 1930, provisions of_____________
Italy. M aternity cases handled by National Institution for Social Assistance, 1926 to 1929M aternity and infancy. Berkeley (Calif.), costs of obstetric service, 1928Mates. (See Masters, mates, and pilots.)
M eat cutters and butcher workmen:
Holidays provided by collective agreements___ ___________
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions___
Mechanics’ liens. Legislation, review of, 1929, by State......................
Medical and hospital service, industrial:
Adequate provision for, city of 100,000 population, an estimate____________
China. Mines, coal and iron..................... .......................... ........
Comparison of industrial group and community medical service_____
Endicott Johnson Corporation medical service, activities and costs_______
Hospital service, cost of________ _______________
Italy (Rome). Royal University, school of industrial medicine opened
M aternity care, cost of, 1928, Berkeley (Calif.)........................................ _
Medical care, cost of (Frankel)................................. ..........
Medical schools, proposed industrial medical courses in, outline__________
Shelby County (Ind.) medical facilities, survey of medical costs, 1929____ ____
M ental effort, intense, effects of, upon total energy transformation (metabolism)___
M etal trades (except Wages and hours, which see):
Holidays provided by collective agreements...................................
M etal workers, sheet:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against_____________
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provision_________
Middle-aged worker. (See Older worker in industry.)
Migration Committee, Internal. Italy. Function of, in directing labor supply
Migratory child labor. (See Child labor and welfare.)
Milking cows, hand versus machine, England, study of, 1926-1928________
Miniature golf courses, labor law held applicable to, California_____________


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

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[1930
Page
Oct. .116-18
Oct. 70-3
Sept. 41-6
Nov. 48
Oct. 39-40
Nov. 105-6
Aug. 82
Nov. 129
Dec. 63-4
Aug. 47
Dec. 54-5
Oct. 35-41

Aug. 139-41

Dec. 66-7
Nov. 131
Aug. 10
Aug. 10
Sept. 10
Aug. 8
Aug. 68
Sept. 80
Aug. 71
Dec. 97-8

Aug. 5-0
Nov. 131
Aug. 85
Nov. 95-6
Dec. 62-3
Dec. 90-1
Dec. 89-91
Nov. 93-5
Nov. 100
Dec. 97-8
Sept. 59-60
Nov. 88-93
Dec. 95-7
Aug. 59-61
Aug. 11,12
Sept. 10
Nov. 130
July 52-3
Oct. 120-1
Sept. 64

1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Mine Workers of America, United:
Page
Agreement. Anthracite districts 1, 7, and 9, September X, 1930, to April 1, 1936, terms
0f___ ______________________ __________________________ __________________ Sept. 103-4
-----Rocky Mountain Fuel Co., September 1, 1930---------------------------------------------- Nov. 132
Coal miners, anthracite and bituminous, payment of wages, agreement provisions.«™^Nov. 131
Mining (except Wages and hours, which see), United States:
Accidents, relative responsibility of management and workers for-------------— - ----- —
July 77-8
Clay. Missouri, fatal accidents, 1929__________________________________________
Aug. 62
Coal. Colorado, fatal accidents, 1920 to 1929------------------------------------------------------Aug. 62
-----Fatalities in 1928, rates by cause of accident and by State-------------------------------—
July 83-5
-----Illinois, production and accidents, 1929------------Sept. 56
-----Labor productivity, analysis by State (Stewart)-------------------------------------------Dec. 37-42
-----Missouri, fatal accidents, 1929«-------------------------------------------- --------------------Aug. 62
-----Ohio, fluctuation of employment (Croxton)--------------------------------------------------Aug. 13-16
Fireclay. Ohio, fluctuation of employment (Croxton)----------------------------------------Aug, 21-2
Gypsum.. Ohio, fluctuation of employment (Croxton)..-------...----------------------------Aug. 23
Lead and zinc. Missouri, fatal accidents, 1929------- -------------------------------------------Aug. 62
Shale. Missouri, fatal accidents, 1929--------------------- ------ -----------------------------------Aug. 62
Mining (except Wages and hours, which see), foreign countries:
Australia (New South Wales). Time lost, by cause, 1917 to 1929----------------------------Aug. 141
China. Coal mine labor, living conditions, relief organizations, etc------------------------Dec. 60-5
Great Britain. Coal mining, increased mechanization, 1929--------------------- ,------------Dec. 66-7
Dec. 65-7
—— Coal mining, output, earnings, etc., report, 1929---------------------------------- ------ —
---- - (England). Coal mines act of August 1, 1930, summary of terms----------- ------ Oct. 108-10
Minors. (See Child labor and welfare.)
Minors, illegally employed, injury to. (See Workmen’s compensation.)
Mosaic and terrazzo workers. Payment ofwages, time and method, agreement provisions...
Nov. 129
Mothers’ pensions, United States. Legislation, review of, 1929, by State----------------------Aug. 86
Motor-vehicle industry (except Wages and hours, which see):
Age distribution of employees, Ford Motor Co. River Rouge plant, February 20, 1930..
Dec. 55-7
Automobile manufacturing, fluctuation of employment in, Ohio, 1923 to 1928 (Croxton
July 40-7
and Croxton)------- ------------------------- ------- --------------------------------------------------Germany. Automobile industry, labor conditions in (Kummer)------------------ ------- July 29-33
Neckwear makers. Holidays provided by collective agreements.------------- ------------------Neckwear tackers, trimmers, and boxers. Holidays provided by collective agreements----Negroes. Richmond (Va.), welfare committee survey, October, 1928, to July, 1929....... .*...
Newspaper publishing. (See Printing trades.)
Night work, United States:
Cotton mills, gradual elimination, for women and minors, plan of Cotton Textile Insti­
tu te.— --------------------------- ------- ------------ --------------------------------------------------Minors, laws governing, provisions of, by State----------------------------------------- -------Noise, effect of, on hearing of industrial workers-------------------------------------------------------

Aug. 4
Aug. 4
Aug. 45-6

Nov. 70-j
Oct. 123-^
Dec. 923
Dec. 97-8

O bstetric service, cost of, 1929, Berkeley (Calif.)-------------------------------- - -----------------Occupational diseases. (See Industrial diseases and poisons; Workmen’s compensation.)
Old-age pensions and retirement, United States:
Nov. 105-6
Electrical Workers, International Brotherhood of, new provisions in agreements....... .
Federal employees’ retirement act of 1930, analysis of------------------------------ ------- -----Aug. 72-80
Hawaii. Employees’ retirement fund, operation of, 1928-29, report-------------------------Aug. 80
Legislation. Private employees, New Jersey, 1929, reviewed---------------------------------Aug. 87
-----Public employees, 1929, review of, by State----- -----Aug. 85-87
-----Review of, 1929, by State------------ ---------------------------------------------------- ------ Aug. 86
Massachusetts. Old-age assistance act of May 28, 1930 (effective July 1, 1931), anal­
ysis_____________________ _____________ ______________ ______ ________ July 103; Aug. 52-3
New York. Retirement system, statistics of operation, annual report of comptroller,
1928-29.............
JuJy 103-5
Railroads. Financing pension plans, funding methods and partial funding--------------Oct. 101-4
Trade-unions, benefits paid by national and international unions, 1929.---------Dec. 106-8
Old-age pensions and retirement, foreign countries:
Australia. Statistics, by sex and age groups, 1927-28-------------------------------------------Aug. 53-5
Belgium. Salaried employees, amendment of June 18, 1930----------------------------------Dec. 75-8
■-----Wage earners, amendment of July 14, 1930----------Dec. 78-82
Canada (Nova Scotia). Final report of committee of inquiry--------------------------------Aug. 55-6
France. Old-age insurance, law effective July 1, 1930, provisions of-------------------— Sept. 81-2
Great Britain (England and Wales). Report, M inistry of Health, 1929-30---------------Nov. 106-7


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1539]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW
Old-age pensions and retirement, foreign countries—Continued.
Great Britain. (Scotland). Old-age contributory scheme, statistics of operation,
1928 and 1929, first annual report_______________________ _______________
Italy. Pension cases handled by National Institution for Social Assistance, 1926 to 1929
New Zealand. National Provident Fund, report of operations, 1929..____ __________
-----Pensions Department, report, 1929-30___________________________________
Salvador. Government service and municipal employees, act of May 24, 1930_______
Older worker in industry:
Lay-off problem, experience of a group of employers______________________________
Middle-aged, finding work for, work of San Francisco agency______________
Retention of, and transfer to other work, employers’ policies______________________
Ornamental-iron workers. (See Structural and ornamental iron workers.)
Orphans’ pensions. (See Widows’ and orphans’ pensions.)
Output. (See Production and productivity.)
Overtime work:
Cigarette manufacturing industry, 1930________________________________________
Dyeing and finishing textiles, rate of pay for, 1930____ ___________________________
Portland-cement industry, 1929___________________________________________

[1930
Page
July 105-6
Aug. 70
Oct. 105-6
Oct. 104-5
Dec. 82
Sept. 23
Sept. 31-4
Sept. 34-5

Oct. 168-9
Nov. 175-6
Aug. 170

P ain ters, decorators, and paper hangers:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against______________________
Sept. 10
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions_______________________
Nov. 129
Painters, sign. Contracting by union members, agreement provision against___________
Sept. 11
Paper and pulp industry (except Wages and hours, which see). Holidays provided by collec­
tive agreements___________________________________________________
Aug. 11-12
Paving cutters. Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions____________
Nov. 131
Payment of wages:
Time and method, collective agreement provisions, by occupations__________ ______ Nov. 128-31
(See also Wage claims.)
Pensions. (See Health insurance; M aternity allowances and insurance; Old-age pensions
and retirement; Unemployment; Widows’ and orphans’ pensions.)
Permits, building. (See Building construction industry.)
Permits, child labor. (See Child labor and welfare: Employment certificates.)
Personnel research, agencies, new directory of (Bureau of Labor Statistics Bui. No. 518)...
Sept. 46-7
Photo-engravers. (See Engravers, photo.)
Physical examination of employees:
Asbestos workers (363), Great Britain, results________ __________________________
July 75
Child applicants for permits to work, Milwaukee (Wis.), results___________________
July 57
Pilots. (See Masters, mates, and pilots.)
Plasterers, operative. Contracting by union members, agreement provision against____
Sept. 10
Plumbers and gas fitters:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against______________________
Sept. 10
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions_______________________
Nov. 130
Pocketbook workers:
Holidays provided by collective agreements____________________________________
Aug. 8
Payment of wages, tim e and method, agreement provisions_______________________
Nov. 131
Poisoning. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Port workers. (See Docks and harbors.)
Portland cement. (See Cement industry.)
Potato harvesting. England, labor efficiency, study of, 1926-1928_____________________
Oct. 119-20
Poultry work. England, efficiency of labor, study of, 1926-1928_______________________
Oct. 122
Poverty. London (England), new survey in progress, scope of (Marsh)____________ ___
Oct. 36-9
Pressers. (See Cleaners, dyers, and pressers.)
Printing trades (except Wages and hours, which see):
Holidays provided by collective agreem ents..._____ ____________________________
Aug. 8-10
Newspaper. Cincinnati, Photo-Engravers’ Union No. 13, arbitration award_________
Dec. 123
Pressmen and assistants, paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions___
Nov. 131
Prices, general. Great Britain (England). Plan to regulate, consumers’ council to replace
Government food council______________________________________________________
July 233
Production and productivity, United States:
Mining, coal. Illinois, mine labor productivity, analysis by county (Stewart)______
Dec. 40
---- - Illinois, production and accidents, 1929...__________________________________
Sept. 56
-----Mine labor productivity, analysis, by State (Stewart)____________ _________ . . .
Dec. 37-42
Portland-cement industry, barrels produced, 1890 to 1927_________________________
Aug. 171-2
Ratio of wages to value added by manufacture and to value of finished product, 1849
to 1929 (Stewart)________________ ____ ______________________ _____ _______
Dec. 33-6


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[1540]

1930]

IN D E X

TO

VOLUM E

31

Production and productivity, foreign countries:
Germany. Automobile industry.........................................................................................
Great Britain. Coal-mining industry, costs, output, and proceeds, by district, 1929___
---- - (England). Coal mining, output per man-shift, 1924 to 1930.................
-----(England). F ruit and hop picking, efficiency oflabor, 1926-1928_________
—— (England). Milking of cows, efficiency of labor, hand versus machine, 1926-1928. _
---- - (England). Potato harvesting, efficiency oflabor, 1926-1928.....................................
---- -(England). Poultry work, efficiency oflabor, 1926-1928----Profit sharing. Employee stock-ownership plans, effect of stock-market crisis of 1929 on..
Public construction work. (See Public works.)
Public health service. (See United States Government, work of, by department, etc.)
Public service, United States. Federal employees’ retirement act of 1930, analysis of------Public service, foreign countries:
Australia (New South Wales). Reduction of salaries, measure of unemployment relief,
1930-31___________________________________________________ ______ ________
Salvador. Retirement law of 1930, Government and municipal employees__________
Public works, U nited States. Hours of labor. Legislation of 1929, reviewed by State------Public works, foreign countries:
Canada. Law of 1930 providing funds for, as unemployment relief measure--------------Great Britain. Construction of, act to facilitate_________________________________
Italy. Government expenditures on, to relieve unemployment, 1930---------------------------Public works organized by the State, 1926 to 1929_____________________________

Page
July 30-2
Dec. 65-6
Oct. 184
Oct. 121
Oct. 120-1
Oct. 119-20
Oct. 122
Dec. 49-52

Dec. 71-3
Nov. 47
Dec. 73-4
- July 53

Q uarries (except Wages and hours, which see):
Accidents. United States, in 1928 (Bureau of Mines Bui. No. 325)-------------------------Holidays provided by collective agreements-------------------------------------------------------Limestone. Ohio, fluctuation of employment (Croxton and Croxton)-------_------- -----Payment of wages, tim e and method, agreement provisions-------------------- --------------Sandstone. Ohio, fluctuation of employment (Croxton and Croxton)----------------------

Sept. 54-5
Aug. 11-12
Aug. 17-19
Nov. 131
Aug. 19-21

Aug. 72-80

Nov. 43-4
Dec. 82
Aug. 83

R adicalism . (See Labor conditions.)
Railroads (except Wages and hours, lohich see), United States:
Aug. 26
Baltimore & Ohio stabilization of employment plan, shopm en..___ ________________
Collective bargaining through employees’ own representative, right upheld, court
decision------------------------------ ------------------- ------- -----------------------------------------Aug. 88-91
Holidays provided by collective agreements--------------------------------- --------------------Aug. 10
Pension plans. Funding methods and partial funding-----------------------------------------Oct. 101-4
Shop crafts employment, stabilization program_______________ 1-------------------------Aug. 24-6
Shopmen, paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions---------------------Nov. 131
Railway employees’ department. (See American Federation of Labor.)
Sept. 47
Rationalization, policy of, tendency and effect, building trades, England----------------------Real wages. (See Wages general.)
Reclamation and development of land. Italy. Rural development policy of Internal
Migration Committee in campaign against unemployment-------- ------- ---------------------July 52-3
Recreation, U nited States. Community recreation movement, 1929, report of Playground
and Recreation Association of America__________________________________________
J uly 73
Rehabilitation, reeducation, and reemployment, United States. Legislation, review of,
1929, by State_________________________________________ ___________— ..................
Aug. 87
Restaurant employees. (See Hotel and restaurant employees.)
Restaurants, cooperative. (See Cooperation.)
Retail clerks. (See Clerks.)
Retail prices, United States:
Coal. Average and relative prices by kind, January, 1913, to June, 1930.........................
Aug. 239
-----By city, specified dates, 1929, 1930_________________________________________
July 225-6;
Aug. 237-8; Sept. 218-19; Oct. 224-5; Nov. 235-6; Dec. 211-13
Electricity. By city, specified dates, 1928,1929, and 1930_________________________
Aug. 243-5
Food. (See article Retail prices of food in the U nited States, each issue of Review.)
Gas. By city, specified dates, 1913 to 1930_____________________________________
Aug. 240-1
Index numbers. Comparison, foods, etc., certain foreign countries, by months, 1924 to
1930___________________________ ___________________________________ July 228; Nov. 237-9
Retail prices, foreign countries:
Australia. Foods and groceries, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930-----------July 229; Nov. 239
Belgium. Foods, etc., index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930------------------------July 228; Nov. 238
Canada. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930------July 228; Nov. 238
Czechoslovakia. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930--------------------- July 228; Nov. 238
Denmark. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930-----------------------------July 228; Nov. 238
Finland. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930----------------------July 228; Nov. 238
France (except Paris). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930..........
July 228; Nov. 238


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1541]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1930

Retail prices, foreign countries—Continued.
Page
France (Paris). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________ . . . . July 228; Nov. 238
Germany. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930......... ............. ............. July 228; Nov. 238
Great Britain (England). Food, plan to regulate, consumers’ council to replace Govern­
ment food council. . ____ _________________________________________ ________
July 233
-----(United Kingdom). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930-...___ July 229; Nov. 239
India (Bombay). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_____________ July 229; Nov. 239
Italy. Foods and charcoal, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_____
July 229; Nov. 239
July 229; Nov. 239
Netherlands (Hague). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930.......
New Zealand. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_______________ July 229; Nov. 239
Norway. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________________ __ July 229; Nov. 239
South Africa. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_____________ ... July 229; Nov. 239
Sweden. Foods, fuel, and light, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930________ July 229; Nov. 239
July 229; Nov. 239
Switzerland. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930...____
Retail store societies, cooperative. (See Cooperation.)
Retirement systems. (See Old-age pensions and retirement.)
Roofers, slate, tile, and composition:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against........................ .................. .
Sept. 11
Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement provisions______ ________________
Nov. 130
Rubber industry (except Wages and hours, which see). Automobile tires and tubes, manu­
facture of, fluctuation of employment in, Ohio, 1923 to 1928 (Croxton and Croxton)_____
July 44-5
Rural housing. Porto Rico, country workers, survey........ ..................................................
Aug. 47-8
Rural living conditions. (See Living conditions.)
Safety. (See Accident prevention, general.)
Salesman held not an employee under workmen’s compensation, court decision, Massachu­
setts____ ______ ____ ________________ _____ _________________________________
Oct. 133
Sanitation, working condicions, and factory inspection, United States. Legislation, review
Aug. 84
of, 1929, by State_______ _________ ______________ ___________________ __________
Sanitation, working conditions, and factory inspection, foreign countries. Great Britain.
Factories and workshops, report of chief inspector, 1929........ .............................................
Nov. 97-100
Saturday half holiday. (See Sunday and holiday work.)
Secretariats, International Trade. (See Labor organizations.)
Seamen (except Wages and hours, which see). Belgium. Compensación act of December 30,
1929, effective July 1, 1930, provisions of__________ ________ ___ _____ _____________
Oct. 131-2
“ Shape,” gathering of longshoremen seeking work, description.____________ ___________
Oct. 4
Sheet-metal workers. (See Metal workers, sheet.)
Shop Craft System Federation No. 30 and Baltimore & Ohio Railroad, agreement, stabiliza­
tion of employment, February 10, 1930__________________________________________
Aug 26
Shopmen, railroad. (See Railroads.)
Sickness insurance. (See Health insurance.)
Sickness statistics, United States:
Benefits paid by trade-unions (national and international), 1929_____ _____________
Dec. 106-8
Organized care of the sick in city of 100,000 population, estimated needs_____________
Nov. 95-6
Silicosis. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Small-loan companies and borrowers:
Economic and social status of borrowers, 1922-23, Russell Sage Foundation study..........
Aug. 42-4
Legislation, review of, 1929, by State___ _______ ___ ___________________________
Aug. 85-6
Social conditions:
Homeless, temporary shelter provided for, January, 1929, to June, 1930...___________
Oct. 115
Korea. Factory workers and miners__________________________________________
Nov. 27-30
Relief expenditures, trend of, by month, 1928 and 1929...____ ______ _____ ________
Oct. 112-15
Social insurance, foreign countries:
Belgium. Salaried employees, act of March 10,1925, amended June 18,1930____ _____
Dec. 75-8
— Wage earners, act of December 10,1924, amended July 14,1930..................................
Dec. 78-82
France. Strikes following application of act effective July 1, 1930_____ ____________
Dec. 120-2
-----System for agricultural workers effective July 1, 1930_________________________
Sept. 84-7
-----System for commercial, industrial, and domestic workers, effective July 1,1930____
Sept. 77-84'
Social statistics. Registration of, program, Children’s Bureau (Steele)_______ _____ ____ Oct. 111-15
Spare time, workers’ utilization of. (See Leisure time, workers’ utilization of.)
Sprinkler fitters. Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions._________
Nov. 130
Steam fitters. Contracting by union members, agreement provision against..................... __
Sept. 11
Stenographers. (See Bookkeepers, stenographers, and typists.)
Stereotypers and electrotypers. Holidays provided by collective agreements___ ________
Aug. 9
Stock ownership, employee:
Massachusetts. Cooperative shoe shops, investigation authorized_____ ____________
Oct. 107
Stock-market crisis of 1929, effect of, on purchase plans............................. ....................... .
Dec. 49-52


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1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Stone trades (except Wages and hours, which see) :
Holidays provided by collective agreements___ ______________________________—
Payment of wages, time and method, stonecutters agreement provisions_______,_____
Street and electric railway employees:
Holidays provided by collective agreements.____ ________________ ______________
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement pro visions. . . . -----------------------------Strikes. (See Industrial disputes.)
Structural and ornamental iron workers:
Contracting by union members, agreement provision against......... ................ ................
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions.____ __________ _______
Sunday and holiday work, United States:
Cigarette manufacturing industry, 1930___ ______ _______ ______________________
Dyeing and finishing textiles, rate of pay for, 1930________ _______________________
Factories and mercantile establishments. New York, half-holiday law for female em­
ployees, April 28, 1930.--................................................................................... ...............
Holidays, provisions for, in collective agreements, by industry........................................
Legislation, review of, Armistice Day, Sunday work, 1929, by S ta te ...____ _________
Portland-cement industry, 1929....................................................... ............................ ..........
Saturday half holiday. Laws pertaining to, by State................................................. ......
•-----(See also Forty-four-hour week.)
Sunday labor, statutory provisions relating to, by State____ ______________ ______
Sunday and holiday work, foreign countries. China. Coal mining, 1928 and 1929_______

Page
Aug. 11-12
Nov. 131
Aug. 11
Nov. 131

Sept. 11
Nov. 130
Oct. 168-9
Nov. 175-6
July 108-9
Aug. 1-12
Aug. 86
Aug. 170
Sept. 67-9
Sept. 69-74
Dec. 61-2

Tailors, journeymen:
Holidays provided by collective agreem ents...___________________________ _____Aug. 4
Paym ent of wages, time and method, agreement p.ovisions_____________ ____ _____
Nov. 130
Teamsters and chauffeurs:
Aug. 6-7
Holidays provided by collective agreem ents...______________ ______________ _____
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions____________________ _
Nov. 131
Technical education. (See Vocational education.)
Telegraphers, commercial. Holidays provided by collective agreements________________
Aug. 8
Tires, rubber. (See Rubber industry.)
Town and country workers, Porto Rico, survey____ ________ ;_______________________
Aug. 46-51
Trade-unions. (See Labor organizations.)
Trend of employment. (See Employment statistics.)
Tuberculosis. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Tubes (automobile), rubber. (See Rubber industry.)
Typists. (See Bookkeepers, stenographers, and typists.)
Typographical workers:
Holidays provided by collective agreements_____ _____ ___ _____ ______ _________
Aug. 8-9
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provision___ ____________________
Nov. 131
U n em p lo y m en t, United States:
American Federation of Labor resolution, fiftieth annual convention, October, 1930___
Nov. 123
Amount of, and earnings of the wage-earning class as a whole, 1890-1926_____________
Aug. 177-8
Boston. Applicants (543) at a free employment agency, January, 1930, study of (Wilke).
Sept. 1-7
Oct. 74-6
Census of 1930, preliminary retu rn s..._______________________________________ . . .
Massachusetts. Causes and extent of, investigation authorized____________________
Oct. 107
New York State. Committee on Stabilization of Industry for the Prevention of, reports
of____ ________ __________________ ______ ________________________________
Aug. 26-31
Ohio. Males, as measured by fluctuations of employment, 1929 (Croxtonand Croxton)
Dec. 22-4
Philadelphia. Relation to health, Visiting Nurse Society survey, March, 1930_______
Dec. 88-9
Porto Rico. Labor situation in 1929____________________ ______________________
Sept. 25
President’s Emergency Committee for Employment, appointment and purpose.......... .
Nov. 36
Surveys. Bloomington (Ind.), February, 1930___________________________ _____ _
July 37-9
-——Buffalo, November, 1930___ ______ _____ _________ __________________ _____
Dec. 68-9
---- - Cincinnati, May, 1930________ ______ ___ _______ ___________________ _____
July 35
---- - Philadelphia, April, 1930.........................................................
Unemployment, foreign countries:
Australia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930____ _________ ______ ______ Nov. 38-39; Dec. 201
-----Trade-union members, March 31 and June 30, 1930, by Province..............................
Nov.46-7
-----(New South Wales). Relief legislation, 1930_______________________
Nov.43-5
-----(Queensland). Relief legislation, 1929 and 1930....__________________
Nov.45-6
-----(Victoria). Relief legislation, 1930.—
1______ . . . . . . _______________________
Nov. 46
Austria. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930...__________________________ Nov. 38-39; Dec. 201
Belgium. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_____________________ ______ Nov. 38-39; Dec. 201
Canada. Relief act of 1930, undertakings under___________ __________ ______ _____
Dec. 71-3-


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[1543]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1930

Unemployment, foreign countries—Continued.
Page
Canada. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930______________________ _____ Nov. 38-39: Dec. 201
China. Special national committee on, formation_______________________________
Aug. 41
Czechoslovakia. Measures for combating, 1930_________________________________
Oct. 76-7
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930______ _________________________ . . . Nov. 38-40; Dec. 202
Danzig, Free City of. Statistics, by m onth, 1929 and 1930__________________ Nov. 38-40; Dec. 202
Denmark. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930________________
Nov.
Estonia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930— ________________
Nov.
Sept. 26
Europe. Conditions, spring and summer of 1929 and 1930________________________
Finland. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930__________________
Nov.
Nov.
France, Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930._________________
Germany. Measures for combating, 1930___________________ _______ ___________
Oct. 77-9
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930__________________________________ Nov. 38-40; Dec. 202
-----(Prussia). Relief measures proposed_________________________________ _____
Dec. 73
Great Britain. Insured persons unemployed 1928 to 1930_________________________
July 47-9
-----Juveniles, transfer of, from distressed areas, and umemployment centers, 1928____
July 60-1
-----(and Northern Ireland.) Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930________ Nov. 38,40-1; Dec. 202-3
Greece. By trade and occupation, second quarter of 1930_______ __________________
Oct. 81
Hungary. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930____________________________Nov. 38-41; Dec. 203
Irish Free State. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930______________________ Nov. 38-41; Dec. 203
Italy. Campaign against____________________________________________________
July 49-53
-----Control of, under scheme of internal improvements (drainage, irrigation, conduit
and road construction, etc.)_________________________________________________
July 53
-----Relief measures, 1930, public improvements, etc_______________________ Oct. 79-80; Dec. 73-4
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930__________________________
Nov.
Japan. Conditions, March and April, 1930_____________________________________
Sept. 30
Latvia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930__________ ___________________ Nov. 38-41; Dec. 203
Netherlands. Measures for combating, 1930___________________________________
Oct. 80-1
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930______________________
Nov.
New Zealand. Analysis of situation and plan for treatm ent of problem, 1929, committee
report-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------July 54-6
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930___________________________________ Nov. 38-41; Dec. 203
Norway. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_____________________________Nov. 38-41; Dec. 203
Poland. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930__________________________ Nov. 38, 41-2; Dec. 203-4
Rumania. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930____________________________Nov. 38-42; Dec. 204
July 66
Russia (U. S. S. R.). Steady increase of, labor union members, 1926-27 to 1928-29___
Saar Territory. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_______________________ Nov. 38-42; Dec. 204
Sweden. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_________ ___________________ Nov. 38-42; Dec. 204
Switzerland. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930__________ -______________ Nov. 38-42; Dec. 204
Yugoslavia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930._____ ____________________Nov. 38-42; Dec. 204
Unemployment insurance and benefits, United States:
Full-fashioned hosiery workers, national agreement, effective August 1, 1930_________
Sept. 103
Aug. 32-3
General Electric Co, pension plan, June 16, 1930____________________________ ____
“ Steady employment plan,” three manufacturing plants, Fond du Lac, Wis_________
Dec. 70-1
Trade-unions, benefits paid by national and international unions, 1929______________
Dee. 106-8
Unemployment insurance and benefits, foreign countries:
Oct. 82-3
Australia (Queensland). System, provisions of, and operation described____________
Austria. System, provisions of, and operation described_________________________
Oct. 83
Belgium. System, provisions of, and operation described________________________
Oct. 84
Bulgaria. System, provisions of, and operation described_________________________
Oct. 84-5
Czechoslovakia. System, provisions of, and operation described___________________
Oct. 85
Denmark. System, provisions of, and operation described__________________ ______
Oct. 86
Finland. System, provisions of, and operation described_________________________
Oct. 86-7
France. System, provisions of, and operation described__________________________
Oct. 87
Germany. Changes in system, decree effective August 1, 1930_______________ _____
Oct. 77-8
—— System, provisions of, and operation described-_________ ____________________
Oct. 87-90
GreatBritain (and Northern Ireland). System, provisions of, and operation described—
Oct. 90-2
-----(England). Liverpool dock workers, rates, by age and dependents, since March 13,
1930-------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ------- — ........
Dec. 47-8
-----(England). Persons insured, index numbers, by geographic division, 1928,1929_____
Sept. 27
-----(England). Scheme, and present status____________ ______ _________ ________ Oct. 97-100
Irish Free State. System, provisions of, and operation described-..........................-........
Oct. 92
Italy. Compulsory insurance, benefit rates, and number in receipt of, 1924 to 1928___
July 50
-----System, provisions of, and operation described_____________________________ ...
Oct. 92-3
Luxemburg. System, provisions of, aDd operation described______________________
Oct. 93
Mexico. System, provisions of, and operation described__________________________
Oct. 93
Netherlands. System, provisions of, and operation described_____________________
Oct. 94


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38-40
38-40

38-40
38-40

38-41;

38-41;

1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Unemployment insurance and benefits, foreign countries—Continued.
Norway. System, provisions of, and operation described_________________________
Poland. System, provisions of, and operation described_______________ ■_________
Russia. System, provisions of, and operation described_________________ ________ _
Spain. System, provisions of, and operation described____ ______________________
Switzerland. System, provisions of, and operation described______________________
United States Government, work of, by department, bureau, etc.:
Children’s Bureau. Collection of social statistics, field and program of (Steele)______
Public Health Service. Reorganization and enlarged scope under act of April 9, 1930
(Parker bill).............. ...................................... ........................... ........... ...........................
Upholsterers:
Holidays provided by collective agreements____________________________________
Payment of wages, time and method, agreement provisions__________________ _____
Vegetable canneries. (See Food canning and preserving.)
Ventilation. Asbestos mining and manufacturing, Great Britain, recommendations_____
Village colleges, plan for, England___ _____ ________________ _____________________
Vocational education, United States. Legislation, review of, 1929, by State_____________
Vocational education, foreign countries:
General. International Labor Office, director of, report on vocational training, 1929__
Canada. Technical education act, experience under, 1919 to 1929__________________
Vocational guidance, foreign countries. General. International Labor Office, director of,
report, 1929______________ _______________________________ ____________________
Vocational rehabilitation. (See Rehabilitation, reeducation, and reemployment.)
Vocational training. (See Vocational education.)
Wage claims:
Collection of. Efforts of State labor offices, survey by Bureau of Labor Statistics____
•---- - Model statute, first draft, text____________________________________________
(See also Legal aid.)
Wages, general:
Australia (Queensland). Basic wage and hours_________________________________
Legislation, review of, 1929, by State__________________________________________
Ratio of, to value added by manufacture and to finished product (Stewart)__________
Real wages in the United States, 1890-1926_____________________________________
Southern States. Study of income and wages____________________ _________ ____
Wages and hours, United States:
Abattoirs, meat packing, etc. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928____________ _________
Automobiles, accessories, and repairs. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929______________
Bakeries. Union wage rates in 1930___________________________________________
— Virginia, bakery products, by sex and race, 1928-------------------------------------------Boot and shoe industry. Earnings, by State and sex, department and occupation, 1910
to 1930__________ _______________________________________________________
-----Virginia, by sex and race, 1928_____________________________________ „______
Brick and tile. Virginia, by race, males, 1928___________________________________
Bricklayers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930____________________________________
Building laborers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930_______ ____________ ________
Building trades. Union wage rates, by occupation, 1930____________________ _____
Candy, chewing gum, etc. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928-----------------------------------Canneries. Fruit and vegetable. Child labor, 1923,1925, and 1926 (hours only)------------- - Virginia, cannery products, by sex and race, 1928________ ____ _________ ______
Carpenters. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930________________________________ ____
Cement finishers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930_______________________________
Cement (Portland) industry. By department, occupation, and sex, 1929____________
Chauffeurs and teamsters. Union wage rates, 1930______________________________
Cigarette manufacturing, by occupation and sex, 1930____________________________
Coffee roasting. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928_________________________________
Common labor. (See Wages and hours: Unskilled labor.)
Compensation claimants. South Dakota, by occupation, year ended June 30, 1929
(wages only)______________________________________________________________
Compositors, book and job. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930_______________________
Compositors, daywork, newspaper. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930________________
Contracting, general. Virginia, by occupation and race, 1928______________________
Cooperage, barrels, and staves. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928____________________
Cotton-goods industry, by occupation, sex, and State, 1910 to 1930------------- :------------Cotton-mill products. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928_________________________
Crabs, oysters, and clams. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928........................ .......................


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Page
Oct. 94
Oct. 94-5
Oct. 95-6
Oct. 96
Oct. 96-7
Oct. 111-15
Aug. 59
Aug. 8
Nov. 131
July 76
July 151
Aug. 87
Aug. 127-31
Dec. 86-7
Aug. 127-8

Oct. 59-70
Oct. 70-3

Aug. 182-3
Aug. 85
Dec. 33-6
Aug. 176-9
Aug. 179-81
July 166
July 166
Nov. 177-82
July 166
July 152-9
July 166
July 166
Sept. 139-40
Sept. 140-1
Nov. 177-82
July 166
Sept. 52
July 166
Sept. 141-2
Sept. 142-3
Aug. 157-73
Nov. 177-83
Oct. 163-9
July 167

July 89
Sept. 143-5
Sept. 145-6
July 165
July 166
Nov. 164-9
July 167
July 167

M ONTHLY

LABOR

R E V IE W

[1930

Wages and hours, United States—Continued.
P age
Dyeing and finishing textiles. By occupation^ sex, and State, 1930____________ _____ Nov. 169-76
Electrotypers, finishers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930_________________ _____ ___ Sept. 146-7
Electrotypers, molders. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930__________________________
Sept. 147
Engraving. Virginia, printing and engraving, by sex and occupation, 1928__________
July 168
Farming. Average rates and index numbers, 1910 to October, 1930_________________ Dec. 159-60
— Decline in, October 1, 1930..... ..................... ................................... ............................ __
Nov. 189
Fertilizers and guano. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928..____ _______ ___________ ___
j ujy 167
Fish oil and fish guano. Virginia, males, by race, 1928___________________________
July 157
j uiy 163
Fishing industry. Alaska, by occupation, 1929____ _______________ ...____________
Flour and grist mills. Virginia, males, by race, 1928___________________________
July 167
Furniture, mattresses, etc. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928__________________
July 167
Garments, including clothing, shirts, and overalls. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928______
July 167
Granite and stone trades. Union wage rates in 1930_____ ________________________ Nov. 177-83
Granite cutters, inside. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930______ ____________________
Sept. 148
Sept. 149
Hod carriers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930_________________________ __________
Ice, artificial. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928________________ ________ _____ _
July 167
Sept. 150-1
Inside wiremen. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930________ ____ ____________________
Iron and steel industry. Virginia, iron and machinery plants, by occupation, 1928______
July 168
July 167
Knitting-mill products. Virginia, by sex and race, 1 9 2 8 ......_______________
Labor organizations. Changes, by industry, occupation, and locality, as reported by
trade-unions_____________________________ ________________________________ July 161_2;
Aug. 174-5; Sept. 163-4; Oct. 177-8; Nov. 185-6; Dec. 157-8
Laundry workers. Union wage rates in 1930____ __________ _______ ________ ____ Nov. 177-83
------ Virginia, by sex and race, 1928,.__________________________
Leather industry. Virginia, trunks, bags, etc., by sex and race, 1928_______________
July 167
Lime, cement, and limestone. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928__________ ___________
July 167
Linemen. Union wage rates in 1930_________ . _________ _______________________ Nov. 177-83
Longshoremen. Baltimore, earnings, by week and month, 1927___________________
Oct. 19-20
-----Boston, earnings, by week, 1928____ _______ ___________________________
Oct. 15
-----Galveston, earnings, September 17, 1927, to April 15, 1928______________________
Nov.15
-----Houston, earnings per month, 1927_____________________________
— - Los Angeles, earnings per month, 1929 and 1930,..____ ______________________
Nov. 22-4
------ New Orleans, earnings per month, 1926_____________________________________
Nov. 12-14
----- New York, earnings, by month and week, 1928______________________________
Oct. 11-12------ Philadelphia, earnings, by week, 1927 and 1928____________________________
Oct.18
— Portland, earnings per month, 1924 to 1928_____________________________________
Nov.18
Nov. 19-20
------ San Francisco, earnings per month, 1926_______
------ Seattle, earnings per month, 1925__________________________
— - Union wage rates in 1930________________ __________________________
Nov. 177-83
July 167
Lumber industry. Virginia, sawmill products, by sex and race, 1928__________________
Machinery plants. Virginia, iron and machinery plants, by occupation, 1928___________
July 168
Manufacturing plants. Wage changes reported, and employees affected, M ay to Octo­
ber, 1930........................................................................................................ ....................... July 159-60;
Aug. 173-4; Sept. 162-3; Oct. 176; Nov. 184; Dec. 156-7
Metal workers, sheet. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930........................................................ Sept. 155-6
Millwork. Virginia, sash, doors, and blinds, by sex and race, 1928..................................
July 167
Mining. Idaho, by occupation, 1929___________________ _______________________
July 164
Mining, coal. Alaska, by occupation, 1929_________ _____________________ ______
July 163
-----Virginia, underground workers, by occupation and race, 1928_________ _________
July 168
Mining, lode. Alaska, by occupation, 1929________________________
Mining, ore. Virginia, by occupation and race, 1928_________________________
j uly 166
Mining, placer. Alaska, by occupation, 1929__ ________________________ _______
July 163-4
Nurses. Shelby County, Ind., 1929__________ ______________________ ' Dec. 96
Painters. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930_____________________________________”
Sept. 151-2
July 165
Painting and paper hanging. Virginia, by occupation and race, 1928___________ ____
Paper and pulp industry. Virginia, boxes, bags, and twine, etc., by sex and race, 1928..
July 167
Peanut-cleaning industry. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928.______ ________ ________
July 167
Plasterers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930....................................... ...... .......................... ] Sept. 152-3
Plasterers’ laborers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930____________ _______________
Sept. 153-4
Plumbers. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930........................ ............ ..................... ...............
Sept. 154-5
Portland cement. (See Wages and hours: Cement industry.)
Printing trades. Book and job, union wage rates, 1930_________________ _________ _ Nov. 177-83
----- Newspapers, union wage rates, 1930____________________________ ____ ________ Nov. 177-83
- Virginia, printing and engraving, by sex and occupation, 1928________ _________
July 168
Public utilities. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928___ ______ _____ _______ ______ - __
j uiy 167
Quarries. Virginia, by kind, and by occupation and race, 1928______ ___________ . . . July 165-166


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1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Wages and. hours, United States—Continued.
Railroads. Virginia, by sex and race, 1928______ ____ __________________ _____ _
Rayon industry. By occupation and sex, 1930__________________________________
Real wages. (See Wages, general.)
Sawmills. (See Wages and hours: Lumber industry.)
Sheet-metal workers. (See Wages and hours: Metal workers, sheet.)
Shipbuilding industry. Virginia, males, by race, 1928______ _____________________
Silk industry. Virginia, silk-mill products, by sex and race, 1928__________________
Stonecutters. Union scale, by city, 1913-1930___________________________________
Stores, mercantile. Hours (only), opening and closing, summer of 1930______________
Structural-iron workers. Union scale, by city, ,1913-1930_____ , ___________________
Tanneries. Virginia, tannery products and tannery extracts, by sex and race, 1928___
Textile industry. Dyeing and finishing, by occupation, sex, and State, 1930_________
-----Rayon and other synthetic textiles, by occupation and sex, 1930________ ________
Tobacco industry. Cigarette manufacturing, by occupation and sex, 1930___________
-----Virginia, tobacco and its products, by sex and race, 1928_._____________________
Town workers. Porto Rico, by sex, classified daily and weekly rates, 1928__________
Typesetting-machine operators. Book and job, union scale, by city, 1913-1930_______
-----Daywork, newspapers, union scale, by city, 1913-1930_________________________
Union scales. Average rates, time-work trades, by trade, 1930_____________________
Unskilled labor. Entrance rates, common labor, by industry, July 1, 1930__________
---- - Louisiana, common and semiskilled labor, 1929______________________________
Woodworkers. Virginia, wood products, baskets, boxes, shooks, and crates, by sex and
race, 1928__________________________________________________________ ______
-----(See also Wages and hours: Furniture industry; Lumber industry; Millwork.)
Woolen and worsted goods manufacturing. By occupation, State, and sex, 1930______
Wages and hours, foreign countries:
Argentina (Buenos Aires). Average daily, by occupation, 1922, 1926, and 1928-29 (wages
only)-______ _____________________________ ______ ________________________
Australia (New South Wales). Forty-eight-hour week established, act of June 16,1930,
------(Queensland). Railway service, and public service, return to 48-hour standard
week_________ _____________________________ _________ ___________________
Belgium. Iron and steel industry, skilled, semiskilled, and unskilled workers, 1930-.-.
-----(Antwerp). Longshoremen, scale per shift, fixed by agreement, September, 1929, _
Brazil. Coffee plantations, labor conditions and wages of “ colonos” ____ __________
China. Coal and iron mining, 1928 and 1929___________________________________
Czechoslovakia. Iron and steel industry, skilled, semiskilled, and unskilled workers,
1930.._________ ______________ __________________________________________
Denmark (Copenhagen). By occupation and sex, 1929__________ ____ ____________
—— (the Provinces). By occupation and sex, 1929___________________ __________
France. Iron and steel industry, skilled, semiskilled, and unskilled workers, 1930____
-----(Nantes). Building construction workers, by occupation, June, 1930 (wages only) .
-----Paris (region). Metal industries, by occupation, 1930.___________ ____________
Germany. Automobile industry, pieceworkers, hourly earnings (wages only)________
-----Building trades, by district and occupation, August, 1929____ _______ __________
-----Hours of labor, trend, 1924 to 1930, and by industry group, 1930 (hours only)______
— - Iron and steel industry, skilled, semiskilled, and unskilled workers, 1930....... ..........
---- - Lithographic work, by occupation and age group, June, 1929__________________
-----Printing trades, by occupation and age group, June, 1929________ _____________
-----Trade-unions resolution, 40-hour week._____ __________________________ _____
Great Britain. Coal mining, earnings per man-shift, by district, 1929.___ __________
—— Railway service, by occupation, 1929 and 1930________________ ________ _____
-----(England). Coal mining, earnings per man-shift, 1924 to 1930 (wages only)_______
-----(England). Dock workers, Liverpool, earnings, 1930___________ ______________
India (Bombay Presidency). Cotton mills, by sex and city, 1926__________________
Italy. Agreement scales, by occupation and city_________________ ______________
—— Printing trades, day work and night work, by occupation, cities of Trieste, Mes­
sina, and Venice________ __________ _____ _____________________________
-----(Rome Province). Building trades, by occupation, collective agreement rates, 1930.
-----(Turin Province). Marble and stone workers, by occupation, collective agreement
rates, 1930____ _______ ______________________ ____ _____________________
Japan. Coal mines and metal mines, by sex and age, 1929________________________
Korea. By industry group, geographic location, and nationality____________ ______
Luxemburg. Iron and steel industry, skilled, semiskilled, and unskilled workers, 1930.
New Zealand. Hours (only), by occupation, 1914, 1925, and 1929___________________
-----Wages (only), by occupation, 1914, 1925, and 1929.._____ _____________________
Spain (Barcelona). By occupation, 1925 and 1929 (wages only)_______________ _____


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Page
July 167
Dec. 150-6

July 167
July 167
Sept. 156-7
Nov. 189-90
Sept. 157-8
July 167
Nov. 169-76
Dec. 150-6
Oct. 163-9
July 167
Aug. 50
Sept. 158-9
Sept. 160-1
Nov. 176-83
Nov. 186-9
Aug. 181
July 167
Oct. 170-5

Dec. 162
Sept. 166
Sept. 165
Oct. 179-80
July 169
July 170
Dec. 60-2
Oct. 179-80
Dec. 162
Dec. 162
Oct. 179-80
Nov. 190
Nov. 191
July 33
Nov. 192-4
Oct. 181-2
Oct. 179-80
Oct. 183
Oct. 182-3
Dec. 162-3
Dec. 66
Nov. 194-5
Oct. 184
Dec. 46-7
Sept. 166-9
Dec. 164
Dec. 163
Oct. 186
Oct. 185
Dec. 165
Nov. 28-9
Oct. 179-80
Dec. 167
Dec. 165-6
Oct. 187

M ONTHLY

LABOR

R E V IE W

Wages and hours, foreign countries—Continued.
Straits Settlements. Wages and labor conditions, 1929___________________________
Switzerland. Metal workers, by industry group and class of workers, 1929__________
— Workers injured in accidents, actual and real wages, by industry group, 1913 and
1929 {wages only)___________ ___________ ________ ____ _____________________
Uruguay. Index numbers, nominal and real wages, 1914 to 1929___________________
Welfare work, United States. Franklin Cooperative Creamery, activities, 1920 to 1929___
Wholesale prices, United States:
Index numbers. Comparison, certain foreign countries, by year and month, 1923 to 1930.

[1930
p age
Nov. 196
Aug. 182
Oct. 187-8
Nov. 242
Aug. 113

Sept. 222-5;
Dec. 216-19
• -Outline of methods used to obtain_________________________________________
Oct. 42
-----(1926=100). By group and subgroup of commodities, M ay to October, 1930____ _
July 230-2;
Aug. 245-7; Sept. 220-1; Oct. 226-7; Nov. 240-1; Dee. 213-15
Wholesale prices, foreign countries:
Australia. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930_____________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 42-3
Austria. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930_______________ Sept. 222-3; Dee. 216-17
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 43-4
Belgium. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930______________ Sept. 222-3; Dec. 216-17
• -- Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain___________________________
Oct. 44
Canada. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930______________ Sept. 222-3; Dec. 216-17
■
---- - Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 44-5
China. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930________________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 45-6
Czechoslovakia. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930________ Sept. 222-3; Dec. 216-17
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 46
Denmark. Index numbers, by year and month, 1925 to 1930_____________ Sept. 222-3; Dec. 216-17
Oct. 46-7
------ Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________ : _______________
Finland. Index numbers, by year and month, 1926 to 1930_______________Sept. 222-3; Dec. 216-17
• -Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 47-8
France. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930_______________ Sept. 222-3; Dec. 216-17
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain___________________
Oct. 48-9
Germany. Index numbers, by year and month, 1924 to 1930....._________ Sept. 222r3; Dec. 216-17
Oct. 50
------ Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Great Britain (United Kingdom). Index numbers by year and month, 1923 to 1930__ Sept. 224-5;
Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain_____________________________
Oct. 57-8
India. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930_____________ . . . . Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----(Bombay). Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain______________
Oct. 50-1
-----(Calcutta). Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain__________________
Oct. 51
Italy. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930_________________Sept. 222-3; Dec. 216-17
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 52
Japan. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930________________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain_________________________ ___
Oct. 52
Netherlands. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930___________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 53
New Zealand. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930__________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 53-4
Norway. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930______________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
------ Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 54-5
South Africa. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930__________ Sept. 224-5; Dec,- 218-19
---- - Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain_____________ _______________
Oct. 55
Spain. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930________________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain_____________________________
Oct. 55-6
Sweden. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930______________ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
-----Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain_____________________________
Oct. 56
Switzerland. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1930___ _______ Sept. 224-5; Dec. 218-19
------ Index numbers, outline of method used to obtain____________________________
Oct. 57
Widows’ and orphans’ pensions, foreign countries:
Great Britain (England and Wales). Report, M inistry of Health, 1929-30__________
Nov. 106-7
------ (Scotland). Contributory system, statistics of operation, 1928 and 1929, first annual
report-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------July io5-6
Window cleaners. Holidays provided by collective agreements_______ ______ ____ _____
Aug. 7
Window-glass cutters. {See Glass cutters, window.)
Women in industry, United States. Night work, cotton mills, gradual elimination, plan of
Cotton Textile Institute_____ _______________________________ ______ _____ _____
Nov. 70-1


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[1548]

1930]

INDEX TO VOLUME 31

Workers’ education:
Development of movement, International Labor Office, director’s report, 1930..............
Great Britain (England). Village colleges to serve groups of neighboring villages, plan
for______________________________ _____ _________________________________
Workers’ productive societies. (See Cooperation.)
Workmen’s compensation, United States:
Accident costs, to the State, the employer, and the man (Heinrich)________________
California. Miniature golf courses covered by law, report of department of industrial
relations, July 29 and 30, 1930___ _________________________ _________________
Claims. Classification of, by occupation, South Dakota, year ending June 30, 1929___
-----Maryland, cases allowed, year ending October 31, 1929,_________ ______________
---- - Minor disability, New York, procedure simplified, calendar hearings not always re­
quired.____ _____________________________________________________________
Legislation. Amendments, by State, 1930_____________________________________
Maryland. State accident fund, statement of operations, year ending October 31,1929.
Minors, illegally employed. Wisconsin, compensable cases closed, 1929_____________
Occupational diseases. Illinois, compensable cases reported, by industry group and na­
ture of disease, 1928 to 1930_________________________________________________
Ohio. Premium rates revision, effective July 1, 1930_____________________________
Philippine Islands. Report of Governor General, June 11 to December 31, 1928______
South Dakota. Compensable injuries and average daily wage, by occupation, year end­
ing June 30, 1929______________________ _____ _____________________________
State reports. Arizona, operation of State fund, 1929_____________________________
---- • Kansas, annual, 1929-30._________________________________________________
•---- Maryland, annual, year ending October 31, 1929_____________________________
—— Ohio, State insurance fund, calendar year, 1929___________________: __________
-----Oregon, financial report, 1929-30___ _________________________________ ______
•----- Rhode Island, annual, 1928-29__________________________________ _________
-----South Dakota, annual, year ending June 30, 1929____________________________
—— Virginia, biennial report, 1928-29____ ______ ____ __________________________
Workmen’s compensation, foreign countries:
Belgium. Act of December 24, 1903, revised June 18,1930_______________ _____ . . .
-----Seamen, act of December 30, 1929, effective July 1, 1930, principal features_______
Canada (Nova Scotia). Annual report, 1929___________________________________
-----(Ontario). Experience, 1928 and 1929______________________________________
Italy. National Institution for Social Assistance, work of, and report, 1926 to 1929____
Nicaragua. Act of May 13, 1930, principal provisions.......... ....... .....................................


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[1549]

Page
Sept. 42-4
J uly 151

Nov. 72-80
Sept. 64
July 89
July 88
July 91-2
Dec. 99-101
July 88
July 57-9
July 90-1
Oct. 130
Aug. 63—
4
July 89
Aug. 63
Dec. 102
July 87-8
Oct. 130
Oct. 130
Sept. 75-6
July 89
Aug. 64-5
Dec. 102-3
Oct. 131-2
Aug. 66
Aug. 67
Aug. 69-71
Nov. 103-4


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis