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

BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
ETHELBERT STEWART, Commissioner

MONTHLY

LABOR REVIEW
INDEX TO VOLUME 32
JANUARY TO JUNE, 1931

UNITED STATES
GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE
WASHINGTON : 1932

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Index to V o lu m e 32—Jan u ary to J u n e , 1931
N ote.—This is a

subject index .

Names of authois do not appear as main entries

A ccident prevention, general:
,
Page
A scientific approach (Heinrich)------ ----------------- — ------------------------------ ----------June 73-4
Safety. Compressed-air work, Massachusetts regulations, and rules, text----------------Jan. 115-20
Safety codes. Basic principles of standards council, American Standards Association
(A. S. A.), text__________________ _________ _____-................ ....................... ..........
May 63-4
-----Lighting, factories, mills, and other work places, standard code, revision.......... .........
Apr. 110
Accident prevention, United States, by industry. Mining, safety work, Bureau of Mines,
year ending June 30, 1930....... ..................................................................................... ......... --Feb. 91
Accident prevention, United States, by locality. New York State. Safety campaign, labor
Feb. 91-2
unions cooperating with State authorities------------------------------------------------------------Accident statistics, by industry:
Iron and steel. By State, department, and year, 1913 to 1929-------------------------------Apr. 93-110
Longshoremen. Compensation cases, Federal act of 1927, by occupation, 1929-30-------Mar. 105-6
Manufacturing industries. Death, temporary, and permanent disability cases, 1926 to
1929............................. -.............................................................. .......................... ................
M ay 1-5
Mining. India, death and injury rates, 1929.................................... ...... ............................
Apr. 85
Jam 122-3
Mining, coal. France, 1928__________________________________________________
-----Mexico, 1929..................................................................... - ...............-........... ........... ........
Ian. 123
Mining, metal. France, 1928........ ........... .........- -------------------------------------------------Jan. 122-3
-----Mexico, mines and mills, 1929..........................................................................................
Jan. 123
National Safety Council. Deaths in industry, estimated number, 1929............. .............
Mar. 93-4
-----Experience, member plants, by industry, 1929................................... ...........................
June 72-3
Quarries. France, 1928....................... ........................................................ ........ ...... ...........
Ian. 122-3
Accident statistics, by locality:
Canada. Fatal accidents, by industry, 1929 and 1930........................................................
May 64
District of Columbia. Compensation cases reported, by industry, 1929-30............. ........
Mar. 106-7
Erie (Pa.). Fatalities, 1930----------------- ------------------------ - .................. - ------ ----------Apr. Ill
France. Mines, quarries, railroads, 1923 to 1928--------- , ------- -------------------------- ----Jan. 122-3
Hawaii. Accidents and accident costs (compensation, medical costs, etc.), 1929---- . . . .
Mar. 100-1
New Hampshire. Fatal and severe, by industry, 1929-30------------------------------------- •
Apr. I ll
New Jersey. Accidents and accident costs (compensation, medical), by industry and
cause, 1929....................................... ...... .................... ..............................-.....................
Mar. 101
Mar. 102
New York. Compensation cases reported, 1929...------------------- ------- ------------------North Dakota. Fiscal years 1919-20 to 1929-30..------------------------------------------------Jan. 120-1
Pennsylvania. Married men, leaving dependents, 1929.--------------------- ----------------Jan. 121-2
Philippine Islands. Fatal, temporary, and permanent, 1925 to 1929----------------- ------June 74
United States. Compensation cases, Federal employees, by department, 1929----------Mar. 103-5
Vermont. Compensation cases reported, by industry and cause, 1928-29 and 1929-30... Mar. 102-3
Age limit for employment. (See Older worker in industry.)
Aged persons, care of. Ancient Order of Gleaners, new home for, Alma, Mich.....................
Feb. 89
Agriculture (except Wages and hours, which see):
Crops. California, Mexican labor, preference f o r....................... ........................ -...........
Jan. 87
Governors’ messages, recommendations, 14 specified States, 1931--------- -------------------Apr. 58-60
Harvest labor, recruiting and distributing, United States Employment Service---------Jan. 26-7
Mechanization, growth of, and its relation to labor productivity..--------------------------May 40-3
New Jersey. Fruit and vegetable farming, migratory children in, legislative commission
June 64-6
inquiry and report, 1930------------------------------- -............. ...................... .......................
Alien labor. (See Immigration; Naturalization.)
American Federation of Labor. Delations with International Federation of Trade Unions.
Apr. 30
Apprenticeship (except Wages and hours, which see):
Electrical workers. Philadelphia, Union N o. 98 and public schools in cooperation, train­
ing sy stem .._................... ............................... -...............------- -----------------------------May 81-4
Oregon. Act of February 28, 1931, text------------------------ -----------------------------------May 80-1
Arbitration award (decision). (See specific industry.)
Bakery and confectionery workers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses..
Barbers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses.............................................


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May 143
May 143

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1931

Benefits and benefit funds:
Page
Canada. Benefits paid, by kind, specified unions, 1930.....................................................
June 113
Establishment. Unemployment insurance and guaranty plans, specified com panies...
Mar. 5-8
Labor organizations. Out-of-work benefit plans, local, national, and international
unions______ ______ ________________________________ ________ ____________
Mar. 3-5
------ Photo-engravers, amount and kind of benefits paid, 1930........................................ .
May 36-7
Apr. 87
Sick benefits. Gary (Ind.) Railways Co. agreement clause providing______ ________
Bibliographies:
Five-day week and other proposals for a shorter work week: A list of references (Thomp­
so n )...__________________________________________________________________ Feb. 247-64
National economic councils. List of references (Thompson)________ ______ _______ May 217-26
Births. (See Vital statistics.)
Blacksmiths, drop forgers, and helpers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement
clauses________________________ ________ ___ ____ _________ ______ ____________
May 145
Boiler makers and iron-ship builders. Reporting time and minimum pay .agreement clauses.
May 145
Bonuses and premiums. Hawaii, pineapple canneries, 1929__________________________
Apr. 15-16
Bookbinders. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses........... ...... •_________
May 145
Boot and shoe industry. Stabilization of employment (Stew art).......... ...............................
Jan. 52-3
Brewery, flour, cereal, and soft-drink workers. Minimum pay, agreement clauses_______
May 143
Brick and clay workers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses_________
May 143
Bricklayers, masons, and plasterers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement ¿lauses.
May 143
Bricklayers, Masons, and Plasterers’ International Union of America. Old-age pensions,
amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930.._______ ____________________________
May 34
Bridge, Structural and Ornamental Iron Workers, International Association of. Old-age
pensions, amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930.................. ........ ...............................
May 34
Budgets, cost-of-living, United States:
Maintenance budgets, graduated according to size of family_______________________ May 148-50
San Francisco. Street-car men’s family budgets, expenditure by item, 1924-25......... .
June 213
Budgets, cost-of-living, foreign countries:
Argentina (Buenos Aires). Laborers’ families, annual income and expenditure, by sup­
porting member, 1929_________________ ____________________________________
Mar. 236
Canada. Family budget, cost per week, specified months, 1921 to 1930..........................
Mar. 237
-—- Family budget, quantity of 36 items................................... ........ .................................
Mar. 237
China (Shanghai). Family budget, annual expenditure, by income group, 1929______
Mar. 240
Japan. Household budgets, salaried workers and wage earners, first official study, 192627, results.___ ______________________ ____________________________________ May 210-14
New Zealand. - Family budgets, study of______________________________________
Feb. 241-2
Building construction industry. Costs, per cubic foot, by class of building, Detroit, Mich.,
Apr. 174-5
1915 to 1931......... ........... .......................................... ........... .....................................................
Building permits. (See Housing.)
Cargoes, ship, loading and discharging. (See Water transportation.)
Carpenters and joiners. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses__________
Carpenters and Joiners of America, United Brotherhood of. Old-age pensions. Amount
and requirements for receipt of, 1930_________________ __________________ _________
Census, industrial. Unemployment, by class, sex, State, and geographic division, April,
1930, and January, 1931__ _______ _________ ______________________ ______________
Cement finishers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses...........................
Child labor and welfare, United States:
California. Mexican children, health relief and delinquency conditions........................
Conferences. (See Conventions, meetings, etc.)
Governors’ messages, recommendations, 9 specified States, 1931.....................................
New Jersey. Vegetable and fruit farming, migratory children in, legislative commission
findings, 1930____ _______________ _________________________________ ______
Philippine Islands (Manila). Woman and child labor employed in inspected establish­
ments, statistics, 1928________________________________ ______ ______________
White House Conference on Child Health and Protection, recommendations_________
Work certificates. Children receiving regular employment certificates for first time, by
State and city, 1928 and 1929; Children’s Bureau report___ _______________ ______
Child labor and welfare. Syria, act of 1930, principal provisions.............................................
Cleaners, dyers, and pressers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses____
Clerks and freight handlers, railway and steamship. Reporting time and minimum pay,
agreement clauses_________________ ___________________ ________ _________ _____
Clerks, Freight Handlers, Express and Station Employees, Brotherhood of Railway and
Steamship. Labor-management cooperation___________ __________ _______________
Clothing industry, women’s. New York City, children’s and house dressmakers, impartial
chairman’s findings and award..................................................................................................


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May 143
May 34
Apr. 35-41
May 143
Jan. 87-9
Apr. 64
June 64-6
June 69
June 15-22
Jan. 102-7
Jan. 107
May 144
May 145
May 44
Jan. 181-3

1931]

INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Page
Apr 17
Coffee industry. Hawaii, acreage and production, 1929-------------------------- ------------------Colleges and universities. Family allowances for professors and ministers...................... ...... June 115-16
Compressed-air work, Maine, act of 1931, text------------------------- -------------------------------- June 92-100
Compressed-air work, safety rules. (See Accident prevention.)
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 Review.)
Jan 146-7
Mediation, United States Board of, annual report.............................................................
Trade-board decisions. (See specific industry.)
Conciliation and arbitration, foreign countries:
Great Britain (England). National railways board award, March 5, 193L........ ........... May 159-60
May 161
-----(England). Railroad shopmen, negotiations and terms secured, 1931-32....... ...........
May 161
-----(South Wales). Coal miners’ wage scale, local board award, March 6, 1931..............
May 44
Conductors of America, Order of Railway. Labor-management cooperation------------------Conferences. (See Conventions, meetings, etc.)
Construction work (bridge, road, sewer, etc.):
Apr. 81
Board and lodging. Minnesota highway construction camps, 1930_________________
Apr. 80-3
Labor conditions. Minnesota highway construction camps, 1930.....................................
Apr 82
Living conditions. Minnesota highway construction camps, summer of 1930________
Continuous-operation industries. Cereal foods, Kellogg Co., Battle Creek, Mich., adoption
of 6-hour day December 1, 1930, results April 14---------------------------------------- ------- ----- June 148-55
Contracts, employment. Oregon, discrimination against labor organizations, illegal, act of
May 72
March 6, 1931______ _______ _____ _____________ _____-................................................
Convalescents. (See Medical and hospital service, industrial.)
Conventions, meetings, etc.:
Child welfare. White House Conference on Child Health and Protection, November
20-22, 1930____ ___________________________________________________ Jan. 101- 2; June 15-22
Mar. 64-6
Governors of States. Unemployment conference, Albany, N. Y., January 23-25, 1931..
Trade Unions, International Federation of. Congress at Stockholm, July, 1930, eco­
Apr. 32-3
nomic program___________________________________________________________
Mar 66-72
Unemployment. Central Conference of American Rabbis, permanent preventives----Mar. 66-72
----- Federal Council of the Churches of Christ in America, permanent preventives-----Mar. 64-6
—— Governors’ conference, seven industrial States, Albany, N. Y., January 23-25, 1931.
Mar. 66-72
— National Catholic Welfare Conference, permanent preventives------------------------Convict labor:
Convict-made goods, importation of, Treasury Department regulations promulgated
Jan. 128-30
November 24, 1930, text______________ _________________________ ___________
Apr. 66-7
Governors’ messages, recommendations, seven specified States, 1931----------------- ------Cooperation, United States:
Consumers’ societies, wholesale and retail, sales, net profit, and membership, 1929 and
May 99-100
1930____________________________________________________________________
May 94
Cooperative Workers’ Union established, Mesabe Range district, Minnesota, purposes.
Mar. 122
Cooperative Youth League. Activities in Cooperative Central Exchange territory----Credit unions. Postal employees, number of unions and membership, assets, loans, etc.,
May 101
1923 to 1930_________________________________________ _____________________
Mar. 120-1
-----Societies, borrowers, and amount of loans, by State, 1929—. ------------------------------Jan. 47-51
Housing. Apartment houses and residential hotels, societies operating, 1929-------------Feb. 95
Insurance service, casualty and fire, Cooperative League, new activities.-----------------May 109
International Cooperative Alliance, membership and business statistics-------------------May 101-9
Llano Cooperative Colony, California and Louisiana, vicissitudes, 1914 to 1930----------Massachusetts. Shoe factories, stock-selling practices, legislative investigation, results. Mar. 123-5
Mar. 121-2
Recreation. Minnesota and Wisconsin societies, joint activities----------------------------Cooperation, foreign countries:
May 109
General. International Cooperative Alliance, membership and business statistics-----Belgium. Cooperatives affiliated to Socialist Party, increase in sales and activities,
Feb. 98-9
1929___________________________________________ ________ ________________
Canada (Quebec). People’s Banks, number and membership, loans and deposits, 1925
to 1929_____________________________ ______ ___________ __________________ May 109-10
Feb. 99
Finland. Cooperative rural banks, development since 1902......................................... .
Feb. 99
Germany. Housing societies, summary data, 1929-------------------------------------------Feb. 95-6
Great Britain. Condition of cooperative societies, by type, 1928 and 1929----------------——• (England). Cooperative Wholesale Society, manufacturing plants, by kind of out­
May 110
put, and number of employees, 1929......... .................................................... - ................
Feb. 100
Italy. Silk-cocoon drying societies, business handled, 1927 to 1930----- ---------------------


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Cooperation, foreign countries—Continued.
Page
Norway. Wholesale Soeiety, office employees, strike, November 12-19,1930..................
May 92-3
Palestine. Jewish societies, development and activities, May, 1930-.............. ................
Feb. 96-7
Switzerland. Federation of Trade-Unions, new agreement pledging support to coopera­
tive movement____________ _____________ __________ __________ __________
Feb. 98
Cooperation, union-management. (See Labor-management cooperation.)
Cost of living, United States:
California. Mexican families, size and income of____________ _____ ________ ____
Jan. 89
Changes (index numbers and per cent), by city and item of expenditure, 1913 to 1930___ Feb. 213-29
Clothing, index numbers, United States and specified foreign countries, 1913 to 1930___
Feb. 234-5
Food, index numbers, United States and specified foreign countries, 1913 to 1930______
Feb. 232-3
Fuel and light, index numbers, United States and specified foreign countries, 1913 to
1930________— __________________________ _______________________________
Feb. 236-7
General index numbers, United States and specified foreign countries, 1913 to 1930____
Feb. 230-1
Philippine Islands. By city or town, average per day, skilled and common labor, 1929June 215
Rent, index numbers, United States and specified foreign countries, 1913 to 1930______
Feb. 238-9
San Francisco (Calif.). Street-car men’s families, income and expenditure, 1924-25___ June 212-15
Cost of living, foreign countries:
Argentina (Buenos Aires). Foodstuffs and rents, price reduction efforts of Govern­
ment................. ......................... ................... ....................... ...............................................
May 210
-----Laborers’ families, annual income and expenditure, by supporting member, 1929-.
Mar. 236
Australia. Index numbers, food, clothing, rent, 1914 to 1930_______________________
Feb. 231-9
Belgium. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1921 to 1930_____ ______
Feb. 230-8
-----(Antwerp). Middle-class family, income of $2,127 per year, by item.........................
Feb. 240
Canada. Family budget (foods, laundry starch, fuel and lighting, rent), cost per week,
specified month, 1921 to 1930_____________ ____________ __________ ___________
Mar. 237
-----Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1913 to 1930_______ ______ _
Feb. 230-8
China (Shanghai). Workers’ families, living standards, 1929___________ ___________ Mar. 238-40
Czechoslovakia (Prague). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to
1930— ______ ________ . . . . ______________ __________ _____ ___________ _____
Feb. 230-8
Denmark. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930............. ......
Feb. 230-8
-----(Copenhagen). Middle-class family, income of $3,022 per year, by item __________
Feb. 240
Finland. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, and taxes, 1914 to 1930...
Feb. 230-8
France. Middle-class family, income of $2,565 per year, by item __________ . _______
Feb. 240
-----(Paris). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930_________
Feb. 230-8
Germany. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930__________
Feb. 230-8
-----(Berlin). Middle-class family, income of $3,076 per year, by item____ __________
Feb. 240
Great Britain. Fluctuations in general level, 1930_____________ _________________
Mar. 182
-----(England). Middle-class family, income of $2,433 per year, by item____________
Feb. 240
-----(England). Rent, clothing, fuel and light, food, per cent of increase, 1914 to 1931...
June 211
-----(United Kingdom). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to
1930................... ......................... ............................. .............................................................
Feb. 231-9
India (Bombay). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930____
Feb. 231-9
Ireland. Index numbers, total cost and food cost, 1914 to 1930_____________________
Feb. 230-2
Italy (Milan). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930______
Feb. 230-8
Netherlands (Amsterdam). Index numbers, total cost and food cost, 1917 to 1930____
Feb. 231-3
-----(Rotterdam). Middle-class family, income of $2,370 per year, by item___________
Feb. 240
New Zealand. Family budgets, study of, 1930._________ _______________________
Feb. 241-4
-----Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930___ _____________
Feb. 231-9
Norway. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930___________
Feb. 231-9
-----(Oslo). Middle-class family, income of $3,285 per year, by ite m .._____ _________
Feb. 240
Poland (Warsaw). Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930___
Feb. 231-9
South Africa. Index numbers, total cost and food cost, 1914 to 1930...______________
Feb. 231-3
Sweden. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930_____ _____
Feb. 231-9
-----(Stockholm). Middle-class family, income of $3,368 per year, by item ___________
Feb. 240
Switzerland. Index numbers, food, clothing, fuel and light, rent, 1914 to 1930________
Feb. 231-9
Cotton manufacturing (except Wages and hours, which see):
Great Britain (England). Lancashire, Burnley district, dispute, more looms per weaver,
ended February 16, 1931___ _________________________________ ______________
Apr. 134-6
-----Lancashire Cotton Corporation (Ltd.) m erger..________ _____________________
May 51-2
India (Bombay). Cotton operatives, incidence of illness among.....................................
June 70-1
Night work. Agreement to abolish, for women and minors, announced by Cotton Tex­
tile Institute.............................................................................................................. ...........
Apr. 187
Crops. (See Agriculture.)
D eaf persons. (See Rehabilitation, reeducation, and reemployment.)
Decisions, impartial chairman, tiade board, etc. (See specific industry.)


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INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Page
Decisions of courts, United States:
June 87-8
Constitutionality. Arkansas full-crew law upheld......................................... ....................
Jan. 130-1
Contract of employment. Alabama, contract for indefinite period terminable at will—
June 91-2
Full-crew law not applicable to electric cars, Ohio.......................... - .................................
June 90-1
Seniority rights. Loss, of wages based on, recoverable, railroads, Minnesota......... ..........
Workmen’s compensation. Absence from work, temporary, not covered by act of May
May 71-2
17, 1928, first case, District of Columbia Court of Appeals....................... — ..................
Jan. 131-2
-----Assignment in payment of prior debt void------------------------ ------------------------ —
June 88-9
-----Drinking polluted water, death from, compensable accident, Indiana______ ______
June 89-90
-----Gradual breaking down of tissue in hand not compensable injury, Massachusetts..
-----Malpractice, action against physician not barred by award of additional compensa­
May 70-1
tion, California----- ------ ------- ----------------------------------------- ---------------------------Mar. 96-7
-----Maximum medical fee provision of act not binding on physician, Kansas____ ____
-----Noon-hour injury regarded as ’‘arising out of and in course of employment,” Ten­
Apr. 118
nessee______________ _________________ ,.------ -------------------------- ----------------—— Occupational disease (from inhaling gypsum dust) not ‘‘accidental injury,” Okla­
homa_____ _____________________________________________ _______________ Mar. 99-100
-----Power of industrial commission to compel testimony of witness upheld, North
Apr. 116-18
Carolina--------------------- --------------------------- ------------------------------------ --------Feb. 93-4
-----Radio station employee held engaged in interstate commerce, Washington_______
Feb. 97-9
— Recovery for recurring injury not barred by former release, Massachusetts..............
-----Stevedore injured on foreign ship regarded as American seaman, United States
Supreme Court...................... ............. ................................................................................ Apr. 115-16
Apr. 72-3
Dismissal wage. United States Rubber Co., New Haven (Conn.) plant..............................
Displacement of labor. (See Machinery.)
Docks and harbors. Longshoremen, reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses,
May 145
United States_______________________ ___________ ______ _____________________
Dole or “ uncovenanted benefit.” (See Unemployment insurance: Great Britain.) '
Dress industry, children’s and house. (See Clothing industry, women’s.)
Apr. 92
Dusts, industrial. Dusty trades, health hazards, United States_________ _____________
E conom ic councils:
France. National Economic Council (Conseil National Economique), established Jan­
uary 16, 1925, functions...................... ............................ ........... ........ ................................
Germany. Provisional Federal economic council created May 4, 1920, composition and
work o f.-------------------------- ------ --------------------- ------------------------------------------Great Britain. Economic Advisory Council, established January 27, 1920, purposes___
Italy. National Council of Corporations, established April 21, 1930, membership and
functions..............................................................................................................................
Electrical workers:
Philadelphia. Training system for apprentices, Union No. 98 and public schools in
cooperation___________ ______ _____________________ _____ __________- ..........
Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses________________ ___________
Electrical Workers, International Brotherhood of:
Old-age pensions. Amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930_________ _________
Union Cooperative Insurance Co., sixth year of operations, statement, 1930....... ............
Employment agencies, United States:
Governors’ messages, recommendations, Iowa, Kansas, Michigan, and New York, 1931..
Placement. Handicapped workers, State services............................................................
— Juveniles, State services............................................................ .............. .....................
-----Procedure, State services_________________________________ ________________
Private (fee-charging). Nevada, activities, 1920 to 1930................ ................ ...................
Public employment services, development, functioning, placement procedure, e t c ......
State services, present organization and activities________________________________
Employment agencies, foreign countries. Germany, private companies liquidated and
supplanted by Federal Bureau, December 31, 1930___________________________ _____
Employment management. China, Institute of Scientific Management established______
Employment, stabilization of:
Boot and shoe industry. (Stewart).................................... ................................ ...... ..........
Federal employment stabilization act, February 10,1931, analysis of____________ ____
New York. Advisory Committee on Stabilization of Industry for the Prevention of
Unemployment, report, November 13, 1930________________________ ______ ____
President’s Emergency Committee for Employment, recommendations..........................
Radio industry. Receiving sets, fluctuations of employment, 1929......... ........................
-----Radio tubes, fluctuation of employment, 1929........................... ...................................
Rochester (N. Y,), methods followed, 14 plants............................................ ............ ..........

99283°— 32
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[1493]

Jan. 2-4
J a n .6-7
Jan. 4-6
Jan. 8-9

May 81-4
May 143
May 34
June 111
Apr. 66
Jan. 29-31
Jan. 27-9
Jan. 22-4
June 48
Jan. 10-32
Jan. 20-32
June 57-9
Feb. 87
Jan. 52-3
Mar. 62-4
Jan. 61-74
June 35-40
June 41-5
June 45-8

Apr, 47

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1931

Employment statistics, United States:
Page
Arkansas. Changes, monthly......................................Jan. 224; Feb. 184; Apr. 230; May 191; June 186
Automobile manufacturing. Employment changes in, “ spotty” character, October,
1929, to October, 1930........ ................................................ .................................................
Mar. 2
Boot and shoe industry. Employment changes in, “ spotty” character, October, 1929,
to October, 1930_________________________________ _____ ___________ ______ Mar. 2
Building construction. January to April, 1931................. ........Mar. 212; Apr. 228; May 189; June 184
California. Changes, monthly and yearly...... ................................. ...... ................ ........... Jan. 224, 228;
Feb. 184, 188; Mar. 214, 218; Apr. 230, 234; May 191, 194; June 186, 190
Canning and preserving. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931.........
Jan. 218;
Feb. 178; Mar. 208-9; Apr. 224; May 186; June 181
-----Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930..........Jan. 221; Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
Cleaning and dyeing. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931_______ Jan. 219-20;
Feb. 179; Mar. 210; Apr. 225-6; May 186; June 181
Cotton manufacturing. Employment changes, “ spotty” character, October, 1929, to
October, 1930____________ _________ ____________ __________ ________________
Mar. 2
Hotels. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931______________ _____ Jan. 217-18;
Feb. 177-8; Mar. 208; Apr. 223-4; May 186; June 181
-----Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930--------Jan. 221; Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
Illinois. Changes, monthly and yearly__________________ _______ _____________ _ j an. 224, 228;
Feb. 184, 189; Mar. 214, 218; Apr. 230, 234; May 191, 195; June 186, 190
Iowa. Changes, m o n th ly .................. ........Jan. 224; Feb. 184; Mar. 214; Apr. 230; May 191; June 186
Iron and steel industry. Employment changes, “ spotty” character, October, 1929, to
October, 1930.._____________ ______________ _______________________ _______
M ar_ 2
Laundry industry. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931_________
Jan. 219;
Feb. 179; Mar. 209; Apr. 225; May 186; June 181
Manufacturing industries, selected. By group and industry, November, 1930, to April,
1931-......... ................- Jan. 198-211; Feb. 149-71; Mar. 185-202; Apr. 203-17; May 170-83; June 165-78
-----Employment changes, “ spotty” character, six major industries........... ......... ...........
Mar. 1-2
Michigan. Changes, monthly________________________ ____________ ___ ______
j an 225Feb. 185; Mar. 215, 218; Apr. 231, 234; May 192, 195; June 187, 190
Jan. 221;
Mining, anthracite. Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930.................... .................................
Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
Mining, anthracite and bituminous coal. By geographic division, November, 1930, to
April, 1931................................... Jan. 211-12; Feb. 171-2; Mar. 202-3; Apr. 217-18; May 184; June 179
Mining, bituminous coal. Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930_________ ____________
Jan. 221;
Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
Mining, metalliferous. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931______
Jan. 213;
Feb. 172-3; Mar. 203; Apr. 218-19; May 184; June 179
-----Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930------ Jan. 221; Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May, 188; June 183
Maryland. Changes, monthly--------Jan. 224; Feb. 184-5; Mar. 214; Apr. 230-1; May 191; June 186-7
Massachusetts. Changes, monthly and yearly________ _________ _____ __________ Jan. 225 228Feb. 185, 188; Mar. 215, 218; Apr. 231, 234; May 192, 195; June 187, 190
New Jersey. Changes, m onthly.,....... Jan. 225; Feb. 185; Mar. 215; Apr. 231, 234; May 192; June 187
New York. Changes, monthly and yearly................... ................. ..................................
j an 225-6228-9; Feb. 185-6, 188-9; Mar. 215, 219; Apr. 231, 235; May 192, 195; June 187, 191
Nonmanufacturing industries. By geographic division, March and April, 1931_______ May 184-7;
June 178-83
-----Index numbers, employment and pay-roll totals, by months, 1930 and 1931..........
May 188
Oklahoma. Changes, monthly and yearly_____________ ________ ______ ______ Jan. 226, 229;
Feb. 186, 189; Mar. 216, 219; Apr. 232, 235; May 193, 196; June 188, 191
Pennsylvania. Changes, monthly and yearly..... ........... __.............................. ................. j an_226,229;
Feb. 186, 189; Mar. 216, 220; Apr. 233, 236; May 193, 196; June 189, 192
Petroleum (crude) producing. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931..
Jan. 214;
Feb. 173-4; Mar. 204; Apr. 219-20; May 184; June 179
Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930.......................Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
Power, light, and water. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931____
Jan. 215;
Feb. 175; Mar. 205-6; Apr. 221; May 185; June 180
-----Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930--------Jan. 221; Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
President’s Advisory Committee on Employment Statistics, recommendations, methods
of measuring employment and unemployment, etc_______ ____ ________ _____ _
Apr. 41-3
Public utilities. By geographic division, November, 1930, to January, 1931.......... ........ Jan. 214-15;
Feb. 174-6; Mar. 205-6; Apr. 220-2
Quarrying and nonmetallic mining. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April,
1931................. ........... ........... ...... ............. - Jan. 213; Feb. 173; Mar. 204; Apr. 219; May 184; June 179
-----Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930.......... Jan. 221; Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1494]

1981]

INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Employment statistics, United States—Continued.
_
Pa?e
Railroads, electric. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931.............. —- Jan. 215-16;
Feb. 175-6; Mar. 206; Apr. 221-2; M ay 185; June 180
___ Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930_____ Jan. 221; Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188, June 183
Railroads, steam. Class I railroads, monthly trend, 1923 to 1930......................................
Jan. 222-3;
Feb. 182-3; Mar. 212; Apr. 228; M ay 189; June 184
___ Class I railroads, shrinkage in employment, by month, division, and occupation,
Jan- 54~60
1929 and 1930_______________ _________________ ____- ............................................
-----Employees’ earnings and number employed, by occupation.....................................
May 190
Slaughtering and meat packing. Employment changes in, “ spotty” character, Octo­
ber, 1929, to October, 1930------------- ----------- - .................. ...... ......................................
M ar- 2
Telephone and telegraph. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931------- Jan. 214-15;
Feb. 174-5; Mar. 205; Apr. 220-1; May 185; June 180
___ Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930_____ Jan. 221; Feb 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
Texas. Changes, monthly and yearly........................................................... - ------ ---------Jan. 227, 230;
Feb. 187,190; Mar. 217, 220; Apr. 233, 236; May 193, 196; June 189, 192
Trade, wholesale and retail. By geographic division, November, 1930, to April, 1931. Jan. 216-17;
Feb. 176-7; Mar. 206-7; Apr. 222-3; May, 185; June 180
— Indexes, by month, 1929 and 1930____ Jan. 221; Feb. 181; Mar. 211; Apr. 227; May 188; June 183
Wisconsin. Changes, m o n th ly ................. Jan. 227; Feb. 187; Mar. 217; Apr. 233; May 194; June 189
Wool manufacturing. Employment changes in, woolen and worsted goods, “ spotty”
character, October, 1929, to October, 1930-------------------------------------------------------Mar. 2
Employment statistics, foreign countries:
Great Britain. Employment and wage-rate changes, principal industries, 1929, 1930... Mar 178-81
-----Insured persons in employment, by industry group, 1923 to 1930................................
Apr. 54-7
Engineers, Grand International Brotherhood of Locomotive:
Old-age pensions. Amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930.----- --------------------May 34
Union-management cooperation------------------------------------- ----------------------- --------May 44
Engineers, hoisting and portable. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses.. .
May 143
May 145
Engravers, photo. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses........................
Engravers’ Union of North America, International Photo. Benefits paid, amount and kind,
by local and international unions----------------------------------------------------------------------May 36-7
Ethylene oxide gas. (See Industrial diseases and poisons.)
Fam ily allowances:
Australia. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services.............. ..............................-...........
May 96
Austria. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services--------------------------------- - ...............
May 96
Belgium. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services------------- -------- - ...........................
May 96
College professors and ministers, United States------------------- ------- ------------- --------- June 115-16
Czechoslovakia. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services............................... ........... .
May 96
Estonia. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services...............................— ........... -...........
MaF 96
France. Development, 6 funds to 230 funds, 1920 to 1930............ ...................................... June 116-17
-----Postal, telegraph, telephone services.......... ........... ........... ........-..............................—
MaF 9P
—— Roubaix-Tourcoing Textile Industry Consortium------------------- ----------- -.............
May 98
Germany. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services-------------------------------------------May 96
Latvia. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services------------------------------------- ---------May 96
Luxemburg. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services------------------ ------ ---------------May 96
Netherlands. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services---------------------------------------May 96
Postal, telegraph, and telephone services, specified countries----------- ------- -------- -----May 96-8
Saar Territory. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services------------------------------------May 96
May 96
Switzerland. Postal, telegraph, and telephone services----------------------------................
Families in need, relief of, cost in 100 cities, 1929 and 1930 (Steele)--------------------------------Apr. 20-8
Firemen and Enginemen, Brotherhood of Locomotive:
Labor-management cooperation-------- --------------------- ------------- -.................................
May 44
Old-age pensions. Amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930......... ...........................
May 34
Five-day week:
Great Britain. Report of chief factory inspector, 1929.....................................................
Jan. 189-90
Snow King Baking Powder Co., Cincinnati, Ohio, experience, 1929.................... .............
May 175
Food manufacturing and packing. Six-hour day adopted, Kellogg Co., Battle Creek, Mich.
Jan 60
Forced labor, foreign countries:
Liberia. “ Pawning” system (placing in servitude indefinitely), native custom--------May 58,62
— - Slavery and Forced Labor, International Commission of Inquiry into Existence of,
report------------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------------------------May 58-62
Forty-four hour week. Australia (New South Wales), legislation, “ rationing” work hours,
effect.......................................................................................................................................
May 158


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MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

G a rm e n t workers, ladies’. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses______
Glass industry. ^ Bottle workers, reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses___
Granite Gutters International Association of America, The. Old-age pensions, amount and
requirements for receipt of, 1930-........................................... ............ ............

[1981
May 144
May 144
May 34

H andicapped, training and placement. (See Rehabilitation, reeducation, and reemploy­
ment.)
Health and hygiene, general. American and Canadian industrial populations, health
conditions, 1930, Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. study__________________________
Mar 88-90
Health and hygiene, United States:
Mar. 90-1
California. Union Labor Benefit League medical service to trade-unionists_________
Governors’ messages, recommendations, 1931____________________ ________
A[|r 6g
Health insurance. Estonia, sickness and accident insurance, coverage, benefits, etc______
June 77-81
Highway construction. (See Construction work.)
Hod carriers and building laborers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement caluses.
May 143
Hotel and restaurant employees. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses-.
May 144
Hours of labor, general. Governors’ messages, recommendations, five specified States, 1931.
Apr. 63-4
Housing, United States:
Apartment-house construction, by city and State, 1921, 1929, and 1930______________
May 133-5
Building materials and wages, index numbers, 1921 to 1930________________________
Apr. 174
Costs (building permit estimate). Residential and nonresidential buildings by city,
State, and geographic division. (See section Housing, each issue of Review.)
Detroit (Mich.) Building erection costs, per cubic foot, by kind of building, 1915 to
------. . . . . . . . . . . ------------------------ - ---------------------------------------------Apr. 174-6
K»31
_
-Permits issued. Principal cities, by kind of building. (See section Housing, each issue
of Review.)
Philadelphia. Cost and sales price, 1-family dwellings__________________________
j an J63
-----Housing Association, annual report_______________________________________
j arlig2-5
-----Rental changes, 1922 to 1929_______________________________________
j an 165
Housing, foreign countries:
Austria (Vienna). Apartments provided, type and size__________________________
May 13
-----Community housing, principles observed in ________________________
May 11-12
-----Financing and expenditures, dwellings, 1923 to 1930______________________ _____
May 9
-----Housing types, conditions determing selection of_________ 1_______________ ____
May 10-11
-----Municipal Construction Bureau (Stadtbauamt), housing procedure________________
May 14-16
-----Workingmen’s housing (Harris)___________________________________________
May 6-16
-----Great Britain (England). Housing acts of 1924 and 1930.................................. ......
Mar. 161
Illness, incidence of. (See Sickness statistics.)
Immigration, United States:
Arizona. Legislature petitions for application of Federal alien quota act________ ____
Apr. 66
June 217
Hawaii. Filipino migration to and from, 1925 to 1929____________________________
Mexican. As affecting three industries, railroads, steel, and meat packing___________
j an.
-----California, before and after quota acts___________________________________
j an §3.4
Statistics. (See section Immigration and emigration, each issue of Review.)
Income, family. (See Cost of living.)
Industrial conditions, foreign countries:
Great Britain. Industrial survey, London (England), first volume, Forty Years of
Change--------------------------------------------------------- --------------- --------------------------May 52-7
-----Industrial surveys projected, four selected areas___________________________ j une 57
Industrial diseases and poisons, United States:
Jan. 111-13
Cancer. Incidence among workers in coal tar, coal-tar products, and mineral oils____
Dioxan gas, acute response of guinea pigs to vapors of____________________________
j an
Ethylene oxide, guinea pigs exposed to vapors, acute effects_______________________
Feb. 90
Occupational diseases. Steel industry and four dusty trades, health hazards....... ..........
Apr. 92
Industrial diseases and poisons, foreign countries:
France. Occupational diseases, compulsory reporting of, statistics, 1929_____________
Mar. 91
South Africa. Gold mines, miners’ phthisis (silicosis) statistics, 1912-13 to 1928-29____
Mar. 91-2
Industrial disputes, United States, general:
Statistics. Fifteen-year period, 1916 to 1930_____________________________________
June 23-34
-----(See also Strikes and lockouts in the United States each issue of Review.)
Industrial disputes, United States, by industry and locality:
Aeronautical workers. Paterson (N. J.), Wright Aeronautical Corporation, strike,
December 12, 1930, to January 14, 1931______________________________ ____ _ Feb. 113; Mar. 128
Cleaners and dyers. New Jersey (Newark and other places) strike, April 14-20, 1931...
June 106


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

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INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Page
Industrial disputes, United States, by industry and locality—Continued.
Clothing, women’s. New York City, Fifth Avenue firms, tailors and dressmakers,
Jan. 143
strike, September 25, 1930--------------------- ------ ------ ------ ------------ - - - - - - - - - - - - - - Cotton mills. Danville (Va.), Riverside & Dan River Cotton Mills (Inc.), strike,
September 29, 1930, to January 29, 1931------------- --------------------------Jan- 1 4 Feb- 113 ; Mar. 129
June 105
Drivers. Chicago, drivers and chauffeurs, 1-day strike, April 1, 1931-----------------------Mar. 128
Fur workers. Danbury (Conn.), strike, January 2-21, 1931-----------------------------------Hosiery workers (full-fashioned). Berks County (Pa.) area, 28 mills, strike, November
Jan. 142-3
17_28 1930-_
__________________________________________________________
-----Philadelphia (Pa.), strike, February 16, 1931------------------------------- APr - 129i May 8S1; June 106
Mar. 128
Kosher butchers. New York City, strike, January 10-22, 1931-----------------------------Apr. 130
Longshoremen. New Orleans Steamship Assn., strike, February 23-25, 1931-------- ---Mining, anthracite. Bast Colliery, Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., strike,
Jan. 142
November 8-13, 1930------------------------------------------ ------------------ ------June 105
-----Lansford (Pa.), Lehigh Coal & Navigation Co., strike, April 4-May 2, 1931---------June
105
___ Pottsville, Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., strike, April 11-28, 1931-------___ Pottsville, Philadelphia & Reading Coal & Iron Co., strike, October 30 to November
Jan. 143
17, 1931----- ----------------------------- ------ ---------------- -------------------- -------------- ------May 87
___ Wilkes-Barre (Pa.), Glen Alden Coal Co., strike, March 19-April 9, 1931------------June 105
Mining, bituminous coal. Harrisburg (111.), O’Gara Coal Co., strike, April 1-May 2,1931.
May 87
___ Illinois, Old Ben Coal Corporation, strike, March 6-7, 1931------------- ----------------Painters, paper hangers, and decorators. New Jersey, general strike, April 1-May 1,
June 105
1931--------------------- ----------------------------------------------------------------------------------Feb. 113
Pencil workers. New York City. Eagle Pencil Co., strike, December 1-10, 1930------Feb. 113
Shirt makers. New Haven (Conn.), Lesnow Bros. (Inc.), strike, December 15-29,1931Silk mills. Hazleton (Pa.), Duplan Silk Corporation, strike, November 14, 1930, to
Mar. 128-9
January 19, 1931-------------------------------- ------ --------------------------------------- Feb' 113,
Jan. 142
____ Hazleton (Pa.), Duplan Silk Corporation, walkout, November 17, 1930-------------Statistics. (See section Strikes and lockouts in the United States, each issue of Review.)
Textile workers. Lawrence (Mass.), American Woolen Co. mills, strike, February
Apr. 130
16-27 1931_____________________________________ ______________________
Mar. 128
___ Philadelphia (Pa.), Erben-Harding Co. worsted mills, strike, January 12-13, 1931..
Apr. 129;
-----Philadelphia (Pa.), upholstery weavers, strike, February 2 to May 4, 1931-----------M a y ,! ; June 106
Industrial disputes, foreign countries:
May 92
Canada. Strikes and lockouts, J913 to 1930--------------- j ----------- -------- ------------ -----Great Britain. Cotton-mill owners, Lancashire, Burnley district, more looms per
Apr. 134-5
weaver dispute, ended February 16, 1931----------------------------------- --------------------Mar. 132-3
___ (South Wales). Coal strike compromise agreement in effect to January 31, 1934-..
Norway. Cooperative Wholesale Society, office employees, strike, November 12May 92-3
19, 1930................... ............................................................................... ..............................
Industrial management:
Feb. 87
China. Institute of Scientific Management established----------------- ------------------Great Britain. Lancashire cotton-mill owners, rationalization plan, opposition of
Apr. 134
operatives---------------------- ------ --------------------------------------------"
.......
Industrial relations, foreign countries:
Czechoslovakia (Zlin). Bata Boot and Shoe Factory, study of, International Labor
May 50-1
Office-----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------May 47-8
France. Lens Mining Co., study of, International Labor Office----------------------------May 46-7
Germany. Siemens Works, study of, International Labor Office---------------------------Great Britain (England). London Traffic Combine, Study of, International Labor
May 48-9
Office__________________________________________________________
May 49-50
Saar Basin. State mines, study of, International Labor Office------------------------------Industrial survey. (See Industrial conditions.)
Infant mortality (See Vital statistics.)
Apr. 65-6
Injunctions. Governors’ messages, recommendations, Minnesota and Wisconsin, 1931----Insurance service. Clusa Service (Inc.), casualty and fire, new activities of Cooperative
Feb. 95
League--------------------------- ------ ------ ------ ----------------------------------------------------------International relations:
Jan. 89-91
Labor treaty. France and Austria, May 27, 1930, terms of----------------- 7--------------- —
Jan. 91-2
-----France and Rumania, January 28, 1930, terms of--------------------------------------------Iron and steel industry (except Wages and hours, which see):
Accident statistics, by State, department, and year, 1913 to 1929-------------- --------------- Apr. 93-110
Jan. 83
Negro and Mexican labor, employment of, 1912 to 1928................ -.............................. ......


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1497]

MONTHLY LAB OK REVIEW

[1931

L abor costs. Hawaii, sugar industry, specified operations.................................. .................
Apr
Labor-management cooperation:
Railroads. Baltimore & Ohio Railroad____ ______ ________ _____ _____
May 44 45
-----Canadian National Railway Co., January, 1925_____________________________
Mav 44’ 45
-----Chicago & North Western Railway Co., 1925_________________________
Ma 44’ 45
-----Chicago, Milwaukee, St. Paul & Pacific Railroad Co., 1926__________ ’ '
May 44’ 45
W. n . Cargill Co., Columbus, Ga., and Syrup Workers Union No. 108, working agree­
m ent_______
_________
Apr. 79
Apr 78
\ eomans Bros. Pump Co., Chicago, 111., union-management working agreement____
Labor offices, governmental:
Mar 21
Annual appropriation, salary range, and total employees, by State_________________
Brazil. M inistry of Labor, Industry, and Commerce established November 26, 1930
and services combined..
’_
„ institutions
... .
iviay oi
California. ^Department of Industrial Relations, organization and functions.......... ........
Mar. 16-17
Egypt. Minister of the Interior decrees new labor office, duties______________
June 63
Illinois. Department of Labor, organization and functions_______________________
Mar 14
Kansas. Commission of Labor and Industry, creation in 1929, and functions________
Mar. 18-19
Massachusetts. Department of Labor and Industries, organization and functions____
Mar. 15
Minnesota. Industrial Commission, make-up and functions_______________
Mar 18
New Jersey. Department of Labor, organization and functions................ Mar 14115
New York State. Department of Labor, organization and functions______________’’ Mar. 11-13
Ohio. Department of Industrial Relations, organization and functions.___ _________
Mar. 15-16
Organization and functions. Federal agencies______________
_ __
Alar 22-47
-----State agencies----------------------------------------------------- Mar. 9-21
I ennsylvania. Department of Labor and Industry, organization and functions
Mar 13-14
Porto Rico. New Department of Labor, act of February 18, 1931____ ____________ "
June 100
~~ Mar 17-18
Wisconsin. Industrial Commission, creation in 1911, and functions..............
Labor organization, United States:
California. Union Labor BenefitLeagueorganizedformedicalservice to trade-unionists.
Mar. 90-1
( ooperative V orkers’ Union established, Mesabe Range district, Minnesota, purposes.
May 94
Hawaii. Trades or occupations unionized, 1930_________________________________
Apr lg_20
Insurance companies. Specified unions operating, policies written, etc., 1930________
June 111
May 44
Labor-management cooperation, nine trade-unions pledged to______ __________
Old-age pensions. Amount and requirements for receipts of, by occupation, 1930_____
May 33-5
Labor organizations, foreign countries:
General. International Federation of Trade-Unions, membership statistics, etc.
(Sum m er)..
___ T ,
,.
.
Apr. 28-34
international Trade-Secretariats, membership, by trade, December 31, 1929
Apr 31-2
Brazil. Membership statistics, 727 trade-unions................ ............................
M gg
Canada. Benefits paid, by kind and name of union, 1930__________
June 113
)---- Journals and papers published, list of.............................................” ’
June n g _14
----- Membership statistics. 1930
T
...
_ „
. .
.
’
-------- ------- ---------------------------------- --------------- June 111-12
Japan. Organized and unorganized workers, statistics, June, 1930__________________
Feh. 101-3
Russian (U. S. S. R.). Trade-union relations with International Federation of Trade
Unions_________________________
Labor treaty. (See International relations.)
• - pr.. 1
Labor turnover:
Compiling statistics of, standard procedure_____________________
June 126-8
Construction camp, Minnesota highways, 1930____________________
~
Apr ’gl
Monthly rates. (See section Labor turnover, each issue of Review.)
Sugar plantations, Hawaii, by sex and month, 1929_______________
A 1Q n
Labor and industrial conditions, United States:
California. Mexicans in, social and labor conditions____________________
j an gg_g 247
Governors’ messages, 14 States, recommendations, 1931_________________
A ’58_g
Hawaii. Labor conditions, 1929-30, summary of Bui. No. 534________"I"” ” ” ” ” ! ”
Apr. 1-20
Highway construction camps, Minnesota, summer of 1930______________________
Apr g(pg
Labor and industrial conditions, foreign countries:
Fiji Islands. 1928_____________________________
Feb
India. Mining, coal, salt, etc., 3 per cent annual diminution of woman labor under­
ground decreed, until extinct in 1939_____________________________
A
g3_4
Japan. Workers assume operation of factories closed for nonpayment of wages
Mar 84
Sumatra. Quarter ending September 30, 1930___________________________
Feb' gs
Lathers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses............................... M ay 144
Laundry woikers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses.............................
May 144


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1498]

1931 ]

INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Laws and legislation, United States, Federal and general:
Child labor. Review of, annual................ ........................................................ ....................
Contract of employment. Review of, annual----------------- --------------- -------------------Cooperative associations. Review of, annual_____________ ______ _______________
Employment agencies. Review of, annual---- --------------- ------------ ------ -----------------Factory inspection. Review of, annual_______ _______ ______ __________________
Federal employees (Panama Canal Zone), retirement act of March 2, 1931, effective
July 1, 1931, analysis______________________________________________________
Federal employment stabilization act, February 10, 1931, analysis__________________
Group life insurance. Review of, annual___ ______________________________ _____
Holidays and rest days. Review of, annual___ _________________________________
Hours of labor. Review of, annual___ ______ _________________________________
Investigative commissions. Review of, annual__________________________________
Labor departments. Review of, annual________________________________________
Labor legislation. Review of, an n u al..________ ________________________________
Labor organizations. Review of, annual___________ ___________________________
Pensions. Review of, annual___ ____________________________________________
Safety and health. Review of, annual_________________________________________
Sanitation. Review of, annual_______________________________________________
Vocational rehabilitation. Review of, annual___________________________________
Wages. Review of, annual__________________________________________________
Laws and legislation, United States, by State:
Delaware. Old-age pensions, act of January 29, 1931, in effect July 1, 1931, principal
features_____________________________________________________
Idaho. Old-age pensions, act of February 12, 1931, analysis----------------------------------Maine. Act of 1931, chapter 164, compressed-air work, text---------------------------------- New Jersey. Old-age pensions, act of April 24, 1931, analysis__________ ___________
Oregon. Apprenticeship, act of February 28, 1931, text---------------------------------------------Contracts of employment discriminating against labor organizations, illegal, act of
March 6, 1931__
Porto Rico. Labor department and vocational education, acts of February and March,
1931, provisions of....... ............
—
West Virginia. Old-age pensions, act of March 13, 1931, analysis..... .............. ........... .
Laws and legislation, foreign countries:
Australia (New South Wales). Amendment restoring 44-hour week-------------- ------ China. Factory inspection law of January 31,1931, text in English---------- ------- ------Great Britain. Unemployment insurance, act of March 3, 1931, amending act of 1927..
New Zealand. Unemployment relief act of October, 1930, principal features...................
Panama. Working women, protection of, decree (No. 23), 1930, principal provisions—
Syria. Child labor law of 1930, provisions------ ------ ----------- ------------ ------ - ...............Life insurance:
Gary (Ind.) railway company, agreement clause providing................. ........................ . . .
Group life insurance. Germany, Adam Opel Co., automobile manufacturers, first to
adopt_______________________________________ _______ ________ ___________
Llano Cooperative Colony, California and Louisiana, vicissitudes, 1914 to 1930---------------Loan funds and plans, employer to employee:
Five typical plans, outline of, as unemployment relief measure-------- ---------------------International Harvester Co., Chicago, 111......................... — ................................................
Lockouts. (See Industrial disputes.)
Longshoremen. (See Docks and harbors.)

Page
Mar. 109
Mar. 108
Mar. 110
Mar. 108-9
Mar. 109-10
May 29-33
Mar. 62-4
Mar. 109
Mar. 110
Mar. 109
Mar. 112
Mar. Ill
Mar. 108-12
Mar. Ill
Mar. 110-11
Mar. 109-10
Mar. 110
Mar. Ill
Mar. 110

Apr. 86-7
June 82-3
June 92-100
June 85-6
May 80-1
Mar. 72
June 100
June 84-5
May 158
May 73-4
May 28
Feb. 85-0
June 69
Jan. 107
Apr. 87
May 38-9
May 101-9
Apr. 43-4
Jan. 61

Machinery:
Displacing labor. Mechanical feeding Of commercial printing presses.......................... .
-----Mechanical sugar-cane cutter displacing 200 cutters using machetes, Florida--------Mechanization in agriculture, growth of, and its relation to labor productivity----------Machinists:
Chicago (111.). Union and management of Yeomans Bros. Pump Co. agreement pledg­
ing cooperation..... .......................................................................................... ....................
Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses------------------------------------------Mailers’ union. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses------------------------Maintenance of Way Employees, Brotherhood of. Labor-management cooperation--------Masters, mates, and pilots. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses---------Maternity allowances and insurance. Estonia, maternity and sick benefits-------------------Meat cutters and butcher workmen. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses.
Mechanization. (See Machinery.)
Mediation, (See Conciliation and arbitration.)


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1 4 9 9 ]

Feb. 78-9
Mar. 84
May 40-3
Apr. 78
M ay 145
May 145
May 44
May 145
June 79
May 145

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW
Medical and hospital service, industrial:
Convalescents, institutional care of________________ ____________________ _____
Medical care, costs of, by family income group__________________________________
Union Labor Benefit League, medical service, California_________________________
Metal workers, sheet. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses___________
Mexican labor. (See Immigration.)
Mining industry (except Wages and hours, which see), United States:
Accident-prevention work, Bureau of Mines, year ending June 30, 1930______________
Coal. Conciliation decision, Hudson Coal Co., Loree No. 3 colliery employees, pay for
funeral attendance............................................................... ..................... ............. ...........
Coal, bituminous. Illinois and West Virginia mines, productivity of labor (Stewart) __
-----Overdevelopment of industry, extent (Stewart)_______________ _____________
Mining industry (except Wages and hours, which see), foreign countries:
France. Accident statistics, coal and metal mines, quarries, 1923 to 1928____________
Great Britain. Coal industry, reorganization commission named, extensive authority _
India. Accident statistics, 1929________ _______ _________________________ _____
-----Coal, annual output per person employed, 1924-1928, 1929______________________
Mexico. Accidents, mines, coal and metal, and mills, 1925 to 1929....................... ...........
Mortality rates. (See Vital statistics.)
Motion-picture industry (except Wages and hours, which see):
Award. Colorado Industrial Commission, wage increase denied___________________
Old-age pensions. New York City, Local Union No. 306, plan in effect January 1,1931.
N atio n al Safety Council. Accident experience (See Accident statistics, by industry.)
Naturalization. Mexicans in California, low percentage................................... .......................
Negroes:
Economic status. Agriculture, in the South........................ ........ .................. ...................
-----Industry, in the North and South___________ ____________ _________________
Unemployment, extent of, and effect, various localities___________________________
Night work. Agreement to abolish, for women and minors, Cotton Textile Institute..........
O ccupations, diseases incident to. (See Industrial diseases and poisons; Workmen’s com­
pensation.)
Old age pensions and retirement, United States:
Delaware. Act approved January 29, 1931, in effect July 1, 1931, principal features___
Governor’s messages, recommendations, 1931________________ _________ __________
Idaho. Act of February 12 (effective April 12), 1931, principal provisions___________
Labor organizations. Amount and requirements for receipt of, by occupation, 1930___
Laws in effect, end of 1930, provisions of___ _________ _____ _____ _______________
Minnesota. Old-age pension law (optional) of 1929, election results, 12 counties______
Motion-picture machine operators. New York City, Local Union No. 306, plan in
effect January 1, 1931________________________________________ ______ ______
New Jersey. Act of April 24, 1931 (in effect January 2, 1932), analysis______________
Panama Canal Zone employees (Federal), retirement act of March 2, 1931, effective
July 1, 1931, analysis__________ ___________ ____ ___________________________
Pension situation, eight States______________ _________________________________
Public old-age pension systems, operation, 1930__________________________________
Public pension costs, and amount paid, by State and county.............. ................... .......
Standard Oil Co. of New York, retirement pension and death and disability benefit
plan, January 1, 1931_________ _____ ________________________________ ______
West Virginia. Act of March 13 (in effect June 9), 1931, analysis...____ ___________
Old-age pensions and retirement. Canada, act of 1927, experience under, by Province,
June 30, 1930________________ _____ ______________________ ____________ ______
Older worker in industry:
Age level, stores and factories, M aryland_______________________________________
Age limit. Different occupations, California____________________________________
-----Manufacturing and nonmanufacturing establishments, California_______________
- — Policy as to, M aryland_________________________________ ______ __________
-----Reasons for setting, California________ ___________________________________
-----Reasons for setting, M aryland................................................ ............................ ........ .
P ain ters, decorators, and paper hangers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement
clauses____________________ ___________________ ________ _____________________
Panama Canal Zone employees, retirement act of March 2, 1931, analysis..............................
Permits, building. (See Housing.)
Photo-engravers. (See Engravers, photo.)


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[1931
Page
Jan. 109-11
Jan. 108-9
Mar. 90-1
May 144
Feb. 91
Apr. 126
Feb. 53-7
Feb. 50-7
Jan. 122-3
Feb. 87
Apr. 85
Apr. 84
Jan. 123
Apr. 125-6
Feb. 89
Jaa. 85
Apr. 73-6
Apr. 76-7
June 60-2
Apr. 187

Apr. 86-7
Apr. 67-8
June 82-3
May 33-5
June 3-4
Jan. 93
Feb. 89
June 85-6
May 29-33
June 12-14
June 1-14
June 5-11
Mar. 81-2
June 84-5
Jan. 94-5
Feb. 32-5
Feb. 37
Feb. 36-9
F e b .30-1
Feb. 37-8
Feb. 31

May 144
May 29-33

1981}

INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Pineapple industry {except Wages and hours, which see):
Hawaii. Cannery employees, length of service...................................................................
-----Employment fluctuations, length of service-------------------- ------- ---------------- ----------Plantation growing, canning----------------------------- ---------------------- ----------..........
Plasterers, operative. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses-----------------Plumbers and gas fitters. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses----- ------Pressmen and Assistants’ Union of North America, International Printing. Old-age
pensions, amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930-------------------- ------ --------------Printing trades. Pressmen, reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses-----------Production and productivity, United States:
Agriculture. Mechanization, growth of and its relation to labor productivity-----------Mining, bituminous coal. Illinois and West Virginia mines (Stewart)............................
Alining, coal. Man-hours and man-shifts required to produce 1 ton, by year, 1911 to
1929----------------------------------- ------- ------------------------------------------------------------Ship cargoes, loading and discharging, units of labor time--------------—---------------------Sugar industry. Hawaii, 1922, 1928 and 1929-----------------------------------------------------Water transportation. Ship cargoes, loading and discharging, specified ports, trade
routes, and commodities---------- ------ -------------------------------------- ----------------- ----Production and productivity. India, coal mining, annual output per person employed,
1924-1928 and 1929---------------------- ----------------------------------- ------------------------- ------Profit sharing. Kansas City (Mo.) Public Service Co., employees’ participation and invest­
ment plan, January 1, 1931------------------------------------------------------------ ---------------- Public employment services. {See Employment agencies.)
Public utilities, United States:
Governors’ messages, recommendations, 1931--------------------------- ------ --------------- ----Kansas City (Mo.) Public Service Co., employees’ participation and investment plan,
effective January 1, 1931---------------------------- ------ -------------------------- ---------------Public works, United States:
Advance planning and accelerated construction, Federal act of February 10, 1931-------Arizona. Aliens prohibited from employment--------------------------------------------------Aleans of stabilization in times of depression------------------------------------------------------Purchasing power of money. Wholesale market, by group and subgroup of commodities,
United States, March, 1931.........................................................................................................
Q u arry Workers’ International Union of North America. Old-age pensions, amount and
requirements for receipt of, 1930...........-............................ ........ ..........- ............................... .

Page
Apr. 16-17
Apr. 12-14
Apr. 11-12
May 144
May 144
May 34
May 145
AIay 40-3
Feb. 53-7
Apr. 79-80
Feb. 2-3
Apr. 5-6
Feb. 1-30
Apr. 84
May 37-8

Apr. 68-9
May 37-8
Mar. 62-4
Apr. 66
Mar. 70-2
May 208-9
May 34

R ailroads {except Wages and hours, which see), United States:
Arbitration award. New York Central Railroad, Buffalo and east, and its station em­
Apr. 125
ployees, Sunday work__------------------------------- ---------------------------------------------Employment statistics. {See Employment statistics.)
May 44-6
Labor-management cooperation, adoption of policy, specified roads-------------------------AIay 145
Maintenance-of-way employees. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clausesJan. 81-2
Mexican labor. Employment of, maintenance-of-way department-------------- ----------May 145
Shopmen. -Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses------------------------ —
May 145
Signalmen. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses-------------------------May 146
Trainmen. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses-------------------------Jan. 123
Railroads. France, accident statistics, 1927-------------------------- ---------------------------------Rationalization of industry. {See Industrial management.)
Real wages. {See Wages, general.)
Alar. 121-2
Recreation. Cooperative societies, Minnesota and Wisconsin, joint activities----------------May 62
Recruitment of labor. Liberia, illegal, act of December 15, 1930----------------------------------Rehabilitation, reeducation, and reemployment, United States:
Civilian rehabilitation, statistics, 1929-30---------------------- ---------------- -------------------- Alar. 115-16
May 79-80
Deaf. Minnesota, causes and age when hearing was lost, by sex----------------------------Alay 77-80
-----Minnesota, training and placement, 1929-1930-----------------------------------------------Jan. 29-31
Handicapped workers. Placement, by State employment services-------.-----------------Apr. 20-8
Relief of needy families, cost in 100 cities, 1929 and 1930 (Steele)------- ------ --------------------May 14
Rents, working-class. Austria (Vienna), municipal apartment houses-------------------------Retail prices, United States:
Feb.
201
Coal. Average and relative prices, by kind, January, 1913, to December, 1930----------Jan. 237-9;
-----By city and kind of coal, specified dates, 1929, 1930 and 1931-----------------------------Feb. 199-200; Mar. 227-9; Apr. 244-5; May 205--6; June 200-1
Feb. 204-7
Electricity. By city, specified dates, 1928, 1929, 1930-------------------------------------------June 209
Food. Philippine Islands, municipalities, 30 specified articles, 1927 and 1928------------ -----(See also Retail prices of food in the United States, each issue of Review.)


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[1501]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1931

Retail prices, United States—Continued.
P ag0
Foodstuffs. Philippine Islands (Manila), 33 specified articles, 1927 and 1928.............. .
June 209
p ek 202-3
Gas. By city, specified dates, 1913 to 1930______________________________________
Index numbers. Comparison, foods, etc., certain foreign countries, by month, 1924 to
1930----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Jan. 241-2; Apr. 247-8
Retail prices, foreign countries:
Australia. Food and groceries, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________ Jan. 242; Apr. 248
-----Index numbers, prices and real and nominal wages, 1901 to 1929________________
Jan. 188
Belgium. Foods, etc., index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________ _____ Jan. 241; Apr. 247
Canada. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930____________
Jan. 241; Apr 247
Czechoslovakia. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930________________ Jan. 241; Apr. 247
Denmark. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930____________________ j a.n. 241; Apr. 247
Finland. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_______________________Jan. 241; Apr. 247
France (except Paris). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________ Jan. 241; Apr. 247
-----(Paris). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930____________________ Jan. 241; Apr. 247
Germany. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930___ ________________ Jan. 241; Apr. 247
Great Britain (England). Clothing, working-class, average per cent increase, 1914 to 1931_ June 210-11
-----(United Kingdom). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________ Jan. 242;
Apr.248
India (Bombay). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_______
Jan. 242;
Apr.248
Italy. Foods and charcoal, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_____________ Jan. 242;
Apr.248
Netherlands (Hague). Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________ Jan. 242;
Apr.248
New Zealand. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930____
Jan. 242;
Apr.248
Norway. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_____________________ Jan. 242;
Apr.248
South Africa. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930__________________ Jan. 242;
Apr.248
Sweden. Foods, fuel and light, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930_________ Jan. 242;
Apr.248
Switzerland. Foods, index numbers, by month, 1924 to 1930____________
Jan. 242;
Apr.248
Rice industry. Hawaii, culture introduced in 1859, intermittent success, future outlook....
Apr. 17-18
Road construction. (See Construction work.)
Roofers, slate, tile, and composition. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses.
May 144

Safety. (See Accident prevention, general.)
Salaries, social workers. (See Wages and hours.)
Sanitation, working conditions, and factory inspection, United States:
Philippine Islands. Inspection statistics, 1925 to 1929......................................................
j une 62-3
----- (Manila). Woman and child labor, distribution of, by industry, inspected estab­
lishments, 1928 and 1929___ _____ _________________________________________
j une 69
Sanitation, working conditions, and factory inspection, foreign countries:
China. Factory inspection law of January 31, 1931, text, English__________________
May 73-4
Jan. 189-90
Great Britain. Factories and workshops, report of chief inspector, 1929_____________
Scientific management. (See Employment management; Industrial management.)
Sheet-metal workers. (See Metal workers, sheet.)
Shift systems. Great Britain, two-shift system for women and minors, report of chief factory
inspector, 1929_________________________________________ ______________ ______
j an lgo
Ship cargoes, loading and discharging. (See Water transportation.)
Shopmen, railroad. (See Railroads.)
Shutdowns, plant. (See Unemployment.)
Sick benefits. (See Benefits and benefit funds.)
Sickness insurance. (See Health insurance.)
Sickness statistics:
Illness, incidence of, among adult wage earners, a statistical study (Brundage)..................
Apr. 88-92
India (Bombay). Cotton operatives, incidence of illness among___________________
June 70-1
May 144
Sign writers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses......... ............................
Signalmen of America, Brotherhood of Railroad. Labor-management cooperation_______
May 44
Six-hour day:
Kellogg Co., Battle Creek (Mich.), adoption by December 1, 1930....................................
Jan. 60
-----Battle Creek (Mich.), statement of results, April 14, 1931........................................... June 148-55
Slaughtering and meat-packing. Negro and Mexican labor, employment of, 1917 to 1928.......
Jan. 83
Slavery and forced labor. (See Forced labor.)
Small-loan companies and borrowers:
Cost of credit to the small borrower....................................................................................... Apr. 119-24
Cost of operation and profits...................................................................................... ..........
Apr. 121-3
Loan agencies, types of, and rates charged...................... ...................................................... Apr. 119-21
Social conditions. (See Labor conditions.)
Social insurance, United States:
Group insurance. Plan administered by Metropolitan Life Insurance Co. for Standard
Oil Co. of New York....................................... .....................................................................
M ar>


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1931]

INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Social insurance, U nited States—Continued.
Oregon. Social insurance legislation, investigative committee to report results, January,
1933_________________________________ ____ ______________________________
Social insurance, foreign countries:
Germany. Adam Opel Co., automobile manufacturers, first to adopt group life insur­
ance________________________________ _____ _____________________________
Great Britain. Contributory premiums in arrear because of unemployment paid by Gov­
ernment___________________________________________________________ _____
Estonia. Sickness, accident, and maternity insurance, coverage, benefits, etc------------Italy. Amount of contributions, employers and employees, and workers insured, by
type of insurance-------------------------------------- ---------------------------------- -------------Social services, foreign countries:
Great Britain (England and Wales). Expenditures under specified acts, 1928-29 and
1929-30__________________________________________________________________
-----(Scotland). Expenditures under specified acts, 1928-29 and 1929-30....... ....................
Social workers. Family Welfare Association agencies, salaries, by position, May, 1929........
Sprinkler fitters. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses-.-'------------------Stage Employees and Moving Picture Machine Operators of the United States and Canada,
International Alliance of Theatrical. Old-age pensions, Union No. 306, New York City,
January 1, 1931----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Stereotypers and electrotypers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses----Stock ownership, employee. Massachusetts cooperative shoe factories, legislative investiga­
tion, results_____________________________________________ _____ -------- -----------Stone trades. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses---------------------------Street and electric railway employees. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses
Street and Electric Railway Employees of America, Amalgamated Association of:
Gary (Ind.). Division No. 517 and operating company, agreement providing life insur­
ance and sick benefits_________ r----------------------------------------------------------------—,— Life insurance and sick benefits, agreement clause providing----------------------------Old-age pensions. Amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930----------------------------Strikes. (See Industrial disputes.)
Structural and ornamental iron workers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement
clauses------------ ------ --------------------------------------------------- ------ ----------------------------Sugar industry (except Wages and hours, which see):
Florida. Southern Sugar Co. installs 15 mechanical harvesters (Falkiner endless tread
cane-cutters)______________________________________________ ______ _______
Hawaii. Irrigation and fertilization----------------------------------------------------------------------Labor costs, specified operations..............................................------- ---------------------------Labor supply, social side of labor problems----- --------------------------------------------------Labor turnover, 41 plantations, by sex and month, 1929-----------------------------------—— Productivity of labor, 1922, 1928, 1929---------------------- -----------------------------------Syrup workers. Columbus (Ga.), Union No. 108 and management of W. H. Cargill Co.,
agreement, pledging cooperation-------------, ................... ...... .................................................
Tailors, journeymen. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses----------------Teamsters and chauffeurs. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses----------Technological unemployment. (See Unemployment.)
Telegraphers, Order of Railroad. Labor-management cooperation-------------------------------T r a in Dispatchers’ Association, American. Labor-management cooperation,......... ............
Trainmen, Brotherhood of Railroad:
Labor-management cooperation------------------ ------------------------------------------ ---------Old-age pensions. Amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930------ ------ ---------------Typographical Union of North America, International:
Financial condition, statement, as of June 20, 1930-----------------------------------------------Old-age pensions. Amount and requirements for receipt of, 1930......................................
Typographical workers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses--------------U n em p lo y m en t, United States:
Bridgeport (Conn.). Unemployment register of 3,463 persons, study of, by Citizens’
Emergency Committee------- ---------------------------- -----------......................-..................
California. County and municipality unemployment committees, organization and
function____________________________ _________ ______________________ _____
-----Emergency act of January 23, 1931, creating 5-member unemployment commission.
Censuses, April, 1930 and January, 1931, by class and sex, State and geographic division.
Community planning in emergencies, permanent program----- -------------------------------Connecticut. State Emergency Committee on Employment, report to Governor........
Governors’ conference, seven industrial States, January 23-25, 1931------------------------- -


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Page
May 38

May 38-9
Mar. 83
June 77-81
May 39
Mar. 82
Mar. 82
June 147
May 144

May 35
May 145
Mar. 123-5
May 146
May 146
Apr. 87
Apr. 87
May 34
May 144
Mar. 84
Apr. 6
Apr. 9-10
Apr. 6-7
Apr. 10-1L
Apr. 5-6
Apr, 79
May 144
May 146
May 44
May 44
May 44
May 34
Feb. 101
May 34
May 145

May 17-20
Mar. 73-5
Mar. 73
Apr. 35-41
Feb. 74-7
Apr. 44-6
Mar. 64-6

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1931

Unemployment, United States—Continued.
Page
Governors’ messages, recommendation, 21 specified States, 1931.........................................
Apr. 60-3
Negroes, various localities, extent of, and effect______________ _________ ______ ___
June 60-2
New York State. Committee on Stabilization of Industry for the Prevention of Unem­
ployment, report, November 13, 1930___________________ _____ _____ _________
Jan. 61-74
Pennsylvania. Committee appointed by Governor-Elect Pinchot, report of January
17, 1931, Part I, sum m ary.____ _______________ __________________ ___________
Mar. 75-9
Pittsburgh, Allegheny County, relief fund, 3,000 employers backing p la n ......................
Mar. 61-2
Plant shutdowns. Readjustment of workers displaced by................. .............................. .
Apr. 69-73
President’s (Hoover) Advisory Committee on Employment Statistics, chairman Willits’
Apr. 41-3
report, February 9, 1931, summary__________________ _____ _______ ___________
President’s (Hoover) Emergency Committee for Employment, policies and practices of
companies reporting to_____ _______ ___ _____ ______________________________
Feb. 68-72
President’s (Hoover) Emergency Committee for Employment, survey of unemployment
relief In industry____________________________ _____ ______ ________________
Feb. 72-3
Printing trades. Commercial pressrooms, displacement of labor through mechanical
feeding------------------------------------------------------ ------ -------- -----------------------------Feb. 78-9
Relief. Loan funds and plans, employer to employee____________ ________ _______
Apr. 43-4
Surveys. Buffalo (N. Y.), November, 1931, and comparison with November, 1929
(Croxton and Croxton)_____ ________________ ________ ______________ _______
Jan. 33-46
-----Metropolitan Life Insurance Co., week ending December 8, 1931__________ ____ _ Mar. 48-55
Technological. United States Rubber Co. permanent shutdowns, Hartford and New
Apr. 69-73
Haven plants__________________ ___________________________________ ______
Unemployment, foreign countries:
Australia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_________ Feb. 80; Mar. 56; Apr. 48; May 21; June 49
-----(New South Wales). Unemployment relief tax, legislation_________
June 53
-----(Queensland). Conditions and statistics, 1929-30________________________
Mar. 60
-----(Queensland). Unemployment relief tax, legislation__________________
June 53
-----(Tasmania). Improvement loans to property owners hiring unemployed workmen.
June 54
Austria. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930________. . . Feb. 80; Mar. 56; Apr. 48; May 21; June 49
Belgium. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_________ Feb. 80; Mar. 56; Apr. 48; May 21; June 49
Canada. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930__________ Feb. 80; Mar. 56; Apr. 48; May 21; June 48
-----Trades and Labor Congress proposals to Prime Minister______________________
June 54-5
Czechoslovakia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930....... Feb. 81; Mar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Danzig, Free City of. Statistics, by month, 1929and 1930.. Feb. 81; Mar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Denmark. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930................. Feb. 81; Alar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Estonia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930._______________ ___________________
Feb. 81;
Mar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Finland. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930.......................... ...... ............. .......................
Feb. 81;
Alar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Feb. 81;
France. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930.________ __________________ ____ ____
Mar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Germany. Commission headed by Heinrich Brauns appointed to investigate________
Apr. 52
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930.............. - ........................... ................. .................
Feb. 81;
Mar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Great Britain. Insured persons in employment, by industry group, 1923 to 1930_____
Apr. .54-7
-----Insured workers registered as unemployed, and estimated as employed, 1930 and 1931. June 55-6
-----Prolonged unemployment, deteriorating effects on workers, remedial measures___
May 25-7
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_______ ____ _____________________________
Feb. 82;
Mar. 58; Apr. 50; May 23; June 51
-----Unemployment Grants Committee, report, August 30, 1930____________________
Apr. 52-4
-----Unemployment rates among insured persons by administrative division, 1927 to
1930..----------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- ----------- - Mar. 176-7
-----(and Northern Ireland), Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_________ _________
Feb. 81;
Mar. 57; Apr. 49; May 22; June 50
Hungary. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_____ _________________ _______ ___
Feb. 82;
Alar. 58; Apr. 50; Alay 23; June 51
Irish Free State. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930....................... ........... ......................
Feb. 82;
Mar. 58; Apr. 50; May 23; June 51
Italy. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930________ _________ ___________________
Feb. 82;
Mar. 58; Apr. 50; May 23; June 51
Latvia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_____ _____ ______________ __________
Feb. 82;
Mar. 58; Apr. 50; M ay 23; June 51
Netherlands. Prolonged unemployment, ill effects on young workers, trade-union
proposals_______ _________ _________________________ _____ ________________
May 27-8
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_____ ___________________________________
Feb. 82;
Mar, 58; Apr. 50; May 23; June 51


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1931 \

INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Unemployment, foreign countries—Continued.
Page
New Zealand. Act of October, 1930, principal provisions........... ................................. .
Peb. 85-6
-----Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930........
Feb. 82; Mar. 58; Apr. 50; May 23; June 51
Norway. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930--............. Feb. 82; Mar. 58; Apr. 50; May 23; June 51
Poland. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930 _____________________________________ Feb. 82-3;
Mar. 58-9; Apr. 50-1; May 23-4; June 51-2
Rumania. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930............... Feb. 83; Mar. 59; Apr. 51; May 24; June 52
Saar Territory. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930___ Feb. 83; Mar. 59; Apr. 51; May 24; June 52
Sweden. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_________ Feb. 83; Mar. 59; Apr. 51; May 24; June 52
Switzerland. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930_____ Feb. 83; Mar. 59; Apr. 51; May 24; June 52
Yugoslavia. Statistics, by month, 1929 and 1930______ Feb. 83; Mar. 59; Apr. 51; May 24; June 52
Unemployment insurance and benefits, United States:
Establishment plans. Guaranteed employment and insurance plans, specified com­
panies__________________________________________________________________
Mar. 5-8
Apr. 47-8
Rochester (N. Y.) companies united in building up a reserve fund, 14 specified plants__
Trade-union plans. Collective agreements guaranteeing employment_____ ..._______
Mar. 4-5
-----Out-of-work benefits, local, national, and international.._______ _______________
Mar. 3-4
Unemployment insurance, foreign countries:
Australia (Queensland). Workers under compulsory insurance, number of__________
Mar. 72
Austria. Workers under compulsory insurance, number of______________ _________
Mar. 72
Belgium. Decree of October 25, 1930 increasing State subsidy_____________________
Mar. 79-80
---- Workers under voluntary insurance, number of_______________
Mar. 72
Mar. 72
Bulgaria. Workers under compulsory insurance, number of__________
Czechoslovakia. Workers under voluntary insurance, number of________ _____ ____
Mar. 72
Mar. 72
Denmark. Workers under voluntary insurance, number of______________ ________
Finland. Workers under voluntary insurance, number of__________ _____ ________
Mar. 72
France. Workers under voluntary insurance, number of_________________________
Mar. 72
Germany. Deficit, October 6, 1930, of 300,000,000 marks______ ___________________
Feb. 84
-----Workers under compulsory insurance, number of__________
Mar. 72
Great Britain. Act of March 3, 1931, extending “ transitional period” under act of 1927.
May 28
-----Benefits, “ uncovenanted” or “ transitional” (the dole)............................................ . .
Feb. 61-3
-----Royal commission of inquiry, names of appointees, scope of inquiry_____________
Feb. 84
-----Scheme, original purpose, operation and effect (Egerton)______________________
Feb. 58-68
-----(and Northern Ireland). Workers under compulsory insurance, number of____
Mar. 72
Irish Free State. Workers under compulsory insurance, number of____ . . ____ _____
Mar. 72
Italy. Workers under compulsory insurance, number of_________________________
Mar. 72
Netherlands. Workers under voluntary insurance, number of________ . ___________
Mar. 72
Norway. Workers under voluntary insurance, number of_________
Mar. 72
Poland. Workers under compulsory insurance, number of________________________
Mar. 72
Russia (U. S. S. R.). Workers under compulsory insurance, number of______
Mar. 72
Switzerland. Workers under voluntary insurance in 14 cantons, number of_________
Mar. 72
-----Workers under compulsory insurance in 9 cantons, number of__________________
Mar. 72
United States Government, work of, by department, bureau, etc.:
Mar.41-3
Bureau of Efficiency. Organization and functions, appropriation for 1930. .....................
Bureau of Mines. Organization and functions, appropriation for 1930________________
Mar.23-4
Bureau of Navigation. Organization, functions____ ____________________
Mar. 26-8
Bureau of Pensions. Organization and functions__________________________________
Mar.46-7
Mar. 35-41
Civil Service Commission. Organization and functions, appropriation for 1930_______
Commerce, Department of. Functions in behalf of miners and seamen_____________
Mar. 23-8
Interstate Commerce Commission. Organization and functions_________ _________
Mar. 31-2
Labor, Department of. Activities, appropriation, and permanent employees,1929-30..
Mar. 22-3
—— Secretary’s Office, annual report__________________________________________
Jan. 75-81
-----United States Employment Service, origin in 1907, war organization, farm labor,
and postwar activities____ ________________________ _______________________
Jan. 14-20
Mediation, United States Board of. Annual report._________ . ________________ Jan. 146-7, 247
-----Organization and function, appropriation for 1930____________________________
Mar. 32-3
Personnel Classification Board. Organization and functions________________________
Mar.43-4
Public Health Service. Organization and functions____________________________
Mar.28-30
Steamboat Inspection Service. Organization, functions, appropriation for 1930.----------Mar.24-6
United States Employees’ Compensation Commission. Organization and functions...
Mar. 44-6
Vocational Education, Federal Board for. Annual report________________________ Mar. 113-16
-----Organization and functions_____________________________ ________________
Mar. 33-4
Union-management cooperation. (See Labor-management cooperation.)
Upholsterers. Reporting time and minimum pay, agreement clauses....................................
May 146


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[1931

Page
V acations with pay. New York State, manufacturing industries, 1,050 plants, survey___ Apr. 189-90
Vital statistics, United States:
Infant mortality. California, Mexican population, urban and rural districts________
Jan. 87
Mortality statistics, United States and Canada, policyholders of Metropolitan Life
Insurance Co., 1930_____________ ____________ _______ ___ ______ ___________
Mar. 88-90
Vocational education, United States:
Federal, State, and local expenditures, enrollment, etc., 1929-30____ ______ _________ Mar. 113-15
Illinois. Board for Vocational Education, annual report................. ........... ..................... Mar. 117-18
-----Statistics, of industrial education, 1929-30_______________________________ ____
Mar. 118
-----Schools or classes, different types of, purposes___________ ____________ ____ ___
May 75-7
Vocational guidance. Canada, report on conditions.......... ....................................................
Mar. 119
Wage claims:
Philippine Islands. Bureau of Labor activities, 1925 to 1929__ ___ ___________ _____
June 159
Utah. Collection work of Industrial Commission, 1928-1930_______ __________ ____
June 157-8
Wage reductions. (See Wages, general.)
Wage systems:
Bedeaux point system, survey of Connecticut factories using______________________
Apr. 188
C. L. Stevens point system, survey of Connecticut factories using__________________
Apr. 188
Connecticut factories using piece rates, day rates, or bonus (incentive) systems, by
industry-----------------------------------------------------Apr. 188
Apr. 188
Emerson bonus system, survey of Connecticut factories using______________
General Electric Co. system, survey of Connecticut factories using_________________
Apr. 188
George S. May system, survey of Connecticut factories using______________________
Apr. 188
Group systems, survey of Connecticut factories using____________________________
Apr. 188
Keys-Weaver system, survey of Connecticut factories using_______________________
Apr 188
Apr. 188
Parkhurst differential bonus system, survey of Connecticut factories using__________
Sherman Co. system, survey of Connecticut factories using_________
Apr. 188
Task and bonus system, survey of Connecticut factories using_____________________
Apr. 188
Time premium system, survey of Connecticut factories using______________________
Apr. 188
Wages, general:
Adequacy of, testing the, a study of wage records of Leeds & Northrup, Philadelphia... May 146-50
Italy. Reductions, all State employees, effective December 1, 1930_________________
Jan. 190-1
Real wages. Australia, nominal and real wages, and retail prices, index numbers, 1901
Jan. 188
to 1929--------------- ------- ------------------------- --------------------- ----------------------------------United States, trend per hour, 1913 to 1929_________ _________________________
Feb. 145
Standard measurement of, development and application of.___ ___________________ May 146-50
Wages and hours, United States:
Abattoirs, meat packing, etc. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929____________________
May 155
Aircraft engines. Average, 1929____________
May 137
Airplanes, Average, by sex, 1929______________________
May 137
Aluminum, brass, and copper wares. Average, by sex, 1927__________
May 137
Automobiles, accessories. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929_________________________
May 155
Aviation. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)_____________________
May 153
Bakeries. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)._.___________________
May 153
-----Virginia, bakery products, by sex and race, 1929_____________________________
May 155
Barbers. Hawaii, union rates, 1930______ _________________ ___________________
Apr. 19
-----Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30__________________________________
Jan. 183-5
Jan. 183-5
Beauty shops. Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30________________________
Boot and shoe industry. By year, 1914 to 1930, by sex, 1930_______________________ May 137, 138
-----Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)_______
May 153
---- - Virginia, by sex and race, 1929_____
May 155
Brass and copper. Rod, shape, sheet, tube, and wire mills, average, by sex, 1927_____
May 137
Brewing and bottling. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only) ________
May 153
Brick and tile. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only) _________
May 152
-----Virginia, males, by race, 1929.......... ................... , ..........................................................
May 155
Building construction. Hawaii, average, 1929............................................. .......................
May 137
-----Hawaii, male employees, 1929-1930................ ............................. ...................................
Apr. 4
Bus and truck lines. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929 and 1930 (wages only)________
May 153
Candy, chewing gum, etc. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929________________________
May 155
Canneries. Hawaii, pineapple, by occupation and sex, 1929-1930_________________ Mar. 15; Apr. 4
-----Virginia, cannery products, by sex and race, 1929__________ __________________
May 155
Carpenters and joiners. Hawaii, union rates, 1930._____ ________________________
Apr. 19
Cartage and storage. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)___________
May 153
Cement (Portland) industry. Average, by sex, 1921..................... ........... .........................
May 137


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

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INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Wages and hours, United States—Continued.
Page
Chemical and allied products. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929,1930 (wages only).........
May 153
Cigarette industry. By sex, 1930----- ---------------------------------------------------------------May 137
Clay products. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only) ------------------------May 152
Cleaning and dyeing. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)----------------May 153
Clothing industry. Minnesota, clothing and furnishings, average weekly, 1929, 1930
(wages only)---------------------- ------------------------------------------ ----------------------------May 153
-----Virginia, clothing, shirts, and overalls, by sex and race, 1929------------------ ----------May 155
Clothing, men’s. By city, occupation, and sex, 1930-------------------- -----------------------Mar. 162-8
-----By year, 1914 to 1930, by sex, 1930......... ............. .................................— ------ ---------- May 137,138
Coffee industry. Hawaii, mills, by sex, 1929-1930----- ----------- ---------------------------- May 137; Apr. 4
-----Virginia, roasting, by sex and race, 1929................... ................... .................................
May 156
Compositors, hand. Hawaii, union rates, 1930--------------------------------------------------Apr. 19
Contracting, general. Virginia, by occupation and race, and industry, 1929--------------May 154
Cooks, labor camp. Minnesota, summer of 1930.................................. .............................
Apr. 80
Cooperage, barrels, and staves. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929------ --------------------------May 155
May 137
Cotton compresses. Average, by sex, 1927------- ------ ------------ -----------------------------Cotton gins. Average, 1927----------------- ------------ --------------------------------------------May 13/
Cotton-goods industry. By year, 1914 to 1930, by sex, 1930------------------------------------ May 137,138
Cotton manufacturing. Virginia, cotton-mill products, by sex and race, 1929------------May 155
Cottonseed-oil mills. Average, 1927------------------------------------------ ------ ---------------May 137
Crabs, oysters, clams, etc. Virginia, packing, by sex and race, 1929------------------------May 155
Creameries. Virginia, creamery and dairy products, by sex and race, 1929------------May 155
Dairy industry. Hawaii, average, male employees, 1929-1930.------------------------------ May 137; Apr. 4
-----Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)--------------------------------------------May 153
-----Virginia, creamery and dairy products, by sex and race, 1929-----------------------------May 155
Domestic service. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930-----------------------------------------May 153
Dry-cell batteries. Average, by sex, 1927-------------------------------------Dry docks. Hawaii, average, 1929--------------------------- ---------------------------------- May 137; Apr. 4
May 137
Dyeing and finishing textiles. By sex, 1930— ............................- ----------------------------Electric plants. Hawaii, average, 1930----- -------------------- ----------------------------------May 137
-----Hawaii, electricity manufacture and distribution, male employees, 1929-1930--------Apr. 4
Engineers, marine. Hawaii, union rates, 1930---------------------------- -----------------------Apr. 19
Engraving. Virginia, printing and engraving, by sex and occupation, 1929----------------May 157
Erecting. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)-----------------------------------May 153
Factory workers. (See Wages and hours: Manufacturing industries.)
Farming. Average rates and index numbers, January 1 and April 1, 1930 and 1931---May 141-2
-----Average rates and index numbers, 1910 to January, 1931----------------------------------Apr. 186-7
-----Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)--------------------------------------------May 152
May 155
Fertilizers and guano. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929---------------------------------------------Finishing, equipping, and installing. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages
only)--------------------------------------------------------------------Fish oil and fish guano. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929--------------------------May 153
Flour and grist mills. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)-------------------—— Virginia, by sex and race, 1929..-----------------------------------------Foundries. By sex, 1929-------------------------------------------------------Gray-iron, by occupation and locality, February, 1931-------------------------------------May 150-2
-----Hawaii, average, 1929-------------------------------------------------------------------------- May 137; Apr. 4
-----Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)--------------------------------------------May 152
Fur industry. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930----------------------------------------------May 153
Furniture industry. By sex, 1929-----------------------------------------------------------------------May 137
-----Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)--------------------------------------------May 153
-----Virginia, furniture, mattresses, and upholstery, by sex and race,
1929-----------------May 155
Garages. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)------------------------------------May 153
Gas industry. Hawaii, male employees, 1929, 1930------------------------------------------Apr. 4; May 137
Glass products. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)-----------------------May 152
Grading, excavating, and foundations. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages
only)_________________________________________________________________ -May 153
Grain elevators. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)----------------------May 153
Hosiery and underwear. By year, 1914 to 1930, by sex, 1930----------------------------------- May 137,138
-----Earnings, by occupation, sex, and State, 1928 to 1930--------------------------------------Jan. 166-76
Hospitals. Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30-----------------------------------------',an - l83-5
Jan. 183-5
Hotels and cafes. Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30--------------------------------Ice, artificial. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929----------------- ------ - ------ --------------------May 155
Index numbers. 1840 to 1929 (exclusive of agriculture), 1913=100----- ------------ ------ Feb. 143
-----Farm wage rates, 1866 to 1929_-------------- - --------- ----------- ------- ----------------------Feb. 144
-----Real wages per hour, trend, 1913 to 1929------------------------------- ------- ---------------Feb. 145


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May 155

Ma

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1931

Wages and hours, United States—Continued.
p age
Iron and steel industry. Average, by year, 1914 to 1929..................................................... May 137,138
Minnesota, rolling mills and steel works, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only) __
May 152
May 152
— Minnesota, structural iron and steel, average weekly, 1929,1930 (wages only)............
-----Virginia, iron and machinery plants, by occupation, 1929___________ ________ May 157
Knitting-mill products. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929__________________________
May 156
Labor organizations. American Federation of Labor, affiliated unions, national and
international, 1929_______________________________________
Jan 179_81
Changes, by industry, occupation and locality, as reported by trade-unions______
Jan. 177-8;
Feb. 141-2; Mar. 171-2; Apr. 184-5; May 140-1; June 145-6
Laundry industry. Hawaii, by sex, 1929-1930______________ ___________ _____ Apr. 4; M ay 137
-----Minnesota, average and weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)____________________ . . . . ' ’ May 153
-----Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30____________ ___________ __________
j an 183_5
-----Virginia, by sex and race, 1929_______________________________________ " " ’
May 156
-----Woman workers, by geographical division and race, 1927_______________ ________
Jan. 98-9
Leather industry. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages o n ly ).......... ......... .
May 153
-----Virginia, trunks, bags, etc., by sex and race, 1929.......... ................ .......................... .
May 156
Lime, cement, and limestone. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929____ ________________
May 156
Linotype operators. (See Wages and hours: Printing.)
Longshoremen. Hawaii, 1929-1930_________________________________________ Apr. 4; May 137
Lumber industry. By occupation and State, 1930, summary of Bui. No. 560
Apr 177-82
-----By year, 1921 to 1930-------- ---------------------------------------------------------------1 ™ " May 137,138
Minnesota, logging, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)______
M ay 153
May 153
Minnesota, planing and lath mills, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)_______
Minnesota, sawmills, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)__________________
May 153
. -----Minnesota, yards, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)_____________
May 153
Sawmills, by occupation and State, 1930, summary of Bui. No. 560_____________ Apr. 177-82
-----Virginia, sawmill products, by sex and race, 1929_________________
May 156
Machine shops. Average, by sex, 1929 ______ ______ _________________ _________
May 137
-----Hawaii, average, 1929__________________________________ __________
" "
May 137
-----Hawaii, male employees, 1929-1930..._______________________________
"
Apr 4
Machinery plants. Minnesota, machinery and instruments, average weekly, 1929 1930
(wages only)--------------------------------------------------- -----------------------------------------May 153
-----Virginia, iron and machinery plants, by occupation, 1929______________________
M ay 157
Machinists. Hawaii, union rates, 1930_________ ; . . . _____ ___________ _
Apr 19
Manufacturing industries. New York State, weekly earnings, by month, 1917 to 1930..
Mar. 175
New York City, woman factory workers, by industry group, 1931______________
June 68
-----Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30__________________________ ________
Jan 183_5
Manufacturing plants. Wage changes reported, and employees affected____________
Jan. 176- 7;
Feb. 140-1; Mar. 169-70; Apr. 183-4; May 138-40; June 143-4
Mattresses. Virginia, furniture, mattresses, and upholstery, by sex and race, 1929____
May 155
Medicines, chemicals, and drugs. Virginia, by sex and race, 1931__________________
May 156
Mercantile. (See Wages and hours: Stores, mercantile.)
May 152
Metal products. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)___________ ____
Mexican labor. California, railroads, manufacturing in d u stries...___ _____________
Jan. 86-7
Mill work. Virginia, sash, doors, and blinds, by sex and race_____________________
May 156
Mining. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)______________________
May 152
—- Nevada, daily wages (only), by occupation, 1930_____________________________
j une 155
June 156
Mining, coal. Utah, contract rates, 1929______________ . . . . __________
Utah, daily rates (only), by occupation, inside and outside workers, March 26, 1929.
June 156
-----Virginia, underground occupations, by race, 1929_____________________________
May 157
Mining, metal. Utah, daily wages (only), by occupation,1928-29 and 1929-30.............
June 157
Mining, ore. Virginia, by occupation and race, 1929_____________________________
May 154
Molders, floor. Hawaii, union rates, 1930__________________________
Apr 19
Molders’ helpers. Hawaii, union rates, 1930________
Apr 19
Motor-vehicle industry. Average, by sex, 1928_______
May 137
Motors, 1 or less horsepower. Average, by sex, 1927____________ ______ __________
May 137
Office employees. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wagesonly)_____ ________
May 153
New York City, women, by kind of business and position, weekly range, 1929, 1930.
June 67
Office employees, factory. New York State, by industry group and sex, 1921 to 1930
Feb. 145-7
(wages only)..----------------- -------------------------------------------------------------------------Overalls and shirt manufacturing. Hawaii, average, by sex, 1930__________________
May 137
Apr. 4
Overalls making. Hawaii, overalls and shirt making, by sex, 1929-1930_______ _____
Painting and paper hanging. Virginia, by occupation and race, 1929......... ....................
May 154
Paper and pulp industry. Virginia, bags, boxes, and twine, by sex and race, 1929____
M ay 156
-----Virginia, by sex and race, 1929___________________________ _____ __ ________"
May 156
-----Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only).......................................................
May 153


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

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1981 ]

INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Wages and hours, United States—Continued.
Page
May 156
Peanut cleaning. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929............
Personal service. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only) ----------------------May 153
Philippine Islands (Manila). By industry group, daily hours (only), 1928, 1929----June 158
Pineapple industry. Hawaii canneries, by sex, 1929-1930------------------------------ Apr. 4, 15; May 137
-----Hawaii plantations, by sex, 1929-1930---------- ------ -------------------------------------- Apr. 4; May 137
Plumbers. Hawaii, union rates, 1930------------------------------------------- -------------------Apr. 19
Printing and publishing. (See Wages and hours: Printing trades.)
Printing trades. Hawaii, book and job, newspaper, by sex, 1929-1930------------ ---------Apr. 4
-----Hawaii, compositors, hand, and linotype operators, union rates, 1930---------------.—
Apr. 19
-----Hawaii, newspaper, book and job, average, 1930------------May 137
-----Minnesota, printing and publishing, 1929, 1930 (wages only) ------------May 153
-----Texas, men, women, and children, in printing and publishing, 1929-30. -------------Jan.183-5
-----Virginia, printing and engraving, by sex and occupation, 1929---------------------------May 157
May 153
Professional service. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only).................
Public service. Minnesota, municipal, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)----------M ay 153
-----Philippine Islands, salaries in civil service, 1925 to 1929--------------June 158
Public utilities. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)-----------------------May 153
-----Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-1930----------------------------------Jan.183-5
-----Virginia, by sex and race, 1929------------------------ - ------- ---------------------------------May 156
Quarries. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)--------------------------------May 152
-----Virginia, by kind, and by occupation and race, 1929-----------------------------May 154-5
Radio receiving sets. Average, by sex, 1927..---------------------------- -----------------------May 137
May 137
Radio speakers. Average, by sex, 1927..--------- ------------------------------------------------Radio tubes. Average, by sex, 1927----- ------ -------- ------------- -----------------------------May 137
Railroads. Hawaii, steam, male employees, 1929-1930-------------------------------------- Apr. 4; May 137
-----Minnesota, intrastate, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)---------------------------May 153
—— Virginia, shops, etc., by sex and race, 1929------------------May 156
Rayon industry. By sex, rayon and other synthetic textiles, 1930--------------------------May 137
-----Virginia, rayon-mill products, by sex and race, 1929— ------May 156
Road building. Hawaii, male employees, 1929-1930----------------------------------------- Apr. 4; May 137
Rubber industry. Minnesota, rubber and composition goods, average weekly, 1929, 1930
May 153
(wages only)._____ ________________ .------------------------------ ------- ---------------- —
Sawmills. (See Wages and hours: Lumber industry.)
Seamen. Cargo vessels, steam and motor, by nationality and occupation, Bureau of
Navigation report--------------------------- ------ ---------------------------------------------------Mar. 172-4
Shipbuilding industry. Virginia, by sex and race, 1929------------------------ ---------------May 156
Shirt making. Hawaii, overalls and shirt making, by sex, 1929-1930-----------------------Apr. 4
Silk industry. Virginia, silk-mill products, by sex and race, 1929---------------------------May 156
Slaughtering and meat packing. Average, by sex, 1929------May 137
-----Hawaii, male employees, 1929-1930------------------ --------------------------------------- Apr. 4; May 137
—— Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)----------------------------------------May 153
Social workers. Family Welfare Association agencies, salaries, by position, May, 1929.
June 147
Stock raising. Hawaii, male employees, 1929-1930----------------- ------------------------- Apr. 4; May 137
Stockyards. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)-------------------------- May 153
Stone products. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929 (wages only)------------------------------May 152
Storage batteries. Average, by sex, 1927----------------------------------------------------- -----May 137
Stores, mercantile. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only) -------------------May 153
-----Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30__________________________________
Jan. 183-5
Stores, wholesale. Texas, men, women, and children, 1929-30-------------------------------Jan. 183-5
Street railways. Hawaii, male employees, 1929-1930---------------------- ------------------ Apr. 4; May 137
-----Minnesota, electric railways, 1929, 1930 (wages only)------ ------------ --------------------May 153
Sugar industry. By occupation, sex, and district, 1930----------------------------------------Feb. 134-40
-----Hawaii plantations, by sex, 1929-1930----------------------------------------------------------Apr. 4, 7-9
-----Refining, continental United States, plantations, Hawaii, 1929 and 1930--------------May 137
Tanneries. Virginia, tannery products and tannery extracts, 1929--------------------------May 156
Telephone and telegraph. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)-.-..........
May 153
Textile industry. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)-------------May 153
Tin-can manufacturing. Hawaii, by sex, 1929-1930------------ ------ ----------------------- Apr. 4; May 137
Tobacco industry. Virginia, tobacco and its products, 1929.............. -.............................
May 156
Transportation, by water. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)---------May 153
Trade, wholesale. (See Wages and hours: Stores, wholesale,)
Underwear. (See Wages and hours: Hosiery and underwear.)
Unskilled labor. Minnesota, highway construction camps, summer of 1930....................
Apr. 80-1
Upholstery. Virginia, furniture, mattresses, and upholstery, by sex and race, 1929.......
May 155
Vehicles. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)...........................................
May 153


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1509]

MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

[1981

Wages and hours, United States—Continued.
Page
Woman labor. Florida industries, Women’s Bureau bulletin...........................................
Mar. 86-7
-----New York City, bank or brokerage and insurance positions, weekly range, 1929
and 1930_____________________________________________________ ________ ___
June 67
-----New York City, factory workers, by industry group, weekly earnings, 1929 and
1930____________________________________________________________________
June 68
Woodworking. Minnesota, including furniture, average weekly, 1929, 1930. (wages
only)________________________________________________________ ____
May 163
— —Virginia, baskets, boxes, crates, and shooks, by sex and race, 1929_______ ____ ___
May 166
----- (See also Wages and hours: Furniture industry; Lumber industry; Millwork.)
Wool manufacturing. Virginia, woolen-mill products, by sex and race, 1929_________
May 156
Woolen and worsted goods. By sex, 1930______________________________________
May 137
Wrecking and moving. Minnesota, average weekly, 1929, 1930 (wages only)..................
May 153
Wages and hours, foreign countries:
Australia. By State, weighted weekly average, adult males and females, 1929___ ____
Jan. 185-8
-----(New South Wales). Basic wage reduction refused_______ _______ ___________
Mar. 176
-----(Queensland). Basic wage reduction...______ ______________________________
Mar. 176
-----(Western). Building trades, 1931_____ ______ _____________________________
Mar. 176
-----(Western). Railway workers, arbitration award amended (hours only)__________
Apr. 190-1
British West Indies (Barbados). Agricultural labor, men, women, youths, daily wages
{only), pre-war, postwar, and 1930__________________________________________
May 158
Canada. Building trades, by city and occupation, 1929 and 1930.......... ..................... Apr. 191, 193
-----Common factory labor, wage rate index numbers, 1921 to 1930________________ _
Apr. 191
-----Farm workers, by Province and sex, 1929 and 1930____ _______________________
June 160
-----Logging and sawmilling, wage rate index numbers, 1921 to 1930_________________
Apr. 191
-----Metal trades, by city and occupation, 1929 and 1930__________ _____ __________ Apr. 192,193
-----Mining, coal, by occupation and locality, September, 1928-29 and 1930___________
Apr. 195
-----Printing trades, by city and occupation, 1929 and 1930__________ ____ __________ Apr. 192, 193
■
-----Railroads (steam), by occupation, train and engine service, 1927-28 and 1929-30___
Apr. 194
------ Street railways, by city and occupation, 1929 and 1930________________________ Apr. 192, 193
Czechoslovakia. Window-glass factories, weekly wages {only), by occupation, 1930___
Juno 159
Fiji Islands. Agricultural laborers, cooks, servants, etc., 1928................................ ..........
Feb. 148
France (Marseille). Blacksmiths, daily wages {only), 1930________________________
Apr. 195
-----Bricklayers, daily wages {only), 1930_______________________ ________________
Apr. 195
-----Butchers, daily wages {only), 1930_____ ____________________________________
Apr. 195
—— Carpenters, daily wages {only), 1930..__________________ _____ ______ ______
Apr. 195
-----Coppersmiths, daily wages {only), 1930_____________________________________
Apr. 195
-----Ditch diggers, daily wages {only), 1930______________________________________
Apr. 195
-----Laborers, daily wages {only), 1930_________________________ ________________
Apr. 195
-----Painters, house, daily wages {only), 1930________________________________ ____
Apr. 195
-----Quarry workers, daily wages {only), 1930____________ _______________________
Apr. 195
— —Stonemasons, daily wages {only), 1930_________________________ ____________
Apr. 195
-----Truckmen, daily wages {only), 1930_________ _____ _________________________
Apr. 195
Great Britain. Building trades, by occupation, average wage rates {only), 1914 and 1930..
May 162
-----Coal mining, by district, average earnings {only), per shift, 1914 and 1930....... ...........
May 164
-----Engineering trades, by occupation, average wage rates {only), 1914 and 1930_______
May 163
----- Hours of labor, aggregate weekly increase or decrease, {only) 1919 to 1930________
Mar. 181-2
-----Increases above pre-war rates_____________________________________________
May 164
-----Shipbuilding, by occupation, average wage rates {only), 1914 and 1930_______ ____
May 163
---- - Wage changes and number of workers affected, by industry group, 1929 and 1930... Mar. 178-80
------ Wage increases and decreases, methods of effecting_________ _________________
Mar. 180
-----(England). National railways board award, March 5, 1931______________ _____
May 159-60
-----(England). Railway shopmen, negotiation of union representative and compa­
nies, terms, 1931-32_______________ ____ ____________________________________
May 161
-----(South Wales). Coal miners’ wage scale, local board award, March 6, 1931_______
May 161
Italy. Agricultural labor, men, women, boys, daily wage {only), August, 1930.......... .
Apr. 197
-----Cement industry, quarry, factory, and workshop, by occupation, November, 1930
{wages only)__________ ___________________________________________ ______ _
Apr. 198
-----Miscellaneous occupations, cooks, chauffeurs, etc., monthly wages {only), 1930____
Apr. 197
-----Public works, by occupation and city, hourly wages {only), August 31, 1930______
Apr. 196
-----(Rome). Bakers (oven men, dough mixers, and helpers), hourly wages {only), Feb­
ruary, 1931_______________________________________________________________
Apr. 199
-----(Rome). Building trades, by occupation, hourly wages {only), July 31, 1930______
Apr. 199
-----(Rome). Engineering trades, by occupation, hourly wages {only), July 31, 1930...
Apr. 199
-----(Rome). Machinists and metal workers, by occupation group, hourly wages {only),
1930...__________ ________________________________________________________ Apr. 199-200
-----(Rome). Printing trades, by occupation, wage rates {only), July 31, 1930________
Apr. 199


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Federal Reserve Bank of St. Louis

[1510]

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INDEX TO VOLUME 32

Wages and hours, foreign countries—Continued.
Page
Italy (Trieste). Shipyards, by class of workers, October 30, 1930 (wages only) ................
Apr. 197-8
-----(Venice). Building trades, by occupation, hourly wages {only), August, 1930-----------Apr.200
-----(Venice). Printing trades, by occupation, August, 1930 {wages only) ----------------------Apr.200
Japan. Building industry, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929..............—
May 166
May 166
------ Chemical industry, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929----------------------Domestic servants, by sex, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929-----------------------------May 166
-----Fisherman, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929---------------r_--------------- ------ ---------May 166
-----Food industry, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929...................... _........
May 166
-----Leather industry, leather makers, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929------ ------ ------May 166
-----Metal industry, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929--------------------------May 166
-----Paper industry, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929.-------------------May 166
-----Printing trades, compositors and bookbinders, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929...
May 166
-----Stevedores and day laborers, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929------------- ------------May 166
-----Stone, clay, and glass products, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929----May 166
-----Textile industry, by occupation and sex, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929------------May 166
May 166
— —Wearing-apparel industry, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929-------------Woodworking industry, by occupation, daily wages {only), 1928 and 1929................
May 166
-----(Tokyo). Maid servants, wages and working conditions---------------------- ------ ----June 161-2
Java. Sugar industry, by class of workers, 1925 to 1929 {wages only)------------------------Mar. 182
Morocco (Tangier). By occupation, European and Moorish workers----------------------Jan. 191
Spain. By capital city of Provinces, specified occupations, 1928---------- -------- ---------Jan. 192-4
-----(Madrid). By occupation, 1927___________________________________________
Jan. 195
Yugoslavia (Croatia and Slavonia). Building industry, by occupation, weekly wages
{only), 1930______________________________________________________________
May 167
-----Food industry, by occupation and sex, weekly wages {only), 1930----------------------May 167
-----Mining industry, by occupation, weekly wages {only), 1930---------------------- ------ —
May 167
---- - Printing trades, by occupation, weekly wages {only), 1930--------- ------- --------------M ay 167
-----Textile industry, by occupation, weekly wages {only), 1930------------------------------May 167
-----Timber industry, by occupation and sex, weekly wages {only), 1930..-----------------May 167
Water transportation {except Wages and hours, which see):
Bananas. Discharging ships, productivity of labor, specified ports.—.............................
Feb. 28-30
Case oil. Loading ships, productivity of labor, specified ports........................... .............
Feb. 15-18
Coffee. Discharging ships, productivity of labor, specified ports----------------------------Feb. 25
Cotton bales. Loading ships, productivity of labor, specified ports............. ..................
Feb. 14-15
Flour. Loading ships, productivity of labor, specified ports----------------------- ----------Feb. 18-19
Lumber. Discharging ships, productivity of labor, specified ports.----- -----------------Feb. 26-8
-----Loading ships, productivity of labor, specified ports....... ................ ...........................
Feb. 19-21
Newsprint paper. Discharging ships, productivity of labor, specified ports--------------Feb. 26
Productivity of labor. Ship cargoes, loading and discharging, specified ports, trade
routes, and commodities__________________ ___________________________ _____
Feb. 1-30
Ship’s cargo, units of measurement----------------------- ------- ----------------------------------Feb. 1-2
Feb 21-2
Steel and steel products. Loading ships, productivity of labor, specified ports..............
Sugar, raw. Discharging ships, productivity of labor, specified ports......... ............ ......
Feb. 22-4
Wholesale prices, United States:
Index numbers. Comparison, certain foreign countries, by year and month, 1923 to 1931. Mar. 232-3;
June 205-6
—— Farm products, food, other products, by month, 1913 to 1930------------------------ Feb. 208-9
——- 1926= 100. By group and subgroup of commodities, November, 1929, to April, 1931.. Jan. 243-4;
Feb. 211; Mar. 230-1; Apr. 250-1; May 206-9; June 203-4
Philippine Islands. Coconut oil, copra, hemp, maguey, rice, sugar, and tobacco, 1913
to 1929__________________________________________ ________ ________ ______
June 210
Purchasing power of the dollar, March, 1931_______________ _____________________
May 208-9
Wholesale prices, foreign countries:
Australia. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931---------------------- Mar. 234-5; June 207-8
Austria. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931------------------------ Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
Belgium. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931----------------------- Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
Canada. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931------- ------ ---------- Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
China. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931_________________ Mar. 234-5; June 207-8
Czechoslovakia. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931-------------- Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
Denmark. Index numbers, by year, 1925 to 1931_____________________ . . . Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
Finland. Index numbers, by year and month, 1926 to 1931------------- ----------Mar 232-3; June 205-6
France. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931------------------------- Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
Germany. Index numbers, by year and month, 1924 to 1931---------------------- Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
Great Britain (United Kingdom). Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931—
Mar. 234-5;
June 207-8
India. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931............ ......................Mar. 234-5; June 207-8


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MONTHLY LABOR REVIEW

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Wholesale prices, foreign countries—Continued.
p age
Italy. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931______ ___________ Mar. 232-3; June 205-6
Japan. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931...........................
Mar.
234-5; June 207 8
Mar.
234-5; June 207 -8
Netherlands. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931....................
New Zealand. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931___________ Mar. 234-5; June 207-8
Norway. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931________________ Mar. 234-5; June 207-8
South Africa. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931__________
Mar.
234-5; June 207-8
Spain. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931......................... .........Mar. 234-5; June 207-8
Sweden. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931...............................Mar. 234-5; June 207-8
Switzerland. Index numbers, by year and month, 1923 to 1931____________Mar. 234-5; June 207-8
Women in industry, United States:
Accidents. Men and women, 21 States, compilation, Women’s Bureau bulletin______ Jan. 100, 248
Florida. Hours, earnings, and working conditions of women, Women’s Bureau bul­
Mar. g5_7
letin------- ------- ------------------------------------------------------------------ --------------------Governors’ messages, recommendations, 9 specified States, 1931. ..a ___ ____ ________
Apr. 64
Laundry industry. Survey, 290 power laundries, in 17 States and 23 cities, 1927..........
Jan. 96-9
Philippine Islands (Manila). Women and children employed in inspected establish­
ments, by industry, 1928 and 1929___________________________________________
j une 69
Women in industry. Panama, Decree No. 23, 1930, protecting working women, principal
provisions------------------------------ ---------------------------------------------------------------------June 69
Workers’ education, United States:
Antioch College, part-time working program, students’ opinions of............ ......................
June 101
Workers’ Education Bureau. Acitivities, 1929-30_________ ____________________Mar. 116-17
Workers’ education, foreign countries:
Canada (Ontario). Workers’ Educational Association, work of, annual report_____ _
June 101-2
China (Ting Hsien). Mass education movement, accomplishments________________
June 102
Workmen’s compensation, United States:
Alabama. Accidents, total and fatal, and compensation paid, by year, 1920 to 1929__
Apr. 112
District of Columbia. Death, permanent and temporary disability cases and compensa­
tion, by industry, 1929-30__________________________________________________
Mar. 106_7
Federal employees. Death, permanent and temporary disability cases and compensa­
tion, by department, 1929_____ ______ ______ ____________________ _________
Mar. 103—5
Governors’ messages, recommendations, 13 specified States________________________
Apr. 64-5
Hawaii. Death, permanent and temporary disability cases and costs, 1929______ ____ Mar. 100-1
Idaho. Claims filed and closed, compensation and medical awards, by year, 1918 to
1930--------- ---------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------Apr. jjc,
Iowa. Experience, 1928-29 and 1929-30, compensation law amendments suggested____
Jan. 124-5
Longshoremen’s compensation act, 1927. Death, permanent and temporary disability
cases and compensation, by occupation, 1929-30_____ ;_______________ _________
Mar. 105-61
Maryland. Compensation cases allowed, by industry and extent of injury__________June 75-6,218
Minnesota. Accidents reported, compensable and noncompensable, compensation
paid, medical costs, 1921 to 1930_____________________________________________
May 65_£
New Hampshire. Accidents and compensation, medical, and hospital awards, 1928-29
and 1929-30—___ ______ ________________________________ ____________
^pr
New Jersey. Death, permanent and temporary disability cases and costs, by industry
and cause, 1929________________________________________________
_.
Mar
North Carolina. Accidents, compensation and medical costs, by industry and nature
of i n j u r y . . . . . .------------------------------------------------------ ------- ---------------------------Jan. 125-6
Occupational diseases. Nomenclature (terminology) as affecting standard practices,
report on, and definition______________________________ ______________ _____
Mar. 95-6
Pennsylvania. New classification of permanent injuries_____ _____________________
j an_ 126-7
South Dakota. Accidents and average daily wages, by employment, 1929-30.......... .
Apr. 114
Texas. Claims filed and allowed, etc., 1928-30_____________ _____________ _______ June 76 219
Vermont. Death, permanent and temporary disability cases, by industry and cause,
1928-29 and 1929-30___________________________________________ ______ _____
M ar. 102-3
West Virginia. Accidents reported, fatal and nonfatai, benefits paid, 1914 to 1930........
May 66-7
Wyoming. Claims allowed, by extent of injury, 1929, and condition of State fund____ June 77, 219
Workmen’s compensation, foreign countries:
General. Latin American countries, scope of the laws, Bui. No. 529........ .......................
Eeb. 39-45
Estonia. Sickness and accident insurance, coverage, benefits, etc__________________
June 77-81
Great Britain (England). Compensation cases, fatal and nonfatai, compensation paid,
seven industry groups, 1920 to 1929______ _______ ____________________________
May 67-9
-----(England). Compensation, duration of, in cases of accidents and disease, 1925
to 1929--------------------------------------------------------- ------ ------- ----------------------------May 68
Mexico. Scope of the laws, 24 of the 28 States............. .................... ...................................
p ep, 45.9


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