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PUBLICATIONS
the
BUREAU of LABOR STATISTICS
U S. DEPARTMENT OF LABOR
B U R E A U OF L A B OR S T AT I ST I CS
Bul l et i n 1567




REGIONAL OFFICES AND DIRECTORS

REGION Y

REGION I
W endell D . M acD onald

T homas J. M cA rdle

1603-A Federal Building
Government Center
Boston, Mass. 02203
Phone: 223-6727 (Area Code 617)
Connecticut, Maine, Massachusetts,
Hampshire, Rhode Island, Vermont.

219 S. Dearborn Street
Chicago, 111. 60604
Phone: 353-7226 (Area Code 312)
Illinois, Indiana, Kentucky, Michigan, Minne­
sota, Ohio, Wisconsin.

New

REGION II
H erbert B ienstock

341 Ninth Avenue
New York, N.Y. 10001
Phone: 971-5401 (Area Code 212)
New Jersey, New York.

REGION VI
E lliott A. B rowar
911 Walnut Street
Kansas City, Mo. 64106
Phone: 374-2378 (Area Code 816)
Colorado, Iowa, Kansas, Montand, Missouri,
Nebraska, North Dakota, South Dakota, Utah,
Wyoming.

REGION III
F rederick W. M ueller .
P.O. Box 1784 William Penn Annex
Ninth and Chestnut Streets
Philadelphia, Pa. 19105
Phone: 597-7560 (Area Code 215)
Delaware, District of Columbia, Maryland,
North Carolina, Pennsylvania, Virginia, West
Virginia.

REGION IY
B runswick A. B agdon

1371 Peachtree Street, NE.
Atlanta, Ga. 30309
Phone: 526-5416 (Area Code 404)
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, Mississippi, South
Carolina, Tennessee.




REGION VII
Jack Strickland

Mayflower Bldg.
411 N. Akard Street
Dallas, Tex. 75201
Phone:
Arkansas, Louisana, New Mexico, Oklahoma,
Texas.

REGION V III
C harles A. R oumasset
450 Golden Gate Avenue, Box 36017
San Francisco, Calif. 94102
Phone: 556-3178 (Area Code 415)
Alaska, Arizona, California, Hawaii, Idaho,
Nevada, Oregon, Washington.

PUBLICATIONS o f the
BUREAU o f LABOR STATISTICS

1886 -1967

- Numerical Listings
- Annotations
- Subject Index
tUNITED STATES DEPARTMENT OF LABOR

Willard Wirtz, Secretary

BUREAU OF LABOR STATISTICS
Arthur M. Ross, Commissioner
Bulletin 1567

For sale by the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office, Washington, D.C. 20402 - Price $1







Preface

Publications of the Bureau of Labor Statistics are of three main types: numbered bul­
letins, numbered reports, and periodicals. Numbered bulletins have been published since
1886, and numbered reports since 1953.
This bulletin contains numerical listings of all bulletins and reports published from
1886 to late 1967, a subject index of those published since 1915, and a list of current peri­
odicals. Its purpose is to provide in one volume a complete catalogue of major BLS pub­
lications and to aid research in the field of economics and labor statistics.
Separate numerical listings are carried for bulletins (pp. 1-80) and reports (pp. 81-90);
current periodicals are listed alphabetically (p. 91). Annotations are provided for those
bulletins which analyze major economic or labor developments, explain phases of the Bu­
reau's statistical programs or survey techniques, or present the latest data from a his­
torical series. Reports have not been annotated. Publication dates are shown in parentheses.
The subject index (pp. 93-156) lists all bulletins published since 1915 (Nos. 174 through
1555) and all of the report series. (Bulletin 174 provided a subject index for Bulletins 1
through 173.) Publications are indexed alphabetically by subject, and cross references are
provided. Annotated bulletins are identified in the subject index by asterisks (*).
Periodicals are not included in the subject index. Bulletins 695, 696, 1080, and 1335
provide subject indexes for the Monthly Labor Review through 1960; indexes are also con­
tained in the December issues of the Review. Semiannually, the Bureau publishes an an­
notated subject catalogue of bulletins, reports, press releases, and four periodicals (Monthly
Labor Review, Employment and Earnings and Monthly Report on the Labor Force, Labor
Developments Abroad, and Occupational Outlook Quarterly.)
Numbered bulletins and some numbered reports are for sale. Four BLS periodicals are
for sale by the copy and by subscription: Monthly Labor Review, Occupational Outlook
Quarterly, Labor Developments Abroad, and Employment and Earnings and Monthly R e­
port on the Labor Force. Prices for those bulletins and reports still in print are given in
the numerical listings; prices of sale periodicals are listed also. For-sale publications can
be obtained from the Superintendent of Documents, U.S. Government Printing Office,
Washington, D.C. 20402 or from any of the BLS Regional offices listed on the inside back
cover of this bulletin. Free periodicals and reports are available at the time of publication
from the Bureau and its regional offices. Bulletins, reports, and periodicals can be found at
most large public libraries and at most university and college libraries.
This publication replaces BLS Bulletin 1281. It was prepared in the Office of Publi­
cations by Craig Dunbar and Marcia Douglass, under the direction of Tommy C. Ishee.




ill




Contents

Numerical listing of bulletins (with selected annotations) .......................
Numerical listing of reports

1

...............................................................................

81

Current periodicals ..............................................................................................

91

Subject index of bulletins and reports ...........................................................

93




v




Numerical Listing o f Bulletins
(With Selected Annotations)

1

2

3
4

5

6

7

Industrial Depressions, March, 1886, The
First Report of the Commissioner of
Labor (1886).

Strikes and Lockouts, 1887, Third An­
nual Report of the Commissioner of
Labor (1888).

Convict Labor, 1886, Second Annual R e­
port of the Commissioner of Labor
(1887).

Working Women in Large Cities, 1888,
Fourth Annual Report of the Commis­
sioner of Labor (1889).

Strikes and Lockouts in the United States
from January 1, 1881, to June 30, 1894 [sum­
mary of Third and Tenth Annual R eports];
Private and Public Debt in the United
States; Employer and Employee under the
Common Law (1895).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation
on work stoppages (strikes and lockouts).
The Poor Colonies of Holland; The Indus­
trial Revolution in Japan; Notes Concerning
the Money of the United States and Other
Countries; The Wealth and Receipts and
Expenses of the United States (1896).
Industrial Communities: Coal Mining Co.
of Anzin, France (1896).
Industrial Communities: Coal Mining Co.
of Blanzy, France. The Sweating System
(1896).
Convict Labor; Industrial Communities;
Iron and Steel Works of Friedrich Krupp,
Essen, Germany (1896).
Industrial Communities; Familistere Society
of Guise, France. Cooperative Distribution
(1896).
Industrial Communities: Other Communi­
ties; Rates of Wages Paid Under Public and
Private Contract (1896).




8

9

10

11

12

13

14

15

Conciliation and Arbitration in the Boot and
Shoe Industry; Railway Relief Department
(1897).
The Padrone System and Padrone Banks;
The Dutch Society for General Welfare
(1897).
Work and Wages of Men, Women, and Chil­
dren [summary of Eleventh Annual R eport];
Condition of the Negro in Various Cities;
Building and Loan Associations (1897).
Workers at Gainful Occupations at the Fed­
eral Censuses of 1870, 1880, and 1890; Public
Baths in Europe (1897).
The Inspection of Factories and Workshops
in the United States; Mutual Rights and
Duties of Parents and Children, Guardian­
ship, etc., Under the Law; The Municipal or
Cooperative Restaurant of Grenoble, France
(1897).
The Italians in Chicago [summary of Ninth
Special Report]. The Anthracite Mine La­
borers (1897).
The Negroes of Farmville, Va.: A Social
Study; Income, Wages, and Rents in Mont­
real (1898).
Boarding Homes and Clubs for Working
Women; The Trade-Union Label (1898).

1

16

17

18
19

20
21
22

23

24
25
26

27

28

29

30

31

The Alaskan Gold Fields and the Oppor­
tunities They Offer for Capital and Labor
(1898).
Economic Aspects of the Liquor Problem
[summary of Twelfth Annual R eport];
Brotherhood Relief and Insurance of Rail­
way Employees; The Nations of Antwerp
(1898) .
Wages in the United States and Europe, 1870
to 1898 (1898).
The Alaskan Gold Fields and the Opportuni­
ties They Offer for Capital and Labor; M u­
tual Relief and Benefit Associations in the
Printing Trade (1898).
Condition of Railway Labor in Europe
(1899) .
Pawnbroking in Europe and the United
States (1899).
Benefit Features of American Trade Unions;
The Negro in the Black Belt; Some Social
Sketches; Wages in Lyons, France, 1870 to
1896 (1899).
The Attitude of Women’s Clubs and Associa­
tions Toward Social Economics; The Produc­
tion of Paper and Pulp in the United States,
from January 1 to June 30, 1898 (1899).
Statistics of Cities (1899).
Foreign Labor Laws: Great Britain and
France (1899).
Protection of Workmen in Their Employ­
ment; Foreign Labor Laws: Belgium and
Switzerland (1900).
Wholesale Prices: 1890 to 1899; Foreign
Labor Laws: Germany (1900).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation on
wholesale prices.
Voluntary Conciliation and Arbitration in
Great Britain; System of Adjusting Scale of
Wages, etc., in Certain Rolling Mills; For­
eign Labor Laws: Austria (1900).
Trusts and Industrial Combinations; The
Yukon and Nome Gold Regions; Labor Day
(1900) .
Trend of Wages from 1891 to 1900; Statistics
of Cities; Foreign Labor Laws: Russia, The
Netherlands, Italy, Norway, Sweden, and
Denmark (1900).
The Betterment of Industrial Conditions;
Present Status of Employers’ Liability in the
United States; Condition of Railway Labor
in Italy (1900).

2



32

33

34

35

36
37

38

39

40

41
42

43

44
45

46
47

Accidents to Labor as Regulated by Law in
the United States; Prices of Commodities
and Rates of Wages in Manila; The Negroes
of Sandy Spring, M d.: A Social Study; The
British Workmen’s Compensation Act and
Its Operation (1901).
Foreign Labor Laws: Australasia and Can­
ada; The British Conspiracy and Protection
of Property Act and Its Operation (1901).
Labor Conditions in Puerto Rico; Social Eco­
nomics at the Paris Exposition; The Work­
men’s Compensation Act of Holland (1901).
Cooperative Communities in the United
States; The Negro Landholder of Georgia
(1901) .
Statistics of Cities; Statistics of Honolulu,
Hawaii (1901).
Railway Employees in the United States;
The Negroes of Litwalton, Va.: A Social
Study of the “ Oyster Negro” (1901).
Labor Conditions in Mexico; The Negroes of
Sinclare Central Factory and Calumet Plan­
tation, La.; Charts Exhibited at the Pan
American Exposition; The Quebec Trade
Disputes Act (1902).
Course of Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1901
(1902) .
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Present Condition of the Handworking and
Domestic Industries of Germany; W ork­
men’s Compensation Acts of Foreign Coun­
tries; Working of Compulsory Conciliation
and Arbitration Laws in New Zealand and
Victoria; the Compulsory Arbitration Act of
New South Wales (1902).
Labor Conditions in Cuba; Beef Prices; The
True Reformers (1902).
Statistics of Cities; Labor Conditions in
Cuba [Amendatory of Article in Bull. 41]
(1902).
Report to the President on Anthracite Coal
Strike; Italian Bureau of Labor Statistics
(1902) .
Factory Sanitation and Labor Protection
(1903) .
Course of Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1902
(1903).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Report of the Anthracite Coal Strike Com­
mission (1903).
Report of the Commissioner of Labor on

48

49

50

51

52
53
54

55

56
57

58

Hawaii [Reprint of Second Report of the
Commissioner of Labor on Hawaii, S. Doc.
181, 57th Cong., 2d Sess.] (1903).
Farm Colonies of the Salvation Army; The
Negroes of Zenia, Ohio: A Social Study
(1903) .
Cost of Living [summary of Eighteenth
Annual R eport]; Labor conditions in New
Zealand; Industrial Conciliation and Arbi­
tration Act of New Zealand (1903).
Labor Unions and British Industry; Land
Values and Ownership in Philadelphia
(1904) .
Course of Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1903;
The Union Movement Among Coal-Mine
Workers (1904).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation
on wholesale prices.
Child Labor in the United States (1904).
Wages and Cost of Living (1904).
The Working of the United States Bureau of
Labor: Bureaus of Statistics of Labor; Bureaus of Statistics of Labor in Foreign Coun­
tries; Value and Influence of Labor Statistics;
Strikes and Lockouts in the United States,
1881 to 1900; Wages in the United States and
in Europe, 1890 to 1903; Cost of Living and
Retail Prices in the United States; Wholesale
Prices in the United States, 1890 to 1903;
Housing of the Working People in the United
States by Employers; Public Baths in the
United States; Trade and Technical Educa­
tion in the United States; Hand and Machine
Labor in the United States; Labor Legislation in the United States; Labor Conditions
in Hawaii (1904).
For annotation on wholesale prices, see
Bull. 1513, this listing; and on work stop­
pages (strikes and lockouts), Bull. 1525.
Building and Loan Associations in the United
States; The Revival of Handicrafts in Amer­
ica (1904).
Influence of Trade Unions on Immigrants;
Labor Conditions in Australia (1905).
Course of Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1904;
Street Railway Employment in the United
States; The State Cooperative Accident Insurance Fund of Maryland (1905).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation on
wholesale prices.
Labor Conditions in the Philippines, Labor




59

60

61

62

63

64
65

66

67

68

69
70

71

72

73

74

Conditions in Java; The New Russian Work­
ingmen’s Compensation Act (1905).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Manufactur­
ing Industries, 1890 to 1904; Retail Prices of
Food, 1890 to 1904; Laws Relating to Child
Labor in European Countries (1905).
Government Industrial Arbitration; The
Eight-Hour Law and Enforced Labor Con­
tracts in the Panama Canal Zone (1905).
Labor Conditions in Puerto Rico; A Docu­
mentary History of the Early Organizations
of Printers (1905).
Municipal Ownership in Great Britain;
Counciliation in the Stove Industry; Laws
Relating to the Employment of Children in
the United States (1906).
Course of Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1905
(1906) .
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Conditions of Living Among the Poor; Bene­
fit Features of British Trade Unions (1906).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Manufactur­
ing Industries, 1890 to 1905; Retail Prices of
Food, 1890 to 1905 (1906).
Third Report of the Commissioner of Labor
on Hawaii [Reprint of H. Doc. 580, 59th
Cong., 1st sess.] (1906).
Conditions of Entrance to the Principal
Trades; Cost of Industrial Insurance in the
District of Columbia (1906).
Free Public Employment Offices in the
United States; Laws of Foreign Countries
Relating to Employees on Railroads (1907).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1906 (1907).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
The Italian on the Land: A Study in Im­
migration; A Short History of Labor Legisla­
tion in Great Britain; British Workmen’s
Compensation Acts (1907).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Manufacturing
Industries, 1890 to 1906; Retail Prices of
Food, 1890 to 1906 (1907).
Italian, Slavic, and Hungarian Unskilled Im­
migrant Laborers in the United States; Eco­
nomic Condition of the Jews in Russia
(1907) .
Laws Relating to the Employment of Women
and Children; Laws Relating to Factory In­
spection and the Health and Safety of Em­
ployees (1907).
The Legal Liability of Employers for In-

3

75

76

77

78

79

80

81
82

83

84

85

86

juries to Their Employees, in The United
States; Summary of Foreign Workmen’s
Compensation Acts; British Workmen’s
Compensation Act of 1906; Canadian In­
dustrial Disputes Investigation Act of 1907;
British Trade Disputes Act of 1906 (1908).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1907; Industrial
Hygiene (1908).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation on
wholesale prices.
Canadian Industrial Disputes Investigation
Act of 1907; What is Done for the Unem­
ployed in European Countries (1908).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Manufactur­
ing Industries, 1890 to 1907; Retail Prices of
Food, 1890 to 1907; Compensation for In­
juries of Artisans and Laborers in the Service
of the United States; Cost of Living of the
Working Classes in the Principal Industrial
Towns of Great Britain (1908).
Industrial Accidents; Mexican Labor in the
United States; Cost of Living of the W ork­
ing Classes in the Principal Industrial Towns
of the German Empire; British Old-Age Pen­
sions Act of 1908 (1908).
See Bull. 490 this listing for annotation on
industrial accidents.
The Mortality from Consumption in Dusty
Trades; Charity Relief and Wage Earnings
(1908) .
Women and Child Wage Earners in Great
Britain; Minimum Wage Act, 1908, New
South Wales (1907).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1908 (1909).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Mortality from Consumption in Occupations
Exposing to Municipal and General Organic
Dust (1909).
The Women’s Trade-Union Movement in
Great Britain; Cost of Living of the W ork­
ing Classes in the Principal Industrial Towns
of France; Earnings and Hours of Labor in
British Textile Industries (1909).
Accidents to Railroad Employees in New
Jersey, 1888 to 1907; The Minnesota Iron
Ranges (1909).
Review of Labor Legislation of 1908 and
1909; Laws of Various States Relating to
Labor, Enacted Since January 1, 1908
(1909) .
Canadian Industrial Disputes Investigation

4



87

88

89
90

91

92

93

Act of 1907; Phosphorus Poisoning in the
Match Industry in the United States; List of
Industrial Poisons; International Associa­
tion for Labor Legislation and Its Publica­
tions; British Trade Boards Act, 1909; Earn­
ings and Hours of Labor in British Clothing
Industries (1910).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to March 1910;
Wages and Hours of Labor of Union Car­
penters in the United States and in EnglishSpeaking Foreign Countries; Prices of Wheat,
Bread, etc., in Milan, Italy, 1801 to 1908;
Cost of Living of the Working Classes in
the Principal Industrial Towns of Bel­
gium ; Earnings and Hours of Labor in
British Building and Woodworking Indus­
tries (1910).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Cost of Living of Families of Moderate In­
come in Germany in 1907-08; Trend of
Wages in Germany, 1898 to 1907; Wages and
Hours of Labor in German Woodworking In­
dustries in 1906; Wages and Hours of Labor
in Austria, 1906 and 1907 (1910).
Child-Labor Legislation in Europe (1910).
Fatal Accidents in Coal Mining; Recent A c­
tion Relating to Employers’ Liability and
Workmen’s Compensation; Essential Fea­
tures of a Compensation Law; Chicago Con­
ference of November 1910; Summary of For­
eign Workmen’s Compensation Acts; Cost of
Employers’ Liability and Workmen’s Com­
pensation Acts; Cost of Employers’ Liability
and Workmen’s Compensation Insurance
(1910).
Working Hours of Wage-Earning Women in
Selected Industries in Chicago; Labor Laws
Declared Unconstitutional; Old-Age and In­
validity Pension Laws of Germany, France,
and Australia; Review of Labor Legislation
of 1910; Laws of Various States Relating to
Labor Enacted Since January 1,1910 (1910).
Industrial Accidents and Loss of Earning
Power: German Experience in 1897 and
1907; Workmen’s Compensation and Insur­
ance; Laws and Bills, 1911; Resolutions of
the Sixth Delegates’ Meeting of the Interna­
tional Association for Labor Legislation; Re­
port of Illinois Commission on Occupational
Diseases (1911).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1910; Report of

94
95

96

97

98

99

British Board of Trade on Cost of Living in
the Principal Industrial Cities of the United
States; Reports of British Board of Trade on
Cost of Living in England and Wales, Ger­
many, France, Belgium, and the United
States; Hours of Labor of Men, Women, and
Children Employed in Factories in Austria
(1911) .
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation on
wholesale prices.
Fourth Report of the Commissioner of Labor
on Hawaii (1911).
Industrial Lead Poisoning, with Descriptions
of Lead Processes in Certain Industries in
Great Britain and the Western States of
Europe; White Lead Industry in the United
States, with an Appendix on the Lead-Oxide
Industry; Deaths from Industrial Lead Poi­
soning (Actually Reported) in New York
State in 1909 and 1910; Laws Enacted Dur­
ing 1911 Requiring the Report of Occupa­
tional Diseases (1911).
Working Hours, Earnings, and Duration of
Employment of Women Workers in Selected
Industries of Maryland and of California;
Employment of Children in Maryland In­
dustries; Attitude of Massachusetts Manu­
facturers Toward the Health of Their Em­
ployees; The Workmen’s Insurance Code of
July 19, 1911, of Germany (1911).
Review of Labor Legislation of 1911; Laws
of Various States Relating to Labor Enacted
Since January 1, 1911 (1911).
Mediation and Arbitration of Railway Labor
Disputes in the United States; Canadian In­
dustrial Disputes Investigation Act of 1907;
Conciliation and Arbitration of Railway La­
bor Disputes in Great Britain (Conciliation
and Arbitration Agreement of 1907); Con­
ciliation and Arbitration in Great Britain
(Conciliation Act of 1896); Attitude of Em­
ploying Interests Toward Conciliation and
Arbitration in Great Britain; Attitude of
Labor Toward Conciliation and Arbitration
in Great Britain; Conciliation, Arbitration,
and Sanitation in the Cloak, Suit, and Skirt
Industry in New York City; Industrial
Courts in France, Germany, and Switzerland
(1912) .
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1911; Wholesale
Prices in Canada, 1890 to 1911 (1912).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.




100

101
102
103
104

105

106

107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116

117
118
119
120
121
122

123

List of Industrial Poisons and Other Sub­
stances Injurious to Health Found in Indus­
trial Processes; Act Providing for a Tax on
White Phosphorus Matches and for Prohibit­
ing Their Import or Export (1912).
Care of Tuberculous Wage Earners in Ger­
many (1912).
British National Insurance Act, 1911 (1912).
Sickness and Accident Insurance Law of
Switzerland (1912).
Lead Poisoning in Potteries, Tile Works, and
Porcelain Enameled Sanitary Ware Factories
(1912) .
Retail Prices, 1890 to 1911.
Part I
(1912).
Part II General Tables (1912).
Retail Prices, 1890 to June 1912.
Part I
(1912).
Part II (1912).
Law Relating to Insurance of Salaried Em­
ployees in Germany (1913).
Retail Prices, 1890 to August 1912 (1912).
Statistics of Unemployment and the Work of
Employment Offices (1913).
Retail Prices, 1890 to October 1912 (1912).
Labor Legislation of 1912 (1913).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1912 (1913).
Retail Prices, 1890 to December 1912
(1913) .
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1912 (1913).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Retail Prices, 1890 to February 1913 (1913).
Hours, Earnings, and Duration of Employ­
ment of Wage-Earning Women in Selected
Industries in the District of Columbia
(1913).
Prohibition of Night Work of Young Persons
(1913).
Ten-Hour Maximum Working-Day for
Women and Young Persons (1913).
Working Hours of Women in the Pea Can­
neries of Wisconsin (1913).
Hygiene of the Painters’ Trade (1913).
Sugar Prices, From Refiner to Consumer
(1913).
Employment of Women in Power Laundries
in Milwaukee. A Study of Working Condi­
tions and of the Physical Demands of the
Various Laundry Occupations (1913).
Employers’ Welfare Work (1913).

5

124

Conciliation and Arbitration in the Building
Trades of Greater New York (1913).
125
Retail Prices, 1890 to April 1913 (1913).
126
Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the Unit­
ed States and Foreign Countries (1914).
127
Dangers to Workers From Dusts and Fumes
and Methods of Protection (1913).
128
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cotton,
Woolen, and Silk Industries, 1890 to 1912
(1913) .
129
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber,
Millwork, and Furniture Industries, 1890 to
1912 (1913).
130
Wheat and Flour Prices From Farmer to
Consumer (1914).
131
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
1907 to 1912 (1913).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building) and 1549 (print* ing), this listing.
132
Retail Prices, 1890 to June 1913 (1913).
133
Report of the Industrial Council of the Brit­
ish Board of Trade on its Inquiry into Indus­
trial Agreements (1913).
134
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe and Hosiery and Knit Goods Industries:
1890 to 1912 (1913).
135
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cigar and
Clothing Industries, 1911 and 1912 (1913).
136
Retail Prices, 1890 to August 1913 (1913).
137
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Building
and Repairing of Steam Railroad Cars: 1890
to 1912 (1914).
138
Retail Prices, 1890 to October 1913 (1913).
139
Michigan Copper District Strike (1914).
140
Retail Prices, 1890 to December 1913 (1914).
141
Lead Poisoning in the Smelting and Refining
of Lead (1914).
142
Administration of Labor Laws and Factory
Inspection in Certain European Countries
(1914) .
143
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1913 (1914).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building) and 1549 (print­
ing), this listing.
144
Industrial Court of the Cloak, Suit, and Skirt
Industry of New York City (1914).

6



145

146

147

148

149
150

151

152
153

154

155

156
157
158

159
160

161
162
163

Conciliation, Arbitration, and Sanitation in
the Dress and Waist Industry of New York
City (1914).
Wages and Regularity of Employment and
Standardization of Piece Rates in the Dress
and Waist Industry: New York City (1914).
Wages and Regularity of Employment in the
Cloak, Suit, and Skirt Industry with Plans
for Apprenticeship for Cutters and the Edu­
cation of Workers in the Industry (1915).
Labor Laws of the United States, with Deci­
sions of Courts Relating Thereto.
Part I (1914).
Part II (1914).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1913 (1914).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cotton,
Woolen, and Silk Industries, 1907 to 1913
(1914) .
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry in the United States, 1907 to
1912 (1914).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1913 (1914).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber,
Millwork, and Furniture Industries, 1907 to
1913 (1914).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe and Hosiery and Underwear Industries:
1907 to 1913 (1914).
Compensation for Accidents to Employees of
the United States. Report of Operations Un­
der the Act of May 30, 1908 (1914).
Retail Prices, 1907 to December 1914 (1915).
Industrial Accident Statistics (1915).
See Bull. 490 this listing for annotation.
Government Aid to Home Owning and Hous­
ing of Working People in Foreign Countries
(1915) .
Short-Unit Courses for Wage Earners and a
Factory School Experiment (1915).
Hours, Earnings, and Conditions of Labor of
Women in Indiana Mercantile Establish­
ments and Garment Factories (1914).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Clothing
and Cigar Industries, 1911 to 1913 (1915).
Vocational Education Survey of Richmond,
Va. (1915).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Building
and Repairing of Steam Railroad Cars: 1907
to 1913 (1915).

164
165
166
167

168
169
170
171

172
173

174

175

Butter Prices, From Producer to Consumer
(1915).
Lead Poisoning in the Manufacture of Stor­
age Batteries (1915).
Labor Legislation of 1914 (1915).
Minimum Wage Legislation in the United
States and Foreign Countries (1915).
Supplemented by Bull. 285.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry, 1907 to 1913 (1915).
Decisions of Courts Affecting Labor, 1914
(1915).
Foreign Food Prices as Affected by the War
(1915).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 1, 1914 (1915).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
Unemployment in New York City, New York
(1915).
Index Numbers of Wholesale Prices in the
United States and Foreign Countries (1915).
Replaced by Bull. 284. See this listing for
annotation.
Subject Index of the Publications of the
United States Bureau of Labor Statistics up
to M ay 1, 1915 (1915).
Lists, numerically and by subject, bulle­
tins and reports published by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics of the U.S. Department of
Labor since its organization in January 1885
as the Bureau of Labor, to May 1, 1915.
Summary of the Report on Condition of
Woman and Child Wage Earners in the
United States (1916).
This 19-volume report resulted from an in­
vestigation
(1907-09)
confined “ almost
wholly” to States east of the Mississippi. The
report covered women and children employed
in the cotton, glass, men’s ready-made gar­
ments, and silk industries, and in miscellane­
ous factory industries; women in stores, fac­
tories, and metal trades; child-labor prob­
lems; history of child-labor legislation, of
women in industry, and of trade unionism
among women; questions of health; family
budgets of cotton-mill workers; connection
between occupation and criminality among




176
177

178
179
180
181
182

183
184
185
186
187
188

189
190

191
192

193
194

women; and the enforcement of labor laws
and laws concerning factory inspection in the
States visited.
Effect of Minimum-Wage Determinations in
Oregon (1915).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery
and Underwear Industry, 1907 to 1914
(1915) .
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry: 1907 to 1914 (1915).
Industrial Poisons Used in the Rubber In­
dustry (1915).
The Boot and Shoe Industry in Massachu­
setts as a Vocation for Women (1915).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1914 (1915).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Unemployment Among Women in Depart­
ment and Other Retail Stores of Boston
(1916) .
Regularity of Employment in the Women’s
Ready-to-Wear Garment Industries (1916).
Retail Prices, 1907 to June 1915 (1916).
Compensation Legislation of 1914 and 1915
(1915) .
Labor Legislation of 1915 (1916).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the M en’s
Clothing Industry, 1911 to 1914 (1916).
Report of British Departmental Committee
on the Danger in the Use of Lead in the
Painting of Buildings (1916).
Decisions of Courts Affecting Labor: 1915
(1916) .
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cotton,
Woolen, and Silk Industries, 1907 to 1914
(1916).
Collective Bargaining in the Anthracite Coal
Industry (1916).
Proceedings of the American Association of
Public Employment Offices, Annual Meet­
ings: First— Chicago, Dec. 19 and 20, 1913.
Second— Indianapolis, Sept. 24 and 25, 1914.
Third— Detroit, July 1 and 2, 1915 (1916).
Dressmaking as a Trade for Women in Mas­
sachusetts (1916).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 1, 1915 (1916).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.

7

195

196

197
198
199
200
201

202

203

204
205
206
207

208
209
210

211

Unemployment in the United States (1916).
Presents second, third, and fourth surveys
in a series of investigations conducted during
March-September 1915 in 39 cities in East,
Middle West, Rocky Mountain, and Pacific
Coast States. See Bull. 172 for the results of
these unemployment surveys in New York
City only.
Proceedings of Employment Managers’ Con­
ference. Held Under the Auspices of the Na­
tional Safety for the Promotion of Industrial
Education and the Minneapolis Civic and
Commerce Association, January 19 and 20,
1916 (1916).
Retail Prices, 1907 to December 1915 (1916).
Collective Agreements in the Men’s Clothing
Industry (1916).
Vocational Education Survey of Minneapo­
lis, Minn. (1917).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1915 (1916).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Report of Committee on Statistics and Com­
pensation Insurance Cost of the Internation­
al Association of Industrial Accident Boards
and Commissions (1916).
Proceedings of the Conference of Employ­
ment Managers’ Association of Boston,
Mass.: Held M ay 10, 1916.
Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the
United States and Foreign Countries (1917).
Supplemented by Bull. 243.
Street Railway Employment in the United
States (1917).
Anthrax as an Occupational Disease (1917).
Replaced by Bull. 267.
The British System of Labor Exchanges
(1916).
Causes of Death by Occupation. Occupation­
al Mortality Experience of the Metropolitan
Life Insurance Co. Industrial Department,
1911-1913 (1917).
See Bull. 507 for later data.
Profit Sharing in the United States (1917).
Hygiene of the Printing Trades (1917).
Proceedings of the Third Annual Meeting of
the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions, Held at
Columbus, Ohio, April 25-28, 1916 (1917).
Labor Laws and Their Administration in the
Pacific States (1917).

8



212

213
214

215
216

217

218
219
220

221

222

223

224
225

226
227

Proceedings of the Conference on Social In­
surance Called by the International Associa­
tion of Industrial Accident Boards and Com­
missions, Washington, D.C., December 5 to
9, 1916 (1917).
Labor Legislation of 1916 (1917).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1916 (1917).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales, see
Bulls. 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
Industrial Experience of Trade-School Girls
in Massachusetts (1917).
Accidents and Accident Prevention in M a­
chine Building (1917).
Replaced by Bull. 256. See Bull. 1237 this
listing for annotation.
Effect of Workmen’s Compensation Laws in
Diminishing the Necessity of Industrial Em­
ployment of Women and Children (1918).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry: 1907 to 1915 (1917).
Industrial Poisons Used or Produced in the
Manufacture of Explosives (1917).
Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Meeting
of the American Association of Public Em­
ployment Offices. Buffalo, N.Y., July 20 and
21, 1916 (1917).
Hours, Fatigue, and Health in British Muni­
tion Factories. Reprints of the Memoranda
of the British Health of Munition Workers
Committee (1917).
Welfare Work in British Munition Factories.
Reprints of the Memoranda of the British
Health of Munition Workers Committee
(1917).
Employment of Women and Juveniles in
Great Britain During the War. Reprints of
the Memoranda of the British Health of
Munition Workers Committee (1917).
Decisions of Courts Affecting Labor, 1916
(1917) .
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber,
Millwork, and Furniture Industries, 1915
(1918) .
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1916 (1917).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Proceedings of the Employment Managers’
Conference, Philadelphia, Pa., April 2 and 3,

228
229

230

231
232

1917 (1917).
Retail Prices, 1907 to December 1916 (1917).
Wage-Payment Legislation in the United
States (1918).
Includes broad discussions of the labor
contract in English and American law and
of the attitude of the courts and public opin­
ion toward freedom of contract.
Industrial Efficiency and Fatigue in British
Munition Factories. Reprints of Interim Re­
port and Memoranda of the British Health
of Munition Workers Committee (1917).
Mortality from Respiratory Diseases in
Dusty Trades (Inorganic Dusts) (1918).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry: 1907 to 1916 (1918).

233

Operation of the Industrial Disputes Investi­
gation Act of Canada (1918).

234

The Safety Movement in the Iron and Steel
Industry, 1907 to 1917 (1918).
Reviews briefly the course of accidents
from 1907 to 1917 in the iron and steel indus­
try, emphasizing the effects of World War I.
Discusses where and why accidents occur,
their seriousness, and by what means acci­
dents may be prevented.

244
245

246
247

248

249

250
251

235

Employment System of the Lake Carriers’
Association (1918).

252

236

Effect of the Air Hammer on the Hands of
Stonecutters (1918).

253
254

237

Industrial Unrest in Great Britain. Reprints
of the— (1) Reports of the Commission of
Inquiry into Industrial Unrest, (2) Interim
Report of the Reconstruction Committee, on
Joint Standing Industrial Councils (1917).

238

Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1916 (1918).

239

Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton Goods
Manufacturing and Finishing, 1916 (1918).

240

Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation
Laws of the United States up to December
31, 1917 (1918).
Replaced by Bull. 275.

241

Public Employment Offices in the United
States (1918).
Includes section on semipublic employment
offices.

242

Food Situation in Central Europe,
(1918).

243

Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the




255

256

257
258
259

1917
260

United States and Foreign Countries, 1917
and 1918 (1918).
Supplements Bull. 203.
Labor Legislation of 1917 (1918).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1917 (1919).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation. For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
Decisions of Courts Affecting Labor, 1917
(1918).
Proceedings of the Employment Managers’
Conference, Rochester, N.Y., May 9, 10, and
11, 1918 (1919).
Proceedings of the Fourth Annual Meeting of
the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
Boston, Mass., August 21-25, 1917 (1919).
Industrial Health and Efficiency. Final R e­
port of the British Health of Munition W ork­
ers Committee (1919).
Welfare Work for Employees in Industrial
Establishments in the United States (1919).
Preventable Death in Cotton Manufacturing
Industry (1919).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughter­
ing and Meat-Packing Industry, 1917 (1919).
Women in the Lead Industries (1919).
International Labor Legislation and the So­
ciety of Nations (1919).
Joint Industrial Councils in Great Britain.
Reports of Committee on Relations Between
Employers and Employed, and Other Official
Documents (1919).
Accidents and Accident Prevention in M a­
chine Building (1920).
Replaces Bull. 216. See Bull. 1237 this list­
ing for annotation.
Labor Legislation of 1918 (1919).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1918 (1920).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1918 (1919).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry, 1907 to 1918 (1919).

9

261
262
263

264

265

266

267
268

269
270
271

Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1918 (1919).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods
Manufacturing and Finishing, 1918 (1919).
Housing by Employers in the United States
(1920) .
Surveys action by employers to provide
housing for their employees in manufacturing
towns, including cotton-mill towns of New
England and the South; steel towns of Penn­
sylvania, Ohio, Alabama, and Minnesota;
and coal mining, and iron and other metal
mining towns.
Proceedings of the Fifth Annual Meeting of
the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions Held at
Madison, Wis., September 24-27, 1918
(1919).
Industrial Survey in Selected Industries in
the United States, 1919 (1920).
Summary report on wages and hours of
work in 28 selected industries.
Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Conven­
tion of the Association of Governmental La­
bor Officials of the United States and Canada.
Held at Seattle, Wash., July 12-15, 1920
(1921) .
Anthrax as an Occupational Disease (1920).
Replaces Bull. 205.
Historical Survey of International Action A f­
fecting Labor (1920).
Briefly describes the international political
labor movement; the international trade
union movement; and the international or­
ganizations of social reformers interested in
labor problems. Recounts efforts of govern­
mental conferences to arrive at agreements
for the control of labor conditions, and an­
alyzes treaties and conventions entered into
by the various governments.
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1919 (1920).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Retail Prices, 1913 to December 1919
(1921).
Adult Working-Class Education in Great
Britain and the United States. A Study of
Recent Developments (1920).
Reports the results achieved by adult
working class educational movements, in­
cluding such movements as the Workers’ Ed­
ucational Association of Great Britain; the

10



272

273

274

275

276

277
278
279

280
281

282
283
284

Workers’ University maintained by the In­
ternational Ladies’ Garment Workers’ Union
(A F L ); and the Rand School of Social Sci­
ence in New York.
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the
United States and Canada (1921).
Supplemented by Bull. 332.
Proceedings of the Sixth Annual Meeting of
the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
Toronto, Canada, September 23-26, 1919
(1920).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1919 (1920).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation
Laws of the United States and Canada up to
January 1, 1920 (1920).
Replaces Bull. 240.
Standardization of Industrial Accident Sta­
tistics. Reports of the Committee on Statis­
tics and Compensation Insurance Cost of the
International Association of Industrial Acci­
dent Boards and Commissions, 1915-1919
(1920).
Replaced by Bull. 667.
Labor Legislation of 1919 (1921).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry: 1907 to 1920 (1921).
Hours and Earnings in Anthracite and Bitu­
minous Coal Mining. Anthracite— 1919 and
1920. Bituminous— 1919 (1921).
Industrial Poisoning in Making Coal-Tar
Dyes and Dye Intermediates (1921).
Proceedings of the Seventh Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
San Francisco, Calif., September 20-24,
1920 (1921).
Mutual Relief Associations Among Govern­
ment Employees in Washington, D.C. (1921).
History of the Shipbuilding Labor Adjust­
ment Board, 1917 to 1919 (1921).
Index Numbers of Wholesale Prices in the
United States and Foreign Countries (1921).
Replaces Bull. 173. Pt. 1 reprinted as Bull.
656.

285

286

287

288
289
290
291
292
293
294

Pt. 1 includes a critical analysis of the var­
ious methods employed to measure price level
changes, and examines advantages and de­
fects of these methods. Discusses uses of index
numbers, reasons for discrepancies between
two series or more for the same time and
country, and necessary safeguards in com­
paring different series. Provides an appraisal
of index numbers as measures of price fluc­
tuations. Pt. 2 is a detailed description of the
leading series of index numbers of wholesale
prices compiled by official bureaus, financial
journals, and private investigators. The his­
tory of each series, sources of price data,
number and kinds of commodities included,
and methods used in averaging prices are in­
cluded. See also Bull. 1513.
Minimum-Wage Laws of the United States:
Construction and Operation (1921).
Supplements Bull. 167.
Discusses provisions of the State mini­
mum-wage laws in effect in 1920, as well as
the orders issued under them and the judicial
determinations upholding and construing the
laws. Gives some account of operations and
of methods of administration, based on offi­
cial reports and a general survey made by
the Bureau.
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1920 (1921).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
National War Labor Board. A History of Its
Formation and Activities, Together with Its
Awards and the Documents of Importance in
the Record of Its Development (1922).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods
Manufacturing, 1920 (1921).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1920 (1921).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1919-1920 (1922).
Carbon-Monoxide Poisoning (1922).
Labor Legislation of 1920 (1922).
The Problem of Dust Phthisis in the GraniteStone Industry (1922).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughter­
ing and Meat-Packing Industry, 1921 (1922).




295

296
297
298

299

300
301
302

303

304

Building Operations in Representative Cities,
1920 (1922).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1920 (1922).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Petroleum
Industry, 1920 (1922).
Causes and Prevention of Accidents in the
Iron and Steel Industry, 1910-1919 (1922).
Includes a record of the accident experience
in this industry. Describes the preparation
and use of accident rates and statistical
methods.
See also Bull. 1237 this listing.
Personnel Research Agencies. A Guide to Or­
ganized Research in Employment Manage­
ment, Industrial Relations Training, and
Working Conditions (1921).
Replaced by Bull. 518.
Retail Prices, 1913 to December, 1920 (1922).
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation In­
surance and Administration (1922).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1921 (1922).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Use of Federal Power in Settlement of Rail­
way Labor Disputes (1922).
Examines methods used by the Federal
Government in the settlement of railway la­
bor disputes as reflected in legislation. D e­
tails events leading to passage of five laws
providing for Federal intervention in such
disputes, the operation of these laws, and the
attitude of the interests affected thereby.
Railway labor problems engendered during
the period of World War I administration of
railroads are treated briefly. The constitu­
tional issues involved in Government action
for prevention and settlement of railway la­
bor disputes are examined, and the texts of
the five laws regulating these disputes are
set forth in two appendixes.
Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Indus­
trial Accident Boards and Commissions. Held
at Chicago, 111., September 19-23, 1921
(1922).

11

305
306

307

308
309
310

311

312
313

314

315
316

317
318

319

320

Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry: 1907 to 1920 (1922).
Occupation Hazards and Diagnostic Signs.
A Guide to Impairments to be looked for in
Hazardous Occupations (1922).
Replaced by Bull. 582.
Proceedings of the Eighth Annual Conven­
tion of the Association of Governmental La­
bor Officials of the United States and Can­
ada. Held at New Orleans, La., M ay 2-6,
1921 (1922).
Labor Legislation of 1921 (1922).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1921 (1922).
Industrial Unemployment: A Statistical
Study of Its Extent and Causes (1922).
Coordinates and interprets available infor­
mation regarding trends in industrial unem­
ployment.
Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Meeting of
the International Association of Public Em­
ployment Services. Held at Buffalo, N.Y.,
September 7-9, 1921 (1922).
National Health Insurance in Great Britain,
1911 to 1921 (1923).
Consumers’ Cooperative Societies in the
United States in 1920 (1923).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Cooperative Credit Societies (Credit Unions)
in America and in Foreign Countries (1922).
Reviews international development of the
credit union movement. Examines principal
provisions of credit union laws, the charac­
teristics and experience of credit unions, and
the attitudes of labor unions toward credit
unions in the United States. Includes a com­
prehensive bibliography.
Retail Prices, 1913 to December, 1921 (1923).
Hours and Earnings in Anthracite and Bi­
tuminous Coal Mining. Anthracite— January,
1922. Bituminous— Winter of 1921-22 (1922).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Lumber Man­
ufacturing, 1921 (1923).
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1921 (1923).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics: United
States Department of Labor. Its History,
Activities, and Organization (1922).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1921 (1922).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.

12



321

322

323

324
325

326

327
328
329
330
331

332

Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Un­
constitutional (1922).
A compilation covering about 300 separate
labor statutes whose constitutionality had
been successfully challenged in the State
Courts of last resort or the Supreme Court of
the United States. Includes some laws of
general application which also affect em­
ployer-employee relations. The statutes con­
sidered are classified under appropriate sub­
ject headings. The decisions are reviewed and
a number of contrasting and illustrative cases
are presented.
Kansas Court of Industrial Relations (1923).
Reproduces the provisions of the 1920
Kansas State law which created a Court of
Industrial Relations and of related 1921
Kansas statutes. Draws on the first two an­
nual reports (applying, respectively, to the
periods Feb. 1-Nov. 30, 1920, and the year
1921) for a synopsis of cases, an account of
the legal proceedings, and comments on the
functions and influence of the Court.
Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Convention
cf the Association of Governmental Labor
Officials of the United States and Canada.
Held at Harrisburg, Pa., M ay 22-26, 1922
(1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry: 1907 to 1922 (1923).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1922 (1923).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Methods of Procuring and Computing Sta­
tistical Information of the Bureau of Labor
Statistics (1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1922 (1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery
and Underwear Industry, 1922 (1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Men’s
Clothing Industry, 1911 to 1922 (1923).
Labor Legislation of 1922 (1923).
Code of Lighting:
Factories, Mills, and
Other Work Places (1923).
Replaced by Bull. 556.
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the

333

334
335
336
337

338

339

340
341
342
343
344
345
346

347

348
349

United States and Canada, 1920 to 1922
(1923).
Supplements Bull. 272.
Proceedings of the Ninth Annual Meeting of
the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
Baltimore, Md., October 9-13, 1922 (1923).
Retail Prices, 1913 to December, 1922
(1923).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1922 (1923).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Safety Code for the Protection of Industrial
Workers in Foundries (1923).
Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Public
Employment Services. Held at Washington,
D.C., September 11-13, 1922 (1923).
Safety Code for the Use, Care, and Protec­
tion of Abrasive Wheels (1923).
Replaced by Bull. 527.
Statistics of Industrial Accidents in the
United States (1923).
See Bull. 490 this listing for annotation.
Chinese Migrations, with Special Reference
to Labor Conditions (1923).
Trade Agreement in the Silk-Ribbon Indus­
try of New York City (1923).
International Seamen’s Union of America. A
Study of Its History and Problems (1923).
Laws Providing for Bureaus of Labor Statis­
tics, etc. (1923).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1922 (1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods
Manufacturing: 1922 (1923).
Humanity in Government (1923).
Describes the early activities of the U.S.
Department of Labor in promoting the wel­
fare of wage earners, children, and other
groups under its jurisdiction. Also briefly
summarizes work of the U.S. Housing Cor­
poration and the Federal Board for Vocation­
al Education.
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1922 (1923).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Automobile
Industry, 1922 (1923).
Industrial Relations in the West Coast Lum­
ber Industry (1924).
A study of the extent and causes of labor




350
351
352

353
354

355

356
357
358
359

360
361

unrest in the industry. Shows how the shift
of lumber production made possible the de­
velopment of the great lumber industry on
the West Coast. Analyzes the internal finan­
cial structure of the industry to determine
the ability of the employers to grant reason­
able wage demands of employees. Technology
of the industry is examined to see what de­
mands it makes upon employees. Discusses
hours, wage rates, and working and living
conditions. Describes development of em­
ployee psychology as conditioned by environ­
ment of the lumber industry. Gives history
of employee protests and employer reactions.
Bibliography is provided.
Rules Governing the Approval of Head
Lighting Devices for Motor Vehicles (1923).
Safety Code for the Construction, Care, and
Use of Ladders (1923).
Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Convention
of the Association of Governmental Labor
Officials of the United States and Canada.
Held at Richmond, Va., May 1-4, 1923
(1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry: 1907 to 1922 (1924).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1923 (1924).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing, 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Public
Employment Services. Held at Toronto, Can­
ada, September 4-7, 1923 (1924).
Productivity Costs in Common-Brick Indus­
try (1924).
Cost of Living in the United States (1924).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Automobile
Tire Industry, 1923 (1924).
Proceedings of the Tenth Annual Meeting of
the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
St. Paul, Minn., September 24-26, 1923
(1921).
Time and Labor Costs in Manufacturing 100
Pairs of Shoes, 1923 (1924).
Labor Relations in the Fairmont, West Vir­
ginia Bituminous Coal Field (1924).

13

362
363
364

365
366
367
368

369

370
371
372
373
374
375
376

377

Wages and Hours of Labor in Foundries and
Machine Shops, 1923 (1924).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Lumber Man­
ufacturing, 1923 (1924).
Safety Code for Mechanical Power-Trans­
mission Apparatus (1924).
Replaced by Bull. 463.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Paper and
Pulp Industry, 1923 (1925).
Retail Prices, 1913 to December, 1923
(1925).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1923 (1925).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1923 (1925).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
The Use of Cost-of-Living Figures in Wage
Adjustments (1925).
Describes instances in which cost-of-living
data have been used by some Federal boards
and commissions, principally in the adjust­
ments of wages, and the use of cost-of-living
statistics by State and municipal agencies in
the adjustment of employees’ salaries. Ana­
lyzes the recognition given to cost-of-living
data in the settlement of wage disputes by
State and industrial arbitration boards. Re­
views methods used by individual companies
in computing their own cost-of-living data,
or in applying available data to wage ad­
justments. Shows the effect of Federal costof-living data on the budgets adopted by
State minimum-wage boards. Cites wage
adjustment provisions tied to cost-of-living
changes in collective bargaining agreements.
Labor Laws of the United States with D eci­
sions of Courts Relating Thereto (1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods
Manufacturing, 1924 (1925).
Convict Labor in 1923 (1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughter­
ing and Meat-Packing Industry, 1923 (1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry: 1907 to 1924 (1925).
Safety Code for Laundry Machinery and
Operations (1924).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery
and Underwear Industry, 1907 to 1924
(1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1924 (1925).

14



378
379

380
381
382
383
384
385

386
387
388

389

390
391
392
393
394
395

396
397

398

Safety Code for Woodworking Plants (1925).
Replaced by Bull. 519.
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation
Laws of the United States as of January 1,
1925 (1925).
Postwar Labor Conditions in Germany
(1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry: 1907 to 1924 (1925).
Code of Lighting School Buildings (1925).
Works Council Movement in Germany
(1925).
Labor Conditions in the Shoe Industry in
Massachusetts, 1920-1924 (1925).
Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
Halifax, Nova Scotia, August 26-28, 1924
(1925).
The Cost of American Almshouses (1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the M en’s
Clothing Industry, 1911 to 1924 (1925).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1924 (1925).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Proceedings of the Eleventh Annual Conven­
tion of the Association of Governmental La­
bor Officials of the United States and Canada.
Held at Chicago, 111., M ay 19-23, 1924
(1925).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1924 (1925).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Decisions of Courts Affecting Labor: 19231924 (1925).
Survey of Hygienic Conditions in the Print­
ing Trades (1925).
Trade Agreements in 1923 and 1924 (1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Metalliferous
Mines, 1924 (1925).
Index to Proceedings of International Asso­
ciation of Industrial Accident Boards and
Commissions, 1914-1924 (1925).
Retail Prices, 1890 to 1924 (1925).
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1924 (1925).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Growth of Legal Aid Work in the United
States. A Study of Our Administration of

399
400

401
402

403
404

405

406

407

408
409
410
411

Justice Primarily as It Affects the Wage
Earner and of the Agencies Designed to Im­
prove His Position Before the Law (1926).
Replaced by Bull. 607.
Labor Relations in the Lace and Lace-Cur­
tain Industries in the United States (1925).
Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Public
Employment Services. Held at Chicago, 111.,
M ay 19-23, 1924 (1925).
Family Allowances in Foreign Countries
(1926).
Collective Bargaining by Actors. A Study
of Trade Unionism Among Performers of the
English-Speaking Legitimate Stage in Amer­
ica (1926).
Labor Legislation of 1925 (1926).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1925 (1926).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Phosphorus Necrosis in the Manufacture of
Fireworks and in the Preparation of Phos­
phorus (1926).
Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
Salt Lake City, Utah, August 17-20, 1925
(1926).
Labor Cost of Production and Wages and
Hours of Labor in the Paper Box-Board In­
dustry (1926).
Laws Relating to Payment of Wages (1926).
Unemployment in Columbus, Ohio, 1921 to
1925 (1926).
Safety Code for Paper and Pulp Mills
(1926).
Proceedings of the Twelfth Annual Conven­
tion of the Association of Governmental
Labor Officials of the United States and Can­
ada. Held at Salt Lake City, Utah, August
13-15, 1925 (1926).

412

Wages, Hours, and Productivity in the Pot­
tery Industry, 1925 (1926).

413

Wages and Hours o.’ Labor in the Lumber
Industry in the United States: 1925 (1926).

414

Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of Public




415
416
417
418
419
420

421
422
423

424

425

426
427
428

429

430
431

432

Employment Services. Held at Rochester,
N.Y., September 15-17, 1925 (1926).
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1925 (1926).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Hours and Earnings in Anthracite and Bi­
tuminous Coal Mining, 1922 and 1924 (1926).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1925 (1926).
Retail Prices, 1890 to 1925 (1926).
Trade Agreements, 1925 (1926).
Handbook of American Trade Unions (1926).
Replaced by Bull. 618. See this listing for
annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughter­
ing and Meat-Packing Industry, 1925 (1927).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Foundries and
Machine Shops, 1925 (1927).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the
United States and Canada as of July 1, 1926
(1926) .
Supplemented by Bull. 496.
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1925 (1926).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Record of Industrial Accidents in the United
States to 1925 (1927).
See Bull. 490 this listing for annotation.
Deaths from Lead Poisoning (1927).
Health Survey of the Printing Trades, 1922
to 1925 (1927).
Proceedings of the Industrial Accident Pre­
vention Conference. Held at Washington,
D.C., July 14-16, 1926 (1926).
Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Con­
vention of the Association of Governmental
Labor Officials of the United States and
Canada. Held at Columbus, Ohio, June 7-10,
1926 (1927).
Safety Code for Power Presses and Foot and
Hand Presses (1926).
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1926 (1927).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Proceedings of the Thirteenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of Indus­
trial Accident Boards and Commissions. Held
at Hartford, Conn., September T4-17, 1926
(1927) .

15

433

434
435
436

437

438
439

440
441
442
443

444
445
446
447
448
449

450
451
452

453

454
455

Safety Codes for the Prevention of Dust Ex­
plosions (1927).
Replaced by Bulls. 562 and 617.
Labor Legislation of 1926 (1927).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Men’s
Clothing Industry, 1911 to 1926 (1927).
Safety Code for the Use, Care, and Protec­
tion of Abrasive Wheels (1927).
Replaced by Bull. 527.
Cooperative Movement in the United States
in 1925 (Other Than Agricultural) (1927).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Motor Ve­
hicle Industry: 1925(1927).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1924-1926
(1927).
See Bull. 1555 this listing for annotation.
Wholesale Prices, 1890 to 1926 (1927).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Productivity of Labor in the Glass Industry
(1927).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry: 1907 to 1926 (1927).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1910 to 1926
(1927).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1926 (1927).
Retail Prices, 1890 to 1926 (1927).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods
Manufacturing, 1910 to 1926 (1927).
Safety Code for Rubber Mills and Calenders
(1927).
Trade Agreements, 1926 (1927).
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1926 (1927).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry: 1907 to 1926 (1927).
Safety Code for Forging and Hot Metal
Stamping (1927).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery
and Underwear Industries, 1907 to 1926
(1927).
Revised Index Numbers of Wholesale Prices,
1923 to July 1927 (1927).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Hours and Earnings in Bituminous Coal
Mining, 1922, 1924, and 1926 (1927).
Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Con­
vention of the Association of Governmental

16



456

Labor Officials of the United States and Can­
ada. Held at Paterson, N.J., M ay 31-June 3,
1927 (1927).
Proceedings of the Fourteenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of A cci­
dent Boards and Commissions. Held at At­
lanta, Ga., September 27-29, 1927 (1928).

457

Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1927 (1928).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
Supplemented by Bull. 476. For annota­
tions on selected union scales, see Bulls. 1546
(local-transit), 1547 (building), 1548 (mo­
tortruck drivers and helpers), and 1549
(printing), this listing.

458

Health and Recreation Activities in Indus­
trial Establishments, 1926 (1928).

459
460

Apprenticeship in Building Construction
(1928).
A New Test for Industrial Lead Poisoning.
The Presence of Basophilic Red Cells in Lead
Poisoning and Lead Absorption (1928).

461

Labor Organization in Chile (1928).

462

Park Recreation Areas in the United States
(1928).
Safety Code for Mechanical Power-Trans­
mission Apparatus. First revision (1928).
Replaces Bull. 364.
Retail Prices, 1890 to 1927 (1928).
Beneficial Activities of American TradeUnions (1928).
A study of the early extension of national
and international trade union activities be­
yond their traditional interests in improving
wages, hours, and working conditions into
such broader areas as general employee wel­
fare, housing for union members, union busi­
ness enterprises and investments, and eco­
nomic and industrial problems. Included
among the employee welfare activities dis­
cussed are the provisions made by labor
organizations for unemployment, disability,
and death benefits; care of the aged; health
services; and recreational activities. Efforts
by unions to prevent and to relieve the effects
of unemployment, union-management co­
operation in industrial matters of mutual
concern, and economic and statistical re­
search are also examined as expressions of
unions’ expanded interests.

463

464
465

466
467

468
469

470
471
472
473
474
475
476

477
478

479
480

Settlement for Accidents to American Sea­
men (1928).
Minimum Wage Legislation in Various Coun­
tries (1928).
Summarizes the development and principal
features of minimum wage legislation in the
United States and various foreign countries,
including Australia, New Zealand, Great
Britain, and Italy. Discusses the considera­
tions underlying wage fixation, the adminis­
tration of such legislation, enforcement
problems, and beneficial results. Cites the
effect of minimum wage legislation on the
employees, on industry, and on the general
wage level.
Trade Agreements, 1927 (1928).
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1927 (1928).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Labor Legislation of 1927 (1928).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Foundries and
Machine Shops, 1927 (1929).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughter­
ing and Meat-Packing Industry, 1927 (1929).
Wholesale Prices, 1913 to 1927 (1929).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Productivity of Labor in Merchant Blast
Furnaces (1929).
Productivity of Labor in Newspaper Print­
ing (1929).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor,
1927-1928 (1929).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
Supplements Bull. 457. For annotations of
selected union scales, see Bulls. 1546 (localtransit), 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
Public Service Retirement Systems: United
States, Canada, and Europe (1929).
Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of Public
Employment Services. Held at Detroit,
Mich., October 25-28, 1927 (1928).
Activities and Functions of a State Depart­
ment of Labor (1928).
Association of Governmental Officials in In­
dustry of the United States and Canada.
[Formerly Association of Governmental La­
bor Officials.] Fifteenth Annual Convention,
New Orleans, La., May 21-24, 1928 (1929).




481
482

483
484
485

486
487

488
489
490

491

492
493
494
495

Joint Industrial Control in the Book and
Job Printing Industry (1928).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1928 (1929).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Conditions in the Shoe Industry in Haverhill,
Mass., 1928 (1929).
Wages and Hours of Labor: Common
Street Laborers, 1928 (1929).
Proceedings of the Fifteenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of In­
dustrial Accident Boards and Commissions.
Held at Paterson, N.J., September 11-14,
1928 (1929).
Labor Legislation of 1928 (1929).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1910 to 1928
(1929).
Deaths from Lead Poisoning, 1925-1927
(1929).
Care of Aged Persons in the United States
(1929).
Statistics of Industrial Accidents in the
United States to the End of 1927 (1929).
Presents available work accident statistics
for various States and industries from 1907
to 1927. Four earlier bulletins, the first of
which was published in 1908, bring together
the important records of industrial accidents
throughout the country. Data for the first
three of these bulletins were based largely
upon State and other official published re­
ports, but the fourth, in addition, included
results of the first attempt to collect data
directly from States and industry. Earlier
bulletins were: 78, 157, 339, and 425.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1929 edition
(1929).
See Bull. 1555 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods
Manufacturing, 1910 to 1928 (1929).
Wholesale Prices, 1913 to 1928 (1929).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Labor Legislation of Uruguay (1929).
Retail Prices, 1890 to 1928 (1929).
Data on food prices replaced by Bull. 635.
See this listing for annotation.

17

496

497
498
499

500

501

502
503
504

505

506

507

508

509
510
511

512

Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the
United States and Canada as of January 1,
1929, with Text of Legislation Enacted in
1927 and 1928 (1929).
Supplements Bull. 423.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber
Industry in the United States: 1928 (1929).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry, 1910 to 1928 (1929).
History of Wages in the United States from
Colonial Times to 1928 (1929).
See Bull. 604 this listing for annotation.
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1928 (1929).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Public
Employment Services. Held at Cleveland,
Ohio, September 18-21, 1928 (1929).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the MotorVehicle Industry: 1928 (1930).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Men’s
Clothing Industry, 1911 to 1928 (1929).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery
and Underwear Industries, 1907 to 1928
(1929).
Directory of Homes for the Aged in the
United States (1929).
Replaced by Bull. 677.
Handbook of American Trade Unions (1929).
Replaced by Bull. 618. See this listing for
annotation.
Causes of Death by Occupation. Occupa­
tional Mortality Experience of the Metro­
politan Life Insurance Company, Industrial
Department, 1922-1924 (1930).
See Bull. 207 for earlier data.
Association of Governmental Officials in In­
dustry of the United States and Canada.
[Formerly Association of Governmental La­
bor Officials] Sixteenth Annual Convention,
Toronto, Canada, June 4-7, 1929 (1930).
Textile Safety Code (1930).
Labor Legislation of Argentina (1930).
Proceedings of the Sixteenth Annual Meeting
of the International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions. Held at
Buffalo, N.Y., October 8-11, 1929 (1930).
Code for Identification of Gas-Mask Can­
isters (1930).

18



513
514

515

516
517
518

519

520
521
522
523
524

525
526
527

528
529
530

531

Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry, 1929 (1930).
Pennsylvania Railroad Wage Data. From
Report of Joint Fact Finding Committee in
Wage Negotiations, 1927 (1930).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor,
May 15, 1929 (1930).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Hours and Earnings in Bituminous Coal
Mining, 1929 (1930).
Decisions of the Courts and Opinions Affect­
ing Labor, 1927, 1928 (1930).
Personnel Research Agencies, 1930 edition
(1930).
Replaces Bull. 299.
Safety Code for Woodworking Plants, as re­
vised 1930 (1930).
Replaces Bull. 378.
Social and Economic Character of Unem­
ployment in Philadelphia, April 1929 (1930).
Wholesale Prices, 1929 (1930).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Foundries
and Machine Shops, 1929 (1930).
Wages and Hours in the Manufacture of Air­
planes and Aircraft Engines, 1929 (1930).
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1929 (1930).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Portland
Cement Industry, 1929 (1931).
WTages and Hours of Labor in the Furniture
Industry, 1910 to 1929 (1931).
Safety Code for the Use, Care, and Protec­
tion of Abrasive Wheels (1930).
Replaces Bulls. 338 and 436.
Labor Legislation, 1929 (1931).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the
Latin American Countries (1930).
Association of Governmental Officials in In­
dustry of the United States and Canada.
Seventeenth Annual Convention, Louisville,
Ky., M ay 20-23, 1930 (1930).
Consumers’, Credit, and Productive Coopera­
tive Societies, 1929 (1931).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.

532

Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cigarette
Manufacturing Industry, 1930 (1931).
533
Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1910 to 1930
(1931).
534
Labor Conditions in the Territory of Hawaii,
1929-1930 (1931).
See Bull. 926 this listing for annotation.
535
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughter­
ing and Meat-Packing Industry, 1929 (1931).
536
Proceedings of the Seventeenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of Indus­
trial Accident Boards and Commissions. Held
at Wilmington, Del., September 22-26, 1930
(1931).
537
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Dyeing
and Finishing of Textiles, 1930 (1931).
538
International Association of Public Employ­
ment Services. Seventeenth Annual Meeting,
Philadelphia, Pa., September 24-27, 1929.
Eighteenth Annual Meeting, Toronto, Can­
ada, September 9-12, 1930 (1931).
539
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods
Manufacturing, 1910 to 1930 (1931).
540
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1930 (1931).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
541
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1931 edition
(1931).
See Bull. 1555 this listing for annotation.
542
Report of the Advisory Committee on Em­
ployment Statistics (1931).
Recommendations to the President of the
United States on methods for improving the
measurement of employment and unemploy­
ment, and on meeting the problem of techno­
logical unemployment.
543
Wholesales Prices, 1930 (1931).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
544
Unemployment-Benefit Plans in the United
States and Unemployment Insurance in For­
eign Countries (1931).
Surveys company and union unemploy­
ment benefit and guaranteed employment
plans for the protection of employees against
unemployment. Includes a summary of the
character, significance, and operating ex­




perience of the plans surveyed, as well as a
detailed account of each plan. See also Bulls.
906, 907, and 925 this listing.
545
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of
the United States in 1930 (1932).
Previous bulletins in this series were: 295,
318, 347, 368, 397, 424, 449, 469, 500, and 524.
Other comprehensive information on building
construction activities and trends based on
building permit reports are provided in Bulls.
650, 668, 689, 693, 713, and 1243.
Bulletins in the building permit series cov­
ering principal cities show data on the num­
ber of buildings and cost (in terms of permit
valuations). These data cover the number of
family dwelling units provided in new resi­
dential buildings; the number and estimated
cost of new nonresidential buildings, by in­
tended use; the volume of additions, altera­
tions, and repairs; and aggregate figures for
all building construction.
546
Wages and Hours in Rayon and Other Syn­
thetic Yarn Manufacturing, 1930 (1932).
547
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cane-Sugar
Refining Industry, 1930 (1931).
548
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1929-1930 (1931).
549
Labor Legislation of Venezuela (1931).
550
Cargo Handling and Longshore Labor Con­
ditions (1932).
551
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry, 1910 to 1930 (1932).
552
Labor Legislation, 1930 (1931).
553
Fluctuation in Employment in Ohio, 1914 to
1929 (1932).
554
Labor Legislation of Paraguay (1931).
555
Social and Economic Character of Unem­
ployment in Philadelphia. April 1930 (1932).
556
Code of Lighting: Factories, Mills, and
Other Work Places. Revision of 1930 (1931).
Replaces Bull. 331.
557
Wages and Hours of Labor in the M en’s
Clothing Industry, 1911 to 1930 (1932).
558
Labor Conditions of Women and Children in
Japan (1931).
559
Labor Legislation of Ecuador (1931).
560
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber
Industry in the United States, 1930 (1932).
561
Public Old-Age Pensions and Insurance in
the United States and in Foreign Countries
(1932).

19

562

563

564

>65
)66

567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575

Provides a brief history and comparative
analysis of old-age pension legislation in the
United States; an analysis of the individual
pension laws; the text of these laws in 17
States and Alaska, and the results of the
Bureau’s studies on the operation of these
laws. Also presents descriptive reports of
public old-age pension and insurance systems
in 39 foreign countries, by U.S. consular rep­
resentatives, and a comparative analysis of
those systems.
Safety Codes for the Prevention of Dust Ex­
plosions (1932).
Replaces Bull. 433. Supplemented by Bull.
617.
Association of Governmental Officials in In­
dustry of the United States and Canada.
[Formerly Association of Governmental La­
bor Officials] Eighteenth Annual Convention,
Boston, Mass., M ay 18-22, 1931 (1932).
Proceedings of the Eighteenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of In­
dustrial Accident Boards and Commissions.
Held at Richmond, Va., October 5-8, 1931
(1932).
Park Recreation Areas in the United States,
1930 (1932).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1931 (1932).
See Bull. 600 this listing for annotation.
For annotations on selected union scales,
see Bulls. 1546 (local-transit), 1547 (build­
ing), 1548 (motortruck drivers and helpers),
and 1549 (printing), this listing.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and
Steel Industry, 1931 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Manufac­
ture of Silk and Rayon Goods, 1931 (1932).
Labor Legislation of Mexico (1932).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Foundries and
Machine Shops, 1931 (1932).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Furniture
Industry, 1910 to 1931 (1932).
Wholesale Prices, 1931 (1933).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Metalliferous
Mining, 1924 and 1931 (1933).
Technological Changes and Employment in
the United States Postal Service (1932).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Air Transpor­
tation, 1931 (1933).

20



576
577

578

579
580

581

582

583

584
585
586
587

588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595

596

Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughter­
ing and Meat-Packing Industry, 1931 (1933).
Proceedings of the Nineteenth Annual Meet­
ing of the International Association of Indus­
trial Accident Boards and Commissions. Held
at Columbus, Ohio, September 26-29, 1932
(1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Gasoline Fill­
ing Stations and Motor-Vehicle Repair Ga­
rages, 1931 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and
Shoe Industry, 1910 to 1932 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Bakery
Industry— Bread and Cake Departments,
1931 (1933).
Laws Relating to Employment Agencies in
the United States as of January 1, 1933
(1933).
Occupation Hazards and Diagnostic Signs. A
Guide to Impairments to be Looked for in
Hazardous Occupations (1933).
Replaces Bull. 306.
Proceedings of the National Conference for
Labor Legislation. Held at Washington, D.C.,
February 14 and 15, 1934 (1934).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and
Worsted Goods Manufacturing, 1932 (1933).
Labor Productivity in the Automobile Tire
Industry (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber
Industry in the United States, 1932 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Rayon and
Other Synthetic Yarn Manufacturing: 1932
(1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Dyeing
and Finishing of Textiles, 1932 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Leather
Industry, 1932 (1933).
Labor Legislation, 1931 and 1932 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery
and Underwear Industries, 1932 (1933).
Decisions of Courts and Opinions Affecting
Labor, 1931 and 1932 (1933).
Technological Changes and Employment in
the Electric-Lamp Industry (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the M en’s
Clothing Industry: 1932 (1933).
Prison Labor in the United States, 1932
(1933).
See also Bull. 596.
Laws Relating to Prison Labor in the United

States as of July 1, 1933 (1933).
Companion volume to Bull. 595.
597
Labor Through the Century— 1833-1933
(1933).
See Bull. 605 this listing for annotation.
[Bull. 605 is a reprint of Bull. 597 with some
additional material.]
598
Organization and Management of Consum­
ers’ Cooperative Associations and Clubs
(With Model Bylaws) (1934).
Replaced by Bull. 1024.
599
What are Labor Statistics for? A series of
pictorial charts prepared by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics for the U.S. Department of
Labor exhibit at the Century of Progress
Exposition, Chicago, 1933 (1933).
600
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor,
M ay 15, 1933 (1934).
Presents data on union scales of wages and
hours in 72 trades in 67 important industrial
cities. Between 1912 and 1933, the Bureau
published results of its surveys of organized
trades each year, with data back to 1907. The
first such bulletin was published in 1913.
Some data have appeared in the Monthly
Labor Review and in Serial reprints, rather
than in bulletin form. Data on five selected
trades only were published annually, be­
tween 1933 and 1952; data on four trades
only since 1953.
For annotations on union scales in these lat­
ter four selected trades, see Bulls. 1546 (localtransit), 1547 (building), 1548 (motortruck
drivers and helpers), and 1549 (printing),
this listing.
601
Wages and Hours of Labor in BituminousCoal Mining, 1933 (1934).
602
Discussions of Industrial Accidents and Dis­
eases. At the 1933 Meeting of the Interna­
tional Association of Industrial Accident
Boards and Commissions, Chicago, 111.
(1934).
603
Comparative Digest of Labor Legislation for
the States of Alabama, Florida, Georgia,
South Carolina, Tennessee (1933).
604
History of Wages in the United States from
Colonial Times to 1928. [Reprint of Bull.
499 with Supplement, 1929-1933] (1934).
A picture of American wages in representa­
tive occupations and industries from early
colonial times to 1933. Pt. 1, largely text,




605

606

607

608

609

610
611

612

613
614

615

616

deals with the period prior to 1840. Methods
of wage payments as well as the wages paid
during these years are interpreted against
the background of customs, system of labor
(indenture and redemption) and working
conditions peculiar to colonization. Pt. 2,
which covers the period 1840 to 1933, is en­
tirely statistical in presentation.
Labor Through the Century, 1833-1933
(1934).
Illustrated account of the history of Amer­
ican labor. Reprint of a booklet published by
the Bureau for distribution at the Century
of Progress Exposition in Chicago in 1933,
(Bull. 597) with additional review of changes
to M ay 1934.
Organization and Management of Coopera­
tive Gasoline and Oil Associations (With
Model Bylaws) (1934).
Growth of Legal Aid Work in the United
States. A Study of Our Administration of
Justice Primarily as It Affects the Wage
Earner and of the Agencies Designed To Im­
prove His Position Before the Law (1936).
Replaces Bull. 398.
Organization and Management of Coopera­
tive Housing Associations (With Model B y­
laws) (1934).
Replaced by Bull. 858.
Discussions of Labor Laws and Their Ad­
ministration at the 1933 Convention of the
Association of Governmental Officials in In­
dustry of the United States and Canada. Chi­
cago, 111. (1934).
Revised Indexes of Factory Employment and
Pay Rolls, 1919 to 1933 (1935).
Unemployment Insurance and Reserves in
the United States. A Selected List of Recent
References (1935).
Consumers’, Credit, and Productive Coopera­
tion in 1933 (1935).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Average Annual Wage and Salary Payments
in Ohio, 1916 to 1932 (1935).
Bulletins and Articles Published by Bureau
of Labor Statistics: A Selected List of R ef­
erences (1935).
The Massachusetts System of Savings-Bank
Life Insurance (1935).
Replaced by Bull. 688.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1936 edition

21

617

618

619

620

621

622
623
624

625

626

627

628
629

(1936).
See Bull. 1555 this listing for annotation.
Safety Codes for the Prevention of Dust Ex­
plosions (1936).
Supplements Bull. 562.
Handbook of American Trade Unions (1936).
Replaces Bulls. 420 and 506.
Provides general information covering
American national and international trade
unions, their relation to the AFL, date of
each organization’s founding, its historical
development, and the essential facts of its
structure and functions.
This edition also includes a brief review
of the outstanding changes and developments
that have occurred within the American labor
movement since 1929, when the preceding
edition of the Handbook was published.
Labor Laws and Their Administration. Pro­
ceedings of the Twenty-first Convention of
the International Association of Govern­
mental Labor Officials, Asheville, N.C., Oc­
tober 1935 (1936).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in
the Folding-Paper-Box Industry, 1933, 1934,
and 1935 (1937).
Labor Offices in the United States and in
Canada (1936).
Replaced by Bureau of Labor Standards
Bull. 177.
Wage Executions for Debt (1936).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in
the Bread-Baking Industry, 1934 (1937).
A Selected List of the Publications of the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1936 edition
(1936) .
Occupational Disease Legislation in the
United States, 1936 (1937).
Reprinted as Bull. 652 with appendix con­
taining laws enacted in 1937.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours in the
Building Trades, M ay 15, 1936 (1937).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Entrance Rates and Full-Time Hours of
Common Laborers Employed by Cities. Sep­
tember 1935 (1937).
Changes in Retail Prices of Gas, 1923-36
(1937) .
Labor Laws and Their Administration, 1936.
Proceedings of the Twenty-second Conven­
tion of the International Association of G ov­

22



630
631

632

633

634

635

636

637

638

ernmental Labor Officials, Topeka, Kans.,
September 1936 (1937).
Laws Relating to Employment Agencies in
the United States as of July 1, 1937 (1937).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours in the
Printing Trades, M ay 15, 1936 (1937).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Labor Offices in the United States and Can­
ada (1938).
Replaced by Bureau of Labor Standards
Bull. 177.
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in
the Set-Up Paper-Box Industry, 1933, 1934,
and 1935 (1937).
Characteristics of Company Unions, 1935
(1938).
A quantitative study of the various types
of employer-employee dealings and the char­
acteristics of “ company unions,” as well as
a detailed analysis of the structure and
functioning of “ company unions.” (The term
“ company union” is used in this report in its
generic sense as an organization of workers
confined to a particular plant or company
and having for its purpose the representation
of employees in their dealings with manage­
ment.)
Retail Prices of Food, 1923-36 (1938).
Replaces report on food prices and costs
included in Bull. 495.
Presents a comprehensive revision of the
Bureau’s series of food-cost indexes for the
period 1923-36, inclusive, to reflect modifica­
tions in merchandising practices, increased
consumer interest, and advances in statisti­
cal methods. Contains a detailed statement
describing changes in methods, including
modifications in consumption weights, intro­
duction of population weights, and a shift of
the base period to 1923-25.
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers in Eight Cities in the East
North Central Region, 1934-36 (1940).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers in the North Atlantic Re­
gion, 1934-36.
Vol. I. New York City (1939).
Vol. II. Eleven Cities (1939).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and

639

640

641

642

643

644

645

646

Clerical Workers, 1934-36. Summary Volume
(1941).
Nationwide survey providing a general
picture of the standards of living available
to moderate-income urban families in 42
cities with populations exceeding 50,000, as
reflected by sources of their incomes, kinds
of goods and services they bought within a
12-month consecutive period, and kinds of
dwellings they occupied. Detailed data from
this study, by region, and by city were pre­
sented in other bulletins. See Bulls. 636, 637,
639, 640, 641-649, and 691 this listing. Ap­
pendixes provide a comprehensive description
of the survey methods.
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers in Five Cities in the Pacific
Region, 1934-36 (1939).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Money Disbursements of Employed Wage
Earners and Clerical Workers in Twelve
Cities of the South, 1934-36 (1941).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers in Five Cities in the West
North Central-Mountain Region, 1934-36
(1939).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Income and Expenditure in Chicago,
1935-36.
Vol. I. Family Income (1939).
Vol. II. Family Expenditure (1939).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Income and Expenditure in New
York City, 1935-36.
Vol. I. Family Income (1941).
Vol. II. Family Expenditure (1939).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Income and Expenditure in Nine
Cities of the East Central Region, 1935-36.
Vol. I. Family Income (1939).
Vol. II. Family Expenditure (1941).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Income and Expenditure in Five New
England Cities, 1935-36.
Vol. I. Family Income (1939).
Vol. II. Family Expenditure (1941).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Income and Expenditure in Selected
Urban Communities of the West CentralRocky Mountain Region, 1935-36.




647

648

649

650

651

Vol. I. Family Income (1939).
Vol. II. Family Expenditure (1940).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Income and Expenditure in the
Southeastern Region, 1935-36.
Vol. I. Family Income (1939).
Vol. II. Family Expenditure (1940).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Expenditures in Selected Cities,
1935-36.
Vol. I.
Housing (1941).
Vol. II.
Food (1940).
Vol. III.
Clothing and Personal Care
(1941).
Vol. IV.
Furnishings and Equipment
(1941).
Vol. V.
Medical Care (1940).
Vol. VI.
Travel
and Transportation
(1940).
Vol. VII. Recreation, Reading, Formal
Education, Tobacco, Contri­
butions, and Personal Taxes
(1941).
Vol. VIII. Changes in Assets and Liabili­
ties (1941).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Family Income and Expenditure in Four Ur­
ban Communities of the Pacific Northwest,
1935-36.
Vol. I. Family Income (1939).
Vol. II. Family Expenditure (1940).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Statistics of Building Construction, 1920 to
1937 as Shown by Building Permits Issued:
Pt. 1— General Trend in Construction. Pt. II
— Residential Building Construction, 1929 to
1935 (1938). Pt. I l l — Building Construction,
1936 and 1937 (1938).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Strikes in the United States, 1880 to 1936
(1938).
Presents the major statistical data avail­
able on strikes and lockouts from the earliest
recorded date through 1936. However, the
principal portion of this bulletin covers dis­
putes during the period 1927-36, when a more
comprehensive program for the collection
and measurement of strike and lockout
statistics was established.
Descriptive materials include definitions of
the various types of work stoppages, prob-

23

652

653

654
655

656

657

658

659

660
661
662
663

lems and significance of their statistical
measurement, and an analysis of trends in
strike statistics. (See also annotation for
Bull. 1525.) Includes appendix on labor dis­
putes in foreign countries.
Occupational Disease Legislation in the
United States, 1936 (With Appendix for
1937) (1938).
Reprint of Bull. 625 with appendix con­
taining laws enacted in 1937.
Labor Laws and Their Administration, 1937.
Proceedings of the Twenty-third Convention
of the International Association of Govern­
mental Labor Officials, Toronto, Canada, Sep­
tember 1937 (1938).
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation (1938).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours in the
Printing Trades, M ay 15, 1937 (1938).
See Bull. 1649 this listing for annotation.
The Making and Using of Index Numbers
(1938).
Reprint of Pt. 1 of Bull. 284. See this list­
ing for annotation.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours in the
Building Trades in 70 Cities, M ay 15, 1937
(1938).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
P.W.A. and Industry. A Four-Year Study of
Regenerative Employment (1938).
A 4-year study intended to gage the
amount of indirect employment provided by
each major type of public works construction
authorized by the Federal Emergency Ad­
ministration of Public Works from m id-1933
to mid-1937.
Consumers’ Cooperation in the United States,
1936 (1939).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Mechanization and Productivity of Labor in
the Cigar Manufacturing Industry (1939).
A Selected List of the Publications of the Bu­
reau of Labor Statistics, 1938 Edition (1939).
Productivity of Labor in the Cotton-Garment
Industry (1939).
Wages in Cotton-Goods Manufacturing
(1938).
Detailed analysis of average and individ­
ual hourly earnings data in the industry. The
analysis is preceded by a comprehensive ex­
amination of the economic setting, including

24



664
665

666

667

668

669

670

671
672

a description of the industry, the competitive
character of the cotton textile market and
plant capacity, balancing of equipment and
demand, profits and cost, mill margins, pro­
ductivity and equipment, foreign trade, and
demand for cotton goods.
Changes in Retail Prices of Electricity, 192338 (1939).
Organization and Management of Consum­
ers’ Cooperatives and Buying Clubs (1941).
Replaced by Bull. 1024.
Labor Laws and Their Administration, 1938.
Proceedings of the Twenty-fourth Conven­
tion of the International Association of G ov­
ernmental Labor Officials, Charleston, S.C.,
September 1938 (1939).
Manual on Industrial Injury Statistics
(1940).
Replaces Bull. 276.
Makes available to administrators of State
workmen’s compensation laws suggested
methods for preparing adequate statistical
reports of industrial injuries. The material is
organized around three focal points: (1)
Facts concerning the efficiency of administra­
tion, e.g., volume, type and disposition of
cases handled, processing time, and difficulties
which cause operating delays; (2) practical
functioning of medical and benefit provisions
of the law, i.e., how the law affects the in­
jured workers; and (3) the incidence and
causes of accidents. Suggestions are given on
the type of statistical tables to be developed,
the codes to be used for this purpose, and
useful means of classifying accident-cause
data.
Building Construction 1921 to 1938 (1940).
Replaced by Bull. 713. See Bull. 545 this
listing for annotation.
The Wage and Hour Structure of the Furni­
ture-Manufacturing Industry, October 1937
(1940).
Earnings and Hours in Shoe and Allied In­
dustries During First Quarter of 1939. Boots
and Shoes, Cut Stock and Findings, Shoe
Patterns (1939).
Earnings and Hours in the Hat Industries,
1939 (1939).
Problems of Workmen’s Compensation Ad­
ministration in the United States and Can­
ada (1940).

673
674

675

676

677
678

679

680

681

682
683

684

Analysis of State experiences in adminis­
tering workmen’s compensation laws, includ­
ing experience with those provisions affecting
the persons and employments covered, in­
juries and diseases covered, adequacy of
benefit payments, medical aid provisions, and
claims administration. The variety of the
patterns followed by individual States is ex­
amined to show the effectiveness of different
policies and procedures.
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in
Union Bakeries, June 1, 1939 (1940).
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Condi­
tions in the Building Trades, June 1, 1939
(1940).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Condi­
tions in the Printing Trades, June 1, 1939
(1940).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Condi­
tions of Motortruck Drivers, June 1, 1939
(1940) .
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Homes for Aged in the United States (1941).
Replaces Bull. 505.
Labor Laws and Their Administration, 1939.
Proceedings of the Twenty-fifth Convention
of the International Association of Govern­
mental Labor Officials, Tulsa, Okla., Sep­
tember 1939 (1940).
Earnings and Hours in the Leather and
Leather Belting and Packing Industries, 1939
(1941) .
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Condi­
tions in the Building Trades, June 1, 1941
(1942) .
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Labor Offices in the United States and in
Canada, 1941 (1941).
Replaced by Bureau of Labor Standards
Bull. 177.
Employment and Earnings in the Engineer­
ing Profession, 1929 to 1934 (1941).
A Selected List of the Publications of the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1940 edition
(1941).
Supplemented by Bull. 747.
Salaries and Hours of Labor in Municipal
Fire Departments, July 1, 1938.
Vol. I.
New England Cities (1940).




Vol. II.
Vol. III.

685

686
687

688

689

Middle Atlantic Cities (1941).
East North Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. IV. West North Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. V.
South Atlantic Cities (1941).
Vol. VI. East South
Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. VII. West South
Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. VIII. Mountain Division Cities
(1940) .
Vol. IX .
Pacific Cities (1940-41).
Salaries and Hours of Labor in Municipal
Police Departments, July 1, 1938.
Vol. I.
New England Cities (1941).
Vol. II.
Middle Atlantic Cities (1941).
Vol. III. East
North Central Cities
(1941) .
Vol. IV. West North Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. V.
South Atlantic Cities (1941).
Vol. VI. East South
Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. VII. West South
Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. VIII. Mountain Division Cities
(1941).
Vol. IX .
Pacific Cities (1941).
Union Agreement Provisions (1942).
Replaced by Bull. 908 to 908-19, inclusive.
Labor in the Territory of Hawaii, 1939
(1940).
See Bull. 926 this listing or annotation.
Operation of Savings-Bank Life Insurance in
Massachusetts and New York (1941).
Replaces Bull. 615.
Building Permit Survey, 1939.
Vol. I.
New England Cities (1941).
Vol. II.
Middle Atlantic Division
(1942).
Vol. III.
East North Central Cities
(1942).
Vol. IV.
West North Central Cities
(1942).
Vol. V.
South Atlantic Cities (1942)
Vol. VI.
East South Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. VII.
West South Central Cities
(1941).
Vol. VIII. Mountain Division Cities

25

690

691

692

693

694

695

696

697

698
699

(1942).
Vol. IX .
Pacific Cities (1941-42).
See Bull. 545 this listing for annotation.
Labor Laws and Their Administration, 1940.
Proceedings of the Twenty-sixth Convention
of the International Association of Govern­
mental Labor Officials, New York City, Sep­
tember 1940 (1941).
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and
Clerical Workers in Thirteen Small Cities,
1933-35 (1942).
See Bull. 638 this listing for annotation.
Earnings and Hours in the Paperboard In­
dustry (1941).
Embraces essentially the same class of es­
tablishments covered by Bull. 407.
Building Construction, 1940 (1941).
Replaced by Bull. 713. See Bull. 545 this
listing for annotation.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1941.
Vol. I. All Topics Except Wages (1942).
Vol. II. Wages and Wage Regulation
(1942).
See Bull. 1555 this listing for annotation.
Subject Index to the Monthly Labor Review.
Vols. 1 to 11, July 1915 to December 1920
(1941).
Subject Index to the Monthly Labor Review.
Vols. 12 to 51. January 1921 to December
1940 (1942).
Hours and Earnings in the United States,
1932-40 with Supplement for 1941 (1942).
Primarily a statistical presentation of
hours and earnings averages in manufactur­
ing and nonmanufacturing industries by
month and year, from 1932-40. (Similar data
by month for 1941 are presented in the sup­
plement.) Also compares the averages for
1932 and 1940, outlines the general move­
ments during 1932-40, and details changes in
these averages in selected industries and in­
dustry groups. A comprehensive explanation
of the scope and methods utilized in prepar­
ing these data is provided.
Prison Labor in the United States, 1940
(1941).
Changes in Cost of Living in Large Cities in
the United States, 1913-41 (1941).
Presents new indexes of changes in the cost
of living of wage earners and clerical work­
ers in large cities in the United States from

26



700
701

702
703
704
705

706

707
708

709
710

711

1913 to June 1941. Expenditure weights are
derived from a 1934-36 Bureau of Labor
Statistics study showing customary con­
sumption patterns of these groups.
See also Bulls. 710, 966, 1039, 1165, 1256,
1517, and 1554.
Industrial-Injury Statistics by States (1942).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions of
Union Street-Railway Employees, June 1,
1941 (1942).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours in the Glove Industry,
1941 (1942).
Consumers’ Cooperatives in 1941 (1942).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Wage Rates in the California Airframe In­
dustry, 1941 (1942).
Wages and Hours of Union Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, June 1, 1941 (1942).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Wage Structure of the Motor-Vehicle Indus­
try (1942).
Presents the results of a survey of the
motor-vehicle industry immediately before
its complete transition to wartime production
and provides a summary of the industry’s
characteristics. In addition to statistical data
on earnings and hours, the bulletin includes
a discussion of the trend in employment, pay­
rolls, earnings, and hours in the industry from
1923 to 1941.
Retail Prices of Food and Coal, 1941 (1942).
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Condi­
tions in the Printing Trades, June 1, 1941
(1942).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Collective Bargaining in Paper and Allied
Products Industry (1942).
Cost of Living in 1941 (1942).
This bulletin gives cost-of-living indexes
in large cities from the first outbreak of war
in Europe, in the fall of 1939, through United
States entry into the war in December 1941.
See also Bulls. 699, 966, 1039, 1165, 1256,
1517, and 1554.
Strikes in 1941 and Strikes Affecting Defense
Production (1942).
In addition to an analysis of strikes that
occurred during 1941, contains a report on
strikes that interfered with or delayed de­
fense production during the 18-month period

712
713

714

715
716
717
718
719

720
720
-A
-B
721

from June 1940, when the first emergency
legislation was enacted, to December 7, 1941.
See also Bull. 1525 this listing.
Earnings in the Grain-Mill Products Indus­
tries, 1941 (1942).
Building Construction, 1941 (1942).
Replaces Bulls. 668 and 693. See Bull. 545
this listing for annotation.
Report on the Work of the National Defense
Mediation Board, March 19, 1941— January
12, 1942 (1942).
Report prepared by the staff of the NDM B
of the methods used and the results attained
in the handling of the most difficult labor dis­
putes in the period of active preparation for
national defense. In addition to a discussion
of the powers, organization, and practice of
the NDM B, includes a brief report on each
of the 118 cases handled, together with the
full text of all recommendations. An appen­
dix supplied by the Bureau consists of the
applicable Executive orders and other deci­
sions reached after the N D M B ’s work in
these cases was completed. For those con­
cerned with the collective bargaining process
and the relation of government thereto, this
report provides a perceptive account of the
practical problems raised by the combination
of mediatory and recommendatory power of
a vaguely compulsory nature in a tripartite
body without specific statutory authority.
Labor Aspects of the Chicago Milk Industry
(1942).
Collective Bargaining in the Chemical Indus­
try, M ay 1942 (1942).
Incentive-Wage Plans and Collective Bar­
gaining (1942).
Wholesale Prices, January-June 1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Earnings and Hours in M en’s Cotton-Gar­
ment Industries and in Plants Manufacturing
Single Pants Other than Cotton, 1939 and
1941 (1942).
Earnings in the Manufacture of Industrial
Machinery, 1942 (1942).
Earnings in the Manufacture of Industrial
Machinery, 1942 (Pt. 2) (1943).
Earnings in the Manufacture of Industrial
Machinery, 1942 (Pt. 3) (1943).
Labor Laws and Their Administration, 1941.
Proceedings of the Twenty-seventh Conven­




722

723
724
725

726
727
728
729
730

731

732

733
734
735
736

737
738

739

740
741

tion of the International Association of Gov­
ernmental Labor Officials, St. Louis, Septem­
ber 1941 (1943).
Shipyard Injuries and Their Causes, 1941
(1943).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Spending and Saving of the Nation’s Families
in Wartime (1942).
Income and Spending and Saving of City
Families in Wartime (1942).
Consumers’ Cooperation in the United States
in 1941 (1943).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Earnings and Hours in Book and Job Print­
ing, January 1942 (1943).
Hourly Earnings in Private Shipyards, 1942
(1943).
Earnings in Eastern and Midwestern Air­
frame Plants, 1942 (1943).
Wage Structure of the Nonferrous Metals In­
dustry, 1941-42 (1943).
Union Wages and Hours in the Building
Trades, July 1, 1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Wage Rates of Union Street-Railway Em­
ployees, June 1, 1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Wages and Hours of Union Alotortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, June 1, 1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Hourly Entrance Rates Paid to Common La­
borers, 1942 (1943).
Absenteeism
in Commercial
Shipyards
(1943).
Union Wages and Hours in the Baking In­
dustry, June 1, 1942 (1943).
Wholesale Prices, July-December and Year
1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Wages in Rubber Manufacturing Industry,
August 1942 (1943).
Developments in Consumers’ Cooperation in
1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Union AVages and Hours in the Printing
Trades, June 1, 1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Student Cooperatives in the United States,
1941 (1943).
Strikes in 1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.

27

742
743
744
745
746
747

748
749

750

751
752
753
754

755
756
757

758

759
760

Effect of Incentive Payments on Hourly
Earnings (1943).
Vacation and Holiday Provisions in Union
Agreements, January 1943 (1943).
Earnings in Aircraft-Parts Plants, November
1942 (1943).
Union Membership and Collective Bargain­
ing by Foremen (1943).
Wage Stabilization in California Airframe
Industry, 1943 (1943).
Selected List of the Publications of the Bu­
reau of Labor Statistics. 1943 Supplement to
1940 Edition (1943).
Supplements Bull. 683.
Pay Differentials for Night Work Under
Union Agreements (1943).
Wartime Prices— Pt. I, August 1939 to Pearl
Harbor (1944). (Only Pt. I has been pub­
lished.)
History of prices in wholesale (primary)
markets in the United States during the de­
fense period from August 1939 (invasion of
Poland) to December 1941 (Pearl Harbor).
Includes a discussion of factors causing price
advances in this period, the operation of
selective price controls, and a comparison of
price rises in World Wars I and II.
Directory of Consumers’ Cooperatives in the
United States (1943). Reprinted 1947.
Replaced by Bull. 959.
Hours and Earnings in the Fertilizer Indus­
try, January 1943 (1943).
Earnings in Ship Construction Yards, Fall of
1942 (1943).
Maintenance-of-Membership Awards of Na­
tional War Labor Board (1943).
Family Allowances in Various Countries
(1943).
Supplemented by Bull. 803.
Wartime Labor Conditions in India (1943).
Wages in Manufacturing Industries in War­
time (1943).
Activities of Consumers’ Cooperatives in
1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Industrial Injuries in the United States Dur­
ing 1942 (1943).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Wholesale Prices, January-June 1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Union Agreements in the Aluminum-Fabri­

28



761
762
763
764

765
766

767

768

769
770

771

772

cation Industry (1944).
Union Agreements in Agricultural-Machin­
ery Industry, 1943 (1944).
Earnings in Southwestern Petroleum Indus­
try, April 1943 (1944).
Hourly Earnings in Private Ship-Repair
Yards, Spring 1943 (1944).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Long­
shore Industry, 1942 (1944).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Wages in the Nonferrous-Metals Industry,
June 1943 (1944).
Union Wage Rates of City Streetcar and Bus
Operators, July 1, 1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours in the Building
Trades, July 1, 1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Developments in the Cooperative Movement
in 1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Spendable Earnings of Factory Workers,
1941-43 (1944).
Cooperative Associations in Europe and
Their Possibilities for Post-War Reconstruc­
tion (1944).
Discusses the development and extent in
Europe of various types of cooperatives—
consumers’, workers’ productive and labor
associations, credit associations, housing as­
sociations, agricultural associations, etc.—
and their potential role in post-World War
II reconstruction.
Part I provides a comparative analysis of
the cooperative movement in European
countries, including the types of cooperatives,
extent of development, the importance of co­
operatives in the national economy, and the
development of international cooperative or­
ganizations. Part II deals with the formation,
growth, and activities of the cooperative
movement in individual countries. It pro­
vides, in most cases, some historical back­
ground showing how the economic events of
the time, as well as changes in governments
and national boundaries, affected the cooper­
ative movement and helped to speed or retard
its development or alter its direction.
Union Wages and Hours of Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Accident Record Manual for Industrial

773
774
775

776
777
778
779

780
781

782
783
784
785

786

Plants (1944).
Assists plants in establishing and using
effective accident records by suggesting sim­
ple and useful methods of accident recording
and the uses of such data for accident pre­
vention.
Installment Buying by City Consumers in
1941 (1944).
Earnings of Bank Employees, Spring and
Summer of 1943 (1944).
Hourly Entrance Rates of Common Laborers
in Large Cities, Spring and Summer of 1943
(1944).
Extent of Collective Bargaining and Union
Status, January 1944 (1944).
Union Agreements in the Leather-Tanning
Industry, 1943 (1944).
Union Wages and Hours in the Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1943 (1944).
Post-War Capacity and Characteristics of
the Construction Industry (1944).
The productive capacity of the construc­
tion industry in the post-World War II
period is projected in terms of its ability to
meet accumulating wartime demands. Four
types of supply factors governing the indus­
try’s physical capacity for resuming postwar
activities are analyzed: Organization and
methods of operation of the industry, its
plant facilities, supplies of building materials
and related products, and availability of
construction labor.
Arbitration Provisions in Union Agreement
(1944).
Union Wages and Hours in the Printing
Trades, July 1, 1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Strikes in 1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Trend of Earnings Among White-Collar
Workers During the War (1944).
Demobilization
of Manpower,
1918-19
(1944).
Wholesale Prices, July-December and Year
1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
The Construction Industry in the United
States (1944).
Analysis of trends in the construction in­
dustry— expenditures, 1915-43; employment,
1929-43; volume of Federal construction,




787
788
789
790
791

791
-A
792
793
794
795

796

797
798
799
800
801

802

803

804
805

806

1935-43; building construction (257 cities),
1921-43; nonfarm dwelling units, 1910-43;
and private building construction costs,
1934-43.
Wages in Iron Mining, October 1943 (1944).
Wartime Earnings and Spending in Honolu­
lu, 1943 (1944).
Cost of Clothing for Moderate-Income Fam­
ilies, 1935-44 (1944).
Average Hourly Earnings in the Airframe
Industry, 1943 (1944).
Studies of the Effects of Long Working
Hours, Pt. 1 (1944).
See Bull. 917 this listing for annotation.
Studies of the Effects of Long Working
Hours, Pt. 2 (1944).
See Bull. 917 this listing for annotation.
Union Agreements in the Airframe Industry,
1944 (1944).
Intercity Variations in Wage Levels (1944).
Union Agreements in the Canned Fruit and
Vegetable Industry (1944).
Labor Laws and Their Administration, 1943.
Proceedings of the Twenty-eighth Conven­
tion of the International Association of Gov­
ernmental Labor Officials, Chicago, October
1943 (1945).
Operations of Consumers’ Cooperatives in
1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Activities of Credit Unions in 1943 (1944).
Earnings in Cotton-Goods Manufacture
During the War Years (1944).
Retail Prices of Food, 1942 and 1943 (1945).
Wartime Development of the Aircraft Indus­
try (1944).
Wages in Department and Clothing Stores,
Large Cities, Spring and Summer, 1943
(1944) .
Work Injuries in the United States During
1943 (1944).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Mid-War Developments in Civilian Family
Allowances (1944).
Supplements Bull. 754.
Reconversion Problems in the Buffalo In­
dustrial Area (1945).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Foundry
Industry, 1942 (1945).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Wages in the Rayon Industry, May 1944
(1945) .

29

807
808
809
810
811
812

813
814

815

816
817

818
819
820

821

822
823
824
825
826
827
828

Improvement of Labor-Utilization Proce­
dures (1945).
Dismissal Pay Provisions in Union Agree­
ments, December 1944 (1945).
Trends in Urban Wage Rates, April-October
1944 (1945).
Wages in Petroleum Drilling and Production
in the Southwest, April 1944 (1945).
Paid Vacations in American Industry, 1943
and 1944 (1945).
Union Wages and Hours of Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Employment Opportunities for Diesel-En­
gine Mechanics (1945).
Union Wage Rates of City Streetcar and Bus
Operators, July 1, 1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours in the Building
Trades, July 1, 1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours in the Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1944 (1945).
Occupational Data for Counselors. A Hand­
book of Census Information Selected for Use
in Guidance (1945).
Effect of War-Contract Cut-Backs on Select­
ed Plants (1945).
Average Hourly Earnings in the Explosives
Industry, June 1944 (1945).
Union Wages and Hours in the Printing
Trades, July 1, 1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Developments in Consumers’ Cooperative
Movement in 1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Family Spending and Saving in Wartime
(1945).
Union Agreements in the Petroleum-Refining
Industry in Effect in 1944 (1945).
Wartime Employment, Production, and Con­
ditions of Work in Shipyards (1945).
Probable Volume of Postwar Construction
(1945).
Impact of the War on Employment in 181
Centers of War Activity (1945).
Hourly Earnings in the Ammunition-Loading
Industry, 1944 (1945).
Guaranteed-Employment and Annual-Wage
Provisions in Union Agreements, Effective
January 1945 (1945).

30



829
830
831

832
833
834
835
836

837
-1
-2

838
839

840

Extent of Collective Bargaining and Union
Status, January 1945 (1945).
Annual and Hourly Earnings, Philadelphia
Knitted-Outerwear Industry, 1943 (1945).
Fact Finding Activities of the Bureau of La­
bor Statistics (1945).
The BLS has compiled and made available
a substantial volume of materials on employ­
ment, wages, working conditions, prices, and
other subjects which are directly pertinent to
many of the Nation’s economic problems.
This bulletin describes the more important
types of information compiled by the Bureau,
their characteristics, uses and limitations,
and the forms in which they are available.
Sick-Leave Provisions in Union Agreements
(1945).
Strikes and Lockouts in 1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Shipyard Injuries, 1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Postwar Employment Prospects for Women
in the Hosiery Industry (1945).
Labor Unionism in American Agriculture
(1945).
A graphic study of the origin, development,
problems, and accomplishments of agricul­
tural unionism in the United States. Analyzes
the combination of circumstances that gave
rise to organized labor-employer conflicts in
agriculture; the types of farming and the
changes in farm structure and labor relations
that tended to generate such conflict; the is­
sues in farm labor disputes; the tactics of
group pressure and combat employed by con­
tending groups; reactions of community
groups to farm labor unions and strikes and
the degree to which their reactions were in­
fluenced or determined by economic, cultural,
social, and politico-legal considerations.
Employment Opportunities in Aviation Occupations, Pt. 1. Postwar Employment Out­
look (1945).
Employment Opportunities in Aviation Oc­
cupations, Pt. 2. Duties, Qualifications,
Earnings, and Working Conditions (1947).
Wartime Food Purchases (1945).
Fatal Work Injuries in Shipyards, 1943 and
1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Wages in the Basic Lumber Industry in the

841

842
843

844
845
846
847
848
849

850
851
852
853
854
855

856

857
858

859

860

Far West, 1944 (1945).
H ealth-B enefit Program s Established
Through Collective Bargaining, 1945 (1945).
Description of provisions in some of the
more representative types of collectively bar­
gained health-benefit plans in various indus­
tries. See also Bull. 900 this listing.
Employment Outlook for Automobile M e­
chanics (1945).
Operations of Consumers’ Cooperatives in
1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Employment Opportunities for Welders
(1945) .
Income From Wages and Salaries in the
Postwar Period (1945).
Trends in Urban Wage Rates, October 1944
to April 1945 (1945).
Union Agreements in the Tobacco Industry,
January 1945 (1945).
Earnings and Wage Practices in Municipal
Governments of 15 Cities, 1944 (1945).
Work Injuries in the United States During
1944 (1945).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Activities of Credit Unions in 1944 (1945).
Wartime Prices, Price Control, and Ration­
ing in Foreign Countries (1946).
War and Postwar Wages, Prices, and Hours,
1914-23 and 1939-44 (1946).
Family Allowances in Various Countries,
1944-45 (1946).
w - '" ^ in the Basic Lumber Industry, 1944
(1946) .
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Slaugh­
tering and Meat-Packing Industry, 1943
(1946).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Union Wage Rates of City Streetcar and Bus
Operators, July 1, 1945 (1946).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Impaired Workers in Industry (1946).
Organization and Management of Coopera­
tive and Mutual Housing Associations
(1946).
Replaces Bull. 608.
Development in Consumers’ Cooperative
Movement in 1945 (1946).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Trends in Urban Wage Rates, April to Octo­
ber 1945 (1946).




861
862

863
864
865

866
867
868
869
870
871
872

873
874

875
876
877
878

879
880
881
882
883
884

Wage Structure in the Machinery Industries,
January 1945 (1946).
Union Wages and Hours in the Building
Trades, July 1, 1945 (1946).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Postwar Outlook for Physicians (1946).
Employment Situation in Certain Foreign
Countries (1946).
Extent of Collective Bargaining and Union
Recognition, 1945 (1946).
Wage Structure of the Fabricated StructuralSteel Industry, January 1945 (1946).
Wage Structure in Bituminous-Coal Mining,
Fall of 1945 (1946).
Wage Structure of the Machine-Tool Acces­
sories Industry, January 1945 (1946).
Workmen’s Compensation and the Protection
of Seamen (1946).
Wholesale Prices, 1944 (1947).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours in the Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1945 (1946).
Union Wages and Hours in the Printing
Trades, July 1, 1945 (1946).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Price Trends and Price Control in Foreign
Countries Since VE-D ay (1946).
Union Wages and Hours of Motortruck
Drivers and Helpers, July 1, 1945 (1946).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Wage Structure of Electroplating and Polish­
ing Industry, January 1945 (1946).
Workers’ Experiences During First Phase of
Reconversion (1946).
Wholesale Prices, 1945 (1947).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Work Stoppages Caused by Labor-Manage­
ment Disputes in 1945 (1946).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
The General Maximum Price Regulation
(1946).
Employment Outlook in Foundry Occupa­
tions (1946).
Factors Affecting Earnings in Chemistry and
Chemical Engineering (1946).
The Changing Status of Bituminous Coal
Miners, 1937-46 (1946).
Wartime Wages, Income, and Wage Regula­
tion in Agriculture (1946).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Brewing
Industry, 1944 (1946).

31

885
886
887

888
-1
-2

-3
889

890

891
892
893
894
895
896
897
898

See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Union Agreements in the Cotton Textile In­
dustry (1947).
Wages of Office Workers in Metalworking
Industries, January 1945 (1946).
Employment and Earnings in the Philadel­
phia Knitted-Outerwear Industry, 1944 and
1945 (1947).
Labor Requirements for Construction Materials. Pt. I— Portland Cement (1947).
Labor Requirements for Construction Mate­
rials. Pt. II— Concrete Masonry Units
(1947).
Labor Requirements for Construction M ate­
rials. Pt. I l l — Concrete Pipe (1947).
Work Injuries in the United States During
1945 (1947).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Operations of Consumers’ Cooperatives in
1945 (1947).
See Bull. 1249 this listing for annotation.
Trends in Urban Wage Rates, April 1946
(1946).
Employment Outlook for Business Machine
Servicemen (1947).
State and Regional Variations in Prospective
Labor Supply (1947).
Activities of Credit Unions in 1945 (1947).
Employment Outlook in Machine Shop Oc­
cupations (1947).
Nonprofit Housing Projects in the United
States (1947).
Collective Bargaining With Associations and
Groups of Employers (1947).
Labor in the South (1947).
An analysis of selected basic factors af­
fecting labor in Southern States. Key popu­
lation, migration, and labor force character­
istics and the rise of industry in the South
are examined to provide a broad base for
understanding the position of labor in the
region. Income trends and levels, wage levels
and wage differentials, and changes in con­
sumer prices are analyzed to provide insight
into the relative economic position of the
Southern industrial worker and of other seg­
ments of the Southern population. Efforts by
Southern workers to improve their economic
position are traced in the development of the
trade union and consumers’ cooperative
movements in the South. In addition, the

32



899
900

901

902
903

904

905
906

907

study appraises the impact of the Fair Labor
Standards Act on Southern industries and
workers, describes the operation of the oldage and survivors insurance and unemploy­
ment insurance programs of the Social Secur­
ity Act, and presents principal provisions of
protective labor legislation enacted in South­
ern States.
Retail Prices of Food, 1944 and 1945 (1947).
Union Health and Welfare Plan (1947).
Describes (1) development and interest in,
and outlook for, health and welfare plans
and (2) experience of the International La­
dies’ Garment Workers’ Union (A FL). Sam­
ple welfare clauses provided in specific agree­
ments and a description of trade unions’ his­
torical interest in health and welfare plans
also are included. See also Bull. 841 this
listing.
Directory of Labor Unions in the United
States, 1947 (1947).
Replaced by Bull. 1493. See this listing for
annotation.
Employment Outlook in Printing Occupa­
tions (1947).
Union Wages and Hours of Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1946 (1947).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Developments in Consumers’ Cooperative
Movement in 1946 (1947).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook in Hotel Occupations
(1947).
Appendix C. Guaranteed Wage or Employ­
ment Plans (1947).
See also Bulls. 544, 907, and 925 this
listing.
Appendix F. Economic Analysis of Guaran­
teed Wages (1947).
Economic analysis of the potential effects
of guaranteed wage plans on the economy,
and the relation of guaranteed wages to eco­
nomic security, business cycles, and the use
of resources. The analysis, which was de­
signed to supplement the description of guar­
anteed wage plans in Bull. 906, was prepared
as a supplement to the Guaranteed Wage
Study Staff’s Final Report to the Advisory
Board of the Office of War Mobilization and
Reconversion. Comments on the analysis by
other eminent economists are included.

908

908
-2
-3

-4
-5

-6
-7

-8
-9
-10

-11
-12

-13
-14
-15
-16
-17
-18

See also Bulls. 544, 906, and 925 this list­
ing.
Union-Security Provisions in Collective Bar­
gaining (1947).
Replaces Bull. 686.
This bulletin, and those that follow (908-2
to 908-19, inch), reproduce a variety of sam­
ple union-management agreement provisions,
each stressing a major area or significant
problem in collective bargaining. Bull. 90817 includes texts of selected health, welfare,
and pension plans in addition to sample
clauses concerning these subjects.
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Vacations;
Holidays and Week-End Work (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Incentive
Wage Provisions; Time Studies and Stand­
ards of Production (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Appren­
tices and Learners (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Discharge,
Discipline, and Quits; Dismissal Pay Provi­
sions (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Leave of
Absence; Military Service Leave (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Promotion,
Transfer, and Assignment; Lay-off, WorkSharing, Reemployment (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. General
Wage Provisions (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Wage Ad­
justment Plans (1948).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. UnionManagement Cooperation, Plant Efficiency,
and Technological Change (1949).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Seniority
(1949).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Union and
Management Functions, Rights, and Respon­
sibilities (1949).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Strikes and
Lock-Outs; Contract Enforcement (1949).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Safety,
Health, and Sanitation (1949).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Guaran­
teed Employment and Wage Plans (1950).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Grievance
and Arbitration Provisions (1950).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Health, In­
surance, and Pensions (1950).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Hours of




-19

909
910

911

912

913

914
915

916

917

Work; Overtime Pay; Shift Operations
(1950).
Collective Bargaining Provisions. Preamble,
Scope of Bargaining Unit. Duration of
Agreements (1950).
Extent of Collective Bargaining and Union
Recognition, 1946 (1947).
Union Wages and Hours in the Building
Trades, July 1, 1946 (1947).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours of Motortruck
Drivers and Helpers, July 1, 1946 (1948).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours in the Printing
Trades, July 1, 1946 (1947).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Summary of Proceedings of Conference on
Productivity, October 28-29, 1946 (1947).
Summarizes and evaluates a Conference on
Productivity held in Washington, D.C., on
October 28 and 29, 1946, under the auspices
of the Bureau of Labor Statistics and the D i­
vision of Statistical Standards of the U.S.
Bureau of the Budget. The conference was
convened as a forum for the exchange of
views on productivity concepts and measure­
ments by participants from labor, industry,
private research groups, and government
agencies.
Union Wages and Hours in the Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1946 (1948).
Construction in the War Years, 1942-45.
Employment, Expenditures, and Building
Volume (1948).
Shows trends in construction activity, par­
ticularly during the 4 years of World War II.
In addition to an analysis of the effects of
war on the construction industry, this report
resumes the annual publication of a statisti­
cal bulletin (on construction expenditures,
employment, and building volume), inter­
rupted in 1944 by wartime pressures.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1947 Edition
(1948).
See Bull. 1555 this listing for annotation.
Hours of Work and Output (1948).
A comprehensive report, based on 78 plant
case studies, showing the effects of working
schedules longer than 8 hours a day or 40
hours a week on absenteeism, efficiency, workinjuries, and output. Includes study of the
effects of the introduction of wage incentives

33

918

919
920
921

922

923
924

G25

926

927

928

on output and a comparison of worker per­
formance before, during, and after World
War II. The description of the case studies
in this report is limited to statements of es­
sentials only.
Work Stoppages Caused by Labor-Manage­
ment Disputes in 1946 (1947).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Labor Requirements to Produce Home Insu­
lation (1947).
Wholesale Prices, 1946 (1948).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Work Injuries in the United States During
1946 (1948).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Consumers’ Cooperatives and Credit Unions:
Operations in 1946 (1948).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
The Performance of Physically Impaired
Workers in Manufacturing Industries (1948).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Pulpwood-Logging Industry, 1943 and 1944
(1948).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Guaranteed Wage Plans in the United States
(1948).
Exhaustive study of guaranteed wage and
employment plans in the United States, in­
cluding their historical development, extent,
and characteristics; detailed analysis of ex­
periences under a selected group of 62 repre­
sentative plans; and compilation of sample
guarantee provisions found in guarantee
plans or union agreements. Major portions of
this report appeared as Bull. 906. See also
Bulls. 544, 906, and 907 this listing.
The Economy of Hawaii in 1947 (1948).
Report on the economy of Hawaii and the
effect of World War II on the economic de­
velopment of the territory. To reflect transi­
tion from primitive self-sufficient economy to
modern specialized economy, a detailed anal­
ysis is presented of major industries in the
Islands, including sugar, pineapple, and tour­
ism. For similar studies covering earlier pe­
riods, see Bulls. 47, 534, and 687.
Workers’ Budgets in the United States: City
Families and Single Persons, 1946 and 1947
(1948).
See Bull. 1021 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­

34



929
930

931
932

933

934
935

936
937

938
939

940

941

ers and Helpers, July 1, 1947 (1948).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook in the Plastics Industry
(1948).
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1947 (1948).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
The Economic Status of Registered Profes­
sional Nurses, 1946-47 (1948).
Developments in the Consumers’ Cooperative
Movement in 1947 (1948).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours:
Local-Transit
Operating Employees, October 1, 1947
(1948).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Wage Trends and Wage Policies: Various
Foreign Countries (1948).
Work Stoppages Caused by Labor-Manage­
ment Disputes in 1947 (1948).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: The Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1947 (1948).
Directory of Labor Unions in the United
States, 1948 (1948).
Replaced by Bull. 1493. See this listing for
annotation.
Retail Prices of Food, 1946 and 1947 (1949).
Supplementary Wage Practices in American
Industry, 1945-46 (1948).
Presents summary information on each of
six types of supplementary wage practices
(vacation and sick leave plans, shift differ­
entials, nonproduction bonuses, incentive
methods of pay, insurance and pension plans,
and wage-rate structure) in the manufactur­
ing and nonmanufacturing industries sur­
veyed by the Bureau of Labor Statistics dur­
ing 1945-46.
Occupational Outlook Handbook (1949).
Replaced by Bull. 1550. See this listing for
annotation.
Construction and Housing, 1946-47 (1948).
An account of the post-World War II re­
vival of the construction industry, presented
through an analysis of data showing the
shifts and trends in construction activity and
employment in this period and a brief inter­
pretation of the factors underlying these de­
velopments. The text deals in some detail
with the progress of postwar housing con-

struction, relating the developments in activ­
ity to economic and regulatory changes.
Cooperatives in Postwar Europe. Survey of
942
Developments in Scandinavian Countries
and Eastern, Central, and Western Europe
(1948).
Brings information in Bull. 770 up to 1945
(and to 1946 for some countries).
Salaries of Office Workers in Selected Large
943
Cities (1949).
Employment Outlook in Electric Light and
944
Power Occupations (1949).
Work Injuries in the United States During
945
1947 (1949).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Employee Benefit Plans Under Collective
946
Bargaining (1949).
Wholesale Prices, 1947 (1949).
947
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Consumers’
Cooperatives:
Operations in
948
1947 (1949).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Injuries and Accident Causes in Fertilizer
949
Manufacturing (1949).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Residential Heating Fuels. Retail Prices,
950
1941-48. Data for Nine Locally Important
Fuels in 55 Cities (1949).
Union Wages and Hours in the Building
951
Trades, July 1, 1948 (1949).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
952
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries,
1945 (1949).
953
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected
Wage Areas, September 1947-September
1948 (1949).
954
Union Wages and Hours: The Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1948 (1949).
955
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1948 (1949).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Family Income, Expenditures, and Savings
956
in 1945. Birmingham, Ala., Indianapolis,
Ind., and Portland, Oreg. (1949).
957
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit Op­
erating Employees, October 1, 1948 (1949).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook in Radio and Televi­
958
sion Broadcasting Occupations (1949).
959
Directory of Consumers’ Cooperatives in the
United States (1949).
Replaces Bull. 750.,




960
-1
-2

-3

-4

961
962

963

964

965
966

967

Contains a key to the kinds of business ac­
tivities conducted by the individual consumer
cooperative associations as well as a list, by
States and cities, of the names and addresses
of the various associations.
Salaries of Office Workers in Large Cities,
1949. Pt. I. Hartford, Los Angeles, New Or­
leans, Philadelphia, St. Louis (1949).
Salaries of Office Workers in Large Cities,
1949. Pt. II. Atlanta, Boston, Chicago, New
York, Seattle (1949).
Salaries of Office Workers in Large Cities,
1949. Pt. IIL Cleveland, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Portland, Oreg., Richmond (1949).
Salaries of Office Workers in Large Cities,
1949. Pt. IV. Cincinnati, Dallas, Washington,
D.C. (1950).
Employment Outlook in Railroad Occupa­
tions (1949).
Injuries and Accident Causes in Textile D ye­
ing and Finishing (1949).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Work Stoppages Caused by Labor-Manage­
ment Disputes in 1948 (1949).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Developments in Consumers’ Co-ops in 1948
(1949).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Retail Prices of Food, 1948 (1949).
Consumers’ Prices in the United States,
1942-48 (1949).
Detailed compilation of retail price data
collected for the Consumer Price Index in
the period 1942-48, as well as historical price
data back to 1935. Analyzes price movements
at the consumer level during World War II
and up to 1948, with particular reference to
the effects of price controls. Compares price
changes in large cities with those in small
cities and discusses price movements for
major commodity groups. Contains a detailed
account of the Bureau of Labor Statistics,
wartime pricing policies and of the revisions
in its pricing techniques necessitated by the
war, as well as of certain postwar adjust­
ments of the Index procedures. See also Bulls.
699, 710, 1039, 1165, 1256, 1517, and 1554.
Employment Outlook in the Building Trades
(1949).

968

Employment Outlook for Engineers (1950).

969

Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage

35

970

970
-2
971

972
973
974
975

976

977
978

979

980

981

982

Areas, September 1948-January 1949 (1949).
The Wage Chronology Series, Vol. I. Ameri­
can Woolen Co., 1939-48; Northern Cotton
Textile Associations, 1943-48; United States
Steel Corp., 1937-48; Bituminous-Coal Mines,
1933-48; Chrysler Corp., 1939-48; Armour
and Co., 1941-48; Swift & Co., 1942-48; FullFashioned Hosiery, 1941-48 (1949).
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
The Wage Chronology Series, Vol. II. General Motors Corp., 1939-40 (1949).
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Consumers’ Cooperatives:
Operations in
1948. A Report on Membership, Business,
and Operating Results (1949).
See Bull. 1049 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook for Elementary and
Secondary School Teachers (1949).
Wholesale Prices, 1948 (1950).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected
Wage Areas, June-December 1947 (1949).
Work Injuries in the United States During
1948 (1950).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1949 (1950).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: The Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1949 (1950).
Union Wages and Hours:
Motortruck
Drivers and Helpers, July 1, 1949 (1950).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Industry,
January 2, 1948, and July 1, 1949 (1950).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Directory of Labor Unions in the United
States, 1950 (1950).
Replaced by Bull. 1493. See this listing for
annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit Op­
erating Employees, October 1, 1949 (1950).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Public Social Security Programs in the
United States, 1949-50 (1950).
Summary information on the operations of
the public social security programs. De­
scribes provisions, operating experience, fi­
nancing, and other aspects of old-age and
survivors insurance, unemployment insur­
ance, and public-assistance programs.

36



983
984
985
986

987

988

989

990

991
992

993

994
995

996
997

998

999

1000

Glossary of Currently Used Wage Terms
(1950).
Construction, 1948 in Review (1950).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, November 1949 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Atlanta, Ga., Janu­
ary 1950 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Indianapolis, Ind.,
January 1950 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Memphis, Tenn.,
February 1950 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Oklahoma
City,
Okla., February 1950 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Milwaukee, Wis.,
January 1950 (1950).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, January 1950 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Boston, Mass., Jan­
uary 1950 (1950).
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statis­
tical Series (1950).
Replaced by Bull. 1168.
Employment Outlook in Petroleum Produc­
tion and Refining (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Chicago, 111., Feb­
ruary 1950 (1950).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1950 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. New York, N.Y.,
February 1950 (1950).
Occupational Outlook Handbook (1951).
Replaced by Bull. 1550. See this listing for
annotation.
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Detroit, Mich.,
April 1950 (1950).
Brief History of the American Labor M ove­
ment, 1957 revision (1957). 35^.
A pocket-sized history of the American
labor movement. Summarizes the develop­
ment of the early organizations of labor and
the modern organized labor movement
(American Federation of Labor and the Con­

1001

1002

1003

1004

1005
1006

1007
1008
1009

gress of Industrial Organizations) and traces
the course of labor events during World War
I, the “ open shop” era of the twenties, the
depressed thirties, and through World War II
and postwar labor-management conflict and
readjustment. A special feature is a chronol­
ogy of events of importance to labor, 17781957. This publication revises a 1951 bulletin
of the same number.
Tables of Working Life. Length of Working
Life for Men (1950).
A study of the length and pattern of work­
ing life of men in the United States. The re­
port describes a significant and pioneering
development in the techniques for analyzing
the dynamics of the labor force. It contains
a brief description of the pattern of working
life, differentials by color and residence, and
the application of the tables to analysis of
old-age dependency, labor force, and occupa­
tional outlook data.
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Los Angeles, Calif.,
March 1950 (1950).
Analysis of Work Stoppages During 1949
(1950).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Work Injuries in Construction, 1948-49
(1950).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage
Areas, April 1949 to November 1949 (1950).
Office Workers. Salaries, Hours of Work,
Supplementary Benefits. Providence, R.I.,
June 1950 (1950).
Wholesale Prices, 1949 (1951).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, M ay 1950 (1950).
Problems and Policies of Dispute Settlement
and Wage Stabilization During World War
II (1950).
An appraisal of major policy decisions
made by the Government to meet the threat
to production involved in industrial disputes
and skyrocketing wage levels, from the time
the Nation began to arm in 1940 until the
end of general price and wage controls in
1947. Analyzes the operations of the National
Defense Mediation Board, the National War
Labor Board, and the National Wage Sta­




bilization Board. The problems encountered
and objectives sought by these agencies are
reviewed in the light of the equally important
problems of efficient manpower allocation.
1010 Employment Outlook in M en’s Tailored
Clothing Industry (1951).
1011 LTnion Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1950 (1951).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
1012 Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1950 (1951).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
1013 Consumers’ Cooperatives in 1949: Opera­
tions and Developments (1951).
See Bulls. 1049 and 1211 this listing for
annotation.
1014 Union Wages and Hours: The Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1950 (1951).
1015 Wage Structure, Motor Vehicles and Parts,
1950. Hourly Earnings and Supplementary
Wage Practices (1951).
1016 Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed.
(1951) and 1951 supp. G953).
Replaced by Bull. 1555. See this listing
for annotation.
1017 Employee-Benefit Plans Under Collective
Bargaining, Mid-1950 (1951).
1018 Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1950 (1951).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
1019 Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, October 1, 1950
(1951).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
1020 Employment Outlook in Department Stores
(1951).
1021 Family Budget of City Workers. October
1950 (1951).
Presents estimated dollar costs of a hypo­
thetical budget for urban families in 34 cities
in October 1949 and October 1950. The
budget was designed to describe a modest but
adequate standard of living for an urban
worker’s family of four persons. Compares esti­
mated costs of the budget in 1949 and 1950
with the cost in June 1947. For estimates of
total budget costs and costs of subgroups of
items at March 1946 and June 1947 price
levels, see Bull. 927.
1022 Labor-Management Contract Provisions,
1949-50. Prevalence and Characteristics of

37

Selected Collective Bargaining Clauses
(1951).
1023 Injuries and Accident Causes in the Manu­
facture of Clay Construction Products
(1951).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
1024 Organization and Management of Consum­
ers’ Cooperatives (1951).
Replaces Bulls. 598 and 665.
Suggests appropriate methods and pro­
cedures and the basic information necessary
for successful organization and management
of consumers’ cooperative associations and
buying clubs. The report includes discussions
of preliminary organization efforts, content
of charter and bylaws, considerations involv­
ing membership and the election of directors
and officers, business methods and practices,
financial requirements, and accounting prac­
tices.
For special reports on organization and
management of gasoline and oil, and housing
associations, See Subject Index under Co­
operatives, consumer.
See also annotations for Bulls. 1049 and
1211.
1025 Work Injuries in the United States During
1949 (1951).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
1026 Elements of Soviet Labor Law (1951).
A significant contribution to critical anal­
ysis of the Soviet economy, relating to the
period between 1920 and 1951. Through
textual use of laws, decrees, and official pro­
nouncements, this study (1) demonstrates
the punitive character of Soviet labor law as
it applied to the Soviet equivalent of “ free”
labor, and (2) describes the creation of con­
ditions for industrial conflict through pres­
sures on management and workers, the de­
terioration of the trade unions, and the
collapse of collective bargaining. It also in­
cludes an account of Soviet labor policies
that (1) have caused loss of freedom on the
job ; (2) subjected the determination of
wages and hours of work to severe govern­
ment restriction; (3) provided for financial
responsibility of workers for damages to the
employer caused by the workers; and (4)
established conscript labor of youth.
1027 Employment, Education and Earnings of

38



American Men of Science (1951).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, Calif., January 1951 (1951).
1029 Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, January 1951 (1951).
1030 Developments in Consumers’ Cooperatives in
1950 (1951).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
1031 Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, March 1951 (1951).
1032 Retail Prices of Food, 1949 (1951).
1033 Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, March 1951 (1951).
1034 Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1951 (1951).
1035 Analysis of Work Stoppages During 1950
(1951).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
1036 Injuries and Accident Causes in the Manu­
facture of Pulp and Paper (1952).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
1037 Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1951 (1951).
1038 Labor-Management Relations in Scandi­
navia (1952).
1039 Interim Adjustment of Consumers’ Price In­
dex (1952).
Detailed description of the interim im­
provements in the Consumers’ Price Index
(in advance of the comprehensive 3-year pro­
gram for modernization of the Index com­
pleted in January 1953). Interim improve­
ments included revision of city population
and commodity weights, correction of the
new unit bias in the rent index, and addition
of new items. See also Bulls. 699, 710, 966,
1165, 1256, 1517, and 1554 this listing.
1040 Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage
Areas, January 1950 to January 1951 (1951).
1041 Occupational Wage Survey, Dayton, Ohio,
June 1951 (1951).
1042 Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Ore­
gon, June 1951 (1951).
1043 Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
June 1951 (1951).
1044 Occupational Wage Survey, Bridgeport, Con­
necticut, June 1951 (1951).
1045 Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, June 1951 (1952).
1046 Productivity Trends in Selected Industries,
Indexes Through 1950 (1951).
1028

Summarizes the statistics regularly present­
ed in individual industry productivity reports
issued regularly by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. (The individual reports contain
analyses of the factors causing changes
in output per man-hour and unit man-hour
requirements, as well as more detailed statis­
tics and information on the methods used in
computing these indexes.) In addition to
current changes in productivity, historical
trends covering the last decade are presented
for most industries. Technical notes explain­
ing the methods used in computing the in­
dexes are included for each of the 35 indus­
tries and industry groups covered in this
report. The report contains 95 series on out­
put per worker and per man-hour, as well as
many series on production, employment,
man-hours, and labor requirements per unit
of output.
1047 Construction. Annual Review, 1950 (1951).
Incorporates comprehensive listings of ref­
erence aids in the field of construction, in­
cluding: (1) articles describing methods of
preparing the statistical series appearing in
the Bureau’s monthly publication, Construc­
tion; (2) feature articles in Construction,
1949-50; and (3) published sources of con­
tinuous historical data on construction, cov­
ering leading series compiled by the Bureau
of Labor Statistics and the Bureau of Ap­
prenticeship.
1048 Employment Outlook in Accounting (1952).
1049 Consumers’ Cooperatives: Operations in
1950 (1952).
A report on membership, business, and
operating results of consumer cooperatives
in 1950, by the various types of cooperatives.
Earlier bulletins in this series (313, 437, 531,
612, 659, 725, 757, 796, 843, 890, 922, 948,
971, and 1013) contain similar information.
The information presented includes esti­
mates of membership and business of the
consumer cooperatives by type of associa­
tion, local and federated. The reports also
show the amount of distributive and service
business, earnings, and patronage refunds of
cooperative wholesales; operating expenses
of farm and nonfarm consumers’ coopera­
tives; the value of goods produced by the
productive associations; and employment




1050
1051

1052

1053
1054
1055
1056
1057
1058
1059
1060
1061

1962

1063
1064
1065

1066
1067

and earnings in local and central coopera­
tives.
See also Bulls. 1024 and 1211 this listing.
For special reports on operations of Credit
Unions, see Subject Index under Coopera­
tives, consumer.
Employment Outlook for Earth Scientists
(1952).
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1951 (1952).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck
Drivers and Helpers, July 1, 1951 (1952).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: The Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1951 (1952).
Employment Outlook in the Merchant M a­
rine (1952).
Retail Prices of Food, 1950 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
October 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash­
ington, September 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Richmond, Vir­
ginia, October 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Hartford, Con­
necticut, October 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, October 1951 (1952).
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, October 1, 1951
(1952).
See Bull 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1951 (1952).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Collective Bargaining in the Meat-Packing
Industry (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri, October 1951 (1952).
Family Income, Expenditures, and Savings in
10 Cities. 1946: Savannah, Ga., Scranton,
Pa., Milwaukee, W is.; 1947: Manchester,
N.H., Richmond, Va., Washington, D.C.;
1948: Denver, Colo., Detroit, Mich., Hous­
ton, Tex.; 1949: Memphis, Tenn. (1952).
See also Bull. 1097.
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, November 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten-

39

1068
1069
1070
1071
1072
1073

1074
1075
1076
1077
1078
1079

1080

1081
1082
1083
1084
1085
1086
1087
1088

1089
1090

nessee, November 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, November 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Salt Lake City,
Utah, December 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Oklahoma City,
Okla., October 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Providence,
Rhode Island, December 1951 (1952).
Employment Outlook in Electronics Manu­
facturing (1952).
Developments in Consumers’ Cooperatives in
1951 (1952).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, December 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Indianapolis, In­
diana, December 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Worcester, M as­
sachusetts, January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Scranton, Penn­
sylvania, December 1951 (1952).
Injuries and Accident Causes in Plumbing
Operations (1952).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Subject Index of Volumes 52-71, Monthly
Labor Review, January 1941 to December
1950 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark-Jersey
City, New Jersey, November 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, November 1951 (1952).
Wholesale Prices, 1950 (1952).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Occupational Wage Survey, Houston, Texas,
January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, M ich­
igan, December 1951 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Rochester, New
York, January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Norfolk-Portsmouth (Hampton Roads), Virginia, Febru­
ary 1952 (1952).
Collective Bargaining, Radio, Television, and
Electronics Industry (1952).
Analysis of Work Stoppages During 1951
(1952).

40



1091

1092

1093
1094
1095
1096
1097

1098

1099
1100

1101
1102
1103
1104
1105
1106
1107

See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions,
1950-51. Prevalence and Characteristics of
Selected Collective Bargaining Clauses
(1952).
Employment and Economic Status of Older
Men and Women (1952).
Revised by Bull. 1213. See this listing for
annotation.
Cooperative Housing in the United States,
1949 and 1950 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los Angeles,
California, January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, M is­
souri, January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cincinnati, Ohio,
February 1952 (1952).
Family Income, Expenditures, and Savings
in 1950, Revised June 1953 (1953).
Replaces earlier bulletin of same number.
Work Injuries in the United States During
1950 (1952).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee, W is­
consin, March 1952 (1952).
Labor and the Savannah River AEC Project.
I. Manpower and Wages; II. Unionization
and Industrial Relations; III. Housing and
Changes in Population; IV. Community
Facilities and Social Changes (1952).
An examination of the effects upon the sur­
rounding communities of the construction of
the Savannah River atomic energy (“ HBomb” ) project in South Carolina. The study
assesses the impact of the sudden influx of a
new labor force upon the communities in sev­
eral major problem areas.
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, January 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, March 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Phoenix, Ari­
zona, March 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Trenton, New
Jersey, March 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
March 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, April 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, April 1952 (1952).

1108
1109
1110
1111

1112
1113
1114

1115

1116
1116
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10

Occupational Wage Survey, Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, March 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Columbus, Ohio,
April 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jacksonville,
Florida, M ay 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, AllentownBethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania, M ay 1952
(1952).
Occupational Wage Survey, Louisville, Ken­
tucky, M ay 1952 (1952).
Wages and Related Benefits. 40 Labor M ar­
kets, 1951-52 (1952).
Case Studies in Union Leadership Training,
1951-52 (1952).
Presents 5 case studies of union-sponsored
educational programs as an aid to under­
standing the directions toward which organ­
ized labor is moving. The particular labor
organizations studied— AFL Ladies’ Gar­
ment Workers; AFL papermaking unions;
White-Collar Workshop of the American La­
bor Education Service; AFL Machinists;
and the CIO— were found to be attempting
to train the members of their organizations
for positions of leadership in the labor move­
ment of the future.
New Housing in Metropolitan Areas, 194951 (1952).
See also Bull. 1231.
Wages and Related Benefits, 20 Labor M ar­
kets, 1952-53 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Dallas, Texas,
August 1952 (1952).
Occupational Wage Survey. Portland, Ore­
gon, September 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Cleveland, Ohio,
October 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Kansas City,
Missouri, October 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, October 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Baltimore,
Maryland, October 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, November 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Denver, Colo­
rado, November 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Providence,




-11
-12
-13
-14
-15
-16
-17
-18
-19
-20

1117
1118

1119

1120

1121

Rhode Island, December 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Newark-Jersey
City, New Jersey, November 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. St. Louis, Mis­
souri, December 1952 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Los Angeles,
California, February 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Chicago, Illinois,
March 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. New York, New
York, February 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Boston, Massa­
chusetts, March 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Atlanta, Geor­
gia, March 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Milwaukee, Wis­
consin, April 1953 (1953).
Occupational Wage Survey. Buffalo, New
York (Erie and Niagara Counties), April
1953 (1953).
Federal White-Collar Workers— Their Occu­
pations and Salaries, June 1951 (1953).
Injuries and Accident Causes in Carpentry
Operations (1953).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Negroes in the United States: Their Em­
ployment and Economic Status (1953).
A description of recent national trends in
the employment and income status of Negro
men and women in relation to that of whites.
Comprehensive data, selected from a wide
variety of sources, present pertinent back­
ground facts concerning birth and mortality
rates, life expectancy, education, school en­
rollment, and population changes. In addi­
tion detailed information is provided about
labor force participation and unemployment,
the industries and occupations in which Ne­
groes are employed, work-life expectancy,
family income and wages, and insurance pro­
tection under the social security program. An
annotated bibliography is included.
See also Bull. 1511 this listing.
The Mobility of Tool and Die Makers, 194051. A Survey of the Work Experience, Train­
ing, and Personal Characteristics of Workers
in a Critical Occupation (1953).
See Bull. 1162 this listing for annotation.
Occupational Mobility of Scientists— A

41

1122
1123
1124

1125

1126
1127

1128
1129
1130
1131

1132

1133

1134

1135

Study of Chemists, Biologists, and Physicists
with Ph. D. Degrees (1953).
See Bull. 1162 this listing for annotation.
Construction. Annual Review, 1951 (1953).
Union Wages and Hours: The Baking In­
dustry, July 1, 1952 (1953).
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1952 (1953).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck
Drivers and Helpers, July 1, 1952 (1953).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook in Printing Occupa­
tions (1953).
Directory of Labor Unions in the United
States, 1953 (1953).
Replaced by Bull. 1493. See this listing for
annotation.
Employment Outlook for Air Transportation
(1953).
Employment Outlook for Mechanics and Re­
pairmen (1953).
Employment Outlook in Metalworking Oc­
cupations (1953).
Employment Outlook for Technicians. A R e­
port on Draftsmen, Engineering Aids, Lab­
oratory Technicians, and Electronic Tech­
nicians (1953).
Manpower Resources in Chemistry and
Chemical Engineering (1953).
Provides information on current and pros­
pective manpower resources in chemistry and
chemical engineering by field of specializa­
tion, level of education, age, and military
status of the scientists, engineers, and grad­
uate students. Other subject matters include
the relative number of chemists and chemical
engineers employed in different industries,
functions performed, incomes received, and
employment trends. Where possible, separate
information is given for women scientists.
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, October 1, 1952
(1953).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1952 (1953).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Wage Differentials and Rate Structures
Among 40 Labor Markets, 1951-52 (1953).

42



1136

1137

1138
1139

1140

1141
1142
1143
1144
1145

1146

Analysis of Work Stoppages During 1952
(1953).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Work Injuries in the United States During
1951 (1953).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook in the Automobile In­
dustry (1953).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Manu­
facture of Paperboard Containers (1953).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
The Consumer Price Index, A Layman’s
Guide (1953).
A popular description of the content, com­
pilation, uses, and limitations of the Bureau’s
Consumer Price Index.
Retail Prices of Food, 1951 and 1952 (1953).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions,
1952 (1953).
Wholesale Prices, 1951 and 1952 (1953).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook for Physicists (1953).
American Labor and the American Spirit.
Unions, Labor-Management Relations, and
Productivity (1954).
Describes the development of the labor
movement in terms of historical and philo­
sophical influences. Prepared originally to
provide productivity teams visiting this coun­
try with background and insight into various
aspects of the American trade union move­
ment, the study has substantial interest for
others concerned with industrial relations.
Covers historical background and present
status of labor unions; types of unions and
their interrelations; collective bargaining;
new attitudes in labor-management relations;
collateral activities of unions, government,
and labor; and labor productivity.
Construction During Five Decades. Histori­
cal Statistics, 1907-52 (1954).
Handbook of construction statistics through
1952, covering the complete historical span
of each of the statistical series on construc­
tion developed in the U.S. Department of
Labor. Data are shown fiom the earliest
years available and, for several of the series,
cover a span of 35 to 40 years. The bulletin
also includes a historical summary of con­
struction trends and a selected bibliography
providing additional or current information

1147

1148

1149
1150

1151
1152

1153

1154

1155

1156
1157
-1

concerning the statistical series.
Pension Plans under Collective Bargaining
(1953).
See Bull. 1259 this listing for annotation.
Scientific Research and Development in
American Industry (1953).
A final report on the findings of a nation­
wide survey of industrial research and de­
velopment conducted by the U.S. Depart­
ment of Defense Research and Development
Board in m id-1952. Covers about 2,000 pri­
vate companies and nonprofit industrial re­
search agencies. Included in the information
provided are the number of research en­
gineers and scientists employed; employment
of supporting personnel; cost of research per­
formed; relationship of research cost to value
of sales; average cost of research per em­
ployee; turnover rates among research en­
gineers and scientists; and potential effects of
military calls of such employees. Information
is presented for different industries and for
companies of different sizes.
Workmen’s Compensation in the United
States (1954).
The Mobility of Electronic Technicians,
1940-52— The Work Experience, Training,
and Personal Characteristics of Workers in
a New Skilled Occupation (1954).
See Bull. 1162 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook in the Industrial
Chemical Industry (1954).
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1953 (1953).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit Op­
erating Employees, July 1, 1953 (1954).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1953 (1954).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1953 (1954).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Employment Outlook in Banking Occupa­
tions (1954).
Wages and Related Benefits. Major Labor
Markets, 1953-1954. Pt. I. Dallas, Tex., D e­
troit, Mich., Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minn.,
New Orleans, La., Philadelphia, Pa., Port­
land, Oreg. (1954).




-2

-3

1158

1159

1160

1161

1162

1163

Wages and Related Benefits. Major Labor
Markets, 1953-1954. Pt. II. Denver, Colo.,
Memphis, Tenn., Newark-Jersey City, N.J.,
St. Louis, Mo., San Francisco-Oakland, Calif.
(1954).
Wages and Related Benefits. Major Labor
Markets, 1953-1954. Pt. III. Atlanta, Ga.,
Boston, Mass., Chicago, 111., Los Angeles,
Calif., Milwaukee, Wis., New York, N.Y.
(1954).
Consumer Cooperatives in the United States
— Recent Developments (1954).
See Bull. 1211 this listing for annotation.
Arbitration of Labor-Management Griev­
ances— Bethlehem Steel
Company and
United Steelworkers of America, 1942-52
(1954).
A study of 10 years of grievance arbitra­
tion under the collective bargaining agree­
ments of the company and the union. An­
alyzes approximately 1,000 decisions by
mutually appointed arbitrators and illus­
trates standards of employer-employee rela­
tionships at the plant level.
Wages and Related Benefits in the Machin­
ery Industries. Postwar Wage Trends, Survey
of 20 Labor Markets, 1953-54 (1954).
Military Manpower Requirements and Sup­
ply, 1954-60 (1954).
See Bull. 1262 this listing for annotation.
Mobility of Molders and Coremakers, 19401952 (1954).
Third in a series of pilot studies covering
the work experience, mobility, training, and
personal characteristics of workers in occupa­
tions vital in defense mobilization. The re­
port evaluates the findings of the study in
terms of their significance for manpower
planning in a mobilization period. It was
prepared as part of a general program of the
Department of the Air Force to develop
systematic methods of determining the man­
power feasibility of military programs. The
two preceding studies in this series relate to
Electronics Technicians (Bull. 1150) and
Tool-and-Die Makers (Bull. 1120). For
studies of the occupational mobility of sci­
entists (chemists, biologists, and physicists
with Ph. D .’s), see Bull 1121, and of profes­
sional engineers, see Bull. 968.
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1953 (1954).

43

1164

1165

1166

See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Work Injuries in the United States During
1952 (1954).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
Consumer Prices in the United States, 194952 (1954).
See also Bulls. 699, 710, 966, 1039, 1256,
1517, and 1554.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions,
1953. Prevalence and Characteristics of Se­
lected Collective-Bargaining Clauses (1954).

1167

Employment Outlook in the Social Sciences
(1954).
For a related study of the social sciences,
see Bull. 1169.

1168

Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statis­
tical Series (1955).
Replaces Bull. 993.
For each major series, presents a compre­
hensive description of the historical back­
ground; methods and scope; concepts and
definitions; sources; sampling and estimat­
ing methods; uses and limitations; and avail­
able measures of reliability. A description of
the similarities and differences in methods
of these series and a selected bibiliography
for each series also are provided.

1169

1170

Personnel Resources in the Social Sciences
and Humanities (1954).
This report is based on information re­
ported by approximately 25,000 social sci­
entists and humanists in 14 fields of spe­
cialization, in response to a questionnaire
survey conducted in 1952 by the American
Council of Learned Societies. The report pre­
sents detailed information on specialization,
age, and educational backgrounds of the
respondents in each major social science and
humanistic field as well as the specialties in
which they were employed, the functions
they were performing, and the types of em­
ploying organizations. Wherever possible,
separate data are given for graduate students
and women. Salaries and supplementary pro­
fessional income of the respondents employed
full time also are discussed.
Structure of the Residential Building Indus­
try in 1949 (1954).
Presents and interprets the final and com­
plete results from a nationwide study of the

44



1171

1172
1172
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10
-11
-12
-13
-14
-15
-16

organization and scale of residential builders’
operations. In the absence of precise statis­
tics, the report analyzes the direction of
organizational changes in the residential
building industry since 1949, on the basis
of an interpretation of historical develop­
ments.
Fact Book on Manpower. September 1954
(1954).
Description and compilation of selected
data for appraising manpower supply in
relation to requirements. Presents significant
facts relating to current and prospective
manpower resources, data on population, la­
bor force, employment, occupations, educa­
tion and training, labor mobility, and mil­
itary manpower.
Wages and Related Benefits— 17 Labor M ar­
kets, 1954-55 (1956).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York (Erie and Niagara Counties), Septem­
ber 1954 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
October 1954 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
September 1954 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, November 1954 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, November 1954 (1954).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1954 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark-Jersey
City, New Jersey, December 1954 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, February 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Mis­
souri, February 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, March 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los Angeles,
California, March 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, March 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, April 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Ore­

gon, April 1955 (1955).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, April 1955 (1955).
1173 Wage Differences and Establishment Prac­
tices. 17 Labor Markets, 1953-54 (1955).
1174 Injuries and Accident Causes in Warehous­
ing Operations (1955).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
1175 Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1954 (1955).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
1176 Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1954 (1955).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
1177 Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1954 (1955).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
1178 Union Wages and Hours of Motortruck
Drivers and Helpers, July 1, 1954 (1955).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
1179 Factory Workers’ Earnings. Distributions by
Straight-Time Hourly Earnings, April 1954
(1955).
See Bull. 1275 this listing for annotation.
1180 Digest of One Hundred Health and Insur­
ance Plans Under Collective Bargaining,
1954 (1955).
Revised by Bull. 1236.
1181 Labor-Management Contract Provisions,
1954. Prevalance and Characteristics of Se­
lected Collective Bargaining Clauses (1955).
1182 Average Retail Prices, 1953-54. Collection
and Calculation, Techniques and Problems
(1955).
See Bull. 1197 this listing for annotation.
1183 Retail Prices of Food, 1953-54 (1955).
1184 Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1954 (1955).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
1185 Directory of National and International La­
bor Unions in the United States, 1955 (1955).
Replaced by Bull. 1493. See this listing
for annotation.
-17

1186

1187
1188

Problems in Measurement of Expenditures
on Selected Items of Supplementary Em­
ployee Remuneration, Manufacturing Estab­
lishments, 1953 (1956).
Health, Insurance, and Pension Plans in
Union Contracts (1955).
Wages and Related Benefits, 17 Labor M ar­
kets, 1955-56 (1956).




1188
-1
-2

Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
October 1955 (1956).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, Mich­
igan, October 1955 (1956).
-3 Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee, W is­
consin, November 1955 (1956).
-4 Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, November 1955 (1956).
-5 Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, November 1955 (1956).
-6 Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1955 (1956).
-7 Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1956 (1956).
-8 Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, December 1955 (1956).
-9 Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Mis­
souri, February 1956 (1956).
-10 Occupational Wage Survey, Newark-Jersey
City, New Jersey, December 1955 (1956).
-11 Occupational Wage Survey, Lawrence, Mas­
sachusetts, February 1956 (1956).
This bulletin includes information on the
construction industry.
-12 Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, February 1956 (1956).
-13 Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1956 (1956).
-14 Occupational Wage Survey, Providence,
Rhode Island, March 1956 (1956).
-15 Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1956 (1956).
-16 Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Ore­
gon, April 1956 (1956).
-17 Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1956 (1956).
-18 Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, April 1956 (1956).
1189 Collective Bargaining Clauses: Layoff, R e­
call, and Work-Sharing Procedures (1956).
1190 Woodworking Circular-Saw Accidents (1956).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.
1191 The Status of Labor in Puerto Rico, Alaska,
Hawaii (1956).
1192 Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1955 (1956).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
1193 Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1955 (1956).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.

45

1194

Union Wages and Hours: Printing Industry,
July 1, 1955 (1956).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.

1195

Union Wages and PIours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1955 (1956).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.

1196

Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1955 (1956).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.

1197

Average Retail Prices, 1955 (1956).
Presents retail prices for approximately
150 commodities and services in certain ma­
jor expenditure categories for the 20 largest
cities surveyed regularly by the Bureau of
Labor Statistics for the Consumer Price In­
dex. These data, covering the last quarter
1954 through 1955, include important items
in all major index groups except food and
fuels, which are published separately, and
rents and certain homeownership costs, which
involve unique problems. The first bulletin to
present average retail prices for items other
than foods and fuels was published in 1955
as Bull. 1182. That bulletin presented retail
prices for 125 articles and services and was
applicable to 10 cities. Prior to that report,
regular bulletins of basic average prices from
which the CPI was computed were confined
to fuels and foods which, unlike other items,
were relatively easy to describe and price
and did not involve major problems of
quality variation. A few retail price bulletins
published in the early 1920’s presented aver­
age prices for a limited list of “ dry goods” ,
but publication of these data was discon­
tinued because of problems relating to qual­
ity definition. For a listing of BLS retail
price bulletins, by item, see Subject Index
under Prices, retail. For current indexes on
items covered in these bulletins other than
food, see the Monthly Labor Review and
other BLS publications.

1201

1202
1202
-1
-2

-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10
-11
-12
-13

1198

Automatic Technology and Its Implications
— A Selected Annotated Bibliography (1956).

-14

1199
-1

Older Workers Under Collective Bargaining,
Part I. Hiring, Retention, Job Termination
(1956).
Older Workers Under Collective Bargaining,
Part II. Health and Insurance Plans, Pension
Plans (1956).

-15

Man-Hours Per Unit of Output in the Basic

1203

—2

1200
46




-16
-17

Steel Industry, 1939-55 (1956).
Collective Bargaining Clauses: Labor-Man­
agement Safety, Production, and Industry
Stabilization Committees (1957).
A report based on the study of collective
agreements covering more than 7 million
workers. Presents the structure, function, and
procedures of labor-management committees
created by formal contract provisions to deal
with problems of safety, production, and in­
dustry stabilization. Sample provisions relat­
ing to the committees are presented.
Wages and Related Benefits, 17 Labor Mar­
kets, 1956-57 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Washington, August 1656 (1956).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York (Erie and Niagara Counties), Septem­
ber 1956 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
October 1956 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, September 1956 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
October 1956 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri, December 1956 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, November 1956 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, December 1956 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, January 1957 (1957).
Occupational WYge Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Ore­
gon, April 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, February 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, March 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, April 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1957 (1957).
Job Performance and Age: A Study in

1204

1205

1206

1207

1208

1209

1210
-1

-2

-3

-4

-5

Measurement (1956).
A pilot study intended to guide future
programs in the investigation and solving of
employment problems of older workers. (See
also annotations for Bulls. 1223 and 1273
this listing.)
Tables of Working Life for Women, 1950
(1957).
A study of the pattern and work life
expectancy of women. Provides a basis for
analyzing the factors that affect the work
careers of women— marriage, children, wid­
owhood, and divorce.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1956 (1957).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1956 (1957).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1956 (1957).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours:
Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1956 (1957).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Analysis of Layoff, Recall, and Work-Shar­
ing Procedures in Union Contracts (1957).
This study, the first of its kind by the Bu­
reau, analyzes the ways in which all major
collective bargaining agreements deal with
layoff, recall, and work-sharing procedures.
Essentially, it is a prevalence study, and
covers formal written policy rather than ac­
tual practice.
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in Hospitals, St. Louis, Missouri, June 1956 (1957).
One of 16 studies which the Bureau under­
took in selected communities (see also Bulls.
1210-2 through 1210-16), covering earnings
and related benefits of nurses and other work­
ers in hospitals having at least 51 employees.
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Portland, Oregon, May and July
1956 (1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Buffalo, New York, June 1956
(1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Baltimore, Maryland, June 1956
(1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in




-6

-7

-8

-9

-10

-11

-12

-13

-14

-15

-16

1211

Hospitals, Chicago, Illinois, August 1956
(1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Boston, Massachusetts, August
1956 (1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Cleveland, Ohio, November 1956
(1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Dallas, Texas, November 1956
(1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Cincinnati, Ohio, September 1956
(1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July
1956 (1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Atlanta, Georgia, September 1956
(1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Memphis, Tennessee, December
1956 (1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, San Francisco-Oakland, Califor­
nia, November 1956 (1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Los Angeles-Long Beach, Califor­
nia, January 1957 (1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota,
March 1957 (1957).
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, New York, New York, February
1957 (1957).
Consumer Cooperatives (1957).
Last in a series of reports on developments
affecting the various types of consumer co­
operatives in the United States, including
credit union, housing, farm supply, medicalcare, student insurance, electricity, telephone,
and retail- and wholesale-trade cooperatives.
These reports include summaries of develop­
ments in Federal and State legislation, court
decisions, and the functions of the Coopera­
tive League of the U.S.A. in sponsoring edu­
cational and recreational activities. Some
bulletins in this series review international
developments and the relationship between
cooperatives and labor, farm, government
agencies, and other groups. Earlier bulletins

47

in this series (703, 738, 768, 821, 859, 904,
932, 964, 1013, 1030, 1073, and 1158) contain
similar information on developments. See also
Bulls. 1024 and 1049 this listing.
1212 New England Labor and Labor Problems
(1957).
Comprises a group of articles on labor and
industrial relations and general economic area
and industry problems in New England.
1213 Employment and Economic Status of Older
Men and Women (1957).
Replaces Bull. 1092.
Provides historical data from a wide vari­
ety of authoritative sources on population
and labor force trends, work-life expectancy,
income, retirement, pension programs, and
job experience of older workers. Data are
presented separately for men and women,
wherever possible, in order to reveal signifi­
cant similarities and differences in their eco­
nomic status and employment experience.
1214 Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1954-56
(1957).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
1215 Occupational Outlook Handbook, 1957 Edi­
tion (1957).
Replaced by Bull. 1550. See this listing for
annotation.
1216 Collective Bargaining Clauses: Dismissal
Pay (1957).
A report on the prevalence of dismissal pay
provisions in collective bargaining agree­
ments, the amounts provided, the conditions
under which laid-off workers qualify for ben­
efits, and related factors. Excerpts from
agreements are provided.
1217
1218
1219

Retail Prices of Food, 1955-56 (1957).
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1956 (1957).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Work Injuries and Work Injury Rates in
Hospitals (1958).
See Bull. 1237 this listing for annotation.

1220

Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in Octo­
ber 1956, Summary Report (1958).

1220
-1

Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in October 1956, Building Materials and Farm
Equipment Dealers (1957).
Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in Octo­
ber 1956, General Merchandise Stores, D e­
partment Stores, Variety Stores (1957).
Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in Octo­

-2

-3

48



ber 1956, Food Stores; Grocery Stores (1957).
Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in Octo­
ber 1956, Automotive Dealers and Gasoline
Service Stations; Franchised Motor Vehicle
Dealers, Gasoline Service Stations (1957).
-5 Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in Octo­
ber 1956, Apparel and Accessories Stores,
M en’s and Boys’ Clothing Stores, Women’s
Ready-to-Wear Stores, Shoe Stores (1957).
-6 Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in Octo­
ber 1956, Furniture, Home Furnishings, and
Appliance Stores (1957).
-7 Employee Earnings in Retail Trade in Octo­
ber 1956, Drug Stores and Proprietary Stores
(1957).
L221 Analysis of Health and Insurance Plans Un­
der Collective Bargaining, Late 1955 (1957).
Presents detailed statistics on the provi­
sions of 300 selected health and insurance
plans under collective bargaining. Types of
benefits included life insurance, accidental
death and dismemberment, accident and
sickness (excluding sick leave, State work­
men’s compensation, and temporary disabil­
ity payments), and hospital, surgical, and
medical care. Special benefits, such as those
provided for poliomyelitis and accidental in­
jury, and during extended periods of illness,
are treated separately, as are provisions ap­
plying to maternity cases.
1222 Directory of National and International La­
bor Unions in the United States, 1957 (1957).
Replaced by Bull. 1493. See this listing for
annotation.
1223 Comparative Job Performance by Age:
Large Plants in the M en’s Footwear and
Household Furniture Industries (1957).
This bulletin continues earlier work on the
relationship between age and work perform­
ance (Bull. 1203), and compares actual
on-the-job performance of older production
workers with the performance of younger
workers. The extensive data provided enable
the reader to draw more definitive conclu­
sions than were possible from the pilot study.
This later study is focused on the measure
of the relationship between age and the three
aspects of job performance: output per man­
hour, attendance, and continuity of service.
(See also annotation for Bull. 1273 this
listing.)
1224 Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash-4

-1
-2

ington, August 1957 (1957).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, September 1957 (1958).
-3 Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, August 1957 (1958).
-4 Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
October 1957 (1958).
-5 Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, M is­
souri, November 1957 (1958).
-6 Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, October 1957 (1958).
-7 Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1957 (1958).
-8 Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1958 (1958).
-9 Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1958 (1958).
-10 Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1958 (1958).
-11 Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 1958 (1958).
-12 Occupational Wage Survey, Newark-Jersey
City, New Jersey, December 1957 (1958).
-13 Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1958 (1958).
-14 Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1958 (1958).
-15 Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1958 (1958).
-16 Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Ore­
gon, April 1958 (1958).
-17 Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, M ay 1958 (1958).
-18 Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee, W is­
consin, M ay 1958 (1958).
-19 Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
June 1958 (1958).
-20 Wages and Related Benefits, 19 Labor M ar­
kets, 1957-58 (1959).
1225 A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in
the United States (1958).
Designed primarily for use by visiting
trade unionists and management representa­
tives of other countries, the study provides
brief descriptions and explanations of various
facets of union activity and labor-manage­
ment relations. Includes 31 reports divided
into (1) trade union activities; (2) collective
bargaining; (3) labor-management relations
in selected industries; and (4) general. The
Guide is prepared in loose-leaf form and ad­




1225
-1

-2

1226
1227

1228

1229

1230

1231

ditional reports will be issued from time to
time. See also Bulls. 1225-1 and 1225-2.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in
the United States. Supp. 1 (1959).
Supplements the information in Bull. 1225.
Includes a brief report on trade union activi­
ties, three reports on collective bargaining,
and a bibliography.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in
the United States. Supp. 2 (1959).
A second supplement to Bull. 1225, con­
taining three brief reports which pertain,
respectively, to trade union activities, collec­
tive bargaining, and labor-management rela­
tions in selected industries. Provides a
glossary of industrial relations terms and a
bibliography.
Productivity: A Bibliography (1958).
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1957 (1958).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Industry,
July 1, 1957 (1958).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit Op­
erating Employees, July 1, 1957 (1958).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1957 (1958).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
New Housing and Its Materials, 1940-56
(1958).
Presents data on selected characteristics of
1-family houses authorized by building per­
mit in 1954-56, in cities of 25,000 population
and over and, in lesser detail, data on
characteristics of 2- to 4-family and 5-ormore-family structures. The introductory
analysis of trends during 1954-56 includes
comparisons with 1940 and 1950 data from
the Federal Housing Administration regard­
ing new 1-family housing processed by the
FHA for mortgage insurance under the
National Housing Act. These trend data
cover the general plan and size of houses;
walls, floors, roofing, insulation, and rain­
carrying equipment; windows, screens, and
storm windows; heating facilities and fuel;
electrical services; and kitchen, laundry, and
other equipment. Among other comparisons,
the data are distributed by selling-price class,

49

1232

1233

1234
1235

1236

1237

region, and metropolitan or nonmetropolitan
area.
Digest of One Hundred Selected Pension
Plans Under Collective Bargaining, Winter
1957-58 (1958).
Revised by Bull. 1307.
Paid Vacation Provisions in Major Union
Contracts, 1957 (1958).
Represents a comprehensive study of paid
vacation practices under collective bargain­
ing. Provides a detailed analysis of the
prevalence and types of vacation plans,
length of vacation, service and work require­
ments, vacation patterns, and vacation pay.
The analysis also covers various administra­
tive aspects of vacation plans; for example,
pay in lieu of time off, scheduling of vaca­
tions, and vacation rights for military service
personnel or upon termination of employ­
ment.
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1957 (1958).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1957
(1958).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Digest of One Hundred Selected Health and
Insurance Plans Under Collective Bargain­
ing, Early 1958 (1958).
Revision of Bull. 1180.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Boilershop-Products Industry (1958).
Part of a series of work injury and accident
statistics bulletins. Annual bulletins present
summary statistics on disabling work injuries
for each of the major industries in the United
States. Other bulletins present detailed
breakdowns of injuries and accident causes
in selected industries, occupations, or activi­
ties during specified periods of time. Sufficient
information is collected to make estimates of
the number of work injuries occurring each
year, the resultant total economic loss ex­
pressed in man-days of work, and the varying
degrees of hazards existing in specific indus­
tries. The general purpose of these surveys
is use in accident prevention work. For some
years, statistics were published in other than
bulletin form; for example, in the Monthly
Labor Review and serial reprints, and
recently as reports. See Subject Index under
Accidents.

50



1238

1239

1240
-1
-2
-3

-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10
-11
-12
-13

The Earnings and Employment of Seamen on
U.S. Flag Ships (1958).
A report prepared at the request of and in
cooperation with the Federal Maritime Board
and the Maritime Administration, U.S.
Department of Commerce. It analyzes the
employment experience, daily and annual
earnings, and fringe benefits of seamen on
U.S. flag ships. Included are brief summaries
on the operations of the American Merchant
Marine and on the history of collective bar­
gaining in the maritime industry.
Union Constitution Provisions: Election and
Tenure of National and International Union
Officers, 1958 (1958).
Analyzes the rules in union constitutions
which govern the qualifications, election, and
terms of union officers, and those providing
for the remuneration and the removal of
union presidents. The bulletin is basically a
summary of the union rules effective in 1958,
and does not include any analysis of union
practices. Rules governing the election of
A FL-CIO officers are summarized in the
appendix.
Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Washington, August 1958 (1958).
Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, August 1958 (1958).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York (Erie and Niagara Counties), Septem­
ber 1958 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, M is­
souri, October 1958 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
October 1958 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, October 1958 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1958 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, November 1958 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark-Jersey
City, New Jersey, December 1958 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey. Detroit, Michi­
gan, January 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Francisco-

-14
-15
-16
-17
-18
-19
-20
-21
-22
1241

1242

1243

Oakland, California, January 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey^ Milwaukee, Wis­
consin, April 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, M ay 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Ore­
gon, April 1959 (1959).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lawrence, M as­
sachusetts, M ay 1959 (1959).
Wages and Related Benefits, 20 Labor Mar­
kets, 1958-59 (1959).
Automation and Employment Opportunities
for Officeworkers (1958).
Designed primarily for use in vocational
guidance, discusses the development and use
of electronic computers and their effect on
the employment of clerical workers. Provides
a description of programing and outlines
the qualifications and employment prospects
for programers.
Population and Labor Force Projections for
the United States, 1960 to 1975 (1959).
Briefly reviews population growth in the
United States from 1900 to 1955 and analyzes
some effects of population change. Includes
population and labor force projections to
1975, and a description of the methods used
in preparing the projections. Points up the
increasing labor force participation of women
and the trend toward more part-time employ­
ment.
Trends in Building Permit Activity (1959).
Presents monthly building permit statistics
for 1954-56 on a national basis and annual
figures from 1949-58 for cities of 100,000
population and over. Includes selected tabu­
lations on metropolitan-nonmetropolitan and
central city-suburban building during 1957—
58. Describes the characteristics and limita­
tions of the data, and explains the shift from
the “ old series” on “ urban building author­
ized” (1920-June 1954) to the “ New series”
on “ building permit activity” (January 1954-




1244

1245

1246

1247

1248
1249

1250

1958). A selected reference list is appended.
See also Bull. 545 this listing.
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit Op­
erating Employees, July 1, 1958 (1959).
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1958 (1959).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1958 (1959).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Industry,
July 1, 1958 (1959).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Paid Holiday Provisions in Major Union
Contracts, 1958 (1959).
Trends in Output per Man-Hour in the
Private Economy, 1909-1958 (1960).
Presents indexes and average rates of
change in output per man-hour in the private
economy for the post-World War II period,
1947-58, and for the long-term period, 190958. Discusses the factors affecting the long­
term increase in output per man-hour, such
as technological innovation, capital invest­
ment, the role of Federal, State, and local
government investment in services and facil­
ities, and the skillful use of human resources.
Summarizes the major elements in deriving
the estimates of real product and man-hours,
and compares the Bureau’s man-hour meas­
ures in the total private economy writh those
of the U.S. Bureau of the Census. Includes
discussions of the problems of comparing
real product and man-hour estimates, and of
the limitations and qualifications of output
per man-hour measures. An appendix in­
cludes a detailed discussion of the methods
and sources used in estimating output per
man-hour.
Health and Insurance Plans Under Collective
Bargaining. Accident and Sickness Benefits,
Fall 1958 (1959).
Analyzes the key features of accident and
sickness benefits and the extent of the pro­
visions for such benefits in 300 selected plans
under collective bargaining in the fall of
1958. This is the first in a planned series of
bulletins dealing separately with specific
health and insurance benefits. A section on
maternity benefits is included.

51

See also annotations for Bulls. 1274, 1280,
1293, and 1296 this listing.
1251 Premium Pay for Night, Weekend, and Over­
time Work in Major Union Contracts (1959).
1252 Factory Workers’ Earnings, M ay 1958
(1959).
See Bull. 1275 this listing for annotation.
1253 Earnings in Wholesale Trade, June 1958
(1959).
1254 Retail Prices of Food, 1957-58. Indexes and
Average Prices (1959).
1255 Occupational Outlook Handbook, 1959 Edi­
tion (1959).
Replaced by Bull. 1550.
See this listing for annotation.
1256 Consumer Prices in the United States, Price
Trends and Indexes, 1953-58 (1959).
Presents the history, scope, and meaning
of the Consumer Price Index; traces adjust­
ments in the series and compares movements
of the old and the adjusted series. Discusses
the comprehensive revision which resulted in
the introduction of the revised Index in Jan­
uary 1953, and the uses of the Index. Tables
of indexes and related data for earlier years
are included.
See Bulls. 699, 710, 966, 1039, 1165, 1517,
and 1554 for analyses of price changes and
for Index methods used in other periods. See
also Bull. 1140.
1257 Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1958
(1959).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
1258 Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1958 (1959).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
1259 Pension Plans Under Collective Bargaining.
Pt. I. Vesting Provisions and Require­
ments for Early Retirement;
Pt. II. Involuntary Retirement Provisions,
Late 1958 (1959).
Analyzes provisions concerning vesting,
benefits, and eligibility contained in selected
pension plans under collective bargaining.
Bull. 1259, which deals with 300 plans in
late 1958, is the first in a new series of pen­
sion plan studies; it does not include infor­
mation on disability retirement provisions.
Bull. 1147 contains similar information on
300 plans in the^fall of 1952. See also anno­
tations for Bulls. 1284 and 1334 this listing.
1260 Nonfarm Housing Starts, 1889-1958 (1959).

52



1261

1262

1263

Presents estimates of new permanent non­
farm dwelling units started during 18891958. Includes distributions from 1920 by
type of structure (1-family, etc.), ownership
(private, public), and location (urban, rural
nonfarm); by years from 1920; and by
months from 1939 or 1940. Presents data for
20 selected States in 1954-58, by ownership.
This bulletin, which also includes an analysis
of the historical series and selected references,
represents a final report of the work done by
the Division of Construction Statistics of
the U.S. Department of Labor, Bureau of
Labor Statistics, in the development of the
nonfarm housing starts series. See also anno­
tations for Bulls. 915 and 941 this listing.
Labor Supply and Mobility in a Newly In­
dustrialized Area (1960).
Provides information on the character of
the labor supply attracted to manufacturing
employment in the chronically depressed
rural area of Ravenswood, W. Va., near
which the Kaiser Aluminum and Chemical
Corp. established a mill. Analyzes work his­
tories of employees of the mill and a small
sample of unaccepted applicants; their geo­
graphical and occupational mobility; their
age, sex, marital status, and education. The
study examines the standards for employ­
ment established by the company and points
out that only by employing persons who lived
considerable distances from the plant, and
by transferring professional employees from
other plants, was the company able to meet
those standards.
Military Manpower Requirements and Sup­
ply, 1959-63 (1959).
Analyzes military manpower requirements
and supply in the United States from the
standpoint of the military manpower situa­
tion and the size and characteristics (age and
sources of supply) of the military manpower
pool. Indicates underlying assumptions and
guiding principles. Bull. 1262 provides esti­
mates for 1958 through 1963, and an earlier
bulletin (1161) provides estimates for 1954
through 1960.
Union Constitution Provisions: Trusteeship
(1959).
Analyzes the formal rules stipulated in
union constitutions governing the establish­

1264

ment of trusteeships, the grounds for such
action, hearing requirements, the status of
the local unions and their officers during
trusteeship, and the provisions applying to
termination and appeal. The bulletin does not
extend to union practices, and is essentially
a summary of union laws in effect before
enactment of the Labor-Management R e­
porting and Disclosure Act of 1959. The
section in this act covering trusteeships is
reproduced in appendix B.
Impact on Workers and Community of a
Plant Shutdown in a Depressed Area (1960).

1265
-1

Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
September 1959 (1959).
-2 Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash­
ington, August 1959 (1959).
-3 Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
October 1959 (1959).
-4 Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, October 1959 (1960).
-5 Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Mis­
souri, October 1959 (1960).
-6 Occupational Wage Survey, Miami, Florida,
December 1959 (1960).
-7 Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
' Maryland, September 1959 (1960).
-8 Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, October 1959 (1960).
-9 Occupational Wage Survey, Dayton, Ohio,
December 1959 (1960).
-10 Occupational Wage Survey, Canton, Ohio,
December 1959 (1960).
-11 Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1959 (1960).
-12 Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Maine,
November 1959 (1960).
-13
Occupational Wage Survey, Fort Worth,
Texas, November 1959 (1960).
-14
Occupational Wage Survey, Jacksonville,
Florida, December 1959 (1960).
-15 Occupational Wage Survey, San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, November
1959 (1960).
-16 Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, November 1959 (1960).
-17 Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1960 (1960).
-18 Occupational Wage Survey, Washington,
D .C .-M d.-V a., Deoember 1959 (1960).
-19 Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­




-20
-21
-22
-23
-24
-25
-26
-27
-28

-29
-30
-31
-32
-33

-34

-35
-36
-37
-38
-39
-40

-41
-42
-43

nessee, January 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, December 1959 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Indianapolis,
Indiana, January 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri-Kansas, January 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Richmond, Vir­
ginia, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, Michi­
gan, January 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jackson, Missis­
sippi, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, York, Pennsyl­
vania, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark and
Jersey City, New Jersey, February 1960
(1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Sioux Falls,
South Dakota, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Des Moines,
Iowa, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cincinnati, OhioKentucky, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, AllentownBethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania-New Jer­
sey, March 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Providence,
Rhode Island-Massachusetts, March 1960
(1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterbury,
Connecticut, March 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, March 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, South Bend, In­
diana, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charlotte, North
Carolina, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, March 1960
(1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Haven,
Connecticut, February 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Phoenix, Ari­
zona, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee,

53

-44
-45
-46
-47
-48
-49
-50

-51
-52
-53
-54
-55

-56
-57

-58
-59
-60
-61
-62
1266

1267

1268

Wisconsin, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Greenville, South
Carolina, M ay 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Rockford, Illi­
nois, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charleston,
West Virginia, April 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Oregon-Washington, M ay 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, New Jersey (Bergen and Pas­
saic Counties), M ay 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lubbock, Texas,
June 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Worcester, Mas­
sachusetts, June 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Savannah, Geor­
gia, June 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, M ay 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, MuskegonMuskegon Heights, Michigan, M ay 1960
(1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Houston, Texas,
June 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lawrence-Haverhill, Massachusetts-New Hampshire, June
1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Beaumont-Port
Arthur, Texas, M ay 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Akron, Ohio,
June 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, June 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boise, Idaho,
June 1960 (1960).
Wages and Related Benefits, 60 Labor M ar­
kets, 1959-60 (1961).
Collective Bargaining Clauses:
Company
Pay for Time Spent on Union Business
(1959).
Directory of National and International La­
bor Unions in the United States, 1959 (1960).
Replaced by Bull. 1493. See this listing for
annotation.
Union Wages and Hours:
Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1959 (1960).

54



1269

1270

1271

1272
1273

1274

1275

See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1959 (1960).
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1959 (1960).
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Industry,
July 1, 1959 (1960).
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Union Security and Checkoff Provisions in
M ajor Union Contracts, 1958-59 (1960).
Comparative Job Performance by Age: Office
Workers (1960).
This bulletin continues work on the rela­
tionship between age and work performance
(Bulls. 1203 and 1223), compares actual onthe-job performances of older office workers
with the performances of younger workers.
The study focused on the measure of the
relationship of age and job experience to out­
put per man-hour, and age and skill level to
output per man-hour.
Health and Insurance Plans Under Collective
Bargaining. Hospital Benefits, Early 1959
(1960).
Analyzes the key features of hospital ben­
efits in 300 selected plans under collective
bargaining in the early part of 1959. This is
the second in a planned series of bulletins
dealing separately with specific health and
insurance benefits. See also annotations for
Bulls. 1250, 1280, 1293, and 1296 this listing.
Factory Workers’ Earnings in Selected Man­
ufacturing Industries, June 1959 (1960).
This study was part of a broad program
initiated by the U.S. Department of Labor
to study the economic effects of the $1 Fed­
eral minimum wage. Bull. 1275 analyzes the
manufacturing wage structure, in June 1959,
on the basis of a 17-industry survey of the
straight-time hourly earnings (exclusive of
premium pay for overtime and work on
weekends, holidays, and late shifts) of
factory workers in the United States. Levels
and distributions of wages of production and
related workers are set forth, by selected in­
dustries, for the United States as a whole,
major regions, and metropolitan and non­
metropolitan areas. Changes between April
1954 and June 1959 are summarized.

1276
1277

1278
1279

1280

1281

1282
1283
1284

1285
-1
-2
-3

For earlier studies of factory workers’
earnings in relation to minimum wage legis­
lation, see Bulls. 1179 and 1252.
Adjustments to the Introduction of Office
Automation (1960).
School and Early Employment Experience of
Youth. A Report on Seven Communities,
1952-57 (1960). 500.
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1959 (1960).
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Rest Periods, Washup, Work Clothing, and
Military Leave Provisions in Major Union
Contracts (1961). 300.
Health and Insurance Plans Under Collective
Bargaining. Surgical and Medical Benefits,
Late Summer 1959 (1960). 300.
Analyzes the principal features of surgical
and medical benefits and the extent of the
provisions for such benefits in 300 selected
plans under collective bargaining in the late
summer of 1959. This bulletin is the third in
a planned series dealing with specific health
and insurance benefits. See also annotations
for Bulls. 1250, 1274, 1293, and 1296 this
listing.
Subject Index of Bulletins Published by the
Bureau of Labor Statistics, 1915-59 (1960).
550.
Replaced by this bulletin.
Paid Sick Leave Provisions in Major Union
Contracts, 1959 (1960). 300.
Composition of Payroll Hours in Manufac­
turing, 1958 (1960). 300.
Pension Plans Under Collective Bargaining.
Normal Retirement, Early and Disability
Retirement, Fall 1959 (1961). 400.
Analyzes the principal features of normal,
early, and disability retirement provisions
of 300 selected pension plans under collective
bargaining. Covers 4.7 million workers, or
half of the estimated number covered by all
pension plans, under collective bargaining in
the United States. Bull. 1284 is the second in
a series of pension plan studies. See also an­
notations for Bulls. 1259 and 1334 this listing.

-4

-5
-6

-7
-8
-9
-10
-11
-12

-13
-14
-15
-16

-17
-18
-19
-20
-21
-22
-23
-24

Occupational Wage Survey, Manchester,
New Hampshire, August 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Green Bay,
Wisconsin, August 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, August 1960 (1960).




-25
-26
-27

Occupational Wage Survey, San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, September
1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Raleigh, North
Carolina, September 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Little R ock North Little Rock, Arkansas, August 1960
(1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash­
ington, August 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Scranton, Penn­
sylvania, August 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Wichita, Kan­
sas, September 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Missouri-Illinois, October 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
September 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Wilmington,
Delaware-New Jersey, September 1960
(1960) .
Occupational Wage Survey, Omaha, Nebraska-Iowa, October 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chattanooga,
Tennessee-Georgia, September 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, October 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Davenport-Rock
Island-Moline, Iowa-Illinois, October 1960
(1961) .
Occupational Wage Survey, Sioux Falls,
South Dakota, November 1960 (1960).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri-Kansas, November 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Maine,
November 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterloo, Iowa,
November 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
November 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey,
Washington,
D .C .-M d.-V a., November 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Fort Worth,
Texas, November 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, November 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Trenton, New
Jersey, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Richmond, Vir­
ginia, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo-

55

-28
-29
-30
-31
-32
-33
-34
-35
-36
-37
-38
-39
-40

-41
-42
-43
-44
-45
-46
-47

-48
-49
-50
-51

rado, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Indianapolis, In­
diana, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Canton, Ohio,
December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jacksonville,
Florida, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Salt Lake City,
Utah, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Miami, Florida,
December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, December 1960 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, M ichi­
gan, January 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Columbus, Ohio,
January 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark and
Jersey City, New Jersey, February 1961
(1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dayton, Ohio,
January 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jackson, Missis­
sippi, February 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Des Moines,
Iowa, February 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, January 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, York, Pennsyl­
vania, February 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Haven,
Connecticut, February 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania-New Jersey,
February 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana, February 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Toledo, Ohio,
March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, March 1961 (1961).

56



-52
-53
-54
-55
-56
-57
-58
-59
-60
-61
-62
-63
-64
-65
-66
-67
-68
-69
-70

-71
-72
-73
-74
-75
-76

Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, April 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, South Bend, In­
diana, March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Phoenix, Ari­
zona, March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterbury, Con­
necticut, March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Burlington, Ver­
mont, March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charlotte, North
Carolina, April 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cincinnati,
Ohio-Kentucky, March 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charleston, West
Virginia, April 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, M ay 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boise, Idaho,
M ay 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Greenville, South
Carolina, April 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee, W is­
consin, April 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lubbock, Texas,
May 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Rockford, Illi­
nois, M ay 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan, May 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, ProvidencePawtucket, Rhode Island-Massachusetts,
May 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Antonio,
Texas, M ay 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Oregon-Washington, M ay 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, M ay 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, New Jersey, M ay 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Beaumont-Port
Arthur, Texas, May 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Savannah, Geor­
gia, May 1961 (1961).

-77

Occupational Wage Survey, Spokane, Wash­
ington, M ay 1961 (1961).
-78 Occupational Wage Survey, Houston, Texas,
M ay 1961 (1961).
-79 Occupational Wage Survey, LawrenceHaverhill, Massachusetts-New Hampshire,
June 1961 (1961).
-80 Occupational Wage Survey, Worcester, M as­
sachusetts, June 1961 (1961).
-81 Occupational Wage Survey, Akron, Ohio,
June 1961 (1961).
-82 Occupational Wage Survey, Norfolk-Portsmouth-Newport News, Virginia, June 1961
(1961).
-83 Wages and Related Benefits, 82 Labor M ar­
kets, 1960-61 (1962).
-84 Wages and Related Benefits, Metropolitan
Areas, United States and Regional Sum­
maries, 1960-61 (1962).
1286 National Survey of Professional, Adminis­
trative, Technical, and Clerical Pay, Winter
1959-60 (1961). 600.
See Bull. 1535 this listing for annotation.
1287 Impact of Automation (1960). 600.
1288 Factory Jobs: Employment Outlook for
Workers in Jobs Requiring Little or No
Experience or Specialized Training (1961).
250.
1289 Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1960 (1961).
150.
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
1290 Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1960 (1961). 350.
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
1291 Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1960 (1961). 250.
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
1292 Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1960 (1961). 350.
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
1293 Health and Insurance Plans Under Collec­
tive Bargaining. Major Medical Expense
Benefits, Fall 1960 (1961). 200.
Analyzes the key features of major medi­
cal or catastrophic illness benefits and the
extent of the provisions for such benefits in
300 selected plans under collective bargain­
ing in the fall of 1960. This is the fourth in
a planned series of bulletins dealing with
specific health and insurance benefits. See




also annotations for Bulls. 1250, 1274, 1280,
and 1296 this listing.
1294 Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in
Hospitals, Mid-1960 (1961). 500.
1295 Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1959
(1961).
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
1296 Health and Insurance Plans Under Collec­
tive Bargaining. Life Insurance and Acci­
dental Death and Dismemberment Benefits,
Early Summer 1960 (1961). 250.
Analyzes the principal features of life in­
surance and accidental death and dismem­
berment benefits and the extent of the pro­
visions for such benefits in 300 selected plans
under collective bargaining in the early
summer of 1960. This bulletin is the last
in the planned series concerning specific
health and insurance benefits. See also an­
notations for Bulls. 1250, 1274, 1280, and
1293 this listing.
1297 Employment in the Atomic Energy Field,
A 1960 Occupational Survey (1961). 300.
1298 The Dimensions of Major Work Stoppages,
1947-59 (1961). 300.
1299 Labor Requirements for School Construction
(1961). 350.
1300 Occupational Outlook Handbook, 1961 Edi­
tion (1961). $4.50.
Replaced by Bull. 1550.
See this listing for annotation.
1301 Retail Prices of Food, 1959-60 (1961). 400.
1302 Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1960 (1961).
300.
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
1303
-1 Occupational Wage Survey, Little R ock North Little Rock, Arkansas, August 1961
(1961).
-2 Occupational Wage Survey, Green Bay, Wis­
consin, August 1961 (1961).
-3 Occupational Wage Survey, Manchester,
New Hampshire, August 1961 (1961).
-4 Occupational Wage Survey, Chattanooga,
Tennessee-Georgia, September 1961 (1961).
-5 Occupational Wage Survey, Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, August 1961 (1961).
-6 Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash­
ington, August 1961 (1961).
-7 Occupational WTage Survey, Wichita, Kan­
sas, September 1961 (1961).

57

-8
-9
-10
-11

-12
-13
-14
-15
-16
-17

-18
-19
-20
-21
-22
-23
-24
-25
-26
-27
-28
-29
-30
-31
-32

Occupational Wage Survey, Scranton, Penn­
sylvania, August 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Wilmington,
Delaware-New Jersey, August 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Raleigh, North
Carolina, September 1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, September
1961 (1961).
Occupational Wage Survey, Washington,
D .C .-M d.-V a., October 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
September 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Omaha, Nebraska-Iowa, October 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Sioux Falls,
South Dakota, November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, October 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, DavenportRock Island-Moline, Iowa-Illinois, October
1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Missouri-Illinois, October 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Fort Worth,
Texas, November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jacksonville,
Florida, November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Richmond, Vir­
ginia, November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterloo, Iowa,
November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri-Kansas, November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania, November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Maine,
November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Indianapolis,
Indiana, December 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, November 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, December 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Trenton, New
Jersey, December 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Miami, Florida,
December 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Salt Lake City,

58



-33
-34
-35
-36
-37
-38
-39
-40
-41
-42
-43
-44
-45
-46

-47
-48
-49
-50
-51
-52
-53
-54
-55
-56
-57

Utah, December 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1961 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Haven,
Connecticut, January 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, January 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, M ich­
igan, January 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dayton, Ohio,
January 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Columbus, Ohio,
February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Des Moines,
Iowa, February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jackson, Missis­
sippi, February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark and Jer­
sey City, New Jersey, February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania-New Jersey,
February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Toledo, Ohio,
March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterbury, Con­
necticut, March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, York, Pennsyl­
vania, February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Burlington, Ver­
mont, March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana, February 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, South Bend, In­
diana, March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Phoenix, Ari­
zona, March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cincinnati,
Ohio-Kentucky, March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, March 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee, W is­
consin, April 1962 (1962).

-58
-59
-60
-61
-62
-63
-64
-65
-66

-67
-68
-69
-70
-71
-72
-73
-74
-75

-76

-77
-78
-79
-80
-81

Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, April 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charlotte, North
Carolina, April 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charleston, West
Virginia, April 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Canton, Ohio,
M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Antonio,
Texas, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, ProvidencePawtucket, Rhode Island-Massachusetts,
M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Rockford, Illi­
nois, April 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Greenville, South
Carolina, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, Newr Jersey, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Oregon-Washington, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Spokane, Wash­
ington, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lubbock, Texas,
June 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Norfolk-Portsmouth and Newport News-Hampton, Vir­
ginia, June 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, LawTrenceHaverhill, Massachusetts-New Hampshire,
June 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boise, Idaho,
M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Beaumont-Port
Arthur, Texas, M ay 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Houston, Texas,
June 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Savannah, Geor­
gia, June 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Akron, Ohio,
June 1962 (1962).




-82
-83
-83

1304
1305

1306
1307

1308

1309
1310

1311
.

2
-1
-2
-3
-4
--5

1313

1314

Occupational Wage Survey, Worcester, Mas­
sachusetts, June 1962 (1962).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 82
Labor Markets, 1961-62 (1962).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: M et­
ropolitan Areas, United States and Regional
Summaries, 1961-62 (1962).
Subcontracting Clauses in Major Collective
Bargaining Agreements (1961). 300.
Technological Change and Productivity in
the Bituminous Coal Industry, 1920-60
(1961). 650.
Industry Wage Survey, Communications,
October 1960 (1961). 200.
Digest of One Hundred Selected Pension
Plans Under Collective Bargaining, Spring
1961 (1962). 500.
Revision of Bull. 1232. Revised by Bull.
1435.
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supple­
mentary Remuneration Practices for Produc­
tion Workers in Manufacturing Industries,
1959 (1962). 650.
Replaced by Bull. 1428.
See this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Machinery Manu­
facturing, M arch-M ay 1961 (1961). 300.
National Survey of Professional, Adminis­
trative, Technical and Clerical Pay, Winter
1960-61 (1961). 400.
See Bull. 1535 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Textile Dyeing and
Finishing, April-M ay 1961 (1961). 350.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the
United States, 1909-60 (1961). $3.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the
United States, 1909-62 (1963). $3.50.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the
United States, 1909-64 (1964). $3.50.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the
United States, 1909-65 (1966). $4.25.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the
United States, 1909-66 (1966). $4.50.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the
United States, 1909-67 (1967). $4.75.
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1961 (1962).
150.
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1961 (1962). 150

59

1315

1316

1317
1318
1319

-1

1320

1321
1322
1323

1324
1325

1326

See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1961 (1962). 350.
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1961 (1962). 350.
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Cigar Manufactur­
ing, A pril-M ay 1961 (1962). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Paints and Varnishes,
M ay 1961 (1962). 300.
Implications of Automation and Other Tech­
nological Developments— Selected Annotated
Bibliography (1962). 650.
Implications of Automation and Other Tech­
nological Developments— Selected Annotated
Bibliography (1964). 500.
Directory of National and International La­
bor Unions in the United States, 1961 0962).
500.
Replaced by Bull. 1493.
See this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Work Clothing,
May-June 1961 (1962).'350.
Salaries for Selected Occupations in Services
for the Blind, M ay 1961 (1962). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Men’s and B oys’
Shirts (Except Work Shirts) and Nightwear,
May-June 1961 (1962). 400
Industry Wage Survey, Life Insurance, M a y July 1961 (1962). 300.
Digest of Profit-Sharing, Savings, and Stock
Purchase Plans, Winter 1961-62 (20 Se­
lected Plans) (1962). 300.
In response to inquiries received from in­
dividuals and organizations at home and
abroad, this bulletin describes the principal
features of 20 selected profit-sharing, savings,
and stock purchase plans in effect in the
United States in the winter of 1961-62. Not
presented as typical or model plans, or as a
representative sample. Most of the plans are
well known, although others were selected
because they represent different ways of
providing benefits to workers. Covers pro­
duction and related workers or nonsupervisory workers; some also cover salaried and
supervisory employees.
Multiemployer Pension Plans Under Collec­
tive Bargaining, Spring 1960 (1962). 650.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics, in co­

60



1327
1328
1329
1330

1331
1332

1333
1334

1335

1336
1337

1338
-1

-2

operation with the Bureau of Labor Stand­
ards, undertook this comprehensive study of
the characteristics, types of benefits, and
administrative features of multiemployer
pension plans under collective bargaining.
Practically all such plans, covering more
than 25 workers, and in effect in spring 1960,
are taken into account.
Industry Wage Survey, Contract Cleaning
Services, Summer 1961 (1962). 250.
Industry Wage Survey, Hotels and Motels,
June 1961 (1962). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Eating and Drinking
Places, June 1961 (1962). 400.
Digest of One Hundred Selected Health and
Insurance Plans Under Collective Bargain­
ing, Winter 1961-62 (1962). $1.25.
Revision of Bull. 1236.
Labor Requirements for Federal Office Build­
ing Construction (1962). 350.
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supple­
mentary Remuneration Practices for Produc­
tion Workers in Mining Industries, 1960
(1963). 450.
See Bull. 1428 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Power Laundries and
Cleaning Services, June 1961 (1962). 450.
Pension Plans Under Collective Bargaining.
Benefits for Survivors, Winter 1960-61
(1962). 250.
Analyzes the principal forms of survivor
protection, including death benefits, the re­
turn of worker contributions, and survivor
options, in 300 selected pension plans under
collective bargaining. This bulletin com­
pletes the series on pension plans under col­
lective bargaining. See also annotations for
Bulls. 1259 and 1284 this listing.
Index of Volumes 72-83, Monthly Labor Re­
view, January 1951 to December 1960
(1962). 400.
Antidiscrimination Provisions in M ajor Con­
tracts, 1961 (1962). 200.
Industry Wage Survey, Flour and Other
Grain Mill Products, November 1961 (1962).
300.
Employee Earnings at Retail Building M a­
terials, Hardware, and Farm Equipment
Dealers, June 1961 (1962). 250.
Employee Earnings in Retail General Mer­

-3
-4

-5
-6

-7
-8
1339

1340
1341
1342
1343
1344

1345
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7

-8
-9

-10

chandise Stores, June 1961 (1962). 400.
Employee Earnings in Retail FoodStores,
June 1961 (1963). 350.
Employee Earnings at Retail Automotive
Dealers and in Gasoline Service Stations,
June 1961 (1963). 400.
Employee Earnings in Retail Apparel and
Accessory Stores, June 1961 (1962). 400.
Employee Earnings in Retail Furniture,
Home Furnishings, and Household Appliance
Stores, June 1961 (1963). 400.
Employee Earnings in Miscellaneous Retail
Stores, June 1961 (1963). 350.
Employee Earnings in Retail Trade, June
1961 (1963). 450.
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1961 (1962).
350.
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Labor Requirements for Hospital Construc­
tion (1962). 350.
Industry Wage Survey, Pulp, Paper, and
Paperboard Mills, January 1962 (1962). 400.
Paid Leave Provisions in Major Contracts,
1961 (1962). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Communications,
1961 (1962). 200.
Employment and Changing Occupational
Patterns in the Railroad Industry, 1947-60
(1963). 300.
Occupational Wage Survey, Raleigh, North
Carolina, September 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Manchester,
New Hampshire, August 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Green Bay, W is­
consin, August 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash­
ington, August 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Scranton, Penn­
sylvania, August 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, August 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Little R ock North Little Rock, Arkansas, August 1962
(1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chattanooga,
Tennessee-Georgia, September 1962 (1962).
Occupational Wage Survey, San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, September
1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Diego, Cali­




-11
-12
-13
-14
-15
-16
-17
-18

-19
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-21
-22
-23
-24
-25
-26
-27
-28
-29
-30
-31

-32
-33
-34

fornia, September 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Wichita, Kan­
sas, October 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Omaha, Nebraska-Iowa, October 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Sioux Falls,
South Dakota, October 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
September 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, October 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey,
Washington,
D .C.-M d.-Va., October 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Missouri-Illinois, October 1962 (1963).
OccupationalWage Survey,
DavenportRock Island-Moline, Iowa-Illinois, October
1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Richmond, Vir­
ginia, November 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterloo, Iowa,
November 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
November 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri-Kansas, November 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, November 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Maine,
November 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Salt Lake City,
Utah, December 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Indianapolis, In­
diana, December 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Fort Worth,
Texas, November 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Columbus, Ohio,
December 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Trenton, New
Jersey, December 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, December 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania-New Jersey, November 1962
(1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Miami, Florida,
December 1962 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1963 (1963).

61

-35
-36
-37
-38
-39
-40
-41
-42
-43
-44
-45

-46
-47
-48
-49
-50
-51
-52
-53
-54
-55
-56
-57
-58
-59

Occupational Wage Survey, Dayton, Ohio,
January 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Haven,
Connecticut, January 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jacksonville,
Florida, January 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, January 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, York, Pennsyl­
vania, February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Des Moines,
Iowa, February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jackson, Missis­
sippi, February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania-New Jersey,
February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark and Jer­
sey City, New Jersey, February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, M ich­
igan, January 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana, February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterburv, Con­
necticut, March 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Burlington, Ver­
mont, March 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Toledo, Ohio,
February 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, South Bend, In­
diana, March 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, March 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cincinnati,
Ohio-Kentucky, March 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Rockford, Illi­
nois, April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Phoenix, Ari­
zona, March 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charlotte, North
Carolina, April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee, Wis­
consin, April 1963 (1963).

62



-60
-61
-62
-63
-64
-65
-66
-67
-68
-69
-70

-71
-72
-73
-74
-75

-76
-77

-78
-79
-80
-81
-82
-83

Occupational Wage Survey, Savannah, Geor­
gia, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charleston, West
Virginia, April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Canton, Ohio,
April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Spokane, Wash­
ington, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Beaumont-Port
Arthur, Texas, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Greenville, South
Carolina, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, ProvidencePawtucket, Rhode Island-Massachusetts,
May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lubbock, Texas,
June 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Oregon-Washington, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boise, Idaho,
M ay 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Norfolk-Portsmouth and Newport News-Hampton, Vir­
ginia, June 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, New Jersey, May 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, LawrenceHaverhill, Massachusetts-New Hampshire,
June 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Antonio,
Texas, June 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Worcester, Mas­
sachusetts, June 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Akron, Ohio,
June 1963 (1963).
Occupational Wage Survey, Houston, Texas,
June 1963 (1963).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 82 La­
bor Markets, 1962-63 (1964).

-84

1346

1347

1348

1349
1350
1351
-1
1352
1353
1354

1355

1356

1357

1358

Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: Met­
ropolitan Areas, United States and Regional
Summaries, 1962-63 (1964).
National Survey of Professional, Adminis­
trative, Technical, and Clerical Pay, Winter
1961-62 (1962). 400.
See Bull. 1535 this listing for annotation.
Impact of Technological Change and Auto­
mation in the Pulp and Paper Industry
(1962). 500.
Examines some implications for automa­
tion and other technological advances in the
pulp and paper industry. Analyzes trends
and outlook for the industry as a whole;
presents illustrative case studies of adjust­
ments to technological changes in three
plants. The study is part of the Bureau of
Labor Statistics program on the progress,
outlook, and implications of technological
change.
Unaffiliated Local and Single-Employer
Unions in the United States, 1961 (1962).
150.
Industry Wage Survey, Hosiery, February
1962 (1963). 450.
Disciplinary Powers and Procedures in
Union Constitutions (1963). $1.25.
Prices: A Chartbook, 1953-62 (1963).
$1.50.
Prices: A Chartbook, 1953-62 (September
1963 Supplement) (1963). 450.
Industry Wage Survey, Machinery Manu­
facturing, March-June 1963 (1963). 400.
M ajor Union Contracts in the United States,
1961 (1962). 200.
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1962 (1963).
150.
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1962 (1963). 300.
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck
Drivers and Helpers, July 1, 1962 (1963).
250.
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1962 (1963). 300.
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Basic Iron and Steel,
March 1962 (1963). 300.




1359
1360
1361
1362
1363

1364

1365
1366

1367

1368

1369

1370
-1

Private Pension Plans and Manpower Pol­
icy (1963). 250.
Industry Wage Survey, Footwear, April 1962
(1963) . 450.
Industry Wage Survey, Southern Sawmills
and Planing Mills, June 1962 (1963). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Fertilizer Manufac­
turing, April 1962 (1963). 400.
Employment Outlook and Changing Occupa­
tional Structure in Electronics Manufactur­
ing (1963). 400.
Presents estimates of electronics manufac­
turing employment for the period 1958-61
and projections of this industry’s manpower
requirements for 1970. Classified by major
product categories, the estimates and pro­
jections provide important data for an essen­
tial and dynamic industry. Designed to assist
in educational training and vocational coun­
seling and to improve employment statistics
and projection techniques in this industry.
Impact of Office Automation in the Internal
Revenue Service: A Study of the Man­
power Implications During the First Stages
of the Changeover (1963). 450.
Describes the impact on manpower of the
introduction of a large-scale computer sys­
tem in the IRS. Provides useful knowledge
for planning such a conversion. The study
is a part of the U.S. Department of Labor’s
activities in carrying out the objectives of
the Manpower Development and Training
Act of 1962.
Digest of Nine Supplemental Unemployment
Benefit Plans, Early 1963 (1963). 250.
Seasonal Factors, Consumer Price Index, Se­
lected Series, June 1953-May 1961 (1963).
300.
Employment Requirements and Changing
Occupational Structure in Civil Aviation
(1964) . 400.
Industrial Retraining Programs for Techno­
logical Change, A Study of the Performance
of Older Workers (1963). 250.
Industry Wage Survey, Wood Household
Furniture, Except Upholstered, July 1962
(1963). 400.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for
States and Areas, 1939-62 (1963). $3.50.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for
States and Areas, 1939-63 (1964). $3.75.

63

-2

Employment and Earnings
Statistics for
States and Areas, 1939-64 (1965). $4.
-3
Employment and Earnings
Statistics for
States and Areas, 1939-65 (1966). $4.25.
-4 Employment and Earnings
Statistics for
States and Areas, 1939-66 (1967). $5.
1371 Industry Wage Survey, Women’s and Misses’
Coats and Suits, August 1962 (1963). 250.
1372 Industry Wage Survey, Wool Textiles, June
1962 (1963). 450.
1373 Digest of 50 Selected Pension Plans for
Salaried Employees, Spring 1963 (1963). 350.
Revised by Bull. 1477.
1374 Industry Wage Survey, Electric and Gas
Utilities, July 1962 (1963). 500.
1375 Occupational Outlook Handbook, 1963-64
Edition (1963). $4.75.
Replaced by Bull. 1550.
See this listing for annotation.
1376 Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1960
(1963) . $1.50.
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
1377 Digest of 50 Selected Health and Insurance
Plans for Salaried Employees, Spring 1963
(1964) . $1.
1378 Industry Wage Survey, Leather Tanning and
Finishing, March 1963 (1963). 400.
1379 Seasonal Adjustment Factors, Wholesale
Price Index: Selected Series,
194S-61
(1963). 700.
1380 Employee Earnings in Retail Trade, June
1962 (1963). 450.
-1 Employee Earnings at Retail Building M a­
terials, Hardware, and Farm Equipment
Dealers, June 1962 (1964). 250.
-2 Employee Earnings in Retail General M er­
chandise Stores, June 1962 (1964). 450.
-3 Employee Earnings in Retail Food Stores,
June 1962 (1964). 400.
-4 Employee Earnings at Retail Automotive
Dealers and in Gasoline Service Stations,
June 1962 (1964). 400.
-5 Employee Earnings in Retail Apparel and
Accessory Stores, June 1962 (1964). 450.
-6 Employee Earnings in Retail Furniture,
Home Furnishings, and Household Appliance
Stores, June 1962 (1964). 400.
-7 Employee Earnings in Miscellaneous Stores,
June 1962 (1964). 400.
1381 Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1962 (1963).
400.

64



1382

1383
1384
1385
-1

See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1961
(1964). $1.25.
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Bituminous Coal
Mining, November 1962 (1963). 450.
Economic Forces in the United States, In
Facts and Figures (1963). 400.

Occupational Wage Survey,
Manchester,
New Hampshire, August 1963 (1963).
-2 Occupational Wage Survey, Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, August 1963 (1963).
-3
Occupational Wage Survey, Little R ock North Little Rock, Arkansas, August 1963
(1963).
-4 Occupational Wage Survey, Green Bay, W is­
consin, August 1963 (1963).
-5
Occupational Wage Survey, Chattanooga,
Tennessee-Georgia, September 1963 (1963).
-6 Occupational Wage Survey, Wichita, Kansas,
September 1963 (1963).
-7 Occupational Wage Survey, Raleigh, North
Carolina, September 1963 (1963).
-8 Occupational Wage Survey, Scranton, Penn­
sylvania, August 1963 (1963).
-9 Occupational Wage Survey, San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, September
1963 (1963).
—^10 Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash­
ington, September 1963 (1963).
-11 Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
September 1963 (1964).
-12
Occupational Wage Survey,
DavenportRock Island-Moline, Iowa-Illinois, October
1963 (1964).
-13 Occupational Wage Survey, San Diego, Cali­
fornia, September 1963 (1964).
-14
Occupational Wage Survey, Omaha, Nebraska-Iowa, October 1963 (1964).
-15 Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
November 1963 (1964).
-16 Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, October 1963 (1964).
-17
Occupational Wage Survey,
Washington,
D .C .-M d.-V a., October 1963 (1964).
-18 Occupational Wage Survey, Waterloo, Iowa,
November 1963 (1964).
-19
Occupational Wage Survey, Fort Worth,
Texas, November 1963 (1964).
-20
Occupational Wage Survey, Sioux Falls,

-21
-22
-23
-24
-25
-26
-27
-28
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-30
-31

-32
-33
-34
-35
-36
-37
-38
-39
-40
-41
-42
-43
-44

South Dakota, October 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Missouri-Illinois, October 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Maine,
November 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Richmond, Vir­
ginia, November 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, November 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Columbus, Ohio,
November 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri-Kansas, November 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Trenton, New
Jersey, December 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Salt Lake City,
Utah, December 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Miami, Florida,
December 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Indianapolis, In­
diana, December 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania-New Jersey, November 1963
(1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jacksonville,
Florida, January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, December 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1963 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Haven,
Connecticut, January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dayton, Ohio,
January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jackson Missis­
sippi, February 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, M ich­
igan, January 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Des Moines,
Iowa, February 1964 (1964).




-45
-46
-47
-48
-49

-50
-51
-52
-53

-54
-55
-56
-57
-58
-59
-60
-61
-62
-63
-64
-65

-66
-67
-68

Occupational Wage Survey, York, Pennsyl­
vania, February 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Toledo, Ohio,
February 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Burlington, Ver­
mont, March 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterbury, Con­
necticut, March 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark and
Jersey City, New Jersey, February 1964
(1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana, February 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, South Bend, In­
diana, March 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, March 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania-New Jersey,
February 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Phoenix, Ari­
zona, March 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charlotte, North
Carolina, April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Milwaukee, Wis­
consin, April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charleston, West
Virginia, April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cincinnati,
Ohio-Kentucky, March 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Rockford, Illi­
nois, April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, New Jersey, May 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Canton, Ohio,
April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, ProvidencePawtucket, Rhode Island-Massachusetts,
May 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Oregon-Washington, May 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Greenville,
South Carolina, May 1964 (1964).

65

-69
-70
-71
-72
-73
-74
-75
-76

-77

-78
-79
-80
-81
-82
-82

1386
1387

1388
1389
1390

1391
1392

Occupational Wage Survey, Savannah, Geor­
gia, M ay 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Beaumont^Port
Arthur, Texas, M ay 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan, May 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, M ay 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Antonio,
Texas, June 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lubbock, Texas,
June 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lawrence-Haverhill, Massachusetts-New Hampshire, June
1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Norfolk-Portsmouth and Newport News-Hampton, Vir­
ginia, June 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Spokane, Wash­
ington, M ay 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Worcester, M as­
sachusetts, June 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Akron, Ohio,
June 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Houston, Texas,
June 1964 (1964).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 80
Metropolitan Areas, 1963-64 (1965).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: M et­
ropolitan Areas, United States and Regional
Summaries, 1963-64 (1965).
Industry Wage Survey, Iron and Steel Foun­
dries, November 1962 (1963). 400.
National Survey of Professional, Administra­
tive, Technical, and Clerical Pay, FebruaryMarch 1963 (1963). 400.
See Bull. 1535 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey. M n o h ^ ^ M onufacturing, M arch-M ay 1963 (1964). 250.
Industry Wage Survey, Commumcaiions,
1962 (1964). 200.
Labor and Material Requirements for Civil
Works Construction by the Corps of En­
gineers (1964). 250.
Industry Wage Survey, Women’s and Misses’
Dresses, March-April 1963 (1964). 300.
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii,
Puerto Rico, and Alaska, May-June 1963
(1964). 400.

66



1393

1394
1395

1396

1397

1398

1399

1400
1401
1402

1403
1404

1405

1406
1407

Industry Wage Survey, Part I: Motor Ve­
hicles, Part II: Motor Vehicle Parts, April
1963 (1964). 450.
Unfunded Private Pension Plans (1964). 300.
Directory of National and International
Labor Unions in the United States, 1963
(1964). 500.
Replaced by Bull. 1493.
See this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours:
Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1963 (1964).
150.
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1963 (1964). 350.
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Vvages and Hours: Motortruck Driv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1963 (1964). 250.
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
LTnion Wages and Hours: Printing Industry,
July 1, 1963 (1964). 300.
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Eating and Drinking
Places, June 1963 (1964). 400.
Industry Wage Survey, Laundries and Clean­
ing Services, June 1963 (1964). 500.
Labor and Material Requirements for Public
Housing Construction, M ay 1964 (1964).
300.
Withdrawn from publication.
Labor and Material Requirements for Pri­
vate One-Family House Construction (1964).
300.
Health and Insurance Benefits and Pension
Plans for Salaried Employees, Spring 1963
(1964). 200.
Industry Wage Survey, Hotels and Motels,
June 1963 (1964). 400.
Labor Mobility and Private Pension Plans:
A Study of Vesting, Early Retirement, Port­
ability Provisions (1964). 450.
Describes the private pension structure—
prevalence of plans, types of plans, and
types and characteristics of benefits provided,
as well as implications for labor mobility
inherent in the provisions and practices thus
accounted for. The study concentrates on
the vesting and early retirement provisions
of pension plans. The pension credit portabil­
ity provided by multiemployer plans and, to
a limited extent, the age and service require­

1408
1409
1410
1411

1412

1413

1414
1415

1416

1417
1418
1419

1420

1421
1422

ments for normal retirement are discussed.
This bulletin is a part of a series undertaken,
under the Manpower Development and
Training Act of 1962, to “ establish a program
of factual studies of practices of employers
and unions which tend to impede the mobility
of workers or which facilitate mobility.” See
also Bull. 1462 this listing.
Case Studies of Displaced Workers, Experi­
ences of Workers After Layoff (1964). 500.
Industry Wage Survey, Hospitals, Mid-1963
(1964) . 500.
Industry Wage Survey, Cotton Textiles, May
1963 (1964). 400.
Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1962
(1965) . $1.75.
See Bull. 1513 this listing for annotation.
Employment of Scientific and Technical Per­
sonnel in State Government Agencies, 1962
(1964). 500.
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supple­
mentary Compensation Practices for Produc­
tion and Related Workers, Meatpacking and
Processing Industries, 1962 (1964). 250.
See Bull. 1428 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Synthetic Textiles,
M ay 1963 (1964). 350.
Industry Wage Survey, Meat Products:
Part I: Meatpacking, Part II: Prepared
Meat Products, November 1963 (1964). 750.
Employee Earnings in Nonmetropolitan
Areas of the South and North Central R e­
gions, June 1962 (1964). 400.
See also Bulls. 1533 and 1552.
Salary Structure Characteristics in Large
Firms, 1963 (1964). 300.
Employment of Scientific and Technical Per­
sonnel in Industry, 1962 (1964). 500.
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supple­
mentary Remuneration Practices: Finance,
Insurance, and Real Estate Industries, 1961
(1964). 450.
See Bull. 1428 this listing for annotation.
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1963 (1964).
350.
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Counselor’s Guide to Occupational and Other
Manpower Information (1965). 500.
National Survey of Professional, Administra­
tive, Technical, and Clerical Pay, FebruaryMarch 1964 (1964). 400.




1423
1424

See Bull. 1535 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Pressed or Blown
Glass and Glassware, May 1964 (1964). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Men’s and Boys’
Suits and Coats, October 1963 (1965). 650.

1425
-1

M ajor Collective Bargaining Agreements:
Grievance Procedures (1964). 450.
-2
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements:
Severance Pay and Layoff Benefit Plans
(1965). 600.
-3
M ajor Collective Bargaining Agreements:
Supplementary Unemployment Benefit Plans
and Wage-Employment Guarantees (1965).
700.
-4
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements:
Deferred Wage Increases and Escalation
Clauses (1966). 400.
-5
M ajor Collective Bargaining Agreements:
Management Rights and Union-Management
Cooperation (1966). 600.
-6
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements:
Arbitration Procedures (1966). $1.
A comprehensive series of studies survey­
ing the entire scope of the collective bargain­
ing agreement. Emphasis is placed on preva­
lent practices, specific problems handled by
negotiators, and interrelationships of agree­
ment provisions. Quoted agreement clauses
are identified by the company and union sig­
natories and by the date of agreement expi­
ration. The studies are based on virtually all
agreements in the United States covering
1,000 workers or more, exclusive of railroad,
airline, and government agreements.
1426 Industry Wage Survey, Communications,
1963 (1964). 200.
1427 Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for
Selected Occupations and Metropolitan Areas
(1965). 150.
See also Bull. 1505.
1428 Employer Expenditures for Selected Supple­
mentary Compensation Practices for Produc­
tion and Related Workers; Composition of
Payroll Hours: Manufacturing Industries,
1962 (1965). $1.
Replaces Bull. 1308.
Latest in a series of bulletins based on the
Bureau of Labor Statistics program of sur­
veys on the magnitude of employer expendi­
tures for supplementary employee remuner­
ation practices. The program provides for

67

1429
1430
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7

-8

-9
-10
-11
-12
-13
-14
-15
-16
-17
-18

surveys in manufacturing industries every 3
years and in selected nonmanufacturing in­
dustries in the intervening 2 years. This bul­
letin contains a section on composition of
payroll hours. For related data on the meat
packing and food processing industry, see
Bull. 1413. For related data on selected non­
manufacturing industries (mining, and fi­
nance, insurance and real estate), see Bulls.
1332 and 1419.
Industry Wage Survey, Machinery Manufac­
turing, M arch-M ay 1964 (1965). 350.

-19

Occupational Wage Survey, Boise City, Ida­
ho, July 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Scranton, Penn­
sylvania, August 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Green Bay, Wis­
consin, August 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Manchester,
New Hampshire, August 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, August 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Raleigh, North
Carolina, September 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Little R ock North Little Rock, Arkansas, August 1964
(1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, September
1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Seattle, Wash­
ington, September 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chattanooga,
Tennessee-Georgia, September 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Wichita, Kan­
sas, September 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Diego, Cal­
ifornia, September 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Cleveland, Ohio,
September 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey,
Washington,
D .C .-M d.-V a., October 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey,
Sioux Falls,
South Dakota, October 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Boston, Massa­
chusetts, October 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Omaha, Nebraska-Iowa, October 1964 (1964).
OccupationalWage Survey, Columbus, Ohio,
October 1964 (1964).

-25

68



-20

-21
-22
-23
-24

-26
-27
-28

-29
-30
-31
-32
-33
-34
-35
-36
-37
-38
-39
-40
-41
-42
-43

Occupational Wage Survey, Richmond, Vir­
ginia, November 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, Davenport-Rock
Island-Moline, Iowa-Illinois, October 1964
(1964) .
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Maine,
November 1964 (1964).
Occupational Wage Survey, St. Louis, Missouri-Illinois, October 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterloo, Iowa,
November 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Fort Worth,
Texas, November 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dallas, Texas,
November 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Kansas City,
Missouri-Kansas, November 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Baltimore,
Maryland, November 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Philadelphia,
Pennsylvania-New Jersey, November 1964
(1965) .
Occupational Wage Survey, Miami, Florida,
December 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Indianapolis,
Indiana, December 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Dayton, Ohio,
January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Denver, Colo­
rado, December 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Salt Lake City,
Utah, December 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Haven,
Connecticut, January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Trenton, New
Jersey, December 1964 (1965).
Occupational WTage Survey, Buffalo, New
York, December 1964 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, San FranciscoOakland, California, January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jacksonville,
Florida, January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Memphis, Ten­
nessee, January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Pittsburgh,
Pennsylvania, January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana, February 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Detroit, Michi­

-44
-45

-46
-47
-48

-49
-50
-51
-52
-53
-54
-55
-56
-57
-58
-59
-60
-61
-62
-63
-64
-65
-66
-67

gan, January 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Jackson, Missis­
sippi, February 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Newark and
Jersey City, New Jersey, February 1965
(1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, York, Pennsyl­
vania, February 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Des Moines,
Iowa, February 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania-New Jersey,
February 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Waterbury,
Connecticut, March 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Toledo, Ohio,
February 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Burlington, Ver­
mont, March 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, New Orleans,
Louisiana, February 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, South Bend, In­
diana, March 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey,
Cincinnati,
Ohio-Kentucky, March 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Phoenix, Ari­
zona, March 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Los AngelesLong Beach, California, March 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey,
Milwaukee,
Wisconsin, April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Canton, Ohio,
April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Birmingham,
Alabama, April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charlotte, North
Carolina, April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Albuquerque,
New Mexico, April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Rockford, Illi­
nois, M ay 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Savannah, Geor­
gia, M ay 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Charleston, West
Virginia, April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Beaumont-Port
Arthur, Texas, M ay 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey,
ProvidencePawtucket, Rhode Island-Massachusetts,
M ay 1965 (1965).




-68

-69
-70
-71
-72
-73
-74
-75

-76
-77

-78
-79
-80
-81
-82
-83
-83

1431

1432

1433

1434

1435

Occupational Wage Survey, MuskegonMuskegon Heights, Michigan, May 1965
(1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Greenville, South
Carolina, M ay 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Portland, Oregon-Washington, M ay 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Paterson-Clifton-Passaic, New Jersey, May 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Chicago, Illinois,
April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lubbock, Texas,
June 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Atlanta, Geor­
gia, M ay 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Lawrence-Haverhill, Massachusetts-New Hampshire, June
1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Worcester, Mas­
sachusetts, June 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Norfolk-Portsmouth and Newport News-Hampton, Vir­
ginia, June 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Akron, Ohio,
June 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Spokane, Wash­
ington, June 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, New York, New
York, April 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, San Antonio,
Texas, June 1965 (1965).
Occupational Wage Survey, Houston, Texas,
June 1965 (1965).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 80
Metropolitan Areas, 1964-65 (1965).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: M et­
ropolitan Areas, United States and Regional
Summaries, 1964-65 (1966).
Union Wages and Hours:
Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1964 (1965).
150.
See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1964 (1965). 350.
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1964 (1965). 300.
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1964 (1965). 350.
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Digest of 100 Selected Pension Plans Under

69

1436
1437

1438
1439
1440
1441
1442

1443

1444
1445
1446
1447

1448
1449

1450

1451

Collective Bargaining, Late 1964 (1965). 500.
Revision of Bull. 1307.
Industry Wage Survey, Cigar Manufactur­
ing, A pril-M ay 1964 (1965). 300.
Outlook for Numerical Control of Machine
Tools: A Study of a Key Technological
Development in Metalworking Industries
(1965). 400.
Analyzes the trend toward increased use
of numerical control of machines by the
metalworking industries. Discusses the im­
pact of numerical control on productivity,
occupational requirements, training pro­
grams, and employment.
Glossary of Current Industrial Relations and
Wage Terms (1965). 350.
Industry Wage Survey, Miscellaneous Plas­
tics Products, June 1964 (1965). 350.
Industry Wage Survey, Work Clothing,
May-June 1964 (1965). 350.
Labor and Material Requirements for Col­
lege Housing Construction (1965). 300.
Wage Chronology: Federal Classification
Act Employees, 1924-64 (1965). 350.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Wage Chronology:
A.T.&T., Long Lines
Department, 1940-64 (1965). 400.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Salary Trends:
Federal Classified Em­
ployees, 1939-64 (1965). 350.
Salary Trends:
Firemen and Policemen,
1924-64 (1965). 250.
Retail Prices of Food, 1961-63, Indexes and
Average Prices (1965). 400.
Wage Chronology: Sinclair Oil Companies,
1941-64 (1965). 250.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Salary Trends: City Public School Teach­
ers, 1925-63 (1965). 300.
Wage Chronology: Martin-Marietta Cor­
poration, 1944-64 (1965). 250.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Occupational Outlook Handbook, 1966-67
Edition (1965). $5.
Replaced by Bull. 1550. See this listing for
annotation.
Collective Bargaining Agreements in the
Federal Service, Late Summer 1964 (1965).
500.
Presents a detailed picture of the early
results of bargaining in the Federal service,

70



1452
1453

1454

1455
1456
1457

1458

1459
1460

1461

1462

as reflected in written agreements. Though it
may soon have historical significance only,
it will serve as a base upon which changes
in collective bargaining can be measured. The
scope of bargaining with individual agencies
are not as wide as in private industry, since
the major terms of compensation and supple­
mentary benefits for Federal workers are
established by Congress.
Industry Wage Survey, Auto Dealer Repair
Shops, August-0ctober 1964 (1965). 300.
Wage Chronology: New York Laundries,
1945-64 (1965). 250.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Wage Chronology:
Bethlehem Atlantic
Shipyards, 1941-65 (1965). 250.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, West Coast Sawmill­
ing, June 1964 (1965). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Hosiery, SeptemberOctober 1964 (1965). 450.
Industry Wage Survey, M en’s and Boys’
Shirts (Except Work Shirts) and Nightwear,
April-June 1964 (1965). 500.
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and
Studies (1966). $1.50.
Contains a statement about the creation
and purpose of each major data collection
program carried out by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics. The statements describe how data
are put into final form, tell how the results
may be used, and state the limitations to be
remembered when one is using the data.
Industry Wage Survey, Structural Clay
Products, July-August 1964 (1965). 450.
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1964 (1965).
400.
See Bull. 1525 this listing for annotation.
Wage Chronology: Bituminous Coal Mines,
1933-66 (1965). 200.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
The Operation of Severance Pay Plans and
Their Implication for Labor Mobility (1966).
600.
Summarizes the aspects of severance pay
plans and their attendant circumstances that
bear upon manpower and mobility issues.
Five case studies of severance pay plans in
operation are included in the discussion. The
bulletin is the second in a series of studies
developed under the Manpower Development

1463

and Training Act of 1962. See also Bull. 1407
this listing.
Industry Wage Survey, Fabricated Struc­
tural Steel, October-November 1964 (1965).

-17

-18

30£.
1464
1465
-1
-2

-3

-4
-5

-6

-7

-8
-9

-10

-11
-12

-13

-14

-15
-16

Industry Wage Survey, Fluid Milk, September-October 1964 (1965). 30^.

-19
-20

Area Wage Survey, The Boise City, Idaho,
Metropolitan Area, July 1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Manchester, New
Hampshire, Metropolitan Area, August 1965
(1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Scranton, Pennsyl­
vania, Metropolitan Area, August 1965
(1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Green Bay, Wiscon­
sin, Metropolitan Area, August 1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, Metropolitan Area, August 1965
(1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Little Rock-North
Little Rock, Arkansas, Metropolitan Area,
August 1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Chattanooga, Tennessee-Georgia, Metropolitan Area, Septem­
ber 1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Cleveland, Ohio,
Metropolitan Area, September 1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Seattle-Everett,
Washington, Metropolitan Area, October
1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Raleigh, North Car­
olina, Metropolitan Area, September 1965
(1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Wichita, Kansas,
Metropolitan Area, October 1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Boston, Massachu­
setts, Metropolitan Area, October 1965
(1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Omaha, NebraskaIowa, Metropolitan Area, October 1965
(1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Washington, D .C .M d.-Va., Metropolitan Area, October 1965
(1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Columbus, Ohio,
Metropolitan Area, October 1965 (1965).
Area Wage Survey, The Davenport-Rock
Island-Moline, Iowa-Illinois, Metropolitan
Area, October 1965 (1965).




-21

-22

-23
-24
-25

-26
-27

-28
-29

-30
-31

-32

-33
-34

-35

-36

Area Wage Survey, The Sioux Falls, South
Dakota, Metropolitan Area, October 1965
(1965) .
Area Wage Survey, The Waterloo, Iowa,
Metropolitan Area, November 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The San Jose, California,
Metropolitan Area, September 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, Metropolitan
Area, September 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The San Diego, Califor­
nia, Metropolitan Area, November 1965
(1966) .
Area Wage Survey, The St. Louis, MissouriIllinois, Metropolitan Area, October 1965
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Portland, Maine,
Metropolitan Area, November 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Dallas, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, November 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Youngstown-Warren, Ohio, Metropolitan Area, November
1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Fort Worth, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, November 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Kansas City, Missouri-Kansas, Metropolitan Area, November
1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Richmond, Virginia,
Metropolitan Area, November 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Baltimore, M ary­
land, Metropolitan Area, November 1965
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Miami, Florida,
Metropolitan Area, December 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Indianapolis, Indi­
ana, Metropolitan Area, December 1965
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Salt Lake City,
Utah, Metropolitan Area, December 1965
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Denver, Colorado,
Metropolitan Area, December 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Trenton, New Jer­
sey, Metropolitan Area, December 1965
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Philadelphia, Penn­
sylvania-New Jersey, Metropolitan Area,
November 1965 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Buffalo, New York,
Metropolitan Area, January 1966 (1966).

71

-37

-38

-39
-40
-41
-42

-43

-44
-45
-46

-47

-48
-49

-50

-51

-52
-53

-54

-55
-56

Area Wage Survey, The New Haven, Con­
necticut, Metropolitan Area, January 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, Metropolitan Area, Janu­
ary 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Dayton, Ohio, M et­
ropolitan Area, January 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The York, Pennsylvania,
Metropolitan Area, February 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Jacksonville, Flori­
da, Metropolitan Area, January 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Memphis, Tennessee-Arkansas, Metropolitan Area, January
1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The San Francisco-Oakland, California, Metropolitan Area, January
1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Jackson, Mississippi,
Metropolitan Area, February 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Detroit, Michigan,
Metropolitan Area, January 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Pittsburgh, Penn­
sylvania, Metropolitan Area, January 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The New Orleans, Lou­
isiana, Metropolitan Area, February 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Des Moines, Iowa,
Metropolitan Area, February 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Toledo, Ohio-Michigan, Metropolitan Area, February 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Newark and Jersey
City, New Jersey, Metropolitan Area, Feb­
ruary 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana, Metropolitan Area, February
1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Waterbury, Connec­
ticut, Metropolitan Area, March 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton,
Pennsylvania-New
Jersey,
Metropolitan Area, February 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Burlington, Ver­
mont, Metropolitan Area, March 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The South Bend, Indiana,
Metropolitan Area, March 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Birmingham, Ala­
bama, Metropolitan Area, April 1966 (1966).

72



-57

-58
-59

-60

-61
-62
-63

-64

-65

-66
-67

-68
-69
-70

-71
-72

-73

-74

-75
-76

Area Wage Survey, The Cincinnati, OhioK e n t u c k y -I n d ia n a , Metropolitan A r e a ,
March 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Canton, Ohio, M et­
ropolitan Area, April 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Los Angeles-Long
Beach and Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden
Grove,
California,
Metropolitan
Area,
March 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, Metropolitan Area,
April 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Milwaukee, Wiscon­
sin, Metropolitan Area, April 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Phoenix, Arizona,
Metropolitan Area, March 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The BeaumonL-Port
Arthur-Orange, Texas, Metropolitan Area,
May 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Albuquerque, New
Mexico, Metropolitan Area, April 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Providence-Pawtucket-Warwick, Rhode Island-Massachusetts, Metropolitan Area, M ay 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Rockford, Illinois,
Metropolitan Area, M ay 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Charlotte, North
Carolina, Metropolitan Area, April 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Chicago, Illinois,
Metropolitan Area, April 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Savannah, Georgia,
Metropolitan Area, M ay 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Charleston, West
Virginia, Metropolitan Area, April 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Atlanta, Georgia,
Metropolitan Area, May 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan, Metropolitan Area,
May 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Portland, OregonWashington, Metropolitan Area, M ay 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Greenville, South
Carolina, Metropolitan Area, May 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Spokane, Washing­
ton, Metropolitan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Paterson-Clifton-

-77

-78
-79
-80

-81
-82
-83

-84
-85
-86
-86

1466
1467
1468
1469

1470
1471

1472
1473
1474

Passaic, New Jersey, Metropolitan Area,
M ay 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Norfolk-Portsmouth
and Newport News-Hampton, Virginia,
Metropolitan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The San Antonio, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Lubbock, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Lawrence-Haverhill,
Massachusetts-New Hampshire, Metropoli­
tan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Akron, Ohio, Metro­
politan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The New York, New
York, Metropolitan Area, April 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Worcester, Massa­
chusetts, Metropolitan Area, June 1966
(1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Midland and Odessa,
Texas, Metropolitan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Area Wage Survey, The Houston, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, June 1966 (1966).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 84
Metropolitan Areas, 1965-66 (1966). 550.
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: M et­
ropolitan Areas, United States and Regional
Summaries, 1965-66 (1967). 600.
Industry Wage Survey, Banking, NovemberDecember 1964 (1965). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Communications,
1964 (1965). 200.
Impact of Office Automation in the Insurance
Industry (1966). 450.
National Survey of Professional, Administra­
tive, Technical, and Clerical Pay, FebruaryMarch 1965 (1965). 450.
See Bull. 1535 this listing for annotation.
Supplementary Compensation for Nonpro­
duction Workers, 1963 (1966). 700.
Wage Chronology:
Massachusetts Shoe
Manufacturing, 1945-66 (1966). 150.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Cigarette Manufac­
turing, July-August 1965 (1965). 200.
Bibliography on Labor in Africa, 1960-64
(1965). 600.
Technological Trends in M ajor American In­
dustries (1966). $1.50.
Presents a detailed study of the technologi­
cal changes in 40 American industries for




1475

1476
1477

1478
1479

1480

1481

1482

1483
1484

1485

1486

the period 1947-64. Analyzes, by industry,
the impact of changes in technology on pro­
duction, productivity, occupational require­
ments, and employment. Projects trends
through 1970, particularly trends for employ­
ment and occupational requirements.
Wage Chronology:
Berkshire Hathaway,
Inc,, 1943-66 (1965). 200.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Machinery Manufac­
turing, April-June 1965 (1965). 250.
Digest of 50 Selected Pension Plans for Sal­
aried Employees, Summer 1965 (1966). 400.
Revision of Bull. 1373.
Industry Wage Survey, Paperboard Contain­
ers and Boxes, November 1964 (1966). 700.
Wage Chronology: International Shoe Com­
pany, 1945-66 (1966). 200.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Premium Pay Practices for Weekend Work
in Seven Continuous-Process Industries, 1966.
(1966). 200.
Wage Chronology: Armour and Company,
1941-67 (1966). 300.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
National Emergency Disputes Under the
Labor Management Relations (Taft-Hartley) Act, 1947-65 (1966). 400.
Covers the actions of all Taft-Hartley
emergency boards, 1947-65. A selected bibli­
ography on national emergency disputes is
included.
Financing Supplemental Unemployment Ben­
efit Plans (1966). 200.
Wage Chronology: Firestone Tire and Rub­
ber Co. and B. F. Goodrich Co. (Akron
Plants), 1937-66 (1967). 300.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Private Pension Plan Benefits (1966). 550.
Analyzes the types and levels of benefits
available for normal, disability, and early
retirement under private pension plans in
the United States. Also covered are vesting
provisions, supplementary pension plans, and
death benefits. For an analysis of the impli­
cations for labor mobility of vesting, early
retirement, and portability provisions, see
Bull. 1407 this listing.
Union Wages and Hours:
Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1965 (1966).
150.

73

1487

1488

1489

1490
1491

1492
1493

1494

1495

1496

1497

See Bull. 1546 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1965 (1966). 350.
See Bull. 1547 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1965 (1966). 300.
See Bull. 1548 this listing for annotation.
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1965 (1966). 400.
See Bull. 1549 this listing for annotation.
Labor and Material Requirements for Sewer
Works Construction (1966). 300.
Wage Chronology: Pacific Longshore In­
dustry, 1934-65 (1966). 250.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Nursing Homes and
Related Facilities, April 1965 (1966). 450.
Directory of National and International
Labor Unions in the United States, 1965
(1966). 550.
Replaces Bulls. 901, 937, 980, 1127, 1185,
1222, 1267, 1320, and 1395.
Provides current general information con­
cerning the structure and activities of the
American labor movement and lists and gives
details about all known national and inter­
national unions and State labor bodies. In­
formation assembled from responses by
unions relates to the number of members
and local union affiliates of the organizations
listed, the number of women who are union
members, and information on union conven­
tions and publications. Headquarters ad­
dresses and names of principal officers of
national and international offices are also
listed.
Wage Chronology: Anthracite Mining In­
dustry, 1930-66 (1966). 200.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Wage Chronology: Dan River Mills, 194365 (1966). 150.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Industry Wage Survey, Wood Household
Furniture, Except Upholstered, May-June
1965 (1966). 400.
Labor Digests on Countries in Europe
(1966). 600.
Made up of digests on labor conditions in
29 European countries. The digests appearing
are: Albania, Austria, Belgium, Bulgaria,
Cyprus, Czechoslovakia, Denmark, Finland,

74



1498
1499

1500
1501
-1

-2

-3
-4

-5

-6

-7
1502

1503
1504
1505

1506
1507
1508

France, East Germany, Federal Republic of
Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iceland, Italy,
Luxembourg, Malta, Netherlands, Norway,
Poland, Portugal, Rumania, Spain, Sweden,
Switzerland, U.S.S.R., United Kingdom, and
Yugoslavia.
Industry Wage Survey, Nonferrous Foun­
dries, June-July 1965 (1966). 400.
Wage Chronology: Pacific Gas and Electric
Co., 1943-66 (1966). 300.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Salaries for Selected Occupations in Services
for the Blind, January 1966 (1966). 300.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Retail
Trade, June 1965 (1967). 500.
Employee Earnings and Hours at Retail
Building Materials, Hardware, and Farm
Equipment Dealers, June 1965 (1966). 250.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Retail Gen­
eral Merchandise Stores, June 1965 (1966).
400.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Retail
Food Stores, June 1965 (1966). 300.
Employee Earnings and Hours at Retail
Automotive Dealers and in Gasoline Service
Stations, June 1965 (1966). 400.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Retail
Apparel and Accessory Stores, June 1965
(1966). 450.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Retail
Furniture, Home Furnishings, and Household
Appliance Stores, June 1965 (1966). 400.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Miscella­
neous Retail Stores, June 1965 (1966). 300.
Digest of 100 Selected Health and Insurance
Plans Under Collective Bargaining, Early
1966 (1966). $1.
Revision of Bull. 1330.
Industry Wage Survey, Footwear, April 1965
(1966). 500.
Salary Trends: City Public School Teach­
ers, 1925-65 (1966). 300.
Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for
Selected Occupations and Metropolitan
Areas, 1907-66 (1966). 250.
See also Bull. 1427.
Industry Wage Survey, Cotton Textiles,
September 1965 (1966). 400.
Industry Wage Survey, Contract Cleaning
Services, Summer 1965 (1966). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Women’s and Misses’

Coats and Suits, August 1965 (1966). 250.
1509 Industry Wage Survey, Synthetic Textiles,
September 1965 (1966). 400.
1510 Price Trends, March 1966 (1966). 550.
1511 The Negroes in the United States: Their
Economic and Social Situation (1966). $1.25.
Presents a comprehensive discussion of the
economic and social situation of the Negroes
— employment and unemployment, education,
and living conditions, such as health and
housing. Suggests some elements that may be
retarding the progress of Negroes toward
economic security. This bulletin updates the
“ Economic Status of the N egro/’ which was
prepared at the request of the Planning Ses­
sion for the White House Conference “ To
Fulfill These Rights,” held November 17-18,
1965. The sourcebook of tabulations used by
working staff in advance of the Conference
has been incorporated in this bulletin.
See also Bull. 1119 this listing.
1512 Technician Manpower: Requirements, Re­
sources, and Training Needs (1966). 600.
Analyzes current and future technician
manpower requirements in the United States,
the ways in which persons are trained for
technician jobs, and the projected supply and
demand for these workers (1963-75). Exten­
sive information also is included on the per­
sonal and educational characteristics of tech­
nicians and the nature of their work.
1513 Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes, 1963
(1966). $1.75.
Latest in a series of bulletins presenting
primary market prices and index numbers
(relative prices) dating back to 1890. The
first bulletin in this series, published in 1900,
was designed to bring up to date as nearly
as practicable the record of prices in a report
of the United States Committee on Finance
for 1840 to 1891 (S. Rept. No. 1394, 52d
Cong., 2d Sess.). Bulletins have been pub­
lished annually through 1931 (except for the
war years 1917 and 1918) and again begin­
ning in 1942.
1514 Productivity: A Bibliography, July 1966
(1966). 650.
1515 Wage Chronology: Chrysler Corporation,
1939-66 (1967). 300.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
1516 Weathering Layoffs in a Small Community:




1517

1518
1519
1520

1521
1522

1523

1524
1525

1526
1527
1528

Case Studies of Displaced Pottery and Car­
pet-Mill Workers (1966). 450.
The Consumer Price Index: History and
Techniques (1966). 600.
See also Bulls. 699, 710, 966, 1039, 1165,
1256, and 1554.
Unit Labor Cost in Manufacturing: Trends
in Nine Countries, 1950-65 (1966). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Southern Sawmills
and Planing Mills, October 1965 (1966). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Candy and Other
Confectionery Products, September 1965
(1966). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Communications,
1965 (1967). 200.
Wage Chronology:
Lockheed-California
Company (a Division of Lockheed Aircraft
Corp.), 1937-67 (1967). 350.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Job Redesign for Older Workers: Ten Case
Studies (1967). 400.
Presents various techniques industry is
using to help older workers meet the require­
ments of new jobs. Job redesign is attracting
more interest than formerly, since 40 percent
of the labor force is composed of workers 45
years of age and older.
Industry Wage Survey, Paints and Varnishes,
November 1965 (1966). 400.
Analysis of Work Stoppages, 1965 (1966).
350.
Latest in a series of bulletins presenting in­
formation on strikes and lockouts in the
United States. Statistics are presented by
State and industry group on the number of
work stoppages beginning in the year, work­
ers involved, and total man-days of idleness.
In addition, data are presented concerning
unions involved; major issues, duration, and
results of the strikes; and methods used in
their termination. Data have been collected
by the Bureau for many years, but have been
published in other than bulletin form for
some of the years. See also annotation for
Bull. 651 this listing.
Industry Wage Survey, Petroleum Refining,
December 1965 (1966). 300.
Industry Wage Survey, Textile Dyeing and
Finishing, Winter 1965-66 (1966). 450.
Compensation Expenditures and Payroll
Hours, Pipelines, 1964 (1967). 250.

75

1529
1530
-1

-2
-3

-4

-5

-6

-7

-8

-9

-10

Industry Wage Survey, Industrial Chemicals,
November 1965 (1966). 400.
-18
Area Wage Survey, The Little Rock-North
Little Rock, Arkansas, Metropolitan Area,
August 1966 (1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Boise City, Idaho,
Metropolitan Area, July 1966 (1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Scranton, Pennsyl­
vania, Metropolitan Area, August 1966
(1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Manchester, New
Hampshire, Metropolitan Area, August 1966
<T966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Green Bay, Wis­
consin, Metropolitan Area, August 1966
(1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Oklahoma City,
Oklahoma, Metropolitan Area, August 1966
(1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Raleigh, North
Carolina, Metropolitan Area, September
1966 (1966). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Chattanooga, Tennessee-Georgia, Metropolitan Area, Septem­
ber 1966 (1966). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Tampa-St. Peters­
burg, Florida, Metropolitan Area, September
1966 (1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The San Jose, California,
Metropolitan Area, September 1966 (1966).

200.
-11

-12

-13

-14

-15

-16

-17

Area Wage Survey, The Wichita, Kansas,
Metropolitan Area, October 1966 (1966).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The Sioux Falls, South
Dakota, Metropolitan Area, October 1966
(1966). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Cleveland, Ohio,
Metropolitan A p a , September 1966 (1966).
300.
Area Wage Survey, The San BernardinoRiverside-Ontario, California, Metropolitan
Area, September 1966 (1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Washington, D .C .M d.-Va., Metropolitan Area, October 1966
(1966). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Boston, Massachu­
setts, Metropolitan Area, October 1966
(1966). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Portland, Maine,

76



-19

-20

-21

-22

-23

-24

-25
-26

-27

-28

-29

-30

-31

-32

-33

-34

Metropolitan Area, November 1966 (1966).
200.
Area Wage Survey, The Omaha, NebraskaIowa, Metropolitan Area, October 1966
(1966) . 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Davenport-Rock
Island-Moline, Iowa-Illinois, Metropolitan
Area. October 1966 (1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Columbus, Ohio,
Metropolitan Area, October 1966 (1967).
300.
Area Wage Survey, The Waterloo, Iowa,
Metropolitan Area, November 1966 (1967).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The Seattle-Everett,
Washington, Metropolitan Area, October
1966 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Richmond, Virginia,
Metropolitan Area, November 1966 (1967).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The San Diego, Califor­
nia, Metropolitan Area, November 1966
(1967) . 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Dallas, Texas, M et­
ropolitan Area, November 1966 (1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Kansas City, Missouri-Kansas, Metropolitan Area, November
1966 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The St. Louis, MissouriIllinois, Metropolitan Area, October 1966
(1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Fort Worth, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, November 1966 (1967).
300.
Area Wage Survey, The Youngstown-Warren, Ohio, Metropolitan Area, November
1966 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Baltimore, M ary­
land, Metropolitan Area, November 1966
(1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Miami, Florida,
Metropolitan Area, December 1966 (1967).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The Denver, Colorado,
Metropolitan Area, December 1966 (1967).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The Salt Lake City,
Utah, Metropolitan Area, December 1966
(1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Trenton, New Jer­
sey, Metropolitan Area, December 1966
(1967). 250.

-35

-36

-37

-38

-39

-40

-41

-42

-43

Area Wage Survey, The Philadelphia, Penn­
sylvania-New Jersey, Metropolitan Area,
November 1966 (1967). 350.
Area Wage Survey, The San Francisco-Oakland, California, Metropolitan Area, Janu­
ary 1967 (1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Indianapolis, In­
diana, Metropolitan Area, December 1966
(1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Buffalo, New York,
Metropolitan Area, December 1966 (1967).
300.
Area Wage Survey, The Jacksonville, Flor­
ida, Metropolitan Area, January 1967
(1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Memphis, Tennessee-Arkansas, Metropolitan Area, January
1967 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The New Haven, Con­
necticut, Metropolitan Area, January 1967
(1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Minneapolis-St.
Paul, Minnesota, Metropolitan Area, Janu­
ary 1967 (1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Jackson, Mississippi,
Metropolitan Area, February 1967 (1967).

200
-44

-45
-46

-47

-48

-49

-50

-51

-52

.

Area Wage Survey, The Des Moines, Iowa,
Metropolitan Area, February 1967 (1967).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The Dayton, Ohio, M et­
ropolitan Area, January 1967 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Pittsburgh, Penn­
sylvania, Metropolitan Area, January 1967
(1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The York, Pennsylvania,
Metropolitan Area, February 1967 (1967).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The Detroit, Michigan,
Metropolitan Area, January 1967 (1967).
300.
Area Wage Survey, The Louisville, Kentucky-Indiana, Metropolitan Area, February
1967 (1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Toledo, Ohio-Michigan, Metropolitan Area, February 1967
(1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The New Orleans, Louisi­
ana, Metropolitan Area, February 1967
(1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Burlington, Ver­




-53

-54

mont, Metropolitan Area, March 1967
(1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton,
Pennsylvania-New
Jersey,
Metropolitan Area, February 1967 (1967).
250.
Area Wage Survey, The Waterbury, Connec­
ticut, Metropolitan Area, March 1967 (1967).

200 .
-55

-56

-57

-58
-59
-60

-61

-62

-63

-64

-65

-66

-67

-68
-69

Area Wage Survey, The Newark and Jersey
City, New Jersey, Metropolitan Area, Feb­
ruary 1967 (1967). 250.
Area
Wage
Survey,
The
Cincinnati,
Ohio-Kentucky-Indiana, Metropolitan Area,
March 1967 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The South Bend, In­
diana, Metropolitan Area, March 1967
(1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Canton, Ohio, M et­
ropolitan Area, April 1967 (1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Phoenix, Arizona,
Metropolitan Area, March 1967 (1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Albuquerque, New
Mexico, Metropolitan Area, April 1967
(1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Charleston, West
Virginia, Metropolitan Area, April 1967
(1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York, Metropolitan Area,
April 1967 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Birmingham, Ala­
bama, Metropolitan Area, April 1967 (1967).
300.
Area Wage Survey, The Charlotte, North
Carolina, Metropolitan Area, April 1967
(1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Los Angeles-Long
Beach and Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden
Grove, California, Metropolitan Area, March
1967 (1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Greenville, South
Carolina, Metropolitan Area, May 1967
(1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Paterson-CliftonPassaic, New Jersey, Metropolitan Area,
M ay 1967 (1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Rockford, Illinois,
Metropolitan Area, May 1967 (1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Savannah, Georgia,
Metropolitan Area, May 1967 (1967). 200.

77

-70

-71
-72

-73
-74

-75
-76

-77

-78

Area Wage Survey, The Providence-Pawtucketr-Warwick, Rhode Island-Massachusetts, Metropolitan Area, May 1967 (1967).
300.
Area Wage Survey, The Atlanta, Georgia,
Metropolitan Area, May 1967 (1967). 250.
Area Wage Survey, The Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan, Metropolitan Area,
M ay 1967 (1967). 200.
Area Wage Survey, The Chicago, Illinois,
Metropolitan Area, April 1967 (1967). 300.
Area Wage Survey, The Beaumont^Port Ar­
thur-Orange, Texas, Metropolitan Area, May
1967 (1967). 20**.
Area Wage Survey, The Lubbock, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, June 1967 (1967). 20**.
Area Wage Survey, The Milwaukee, Wis­
consin, Metropolitan Area, April 1967
(1967). 30**.
Area Wage Survey, The Lawrence-Haverhill, Massachusetts-New Hampshire, Metro­
politan Area, June 1967 (1967). 20**.
Area Wage Survey, The Midland and Odessa,
Texas, Metropolitan Area, June 1967 (1967).

200.

Area Wage Survey, The Portland, Oregon,
Metropolitan Area, M ay 1967 (1967). 250.
-80 Area Wage Survey, The Spokane, Washing­
ton, Metropolitan Area, June 1967 (1967).
250.
-81 Area Wage Survey, The Worcester, Massa­
chusetts, Metropolitan Area, June 1967
(1967). 250.
-82 Area Wage Survey, The Norfolk-Portsmouth
and Newport News-Hampton, Virginia, M et­
ropolitan Area, June 1967 (1967). 250.
-83 Area Wage Survey, The New York, New
York, Metropolitan Area, April 1967 (1967).
400.
-84 Area Wage Survey, The San Antonio, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, June 1967 (1967). 250.
-85 Area Wage Survey, The Houston, Texas,
Metropolitan Area, June 1967 (1967). 250.
-86 Area Wage Survey, The Akron, Ohio, Metro­
politan Area, June 1967 (1967). 250.
-87 Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 85
Metropolitan Areas, 1966-67 (in process).
-87 Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: M et­
ropolitan Areas, United States and Regional
Summaries, 1966-67 (in process).
Provides data on occupational earnings,

1531
1532

1533

1534

1535

-79

78



1536

establishment practices, and supplementary
wage provisions in 85 metropolitan areas.
Part I compiles most of the results of the
individual surveys. Part II presents infor­
mation which has been projected from in­
dividual metropolitan area data to relate to
economic regions and the United States. For
a listing of other wage surveys conducted,
see Subject Index— Wages and hours, Area
Wage Surveys and Occupational Wage Sur­
veys.
Industry Wage Survey, Fertilizer Manufac­
turing, March-April 1966 (1967). 300.
Wage Chronology: General Motors Corp.,
1939-66 (1966). 300.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Eight M et­
ropolitan Areas of the South, June 1965
(1966) . 400.
See also Bulls. 1416 and 1552.
Wage Chronology: International Paper
Company, Southern Kraft Division, 1937-67
(1967) . 250.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.
National Survey of Professional, Adminis­
trative, Technical, and Clerical Pay, February-March 1966 (1966). 500.
Presents the results of the seventh in a
series of annual nationwide surveys of com­
pensation for selected professional, adminis­
trative, technical, and clerical occupations
in private industry. The data were obtained
by personal visits of Bureau field economists
to representative establishments in American
industry and relate to the period FebruaryMarch 1966. For previous surveys, see Bulls.
1286, 1310, 1346, 1387, 1422, and 1469.
Projections 1970: Interindustry Relation­
ships, Potential Demand, Employment
(1966). $1.
Presents 1970 projections of potential de­
mand, interindustry relationships, and em­
ployment under alternative assumptions
regarding rates and patterns of growth. In­
cludes a comprehensive study of the frame­
work for the projections. Potential output
in 1970 is projected and distributed among
categories of final demand. Final demand is
shown in a detailed “ bill of goods.” The
interindustry employment table is used to
convert the projections of final demand for

1537
1538
1539

1540

goods and services into estimates of industryemployment requirements. The projections
contained in this bulletin are not forecasts,
but provide detailed and consistent projec­
tions of what the economy may look like
in 1970.
Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Selected
Industries, 1939 and 1947-65 (1966). 500.
Industry Wage Survey, Women’s and Misses’
Dresses, March 1966 (1967). 300.
Labor Digests on Countries in Africa (1966).
$1.25.
Contains digests on labor conditions in 51
African countries. Each digest includes a
brief statement concerning the political, eco­
nomic, and social conditions of the country.
Information is presented on employment
and unemployment; productivity; labor leg­
islation; wages, hours, prices, and level of
living; employer organizations; and labor
management relations.
Industry Wage Survey, Synthetic Fibers,
February-April 1966 (1967). 300.

1541

Wage Chronology: Berkshire Hathaway,
Inc., 1943-69 (1967). 250.
See Bull. 1545 this listing for annotation.

1542

Industry Wage Survey, Motion
Theaters, April 1966 (1967). 350.

1543

Price Perspective, 1965, 1966, 1967 (in proc­
ess).

1544

Industry Wage Survey, Laundry and Clean­
ing Services, Mid-1966 (1967). 600.

1545

Wage Chronology: Western Union Tele­
graph Co., 1943-67 (1967). 350.
The most recent in a series of publications
tracing changes in wage scales and related
benefits negotiated by individual employers
or combinations of employers with a union
or a group of unions in selected collective
bargaining situations. Benefits introduced
unilaterally by an employer generally are
included. References to job security, griev­
ance procedure, methods of piece rate ad­
justment, and similar matters are omitted.

1546

Picture

Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit
Operating Employees, July 1, 1966 (1967).
150.
Latest in a series of bulletins presenting
union wages and hours of operating em­
ployees in the local-transit industry. This




1547

1548

bulletin presents the results of an annual
survey by the Bureau, and is based on
union scales in effect on July 1, 1966, for
approximately 63,000 operating employees
in 67 cities having populations of 100,000 or
more. The first bulletin in this series was
printed in 1922 and presented wages as of
May 15, 1921. Surveys have been made for
all ensuing years, but from 1932 to 1940,
inclusive, the results were printed in the
Monthly Labor Review and serial reprints,
rather than in bulletin form. Hours of work
were not included in some of the earlier
bulletins because of their irregularity. The
Bureau first surveyed collectively bargained
insurance and pension plans in 1954, and the
results for the local-transit industry were
first published in Bull. 1177. See also anno­
tation for Bull. 600 this listing.
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades,
July 1, 1966 (1967). 350.
Latest in a series of bulletins presenting
union wages in effect for building trades
workers. This bulletin covers approximately
690.000 journeymen and 175,000 helpers and
laborers in 68 cities having populations of
100.000 or more. The first bulletin in this
series was published in 1913 and presents
wage and hour data back to 1907. Data have
been published for most of the ensuing
years. The Bureau first surveyed collec­
tively bargained insurance and pension plans
in 1954, and the results for the building
trades were first published in Bull. 1175. See
also annotation for Bull. 600 this listing.
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck D riv­
ers and Helpers, July 1, 1966 (1967). 300.
Latest in a series of bulletins presenting
union wage scales for motortruck drivers and
helpers. This bulletin presents information
based on union scales in effect on July 1,
1966, and covers approximately 310,000 driv­
ers and 35,000 helpers in 68 cities having
populations of 100,000 or more. The first
bulletin in this series was published in 1915
and presented union wage scales in effect as
of 1913 and 1914; however, the majority of
quotations for the early years are for Team­
sters rather than for motortruck drivers.
Data have been published in bulletin form
for most of the ensuing years. The Bureau

79

first surveyed collectively bargained insur­
ance and pension plans in 1954, and the
results for motortruck drivers and helpers
were first published in Bull. 1178. See also
annotation for Bull. 600 this listing.
1549 Union Wages and Hours: Printing Indus­
try, July 1, 1966 (1967). 400.
Latest in a series of bulletins presenting
union wages and hours in the printing indus­
try. In this bulletin, information is based on
union scales in effect on July 1, 1966, for
approximately 105,000 printing trades work­
ers in 69 cities having populations of 100,000
or more. The first bulletin in this series was
published in 1913 and presents wage and
hour data back to 1907. Data have been
published in bulletin form for most of the
ensuing years. The Bureau first surveyed
collectively bargained insurance and pension
plans in 1954, and the results for the printing
industry were first published in Bull. 1176.
See also annotation for Bull. 600 this listing.
1550 Occupational Outlook Handbook, 1968-69
Edition (in process).
The eighth edition of the Handbook as­
sesses the employment outlook for 10 years
in the future for more than 700 occupations
and 30 major industries. It is designed for
use in vocational guidance and educational
and other economic planning. Occupational
coverage includes professional, managerial,
and technical; clerical, sales, and services;
skilled trades; and semiskilled and unskilled
jobs. Each occupational report describes the
nature of the work; the principal employers;
the education, training and other qualifica­
tions required for entry; the earnings, work­
ing conditions, and advancement opportuni­
ties; and sources of further information. The
Handbook also evaluates the effects of auto­
mation, technology, and recent economic
developments on the occupational and indus­
trial manpower requirements in the decade
ahead. The first chapter of the book, Look­
ing Ahead to A Career, provides trend data
on population, labor force, and employment

80



1551
1552

1553
1554

1555

to 1975, as well as an analysis of factors
affecting growth in the broad industrial and
occupational groups.
(Reprints of the occupations and industries
from the Handbook are available in the Oc­
cupational Outlook Reprint Series as Bulls.
1550-A and 1550-1 through 1550-118.)
Industry Wage Survey, Wool Textiles, N o­
vember 1966 (1967). 450.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Nonmetro­
politan Areas of the South and North Central
Regions, June 1965 (1967). 500.
See also Bulls. 1416 and 1533.
Industry Wage Survey, Hospitals, July 1966
(1967). 700.
The Consumer Price Index: Technical
Notes, 1959-63 (1967). 500.
Contains a summary of technical changes
made in the Consumer Price Index data col­
lection and calculation procedures during
the period from 1959 through 1963. These
changes include rebasing from 1 9 4 7 -4 9 = 100
to 1 9 5 7 -5 9 = 100; improvements in price
collection through expansion of the outlet
samples; and improvements in the measure­
ment of the effects of quality changes. The
bulletin also includes tables of indexes for
the U.S. city average and for individual cities.
See also Bulls. 699, 710, 966, 1039, 1165,
1256, and 1517.
Handbook of Labor Statistics 1967 (1967).

$2.
Replaces Bull. 1016.
Earlier editions in this series are: Bulls.
439 (1924-26), 491 (1929), 541 (1931), 616
(1936), 694 (1941), 916 (1947), and 1016
(1950-51).
Collects in one volume major BLS histori­
cal series from the beginning of the series to
the past year. Monthly data are shown for
the last two years. Data also include series
from other offices of the Department of
Labor, other Departments of the govern­
ment, and foreign governments. Short state­
ments of methods used and limitations of
each series of tables are included.

Numerical Listing o f Reports
1
2

3

4

5

6
7

8

9

10

11
12
13

14
15

16

17

18

Collective Bargaining Structures: The Em­
ployer Bargaining Unit (1953).
New and Maintenance Construction: Con­
struction in the 1947 Interindustry Relations
Study (1953).
New Nonfarm Residential Construction: A
Segment of Construction Activity in the 1947
Interindustry Relations Study (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory
Performance: M en’s Winter Suits and T op­
coats (1953).
Employment in Metalworking Industries by
Size of Firm, October 1951 to October 1952
(1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory
Performance: Beet Sugar Refining (1953).
Wage Structure: West Coast Sawmilling,
1952 (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Processed Foods— Canned
Vegetables (1953).
Industry Reports: General Explanations.
The 1947 Interindustry Relations Study
(1953).
Industry Reports: Manufacturing Method­
ology. The 1947 Interindustry Relations Study
(1953).
Work Stoppages: Collection and Compila­
tion of Work Stoppage Statistics (1953).
Wage Structure: Electric and Gas Utilities,
July 1952 (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Combines [Harvesterthreshers] (1954).
Capital Requirements and Operating R a­
tios: The Electric Motor Industry (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Dry Electrolytic Capac­
itors (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Coarse Cotton Gray
Goods (1953).
Collective Bargaining Agreements: Expira­
tion, Reopening, and Wage Adjustment Pro­
visions of M ajor Agreements (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Wood Furniture (1954).




19

20

21

22

23

24

25

26

27

28
29

30

31

32

33

New Nonfarm Nonresidental Construction.
Part I: New Industrial Building Construc­
tion; Part II: All Other New Nonfarm Nonresidential Building Construction. Two Seg­
ments of Construction Activity in the 1947
Interindustry Relations Study (1953).
Farm Construction: A Segment of Construc­
tion Activity in the 1947 Interindustry Rela­
tions Study (1953).
Industry Reports: Methodology for Agricul­
tural Sectors. The 1947 Interindustry Rela­
tions Study (1953).
Industry Reports: The Alkalies and Chlo­
rine Industry. A Manufacturing Sector in the
1947 Interindustry Relations Study (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance:
Fractional Horsepower
Motors (1953).
Capital Requirements and
Operating Ra­
tios: The Coarse Paper Industry, 1949 and
1950 (1953).
Capital Requirements and
Operating Ra­
tios: The Agricultural Machinery Industry,
1950 and 1951 (1954).
Capital Requirements and
Operating R a­
tios: The Work Clothing Industry, 1950-51
(1953).
Capital Requirements and
Operating R a­
tios: The Paperboard Industry, 1949 and
1950 (1953).
Injury Rate Variations in the BoilershopProducts Industry, 1951 (1953).
Industry Reports: The Drugs and Medicines
Industry. A Manufacturing Sector in the 1947
Interindustry Relations Study (1953).
Industry Reports: The Plastics Materials
Industry. A Manufacturing Sector in the 1947
Interindustry Relations Study (1953).
Industry Reports: The Inorganic Chemicals
Industry. A Manufacturing Sector in the 1947
Interindustry Relations Study (1953).
Employment in Metalworking Industries by
Size of Firm: Quarterly Employment in Se­
lected Metalworking Industries by Size Class
of Establishment, January 1952 to January
1953 (1953).
General Explanations of the 200 Sector

81

34
35

36

37

38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47

48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55

Tables: The 1947 Interindustry Relations
Study (1953).
Wage Structure: Hosiery, November 1952
(1953).
Industry Reports: The Organic Chemicals
Industry. A Manufacturing Sector in the 1947
Interindustry Relations Study (1953).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries
and Areas. Studies Between March 1951 and
M ay 1952 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Veneer and Plywood
(1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Farm Tractors (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Hand Tools (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance: Knit Outerwear (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance: Knit Underwear (1953).
Employment in Metalworking Industries by
Size of Firm, April 1952 to April 1953 (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance:
Brick and Tile (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Seamless Hosiery (1953).
Wage Structure:
Southern Lumber Industry,
April 1953 (1953).
Wape Structure: Footwear, March 1953
(1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Cold Formed Machine
Bolts and Hexagon Nuts (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance: Aluminum Ware (1954).
Earnings of Communications Workers, October 1952 (1953).
Cotton and Synthetic Textiles, Wage Trends,
1950-1953 (1954).
Wage Structure: Work Clothing, July 1953
(no date).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Farm Implements (1954).
Plant Operation Report on a Small Gray Iron
Foundry (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Fork Lift Trucks (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance: 5-Horsepower Induction
Motors (1954).

82



56
57

58

59

60

61

62
63
64

65

66

67

68
69

70
71
72
73

74
75

Wage Structure: Miscellaneous Textile In­
dustries, October 1953 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Processed Foods— Pre­
serves, Jams, and Jellies (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Fine Cotton Gray Goods
(1954).
Capital Requirements and Operating R a­
tios: The M en’s Shoe Industry, 1950 and
1951 (1954).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries
and Areas. Studies Between Mid-1952 and
Mid-1953 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Irons, Hot Plates, and
Space Heaters (1954).
Work-Injury Rates in the Fluid-Milk Indus­
try, 1952 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Fertilizer (1954).
Employment in Metalworking Industries by
Size of Firm, Summary Report, July 1951 to
July 1953 (1955).
Collective Bargaining Agreements: Hours
and Premium Pay Provisions in the Indus­
trial Chemicals Industry, 1953 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Cotton Textile Dyeing
and Finishing (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: 3-Pole Circuit Breakers,
Circuit Interrupters, and Safety Switches
(1954).
Plant Operation Report for the Manufacture
of Plows (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory P erform an ce: C entrifugal Pumps
(1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Glass Containers (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Metal Containers (1954).
Earnings of Communications Workers, Octo­
ber 1953 (1954).
Construction Cost Indexes: Annual Indexes,
1915-1953; Monthly Indexes, January 1949July 1954 (1954).
Wage Structure:
Men’s and Boys’ Dress
Shirts and Nightwear, M ay 1954 (1954).
Collective Bargaining Agreements: Expira-

76
77
78

79

80
81

82
83
84
85

86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94

95
96

tion, Reopening, and Wage Adjustment Pro­
visions of M ajor Agreements, October 1954
(1954) .
Wage Structure: Household Furniture, 1954
(1955) .
Wage Structure: Structural Clay Products,
M ay 1954 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Coal-Burning Space Heat­
ers (1955).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance:
Paint and Varnish
(1955).
Wage Structure: Leather Tanning and Fin­
ishing, M ay 1954 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Copper Tube and Brass
Rod (1955).
Wage Structure: Cotton Textiles, November
1954 (1955).
Injuries and Injury Rates in Water-Supply
Utilities, 1953 (1955).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Women’s Dresses (1955).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Five Small Gray Iron
Foundries (1955).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Fac­
tory Performance: Diesel Engines (1955).
Wage Structure: Synthetic Textiles, Novem­
ber 1954 (1955).
Plant Operation Report for the Manufacture
of Concrete Pipe and Block (1955).
Plant Operation Report for Meat Processing
(1955).
Plant Operation Report for the Manufacture
of Fish Netting (1955).
Plant Operation Report for the Manufacture
of Rubber Sole Fabric Shoes (1955).
Work Stoppages, Basic Steel Industry (1955).
Wage Structure: Machinery Industries, W in­
ter 1954-55 (1955).
Impact of a Full Mobilization Program on
the Occupational Composition of the Air­
craft Engine and Parts Industry: Tech­
niques for Projecting Employment and Occu­
pational Patterns (1955).
Work Stoppages, Bituminous-Coal Mining In­
dustry (1955).
Earnings of Communications Workers, Octo­
ber 1954 (1955).




97
98

99
100

101
102

103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111

112

113

114
-1

Wage Structure: Cigar Manufacturing, April
1955 (1955).
Women Production Workers in the Machinery
Industries: Emplovment Distribution; Earn­
ings, Winter 1952-53 (1956).
Wage Chronology: Ford Motor Co., 1941-55
(1956) ; 1941-64 (Revised 1965).
Trends in Output Per Man-Hour and ManHours Per Unit of Output— Manufacturing,
1939-53 (1955).
WTork Injuries in the Canning and Preserv­
ing Industry (1956).
Collective Bargaining Activity in 1956: A
Timetable of Expiration, Reopening, and
WTage Adjustment Provisions of Major Agree­
ments (1957).
Wage Structure: Industrial Chemicals, Au­
gust 1955 (1956).
Injuries and Injury Rates in the Bottled SoftDrink Industry (1956).
Trends in Output Per Man-Hour, 1935-55:
Selected Nonmanufacturing Industries (1956).
Wage Chronology: United States Steel Corp.,
1937-55 (1957).
Wage Structure: Machinery Manufacturing,
Winter 1955-56 (1956).
Earnings of Communications Workers, Octo­
ber 1955 (1957).
Studies of Automatic Technology: A Case
Study of a Large Mechanized Bakery (1956).
Wage Structure: Textile Dyeing and Finish­
ing, April 1956 (1956).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Fertilizer Manufac­
turing, Part I— Nationwide Earnings, April
1956; Part II— Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage in the South, April 1955 and April 1956
(1957) .
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Seamless Hosiery,
Part I— Nationwide Earnings, April 1956;
Part II— Effects of the $1 Minimum Wage,
February, April, and August 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Southern Sawmills,
October-December 1955 and April 1956
(1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Burlington, Vermont, February and
April 1956 (1957).

83

-2

-3

-4

-5

-6

-7

-8

-9

-10

115

116

117

Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Millville, New Jersey, February and
April 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Athens, Georgia, February and April
1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Dalton, Georgia, February and April
1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
W a ge: S u n b u ry-S h a m ok in -M t. C arm el,
Pennsylvania, February and April 1956
(1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Dothan, Alabama, February and
April 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Hickory, North Carolina, February
and April 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Fort Smith, Arkansas, February and
April 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Meridian, Mississippi, February and
April 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Spartanburg, South Carolina, Febru­
ary and April 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure (in Selected A reas):
Footwear, Processed Waste, Wooden Contain­
ers, Work Shirts, August 1955, February 1956,
and April 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Men’s and Boys’
Shirts (except Work Shirts) and Nightwear,
February, April, and October 1956 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure (in Selected Areas):
Cigars, Canning and Freezing, Raw Sugar,
Tobacco Stemming and Redrying, 1955 and
1956 (1958).

121
122
123
124

125

126

127
-1

-2

-3

-4

-5

-6

-7

128

129

118

Factory Workers’ Earnings in 5 Industry
Groups: Food, Textiles, Apparel, Furniture,
Leather, April 1956 (1957).

119

Initial Report: Employee Earnings in Retail
Trade, October 1956 (1957).

130

120

Studies of Automatic Technology: A Case
Study of a Modernized Petroleum Refinery
(1957).

131

84



Earnings of Communications Workers, Octo­
ber 1956 (1957).
Wage Structure: Women’s and Misses’ Coats
and Suits, February 1957 (1958).
Wage Structure: Fabricated Structural Steel,
March 1957 (1958).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure (in Selected A reas):
Processed Waste, Work Shirts, April 1957
(1958).
Injuries and Injury Rates in the Fabricated
Structural Steel and Ornamental Metalwork
Industry, 1954 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Wooden Containers,
April 1957 (1958).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
W age: S u n bu ry -S h am ok in -M t. Carmel,
Pennsylvania, February and April 1956 and
April 1957 (1958).
Studies of the Effects of the SI Minimum
Wage: Athens, Georgia, February and April
1956 and April 1957 (1958).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage: Hickory, North Carolina, February
and April 1956 and April 1957 (1958).
Studies of the Effects of the SI Minimum
Wage: Dalton, Georgia, February and April
1956 and April 1957 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the SI Minimum
Wage: Dothan, Alabama, February and
April 1956 and April 1957 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the SI Minimum
Wage: Fort Smith, Arkansas, February and
April 1956 and April 1957 (1957).
Studies of the Effects of the SI Minimum
Wage: Meridian, Mississippi, February and
April 1956 and April 1957 (1958).
Wage Structure:
Part I— Motor Vehicles,
Part II— Motor Vehicle Parts, July 1957
(1958).
Studies of the Effects of the SI Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Seamless Hosiery—
Men’s Seamless Hosiery, Nationwide; Chil­
dren’s Seamless Hosiery, Southeast, April 1957
(1958).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Southern Sawmills,
April 1957 (1958).
Daily Indexes and Spot Market Prices, Janu-

132

133
134
135
136

137

138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153

154

ary 1, 1954-December 31, 1956 (1958).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure: Fertilizer Manufac­
turing, South, April 1957 (1958).
Wage Structure: Footwear Industry, April
1957 (1958).
Wage Structure: Wool Textiles, September
1957 (1958).
Wage Structure: Electric and Gas Utilities,
September 1957 (1958).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum
Wage. Wage Structure (in Selected A reas):
Canning and Freezing, Raw Sugar, Tobacco
Stemming and Redrying, 1957 (1958).
Studies of Automatic Technology: A Case
Study of an Automatic Airline Reservation
System (1958).
Earnings of Communications Workers, Octo­
ber 1957 (1958).
Wage Structure: Machinery Manufacturing,
Winter 1957-58 (1958).
Wage Structure: M en’s and Boys’ Suits and
Coats, March 1958 (1959).
Wage Structure: Auto Dealer Repair Shops,
Summer 1958 (1959).
Frequency of Change in Wholesale Prices: A
Study of Price Flexibility (1958).
Wage Structure: Synthetic Fibers, October
1958 (1959).
Initial Report: Factory Workers’ Earnings,
M ay 1958 (1959).
Work Injuries and Injury Rates in the Manu­
facture of Cooperage (1959).
Work Injuries and Injury Rates in Sawmills
and Planing Mills (1959).
Wage Structure: Machinery Manufacturing,
Winter 1958-59 (1959).
Work Stoppages, Motor Vehicles and Motor
Vehicle Equipment Industry, 1927-58 (1959).
Earnings of Communications Workers, Octo­
ber 1958 (1959).
Wage Structure: Leather Tanning and Fin­
ishing, M ay 1959 (1959).
Wage Structure: Gray Iron Foundries, AprilJune 1959 (1959).
Wage Structure: Wood Household Furniture,
Except Upholstered, April-M ay 1959 (1960).
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in the
Concrete Brick and Block Industry, 1957
(1959).
Work Injuries and W ork-Injury Rates in Log-




ging Operations, 1955 (1960).
155
-1

Minimum Wage Effects Studies: SunburyShamokin-Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, June
1959 (1959).
-2 Minimum Wage Effects Studies:
Athens,
Georgia, June 1959 (1960).
-3 Minimum Wage Effects Studies:
Dothan,
Alabama, June 1959 (1960).
-4 Minimum Wage Effects Studies:
Dalton,
Georgia, June 1959 (1960).
-5 Minimum Wage Effects Studies: Fort Smith,
Arkansas, June 1959 (1960).
-6 Minimum Wage Effects Studies: Meridian,
Mississippi, June 1959 (1960).
156 Wage Structure:
West Coast Sawmilling,
July 1959 (1960).
157 Daily Spot Market: Price Indexes and Prices,
January 1, 1957-December 31, 1959 (1961).
'58 Wage Structure: Petroleum Refining, July
1959 (1960).
159 Work Injuries and W ork-Injury Rates in
School Lunchrooms, 1958 (1960).
160 Wage Chronology: Western Union Telegraph
Co., 1945-53 (1960); 1943-63 (Revised 1964).
161 Wage Chronology: Chrysler Corp., 1939-53
(1960).
162 Wage Chronology: International Harvester
Co., 1946-57 (1960).
163 Wage Chronology: North American Avia­
tion, 1941-57 (1960).
164 Wage Chronology: General Motors Corp.,
1939-55 (1960).
165 Wage Chronology: Armour and Co., 1941-58
(1960).
166

Injuries and Accident Causes in Water-Supply
Utilities (1960).

167

Wage Structure: Cigarette Manufacturing,
May 1960 (1960).
Wage Structure:
Miscellaneous Plastics
Products, January-February 1960 (1960).
National Emergency Disputes Under the La­
bor Management Relations (Taft-Hartley)
Act, 1947-October 1960 (1961); 1947-61 (Re­
vised 1962); 1947-62 (Revised 1963).
Wage Structure: Machinery Manufacturing,
Winter 1959-60 (1960).
Earnings of Communications Workers, Octo­
ber 1959 (1960).
Wage Structure: Structural Clay Products,
April-June 1960 (1961).

168
169

170
171
172

85

173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193

Wage Structure: Hotels, March-June 1960
(1961).
Wage Structure: Fluid Milk Industry, AprilJune 1960 (1961).
Work Stoppages, Aircraft and Parts Industry,
1927-59 (1961).
Work Stoppages, Water Transportation In­
dustry, 1927-59 (1961).
Wage Structure: Pressed or Blown Glass and
Glassware, M ay 1960 (1961).
Wage Structure: Power Laundries and Dry
Cleaners, April-July 1960 (1961).
Wage Structure: Banking Industry, Mid1960 (1961).
Wage Structure: Nonferrous Foundries, May
1960 (1961).
Wage Structure: Crude Petroleum and Nat­
ural Gas Production, May-June 1960 (1961).
Labor in the Sudan (1961).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Canning
of Fruits and Vegetables (1961).
Wage Structure: Cotton Textiles, August
1960 (1961).
Wage Chronology: General Motors Corp.,
1939-60 (1961); 1939-63 (Revised 1964).
Wage Chronology: United States Steel Corp.,
1937-60 (1961); 1937-64 (Revised 1965).
Wage Chronology: Armour and Co., 1941-60
(1961); 1941-63 (Revised 1963).
Labor in India (1961).
Labor Law and Practice in Honduras (1961).
Wages in Nonmetropolitan Areas, South and
North Central Regions, October 1960 (1961).
Labor in Brazil (1962).
Wage Structure: Synthetic Textiles, August
1960 (1961).
Wage Structure:
Women’s and Misses’
Dresses, August 1960 (1961).

200

201
202
203
204
205

206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217

194

Salary Trends: City Public School Teachers,
1925-59 (1961).

218

195

Wage Structure: Candy and Other Confec­
tionery Products, November-December 1960
(1961).

219
220

196

Injuries and Accident Causes in the FluidMilk Industry (1961).

197

Wage Chronology:
58 (1961).

198

Wage Chronology: Chrysler Corp., 1939-60
(1961); 1939-64 (Revised 1964).

224
225

199

Wage Chronology: Federal Classification Act
Employees, 1924-60 (1961).

226

86



The Anaconda Co., 1941-

221
222
223

Salary Trends:
Federal Classified Em­
ployees, 1939-60 (1961); Supp. 1, July 1960July 1961 (not dated).
Wage Chronology: Chicago Newspaper Pub­
lishers’ Assn., 1939-61 (1962).
Wage Chronology: International Harvester
Co., 1946-61 (1961).
Wage Chronology: North American Avia­
tion, 1941-64 (1965). 250.
Wage Chronology: The Boeing Co. (Wash­
ington Plants), 1936-64 (1965). 200.
Wage Chronology:
Commonwealth Edison
Co. of Chicago, 1945-61 (1962); 1945-63 (R e­
vised 1964). 200.
Work Stoppages, Basic Steel Industry, 190161 (1961).
Work Stoppages, Contract Construction In­
dustry, 1927-60 (1962).
Wage Chronology: Railroads— Nonoperating
Employees, 1920-62 (Revised 1963). 250.
Wage Chronology: Massachusetts Shoe Man­
ufacturing, 1945-64 (Revised 1964). 200.
Principal Current Soviet Labor Legislation
(1962).
Wage Chronology: International Shoe Co.,
1945-64 (Revised 1963).
Labor Law and Practice in Venezuela (1962).
300.
Work Stoppages, Electrical Machinery, Equip­
ment, and Supplies Industry, 1927-60 (1962).
Work Stoppages, Meat Products Industry,
1927-60 (1962).
Wage Chronology: Franklin Assn, of Chi­
cago, 1939-61 (1962).
Wage Chronology: Bethlehem Atlantic Ship­
yards, 1941-62 (1962).
Labor Law and Practice in Colombia (1962).
350.
Labor Law and Practice in Bolivia (1962).
300.
Wage Chronology: Aluminum Co. of Amer­
ica, 1939-61 (1962).
Labor Law and Practice in Costa Rica (1962).
300.
Labor Law and Practice in Iraq (1963). 300.
Labor in Colombia (1962).
Labor Law and Practice in Guatemala (1963).
250.
Labor in Chile (1962).
Wage Chronology: Sinclair Oil Companies,
1941-61 (1962); 1941-63 (Revised 1964). 250.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Fabrica-

227

tion of Structural Steel and Architectural
Metalwork (1962).
Labor Law and Practice in Ceylon (1963).

35^.
228
229

230
231

232
233
234
235
236
237
-1
-2
-3
-4
-5
-6
-7
-8
-9
-10
-11
-12
-13
-14
-15

Health and Insurance and Pension Plan Cov­
erage in Union Contracts, Late 1960 (1962).
Summary of Manufacturing Earnings Series,
1939-March 1965 (1965); Supp. 1, June 1965
(1965); 1939-65 (Revised 1966).
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in
Hotels (1962).
Wage Chronology: Lockheed Aircraft Corp.
(California Company), 1937-61 (1962); 193764 (Revised 1964). 25^.
Wage Chronology: Martin-Marietta Corp.
(Baltimore Plant), 1944-61 (1963).
Salary Trends: Firemen and Policemen,
1924-61 (1962).
Wage Chronology: North Atlantic Longshoring, 1934-61 (1962).
Deferred Wage Increases and Escalator
Clauses, 1952-63 (1963).
Work Stoppages, Metropolitan Areas, 1952-61
(1963); 1952-62 (Revised 1963).
Consumer Expenditures and Income Surveys:
Detroit, Michigan, 1960 (1962); Supp. 1
(1963).
San Francisco, California, 1960 (1962); Supp.
1 (1963).
Washington, D.C., 1960 (1962; Revised 1963);
Supp. 1 (1963).
New York, New York, 1960 (1962); Supp. 1
(1963).
Chicago, Illinois, 1960 (1962); Supp. 1 (1963).
Atlanta, Georgia, 1960 (1962); Supp. 1
(1963).
Boston, Massachusetts, 1960 (1962); Supp. 1
(1963).
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1960 (1963);
Supp. 1 (1963).
Seattle, Washington, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Indianapolis, Indiana, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1960 (1963); Supp.
1 (1963).
Austin, Texas, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Northern New Jersey, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Portland, Maine, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
St. Louis, Missouri, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).




-16

Baltimore, Maryland, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
-17 Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1960 (1963) ; Supp. 1
(1963).
-18 Buffalo, New York, 1960 (1963) ; Supp. 1
(1963).
-19 Orlando, Florida, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
-20 Dallas, Texas, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
-21 Cleveland, Ohio, 1960 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
-22 Los Angeles, California, 1960 (1963) ; Supp. 1
(1963).
-23 Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, 1960 (1963);
Supp. 1 (1963).
-24 Small Cities in the Northeastern Region, 1960
(1963).
-25 Small Cities in the Southern Region, 1960
(1963).
-26 Small Cities in the Western Region, 1960
(1963).
-27 Small Cities in the North Central Region, 1960
(1963).
-28 Cincinnati, Ohio, 1959 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) .
-29 Anchorage, Alaska, 1959 (1963).
-30 Fairbanks, Alaska, 1959 (1963).
-31 Ketchikan, Alaska, 1960 (1963).
-32 Juneau, Alaska, 1960 (1963).
-33 Las Vegas, Nevada, 1962 (1964); Supp. 1
(1964) .
-34 Urban Places in the Northeastern Region,
1960-61 (1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964);
Supp. 3, Part A (1964).
-35 Urban Places in the North Central Region,
1960-61 (1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964).
-36 Urban Places in the Southern Region, 1960-61
(1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964).
-37 Urban Places in the Western Region, 1960-61
(1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964); Supp. 3, Part
A (1964).
-38 Urban United States, 1960-61 (1964); Supp. 1
(1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964); Supp. 3, Part
A (1964); Supp. 3, Part B (1964); Supp. 3,
Part C (1964).
-39-50. Numbers withdrawn.
-51 Detroit, Michigan, 1960-61 (1963).
-52 San Francisco, California, 1960-61 (1964).
-53 Washington, D.C., 1960-61 (1964).
-54 New York, New York, 1960-61 (1963).
-55 Chicago, Illinois, 1960-61 (1963).
-56 Nashville, Tennessee, 1961 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
-57 Boston, Massachusetts, 1960-61 (1964).

87

-58
-59
-60
-61
-62
-63
-64
-65
-66
-67
-68
-69
-70
-71
-72
-73
-74
-75
-76
-77
-78
-79
-80
-81
-82
-83
-84
-85

-86
-87

Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1960-61 (1964).
Denver, Colorado, 1961 (1963) ; Supp. 1
(1963) .
Dayton, Ohio, 1961 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1960-61 (1964).
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 1961 (1964); Supp. 1
(1964) .
Northern New Jersey, 1960-61 (1963).
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 1961 (1963); Supp.
1 (1963).
St. Louis, Missouri, 1960-61 (1964).
Baltimore, Maryland, 1960-61 (1964).
Wichita, Kansas, 1961 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Hartford, Connecticut, 1961 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) .
Durham, North Carolina, 1961 (1963); Supp.
1 (1963).
Bakersfield, California, 1961 (1964); Supp. 1
(1964) .
Cleveland, Ohio, 1960-61 (1964).
Los Angeles, California, 1960-61 (1964).
Green Bay, Wisconsin, 1961 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) .
Small Cities in the Northeastern Region, 1961
(1964) .
Small Cities in the Southern Region, 1961
(1964).
Small Cities in the Western Region, 1961
(1964).
Small Cities in the North Central Region, 1961
(1964) .
Honolulu, Hawaii, 1961 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) .
Kansas City, Missouri-Kansas, 1963 (1965);
Supp. 1 (1965).
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1963 (1965); Supp. 1
(1965) .
Minneapolis-St.
Paul,
Minnesota,
1963
(1965); Supp. 1 (1965).
San Diego, California, 1963 (1965); Supp. 1
(1965).
Houston, Texas, 1963 (1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in Northeastern Region,
1961 (1964); Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3 (1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in North Central Re­
gion, 1961 (1964); Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3
(1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in Southern Region,
1961 (1964); Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3 (1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in Western Region, 1961
(1964) ; Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3 (1965).

88



-88

Rural Nonfarm Areas in United States, 1961
(1964) ; Supp. 1 (1964); Supp. 3 (1965).
-89 Total Northeastern Region, Urban and Rural,
1960-61 (1965); Supp. 1 (1965); Supp. 2
(1966); Supp. 3, Part A (1966).
-90 Total North Central Region, Urban and Ru­
ral, 1960-61 (1965); Supp. 1 (1965); Supp. 2
(1966) ; Supp. 3, Part A (1966).
-91 Total Southern Region, Urban and Rural,
1960-61 (1965); Supp. 1 (1965); Supp. 2
(1966); Supp. 3, Part A (1966).
-92 Total Western Region, Urban and Rural,
1960-61 (1965); Supp. 1 (1965); Supp. 2
(1966); Supp. 3, Part A (1966).
-93 Total United States, Urban and Rural, 196061 (1965); Supp. 2 (1966); Supp. 3, Part A
(1966).
238 Survey of Consumer Expenditures, 1960-61:
-1 Workers’ Wealth and Family Living Stand­
ards (1963).
-2 The Impact of Rising Prices on Younger and
Older Consumers (1963).
-3 Changing Patterns of Consumer Expenditures,
1950-1960 (1964).
-4 Economics and Public Welfare (1963).
-5 Changing Patterns of Consumer Expenditures
(1964) .
-6 Consumer Expenditures and Income, with
Emphasis on Low-Income Families (1964).
-7 Expanding Ownership of Household Equip­
ment (1964).
-8 Contrasts in Spending by Urban Families:
Trends Since 1950 and Variations in 1960-61
(1965) .
-9 Food Expenditures of Urban Families, 1950
to 1960-61 (1965).
-10 Expenditure Patterns of Low Consumption
Families (1965).
-11 Changing Consumption Patterns, 1960-61
(1965).
-12 Levels of Living Among the Poor (1965).
-13 Uses of Family Expenditure Data (1965).
239 Labor Law and Practice in Turkey (1963).
450.
240 Labor Law and Practice in Mexico (1963).
450.
241 Labor Law and Practice in Austria (1963).
400.
242 Labor Law and Practice in Ecuador (1963).
350.
243 Labor in Cyprus (1963).

Labor Law and Practice in Haiti (1963). 400.
Wage Chronology:
Western Greyhound
Lines, 1945-63 (1964). 300.
246 Labor in Indonesia (1963).
Employees,
247 Work Stoppages, Government
1942-61 (1963).
248 The Forecasting of Manpower Requirements
(1963).
in Sawmills
249 Injuries and Accident Causes
(1963).
250 Labor Law and Practice in Yugoslavia (1963).
400.
251 Labor in Mexico (1963).
in Logging
252 Injuries and Accident Causes
Operations (1963).
253 Labor Law and Practice in the Philippines
(1963). 500.
254 Wage Chronology: Pacific Coast Shipbuild­
ing, 1941-64 (1965). 250.
255 Wage Chronology: Anthracite Mining Indus­
try, 1930-59 (no date).
256 Work Stoppages, Fifty States and the District
of Columbia, 1927-62 (1963).
257 Work Injuries and W ork-Injury Rates in the
Highway and Street Construction Industry,
1961 (1963).
258 Labor Law and Practice in the Trust Territory
of New Guinea Under Australian Administration (1964). 500.
259 Wage Chronology:
Carolina Coach Co.,
1947-63 (1963).
260 Wage Chronology: Swift and Co., 1942-63
(Revised 1964). 250.
261 Labor in Nigeria (1963).
262 Labor in Peru (1964). 400.
263 Conducting a Labor Force Survey in Develop­
ing Countries (1964).
264 Labor Law and Practice in the Union of
Burma (1964). 400.
265 Labor Law and Practice in Nicaragua (1964).
500.
266 Recent Collective Bargaining andTechnological Change (1964).
267 Labor Law and Practice in Thailand (1964).
400.
268 Labor Law and Practice in Taiwan (Formosa)
(1964). 450.
269 Labor Law and Practice in Saudi Arabia
(1964). 350.
270 Labor Law and Practice in the U.S.S.R.
(1964). 500.
244
245




271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279

280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290

Labor Law and Practice in Pakistan (1964).
450.
Withdrawn from publication.
Withdrawn from publication.
Labor Law and Practice in Malaysia and
Singapore (1965). 550.
Labor Law and Practice in the United Arab
Republic (Egypt) (1965). 500.
Labor Law and Practice in Iran (1964). 400.
Wage Chronology: American Viscose, 1945—
63 (1964).
Injury Rates by Industry, 1958, 1959, and
1960 (1964).
Concepts and Methods Used in Household
Statistics on Employment and Unemployment
from the Current Population Survey (1964).
Labor Law and Practice in El Salvador
(1964). 300.
Wage Chronology: Berkshire Hathaway Inc.,
1943-64 (1964). 200.
Labor Law and Practice in Morocco (1965).
450.
Computation of Cost-of-Living Indexes in
Developing Countries (1964).
Withdrawn from publication.
Labor Law and Practice in Sweden (1964).
400.
Recent Price Developments, January-August
1964 (1964).
How the Government Measures Unemploy­
ment (1964).
Injury Rates by Industry, 1961 and 1962
(1964) .
Labor Law and Practice in Spain (1965). 500.
Labor Law and Practice in the Kingdom of
Laos (1965). 400.

291
292
293
294
295
296

297
298

Prices, 1964 (1965).
Labor Developments Abroad, Cumulative In­
dex, 1956-63 (1965).
Manpower Planning to Adapt to New Tech­
nology at an Electric and Gas Utility (1965).
Labor Law and Practice in Tunisia (1965).
400.
Injury Rates by Industry, 1963 (1965).
Work Injuries and W ork-Injury Rates in the
Street and Highway Department Industry
(1965) .
Labor Law and Practice in the Kingdom of
Libya (1966). 350.
Labor Law and Practice in the Empire of
Ethiopia (1966). 400.

89

299

300

Labor and Material Requirements for Con­
struction of Federally Aided Highways, 1958,
1961, and 1964 (1966).

305
306

Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Concrete
Products Industry, 1947-63 (1965).

307

301

Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Selected
Industries, 1939 and 1947-63 (1965).

308

302

How to Establish Current Reporting of Em­
ployment, Hours, and Earnings in Developing
Countries (1966).

309
310

303

Labor Law and Practice in India (1966).

304

Labor Law and Practice in Lebanon (1966).
500.

90



311
312

Occupational Employment Statistics: Sources
and Data (1966).
Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Steel In­
dustry, 1947-65 (1966).
Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Hosiery
Industry, 1947-64 (1966).
Indexes of Output Per Employee, Air Trans­
portation Industry, 1947-64 (1966).
Labor Law and Practice in Brazil (1967). 450.
Labor Productivity of the Steel Industry in
the United States (1966).
Labor Developments in the U.S.S.R. (1966).
How the Government Measures Unemploy­
ment (1967).

Current Periodicals

Bureau of Labor Statistics Catalogue of Publications (semiannual)
Consumer Price Indexes for Selected Items and Groups (semiannual)
Current Wage Developments (monthly)
Employment and Earnings and Monthly Report on the Labor Force (65^ per
copy; $7.00 for yearly subscription; $8.25 for foreign mailing)
Estimated Retail Food Prices by Cities (monthly)
Labor Developments Abroad (monthly; 25^ per copy; $2.75 for yearly subscrip­
tion; $3.50 for foreign mailing)
Monthly Labor Review (75^ per copy; $7.50 for yearly subscription; $9.00 for
foreign mailing)
Occupational Outlook Quarterly (35fl per copy; $1.25 for yearly subscription;
$1.75 for foreign mailing)
Retail Prices and Indexes for Fuels and Electricity (monthly)
The Consumer Price Index (detailed report) (monthly)
Union Wage Scales, Building Trades (quarterly)
Wage Developments in Manufacturing (quarterly)
Wholesale Prices and Price Indexes (detailed report) (monthly)







Absenteeism

Accidents

Subject Index o f Bulletins and Reports
[Asterisks refer to annotated bulletins]

A
Absenteeism. (See also Productivity— Effects of long hours.)
Absenteeism in Commercial Shipyards, Bull. 734 (1943).
Improvement of Labor-Utilization Procedures, Bull. 807 (1945).
Accident and sickness benefits. See under Collective bargaining,
general— Health and welfare insurance.
Accident compensation or insurance. See Workmen’s compensation.
Accident prevention. See Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and pre­
vention, by industry or occupation; Conventions, meetings, etc.—
Industrial Accident (etc.); and Safety— Codes.
Accidents. (See also Conventions, meetings, etc.— Industrial Acci­
dent Boards and Commissions,- Safety— Codes; and Workmen’s
compensation.)
Frequency and severity rates, by years.
1907-21. Statistics of Industrial Accidents in the United
States, Bull. 339 (1923).*
1907-25. Record of Industrial Accidents in the United
States to 1925, Bull. 425 (1927).*
1907-27. Statistics of Industrial Accidents in the United
States to the End of 1927, Bull. 490 (1929).*
1926-50. Handbook of Labor Statistics, Bull. 1016, 1950
ed. (1951); and 1951 supp. (1953).*
1940. Industrial-Injury Statistics, by States, Bull. 700
(1942).
1942. Industrial Injuries in the United States During
1942, Bull. 758 (1943).*
1943. Work Injuries in the United States During 1943,
Bull. 802 (1944).*
1944. Work Injuries in the United States During 1944,
Bull. 849 (1945).*
1945. Work Injuries in the United States During 1945,
Bull. 889 (1947).*
1946. Work Injuries in the United States During 1946,
Bull. 921 (1948).*
1947. Work Injuries in the United States During 1947,
Bull. 945 (1949).*
1948. Work Injuries in the United States During 1948,
Bull. 975 (1950).*
1949. Work Injuries in the United States During 1949,
Bull. 1025 (1951).*
1950. Work Injuries in the United States During 1950,
Bull. 1098 (1952).*
1951. Work Injuries in the United States During 1951,
Bull. 1137 (1953).*
1952. Work Injuries in the United States During 1952,
Bull. 1164 (1954).*
1958-65. Handbook of Labor Statistics 1967, Bull. 1555
(1967).*
Methods.
Accident Record Manual for Industrial Plants, Bull. 772
(1944).*
Manual on Industrial-Injury Statistics, Bull. 667 (1940).*
Report of Committee on Statistics and Compensation In­
surance Cost of the International Association of Indusdustrial Accident Boards and Commissions, Bull. 201
(1916).



Standardization of Industrial Accident Statistics, Bull. 276
(1920). See Bull. 667.*
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).*
Rates, types, causes, and prevention, by industry or occupation.
Boilershop-products.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Boilershop-Products Industry, 1951, Bull. 1237 (1958).*
Injury Rate Variations in the Boilershop— Products
Industry, 1951, Rpt. 28 (1953).
Bottled soft drink industry.
Injuries and Injury Rates in the Bottled Soft-Drink
Industry, Rpt. 104 (1956).
Breweries.
Injuries and Accidents in the Brewing Industry, 1944,
Bull. 884 (1946).*
Canning and Preserving industry.
Work Injuries in the Canning and Preserving Industry,
Rpt. 101 (1956).
Canning of fruits and vegetables.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Canning of Fruits
and Vegetables, Rpt. 183 (1961).
Carpenters.
Injuries and Accident Causes [1948-49] in Carpentry
Operations, Bull. 1118 (1953).*
Clay construction products.
Injuries and Accident Causes [1948] in the Manufac­
ture of Clay Construction Products, Bull. 1023
(1951).*
Concrete brick and block industry.
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in the Concrete
Brick and Block Industry, 1957, Rpt. 153 (1959).
Construction.
Work Injuries in Construction, 1948-49, Bull. 1004
(1950).*
Cooperage manufacture.
Work Injuries and Injury Rates in the Manufacture of
Cooperage, Rpt. 145 (1959).
Fabricated structural steel.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Fabrication of
Structural Steel and Architectural Metalwork, Rpt.
226 (1962).
Injuries and Injury Rates in the Fabricated Structural
Steel and Ornamental Metalwork Industry, 1954,
Rpt. 125 (1957).
Fertilizer.
Injuries and Accident Causes [1946] in Fertilizer Man­
ufacturing, Bull. 949 (1949).*
Fluid milk.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Fluid-Milk Indus­
try, Rpt. 196 (1961).
Work-Injury Rates in the Fluid-Milk Industry, 1952,
Rpt. 62 (1954).
Foundries.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Foundry Industry,
1942, Bull. 805 (1945).*

93

Accidents
Highway and street construction.
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in the Highway
and Street Construction Industry, 1961, Rpt. 257
(1963).
Hospitals.
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in Hospitals
[1953], Bull. 1219 (1958).*
Hotels.
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in Hotels, Rpt.
230 (1962).
Industrial.
Injury Rates by Industry, 1958, 1959, and 1960, Rpt.
278 (1964); and 1963, Rpt. 295 (1965).
Iron and steel.
Causes and Prevention of Accidents in the Iron and
Steel Industry, 1910-1919, Bull. 298 (1922).*
The Safety Movement in the Iron and Steel Industry,
1907 to 1917, Bull. 234 (1918).*
Logging.
Injuries and Accident Causes in Logging Operations,
Rpt. 252 (1963).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Pulpwood-Logging
Industry, 1943 and 1944, Bull. 924 (1948).*
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in Logging Opera­
tions, 1955, Rpt. 154 (1960).
Longshoring.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Longshore Indus­
try, 1942, Bull. 764 (1944).*
Machine Building.
Accidents and Accident Prevention in Machine Build­
ing, Bulls. 216 (1917)* and 256 (1920).*
Meatpacking.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Slaughtering and
Meat-Packing Industry, 1943, Bull. 855 (1946).*
Paper and paper products.
Injuries and Accident Causes [1950-51] in the Man­
ufacture of Paperboard Containers, Bull. 1139
(1953).*
Injuries and Accident Causes [1948-49] in the Manu­
facture of Pulp and Paper, Bull. 1036 (1952).*
Plumbers.
Injuries and Accident Causes [1948-49] in Plumbing
Operations, Bull. 1079 (1952).*
Sawmills and planing mills.
Injuries and Accident Causes in Sawmills, Rpt. 249
(1963).
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in Sawmills and
Planing Mills, Rpt. 146 (1959).
School lunchrooms.
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in School Lunch­
rooms, 1958, Rpt. 159 (1960).
Shipbuilding.
Fatal Work Injuries in Shipyards, 1943 and 1944,
Bull. 893 (1945).*
Shipyard Injuries, 1944, Bull. 834 (1945).*
Shipyard Injuries and Their Causes, 1941, Bull. 722
(1943).*
Steel. See Iron and steel, this section.
Street and highway department industry.
Work Injuries and Work-Injury Rates in the Street and
Highway Department Industry, 1961, Rpt. 296 (1965).

94




AFL-CIO
Textile dyeing and finishing.
Injuries and Accident Causes [1945] in Textile Dyeing
and Finishing, Bull. 962 (1949).*
Warehousing.
Injuries and Accident Causes [1950] in Warehousing
Operations, Bull. 1174 (1955).*
Utilities, water-supply.
Injuries and Accident Causes in Water-Supply Utilities,
Rpt. 166 (1950).
Injuries and Injury Rates in Water-Supply Utilities,
1953, Rpt. 83 (1955).
Woodworking circular saw.
Woodworking Circular-Saw Accidents, Bull. 1190
(1956).*
Seamen. See under Workmen’s compensation.
Accounting. See under Employment outlook.
Actors.
Collective Bargaining by Actors, Bull. 402 (1926).
Union wage scales 1929-31. See under Wages and hours.
Adult education. See Workers’ education.
Africa.
Bibliography on Labor in Africa, 1960-64, Bull. 1473 (1965).
Labor Digests on Countries in Africa, Bull. 1539 (1966).*
Aged persons, care and assistance. See Old-age care and assist­
ance.
Agricultural machinery. (See also Wages and hours-Machinery man­
ufacture.)
Union Agreements in Agricultural-Machinery Industry, 1943,
Bull. 761 (1944).
Agricultural occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Agriculture.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Labor Unionism in American Agriculture, Bull. 836 (1945).*
Wartime Wages, Income, and Wage Regulation in Agriculture,
Bull. 883 (1946).
Air transportation. See under Employment outlook, and under
Wages and hours.
Air-conditioning mechanics. See under Employment outlook.
Aircraft manufacture. (See also under Employment outlook, and
specific branch of manufacture under Wages and hours.)
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Union Agreements in the Airframe Industry, 1944, Bull. 792
(1944).
Wage Stabilization in California Airframe Industry, 1943, Bull.
746 (1943).
Wartime Development of the Aircraft Industry, Bull. 800 (1944).
Alaska.
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and
Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
The Status of Labor in Puerto Rico, Alaska, Hawaii, Bull. 1191
(1956).
Almshouses.
The Cost of American Almshouses, Bull. 386 (1925). See also
Bull. 489 (1929).
Aluminum-fabrication industry.
Union Agreements in the Aluminum-Fabrication Industry, Bull.
760 (1944).
Wage Chronology: Aluminum Co. of America, 1939-61, Rpt. 219
(1962).
American Federation of Labor and Congress of Industrial Organiza­
tions. See Labor organizations and Labor movement.

Ammunition-loading Industry
Ammunition-loading industry. See under Wages and hours.
Amusements. See under Wages and hours.
Annual wage plans. See Guaranteed employment and wage plans.
Anthracite mining. See under Collective bargaining, by industry or
occupation, and under Wages and hours— Mining.
Anthrax. See under Occupational diseases.
Apparel and accessories stores. See under Wages and hours—
Stores, retail, and Retail trade.
Apparel industry. See under Wages and hours.
Appliance stores. See under Wages and hours— Retail trade.
Apprentices and learners. (See also Legislation— Labor-Text, sum­
maries, and reviews of laws, beginning with Bull. 370 (1925).)
Apprenticeship in Building Construction, Bull. 459 (1928).
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Apprentices and Learners,
Bull. 908-4 (1948).
Labor-management training programs. A Guide to Labor-Man­
agement Relations in the United States, Bull. 1225-1
(1959).*
Arbitration and conciliation. See under Collective bargaining, gen­
eral, and by industry or occupation; also see Labor-management
disputes; and Legislation— Labor.
Arbitration and conciliation, foreign countries. See Labor condi­
tions and industrial relations, foreign countries— Great Britain.
Architects. See under Employment outlook.
Argentina.
Labor Legislation of Argentina, Bull. 510 (1930).
Artists, commercial. See under Employment outlook.
Assignment. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Assignment of wages. (See also Legislation— Labor— Text, sum­
maries, and reviews of laws.)
Wage Executions for Debt, Bull. 622 (1936).
Atomic Energy Commission.
Labor and the Savannah River AEC Project, Bull. 1100 (1952).*
Atomic energy field. (See also under Employment outlook.)
Employment in the Atomic Energy Field, A 1960 Occupational
Survey, Bull. 1297 (1961).
Automation.
Adjustments to the Introduction of Office Automation, Bull.
1276 (1960).
Automatic Technology and Its Implications— A Selected Anno­
tated Bibliography, Bull. 1198 (1956).
Automation and Employment Opportunities for Officeworkers,
Bull. 1241 (1958).*
Impact of Automation, Bull. 1287 (1960).
Impact of Office Automation in the Insurance Industry, Bull.
1468 (1966).
Impact of Office Automation in the Internal Revenue Service: A
Study of the Manpower Implications During the First Stages
of the Changeover, Bull. 1364 (1963).*
Impact of Technological Change and Automation in the Pulp and
Paper Industry, Bull. 1347 (1962).*
Implications of Automation and Other Technological Develop­
ments— Selected Annotated Bibliography, Bulls. 1319 (1962)
and 1319-1 (1964).
Manpower Planning to Adapt to New Technology at an Electric
and Gas Utility, Rpt. 293 (1965).
Studies of Automatic Technology:
A Case Study of an Automatic Airline Reservation System,
Rpt. 137 (1959).
A Case Study of a Large Mechanized Bakery, Rpt. 109
(1957).



Building Construction
A Case Study of a Modernized Petroleum Refinery, Rpt. 120
(1957).
Automobile and other motor vehicle (and parts) manufacturing. See
under Wages and hours, and see Tire industry.
Automobile industry. (See also under Employment outlook.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Automobile mechanics. See under Employment outlook.
Automobile repair garages and shops. See under Wages and hours.
Automotive dealers. See under Wages and hours— Retail trade.
Aviation occupations. See under Employment outlook— Air trans­
portation, and under Wages and hours.

B
Baking industry. See under Collective bargaining, by industry or
occupation, and under Wages and hours.
Banking. See under Employment outlook and under Wages and
hours.
Banking societies and banks, labor. See Cooperatives— Consum erCredit unions.
Barbers. See under Employment outlook and under Wages and
hours.
Bargaining unit. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Beauty operators. See under Employment outlook.
Benefit associations, sickness and death benefits.
Mutual Relief Associations Among Government Employees in
Washington, D.C., Bull. 282 (1921).
Benefits and benefit funds. See specific benefits under Collective
bargaining, general.
Bibliographies. See specific subjects.
Biological sciences (animal and plant sciences, microbiology). See
under Employment outlook.
Biologists. See Scientists.
Bituminous coal mining. See under Mining; see also under Wages
and hours— Mining.
Blacksmiths. See under Employment outlook.
Boilermaking occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Boilershop products industry.
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Boilershop-Products Indus­
try [1951], Bull. 1237 (1958).*
Bonuses. See Collective bargaining, by industry or occupation;
Wages and hours— specific industry; and Related wage benefits.
Bookkeepers. See under Employment outlook, and see Office
workers.
Boot and shoe industry. See Shoe industry.
Bottling-house workmen and Brewery workers. See under Wages
and hours.
Brewing industry. See under Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and
preventions, by industry or occupation.
Brick industry. See under Productivity.
Budgets. See Income and expenditures, consumer.
Building construction. (See also Construction; Housing; and Labor
requirements.)
Apprenticeship in Building Construction, Bull. 459 (1928).
Building Construction, 1921 to 1938, Bull. 668 (1940).*
Building Construction, 1940, Bull. 693 (1941).*
Building Construction, 1941, Bull. 713 (1942).*

95

Building Trades
Building Operations in Representative Cities, 1920, Bull. 295
(1922).*
Building Permits in the Principal Cities of the United States in:
1921, Bull. 318 (1923).*
1922, Bull. 347 (1923).*
1923, Bull. 368 (1925).*
1924, Bull. 397 (1925).*
1925, Bull. 424 (1926).*
1926, Bull. 449 (1927).*
1927, Bull. 469 (1928).*
1928, Bull. 500 (1929).*
1929, Bull. 524 (1930).*
1930, Bull. 545 (1932).*
Statistics of Building Construction, 1920 to 1937, Bull. 650
(1938).*
Structure of the Residential Building Industry in 1949, Bull.
1170 (1954).*
Trends in Building Permit Activity, Bull. 1243 (1959).*
Building trades. See Construction; and see under Collective bar­
gaining, by industry or occupation; Employment outlook; and
Wages and hours.
Building materials and farm equipment dealers. See under Wages
and hours— Retail trade.
Bureau of Labor Statistics (U.S. Government).
Fact-Finding Activities of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bull.
831 (1945).*
Publications, indexes to and lists of. See under that title.
Statistics. See under that title.
The Bureau of Labor Statistics, United States Department of
Labor: Its History, Activities, and Organization, Bull. 319
(1922).
Bureaus of Labor Statistics (State). See Labor (and related) offices,
State. For Directories 1936-38-41, see Labor (and related) offices,
Federal and State. See also Legislation— Labor.
Busdrivers. See under Collective bargaining, by industry or occu­
pation, and under Wages and hours— Transit industry, local.
Business machine servicemen. See under Employment outlook.

c

Callback pay. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Canada. See under Legislation, foreign countries; Workmen’s com­
pensation; and under other specific subjects.
Canning (fruit and vegetable) industry. See under Accidents—
Rates, types, causes, and prevention (etc.), and under Collective
bargaining, by industry or occupation.
Capital requirements and operating ratios.
Capital Requirements and Operating Ratios:
The Agricultural Machinery Industry, 1950 and 1951, Rpt.
25 (1954).
The Coarse^Paper Industry, 1949 and 1950, Rpt. 24 (1953).
The Electric Motor Industry [1950-51], Rpt. 14 (1954).
The Men’s Shoe Industry, 1950 and 1951, Rpt. 59 (1954).
The Paperboard Industry, 1949 and 1950, Rpt. 27 (1953).
The Work Clothing Industry, 1950-51, Rpt. 26 (1953).
Carbon-monoxide poisoning.
Carbon-Monoxide Poisoning, Bull. 291 (1922).
Cargoes, ship, loading and unloading. See Longshore industry.
Carnentry. See Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and prevention,
by industry or occupation.

96



Collective Bargaining, General
Cement industry, Portland.
Labor Requirements for Construction Materials (Part 1— Port­
land Cement), Bull. 888-1 (1947).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Portland Cement Industry,
1929, Bull. 525 (1931).
Chauffeurs, and teamsters and drivers. See Wages and hours—
General trades, and Truckdrivers and helpers.
Checkoff arrangements. See Collective bargaining, general— Union
security.
Chemical industry. See under Collective bargaining, by industry or
occupation; Employment outlook; and under Wages and hours.
Chemists and chemical engineers. See under Scientists, and Wages
and hours.
Child labor. (See also Legislation— Labor, and Minimum Wage.)
Effect of Workmen’s Compensation Laws in Diminishing the
Necessity of Industrial Employment of Women and Children,
Bull. 217 (1918).
Employment of Women and Juveniles in Great Britain During
the War, Bull. 223 (1917).
Labor Conditions of Women and Children in Japan, Bull. 558
(1931).
Summary of the Report on Condition of Woman and Child Wage
Earners in the United States, Bull. 175 (1916).*
Chile.
Labor in Chile, Rpt. 224 (1962).
Labor Organizations in Chile, Bull. 461 (1928).
Chinese migrants.
Chinese Migrations, with Special Reference to Labor Conditions,
Bull. 340 (1923).
Cigar and cigarette manufacturing. See under Tobacco industry,
and Wages and hours— Tobacco industry.
Civil rights of employees. See Legislation— Employee rights, civil.
Clay construction products industry. See under Accidents— rates,
types, causes, and prevention, by industry or occupation.
Clay workers. See Wages and hours— Clay, stone, and glass in­
dustries.
Cleaners, dyers, and pressers. See under Wages and hours.
Cleanup time. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Clerical workers. See under Wages and hours, and see specific
occupation and industry under Employment outlook.
Closed shop. See Collective bargaining, general— Union security.
Clothes-change time. See Collective bargaining, general— Cleanup.
Clothing industry. See under Employment outlook; Older workers;
and Wages and hours.
Coal industry. See Mining, and Wages and hours— Mining.
Collective agreements, provisions of. See Collective bargaining,
general, and by industry or occupation.
Collective bargaining, general. (See also Collective bargaining, by
industry or occupation; Labor and industrial relations; Labormanagement relations.)
Accident and sickness benefits. See Health and welfare in­
surance, this section.
Annual wage plans. See Guaranteed employment and wage
plans, this section.
Antidiscrimination clauses.
Antidiscrimination Provisions in Major Contracts, 1961,
Bull. 1336 (1962).
Apprentices.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Apprentices and Learn­
ers, Bull. 908-4 (1948).
Arbitration. (See also Grievances, this section.)

Collective Bargaining, General

Collective Bargaining, General
Analysis of agreements.
Arbitration Provisions in Union Agreements, Bull. 780
(1944).
Extent and characteristics of provisions.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions: 1949-50 and
1952, Bulls. 1022 (1951) and 1142 (1953), respec­
tively.
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Arbitration
Procedures, Bull. 1425-6 (1966).*
Assignment. See Promotion, transfer, and assignment, this
section.
Bargaining structure. See Bargaining unit, scope of, and Ne­
gotiations, methods of, this section.
Bargaining unit, scope of.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Preamble, Scope of Bar­
gaining Unit, Duration of Agreements, Bull. 908-19
(1950).
Collective Bargaining Structures: The Employer Bargain­
ing Unit. A Study in Industrial Relations, Rpt. 1 (1953).
Collective Bargaining with Associations and Groups of
Employers, Bull. 897 (1947).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1949-50, Bull.
1022 (1951).
Benefit plans. See specific plans, this section.
Callback pay.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1954, Bull. 1181
(1955).
Checkoff arrangements. See Union security, this section.
Clauses. See Sample agreements and clauses, this section.
Cleanup and clothes-change time.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1953, Bull. 1166
(1954).
Rest Periods, Washup, Work Clothing, and Military Leave
Provisions in Major Union Contracts, Bull. 1279 (1961).
Clothing. See Work clothing, this section.
Company unions.
Characteristics of Company Unions, 1935, Bull. 634
(1938).*
Contract.
Duration.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Preamble, Scope of
Bargaining Unit, Duration of Agreements, Bull.
908-19 (1950).
Enforcement.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Strike and Lock­
outs; Contract Enforcement, Bull. 908-13 (1949).
General.
Major Union Contracts in the United States, 1961,
Bull. 1353 (1962).
Death benefits. See Health and welfare insurance, this sec­
tion.
Deferred wages.
Deferred Wage Increases and Escalator Clauses, 1952-63,
Rpt. 235 (1963).
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Deferred Wage
Increases and Escalation Clauses, Bull. 1425-4 (1966).*
Denmark. See Scandinavia, this section.
Disability benefits. See Health and welfare insurance, this
section.
Discharge, discipline, and quits. See Severance pay, this sec­
tion.




Dismissal pay. See Severance pay, this section.
Employer associations and groups. See Bargaining unit, scope
of, this section.
Employment stabilization. See Guaranteed employment and
wage plans, and Labor-management cooperation, this section.
Equal job opportunity.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225-2 (1959).*
Equal pay for equal work.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952).
Escalation clauses.
Deferred Wage Increases and Escalator Clauses, 1952-63,
Rpt. 235 (1963).
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Deferred Wage
Increases and Escalation Clauses, Bull. 1425-4 (1966).
Expiration.
Collective Bargaining Activity in 1956: A Timetable of
Expiration, Reopening, and Wage Adjustment Provisions
of Major Agreements, Rpt. 102 (1957).
Collective Bargaining Agreements: Expiration, Reopening,
and Wage Adjustment Provisions of Major Agreements,
Rpt. 17 (1954) and October 1954, Rpt. 75 (1954).
Federal service.
Collective Bargaining Agreements in the Federal Service,
Late Summer 1964, Bull. 1451 (1965).*
Foremen and supervisors.
Union Membership and Collective Bargaining by Foremen,
Bull. 745 (1943).
Fringe benefits. (See also Health and welfare insurance,
Pensions, and specific benefit, this section.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Grievances. (See also Arbitration and Labor-management co­
operation, this section.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Grievances and Arbitra­
tion Provisions, Bull. 908-16 (1950).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952).
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Grievance Pro­
cedures, Bull. 1425-1 (1964).*
Guaranteed employment and wage plans.
Historical development.
Guaranteed-Employment and Annual-Wage Provisions
in Union Agreements, Effective January 1945, Bull.
828 (1945).
Guaranteed Wage Plans in the United States, Bull. 925
(1948).*
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952).
Sample clauses.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Guaranteed Employ­
ment and Wage Plans, Bull. 908-15 (1950). See
also Bulls. 828 and 925.*
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Supple­
mentary Unemployment Benefit Plans, and WageEmployment Guarantees, Bull. 1425-3 (1965).*
Health and welfare insurance.

97

Collective Bargaining, General
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225-1 (1959).*
Analysis of Health and Insurance Plans Under Collective
Bargaining, Late 1955, Bull. 1221 (1957).*
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Health, Insurance, and
Pensions, Bull. 908-17 (1950).
Digest of One Hundred Selected Health and Insurance
Plans Under Collective Bargaining, 1954, Bull. 1180
(1955) ; Early 1958, Bull. 1236 (1958); Winter 1961-62,
Bull. 1330 (1962); and Early 1966, Bull. 1502 (1966).
Employee Benefit Plans Under Collective Bargaining, Bull.
946 (1949).
Employee-Benefit Plans Under Collective Bargaining, Mid1950, Bull. 1017 (1951).
Health and Insurance and Pension Plan Coverage in Union
Contracts, Late 1960, Rpt. 228 (1962).
Health and Insurance Plans Under Collective Bargaining:
Accident and Sickness Benefits, Fall 1958, Bull. 1250
(1959).*
Hospital Benefits, Early 1959, Bull. 1274 (I960).*
Life Insurance and Accidental Death and Dismemberment
Benefits, Early Summer 1960, Bull. 1296 (1961).*
Major Medical Expense Benefits, Fall 1960, Bull. 1293
(1961).*
Surgical and Medical Benefits, Late Summer 1959, Bull.
1280 (I960).*
Health, Insurance, and Pension Plans in Union Contracts,
Bull. 1187 (1955).
Health-Benefit Programs Established Through Collective
Bargaining, 1945, Bull. 841 (1945).*
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1949-50, Bull.
1022 (1951).
Older Workers Under Collective Bargaining, Part II:
Health and Insurance Plans, Pension Plans, Bull. 1199-2
(1956) .
Union Health and Welfare Plans, Bull. 900 (1947).*
Health standards.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Safety, Health, and Sani­
tation, Bull. 908-14 (1949).
Holidays.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Vacation; Holidays and
Week-End Work, Bull. 908-2 (1948).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1949-50, Bull.
1022 (1951); and 1953, Bull. 1166 (1954).
Paid Holiday Provisions in Major Union Contracts, 1958,
Bull. 1248 (1959).
Vacation and Holiday Provisions in Union Agreements,
January 1943, Bull. 743 (1943).
Hours of work. See Premium pay, and Shift differentials and
operations, this section.
Incentive-wage plans. See Wage-incentive plans, this section.
Industry stabilization committees. See Labor-management co­
operation, this section.
Insurance plans. See Health and welfare insurance, this sec­
tion.
Jury leave. See Leave, with and without pay, this section.
Labor and management rights.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Union and Management
Functions, Rights, and Responsibilities, Bull. 908-12
(1949).

98



Collective Bargaining, General
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Management
Rights and Union-Management Cooperation, Bull. 1425-5
(1966).*
Labor-management cooperation. (See also Safety, this sec­
tion.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Collective Bargaining Clauses: Labor-Management Safety,
Production, and Industry Stabilization Committees, Bull.
1201 (1957).*
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Union-Management Co­
operation, Plant Efficiency, and Technological Change,
Bull. 908-10 (1949).
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Management
Rights and Union-Management Cooperation, Bull. 1425-5
(1966).*
Layoff. (See also Severance pay, this section.)
Analysis of Layoff, Recall, and Work-Sharing Procedures in
Union Contracts, Bull. 1209 (1957).*
Collective Bargaining Clauses: Layoff, Recall, and WorkSharing Procedures, Bull. 1189 (1956).
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Promotion, Transfer, and
Assignment; Layoff, Work-Sharing, and Reemployment,
Bull. 908-7 (1948).
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Severance Pay
and Layoff Benefit Plans, Bull. 1425-2 (1965).*
Leave, with and without pay. (See also Sick leave, and Vaca­
tions, this section.)
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Leave of Absence; Mili­
tary Service Leave, Bull. 908-6 (1948).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1954, Bull. 1181
(1955).
Paid Leave Provisions in Major Contracts, 1961, Bull. 1342
(1962).
Length of service. See Service, length of, this section.
Lockouts. See Strikes, this section.
Maintenance-of-membership. See Union security, this section.
Management. See Labor and management rights, this section.
Methods.
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull.
1458 (1966).*
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).*
Military service.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Leave of Absence; Mili­
tary Service Leave, Bull. 908-6 (1948).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1954, Bull. 1181
(1955).
Rest Periods, Washup, Work Clothing, and Military Leave
Provisions in Major Union Contracts, Bull. 1279 (1961).
Negotiations, methods of. (See also Bargaining unit, scope of,
this section.)
Union Agreement Provisions, Bull. 686 (1942).
Nightwork. See Premium pay, and Shift differentials and opera­
tions, this section.
Norway. See Scandinavia, this section.
Older workers.
Older Workers Under Collective Bargaining, Bulls. 1199-1
and -2 (1956).

Collective Bargaining, General
Overtime, and pay for. See Premium pay, and Shift differen­
tials and operations, this section.
Pensions.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Health, Insurance, and
Pensions, Bull. 908-17 (1950).
Digest of One Hundred Selected Pension Plans Under Col­
lective Bargaining: Winter 1957-58, Bull. 1232 (1958);
Spring 1961, Bull. 1307 (1962); and Late 1964, Bull.
1435 (1965).
Employee-Benefit Plans Under Collective Bargaining, Mid1950, Bull. 1017 (1951).
Health and Insurance and Pension Plan Coverage in Union
Contracts, Late 1960, Rpt. 228 (1962).
Health, Insurance, and Pension Plans in Union Contracts,
Bull. 1187 (1955).
Multiemployer Pension Plans Under Collective Bargaining,
Spring 1960, Bull. 1326 (1962).*
Pension Plans Under Collective Bargaining:
Bull. 1147 (1953);*
Benefits for Survivors, Winter 1960-61, Bull. 1334
(1962);*
Normal Retirement, Early and Disability Retirement,
Fall 1959, Bull. 1284 (1961);*
Vesting Provisions and Requirements for Early Retire­
ment, and Involuntary Retirement Provisions, Late
1958, Bull. 1259 (1959).*
Plant efficiency. See Labor-management cooperation, this
section; also see Safety, this section.
Premium pay. (See also Shift differentials and operations,
this section.)
Collective Bargaining Agreements; Hours and Premium
Pay Provisions in the Industrial Chemicals Industry,
1953, Rpt. 65 (1954).
Collective Bargaining Provisions:
Hours of Work, Overtime Pay, Shift Operations, Bull.
908-18 (1950).
Vacations; Holidays and Week-End Work, Bull. 908-2
(1948).
(See also Bull. 1248 (1959) for clauses relating to
premium pay on holidays.)
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952); and 1953, Bull. 1166 (1954).
Paid Holiday Provisions in Major Union Contracts, 1958,
Bull. 1248 (1959).
Premium Pay for Night, Weekend, and Overtime Work in
Major Union Contracts, Bull. 1251 (1959).
Premium Pay Practices for Weekend Work in Seven Con­
tinuous-Process Industries, 1966, Bull. 1480 (1966).
Production standards. See Labor-management cooperation, and
Wage-incentive plans, this section.
Promotion, transfer, and assignment.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Promotion, Transfer, and
Assignment; Layoff, Work-Sharing, and Reemployment,
Bull. 908-7 (1948).
Provisions, sample.
Collective Bargaining Provisions, Bull. 908 to 908-19 inc.*
Union Agreement Provisions, Bull. 686 (1942).
Quits. See Severance pay, this section.
Recall. See Layoff, this section.
Reemployment. See Layoff, and Military service, this section.
Reopening provisions.



Collective Bargaining, General
Collective Bargaining Activity in 1956: A Timetable of
Expiration, Reopening, and Wage Adjustment Provisions
of Major Agreements, Rpt. 102 (1957).
Collective Bargaining Agreements: Expiration, Reopening,
and Wage Adjustment Provisions of Major Agreements,
Rpt. 17 (1954); and October 1954, Rpt. 75 (1954).
Reporting and callback pay. See Callback pay, this section.
Rest periods.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1953, Bull. 1166
(1954).
Rest Periods, Washup, Work Clothing, and Military Leave
Provisions in Major Union Contracts, Bull. 1279 (1961).
Retirement. See Pensions, this section.
Russia.
Elements of Soviet Labor Law, Bull. 1026 (1951).*
Principal Current Soviet Labor Legislation, Rpt. 210 (1962).
Safety. (See also Labor-management cooperation, this section.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1949-50, Bull.
1022 (1951).
Safety and sanitation standards. See Health standards, and
Labor-management cooperation, this section.
Sample agreements and clauses. (See also specific subjects,
this section.)
Collective Bargaining Provisions, Bulls. 908 to 908-19
inc.*
Collective Bargaining Clauses: Company Pay for Time
Spent on Union Business, Bull. 1266 (1959).
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements, Bulls. 1425-1
to -6 inc.*
Union Agreement Provisions, Bull. 686 (1942).
Scandinavia (Denmark, Norway, and Sweden).
Labor-Management Relations in Schandinavia, Bull. 1038
(1952) .
Seniority. See Service, length of, this section.
Service, length of. (See also Promotion, transfer, and assign­
ment, this section.)
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Seniority, Bull. 908-11
(1949).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952).
Severance pay. (See also Layoff, this section.)
Collective Bargaining Clauses: Dismissal Pay, Bull. 1216
(1957).*
Collective Bargaining Provisions: Discharge, Discipline,
and Quits; Dismissal Pay Provisions, Bull. 908-5 (1948).
Dismissal-Pay Provisions in Union Agreements, December
1944, Bull. 808 (1945).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1949-50, Bull.
1022 (1951).
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Severance Pay
and Layoff Benefit Plans, Bull. 1425-2 (1965).*
Shift differentials and operations. (See also Premium pay,
this section and Collective bargaining, by industry or occu­
pation.)
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Hours of Work, Over­
time Pay, Shift Operations, Bull. 908-18 (1950).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1952, Bull. 1142
(1953) .
99

Collective Bargaining, General
Pay Differentials for Night Work Under Union Agreements,
Bull. 748 (1943).
Premium Pay for Night, Weekend, and Overtime Work in
Major Union Contracts, Bull. 1251 (1959).
Sick leave, paid and unpaid.
Collective Bargaining Provisions^Leave of Absence; Mili­
tary Service Leave, Bull. 908-6 (1948).
Paid Sick Leave Provisions in Major Union Contracts,
1959, Bull. 1282 (1960).
Sick-Leave Provisions In Union Agreements, Bull. 832
(1945).
Sickness and accident benefits. See Health and welfare in­
surance, this section.
Strikes.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Strikes and Lock-Outs;
Contract Enforcement, Bull. 908-13 (1949).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952).
Subcontracting.
Subcontracting Clauses in Major Collective Bargaining
Agreements, Bull. 1304 (1961).
Supervisors. See Foremen and supervisors, this section.
Sweden. See Scandinavia, this section.
Technological change. See Labor-management cooperation,
this section.
Technological change, impact of.
Recent Collective Bargaining and Technological Change,
Rpt. 266 (1964).
Time studies. See Wage-incentive plans, this section.
Unemployment benefits.
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Supplementary
Unemployment Benefit Plans and Wage-Employment
Guarantees, Bull. 1425-3 (1965).*
Unemployment-Benefit Plans in the United States and
Unemployment Insurance in Foreign Countries, Bull.
544 (1931).*
Union and management rights. See Labor and management
rights, this section.
Union-management cooperation. See Labor-management co­
operation, this section.
Union security.
Extent of Collective Bargaining and Union Recognition,
1945, Bull. 865 (1946), and 1946, Bull. 909 (1947).
Extent of Collective Bargaining and Union Status, January
1944, Bull. 776 (1944); January 1945, Bull. 829 (1945).
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1949-50, Bull.
1022 (1951); 1950-51, Bull. 1091 (1952); and 1952,
Bull. 1142 (1953).
Union Security and Checkoff Provisions in Major Union
Contracts, 1958-59, Bull. 1272 (1960).
Union Security Provisions in Collective Bargaining, Bull.
908 (1947).*
Vacations.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Vacations; Holidays and
Week-End Work, Bull. 908-2 (1948).
Paid Vacation Provisions in Major Union Contracts, 1957,
Bull. 1233 (1958).*
Paid Vacations in American Industry, 1943 and 1944, Bull.
811 (1945).
Vacation and Holiday Provisions in Union Agreements,
January 1943, Bull. 743 (1943).

TOO



Collective Bargaining by Industry or Occupation
See also Bulls. 1022 (1951) and 1142 (1953).
Wage adjustment.
Extent and characteristics of agreement provisions.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952).
General.
Collective Bargaining Activity in 1956: A Time­
table of Expiration, Reopening, and Wage Adjust­
ment Provisions of Major Agreements, Rpt. 102
(1957).
Collective Bargaining Agreements: Expiration, Re­
opening, and Wage Adjustment Provisions of Major
Agreements, Rpt. 17 (1954) and October 1954, Rpt.
75 (1954).
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Wage Adjustment
Plans, Bull. 908-9 (1948).
Wage-incentive plans.
General.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Incentive Wage Pro­
visions; Time Studies; and Standards of Production,
Bull. 908-3 (1948).
Worker attitudes toward and procedures for handling.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225-2 (1959).*
Incentive-Wage Plans and Collective Bargaining, Bull.
717 (1942).
Wage provisions, general.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— General Wage Provisions,
Bull. 908-8 (1948).
Wage reopening. See Reopening provisions, and Wage adjust­
ment, this section.
Washup, cleanup, and clothes-change time.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1953, Bull. 1166
(1954).
Rest Periods, Washup, Work Clothing, and Military Leave
Provisions in Major Union Contracts, Bull. 1279 (1961).
Weekend work. See Premium pay, this section.
Welfare plans and programs. See Health and welfare insurance,
this section.
Work Clothing.
Rest Periods, Washup, Work Clothing, and Military Leave
Provisions in Major Union Contracts, Bull. 1279 (1961).
Work stoppages. See Strikes, this section.
Worksharing. See Layoff, this section.
Collective bargaining, by industry or occupation. (See also Collec­
tive bargaining, general; Labor and industrial relations; Labormanagement relations.)
Actors.
Collective Bargaining by Actors, Bull. 402 (1926).
Agricultural machinery. See Machinery, this section.
Airframe.
Union Agreements in the Airframe Industry, 1944, Bull.
792 (1944).
Aluminum fabrication.
Union Agreements in the Aluminum-Fabrication Industry,
Bull. 760 (1944).
Anthracite mining. See Mining, this section.
Baking.
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in Union Bakeries,
June 1, 1939, Bull. 673 (1940).
Building trades.

Collective Bargaining, by Industry or Occupation
Union Wages, Hours and Working Conditions in the Build­
ing Trades: June 1, 1939, Bull. 674 (1940);* and June
1, 1941, Bull. 680 (1942).*
Canning (fruit and vegetable).
Union Agreements in the Canned Fruit and Vegetable In­
dustry, Bull. 794 (1944).
Chemical.
Collective Bargaining in the Chemical Industry, May 1942,
Bull. 716 (1942).
Chemical, industrial.
Collective Bargaining Agreement: Hours and Premium
Pay Provisions in the Industrial Chemicals Industry, 1953
(1954).
Clothing, men’s.
Collective Agreements in the Men’s Clothing Industry,
Bull. 198 (1916).
Cotton textiles.
Union Agreements in the Cotton-Textile Industry, Bull. 885
(1947).
Electronics.
Collective Bargaining— Radio, Television, and Electronics
Industry, Bull. 1089 (1952).
Fruit and vegetable, canned. See Canning, this section.
Leading industries and occupations.
Trade Agreements in:
1923 and 1924, Bull. 393 (1925).
1925, Bull. 419 (1926).
1926, Bull. 448 (1927).
1927, Bull. 468 (1928).
Leather tanning.
Union Agreements in the Leather-Tanning Industry, 1943,
Bull. 777 (1944).
Machinery.
Union Agreements in Agricultural-Machinery Industry, 1943,
Bull. 761 (1944).
Maritime industry.
The Earnings and Employment of Seamen on U.S. Flag
Ships, Bull. 1238 (1958).*
Meatpacking.
Collective Bargaining in the Meat-Packing Industry, Bull.
1063 (1952).
Mining.
Collective Bargaining in the Anthracite Coal Industry,
Bull. 191 (1916).
Motortruck drivers. See Truckdrivers, this section.
Paper and Allied Products Industry, Bull. 709 (1942).
Petroleum refining.
Union Agreements in the Petroleum-Refining Industry in
Effect in 1944, Bull. 823 (1945).
Printing trades.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours in the Printing Trades,
May 15, 1936, Bull. 631 (1937).
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in the Print­
ing Trades: June 1, 1939, Bull. 675 (1940);* June 1,
1941, Bull. 708 (1942).* See also Bull. 481 (1928).
Radio. See Electronics, this section.
Seamen. See Maritime industry, this section.
Shoe industry. See Labor and industrial conditions— Shoe in­
dustry.
Silk ribbon.



Construction, General
Trade Agreement in the Silk-Ribbon Industry of New York
City, Bull. 341 (1923).
Steel.
Arbitration of Labor-Management Grievances: Bethlehem
Steel Company and United Steelworkers of America,
1942-52, Bull. 1159 (1954).*
Television. See Electronics, this section.
Textiles, cotton. See Cotton textiles, this section.
Tobacco.
Union Agreements in the Tobacco Industry, January 1945,
Bull. 847 (1945).
Transit, local.
Street Railway Employment in the United States, Bull. 204
(1917).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions of Union StreetRailway Employees, June 1, 1941, Bull. 701 (1942).*
Truckdrivers.
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions of Motor­
truck Drivers, June 1, 1939, Bull. 676 (1940).*
Commercial artists. See under Employment outlook.
Common labor. See under Wages and hours— Municipal employees.
Community wage surveys. See Wages and hours— Area Wage Sur­
veys.
Company housing.
Housing by Employers in the United States, Bull. 263 (1920).*
Company unions.
Characteristics of Company Unions, 1935, Bull. 634 (1938).*
Conciliation. (See also Labor-management disputes.)
Collective Agreements in the Men’s Clothing Industry, Bull. 198
(1916). (Hart, Schaffner & Marx and United Garment Workers
of America.)
Collective Bargaining in the Anthracite Coal Industry, Bull. 191
(1916).
Concrete industry. See under Labor requirements.
Conferences. See Conventions, meetings, etc.
Congress of Industrial Organizations. See Labor organizations,
and Labor movement.
Construction, general. (See also Building construction.)
Estimating expenditures and labor for new construction.
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).*
Injuries.
Work Injuries in Construction, 1948-49, Bull. 1004 (1950).*
Labor-management relations.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Materials, man-hours required to produce and transport. See
Labor requirements.
Post-World War II.
Post-War Capacity and Characteristics of the Construc­
tion Industry, Bull. 779 (1944).*
Public Works Administration.
A Four-Year Study of Regenerative Employment, Bull. 658
(1938).*
Statistics. (See also Building construction— Building permits.)
Construction During Five Decades, 1907-52, Bull. 1146
(1954).*
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951)
and 1951 supp. (1953).*
Nonfarm Housing Starts 1889-1958, Bull. 1260 (1959).*

101

Construction, Building and Nonbuilding
Construction, building and nonbuilding. (See also Building con­
struction, and Housing.)
Construction— 1948 in Review, Bull. 984 (1950).
Construction and Housing, 1946-47, Bull. 941 (1948).*
Construction, Annual Review, 1950, Bull. 1047 (1951).*
Construction, Annual Review, 1951, Bull. 1122 (1953).
Construction During Five Decades, 1907-52, Bull. 1146 (1954).*
Construction in the War Years, 1942-45, Bull. 915 (1948).*
Probable Volume of Postwar Construction, Bull. 825 (1945).
The Construction Industry in the United States, Bull. 786
(1944).*
Consumer expenditures. See Income and expenditures, consumer.
Consumer Price Index. See under Prices.
Consumers’ cooperative associations, clubs, and societies. See
Cooperatives, consumer.
Contract. See under Collective bargaining, general; EmploymentContract of; Legislation— Wage payment; and War contracts.
Conventions, meetings, etc.
Accident prevention, industrial. (See also Industrial Accident
Boards and Commissions, International Association of, this
section.)
Proceedings of conference July 1926, Bull. 428 (1926).
Employment Managers.
Proceedings of conferences:
January 1916, Minneapolis, Minn., Bull. 196 (1916).
May 1916, Boston, Mass., Bull. 202 (1916).
April 1917, Philadelphia, Pa., Bull. 227 (1917).
May 1918, Rochester, N.Y., Bull. 247 (1919).
Employment Offices, Public, American Association of.
Proceedings of annual meetings:
1st, Chicago, III., December 1913, Bull. 192 (1916).
2d, Indianapolis, Ind., September 1914, Bull. 192
(1916).
3d, Detroit, Mich., July 1915, Bull. 192 (1916).
4th, Buffalo, N.Y., July 1916, Bull. 220 (1917).
Employment Services, Public, International Association of.
Proceedings of annual meetings.9th, Buffalo, N.Y., September 1921, Bull. 311 (1922).
10th, Washington, D.C., September 1922, Bull. 337
(1923) .
11th, Toronto, Canada, September 1923, Bull. 355
(1924) .
12th, Chicago, III., May 1924, Bull. 400 (1925).
13th, Rochester, N.Y., September 1925, Bull. 414
(1926).
15th, Detroit, Mich., October 1927, Bull. 478 (1928).
16th, Cleveland, Ohio, September 1928, Bull. 501
(1929).
17th, Philadelphia, Pa., September 1929, Bull. 538
(1931).
18th, Toronto, Canada, September 1930, Bull. 538
(1931).
Governmental Labor Officials, International Association of.
Proceedings of annual conventions:
7th, Seattle, Wash., July 1920, Bull. 266 (1921).
8th, New Orleans, La., May 1921, Bull. 307 (1922).
9th, Harrisburg, Pa., May 1922, Bull. 323 (1923).
10th, Richmond, Va., May 1923, Bull. 352 (1923).
11th, Chicago, III., May 1924, Bull. 389 (1925).
12th, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 1925, Bull. 411
(1926).

102



Conventions, Meetings, etc.
13th, Columbus, Ohio, June 1926, Bull. 429 (1927).
14th, Paterson, N.J., May-June 1927, Bull. 455 (1927).
15th, New Orleans, La., May 1928, Bull. 480 (1929).
16th, Toronto, Canada, June 1929, Bull. 508 (1930).
17th, Louisville, Ky., May 1930, Bull. 530 (1930).
18th, Boston, Mass., May 1931, Bull. 563 (1932).
19th, Chicago, III., September 1933, Bull. 609 (1934).
21st, Asheville, N.C., October 1935, Bull. 619 (1936).
22d, Topeka, Kans., September 1936, Bull. 629 (1937).
23d, Toronto, Canada, September 1937, Bull. 653
(1938) .
24th, Charleston, S.C., September 1938, Bull. 666
(1939) .
25th, Tulsa, Okla., September 1939, Bull. 678 (1940).
26th, New York City, September 1940, Bull. 690
(1941).
27th, St. Louis, Mo., September 1941, Bull. 721
(1943).
28th, Chicago, III, October 1943, Bull. 795 (1945).
Government Labor Officials of the United States and Canada,
Association of. See Governmental Labor Officials, Interna­
tional Association of, this section.
Governmental Officials in Industry of the United States and
Canada, Association of. See Governmental Labor Officials,
International Association of, this section.
Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions, International As­
sociation of. (See also Social insurance, this section.)
Proceedings of annual meetings:
3rd, Columbus, Ohio, April 1916, Bull. 210 (1917).
4th, Boston, Mass, August 1917, Bull. 248 (1919).
5th, Madison, Wis, September 1918, Bull. 264 (1919).
6th, Toronto, Canada, September 1919, Bull. 273
(1920).
7th, San Francisco, Calif, September 1920, Bull.
281 (1921).
8th, Chicago, III, September 1921, Bull. 304 (1922).
9th, Baltimore, Md, October 1922, Bull. 333 (1923).
10th, St. Paul, Minn, September 1923, Bull. 359
(1924) .
11th, Halifax, Nova Scotia, August 1924, Bull. 385
(1925) .
12th, Salt Lake City, Utah, August 1925, Bull. 406
(1926) .
13th, Hartford, Conn, September 1926, Bull. 432
(1927) .
14th, Atlanta, Ga, September 1927, Bull. 456 (1928).
15th, Paterson, N.J, September 1928, Bull. 485 (1929).
16th, Buffalo, N.Y., October 1929, Bull. 511 (1930).
17th, Wilmington, Del, September 1930, Bull. 536
(1931).
18th, Richmond, Va, October 1931, Bull. 564 (1932).
19th, Columbus, Ohio, September 1932, Bull. 577
(1933).
20th, Chicago, III, September 1933, Bull. 602 (1934).
Index to proceedings, 1914-24, by subject and name,
Bull. 395 (1925).
Industrial accident prevention.
Proceedings of the Industrial Accident Prevention Con­
ference. Held at Washington, D.C, July 14-16, 1926,
Bull. 428 (1926).
Labor legislation.

Convict Labor
Proceedings of the National Conference for Labor Legisla­
tion. Held at Washington, D.C., February 14 and 15,
1934, Bull. 583 (1934).
Labor officials, governmental. See Governmental Labor Offi­
cials, International Association of, this section.
Productivity.
Summary of Proceedings of Conference on Productivity,
October 28-29, 1946, Bull. 913 (1947).*
Social insurance.
Proceedings of the Conference on Social Insurance Called
by the International Association of Industrial Accident
Boards and Commissions, Washington, D.C., December
5 to 9, 1916, Bull. 212 (1917).
Convict labor. See Prison labor, and Legislation— Prison labor.
Cooperative banking and credit societies. See Cooperatives, con­
sumer— Credit unions.
Cooperative housing. See Cooperatives, consumer— Housing.
Cooperatives, consumer. [Note: For information on the various
types and groups of cooperatives, see Developments and Opera­
tions, this section.]
Credit unions. (See also Developments and Operations, this
section, and see under Legislation— Cooperatives, consumer.)
Activities of Credit Unions in 1943, 1944, and 1945, Bulls.
797 (1944),* 850 (1945),* and 894 (1947),* respectively.
Consumers’ Cooperatives and Credit Unions: Operations in
1946, Bull. 922 (1948).
Consumers’, Credit, and Productive Cooperation in 1933,
Bull. 612 (1935).*
Consumers', Credit, and Productive Cooperative Societies,
1929, Bull. 531 (1931).*
Cooperative Credit Societies (Credit Unions) in America and
in Foreign Countries, Bull. 314 (1922).*
Cooperative Movement in the United States in 1925 (other
than Agricultural), Bull. 437 (1927).*
Developments.
Consumer Cooperatives, Bull. 1211 (1957).*
Consumer Cooperatives in the United States, Bull. 1158
(1954).*
Consumers’ Cooperatives in 1941, Bull. 703 (1942).*
Consumers’ Cooperatives in 1949: Operations and De­
velopments, Bull. 1013 (1951).*
Developments in Consumers’ Cooperation in 1942, Bull.
738 (1943).*
Developments in Consumers’ Cooperative Movement in
1944, 1945, 1946, and 1947, Bulls. 821 (1945),* 859
(1946)
,* 904 (1947),* and 932 (1948),* respectively.
Developments in Consumers’ Cooperatives in 1950, 1951,
Bulls. 1030 (1951)* and 1073 (1952),* respectively.
Developments in Consumers’ Co-ops in 1948, Bull. 964
(1949).*
Developments in the Cooperative Movement in 1943, Bull.
768 (1944).*
Directory of Consumers' Cooperatives in the United States,
Bulls. 750 (1943, revised 1947) and 959 (1949).*
Gasoline and oil associations.
Organization and Management of Cooperative Gasoline and
Oil Associations (with model bylaws), Bull. 606 (1934).
Housing. (See also Developments and Operations, this section.)
Cooperative Housing in the United States, 1949 and 1950,
Bull. 1093 (1952).
Nonprofit Housing Projects in the United States, Bull. 896
(1947) .



Cooperatives, Foreign Countries
Organization and Management of Cooperative and Mutual
Housing Associations, Bull. 858 (1946).
Organization and Management of Cooperative Housing
Associations (with model bylaws), Bull. 608 (1934).
Legal status.
Consumers' Cooperation in the United States, 1936, Bull.
659 (1939).*
Operations.
Activities of Consumers’ Cooperatives in 1942, Bull. 757
(1943).*
Consumers’ Cooperation in the United States, 1936, Bull.
659 (1939).*
Consumers’ Cooperation in the United States in 1941, Bull.
725 (1943).*
Consumers’ Cooperative Societies in the United States in
1920, Bull. 313 (1923).*
Consumers' Cooperatives and Credit Unions: Operations
in 1946, Bull. 922 (1948).*
Consumers' Cooperatives in 1949, Operations and Develop­
ments, Bull. 1013 (1951).*
Consumers’ Cooperatives: Operations in 1947, Bull. 948
(1949).*
Consumers' Cooperatives: Operations in 1948, Bull. 971
(1949).*
Consumers’ Cooperatives: Operations in 1950, Bull. 1049
(1952).*
Consumers', Credit, and Productive Cooperation in 1933,
Bull. 612 (1935).*
Consumers’, Credit, and Productive Cooperative Societies,
1929, Bull. 531 (1931).*
Cooperative Movement in the United States in 1925 (other
than agricultural), Bull. 437 (1927).*
Operations of Consumers’ Cooperatives in 1943, 1944,
1945, Bulls. 796 (1944),* 843 (1915),* and 890 (1947),*
respectively.
Organization and Management of Consumers’ Cooperative Asso­
ciations and Clubs (with model bylaws), Bull. 598 (1934).
Organization and Management of Consumers’ Cooperatives and
Buying Clubs, Bull. 665 (1941).
Organization and Management of Consumers’ Cooperatives, Bull.
1024 (1951).*
Personnel policies.
Consumers’ Cooperation in the United States, 1936, Bull.
659 (1939).*
Southern States, developments in.
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Statistics.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951).*
Student. (See also Developments and Operations, this section.)
Student Cooperatives in the United States, 1941, Bull. 740
(1943).
Legislation affecting. See under Legislation; also see Develop­
ments, this section.
Cooperatives, foreign countries.
Consumer Cooperatives, Bull. 1211 (1957).*
Consumer Cooperatives in the United States [includes data on
foreign countries], Bull. 1158 (1954).*
Cooperative Associations in Europe and Their Possibilities for
Post-War Reconstruction, Bull. 770 (1944).*
Cooperative Credit Societies (Credit Unions) in America and in
Foreign Countries, Bull. 314 (1922).*

103

Coremakers
Cooperatives in Post-War Europe— Survey of Developments in
Scandinavian Countries and Eastern, Central, and Western
Europe, Bull. 942 (1948).
Coremakers.
Mobility of Molders and Coremakers, 1940-1952, Bull. 1162
(1954).*
Cost of living. See Income and expenditures, consumer; and Prices.
Cotton industries. See under Accidents; Collective bargaining, by
industry or occupation; Productivity; see under Wages and hours,
and Wages and hours— Wage chronologies.
Court decisions. (See also Legislation.)
Affecting labor.
1915, Bull. 189 (1916).
1916, Bull. 224 (1917).
1917, Bull. 246 (1918).
1918, Bull. 258 (1920).
1919-20, Bull. 290 (1922).
1921, Bull. 309 (1922).
1922, Bull. 344 (1923).
1923-24, Bull. 391 (1925).
1925, Bull. 417 (1926).
1926, Bull. 444 (1927).
1927-28, Bull. 517 (1930).
1929-30, Bull. 548 (1931).
1931-32, Bull. 592 (1933).
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925). (Compilation of laws
through 1924).
Laws Relating to Employment Agencies in the United States
as of July 1, 1937, Bull. 630 (1937).
Craft wage scales. See Wages and hours.
Credit societies. See Cooperatives, consumer— Credit unions.
Credit unions. See under Cooperatives, consumer.
Cutbacks. See War contracts.

D
Dangerous occupations. See Accidents; Occupational diseases;
Poisons, industrial; and Safety— Codes.
Death benefits. See specific benefit under Collective bargaining,
general.
Deaths, causes of. See Mortality statistics.
Demobilization. See Wartime.
Denmark. See Scandinavia.
Department stores. See Stores, retail, and Wages and hours—
Stores, retail.
Depressed areas. See under Unemployment.
Designers and decorators. See under Employment outlook.
Diesel-engine mechanics. See under Employment outlook.
Dietitians and home economists. See under Employment outlook.
Digests. See specific subject.
Directories. See specific subject.
Disability benefits. See specific benefit under Collective bargain­
ing, general.
Discharge, discipline, and quits. See Collective bargaining, general
— Severance pay.
Diseases, industrial. See Occupational diseases.
Dismissal compensation. See Collective bargaining, general— Sev­
erance pay.
Disputes, industrial. See Labor-management disputes.
Draftsmen. See under Employment outlook.

104



Employers’ Liability
Dressmaking. See Women workers.
Drivers. See Wages and hours— General trades, and Truckdrivers
and helpers.
Drivers, bus. See Wages and hours— Transit industry— local.
Drug stores and proprietary stores. See under Wages and hours—
Retail trade.
Dust phthisis and dusty trades. See Mortality statistics— Dusty
trades; also Hygiene, industrial— Printing trades.
Dyeing and finishing textiles. See under Accidents— Rates, types,
causes, and prevention, by industry or occupation; and under
Wages and hours.
Dyers. See Wages and hours— Cleaners, dyers, and pressers.

E
Earnings. See Wages and hours; also specific industry or occupation
under Employment outlook.
Earth scientists. See under Employment outlook.
Economic conditions. (See also Labor and industrial conditions;
Unemployment; and specific industry.)
Economic Forces in the United States, in Facts and Figures,
Bull. 1384 (1963).
Economic status. See Income.
Ecuador.
Labor Law and Practice in Ecuador, Rpt. 242 (1963).
Labor Legislation of Ecuador, Bull. 559 (1931).
Education. See Employment outlook; Vocational education and
training; and Workers’ education; also specific occupation, pro­
fession, industry, or trade.
Efficiency, industrial. See Munition factories, Great Britain, World
War I; Plant management; Productivity.
Egypt. See United Arab Republic.
El Salvador.
Labor Law and Practice in El Salvador, Rpt. 280 (1964).
Electric and gas utilities. See under Wages and hours— Utilities.
Electric lamp industry. See under Technological change.
Electric light and power occupations. See under Employment out­
look.
Electricians, maintenance. See under Employment outlook.
Electricity, prices of. See under Prices— Retail.
Electronic technicians. See under Employment outlook, and Oc­
cupational mobility.
Electronics manufacturing. See under Collective bargaining, by
industry or occupation; and under Employment outlook.
Electroplaters. See under Employment outlook.
Electroplating and polishing industry. See under Wages and hours.
Emigrant agents. See Legislation— Employment agencies, public
and private.
Employee-benefit plans. See specific benefit under Collective bar­
gaining, general.
Employee representation, foreign countries. See Labor conditions
and industrial relations, foreign countries.
Employee rights, civil. See under Legislation.
Employee welfare. See Health, recreation, and welfare conditions.
Employer associations and groups. See under Collective bargaining,
general— Bargaining unit, scope of.
Employer housing.
Housing by Employers in the United States, Bull. 263 (1920).*
Employers’ liability. See Workmen's compensation; also see Court
decisions affecting labor; and under Legislation.

Employment
Employment. (See also Employment outlook; Employment statistics;
Unemployment; and other specific occupations, professions, indus­
tries, or trades.)
Automation affecting.
Adjustments to the Introduction of Office Automation, Bull.
1276 (1960).
Automation and Employment Opportunities for Office Work­
ers, Bull. 1241 (1958).*
Children. See Child labor.
Clothing industry, women’s.
Regularity of Employment in the Women’s Ready-to-Wear
Garment Industries, Bull. 183 (1916).
Construction industry.
The Construction Industry in the United States, Bull. 786
(1944). See also Bull. 658 (1938).*
Contract of. See Wage payment under Legislation. See also
Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws,
Bulls. 186 (1916)— 330 (1923), inclusive, listed thereunder;
Bull. 321 (1922), Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Un­
constitutional; and Collective bargaining, general— Contract.
Cutbacks in war contracts affecting. See Reconversion.
Discrimination.
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including Workmen’s Com­
pensation Legislation, Bull. 654 (1938).
Electric-lamp industry.
Technological Changes and Employment in the Electric
Lamp Industry, Bull. 593 (1933).
Engineers, professional. See that title.
Guaranteed. See Guaranteed employment and wage plans.
Measurement, methods of.
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull.
1458 (1966).*
Concepts and Methods Used in Household Statistics on
Employment and Unemployment from the Current Popu­
lation Survey, Rpt. 279 (1964).
Employment by Occupation, U.S. Statistics and Sources,
Rpt. 305 (1966).
Report of the Advisory Committee on Employment Statis­
tics, Bull. 542 (1931).*
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).*
Machinery industry.
Women Production Workers in the Machinery Industries:
Employment Distribution; Earnings, Winter 1952-53,
Rpt. 98 (1956).
Metalworking industries.
Employment in Metalworking industries by Size of Firm,
October 1951 to October 1952, Rpt. 5 (1953); January
1952 to January 1953, Rpt. 32 (1953); April 1952 to
April 1953, Rpt. 42 (1953); and Summary Report, July
1951 to July 1953, Rpt. 64 (1955).
Minors. See Child labor.
Negroes.
Negroes in the United States: Their Employment and
Economic Status, Bull. 1119 (1953).*
The Negroes in the United States: Their Economic and
Social Situation, Bull. 1511 (1966).*
New England.
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Older workers. See that title.
Part-time, increase in.



Employment Outlook
Population and Labor Force Projections for the United
States, 1960 to 1975, Bull. 1242 (1959).*
Postal Service.
Technological Changes and Employment in the United
States Postal Service, Bull. 574 (1932).
Public works programs.
A Four-Year Study of Regenerative Employment, Bull. 658
(1938).*
Railroads.
Employment and Changing Occupational Patterns in the
Railroad Industry, 1947-60, Bull. 1344 (1963).
Reconversion. See that title.
Scientific and technical personnel.
Employment of Scientific and Technical Personnel in In­
dustry, 1962, Bull. 1418 (1964).
Employment of Scientific and Technical Personnel in State
Government Agencies, 1962, Bull. 1412 (1964).
Seamen. See Merchant seamen.
Seamen, Great Lakes District. See Merchant seamen.
Shipbuilding industry.
Wartime Employment, Production, and Conditions of Work
in Shipyards, Bull. 824 (1945).
Southern States.
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Statistics. See Employment statistics.
Women. See Women workers.
Employment outlook. [Note: The listing here includes the latest
Occupational Outlook Reprint Series, Bulls. 1550-1 to 1550-118.
These Reprints will be published in 1967 and 1968. For complete
listings of earlier Reprint Series, see Bulls. 1215 (1957), 1225
(1959), 1300 (1961), 1375 (1963), and 1450 (1965).*]
Accounting.
Bulls. 1048 (1952) and 1550-1.
Advertising, marketing research, and public relations.
Bull. 1550-2.
Agriculture.
Bull. 1550-95.
Air conditioning and heating mechanics.
Bull. 1550-3.
Air transportation.
Bulls. 837-1 (1945), 837-2 (1947), 1128 (1953), and
1550-102.
Employment Requirements and Changing Occupational
Structure in Civil Aviation, Bull. 1367 (1964).
Aircraft manufacturing.
Bull. 1550-96.
Aluminum.
Bull. 1550-97.
Apparel.
Bull. 1550-98.
Appliance servicemen.
Bull. 1550-4.
Architects.
Bull. 1550-5.
Artists, commercial. See Commercial artists, this section.
Atomic energy field.
Bull. 1550-99.
Employment in the Atomic Energy Field, A 1960 Occupa­
tional Survey, Bull. 1297 (1961).
Automobile industry.
Bull. 1550-6.

105

Employment Outlook
Automobile mechanics.
Bulls. 842 (1945), 1129 (1953), and 1550-6.
Aviation. See Air transportation, this section.
Baking.
Bull. 1550-100.
Banking.
Bulls. 1156 (1954), and 1550-101.
Barbers and cosmetologists.
Bull. 1550-7.
Biological science.
Bull. 1550-8.
Blacksmiths.
Bull. 1550-38.
Boilermaking.
Bull. 1550-9.
Bookkeepers. (See also Banking, this section.)
Bull. 1550-10.
Bowling-pin-machine mechanics.
Bull. 1550-11.
Building trades.
Bulls. 967 (1949) and 1550-12.
Business machine servicemen.
Bulls. 892 (1947), 1129 (1953), and 1550-13.
Carpenters, painters, paperhangers, and glaziers.
Bull. 1550-14.
Cashiers.
Bull. 1550-16.
Cement masons, plasterers, and lathers.
Bull. 1550-15.
Chemical industry, industrial.
Bulls. 1151 (1954) and 1550-108.
Chiropractors.
Bull. 1550-17.
Clergy.
Bull. 1550-18.
Clerical workers. See specific industry.
Clothing industry.
Bulls. 1010 (1951) and 1550-98.
Commercial artists.
Bull. 1550-19.
Conservation occupations. (Foresters, forestry aids, and range
managers.)
Bull. 1550-20.
Counseling and placement.
Bull. 1550-21.
Dental hygienists.
Bull. 1550-22.
Dental laboratory technicians.
Bull. 1550-23.
Dentists.
Bull. 1550-24.
Department stores. See Stores, department, this section.
Designers (interior) and decorators.
Bull. 1550-19.
Diesel (engine) and farm equipment mechanics.
Bulls. 813 (1945), 1129 (1953), and 1550-25.
Dietitians.
Bull. 1550-26.
Draftsmen.
Bull. 1550-88.

106



Employment Outlook
Drivers.
Bull. 1550-28.
Earth scientists (geologists, geophysicists, meteorologists, and
oceanographers).
Bulls. 1050 (1952) and 1550-29.
Electric light and nower.
Bulls. 944 (1949) and 1550-103.
Electric sign servicemen.
Bull. 1550-30.
Electricians, construction.
Bull. 1550-31.
Electricians, maintenance.
Bull. 1550-48.
Electronic computer operating personnel, programmers, and
systems analysts.
Bull. 1550-32.
Electronic technicians.
Bull. 1550-104.
Electronics manufacturing.
Bulls. 1072 (1952) and 1550-104.
Employment Outlook and Changing Occupational Structure
in Electronics Manufacturing, Bull. 1363 (1963).*
Electroplaters. See Factory operatives, this section.
Engineers, professional.
Bulls. 968 (1950) and 1550-33.
Factory operatives.
Bull. 1550-34.
Factory Jobs: Employment Outlook for Workers in Jobs
Requiring Little or No Experience or Specialized Train­
ing, Bull. 1288 (1961).
F.B.I. special agents.
Bull. 1550-35.
Firefighters, policemen and policewomen, and state police
officers.
Bull. 1550-36.
Floor covering installers.
Bull. 1550-37.
Foresters. See Conservation occupations, this section.
Forge shops.
Bull. 1550-38.
Foundries.
Bulls. 880 (1946) and 1550-105.
Furniture upholsterers.
Bull. 1550-39.
Government, except post office.
Bull. 1550-106.
Handbooks.
Counselor’s Guide to Occupational and Other Manpower
Information, Bull. 1421 (1965).
Occupational Data for Counselors: A Handbook of Census
Information Selected for Use in Guidance, Bull. 817
(1945).
Occupational Outlook Handbook, Bulls. 940 (1949),* 998
(1951),* 1215 (1957),* 1255 (1959),* 1300 (1961),*
1375 (1963),* 1450 (1965),* and 1550 (1967).*
Health services.
Bull. 1550-73.
Home economists.
Bull. 1550-40.
Hoisery industry, women workers. See Women workers, this
section.

Employment Outlook
Hospital administrators.
Bull. 1550-42.
Hotels.
Bulls. 905 (1947) and 1550-107.
Household workers, private.
Bull. 1550-41.
Industrial chemical industry. See Chemical industry, indus­
trial, this section.
Industrial machinery repairman. (See also Mechanics and re­
pairmen, this section.)
Bull. 1550-48.
Instrument makers.
Bull. 1550-47.
Insurance.
Bull. 1550-109.
Interior designers and decorators.
Bull. 1550-19.
Iron and steel industry.
Bull. 1550-110.
Jewelers and jewelry repairmen.
Bull. 1550-93.
Laborers, construction.
Bull. 1550-43.
Landscape architects.
Bull. 1550-44.
Lawyers.
Bull. 1550-45.
Librarians.
Bull. 1550-46.
Machine shops.
Bulls. 895 (1947), 1130 (1953), and 1550-47.
Maintenance electricians.
Bull. 1550-48.
Mathematics and related fields.
Bull. 1550-49.
Mechanics and repairmen. (See also specific occupational field
or specific industry, this section, for later data.)
Bull. 1129 (1953).
Medical record librarians.
Bull. 1550-50.
Medical technologists and laboratory assistants.
Bull. 1550-51.
Medical X-ray technicians.
Bull. 1550-52.
Merchant marine.
Bull. 1054 (1952).
Metalworking. (See also specific occupational group, this
section, for later data.)
Bull. 1130 (1953).
Millwrights.
Bull. 1550-48.
Motion picture projectionists.
Bull. 1550-53.
Motor vehicles.
Bull. 1550-111.
Newspaper reporters.
Bull. 1550-54.
Occupational therapists and physical therapists.
Bull. 1550-55.
Office workers. See specific occupation or industry, this sec­
tion.




Employment Outlook
Operating engineers, construction.
Bull. 1550-56.
Opticians and optical mechanics.
Bull. 1550-27.
Optometrists.
Bull. 1550-57.
Osteopathic physicians.
Bull. 1550-58.
Oxygen cutters. See Welders, this section.
Paper.
Bull. 1550-113.
Performing artists.
Bull. 1550-59.
Personnel workers.
Bull. 1550-60.
Petroleum and natural gas.
Bulls. 994 (1950) and 1550-112.
Pharmacists.
Bull. 1550-61.
Photographers and photographic laboratories.
Bull. 1550-62.
Physical scientists (chemists, biochemists, physicists, and as­
tronomers).
Bull. 1550-65.
Physicians.
Bull. 1550-66.
Postwar Outlook for Physicians, Bull. 863 (1946).
Physicists.
Bulls. 1144 (1953) and 1550-65.
Plastics products.
Bull. 929 (1948).
Plumbers and pipefitters, and asbestos and insulating workers.
Bull. 1550-63.
Podiatrists.
Bull. 1550-67.
Post Office.
Bull. 1550-114.
Printing.
Bulls. 902 (1947), 1126 (1953), and 1550-64.
Programers. See Electronic computer operating personnel,
programers, and systems analysts, this section.
Psychologists.
Bull. 1550-68.
Purchasing agents and industrial traffic managers.
Bull. 1550-69.
Radio and television broadcasting.
Bulls. 958 (1949) and 1550-115.
Radio and television manufacturing. See Electronics manu­
facturing, this section.
Railroads.
Bulls. 961 (1949) and 1550-116.
Real estate agents and brokers.
Bull. 1550-70.
Receptionists.
Bull. 1550-71.
Recreation workers.
Bull. 1550-72.
Refrigeration and air conditioning mechanics.
Bull. 1550-3.
Registered professional nurses, licensed practical nurses, and
hospital attendants.

107

Employment Outlook
Bull. 1550-73.
Repairmen. See Mechanics and repairmen, and specific occu­
pational field or industry, this section.
Reporters, newspaper.
Bull. 1550-54.
Restaurants.
Bull. 1550-117.
Salesmen and saleswomen; retail stores, wholesale trade, and
manufacturing.
Bull. 1550-74.
Sanitarians.
Bull. 1550-75.
School teachers. See Teachers, this section.
Scientists. See specific industry or profession, this section.
Seamen, merchant. See Merchant marine, this section.
Secrets..-a, stenographers, and typists. (See also specific
industry, this section.)
Bull. 1550-84.
Securities salesmen.
Bull. 1550-76.
Sheet-metal workers and roofers.
Bull. 1550-78.
Shipping and receiving clerks.
Bull. 1550-77.
Shoe repairmen.
Bull. 1550-79.
Social scientists (anthropologists, economists, geographers,
historians, political scientists, and sociologists).
Bulls. 1167 (1954) and 1550-80.
Social workers.
Bull. 1550-81.
Speech pathologists and audiologists.
Bull. 1550-82.
Stationary engineers and stationary firemen (boiler).
Bull. 1550-83.
Statisticians.
Bulls. 1167 (1954) and 1550-49.
Steel industry. See Iron and steel industry, this section.
Stores, department.
Bulls. 1020 (1951) and 1550-74.
Structural and other ironworkers, and elevator constructors.
Bull. 1550-85.
Surveyors.
Bull. 1550-86.
Teachers.
Bulls. 972 (1949) and 1550-87.
Technicians. (See also specific occupation or industry, this
section.)
Bulls. 1131 (1953) and 1550-88.
Technician Manpower: Requirements, Resources, and
Training Needs, Bull. 1512 (1966).*
Telephone.
Bull. 1550-118.
Television and radio service technicians.
Bull. 1550-89.
Television broadcasting. See Radio and television broadcast­
ing, this section.
Television manufacturing. See Electronics manufacturing, this
section.
Typists. (See also specific industry, this section.)
Bull. 1550-84.

108



Engineers, Professional
Urban planners.
Bull. 1550-90.
Various occupations. See under Handbooks, this section.
Vending machine mechanics.
Bull. 1550-91.
Veterinarians.
Bull. 1550-92.
Watch and instrument repairmen.
Bull. 1550-93.
Welders.
Bulls. 844 (1945). 1130 (1953), and 1550-94.
Women, hosiery industry.
Postwar Employment Prospects for Women in the Hosiery
Industry, Bull. 835 (1945).
Employment stabilization. See guaranteed employment and wage
plans.
Employment statistics. (See also Employment, and Unemployment.)
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull. 1458
(1966) .
Employment and Earnings Statistics for States and Areas, 1939—
62, Bull. 1370 (1963); 1939-63, Bull. 1370-1 (1964); 193964, Bull. 1370-2 (1965); 1939-65, Bull. 1370-3 (1966); and
1939-66, Bull. 1370-4 (1967).
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the United States,
1909-60, Bull. 1312 (1961); 1909-62, Bull. 1312-1 (1963);
1909-64, Bull. 1312-2 (1964); 1909-65, Bull. 1312-3 (1966);
1909-66, Bull. 1312-4 (1966); and 1909-67, Bull. 1312-5
(1967) .
Fluctuation in Employment in Ohio, 1914 to 1929, Bull. 553
(1923). See also Bull. 613 (1935).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, Bull. 1016, 1950 ed. (1951);
1951 supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1^5 (1967).*
Impact of the War on Employment in 181 Centers of War Ac­
tivity, Bull. 826 (1945).
Occupational Data for Counselors: A Handbook of Census
Information Selected for Use in Guidance, Bull. 817 (1945).
Occupational Employment Statistics: Sources and Data, Rpt.
305 (1966).
Report of the Advisory Committee on Employment Statistics,
Bull. 542 (1931).*
Revised Indexes of Factory Employment and Pay Rolls, 1919 to
1933, Bull. 610 (1935).
Street Railway Employment in the United States, Bull. 204
(1917).
Unemployment in Columbus, Ohio, 1921 to 1925, Bull. 409
(1926).
Engineers, professional.
Employment and Earnings in the Engineering Profession, 1929
to 1934, Bull. 682 (1941). See also Bull. 1027 (1951).
Employment Outlook for Engineers, Bulls. 968 (1950) and
1550-33 (no date).
Manpower Resources in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering,
Bull. 1132 (1953).*
Scientific Research and Development in American Industry,
Bull. 1148 (1953).*
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical, and
Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60, Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61, Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62, Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963, Bull. 1387 (1963).*

Equal Pay for Equal Work
February-March 1964, Bull. 1422 (1964).*
February-March 1965, Bull. 1469 (1965).*
February-March 1966, Bull. 1535 (1966).*
Equal pay for equal work.
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull. 1091
(1952).
Escalation clauses. See Collective bargaining, genera I—Escalation
clauses.
Ethiopia.
Labor Law and Practice in the Empire of Ethiopia, Rpt. 298
(1966).
Europe. (See also specific country or specific subject.)
Labor Digests on Countries in Europe, Bull. 1497 (1966).*
Examining and licensing of workmen. See Legislation— L a b o rText, summaries, and reviews of laws.
Expenditures. See Income and expenditures, consumer.
Explosives industry. (See also Munition factories, Great Britain,
World War I.)
Average Hourly Earnings in the Explosives Industry, June 1944,
Bull. 819 (1945).
Industrial Poisons Used or Produced in the Manufacture of
Explosives, Bull. 219 (1917).
Extra pay, specific industries. See Shift differentials and opera­
tions.

F
Fabricated structural-steel industry. See Wages and hours— Iron
and steel industry.
Factfinding boards.
Work Stoppages Caused by Labor-Management Disputes in 1948,
Bull. 963 (1949).*
Factory workers. See under Wages and hours.
Fair Labor Standards Act. See under Legislation.
Family allowances. (See also Public assistance.)
Family Allowances in Foreign Countries, Bull. 401 (1926).
Family Allowances in Various Countries, Bull. 754 (1943).
Family Allowances in Various Countries, 1944-45, Bull. 853
(1946).
Mid-War Developments in Civilian Family Allowances, Bull. 803
(1944).
Family budgets. See Income and expenditures, consumer; and
Prices.
Family— expenditures— income. See Income and expenditures, con­
sumer.
Farm equipment dealers. See under Wages and hours— Retail
trade.
Farm labor. See Agriculture.
Fatalities, caused by accidents and injuries. See Accidents.
Fatigue, industrial. See Munition factories, Great Britain, World
War I.
Federal employees. (See also under Wages and hours—White-collar
workers, and specific occupation or profession.)
Mutual Relief Associations Among Government Employees in
Washington, D. C., Bull. 282 (1921).
Public Service Retirement Systems: United States, Canada,
and Europe, Bull. 477 (1929).
Fertilizer industry. See under Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and
prevention, by industry or occupation; and Wages and hours.
Fire departments and firemen. See Wages and hours— Municipal
employees.



Government Employees
Fireworks industry.
Phosphorus Necrosis in the Manufacture of Fireworks and in
the Preparation of Phosphorus, Bull. 405 (1926).
Fishermen and fishing. See Wages and hours— Fishermen.
Food. (See also under Prices— Retail, and under Wages and hours—
Groceries, wholesale and Retail trade.)
Food Situation in Central Europe, 1917, Bull. 242 (1918).
Wartime Food Purchases, Bull. 838 (1945).
Footwear manufacturing. See Shoe industry; also Shoe industry
under Labor and industrial conditions, and under Wages and hours.
Foremen. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Foresters. See under Employment outlook.
Forge shop occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Formosa. See Taiwan.
Foundries. See under Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and pre­
vention, by industry or occupation; Safety— Codes; and Wages
and hours.
Foundry occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Freight handlers. See under Wages and hours— General trades.
Fringe benefits. See under Collective bargaining, general. See also
Employment outlook; Health, insurance, and pension plans, ex­
tent of; Related wage benefits; specific industry or occupation;
and Wages and hours, particularly Hospital employees, selected
cities, Area Wage Surveys, Office workers, and bulletins entitled
"Hourly Earnings,” etc.
Fruit and vegetable industry, canned. See Accidents— Rates, types,
causes, and prevention, by industry or occupation; and under
Collective bargaining, by industry or occupation.
Fuels, prices of. See under Prices— Retail.
Furniture, homefurnishings, and appliance stores. See under Wages
and hours— Retail trade, and Stores, retail.
Furniture industry. See Older Workers and under Wages and hours.

G
Garages, repair. See Wages and hours— Automobile repair garages
and shops, and Service stations.
Garnishments.
Wage Executions for Debt, Bull. 622 (1936).
Gas utilities. See Wages and hours— Utilities.
Gasoline filling stations. See Wages and hours— Service stations.
General merchandise stores. See Stores, retail, and under Wages
and hours— Retail trade.
Germany.
Postwar Labor Conditions in Germany, Bull. 380 (1925).
Works Council Movement in Germany, Bull. 383 (1925).
Glass, clay, and stone workers. See Wages and hours— Clay, stone,
and glass industries.
Glass industry. See under Productivity, and under Wages and
hours— Clay, stone, and glass industries.
Glassware and glass-container industries. See under Wages and
hours.
Glossaries.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Glossary of Current Industrial Relations and Wage Terms, Bull.
1438 (1965).
Glossary of Currently Used Wage Terms, Bull. 983 (1950).
Glove industry. See under Wages and hours.
Government employees. See Federal employees; and Wages and
hours— Municipal employees, and White-collar workers.

109

Government Labor Officials
Governmental Labor Officials, International Association of. See un­
der Conventions, meetings, etc.
Government Labor Officials of the United States and Canada, Asso­
ciation of, and Governmental Officials in Industry of the United
States and Canada, Association of. See Conventions, meetings,
etc.— Governmental Labor Officials, International Association of.
Grain-mill products industries. See under Wages and hours.
Granite and stone trades. See under Mortality statistics— Dusty
trades; and see Wages and hours— General trades.
Great Britain. See specific subjects.
Grievances. See under Collective bargaining, general; and Collec­
tive bargaining, by industry or occupation.
Groceries, wholesale. See under Wages and hours.
Guaranteed employment and wage plans. (See also under Collec­
tive bargaining, general.)
Appendix C— Guaranteed Wage or Employment Plans, Bull. 906
(1947).
Appendix F— Economic Analysis of Guaranteed Wages, Bull. 907
(1947).*
Collective Bargaining in the Meat-Packing Industry, Bull. 1063
(1952).
Digest of Nine Supplemental Unemployment Benefit Plans, Early
1963, Bull. 1365 (1963).
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Compensa­
tion Practices for Production and Related Workers; Composi­
tion of Payroll Hours: Manufacturing Industries, 1962, Bull.
1428 (1965).*
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Compensa­
tion Practices for Production and Related Workers, Meat­
packing and Processing Industries, 1962, Bull. 1413 (1964).*
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Remunera­
tion Practices: Finance, Insurance, and Real Estate Indus­
tries, 1961, Bull. 1419 (1964).*
Financing Supplemental Unemployment Benefit Plans, Bull.
1483 (1966).
Guaranteed Wage Plans in the United States, Bull. 925 (1948).*
Unemployment-Benefit Plans in the United States and Unemploy­
ment Insurance in Foreign Countries, Bull. 544 (1931).*
Guatemala.
Labor Law and Practice in Guatemala, Rpt. 223 (1963).

H
Haiti.
Labor Law and Practice in Haiti, Rpt. 244 (1963).
Handbooks. See specific subjects.
Handicapped workers.
Impaired Workers in Industry, Bull. 857 (1946).
The Performance of Physically Impaired Workers in Manu­
facturing Industries, Bull. 923 (1948).
Hat industries. See under Wages and hours.
Hawaii.
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and
Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
The Status of Labor in Puerto Rico, Alaska, Hawaii, Bull. 1191
(1956).
Hazardous occupations. See under Occupational diseases. See
also Accidents; Mortality statistics; Poisons, industrial; and
Safety.
110



Hours and Earnings
Health. See Health, recreation, and welfare conditions; Occupa­
tional diseases; Poisons, industrial. See also LegislationLabor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws.
Health and welfare benefit plans, collectively bargained. See
Collective bargaining, general— Health and welfare insurance.
Health insurance. See Collective bargaining, general— Health and
welfare insurance.
Health insurance, Great Britain.
National Health Insurance in Great Britain, 1911 to 1921,
Bull. 312 (1923).
Health, insurance, and pension plans, extent of. (See also Collective
bargaining, general— Health and welfare insurance, and Pensions;
Collective bargaining, by industry or occupation; Wages and
hours— specific industry or occupation; Related wage benefits.)
Digest for 50 Selected Health and Insurance Plans for Salaried
Employees, Spring 1963, Bull. 1377 (1964).
Digest of 50 Selected Pension Plans for Salaried Employees,
Spring 1963, Bull. 1373 (1963).
Health and Insurance Benefits and Pension Plans for Salaried
Employees, Spring 1963, Bull. 1405 (1964).
Health, recreation, and welfare conditions. (See also Parks.)
Beneficial Activities of American Trade-Unions, Bull. 465
(1928).*
Health and Recreation Activities in Industrial Establishments,
1926, Bull. 458 (1928).
Welfare Work for Employees in Industrial Establishments in
the United States, Bull. 250 (1919).
Health service occupations. See under Employment outlook, and
under Wages and hours— Hospitals.
Health standards.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Safety, Health, and Sanita­
tion, Bull. 908-14 (1949).
Holidays. See under Collective bargaining, general, and by in­
dustry or occupation. Also see Employment outlook; Wages and
hours— Area Wage Surveys, Office workers, and bulletins entitled
‘‘Hourly Earnings,” etc. For legislation concerning, see Legisla­
tion— Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws.
Home economists. See under Employment outlook.
Home industries. See Homeworkers.
Home insulation (heat) materials. See under Labor requirements.
Homes for the aged. See under Old-age care and assistance.
Homeworkers. See Legislation— Labor.
Homeworkers, foreign countries.
Minimum Wage Legislation in Various Countries, Bull. 467
(1928).*
Honduras.
Labor Law and Practice in Honduras, Rpt. 189 (1961).
Hosiery and underwear manufacture. See under Wages and hours.
Hosiery manufacture. See under Wages and hours— Wage chronol­
ogies, and specific industry; also see Women workers.
Hospital employees. See under Accidents— Rates, types, causes,
and prevention, by industry or occupation; under Wages and
hours.
Hospitalization benefits, collectively bargained. See Collective
bargaining, general— Health and welfare insurance.
Hotel and restaurant workers. See Wages and hours— Hotels,
motels, and restaurants.
Hotel occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Hours and earnings. See Wages and hours.

Hours of Work
Hours of work. (See also under Collective bargaining, general, and
by industry or occupation; specific industry or occuoation under
Employment outlook; Munition factories, Great Britain, World
War I; and Wages and hours.)
Hours of Work and Output, Bull. 917 (1948).*
Studies of the Effects of Long Working Hours, Bulls. 791, Part
I (1944)* and 791-A, Part 2 (1944).*
Housing. (See also under Building construction; ConstructionBuilding and nonbuilding; Construction, general; under Co­
operatives, consumer; and under Legislation.)
Housing by Employers in the United States, Bull. 263 (1920).*
New Housing and Its Materials, 1940-56, Bull. 1231 (1958).*
See also Bull. 1115 (1952).
New Housing in Metropolitan Areas, 1949-51, Bull. 1115 (1952).
Structure of the Residential Building Industry in 1949, Bull.
1170 (1954).*
Humanities.
Personnel Resources in the Social Sciences and Humanities,
Bull. 1169 (1954).*
Hygiene, industrial. (See also Occupational diseases; Poisons, in­
dustrial; Safety; Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and re­
views of laws; Munition factories, Great Britain, World War I.)
Health Survey of the Printing Trades, 1922 to 1925, Bull. 427
(1927).
Hygiene of the Printing Trades, Bull. 209 (1917).
Survey of Hygienic Conditions in the Printing Trades, Bull. 392
(1925).

I
impaired workers. See Handicapped workers.
Incentive-wage plans. See Wage-incentive plans; also Collective
bargaining, general— Wage-incentive plans.
Income. See Negroes; Older workers; Southern States; and War­
time.
Income, national.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Income and expenditures, consumer. (See also Prices— Consumer
Price Index.)
Changing Consumption Patterns, 1960-61, Rpt. 238-11 (1965).
Changing Patterns of Consumer Expenditures, 1950-60, Rpt.
238-3 (1964); and 1960-61, Rpt. 238-5 (1964).
Consumer Expenditures and Income Survey:
Anchorage, Alaska, 1959, Rpt. 237-29 (1963).
Atlanta, Georgia, 1960, Rpt. 237-6 (1962); Supp. 1 (1963).
Austin, Texas, 1960, Rpt. 237-12 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Bakersfield, California, 1961, Rpt. 237-70 (1964); Supp. 1
(1964).
Baltimore, Maryland, 1960, Rpt. 237-16 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) ; 1960-61, Rpt. 237-66 (1964).
Baton Rouge, Louisiana, 1961, Rpt. 237-62 (1964); Supp. 1
(1964) .
Boston, Massachusetts, 1960, Rpt. 237-7 (1962); Supp. 1
(1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-57 (1964).
Buffalo, New York,'i960, Rpt. 237-18 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Cedar Rapids, Iowa, 1960, Rpt. 237-17 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Champaign-Urbana, Illinois, 1960, Rpt. 237-23 (1963);
Supp. 1 (1963).



Income and Expenditures, Consumer
Chicago. Illinois, 1960. Rpt. 237-5 (1962); Supp. 1 (1963);
1960-61 Rpt. 237-55 (1963).
Cincinnati, Ohio, 1959, Rpt. 237-28 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Cleveland. Ohio, 1960, Rot. 237-21, (1963); Supp. 1 (1963);
1960-61, Rpt. 237-71 (1964).
Dallas, Texas, 1960, Rpt. 237-20 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Dayton, Ohio, 1961, Rot. 237-60 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Denver, Colorado, 1961, Rpt. 237-59 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Detroit, Michigan, 1960, Rpt. 237-1 (1952); Supp. 1 (1963);
1960-61, Rpt. 237-51 (1963).
Durham, North Carolina, 1961, Rpt. 237-69 (1963); Supp.
1 (1963).
Fairbanks, Alaska, 1959, Rpt. 237-30 (1963).
Green Bay, Wisconsin, 1961, Rpt. 237-73 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Hartford, Connecticut, 1961, Rpt. 237-68 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Honolulu, Hawaii, 1961, Rpt. 237-78 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Houston, Texas, 1961, Rpt. 237-83 (1965).
Indianapolis, Indiana, 1960, Rpt. 237-10 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) .
Juneau, Alaska, 1960, Rpt. 237-32 (1963).
Kansas City, Missouri-Kansas, 1963, Rpt. 237-79 (1965);
Supp. 1 (1965).
Ketchikan, Alaska, 1960, Rpt. 237-31 (1963).
Lancaster, Pennsylvania, 1961, Rpt. 237-64 (1963); Supp.
1 (1963).
Las Vegas, Nevada, 1962, Rpt. 237-33 (1964); Supp. 1
(1964) .
Los Angeles, California, 1960, Rpt. 237-22 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-72 (1964).
Milwaukee, Wisconsin, 1963, Rpt. 237-80 (1965); Supp. 1
(1965) .
Minneapolis—St. Paul, Minnesota, 1963, Rpt. 237-81
(1965); Supp. 1 (1965).
Nashville, Tennessee, 1961, Rpt. 237-56 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
New York, New York, 1960, Rpt. 237-4 (1962); Supp. 1
(1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-54 (1963).
Northern New Jersey, 1960, Rpt. 237-13 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-63 (1963).
Orlando, Florida, 1960, Rpt. 237-19 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) .
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, 1960, Rpt. 237-8 (1963); Supp.
1 (1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-58 (1964).
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania, 1960, Rpt. 237-11 (1953); Supp.
1 (1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-61 (1964).
Portland, Maine, 1960, Rpt. 237-14 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in North Central Region, 1961, Rpt.
237-85 (1964); Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3 (1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in Northeastern Region, 1961, Rpt.
237-84 (1964); Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3 (1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in Southern Region, 1961, Rpt.
237-86 (1964); Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3 (1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in United States, 1961, Rpt. 237-88
(1964) ; Supp. 1 (1964); Supp. 3 (1965).
Rural Nonfarm Areas in Western Region, 1961, Rpt. 237-87
(1964) ; Supp. 2 (1965); Supp. 3 (1965).
San Diego, California, 1963, Rpt. 237-82 (1965); Supp. 1
(1965) .
Ill

Income and Expenditures, Consumer
San Francisco, California, 1960, Rpt. 237-2 (1962); Supp.
1 (1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-52 (1964).
Seattle, Washington, 1960, Rpt. 237-9 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963).
Small Cities in the North Central Region, 1960, Rpt. 237—
27 (1963); 1961, Rpt. 237-77 (1964).
Small Cities in the Northeastern Region, 1960, Rpt. 237-24
(1963); 1961, Rpt. 237-74 (1964).
Small Cities in the Southern Region, 1960, Rpt. 237-25
(1963); 1961, Rpt. 237-75 (1964).
Small Cities in the Western Region, 1960, Rpt. 237-26
(1963); 1961, Rpt. 237-76 (1964).
St. Louis, Missouri, 1960, Rpt. 237-15 (1963); Supp. 1
(1963) ; 1960-61, Rpt. 237-65 (1964).
Total North Central Region, Urban and Rural, 1960-61,
Rpt. 237-90 (1965); Supp. 1 (1965); Supp. 2 (1966);
Supp. 3, Part A (1966).
Total Northeastern Region, Urban and Rural, 1960-61,
Rpt. 237-89 (1965); Supp. 2 (1966); Supp 3, Part A
(1966).
Total Southern Region, Urban and Rural, 1960-61, Rpt.
237-91 (1965); Supp. 2 (1966); Supp. 3, Part A (1966).
Total United States, Urban and Rural, 1960-61, Rpt.
237-93 (1965); Supp. 2 (1966); Supp. 3, Part A (1966).
Total Western Region, Urban and Rural, 1960-61, Rpt.
237-92 (1965); Supp. 1 (1965); Supp. 2 (1966); Supp. 3,
Part A (1966).
Urban Places in the North Central Region, 1960-61, Rpt.
237-35 (1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1965).
Urban Places in the Northeastern Region, 1960-61, Rpt.
237-34 (1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964); Supp. 3, Part A
(1964) .
Urban Places in the Southern Region, 1960-61, Rpt.
237-36 (1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964).
Urban Places in the Western Region, 1960-61, Rpt.
237-37 (1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964); Supp. 3, Part A
(1964).
Urban United States, 1960-61, Rpt. 237-38 (1964); Supp.
1 (1964); Supp. 2, Part A (1964); Supp. 3, Part A
(1964); Supp. 3, Part B (1964); Supp. 3, Part C (1964).
Washington, D.C., 1960, Rpt. 237-3 (1962) (Revised 1963);
Supp. 1 (1963); 1960-61, Rpt. 237-53 (1964).
Wichita, Kansas, 1961, Rpt. 237-67 (1963); Supp. 1 (1963).
Family Expenditures in Selected Cities, 1935-36, Bull. 648:
Vol. I (1941), Housing; Vol. II (1940), Food; Vol. Ill (1941),
Clothing and Personal Care; Vol. IV (1941), Furnishings and
Equipment; Vol. V (1940), Medical Care; Vol. VI (1940),
Travel and Transportation; Vol. VII (1941), Recreation, Read­
ing, Formal Education, Tobacco, Contributions, and Personal
Taxes; Vol. VIII (1941), Assets and Liabilities, Changes in.
Family Income and Expenditure, 1935-36:— Vol. I, Family In­
come; Vol. II, Family Expenditure:
Chicago, Bull. 642 (1939).
East Central Region, Bull. 644 (1939 and 1941).
New England, Bull. 645 (1939 and 1941).
New York City, Bull. 643 (1939 and 1941).
Pacific Northwest, Bull. 649 (1939 and 1940).
Southeastern Region, Bull. 647 (1939 and 1940).
West Central-Rocky Mountain Region, Bull. 646 (1939 and
1940).
112



India
Family Income, Expenditures, and Savings in 1945, Bull. 956
(1949); in 1950, Bull. 1097 (Revised 1953).
Family Income, Expenditures, and Savings in 10 Cities, Bull.
1065 (1952).
Family Spending and Saving in Wartime, Bull. 822 (1945).
Income and Spending and Savings of City Families in Wartime,
Bull. 724 (1942).
Installment Buying by City Consumers in 1941, Bull. 773 (1944).
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and Clerical Workers,
1934-36:
East North Central Region, Bull. 636 (1940).*
North Atlantic Region: New York City, Bull. 637, Vol. I
(1939);* Eleven Cities, Bull. 637, Vol. II (1939).*
Pacific Region, Bull. 639 (1939).*
Southern Cities, Bull. 640 (1941).*
Summary Volume, Bull. 638 (1941).*
West North Central-Mountain Region, Bull. 641 (1939).*
Money Disbursements of Wage Earners and Clerical Workers
in Thirteen Small Cities, 1933-35, Bull. 691 (1942).
Spending and Saving of the Nation’s Families in Wartime, Bull.
723 (1942).
Survey of Consumer Expenditures, 1960-61:
Changing Consumption Patterns, 1960-61, Rpt. 238-11
(1965).
Changing Patterns of Consumer Expenditures, Rpt. 238-5
(1964).
Changing Patterns of Consumer Expenditures, 1950-1960,
Rpt. 238-3 (1964).
Consumer Expenditures and Income, with Emphasis on
Low-Income Families, Rpt. 238-6 (1964).
Contrasts in Spending by Urban Families: Trends Since
1950 and Variations in 1960-61, Rpt. 238-8 (1965).
Economics and Public Welfare, Rpt. 238-4 (1963).
Expanding Ownership of Household Equipment, Rpt. 238-7
(1964).
Expenditure Patterns of Low Consumption Families, Rpt.
238-10 (1965).
Food Expenditures of Urban Families, 1950 to 1960-61,
Rpt. 238-9 (1965).
Levels of Living Among the Poor, Rpt. 238-12 (1965).
The Impact of Rising Prices on Younger and Older Con­
sumers, Rpt. 238-2 (1963).
Uses of Family Expenditures Data, Rpt. 238-13 (1965).
Workers' Wealth and Family Living Standards, Rpt. 238-1
(1963).
Wartime Earnings and Spending in Honolulu, 1943, Bull 788
(1944).
Wartime Food Purchases, Bull. 838 (1945).
Workers’ Budgets in the United States, City Families and
Single Persons, 1946 and 1947, Bull. 927 (1948).*
Indexes. (See also Prices; Productivity— Trends; and Wages and
hours— Indexes.)
Revised Indexes of Factory Employment and Pay Rolls, 1919 to
1933, Bull. 610 (1935).
The Making and Using of Index Numbers, Bull. 656 (1938).*
Indexes to (and lists of) publications. See Publications, indexes to
and lists of.
India.
Labor in India, Rpt. 188 (1961).
Wartime Labor Conditions in India, Bull. 755 (1943).

Indonesia
Indonesia.
Labor in Indonesia, Rpt. 246 (1963).
Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions. See under Conven­
tions, meetings, etc. See also Safety— Codes; and Workmen’s
compensation.
Industrial accidents and injuries. See Accidents; Workmen’s com­
pensation; also Conventions, meetings, etc.— Industrial Accident
Boards and Commissions; Poisons, industrial.
Industrial chemical industry. See Chemical industry.
Industrial classification.
Report of Committee on Statistics and Compensation Insurance
Cost of the International Association of Industrial Accident
Boards and Commissions, Bull. 201 (1916).
Industrial conditions. See Labor and industrial conditions.
Industrial councils, foreign countries. See Labor conditions and
industrial relations, foreign countries.
Industrial diseases. See Occupatiosal diseases.
Industrial disputes. See Labor-management disputes.
Industrial Disputes Investigation Act, Canada.
Operation of the Industrial Disputes Investigatiin Act of Can­
ada, Bull. 233 (1918).
Industrial efficiency. See Munition factories, Great Britain, World
War I; Plant management; Productivity.
Industrial employment. See Employment; and Employment statistics.
Industrial engineering.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225-2 (1959).*
Industrial machinery. See Wages and hours— Machinery manufac­
ture.
Industrial machinery repairmen. See under Employment outlook.
Industrial poisoning. See Poisons, industrial.
Industrial relations. See Labor and industrial relations; Labormanagement relations; Labor and industrial conditions; and
Labor-management disputes.
Industrial surveys. See Wages and hours— Manufacturing and non­
manufacturing industries, Area Wage Surveys, and specific in­
dustry.
Industrial unemployment. See Unemployment.
Industrial unrest. See Labor and industrial relations.
Industrial wage scales. See Wages and hours.
Industrialization.
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
■ndustry stabilization committees. See Collective bargaining, gen­
eral— Labor-management cooperation.
Injuries, industrial. See Accidents; Workmen’s compensation; Con­
ventions, meetings, etc— Industrial Accident Boards and Com­
missions; and Poisons, industrial.
Installment buying.
Installment Buying by City Consumers in 1941, Bull. 773 (1944).
Instrument makers. See under Employment outlook.
Insulation (heat) materials. See under Labor requirements.
Insurance. See specific type of.
Insurance occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Insurance plans. See Collective bargaining, general— Health and
welfare insurance, and Pensions; Collective bargaining, by in­
dustry or occupation; Health, insurance, and pension plans,
extent of; Wages and hours— specific industry or occupation;
Related wage benefits.




Iron and Steel Industry
Interindustry relations.
Farm Construction: A Segment of Construction Activity in
the 1947 Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt. 20 (1953).
General Explanations of the 200 Sector Tables: The 1947
Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt. 33 (1953).
Industry Reports:
General Explanations. The 1947 Interindustry Relations
Study, Rpt. 9 (1953).
Manufacturing Methodology. The 1947 Interindustry Re­
lations Study, Rpt. 10 (1953).
Methodology for Agricultural Sectors. The 1947 Inter­
industry Relations Study, Rpt. 21 (1953).
The Alkalies and Chlorine Industry. A Manufacturing
Sector in the 1947 Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt.
22 (1953).
The Drugs and Medicines Industry. A Manufacturing
Sector in the 1947 Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt. 29
(1953).
The Inorganic Chemicals Industry. A Manufacturing
Sector in the 1947 Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt.
31 (1953).
The Organic Chemicals Industry. A Manufacturing Sector
in the 1947 Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt. 35
(1953).
The Plastics Materials Industry. A Manufacturing Sector
in the 1947 Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt. 30
(1953).
New and Maintenance Construction: Construction in the
1947 Interindustry Relations Study, Rpt. 2 (1953).
New Nonfarm Nonresidential Construction. Part I: New In­
dustrial Building Construction,- Part II: All Other New
Nonfarm Nonresidential Building Construction. Two Seg­
ments of Construction Activity in the 1947 Interindustry
Relations Study, Rpt. 19 (1953).
New Nonfarm Residential Construction: A Segment of Con­
struction Activity in the 1947 Interindustry Relations Study,
Rpt. 3 (1953).
Projections 1970: Interindustry Relationships, Potential De­
mand, Employment, Bull. 1536 (1966).*
Interior designers and decorators. See under Employment outlook.
International Association of Governmental Labor Officials. See
Conventions, meetings, etc.— Governmental Labor Officials, In­
ternational Association of.
International labor movement. See International labor regulation.
International labor regulation.
Historical Survey of International Action Affecting Labor, Bull.
268 (1920).*
International Labor Legislation and the Society of Nations, Bull.
254 (1919).
International Seamen’s Union. See Labor organizations— Seamen's
union, international.
Intoxicants. See under Legislation.
Iran.
Labor Law and Practice in Iran, Rpt. 276 (1964).
Iraq.
Labor Law and Practice in Iraq, Rpt. 221 (1963).
Iron and steel industry. See under Accidents— Rates, types, causes,
and prevention, by industry or occupation; Employment outlook;
Productivity; and under Wages and hours.

113

Iron-Ore Mining
Iron-ore mining. See under Wages and hours— Mining.
Israel.
Labor in Israel, Rpt. 284 (no date).

J
Japan.
Labor Conditions of Women and Children in Japan, Bull. 558
(1931).
Jewelers and jewelry repairmen. See under Employment outlook.
Job evaluation, union attitudes toward.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225-2 (1959).*
Job redesign.
Job Redesign for Older Workers: Ten Case Studies, Bull. 1523
(1967).*
Job training. See Apprentices and learners; Vocational education
and training; Workers’ education.
Joint industrial councils. See Labor conditions and industrial rela­
tions, foreign countries.
Jury leave. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Juveniles. See Child labor.

K
Kansas Court of Industrial Relations, Bull. 322 (1923).*
Knit goods industry. See under Wages and hours.
Knitted-outerwear industry. See under Wages and hours.
Korea.
Labor Law and Practice in Korea, Rpt. 273 (no date).

L
Labor agents. See Legislation— Employment agencies, public and
private.
Labor agreements. See Collective bargaining, general, and by in­
dustry or occupation.
Labor and industrial conditions. (See also Labor and industrial
relations.)
Alaska.
The Status of Labor in Puerto Rico, Alaska, Hawaii, Bull.
1191 (1956).
Children wage earners. See Child labor.
Hawaii.
Labor Conditions in the Territory of Hawaii, 1929-1930,
Bull. 534 (1931).*
Labor in the Territory of Hawaii, 1939, Bull. 687 (1940).*
The Economy of Hawaii in 1947, Bull. 926 (1948).*
The Status of Labor in Puerto Rico, Alaska, Hawaii, Bull.
1191 (1956).
History.
History of Wages in the United States from Colonial
Times to 1928, Bull. 604 (1934).* (Part I of bulletin.)
Longshore industry.
Cargo Handling and Longshore Labor Conditions, Bull. 550
(1932).
New England.
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212
(1957).*

114



Labor Conditions— Industrial Relations
Puerto Rico.
The Status of Labor in Puerto Rico, Alaska, Hawaii, Bull.
1191 (1956).
Shoe industry.
Conditions in the Shoe Industry in Haverhill, Mass., 1928,
Bull. 483 (1929).
Labor Conditions in the Shoe Industry in Massachusetts,
1920-1924, Bull. 384 (1925).
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212
(1957).*
The Boot and Shoe Industry in Massachusetts as a Vocation
for Women, Bull. 180 (1915).
Southern States.
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Women workers. See that title.
Labor and industrial relations. (See also Collective bargaining, gen­
eral, and by industry or occupation; Labor and industrial condi­
tions; Labor-management relations; Labor movement; and Labor
organizations— Seamen’s union, international.)
Glossary of Current Industrial Relations and Wage Terms, Bull.
1438 (1965).
Industrial Relations in the West Coast Lumber Industry, Bull.
349 (1924).*
Joint Industrial Control in the Book and Job Printing Industry,
Bull. 481 (1928).
Labor Relations in the Fairmont, West Virginia Bituminous
Coal Field, Bull. 361 (1924).
Labor Relations in the Lace and Lace-Curtain Industries in the
United States, Bull. 399 (1925).
The Cnanging Status of Bituminous-Coal Miners, 1937-46,
Bull. 882 (1946).
Labor conditions and industrial relations, foreign countries. (See
also Legislation, foreign countries.)
Africa.
Bibliography on Labor in Africa, 1960-64, Bull. 1473
(1965).
Labor Digests on Countries in Africa, Bull. 1539 (1966).*
Brazil.
Labor in Brazil, Rpt. 191 (1962).
Chile.
Labor in Chile, Rpt. 224 (1962).
Chinese migrants.
Cninese Migrations, with Special Reference to Labor
Conditions, Bull. 340 (1923).
Colombia.
Labor in Colombia, Rpt. 222 (1962).
Cyprus.
Labor in Cyprus, Rpt. 243 (1963).
Europe.
Labor Digests on Countries in Europe, Bull. 1497 (1966).*
Germany.
Postwar Labor Conditions in Germany, Bull. 380 (1925).
Works Council Movement in Germany, Bull. 383 (1925).
Great Britain.
Industrial Unrest in Great Britain, Bull. 237 (1917).
Joint Industrial Control in the Book and Job Printing In­
dustry, Bull. 481 (1928). (Note: Section on Great
Britain includes newspaper branch of industry.)
Joint Industrial Councils in Great Britain, Bull. 255 (1919).
India.
Labor in India, Rpt. 188 (1961).

Labor Chronology
Wartime Labor Conditions in India, Bull. 755 (1943).
Indonesia.
Labor in Indonesia, Rpt. 246 (1963).
Japan.
Labor Conditions of Women and Children in Japan, Bull.
558 (1931).
Methods.
Cost-of-Living Indexes in Developing Countries, Rpt. 283
(1964).
Forecasting of Manpower Requirements, Rpt. 248 (1963).
How to Establish Current Reporting, Rpt. 302 (1966).
Labor Force Survey in Developing Countries, Rpt. 263
(1964).
Mexico.
Labor in Mexico, Rpt. 251 (1963).
Nigeria.
Labor in Nigeria, Rpt. 261 (1963).
Peru.
Labor in Peru, Rpt. 262 (1964).
Sudan.
Labor in Sudan, Rpt. 182 (1961).
Labor chronology. See Labor movement.
Labor contracts. See Collective bargaining, general, and by in­
dustry or occupation.
Labor costs. See Productivity.
Labor courts.
Kansas Court of Industrial Relations, Bull. 322 (1923).*
Labor, State departments and bureaus of. See Labor (and re­
lated) offices, Federal and State.
Labor, U.S. Department of. (See also Bureau of Labor Statistics.)
Humanity in Government, Bull. 346 (1923).*
Labor disputes. See Labor-management disputes.
Labor exchanges. See Employment agencies.
Labor force. See Labor supply; Manpower; Negroes; Occupational
mobility; Older workers; Statistics; Wartime; and specific indus­
tries and occupations.
Labor Information Bulletin. See Publications, indexes to and lists
of.
Labor laws and legislation. See Legislation.
Labor-management contracts. See Collective bargaining, general,
and by industry or occupation.
Labor-management cooperation. (See also under Collective bargain­
ing, general.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bulls. 1225 (1958)* and 1225-1 (1959).*
Beneficial Activities of American Trade-Unions, Bull. 465
(1928).*
Major Collective Bargaining Agreements: Management Rights
and Union-Management Cooperation, Bull. 1425-5 (1966).*
Labor-management cooperation, foreign countries. See Labor con­
ditions and industrial relations, foreign countries.
Labor-management disputes. (See also Collective bargaining, by in­
dustry or occupation; Labor and industrial conditions; Labor and
industrial relations; Labor-management relations; and Legisla­
tion-Labor.)
Federal intervention.
History of the Shipbuilding Labor Adjustment Board, 1917
to 1919, Bull. 283 (1921).
National War Labor Board, Bull. 287 (1922).
Problems and Policies of Dicpute Settlement and Wage
Stabilization During World War II, Bull. 1009 (1950).*



Labor-Management Disputes
Report on the Work of the National Defense Mediation
Board, March 19, 1941-January 12, 1942, Bull. 714
(1942).*
Use of Federal Power in Settlement of Railway Labor Dis­
putes, Bull. 303 (1922).*
Lockouts. See Strikes, this section.
Railroads. See Federal intervention, this section.
Strikes. [Note: The term “strike” includes all stoppages of
work due to labor disputes whether initiated by the employer
(lockout) or by the employees.]
Analysis of Work Stoppages:
1949, Bull. 1003 (1950).*
1950, Bull. 1035 (1951).*
1951, Bull. 1090 (1952).*
1952, Bull. 1136 (1953).*
1953, Bull. 1163 (1954).*
1954, Bull. 1184 (1955).*
1955, Bull. 1196 (1956).*
1956, Bull. 1218 (1957).*
1957, Bull. 1234 (1958).*
1958, Bull. 1258 (1959).*
1959, Bull. 1278 (I960).*
1960, Bull. 1302 (1961).*
1961, Bull. 1339 (1962).*
1962, Bull. 1381 (1963).*
1963, Bull. 1420 (1964).*
1964, Bull. 1460 (1965).*
1965, Bull. 1525 (1966).*
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull.
1458 (1966).*
Collective Bargaining Provisions: Strikes and Lockouts;
Contract Enforcement, Bull. 908-13 (19+9).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed. Bull. 1016 (1951)
and 1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Labor Unionism in American Agriculture, Bull. 836 (1945).*
Labor-Management Contract Provisions, 1950-51, Bull.
1091 (1952).
Stakes and Lockouts in 1944, Bull. 833 (1945).*
Strikes in 1941 and Strikes Affecting Defense Production,
Bull. 711 (1942).*
Strikes in 1942, Bull. 741 (1943).*
Strikes in 1943, Bull. 782 (1944).*
Strikes in the United States, 1880-1936, Bull. 651
(1938).*
Tecnniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).*
The Dimensions of Major Work Stoppages, 1947-59, Bull.
1298 (1961).
Work Stoppages:
Aircraft and Parts Industry, 1927-59, Rpt. 175 (1961).
Basic Steel Industry, Rpt. 92 (1955); and 1901-61,
Rpt. 206 (1961).
Bituminous-Coal Mining Industry, Rpt. 95 (1955).
Collection and Compilation of Work Stoppages Statis­
tics, Rpt. 11 (1953).
Contract Construction Industry, 1927-60, Rpt. 207
(1962).
Electrical Machinery, Equipment, and Supplies Indus­
try, 1927-60, Rpt. 213 (1962).
Fifty States and the District of Columbia, 1927-62,
Rpt. 256 (1963).

115

Labor-Management Disputes, Foreign
Government Employees, 1942-61, Rpt. 247 (1963).
Meat Products Industry, 1927-60, Rot. 214 (1962).
Metropolitan Areas, 1952-61, Rpt. 236 (1963), 1952—
62, Rpt. 236 (Revised 1963).
Motor Vehicles and Motor Vehicle Equipment Industry,
1927-59, Rpt. 148 (1959).
Water Transportation Industry, 1927-59, Rpt. 176
(1961).
Work Stoppages Caused by Labor-Management Disputes in:
1945, Bull. 878 (1946).*
1946, Bull. 918 (1947).*
1947, Bull. 935 (1948).*
1948, Bull. 963 (1949).*
Work Stoppages: Collection and Compilation of Work
Stoppage Statistics, Rpt. 11 (1953).
Work stoppages. See Strikes, this section.
World Wars I and II. See Federal intervention, this section.
Labor-management disputes, foreign countries.
Operation of the Industrial Disputes Investigation Act of Canada,
Bull. 233 (1918).
Strikes in the United States, 1880-1936, Bull. 651 (1938).*
(Includes some data on foreign countries.)
Labor-management grievances. See Collective bargaining, general—
Grievances, and by industry or occupation; Labor-management
disputes.
Labor-management relations. (See also Collective bargaining, gen­
eral, and by industry or occupation; Company unions; Labor and
industrial conditions; Labor and industrial relations; Labor-man­
agement cooperation; Labor-management disputes; Labor organ­
izations; and Scandinavia.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bulls. 1225 (1958);* 1225-1 (1959);* and 1225-2 (1959).*
Labor-Management Relations Act of 1947. (See also Labor-manage­
ment disputes— Strikes, bulletins beginning with 1947.)
National Emergency Disputes Under the Labor Management
Relations (Taft-Hartley) Act, 1947—October 1960, Rpt. 169
(1961); 1947-61, Rpt. 169 (Revised 1962); 1947-62, Rpt.
169 (Revised 1963); 1947-65, Bull. 1482 (1966).*
Labor-Management Reporting and Disclosure Act of 1959, Title III.
Union Constitution Provisions: Trusteeship, Bull. 1263 (1959).*
Labor markets, major— community wage surveys. See Wages and
hours— Area Wage Surveys.
Labor mobility.
Labor Mobility and Private Pension Plans: A Study of Vesting,
Early Retirement, Portability Provisions, Bull. 1407 (1964).*
Private Pension Plans and Manpower Policy, Bull. 1359 (1963).
The Operation of Severance Pay Plans and Their Implication for
Labor Mobility, Bull. 1462 (1966).*
Labor movement. (See also Labor organizations.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
American Labor and the American Spirit, Bull. 1145 (1954).*
Brief History of the American Labor Movement, Bull. 1000
(1951) (1957).*
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Labor Through the Century, 1833-1933, Bull. 597 (1933),* and
1934, Bull. 605 (1934).*
Labor Unionism in American Agriculture, Bull. 836 (1945).*
Labor movement, international. See International labor regulation.
Labor (and related) offices, Federal and State (and principal Cana­
dian offices).

116




Labor Organizations
Activities and Functions of a State [New York) Department of
Labor, Bull. 479 (1928).
Labor Offices in the United States and in Canada, Bulls. 621
(1936), 632 (1938), and 681 (1941).
Laws Providing for Bureaus of Labor Statistics, etc., Bull. 343
(1923).
Labor organizations. (See also Labor movement; and Legislation—
Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws.)
Activities.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bulls. 1225 (1958),* 1225-1 (1959),* and 12252 (1959).*
American Labor and the American Spirit, Bull. 1145 (1954).*
Beneficial Activities of American Trade-Unions, Bull. 465
(1928).*
Directories. (See also Handbooks, this section.)
Directory of Labor Unions in the United States:
1947, Bull. 901 (1947).*
1948, Bull. 937 (1948).*
1950, Bull. 980 (1950).*
1953, Bull. 1127 (1953).*
Directory of National and International Labor Unions in
the United States:
1955, Bull. 1185 (1955).*
1957, Bull. 1222 (1957).*
1959, Bull. 1267 (I960).*
1961, Bull. 1320 (1962).*
1963, Bull. 1395 (1964).*
1965, Bull. 1493 (1966).*
Handbooks. (See also Directories, this section.)
Handbook of American Trade-Unions 1926, 1929, and 1936,
Bulls. 420 (1926),* 506 (1929),* and 618 (1936),* re­
spectively.
Leadership, workers’ education for.
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United
States, Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Case Studies in Union Leadership Training, 1951-52, Bull.
1114 (1952).*
Membership statistics. (See also Directories and Handbooks,
this section.)
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016,
(1951) and Supp. (1953);* 1967, Bull. 1555 (1957).*
Officers, rules governing.
Union Constitution Provisions: Election and Tenure of
National and International Union Officers, 1958, Bull.
1239 (1958).*
Rights and responsibilities.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Union and Management
Functions, Rights, and Responsibilities, Bull. 908-12
(1949).
Seaman’s union, international.
Employment System of the Lake Carriers’ Association, Bull.
235 (1918).
International Seaman’s Union of America: A study of Its
History and Problems, Bull. 342 (1923).
State. See Directories, this section.
Trusteeships.
Union Constitution Provisions: Trusteeship, Bull. 1263
(1959).*
Unaffiliated unions.
Unaffiliated Local and Single-Employer Unions in the
United States, 1961, Bull. 1348 (1962).

Labor Organizations, Foreign
Labor organizations, foreign countries. (See also Labor conditions
and industrial relations, foreign countries— Labor in, and Labor
Law and Practice— specific countries.)
Elements of Soviet Labor Law, Bull. 1026 (1951).*
Labor Organizations in Chile, Bull. 461 (1928).
Labor problems. See Labor-management disputes.
Labor productivity. See Productivity.
Labor relations. See Labor and industrial relations; Labor-manage­
ment relations; and Labor-management disputes.
Labor requirements. (See also Productivity.)
Cement industry.
Labor Requirements for Construction Materials, Bull. 888-1
(1947).
Civil works construction.
Labor and Material Requirements for Civil Works Con­
struction by the Corps of Engineers, Bull. 1390 (1964).
College housing construction.
Labor and Material Requirements for College Housing Con­
struction, Bull. 1441 (1965).
Concrete industry.
Labor Reamrements for Construction Materials, Bulls. 888—
2 and 888-3 (1947).
Federally aided highways.
Labor and Material Requirements for Construction of Fed­
erally Aided Highways, 1958, 1961, and 1964, Rpt. 299
(1966).
Federal office building construction.
Labor Requirements for Federal Office Building Construc­
tion, Bull. 1331 (1962).
Hospital construction.
Labor Requirements for Hospital Construction, Bull. 1340
(1962).
Insulation (heat) materials.
Labor Requirements to Produce Home Insulation, Bull. 919
(1947).
Private housing construction.
Labor and Material Requirements for Private One-Family
House Construction, Bull. 1404 (1964).
Public housing construction.
Labor and Material Requirements for Public Housing Con­
struction, May 1964, Bull. 1402 (1964).
School construction.
Labor Requirements for School Construction, Bull. 1299
(1961).
Sewer works construction.
Labor and Material Requirements for Sewer Works Con­
struction, Bull. 1490 (1966).
Labor Statistics. See Statistics, and specific subject.
Labor Statistics, Bureau of. See Bureau of Labor Statistics.
Labor statistics, State bureaus of. See Labor (and related) offices,
Federal and State.
Labor supply. (See also Manpower; and Occupational mobility.)
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Labor Supply and Mobility in a Newly Industrialized Area (Ravenswood, W. Va.), Bull. 1261 (I960).*
Population and Labor Force Projections for the United States,
1960 to 1975, Bull. 1242 (1959).*
State and Regional Variations in Prospective Labor Supply,
Bull. 893 (1947).
Labor unions. See Labor organizations; and Labor movement.




Legislation
Labor turnover. (See also Employment statistics.)
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Labor utilization, procedures.
Improvement of Labor-Utilization Procedures, Bull. 807 (1945).
Lace industries. See Labor and industrial relations.
Laos.
Labor Law and Practice in the Kingdom of Laos, Rpt. 290 (1965).
Latin America. See under Legislation, foreign countries; and see
specific countries.
Laundries, power. See under Wages and hours.
Laundry workers. See Wages and hours— General trades, beginning
with Bull. 259 (1919).
Lawyers. See under Employment outlook.
Layoff. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Lead poisoning. See under Poisons, industrial.
Learners. See Apprentices and learners; and under Collective bar­
gaining, general.
Leather and leather-products industries. See under Collective bar­
gaining, by industry or occupation; and under Wages and hours.
Leave. See Collective bargaining, general— Leave, with and with­
out pay.
Lebanon.
Labor Law and Practice in Lebanon, Rpt. 304 (1966).
Legal aid.
Growth of Legal Aid Work in the United States, Bulls. 398
(1926) and 607 (1936).
Legislation.
Apprentices. See Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of
laws, this section.
Arbitration. See Labor, this section.
Bureaus of labor statistics, State. See Labor (and related)
offices, State, this section.
Child labor. See Labor, and Minimum wage, this section.
Civil rights of employees. See Employee rights, civil, this
section.
Cooperatives, consumer. (See also Labor— Text, summaries,
and reviews of laws, this section.)
Activities of Credit Unions in 1945, Bull. 894 (1947).
Consumers’ Cooperatives and Credit Unions: Operations
in 1946, Bull. 922 (1948).*
Consumers’ Credit, and Productive Cooperative Societies,
1929, Bull. 531 (1931).*
Organization and Management of Consumers’ Cooperatives,
Bull. 1024 (1951).*
Defense, State councils of.
Labor Legislation of:
1917, Bull. 244 (1918).
1918, Bull. 257 (1919).
Discrimination. See Employment discrimination, this section.
Employee rights, civil. (See also Labor— Text, summaries, and
reviews of laws, this section.)
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional,
Bull. 321 (1922).*
Employers’ liability. (See also Workmen’s compensation.)
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional,
Bull. 321 (1922).*
Labor Legislation of:
1915, Bull. 186 (1916).

117

Legislation
1917, Bull. 244 (1918).
1918, Bull. 257 (1919).
1919, Bull. 277 (1921).
1920, Bull. 292 (1922).
1922, Buli. 330 (1923).
1927, Bull. 470 (1928).
Employment agencies, public and private. (See also Labor,
this section.)
Laws Relating to Employment Agencies in the United
States: as of January 1, 1933, Bull. 581 (1933); as of
July 1, 1937, Bull. 630 (1937).
Employment contract. (See also Labor— Text, summaries, and
reviews of laws, this section.)
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional,
Bull. 321 (1922).*
Employment discrimination.
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including Workmen’s Com­
pensation, Bull. 654 (1938).
Examining and licensing of workmen. (See also Labor— Text,
summaries, and reviews of laws, this section.)
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional, Bull.
321 (1922).*
Fair Labor Standards Act.
Guaranteed Wage Plans in the United States, Bull. 925
(1948).*
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Health. (See also Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of
laws, this section.)
Comparative Digest of Labor Legislation for the States of
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Bull. 603 (1933).
Labor Laws and Their Administration in the Pacific States,
Bull. 211 (1917).
Holidays. See Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws,
this section.
Homework.
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including Workmen’s Com­
pensation, Bull. 654 (1938).
Hours of work. See Labor, this section.
Housing.
Labor Legislation of:
1920, Bull. 292 (1922).
1921, Bull. 308 (1922).
Hygiene and safety. See Labor, this section.
Intoxicants.
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Labor Legislation of 1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
Kansas.
Kansas Court of Industrial Relations, Bull. 322 (1923).*
Labor. (See also Conventions, meetings, etc.; and International
labor regulation.)
Comparative Digest of Labor Legislation for the States of
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Bull. 603 (1933).
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Labor Laws and Their Administration in the Pacific States,
Bull. 211 (1917).
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional, Bull.
321 (1922).*
Text, summaries, and reviews of laws.

118



Legislation
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of
Courts Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Labor Legislation of:
1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
1916, Bull. 213 (1917).
1917, Bull. 244 (1918).
1918, Bull. 257 (1919).
1919, Bull. 277 (1921).
1920, Bull. 292 (1922).
1921, Bull. 308 (1922).
1922, Bull. 330 (1923).
1925, Bull. 403 (1926).
1926, Bull. 434 (1927).
1927, Bull. 470 (1928).
1928, Bull. 486 (1929).
1929, Bull. 528 (1931).
1930, Bull. 552 (1931).
1931-32, Bull. 590 (1933).
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including Workmen's Com­
pensation Legislation, Bull. 654 (1938).
Labor-management disputes. See Labor, this section.
Labor (and related) offices, State. (See also Labor— Text,
summaries, and reviews of laws, this section.)
Laws Providing for Bureaus of Labor Statistics, etc., Bull.
343 (1923).
Labor Laws and Their Administration in the Pacific States,
Bull. 211 (1917).
Labor organizations. (See also Labor— Text, summaries, and
reviews of laws, this section.)
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional,
Bull. 321 (1922).*
Mechanics’liens. See Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of
laws, this section.
Minimum wage. (See also Wage payment, this section.)
Comparative Digest of Labor Legislation for the States of
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Bull. 603 (1933).
Minimum Wage Legislation in Various Countries, Bull. 467
(1928).*
Minimum-Wage Laws of the United States: Construction
and Operation, Bull. 285 (1921).*
Mining regulations.
Labor Legislation of:
1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
1916, Bull. 213 (1917).
1917, Bull. 244 (1918).
Occupational disease. See Workmen's compensation— Legis­
lation.
Pensions. (See aiso Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of
laws, this section.)
Comparative Digest of Labor Legislation for the States of
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Bull. 603 (1933).
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional, Bull.
321 (1922).*
Public Old-Age Pensions and Insurance in the United
States and Foreign Countries, Bull. 561 (1932).*
Police. See Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws,
this section.
Printing, public.

Legislation
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Labor Legislation, 1931 and 1932, Bull. 590 (1933).
Prison labor. (See also Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews
of laws, this section.)
Convict Labor in 1923, Bull. 372 (1925).
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional, Bull.
321 (1922).*
Laws Relating to Prison Labor in the United States as of
July 1, 1933, Bull. 596 (1933).
Protection of local labor. See Public works, this section.
Public works.
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional, Bull.
321 (1922).*
Labor Legislation of:
1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
1925, Bull. 403 (1926).
1927, Bull. 470 (1928).
1928, Bull. 486 (1929).
1929, Bull. 528 (1931).
1931-32, Bull. 590 (1933).
Railroads.
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Labor Legislation of:
1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
1916, Bull. 213 (1917).
1917, Bull. 244 (1918).
1931-32, Bull. 590 (1933).
Use of Federal Power in Settlement of Railway Labor Dis­
putes, Bull. 303 (1922).*
Sabotage. See Syndicalism and sabotage, this section.
Safety. See Labor, this section.
Seamen.
International Seamen’s Union of America: A Study of its
History and Problems, Bull. 342 (1923).
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Seamen, disabled. See under Workmen’s compensation.
Social insurance.
Comparative Digest of Labor Legislation for the States of
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Bull. 603 (1933).
Labor Legislation of 1916, Bull. 213 (1917).
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including Workmen’s Com­
pensation Legislation, Bull. 654 (1938).
State conduct of business.
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional, Bull.
321 (1922).*
Labor Legislation of 1925, Bull. 403 (1926).
Sunday labor. (See also Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews
of laws, this section.)
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional, Bull.
321 (1922).*
Syndicalism and sabotage.
Labor Laws of the United States with Decisions of Courts
Relating Thereto, Bull. 370 (1925).




Legislation, Foreign Countries
Labor Legislation of:
1919, Bull. 277 (1921).
1920, Bull. 292 (1922).
1925, Bull. 403 (1926).
Transit industry, local.
Labor Legislation of 1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
Trusteeship.
Union Constitution Provisions: Trusteeship, Bull. 1263
(1959).*
Unemployment compensation or insurance. See Social insur­
ance, this section.
Vocational education and vocational rehabilitation. (See also
Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws, this section.)
Comparative Digest of Labor Legislation for the States of
Alabama, Florida, Georgia, South Carolina, Tennessee,
Bull. 603 (1933).
Voting rights. See Employee rights, civil, this section.
Wage assignment. (See also Labor— Text, summaries, and re­
views of laws, this section.)
Labor Laws That Have Been Declared Unconstitutional,
Bull. 321 (1922).*
Wage payment. (See also Labor, and Minimum wage, this sec­
tion.)
Laws Relating to Payment of Wages, Bull. 408 (1926).
Wage-Payment Legislation in the United States, Bull. 229
(1918).*
Wages and hours. See Labor; Minimum wage; and Wage pay­
ment, this section.
Wartime (World War I), industrial control.
Labor Legislation of:
1917, Bull. 244 (1918).
1918, Bull. 257 (1919).
Water transportation.
Labor Legislation of 1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
Women workers. See Labor, and Minimum wage, this section.
Working conditions.
Labor Legislation of:
1915, Bull. 186 (1916).
1916, Bull. 213 (1917).
Workmen’s compensation. See that title, and see Labor, this
section.
Legislation, foreign countries. (See also Workmen’s compensation,
foreign countries.)
Elements of Soviet Labor Law, Bull. 1026 (1951).*
Labor Law and Practice in:
Austria, Rpt. 241 (1963).
Bolivia, Rpt. 218 (1962).
Brazil, Rpt. 309 (1966).
Burma, the Union of, Rpt. 264 (1964).
Ceylon, Rpt. 227 (1963).
Colombia, Rpt. 217 (1962).
Costa Rica, Rpt. 220 (1962).
Ecuador, Rpt. 242 (1963).
El Salvador, Rpt. 280 (1964).
Ethiopia, the Empire of, Rpt. 298 (1966).
Guatemala, Rpt. 223 (1963).
Haiti, Rpt. 244 (1963).
Honduras, Rpt. 189 (1961).
Iran, Rpt. 276 (1964).
Iraq, Rpt. 221 (1963).
Lebanon, Rpt. 304 (1966).

119

Mechanics’ Liens

Legislation, International
Libya, the Kingdom of, Rpt. 297 (1966).
Laos, the Kingdom of, Rpt. 290 (1965).
Malaysia and Singapore, Rpt. 274 (1965).
Mexico, Rpt. 240 (1963).
Morocco, Rpt. 282 (1965).
New Guinea, Trust Territory under Australian Administra­
tion, Rpt. 258 (1964).
Nicaragua, Rpt. 265 (1964).
Pakistan, Rpt. 271 (1964).
Philippines, Rpt. 253 (1963).
Saudi Arabia, Rpt. 269 (1964).
Spain, Rpt. 289 (1965).
Sweden, Rpt. 285 (1965).
Taiwan (Formosa), Rpt. 268 (1964).
Thailand, Rpt. 267 (1964).
Tunisia, Rpt. 294 (1965).
Turkey, Rpt. 239 (1963).
United Arab Republic (Egypt), Rpt. 275 (1965).
U.S.S.R., Rpt. 270 (1964).
Venezuela, Rpt. 212 (1962).
Yugoslavia, Rpt. 250 (1963).
Labor Legislation of:
Argentina, Bull. 510 (1930).
Ecuador, Bull. 559 (1931).
Mexico, Bull. 569 (1932).
Paraguay, Bull. 554 (1931).
Uruguay, Bull. 494 (1929).
Venezuela, Bull. 549 (1931).
Minimum Wage Legislation in Various Countries, Bull. 467
(1928).*
Operation of the Industrial Disputes Investigation Act of Can­
ada, Bull. 233 (1918).
Principal Current Soviet Labor Legislation, Rpt. 210 (1962).
Public Old-Age Pensions and Insurance in the United States and
in Foreign Countries, Bull. 561 (1932).*
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the Latin American
Countries, Bull. 529 (1930).
Legislation, international. See International labor regulation.
Librarians. See under Employment outlook.
Libya.
Labor Law and Practice in Libya, the Kingdom of, Rpt. 297
(1966).
Life insurance, industrial establishments. See Collective bargain­
ing, general— Health and welfare insurance; and Related wage
benefits.
Life insurance, State-sponsored.
Operation of Savings-Bank Life Insurance in Massachusetts and
New York, Bull. 688 (1941).
The Massachusetts System of Savings-Bank Life Insurance, Bull.
615 (1935).
Linemen. See Wages and hours— General trades, beginning with
Bull. 302 (1922).
Living conditions. See Labor and industrial conditions; Wartime;
and Women workers.
Living costs. See Income and expenditures, consumer; and Prices.
Living standards. See Income and expenditures, consumer.
Lockouts. See Labor-management disputes— Strikes.
Local-transit employees. See Wages and hours— Transit in d u strylocal.
Logging. See Lumber industry.
120



Longshore industry. (See also Wages and hours— General trades,
beginning with Bull. 431 [1927].)
Cargo Handling and Longshore Labor Conditions, Bull. 550
(1932).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Longshore Industry, 1942,
Bull. 764 (1944).*
Lumber industry. See Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and pre­
vention, by industry or occupation; Labor and industrial rela­
tions; Productivity; and Wages and hours.

M
Machine-shop occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Machine shops. See Wages and hours— Foundries and machine
shops.
Machine-tool accessories industry. See under Wages and hours.
Machine-tool industry. See Wages and hours— Machinery manufac­
ture.
Machinery manufacture. See under Wages and hours.
Machinery manufacture, agricultural. See under Collective bargain­
ing, by industry or occupation.
Machinery repairmen. See Employment outlook— Mechanics and
repairmen.
Maintenance electricians. See under Employment outlook.
Maintenance-of-union-membership. See Collective bargaining, gen­
eral— Union security; and National War Labor Board.
Malaysia.
Labor Law and Practice in Malaysia and Singapore, Rpt. 274
(1965).
Management rights and responsibilities. See Collective bargaining,
general— Labor and management rights.
Man-hour requirements. See Labor requirements; Productivity.
Manpower. (See also Labor force; Labor supply; Occupational mo­
bility.)
Demobolization of Manpower, 1918-19, Bull. 784 (1944).
Fact Book on Manpower September 1954, Bull. 1171 (1954).*
Improvement of Labor-Utilization Procedures, Bull. 807 (1945).
Manpower Resources in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering,
Bull. 1132 (1953).*
Military Manpower Requirements and Supply: 1954-60, Bull.
1161 (1954)* and 1959-63, Bull. 1262 (1959).*
Personnel Resources in the Social Sciences and Humanities,
Bull. 1169 (1954).*
Scientific Research and Development in American Industry,
Bull. 1148 (1953).*
Manufacturing industries. See under Wages and hours— Manufac­
turing and nonmanufacturing industries; also specific subject or
industry.
Marine workers. See Wages and hours— Water transportation.
Maritime industry. See Merchant seamen.
Maritime law. See Legislation— Seamen.
Massachusetts. See specific subjects.
Meatcutters and butchers. See under Wages and hours.
Meatpacking industry. See Accidents— Rates, types, etc.; Collective
bargaining, by industry or occupation; and Wages and hours.
Mechanics and repairmen. See under Employment outlook.
Mechanics’ liens. See Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and
reviews of laws, beginning with Bull. 370 (1925).

Mechanization
Mechanization. See Productivity.
Mediation. (See also Labor-management disputes.)
Collective Agreements in the Men’s Clothing Industry, Bull. 198
(1916).
Problems and Policies of Dispute Settlement and Wage Stabil­
ization During World War II, Bull. 1009 (1950).*
Report on the Work of the National Defense Mediation Board,
March 19, 1941-January 12, 1942, Bull. 714 (1942).*
Medical-service plans. See Collective bargaining, general— Health
and welfare insurance.
Meetings. See Conventions, meetings, etc.
Men’s clothing industry. See Wages and hours— Clothing industry—
Men’s.
Merchandise stores, general. See Stores, retail; and Wages and
hours— Retail trade.
Merchant seamen. (See also Labor organizations— Seamen’s union,
international; Wages and hours— Water transportation; and Work­
men’s compensation— Seamen.)
The Earnings and Employment of Seamen on U.S. Flag Ships,
Bull. 1238 (1958).*
Employment Outlook in the Merchant Marine, Bull. 1054 (1952).
Metal trades. See under Wages and hours.
Metalliferous mining. See Wages and hours— Mining.
Metalworking industries. See specific branch of industry under
Wages and hours.
Metalworking occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Methods. (See also Statistics; and individual BLS bulletins for
scope and method of survey, and for technical notes, where
applicable.)
Average Retail Prices: Collection and Calculation, Techniques
and Problems, Bull. 1182 (1955).
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull. 1458
(1966).*
Concepts and Methods Used in Household Statistics on Employ­
ment and Unemployment from the Current Population Sur­
vey, Rpt. 279 (1964).
How the Government Measures Unemployment, Rpt. 287 (1964);
Rpt. 312 (1967).
Job Performance and Age: A Study in Measurement, Bull. 1203
(1956).*
Problems in Measurement of Expenditures on Selected Items
of Supplementary Employee Remuneration, Bull. 1186 (1956).
Work Stoppages: Collection and Compilation and Work Stop­
page Statistics, Rpt. 11 (1953).
Mexico.
Labor in Mexico, Rpt. 251 (1963).
Labor Law and Practice in Mexico, Rpt. 240 (1963).
Labor Legislation of Mexico, Bull. 569 (1932).
Migrations.
Chinese Migrations, with Special Reference to Labor Conditions,
Bull. 340 (1923).
Military manpower. See under Manpower.
Military service. See Collective bargaining, general— Leave, with
and without pay.
Milk industry, Chicago.
Labor aspects of the Chicago Milk Industry, Bull. 715 (1942).
Millwork. See under Wages and hours.
Millwrights. See under Employment outlook.
Minimum wage, effects of.
Effect of Minimum-Wage Determinations in Oregon, Bull. 176
(1915).



Minimum Wage, Effects of
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, January 1950
to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Minimum Wage Effects Studies:
Athens, Georgia, June 1959, Rpt. 155-2 (1960).
Dalton, Georgia, June 1959, Rpt. 155-4 (1960).
Dothan, Alabama, June 1959, Rpt. 155-3 (1960).
Fort Smith, Arkansas, June 1959, Rpt. 155-5 (1960).
Meridian, Mississippi, June 1959, Rpt. 155-6 (1960).
Sunbury-Shamokin-Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, June 1959,
Rpt. 155-1 (1959).
Studies of the Effects of the $1 Minimum Wage:
Athens, Georgia, February and April 1956, Rpt. 114-3
(1957) and February and April 1956 and April 1957,
Rpt. 127-2 (1958).
Burlington, Vermont, February and April 1956, Rpt. 114-1
(1957).
Dalton, Georgia, February and April 1956, Rpt. 114-4
(1957) and February and April 1956 and April 1957, Rpt.
127-4 (1957).
Dothan, Alabama, February and April 1956, Rpt. 114-6
(1957) and February and April 1956 and April 1957, Rpt.
127-5 (1957).
Fort Smith, Arkansas, February and April 1956, Rpt. 114-8
(1957) and February and April 1956 and April 1957, Rpt.
127-6 (1957).
Hickory, North Carolina, February and April 1956, Rpt.
114-7 (1957) and February and April 1956 and April
1957, Rpt. 127-3 (1958).
Meridian, Mississippi, February and April 1956, Rpt. 114-9
(1957) and February and April 1956 and April 1957,
Rpt. 127-7 (1958).
Millville, New Jersey, February and April 1956, Rpt. 114-2
(1957).
Spartanburg, South Carolina, February and April 1956, Rpt.
114-10 (1957).
Sunbury-Shamokin-Mount Carmel, Pennsylvania, February
and April, 1956, Rpt. 114-5 (1957) and February and
April 1956 and April 1957, Rpt. 127-1 (1958).
Wage Structure: Canning and Freezing, Raw Sugar, To­
bacco Stemming and Redrying, 1957, Rpt. 136 (1958).
Wage Structure: Cigars, Canning and Freezing, Raw Sugar,
Tobacco Stemming and Redrying, 1955 and 1956, Rpt.
117 (1958).
Wage Structure: Fertilizer Manufacturing, Part I— Na­
tionwide Earnings, April 1956, Part II— Effects of the $1
Minimum Wage in the South, April 1955 and April 1956,
Rpt. I l l (1957).
Wage Structure: Fertilizer Manufacturing, South, April
1957, Rpt. 132 (1958).
Wage Structure: Footwear, Processed Waste, Wooden
Containers, Work Shirts, August 1955, February 1956,
and April 1956, Rpt. 115 (1957).
Wage Structure: Men's and Boy’s Shirts (except Work
Shirts) and Nightwear, February, April, and October
1956, Rpt. 116 (1957).
Wage Structure: Processed Waste, Work Shirts, April
1957, Rpt. 124 (1958).
Wage Structure: Seamless Hosiery— Men’s Seamless
Hosiery, Nationwide; Children's Seamless Hosiery, South­
east, April 1957, Rpt. 129 (1958).
Wage Structure: Seamless Hosiery, Part I— Nationwide
Earnings, April 1956, Part II— Effects of the $1 Minimum

121

Occupational Diseases

Mining
Wage, August 1955, February 1956, and April 1956,
Rpt. 112 (1957).
Wage Structure: Southern Sawmills, October-December
1955 and April 1956, Rpt. 113 (1957); April 1957, Rpt.
130 (1958).
Wage Structure: Wooden Containers, April 1957, Rpt. 126
(1958).
Mining. See under Legislation; and Wages and hours.
Minors, employment of. See Child labor.
Mobility. See Occupational mobility.
Mobilization, effects of.
Impact of a Full Mobilization Program on the Occupational Com­
position of the Aircraft Engine and Parts Industry: Tech­
niques for Projecting Employment and Occupational Pat­
terns, Rpt. 94 (1955).
Molders. See Occupational mobility.
Money disbursements. See Income and expenditures, consumer.
Monthly Labor Review, subject indexes to. See under Publications,
indexes to and lists of.
Morocco.
Labor Law and Practice in Morocco, Rpt. 282 (1965).
Mortality statistics.
Deaths from Lead Poisoning, Bull. 426 (1927); 1925-1927,
Bull. 488 (1929).
Health Survey of the Printing Trades, 1922 to 1925, Bull. 427
(1927).
Mortality from Resipratory Diseases in Dusty Trades (Inorganic
Dusts), Bull. 231 (1918).
Occupational Mortality Experience of the Metropolitan Life
Insurance Company, 1911-1913, Bull. 207 (1917); 1922-24,
Bull. 507 (1930).
Preventable Death in Cotton Manufacturing Industry, Bull. 251
(1919).
The Problem of Dust Phthisis in the Granite-Stone Industry,
Bull. 293 (1922).
Motion-picture machine operators. See Wages and hours— Amuse­
ments.
Motortruck drivers and helpers. See Wages and hours— Truckdrivers and helpers.
Motor vehicles (and parts) manufacturing. See Wages and hours—
Automobile and other motor vehicle (and parts) manufacturing.
Motor vehicle repair garages and shops. See Wages and hours—
Automobile repair garages and shops.
Municipal employers. See Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries,
and reviews of laws; and under Wages and hours.
Munition factories, Great Britain, World War I.
Employment of Women and Juveniles in Great Britain During the
War, Bull. 223 (1917).
Hours, Fatigue, and Health in British Munition Factories, Bull.
221 (1917).
Industrial Efficiency and Fatigue in British Munition Factories,
Bull. 230 (1917).
Industrial Health and Efficiency, Bull. 249 (1919).
Welfare Work in British Munition Factories, Bull. 222 (1917).
Musicians. See Wages and hours— Amusements.
Mutual relief associations.
Mutual Relief Associations Among Government Employees in
Washington, D.C., Bull. 282 (1921).

122



N
National Defense Mediation Board.
Problems and Policies of Dispute Settlement and Wage Stabili­
zation During World War II, Bull. 1009 (1950).*
Report on the Work of the National Defense Mediation Board,
March 19, 1941-January 12, 1942, Bull. 714 (1942).*
National Wage Stabilization Board. Bull. 1009 (1950),* entitled
above.
National War Labor Board. (See also Labor-management disputes—
Strikes, for specified years.)
Maintenance-of-Membership Awards of National War Labor
Board, Bull. 753 (1943).
National War Labor Board, Bull. 287 (1922).
Problems and Policies of Dispute Settlement and Wage Stabili­
zation During World War II, Bull. 1009 (1950).*
Wage Stabilization in California Airframe Industry, 1943, Bull.
746 (1943).
Necrosis, phosphorus. See under Occupational diseases.
Negroes.
Negroes in the United States— Their Employment and Economic
Status, Bull. 1119 (1953).*
The Negroes in the United States: Their Economic and Social
Situation, Bull. 1511 (1966).*
New England. See specific subjects.
New Guinea.
Labor Law and Practice in New Guinea, Trust Territory under
Australian Administration, Rpt. 258 (1964).
New York State. See specific subjects.
Newspaper industry. See Printing and publishing.
Newspaper reporters. See under Employment outlook.
Nicaragua.
Labor Law and Practice in Nicaragua, Rpt. 265 (1964).
Nigeria.
Labor in Nigeria, Rpt. 261 (1963).
Nightwork. See Collective bargaining, general— Premium pay, and
Shift differentials and operations.
Nonferrous metals industry. (See also under Wages and hours.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Norway. See Scandinavia.
Numerical control.
Outlook for Numerical Control of Machine Tools: A Study of
a Key Technological Development in Metalworking Industries,
Bull. 1437 (1965).*
Nurses, registered professional. See under Wages and hours.

0
Occupational diseases. (See also Mortality statistics; Poisons, in­
dustrial; Workmen's compensation.)
Anthrax.
Anthrax as an Occupational Disease, Bulls. 205 (1917) and
267 (1920).
Hazardous occupations.
Occupation Hazards and Diagnostic Signs: A Guide to
Impairments to be Looked for in Hazardous Occupations,
Bulls. 306 (1922) and 582 (1933).

Occupational Mobility
Necrosis, phosphorus.
Phosphorus Necrosis in the Manufacture of Fireworks and
in the Preparation of Phosphorus, Bull. 405 (1926).
Printing trades. See under Hygiene, industrial, and Mortality
statistics.
Respiratory. See Mortality statistics, and Hygiene, industrial—
Printing trades.
Stonecutters. (See also Mortality statistics.)
Effect of the Air Hammer on the Hands of Stonecutters,
Bull. 236 (1918).
Tuberculosis. See Mortality statistics, and Hygiene, industrial
— Printing trades.
Occupational mobility.
Coremakers. See Molders and Coremakers, this section.
Depressed rural area.
Labor Supply and Mobility in a Newly Industrialized Area
(Ravenswood, W.Va.), Bull. 1261 (I960).*
Electronic technicians.
The Mobility of Electronic Technicians, 1940-52, Bull.
1150 (1954).*
Molders and coremakers.
Mobility of Molders and Coremakers, 1940-1952, Bull.
1162 (1954).*
Scientists.
Occupational Mobility of Scientists, Bull. 1121 (1953).*
Tool-and-die makers.
The Mobility of Tool and Die Makers, 1940-1951, Bull.
1120 (1953).*
Occupational outlook. See Employment outlook.
Occupational wage surveys. See Wages and hours— Area Wage
Surveys.
Occupations. See Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and preven­
tion, by industry or occupation; Employment outlook; Mortality
statistics; Occupational diseases; Poisons, industrial; Safety;
Wages and hours; Working conditions; and specific occupation.
Office-building service employees.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April 1949 to
November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
Office workers. See under Wages and hours; and see specific occu­
pation or industry under Employment outlook.
Old-age and survivors insurance. See under Old-age care and assist­
ance.
Old-age benefits. See Old-age care and assistance.
Old-age care and assistance. (See also Public assistance.)
Beneficial Activities of American Trade-Unions, Bull. 465
(1928) .*
Care of Aged Persons in the United States, Bull. 489 (1929).
Directory of Homes for the Aged in the United States, Bull. 505
(1929) .
Homes for Aged in the United States, Bull. 677 (1941).
Public Old-Age Pensions and Insurance in the United States and
Foreign Countries, Bull. 561 (1932)* and Bull. 489 (1929).
Public Social Security Programs in the United States, 1949-50,
Bull. 982 (1950).*
Old-age care and assistance, foreign countries.
Public Service Retirement Systems: United States, Canada,
and Europe, Bull. 477 (1929). See also Bull. 561 (1932),*
entitled in above section.
Old-age pensions, extent of. See Health, insurance, and pension
plans, extent of.




Pensions
Older workers.
Comparative Job Performance by Age: Large Plants in the
Men's Footwear and Household Furniture Industries, Bull. 1223
(1957).*
Comparative Job Performance by Age: Office Workers, Bull.
1273 (I960).*
Employment and Economic Status of Older Men and Women,
Bull. 1213 (1957).*
Employment and Economic Status of Older Men and Women,
May 1952, Bull. 1092 (1952).*
Industrial Retraining Programs for Technological Change: A
Study of the Performance of Older Workers, Bull. 1368
(1963).
Job Performance and Age: A Study in Measurement, Bull. 1203
(1956).*
Job Redesign for Older Workers: Ten Case Studies, Bull. 1523
(1967).*
Older Workers Under Collective Bargaining: Part I, Hiring,
Retention, Job Termination, Bull. 1199-1 (1956); Part II,
Health and Insurance Plans, Pension Plans, Bull. 1199-2
(1956).
Operating ratios. See Capital requirements and operating ratios.
Opinions, legal. See Court decisions affecting labor.
Opticians and optical mechanics. See under Employment outlook.
Output per man-hour. See Productivity.
Overtime, and compensation for. See Collective bargaining, general
— Premium pay, and Shift differentials and operations.
Oxygen cutters. See Employment outlook— Welders.

P
Paint and varnish industry. See under Wages and hours.
Painters, exposure to lead poisoning.
Report of British Departmental Committee on the Danger in the
Use of Lead in the Painting of Buildings, Bull. 188 (1916).
Pakistan.
Labor Law and Practice in Pakistan, Rpt. 271 (1964).
Paper and paper products industries. See under Accident— Rates,
types, etc.; Collective bargaining, by industry or occupation; and
Wages and hours.
Paraguay.
Labor Legislation of Paraguay, Bull. 554 (1931).
Parks.
Park Recreation Areas in the United States, Bulls. 462 (1928)
and 565 (1932).
Payroll statistics. See Indexes; and specific industry.
Pennsylvania Railroad Wage Data. Bull. 514 (1930).
Pensions. (See also Collective bargaining, general— Pensions;
Health, insurance, and pension plans, extent of; and Older work­
ers.)
Digest of 50 Selected Pension Plans for Salaried Employees,
Spring 1963, Bull. 1373 (1963) and Summer 1965, Bull. 1477
(1966).
Health and Insurance Benefits and Pension Plans for Salaried
Employees, Spring 1963, Bull. 1405 (1964).
Labor Legislation, 1931 and 1932, Bull. 590 (1933).
Labor Mobility and Private Pension Plans: A Study of Vesting,
Early Retirement, Portability Provisions, Bull. 1407 (1964).*
Private Pension Plan Benefits, Bull. 1485 (1966).*
Private Pension Plans and Manpower Policy, Bull. 1359 (1963).

123

Permits, Building
Public Service Retirement Systems: United States, Canada,
and Europe, Bull. 477 (1929).
Unfunded Private Pension Plans, Bull. 1394 (1964).
Permits, building. See Building construction.
Personnel research agencies.
Personnel Research Agencies, Bulls. 299 (1921) and 518
(1930).
Personnel resources. See Manpower.
Personnel workers. See under Employment outlook.
Peru.
Labor in Peru, Rpt. 262 (1964).
Petroleum industry. See under Collective bargaining, by industry
or occupation; Employment outlook; and Wages and hours.
Philippines.
Labor Law and Practice in the Philippines, Rpt. 253 (1963).
Physical and earth sciences. See under Employment outlook.
Physicians. See under Employment outlook.
Physicists. See Scientists and under Employment outlook.
Pineapple industry, Hawaii. See Hawaii.
Plant management. (See also Collective bargaining, general— Labormanagement cooperation.)
Improvement of Labor-Utilization Procedures, Bull. 807 (1945).
Plant operations.
Plant Operation Report for (the):
Manufacture of Concrete Pipe and Block, Rpt. 88 (1955).
Manufacture of Fish Netting, Rpt. 90 (1955).
Manufacture of Rubber Sole Fabric Shoes, Rpt. 91 (1955).
Manufacture of Plows, Rpt. 68 (1954).
Meat Processing, Rpt. 89 (1955).
Plant Operation Report on a Small Gray Iron Foundry, Rpt. 53
(1954).
Plastic products industry. See under Employment outlook.
Plumbing. See under Accidents— Rates, types, etc.
Poisons, industrial. (See also Mortality Statistics, and Hygiene,
industrial.)
A New Test for Industrial Lead Poisoning, Bull. 460 (1928).
Carbon-Monoxide Poisoning, Bull. 291 (1922).
Industrial Poisoning in Making Coal-Tar Dyes and Dye Inter­
mediates, Bull. 280 (1921).
Industrial Poisons Used in the Rubber Industry, Bull. 179
(1915).
Industrial Poisons Used or Produced in the Manufacture of Ex­
plosives, Bull. 219 (1917). See also Bulls. 221 (1917) and
249 (1919).
Phosphorus Necrosis in the Manufacture of Fireworks and in
the Preparation of Phosphorus, Bull. 405 (1926).
Report of British Departmental Committee on the Danger in the
Use of Lead in the Painting of Buildings, Bull. 188 (1916).
Women in the Lead Industries, Bull. 253 (1919).
Police. (See also Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and re­
views of laws; and Wages and hours— Municipal employees.)
Public Service Retirement Systems: United States, Canada, and
Europe, Bull. 477 (1929).
Population forecasts.
Population and Labor Force Projections for the United States,
1960 to 1975, Bull. 1242 (1959).*
Portland cement industry. See Cement industry, Portland.
Postal Service.
Technological Changes and Employment in the United States
Postal Service, Bull. 574 (1932).
Pottery industry. See under Wages and hours.
124



Prices
Power laundries. See Wages and hours— Laundries, power.
Premium pay. See under Collective bargaining, general; and see
Wages and hours— specific industry.
Price control. See Wartime.
Prices. [Note: Bulletins showing retail and wholesale prices in
particular periods frequently include data for earlier years and
for foreign countries.] (See also Income and expenditures, con­
sumer.)
Construction costs.
Construction Cost Indexes: Annual Indexes, 1915-1953;
Monthly Indexes, January 1949—July 1954, Rpt. 73
(1954).
Consumer Price Index.
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull.
1458 (1966).*
Changes in Cost of Living in Large Cities in the United
States, 1913-41, Bull. 699 (1941).*
Consumer Prices in the United States, 1949-52, Bull.
1165 (1954).*
Consumer Prices in the United States, 1953-58, Bull.
1256 (1959).*
Consumers’ Prices in the United States, 1942-48, Bull.
966 (1949).*
Cost of Clothing for Moderate-Income Families, 1935-44,
Bull. 789 (1944).
Cost of Living in 1941, Bull. 710 (1942).*
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Interim Adjustment of Consumers’ Price Index, Bull. 1039
(1952).*
Price Trends, March 1966, Bull. 1510 (1966).
Prices.- A Chartbook, 1953-62, Bull. 1351 (1963); and
September 1963 Supp., Bull. 1351-1 (1963).
Seasonal Factors, Consumer Price Index, Selected Series,
June 1953-May 1961, Bull. 1366 (1963).
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).*
The Consumer Price Index: A Layman’s Guide, Bull. 1140
(1943).*
The Consumer Price Index: History and Techniques, Bull.
1517 (1966).
The Consumer Price Index: Technical Notes, 1959-63,
Bull. 1554 (1967).*
Retail.
Coal. (See also bulletins for specified years under
Prices— Retail— Various commodities.)
Residential Heating Fuels, Retail Prices, 1941-48,
Bull. 950 (1949).
Retail Prices of Food and Coal, 1941, Bull. 707
(1942).
Dry Goods. See bulletins for years from 1907 to 1923,
listed below under Various commodities.
Electricity. [See also Bulls. 418 (1926), 445 (1927), 464
(1928), 495 (1929), and 950 (1949).]
Changes in Retail Prices of Electricity, 1923-38,
Bull. 664 (1939).
Food, indexes.
Methods.
Retail Prices of Food, 1923-36, Bull. 635 (1938).*
Retail Prices of Food, 1951 and 1952, Bull. 1141
(1953).

Prices

Prices
Retail Prices of Food, 1953-54, Bull. 1183 (1955).
Yearly.
1923-36, Bull. 635 (1938).*
1941, Bull. 707 (1942).
1942 and 1943, Bull. 799 (1945).
1944 and 1945, Bull. 899 (1947).
1946 and 1947, Bull. 938 (1949).
1948, Bull. 965 (1949).
1949, Bull. 1032 (1951).
1950, Bull. 1055 (1952).
1951-52, Bull. 1141 (1953).
1953-54, Bull. 1183 (1955).
1955-56, Bull. 1217 (1957).
1957-58, Bull. 1254 (1959).
1959-60, Bull. 1301 (1961).
1961-63, Bull. 1446 (1965).
Fuels. (See also specific fuel and specified years listed
below under Various commodities.)
Residential Heating Fuels, Retail Prices, 1941-48,
Bull. 950 (1949).
Gas. (See also Fuels, under Retail, this section.)
Changes of Retail Prices of Gas, 1923-36, Bull. 628
(1937).
Handbooks.
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies,
Bull. 1458 (1966).*
Handbook of Labor Statistics 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
History.
Average Retail Prices, 1953-54: Collection and
Calculation, Techniques and Problems, Bull. 1182
(1955).*
Price Perspective 1965, 1966, 1967, Bull. 1543 (in
process).
Price Trends, March 1966, Bull. 1510 (1966).
Prices, 1964, Rpt. 291 (1965).
Prices: A Chartbook, 1953-62, Bull. 1351; and
September 1963 Supp., Bull. 1351-1 (1963).
Recent Price Developments, January-August 1964,
Rpt. 286 (1965).
Retail Prices, 1890 to 1924, Bull. 396 (1925).
Various commodities.
1907 to June 1915, Bull. 184 (1916).
1907 to December 1915, Bull. 197 (1916).
1907 to December 1916, Bull. 228 (1917).
1913 to December 1919, Bull. 270 (1921).
1913 to December 1920, Bull. 300 (1922).
1913 to December 1921, Bull. 315 (1923).
1913 to December 1922, Bull. 334 (1923).
1913 to December 1923, Bull. 366 (1925).
1890 to 1924, Bull. 396 (1925).
1890 to 1925, Bull. 418 (1926).
1890 to 1926, Bull. 445 (1927).
1890 to 1927, Bull. 464 (1928).
1890 to 1928, Bull. 495 (1929).
1953-54, Average Retail Prices: Collection and
Calculation, Techniques and Problems, Bull.
1182 (1955).*
1955, Average Retail Prices 1955, Bull. 1197
(1956).*
Wartime. (See also bulletins for war years under Re­
tail, and Wholesale Price Index, this section.)




Consumers’ Price in the United States, 1942-48, Bull.
966 (1949).*
The General Maximum Price Regulation, Bull. 879
(1946).
War and Postwar Wages, Prices, and Hours, 1914-23
and 1939-44, Bull. 852 (1946).
Wartime Prices, Part I— August 1939 to Pearl Harbor,
Bull. 749 (1944).*
Wholesale Price Index.
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull.
1458 (1966).*
Daily indexes and Spot Market Prices, January 1, 1954December 31, 1956, Rpt. 131 (1958).
Daily Spot Market: Price Indexes and Prices, January 1,
1957-December 31, 1959, Rpt. 157 (1961).
Frequency of Change in Wholesale Prices: A Study of
Price Flexibility, Rpt. 142 (1958).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1957).*
Index Numbers of Wholesale Prices in the United States
and Foreign Countries, Bull. 284 (1921).* [Part I re­
printed as Bull. 656 (1938).]
Price Perspective 1965, 1966, 1967, Bull. 1543 (in
process).
Price Trends, March 1966, Bull. 1510 (1966).
Prices: A Chartbook, 1953-62, Bull. 1351 (1963); and
September 1963 Supp., Bull. 1351-1 (1953).
Revised Index Numbers of Wholesale Prices, 1923 to
July 1927, Bull. 453 (1927).*
Seasonal Adjustment Factors, Wholesale Price Index:
Selected Series, 1948-61, Bull. 1379 (1963).
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).* See also Bulls. 947 (1949),* 1083
(1952),* 1214 (1957),* 1235 (1958),* 1257 (1959),* 1411
(1965),* and 1513 (1966).*
Various commodities.
1890 to 1914, Bull. 181 (1915).*
1890 to 1915, Bull. 200 (1916).*
1890 to 1916, Bull. 226 (1917).*
1890 to 1919, Bull. 269 (1920).*
1890 to 1920, Bull. 296 (1922).*
1890 to 1921, Bull. 320 (1922).*
1890 to 1922, Bull. 335 (1923).*
1890 to 1923, Bull. 367 (1925).*
1890 to 1924, Bull. 390 (1925).*
1890 to 1925, Bull. 415 (1926).*
1890 to 1926, Bull. 440 (1927).*
1913 to 1927, Bull. 473 (1929).*
1913 to 1928, Bull. 493 (1929).*
1929, Bull. 521 (1930).*
1930, Bull. 543 (1931).*
1931, Bull. 572 (1933).*
1939 (August) to 1941 (December), Bull. 749 (1944).*
January-June 1942, Bull. 718 (1943).*
July-December and Year 1942, Bull. 736 (1943).*
January-June 1943, Bull. 759 (1944).*
July-December and Year 1943, Bull. 785 (1944).*
1944, Bull. 870 (1947).*
1945, Bull. 877 (1947).*
1946, Bull. 920 (1948).*
1947, Bull. 947 (1949).*

125

Prices, Foreign Countries
1948, Bull. 973 (1950) *
1949, Bull. 1007 (1951).*
1950, Bull. 1083 (1952).*
1951-52, Bull. 1143 (1953).*
1954-56, Bull. 1214 (1957).*
1957, Bull. 1235 (1958).*
1958, Bull. 1257 (1959).*
1959, Bull. 1295 (1961).*
1960, Bull. 1376 (1963).*
1961, Bull. 1382 (1964).*
1962, Bull. 1411 (1965).*
1963, Bull. 1513 (1966).*
Prices, foreign countries. (See also Prices; and Wartime, foreign
countries.)
Handbook of Labor Statistics 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Index Numbers of Wholesale Prices in the United States and
Foreign Countries, Bull. 284 (1921).*
Wage Trends and Wage Policies: Various Foreign Countries,
Bull. 934 (1948).
Printing (trades) and publishing. (See also under Collective bargain­
ing, by industry or occupation; Employment outlook; Hygiene, in­
dustrial; Productivity; Wages and hours.)
Public printing. See Legislation— Printing, public.
Prison labor. (See also under Legislation.)
Convict Labor in 1923, Bull. 372 (1925).
Prison Labor in the United States, 1932, Bull. 595 (1933).
Prison Labor in the United States, 1940, Bull. 698 (1941).
Prison-made goods. See Prison labor.
Production statistics.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Production standards. See Collective bargaining, general— Labormanagement cooperation; Productivity; Wage-incentive plans.
Productivity. (See also Conventions, meetings, etc.; Labor require­
ments; Older workers; and Technological changes.)
Air Transportation.
Indexes of Output Per Employee, Air Transportation In­
dustry, 1947-64, Rpt. 308 (1966).
Aluminum ware.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Aluminum Ware, Rpt. 48 (1954).
Beet sugar refining.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Beet Sugar Refining, Rpt. 6 (1953).
Bibliographies.
Productivity: A Bibliography, Bull. 1226 (1958); and July
1966, Bull. 1514 (1966).
Brick.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Brick and Tile, Rpt. 43 (1953).
Productivity Costs in Common-Brick Industry, Bull. 356
(1924).
Capacitors.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Dry Electrolytic Capacitors, Rpt. 15 (1953).
Cargo handling. See Longshoremen, this section.
Centrifugal pumps.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Centrifugal Pumps, Rpt. 69 (1954).

126



Productivity
Cigars.
Mechanization and Productivity of Labor in the CigarManufacturing Industry, Bull. 660 (1939).
Circuit breakers.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
3-Pole Circuit Breakers, Circuit Interrupters, and Safety
Switches, Rpt. 67 (1954).
Clothing.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Men’s Winter Suits and Topcoats, Rpt. 4 (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Women's Dresses, Rpt. 84 (1955).
Productivity of Labor in the Cotton-Garment Industry, Bull.
662 (1939).
Coal, bituminous.
Technological Change and Productivity in the Bituminous
Coal Industry, 1920-60, Bull. 1305 (1961).
Combines.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance.Combines (Harvester-threshers), Rpt. 13 (1954).
Concrete products.
Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Concrete Products In­
dustry, 1947-63, Rpt. 300 (1965).
Copper tube and brass rod.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Copper Tube and Brass Rod, Rpt. 81 (1955).
Cotton goods.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Coarse Cotton Gray Goods, Rpt. 16 (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Fine Cotton Gray Goods, Rpt. 58 (1954).
Dyeing and finishing, cotton.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Cotton Textile Dyeing and Finishing, Rpt. 66 (1954).
Effects of long hours.
Hours of Work and Output, Bull. 917 (1948).*
Studies of the Effects of Long Working Hours, Bulls. 791
and 791—A (1944).*
Electric lamps.
Technological Changes and Employment in the ElectricLamp Industry, Bull. 593 (1933).
Engines and motors.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Diesel Engines, Rpt. 86 (1955).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
5-Horsepower Induction Motors, Rpt. 55 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Fractional Horsepower Motors, Rpt. 23 (1953).
Farm equipment.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Farm Implements, Rpt. 52 (1954).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Farm Tractors, Rpt. 38 (1953).
Fertilizer.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Fertilizer, Rpt. 63 (1954).
Fork lift trucks.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Fork Lift Trucks, Rpt. 54 (1954).

Productivity
Foundries.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Parformance:
Five Small Gray Iron Foundries, Rpt. 85 (1955).
Furniture.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Wood Furniture, Rpt. 18 (1954).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber, Millwork, and
Furniture Industries, 1915, Bull. 225 (1918).
Glass.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Glass Containers, Rpt. 70 (1954).
Productivity of Labor in the Glass Industry, Bull. 441
(1927).
Hand tools.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Hand Tools, Rpt. 39 (1953).
Heaters, irons and hot plates.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Coal-Burning Space Heaters, Rpt. 78 (1955).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Irons, Hot Plates, and Space Heaters, Rpt. 61 (1954).
Hosiery.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Seamless Hosiery, Rpt. 44 (1953).
Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Hosiery Industry, 194764, Rpt. 307 (1966).
Indexes. See Trends, and see specific industries, this section.
Iron and steel.
Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Steel Industry, 1947-65,
Rpt. 306 (1966).
Man-Hours Per Unit of Output in the Basic Steel Industry,
1939-55, Bull. 1200 (1956).
Productivity of Labor in Merchant Blast Furnaces, Bull.
474 (1929).
Knitwear.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Knit Outerwear, Rpt. 40 (1953).
Case Stu-, Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Knit Underwear, Rpt. 41 (1953).
Longshoremen.
Cargo Handling and Longshore Labor Conditions, Bull. 550
(1932).
Lumber. See Furniture, this section.
Machine bolts.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Cold Formed Machine Bolts and Hexagon Nuts, Rpt. 47
(1953).
Metal containers.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Metal Containers, Rpt. 71 (1954).
Newspaper printing.
Productivity of Labor in Newspaper Printing, Bull. 475
(1929).
Paint and varnish.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Paint and Varnish, Rpt. 79 (1955).
Paper boxboard.
Labor Cost of Production and Wages and Hours of Labor
in the Paper Box-Board Industry, Bull. 407 (1926).




Profit Sharing
Plywood and veneer.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Veneer and Plywood, Rpt. 37 (1953).
Pottery.
Wages, Hours, and Productivity in the Pottery Industry,
1925, Bull. 412 (1926).
Processed foods.
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Processed Foods— Canned Vegetables, Rpt. 8 (1953).
Case Study Data on Productivity and Factory Performance:
Processed Foods— Preserves, Jams, and Jellies, Rpt. 57
(1954).
Projections.
Projections 1970: Interindustry Relationships, Potential
Demand, Employment, Bull. 1536 (1966).*
Shipbuilding.
Wartime Employment, Production, and Conditions of Work
in Shipyards, Bull. 824 (1945).
Shoes.
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Time and Labor Costs in Manufacturing 100 Pairs of Shoes,
1923, Bull. 360 (1924).
Statistics. (See also Trends, and see specific industries, this
section.)
3LS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull.
1458 (1966).*
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bull.
1168 (1955).*
Steel. See Iron and steel, this section.
Time studies and production standards.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Incentive Wage Provi­
sions; Time Studies and Standards of Production, Bull.
908-3 (1948).
Tires.
Labor Productivity in the Automobile Tire Industry, Bull.
585 (1933).
Tobacco. See Cigars, this section.
Trends. (See also specific industries, this section.)
Indexes of Output Per Man-Hour, Selected Industries, 1939
and 1947-63, Rpt. 301 (1965); and 1939 and 1947-65,
Bull. 1537 (1966).
Productivity Trends in Selected Industries, Indexes
Through 1950, Bull. 1046 (1951).*
Trends in Output Per Man-Hour, 1935-55: Selected Non­
manufacturing Industries, Rpt. 105 (1956).
Trends in Output Per Man-Hour and Man-Hours Per Unit
of Output— Manufacturing, 1939-53, Rpt. 100 (1955).
Trends in Output Per Man-Hour in the Private Economy,
1S09-58, Bull. 1249 (I960).*
Unit Labor Cost in Manufacturing: Trends in Nine Coun­
tries, 1950-65, Bull. 1518 (1966).
Professional workers. See Federal employees, Scientists, Whitecollar workers, and specific profession.
Profit sharing.
Digest of Profit-Sharing, Savings, and Stock Purchase Plans,
Winter 1961-62 (20 Selected Plans), Bull. 1325 (1962).*
Profit Sharing in the United States, Bull. 208 (1917).

127

Related Wage Benefits

Programmers
Programmers.
Automation and Employment Opportunities for Officeworkers,
Bull. 1241 (1958).*
Promotion, transfer, and assignment.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Promotion, Transfer, and
Assignment; Lay-off, Work Sharing, and Reemployment, Bull.
908-7 (1948).
Protection of workers. See Safety; and Safety— Codes. See also
Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and preventions, by industry
or occupation.
Psychologists. See under Employment outlook.
Public assistance. (See also Family allowances; Old-age care and
assistance.)
Public Social Security Programs in the United States, 1949-50,
Bull. 982 (1950).*
The Cost of American Almshouses, Bull. 386 (1925).
Public employment offices. See Employment agencies.
Public service. (See also Federal workers; Legislation— Labor—
Text, summaries, and reviews of laws; and Municipal employees.)
Retirement systems.
Public Service Retirement Systems: United States, Can­
ada, and Europe, Bull. 477 (1929).
Teachers. See under Employment outlook.
Public welfare. See Public assistance.
Public works. See under Legislation.
Public Works Administration.
A Four-Year Study of Regenerative Employment, Bull. 658
(1938) .* See also Bull. 786 (1944).
Publications, indexes to and lists of.
A Selected List of the Publications of the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, 1936 ed., Bull. 624 (1936); 1938 ed„ Bull. 661
(1939) ; 1940 ed., Bull. 683 (1941); Supp. to 1940 ed., Bull.
747 (1943).
Bulletins and Articles Published by Bureau of Labor Statistics:
A Selected List of References, Bull. 614 (1935).
Index of Volumes 72-83, Monthly Labor Review, January 1951
to December 1960, Bull. 1335 (1962).
Index to Proceedings of International Association of Industrial
Accident Boards and Commissions 1914-1924, Bull. 395
(1925).
Subject Index of Bulletins Published by the Bureau of Labor
Statistics, 1915-59, with Annotated Listing of Bulletins,
1895-1959, Bull. 1281 (1960).
Subject Index of the Publications of the United States Bureau
of Labor Statistics up to May 1, 1915, Bull. 174 (1915).*
Subject Index to the Monthly Labor Review:
Volumes 1 to 11, July 1915 to December 1920, Bull. 695
(1941).
Volumes 12 to 51, January 1921 to December 1940, Bull.
696 (1942).
Volumes 52 to 71, January 1941 to December 1950, Bull.
1080 (1953). For later numbers, see Bull. 1335, en­
titled above, this listing.
Puerto Rico.
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico, and
Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
The Status of Labor in Puerto Rico, Alaska, Hawaii, Bull. 1191
(1956).
Pulp and paper industry. See Paper and paper products industries.

128



Pulpwood-logging industry.
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Pulpwood-Logging Industry,
1943 and 1944, Bull. 924 (1948).*

Q
Quits. See Collective bargaining, general— Severance pay.

R
Radio and television broadcasting. See under Employment outlook.
Radio manufacture. See under Collective bargaining, by industry or
occupation; See Employment outlook— Electronic technicians and
Electronics manufacturing; and Wages and hours.
Railroads. (See also under Employment outlook; Legislation; and
Wages and hours.)
Pennsylvania Railroad Wage Data, Bull. 514 (1930).
Use of Federal Power in Settlement of Railway Labor Disputes,
Bull. 303 (1922).*
Rationing, foreign countries, World War II.
Wartime Prices, Price Control, and Rationing in Foreign Coun­
tries, Bull. 851 (1946).
Rayon industry. See under Wages and hours.
Recall. See Collective bargaining, general— Layoff.
Reconstruction, postwar, Europe.
Cooperative Associations in Europe and Their Possibilities for
Post-War Reconstruction, Bull. 770 (1944).*
Reconversion.
Demobilization of Manpower, 1918-19, Bull. 784 (1944).
Effects of War-Contract Cut-Backs on Selected Plants, Bull. 818
(1945).
Reconversion Problems in the Buffalo Industrial Area, Bull. 804
(1945).
Workers’ Experiences During First Phase of Reconversion, Bull.
876 (1946).
Recreation. See Parks; and Health, recreation, and welfare condi­
tions.
Reemployment. See Collective bargaining, general— Layoff, and
Military service.
Refrigeration mechanics. See under Employment outlook.
Related wage benefits. (See also Collective bargaining, general—
specific benefit— and by industry or occupation; Employment
outlook; Health, insurance, and pension plans, extent of; and
Wages and hours— Area Wage Surveys, and Wage chronologies.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Remunera­
tion Practices for Production Workers in Manufacturing
Industries, 1959, Bull. 1308 (1962).*
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Remunera­
tion Practices for Production Workers in Mining Industries,
1960, Bull. 1332 (1963).*
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Problems in Measurement of Expenditures on Selected Items of
Supplementary Employee Remuneration, Bull. 1186 (1956).*
Supplementary Compensation for Nonproduction Workers, 1963,
Bull. 1470 (1966).
Supplementary Wage Practices in American Industry, 1945-46,
Bull. 939 (1948).*

Repairmen
Repairmen. See Employment outlook— Mechanics and repairmen.
Reporters, newspaper. See Employment outlook— Newspaper re­
porters.
Reporting pay. See Collective bargaining, general— Callback pay.
Reports. See specific subjects.
Research and development, industrial.
Scientific Research and Development in American Industry, Bull.
1148 (1953).*
Respiratory diseases. See Mortality statistics; and Hygiene, indus­
trial— Printing trades.
Rest periods. See under Collective bargaining, general.
Restaurant workers. See under Employment outlook, and see
Wages and hours— Hotels, motels, and restaurants.
Retail prices. See Prices, retail.
Retail stores. See Stores, retail.
Retail trade. See under Wages and hours.
Retirement. (See also Collective bargaining, general— Health and
welfare insurance, and Pension; Health, insurance, and pension
plans, extent of; Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and re­
views of laws; and Older workers.)
Public Service Retirement Systems: United States, Canada,
and Europe, Bull. 477 (1929).
Retraining.
Industrial Retraining Programs for Technological Change: A
Study of the Performance of Older Workers, Bull. 1368 (1963).
Job Redesign for Older Workers: Ten Case Studies, Bull. 1523
(1967).*
Rubber industry. See under Wages and hours; and see Poisons, in­
dustrial, and Tire industry.
Russia. See U.S.S.R.

s

Sabotage. See Legislation— Syndicalism and sabotage.
Safety. (See also Accidents— Rates, types, causes, and: prevention;
Conventions, meetings, etc.— Industrial Accident Boards and
Commissions; and Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and re­
views of laws.)
Codes.
Code for Identification of Gas-Mask Canisters, Bull. 512
(1930).
Code of Lighting: Factories, Mills, and Other Work Places,
Bulls. 331 (1923) and 556 (1931).
Code of Lighting School Buildings, Bull. 382 (1925).
Injuries and Accident Causes in the Longshore Industry,
1942, Bull. 764 (1944).*
Rules Governing the Approval of Headlighting Devices for
Motor Vehicles, Bull. 350 (1923).
Safety Code for Forging and Hot Metal Stamping, Bull. 451
(1927).
Safety Code for Laundry Machinery and Operations, Bull.
375 (1924).
Safety Code for Mechanical Power-Transmission Apparatus,
Bulls. 364 (1924) and 463 (1928).
Safety Code for Paper and Pulp Mills, Bull. 410 (1926).
Safety Code for Power Presses and Foot and Hand Presses,
Bull. 430 (1926).
Safety Code for Rubber Mills and Calendars, Bull. 447
(1927).



Secretaries, Stenographers, and Typists
Safety Code for the Construction, Care, and Use of Ladders,
Bull. 351 (1923).
Safety Code for the Protection of Industrial Workers in
Foundries, Bull. 336 (1923).
Safety Code for the Use, Care, and Protection of Abrasive
Wheels, Bulls. 338 (1923), 436 (1927), and 527 (1930).
Safety Code for Woodworking Plants, Bulls. 378 (1925) and
(revision) 519 (1930).
Safety Codes for the Prevention of Dust Explosions, Bulls.
433 (1927), 562 (1932), and 617 (1936).
Textile Safety Code, Bull. 509 (1930).
Iron and steel industry.
The Safety Movement in the Iron and Steel Industry, 1907
to 1917, Bull. 234 (1918).*
Salaries. See Wages and hours.
Sanitation. See Collective bargaining, general— Health standards,
and Labor-management cooperation.
Saudi Arabia.
Labor Law and Practice in Saudi Arabia, Rpt. 269 (1964).
Savannah River AEC project.
Labor and the Savannah River AEC Project, Bull. 1100 (1952).*
Savings-bank life insurance. See under Life insurance, State-spon­
sored.
Savings, consumer. (See also Income and expenditures, consumer.)
Family Income, Expenditures, and Savings in 1945, Bull. 956
(1949); in 1950, Bull. 1097 (1953).
Family Income, Expenditures, and Savings in 10 Cities, Bull.
1065 (1952).
Family Spending and Saving in Wartime, Bull. 822 (1945).
Income and Spending and Saving of City Families in Wartime,
Bull. 724 (1942).
Spending and Saving of the Nation's Families in Wartime, Bull.
723 (1942).
Savings plans.
Digest of Profit-Sharing, Savings, and Stock Purchase Plans,
Winter 1961-62 (20 Selected Plans), Bull. 1325 (1962).*
Sawmill operations. See Lumber industry.
Saws.
Woodworking Circular-Saw Accidents, Bull. 1190 (1956).*
Scandinavia (Denmark, Norway, and Sweden).
Labor-Management Relations in Scandinavia, Bull. 1038 (1952).
Scientific and technical personnel. (See also Federal employees;
Scientists; White-collar workers; and specific profession.)
Employment of Scientific and Technical Personnel in Industry,
1962, Bull. 1418 (1964).
Employment of Scientific and Technical Personnel in State
Government Agencies, 1962, Bull. 1412 (1964).
Scientists. (See also specific professions or branch of science;
Employment outlook.)
Employment, Education, and Earnings of American Men of
Science, Bull. 1027 (1951).
Occupational Mobility of Scientists, Bull. 1121 (1953).*
Scientific Research and Development in American Industry, Bull.
1148 (1953).*
Seamen. See Merchant seamen; and under Legislation. See also
Labor organizations— Seamen’s union, international; and Wages
and hours— Water transportation.
Seamen, disabled. See under Workmen’s compensation.
Seamen’s union, international. See under Labor organizations.
Secretaries, stenographers, and typists. See Office workers; and
under Employment outlook.
129

Teachers

Seniority
Seniority. See Collective bargaining, general— Service, length of.
Service stations. See under Wages and hours.
Severance pay. (See also under Collective bargaining, general.)
The Operation of Severance Pay Plans and Their Implication
for Labor Mobility, Bull. 1462 (1966).*
Sheet-metal industry. See under Wages and hours.
Shift differentials and operations. See under Collective bargaining,
general; and see Related wage benefits; and Wages and hours.
Shipbuilding and repairs. (See also under Absenteeism; Accidents—
Rates, types, causes, and prevention, by industry or occupation;
and Wages and hours.)
Wartime Employment, Production, and Conditions of Work in
Shipyards, Bull. 824 (1945).
Shipbuilding Labor Adjustment Board.
History of the Shipbuilding Labor Adjustment Board, 1917 to
1919, Bull. 283 (1921).
Shipyards. See Shipbuilding.
Shoe industry. See Labor and industrial conditions; Older workers;
and under Productivity-, and Wages and hours.
Sick leave, paid and unpaid. See under Collective bargaining, gen­
eral; and see Related wage benefits.
Sickness and accident benefits. See Collective bargaining, general
— Health and welfare insurance.
Silk industry. See under Wages and hours.
Slaughtering industry. See Meatpacking industry; and Wages and
hours— Meatpacking industry.
Small-arms industry. See under Wages and hours.
Social insurance. See Conventions, meetings, etc.; Legislation;
Old-age care and assistance; and Social security.
Social sciences. (See also under Employment outlook.)
Personnel Resources in the Social Sciences and Humanities,
Bull. 1169 (1954).*
Social security.
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
Public Social Security Programs in the United States, 1949-50,
Bull. 982 (1950).*
Social workers. See under Employment outlook.
Soft-drink establishment employees. See Wages and hours— Bot­
tling-house workmen, and Brewery workers.
Soviet Union. See U.S.S.R.
Spain.
Labor Law and Practice in Spain, Rpt. 289 (1965).
Spending, family. See Income and expenditures, consumer.
State Government employees.
Employment of Scientific and Technical Personnel in State
Government Agencies, 1962, Bull. 1412 (1964).
Public Service Retirement Systems: United States, Canada, and
Europe, Bull. 477 (1929).
Statisticians. See under Employment outlook.
Statistics. (See also specific subject.)
BLS Handbook of Methods for Surveys and Studies, Bull. 1458
(1966).*
Economic Forces in the United States, in Facts and Figures,
Bull. 1384 (1963).
Fact-Finding Activities of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bull.
831 (1945).*
Handbook of Labor Statistics:
1924-26 ed. Bull. 439 (1927).*
1929 ed. Bull. 491 (1929).*

130



1931 ed. Bull. 541 (1931).*
1936 ed. Bull. 616 (1936).*
1941 ed. Bull. 694, Vols. I and II (1942).*
1947 ed. Bull. 916 (1948).*
1950 ed. Bull.1016 (1951).*
1951 Supp, Bull. 1016 (1953).*
1967 ed. Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Methods of Procuring and Computing Statistical Information of
the Bureau of Labor Statistics, Bull. 326 (1923).
Techniques of Preparing Major BLS Statistical Series, Bulls.
993 (1950) and 1168 (1955).*
What are Labor Statistics for?, Bull. 599 (1933).
Steel industry. See Iron and steel industry under Accidents— Rates,
types, causes, and prevention, by industry or occupation; under
Employment outlook; Productivity; and Wages and hours.
Stevedoring. See Longshore industry.
Stock purchase plans.
Digest of Profit-Sharing, Savings, and Stock Purchase Plans,
Winter 1961-62, Bull. 1325 (1962).*
Stone-cutters, industries, trades, workers. See Wages and hours
— General trades.
Stonecutters, health of. See Occupational diseases.
Stores, retail. See Employment outlook— Department stores; Un­
employment; and under Wages and hours.
Street laborers, unskiiied. See Wages and hours— Municipal em­
ployees.
Street railways.— See Transit industry— local; under Collective
bargaining, by industry or occupation; and under Wages and hours.
Strikes. See under Labor-management disputes.
Sudan.
Labor in the Sudan, Rpt. 182 (1961).
Sugar industry. See Labor and industrial conditions— Hawaii; and
under Wages and hours.
Sunday labor. See Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and re­
views of laws.
Supervisors.
Union Membership and Collective Bargaining by Foremen, Bull.
745 (1943).
Supplementary wage practices. See Related wage benefits. See
also Collective bargaining, general— specific benefit— and by in­
dustry or occupation; Employment outlook; and Wage and hours,
particularly Hospitals, Area Wage Surveys, Office workers, and
bulletins entitled “Hourly Earnings,” etc.
Sweden.
Labor-Management Relations in Scandinavia, Bull. 1038 (1952).
Labor Law and Practice in Sweden, Rpt. 285 (1965).
Syndicalism. See Legislation— Syndicalism and sabotage.

T
Taft-Hartley Act. (See also Labor-management disputes— Strikes,
bulletins beginning with 1947.)
National Emergency Disputes Under the Labor Management
Relations (Taft-Hartley) Act, 1947-65, Bull. 1482 (1966).*
See also Rpt. 169 (1961).
Taiwan.
Labor Law and Practice in Taiwan, (Formosa), Rpt. 268 (1964).
Teachers. See under Employment outlook; and see Wages and
hours— Municipal employees.

Teamsters
Teamsters. See Wages and hours— General trades, and Truckdrivers and helpers.
Technical notes. See Methods.
Technicians. (See also under Employment outlook; and under
Occupational mobility.)
Technician Manpower: Requirements, Resources, and Train­
ing Needs, Bull. 1512 (1966).*
Technological changes. (See also Automation; and Productivity.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Union-Management Coopera­
tion, Plant Efficiency, and Technological Change, Bull. 908—
10 (1949).
Impact of Technological Change and Automation in the Pulp and
Paper Industry, Bull. 1347 (1962).*
Manpower Planning to Adapt to New Technology at an Electric
and Gas Utility, Rpt. 293 (1965).
Outlook for Numerical Control of Machine Tools: A Study of
a Key Technological Development in Metalworking Industries,
Bull. 1437 (1965).*
Report of the Advisory Committee on Employment Statistics,
Bull. 542 (1931).*
Studies of Automatic Technology:
A Case Study of an Automatic Airline Reservation System,
Rpt. 137 (1959).
A Case Study of a Large Mechanized Bakery, Rpt. 109
(1957).
A Case Study of a Modernized Petroleum Refinery, Rpt.
120 (1957).
Technological Change and Productivity in the Bituminous Coal
Industry, 1920-60, Bull. 1305 (1961).
Technological Changes and Employment in the Electric-Lamp
Industry, Bull. 593 (1933).
Technological Changes and Employment in the United States
Postal Service, Bull. 574 (1932).
Technological Trends in Major American Industries, Bull. 1474
(1966).*
Telephone occupations. See under Employment outlook.
Television broadcasting. See Employment outlook— Radio and tele­
vision broadcasting.
Television manufacture. See Collective bargaining, by industry or
occupation— Electronics; Employment outlook— Electronic tech­
nicians, and Electronics manufacturing.
Textile industries. See specific branch of industry under Wages
and hours.
Thailand.
Labor Law and Practice in Thailand, Rpt. 267 (1964).
Theatrical employment. See under Wages and hours.
Time study. See Productivity.
Tire industry.
Labor Productivity in the Automobile Tire Industry, Bull. 585
(1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Automobile Tire Industry,
1923, Bull. 358 (1924).
Tobacco industry. (See also under Wages and hours.)
Mechanization and Productivity of Labor in the Cigar-Manufac­
turing Industry, Bull. 660 (1939).
Union Agreements in the Tobacco Industry, January 1945, Bull.
847 (1945).
Tool-and-die-makers. See under Occupational mobility.



Unemployment
Trade agreements. See Collective bargaining, general, and by
industry or occupation.
Trade, retail. See Stores, retail; and Wages and hours— Retail
trade.
Trade schools, girls.
Industrial Experience of Trade-School Girls in Massachusetts,
Bull. 215 (1917).
Trade unions. See Labor organizations; and Labor movement.
Trade, wholesale. See Wages and hours— Wholesale trade.
Training. See Apprentices and learners; Vocational education and
training; and Workers’ education.
Transfer and assignment.
Collective Bargaining Provisions— Promotion, Transfer, and
Assignment; Layoff, Work-Sharing, and Reemployment, Bull.
908-7 (1948).
Transit industry, local. See under Collective bargaining, by in­
dustry or occupation; Wages and hours; also see Related wage
benefits.
Transportation. See specific type of; and Wages and hours— spe­
cific type of transportation.
Treaties and conventions, international.
Historical Survey of International Action Affecting Labor, Bull.
268 (1920).*
Truckdrivers and helpers. See under Wages and hours.
Trusteeships, labor organizations.
Union Constitution Provisions: Trusteeship, Bull. 1263 (1959).*
Tuberculosis. See Mortality statistics; and Hygiene, industrial.
Tunisia.
Labor Law and Practice in Tunisia, Rpt. 294 (1965).
Turkey.
Labor Law and Practice in Turkey, Rpt. 239 (1963).
Typists. See Employment outlook— Secretaries, stenographers, and
typists; Office workers; and specific industry under Employment
outlook.

u

Underwear industry. See Wages and hours— Hoisery and underwear
manufacture.
Unemployment. (See also Employment; and Employment statistics.)
Beneficial Activities of American Trade-Unions, Bull. 465
(1928).*
Case Studies of Displaced Workers: Experiences of Workers
After Layoff, Bull. 1408 (1964).
Employment and Earnings in the Engineering Profession, 1929
to 1934, Bull. 682 (1941).
How the Government Measures Unemployment, Rpt. 287 (1964);
Rpt. 312 (1967).
Industrial Unemployment: A Statistical Study of Its Extent and
Causes, Bull. 310 (1922).*
Labor Supply and Mobility in a Newly Industrialized Area (Ravenswood, W. Va.), Bull. 1261 (I960).*
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Report of the Advisory Committee on Employment Statistics,
Bull. 542 (1931).*
Social and Economic Character of Unemployment in Philadel­
phia, April 1929, Bull. 520 (1930), and April 1930, Bull 555
(1932).
Unemployment Among Women in Department and Other Retail
Stores of Boston, Bull. 182 (1916).

131

Unemployment-Benefit Plans
Unemployment in Columbus, Ohio, 1921 to 1925, Bull. 409
(1926). See also Bull. 553 (1932).
Unemployment in the United States, Bull. 195 (1916).*
Weathering Layoffs in a Small Community: Case Studies of
Displaced Pottery and Carpet-Mill Workers, Bull. 1516 (1966).
Unemployment-benefit plans. See Guaranteed employment and
wage plans.
Unemployment insurance. See Social security.
Unemployment insurance, foreign countries.
Unemployment-Benefit Plans in the United States and Unem­
ployment Insurance in Foreign Countries, Bull. 544 (1931).*
Unemployment insurance and reserve funds, bibliography.
Unemployment Insurance and Reserves in the United States,
Bull. 611 (1935).
Union agreements and contracts. See Collective bargaining, gen­
eral, and by industry or occupation.
Union constitutions, disciplinary powers and procedures.
Disciplinary Powers and Procedures in Union Constitutions, Bull.
1350 (1963).
Union leadership. See Labor organizations— Leadership, workers’
education for.
Union-management cooperation. See Labor-management coopera­
tion.
Union membership. See Union security.
Union security. (See also under Collective bargaining, general.)
Maintenance-of-Membership Awards of National War Labor
Board, Bull. 753 (1943).
Union Membership and Collective Bargaining by Foremen, Bull.
745 (1943).
Union Security and Checkoff Provisions in Major Union Con­
tracts, 1958-59, Bull. 1272 (1960).
Union shop. See Union security.
Union wage scales. See Wages and hours.
Unions, company. See Company unions.
Unions, labor. See Labor organizations; also Labor movement.
United Arab Republic.
Labor Law and Practice in the United Arab Republic (Egypt),
Rpt. 275 (1965).
United States Government agencies. See specific agency.
Upholsterers. See under Wages and hours.
Uruguay.
Labor Legislation of Uruguay, Bull. 494 (1929).
U.S.S.R.
Elements of Soviet Labor Law, Bull. 1026 (1951).*
Labor Law and Practice in the U.S.S.R., Rpt. 270 (1964).
Principal Current Soviet Labor Legislation, Rpt. 210 (1962).
Utilities. See under Wages and hours.

V
Vacations. See under Collective bargaining, general. Also see Em­
ployment outlook; Related wage benefits; and Wages and hours,
particularly Hospitals, selected cities, Area Wage Surveys, Office
workers, and bulletins entitled "Hourly Earnings,” etc.
Vegetable (and fruit) industry, canned. See Accidents— Rates,
types, etc.; and Collective bargaining, by industry or occupation.
Venezuela.
Labor Law and Practice in Venezuela, Rpt. 212 (1962).
Labor Legislation of Venezuela, Bull. 549 (1931).

132



Wage Terminology
Veterans’ rights. See Collective bargaining, general— Leave, with
and without pay.
Vital statistics. See Mortality statistics.
Vocational education and training. (See also Workers’ education;
and Legislation— Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws.)
Apprenticeship in Building Construction, Bull. 459 (1928).
Industrial Exoerience of Trade-School Girls in Massachusetts,
Bull. 215 (1917).
Vocational Education Survey of Minneapolis, Minn., Bull. 199
(1917).
Vocational guidance. See Employment outlook.
Vocational rehabilitation. See Legislation— Labor— Text, summar­
ies, and reviews of laws.
Vocational training. See Vocational education and training.
Voting. See Legislation— Employee rights, civil.

w
Wage adjustment. (See also under Collective bargaining, general.)
The Use of Cost-of-Living Figures in Wage Adjustments, Bull.
369 (1925).*
Wage Adjustment Board for the Building Construction Industry (U.S.
Government).
Union Wages and Hours in the Building Trades, July 1, 1946,
Bull. 910 (1947).
Wage assignments. See Garnishments.
Wage chronologies. See under Wages and hours.
Wage control. (See also Wages and hours— Bulletins published in
wartime years.)
Problems and Policies of Dispute Settlement and Wage Stabil­
ization During World War II, Bull. 1009 (1950).*
Wartime Wages. Income, and Wage Regulation in Agriculture,
Bull. 883 (1946).
Wage differentials. See under Wages and hours; and see Shift dif­
ferentials and operations.
Wage escalation. See Collective bargaining, general— Wage ad­
justment.
Wage executions. See Garnishments.
Wage-incentive plans. (See also under Collective bargaining, gen­
eral.)
Effect of Incentive Payments on Hourly Earnings, Bull. 742
(1943).
Hours of Work and Output, Bull. 917 (1918).*
Supplementary Wage Practices in American Industry, 1945-46,
Bull. 939 (1948).*
Wage-payment legislation. See under Legislation.
Wage plans, guaranteed. See Guaranteed employment and wage
plans.
Wage policies, foreign countries.
Wage Trends and Wage Policies: Various Foreign Countries,
Bull. 934 (1948).
Wage practices, related. See Related wage benefits.
Wage scales. See Wages and hours.
Wage stabilization. See Wage control.
Wage structure. See Collective bargaining, general— Wage-incen­
tive plans, and Wage provisions, general; and see Wages and
hours.
Wage terminology.
Glossary of Current Industrial Relations and Wage Terms, Bull.
1438 (1965).

Wages
Glossary of Currently Used Wage Terms, Bull. 983 (1950).
Wages. See Legislation— Labor, Minimum wage, and Wage pay­
ment; and Wages and hours.
Wages and hours. [Note: Bulletins showing union scales of wages
and hours in particular years also include comparative and other
relevant data for earlier years. Union wage scales— For occupa­
tions and trades not specified, see miscellaneous sections in
Bulls. 476, 515, 540, and 566. For data on specific firms see
Wage chronologies, this section. For recent data on wages and
hours under collective bargaining, see BLS periodical, Current
Wage Developments.]
Actors.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Agricultural machinery industry. See Machinery manufacture,
this section.
Air transportation.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Air Transportation, 1931, Bull.
575 (1933).
Aircraft manufacture.
Aircraft parts.
Earnings in Aircraft-Parts Plants, November 1942,
Bull. 744 (1943).
Airframe.
Average Hourly Earnings in the Airframe Industry,
1943, Bull. 790 (1944).
Earnings in Eastern and Midwestern Airframe Plants,
1942, Bull. 728 (1943).
Wage Rates in the California Airframe Industry, 1941,
Bull. 704 (1942).
Wage Stabilization in California Airframe Industry,
1943, Bull. 746 (1943).
Airplanes and aircraft engines.
Wage Chronology:
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. (California Company),
1937-64, Rpt. 231 (1964).
Lockheed-California Co. (A Division of Lockheed
Aircraft Corp.), 1937-67, Bull. 1522 (1967).*
Martin-Marietta Corp., 1944-61, Rpt. 232 (1963);
and 1944-64, Bull. 1449 (1965).*
North American Aviation, 1941-57, Rpt. 163
(I960); and 1941-64, Rpt. 203 (1965).
The Boeing Co., 1936-64, Rpt. 204 (1965).
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull.
952 (1949).
Wages and Hours in the Manufacture of Airplanes and
Aircraft Engines, 1929, Bull. 523 (1930).
Glider industry.
Average Hourly Earnings in the Airframe Industry,
1943, Bull. 790 (1944).
Alaska.
The Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto
Rico, and Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
Aluminum industry.
Wage Chronology: Aluminum Co. of America, 1939-61,
Rpt. 219 (1962).
Ammunition-loading industry.
Hourly Earnings in the Ammunition-loading Industry, 1944,
Bull. 827 (1945).



Wages and Hours
Amusements.
Industry Wage Survey, Motion Picture Theaters, April 1966,
Bull. 1542 (1967).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-28, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Anthracite coal mining. See under Mining, this section.
Apparel and accessories stores. See under Retail trade, this
section.
Appliance stores. See Furniture, etc., under Retail trade, this
section.
Area Wage Surveys. (Note: Occupational Wage Surveys prior
to Bull. 1465.)
Akron, Ohio:
June 1960, Bull. 1265-59 (1960).
June 1961, Bull. 1285-81 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-81 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-81 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-80 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-78 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-81 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-86 (1967).
Albany-Schenectady-Troy, New York:
March 1952, Bull. 1108 (1952).
March 1960, Bull. 1265-40 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-51 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-56 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-53 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-52 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-52 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-60 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-62 (1967).
Albuquerque, New Mexico:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-54 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-61 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-67 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-63 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-61 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-62 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-64 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-60 (1967).
Allentown-Bethlehem-Easton, Pennsylvania:
May 1952, Bull. 1111 (1952).
March 1960, Bull. 1265-33 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-47 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-46 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345^45 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-53 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-48 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-53 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-53 (1967).
Atlanta, Georgia:
March 1951, Bull. 1031 (1951).
March 1952, Bull. 1102 (1952).
March 1953, Bull. 1116-18 (1953).
March 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
March 1955, Bull. 1172-11 (1955).
April 1956, Bull. 1188-18 (1956).
April 1957, Bull. 1202-16 (1957).

133

Wages and Hours
May 1958, Bull. 1224-17 (1958).
May 1959, Bull. 1240-19 (1959).
June 1960, Bull. 1265-60 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-73 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-65 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-71 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-73 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-74 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-71 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-71 (1967).
Baltimore, Maryland:
June 1951, Bull. 1045 (1951).
October 1952, Bull. 1116-6 (1953).
April 1955, Bull. 1172-15 (1955).
August 1957, Bull. 1224-3 (1958).
August 1958, Bull. 1240-2 (1958).
September 1959, Bull. 1265-7 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-34 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-28 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-23 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-24 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-27 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-29 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-30 (1967).
Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange, Texas:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-58 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-75 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-78 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-67 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-70 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-66 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-63 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-74 (1967).
Birmingham, Alabama:
April 1952, Bull. 1107 (1952).
January 1957, Bull. 1202-10 (1957).
March 1960, Bull. 1265-37 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-53 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-59 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-56 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-63 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-60 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-56 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-63 (1967).
Boise, Idaho:
June 1960, Bull. 1265-61 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-62 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-77 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-74 (1963).
Boise City, Idaho:
July 1964, Bull. 1430-1 (1964).
July 1965, Bull. 1465-1 (1965).
July 1966, Bull. 1530-2 (1966).
Boston, Massachusetts:
March 1951, Bull. 1033 (1951).
April 1952, Bull. 1106 (1952).
March 1953, Bull. 1116-17 (1953).
March 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
April 1955, Bull. 1172-17 (1955).
September 1956, Bull. 1202^4 (1957).
September 1957, Bull. 1224-2 (1958).

134



Wages and Hours
October 1958, Bull. 1240-6 (1959).
October 1959, Bull. 1265-8 (1960).
October 1960, Bull. 1285-15 (1961).
October 1961, Bull. 1303-16 (1962).
October 1962, Bull. 1345-15 (1963).
October 1963, Bull. 1385-16 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-16 (1964).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-12 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-16 (1966).
Bridgeport, Connecticut:
June 1951, Bull. 1044 (1951).
Buffalo, New York:
January 1950, Bull. 991 (1950).
January 1952, Bull. 1085 (1952).
April 1953, Bull. 1116-20 (1953).
September 1954, Bull. 1172-1 (1955).
September 1956, Bull. 1202-2 (1957).
September 1958, Bull. 1240-3 (1959).
October 1959, Bull. 1265-4 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-31 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-29 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-30 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-33 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-36 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-36 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-38 (1967).
Burlington, Vermont:
March 1961, Bull. 1285-57 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-50 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-50 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-47 (1964).
March 1965, Bull. 1430-51 (1965).
March 1966, Bull. 1465-54 (1966).
March 1967, Bull. 1530-52 (1967).
Canton, Ohio.December 1959, E ull. 1265-10 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-29 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-62 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-64 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-64 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-59 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-58 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-58 (1967).
Charleston, West Virginia:
April 1960, Bull. 1265-48 (I960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-60 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-61 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-61 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-57 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-65 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-70 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-61 (1967).
Charlotte, North Carolina:
April 1960, Bull. 1265-39 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-58 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-60 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-58 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-55 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-61 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-67 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-64 (1967).

Wages and Hours
May 1958, Bull. 1224-17 (1958).
May 1959, Bull. 1240-19 (1959).
June 1960, Bull. 1265-60 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-73 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-65 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-71 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-73 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-74 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-71 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-71 (1967).
Baltimore, Maryland:
June 1951, Bull. 1045 (1951).
October 1952, Bull. 1116-6 (1953).
April 1955, Bull. 1172-15 (1955).
August 1957, Bull. 1224-3 (1958).
August 1958, Bull. 1240-2 (1958).
September 1959, Bull. 1265-7 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-34 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-28 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-23 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-24 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-27 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-29 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-30 (1967).
Beaumont-Port Arthur-Orange, Texas:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-58 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-75 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-78 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-67 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-70 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-66 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-63 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-74 (1967).
Birmingham, Alabama:
April 1952, Bull. 1107 (1952).
January 1957, Bull. 1202-10 (1957).
March 1960, Bull. 1265-37 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-53 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-59 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-56 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-63 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-60 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-56 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-63 (1967).
Boise, Idaho:
June 1960, Bull. 1265-61 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-62 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-77 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-74 (1963).
Boise City, Idaho:
July 1964, Bull. 1430-1 (1964).
July 1965, Bull. 1465-1 (1965).
July 1966, Bull. 1530-2 (1966).
Boston, Massachusetts:
March 1951, Bull. 1033 (1951).
April 1952, Bull. 1106 (1952).
March 1953, Bull. 1116-17 (1953).
March 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
April 1955, Bull. 1172-17 (1955).
September 1956, Bull. 1202^4 (1957).
September 1957, Bull. 1224-2 (1958).

134



Wages and Hours
October 1958, Bull. 1240-6 (1959).
October 1959, Bull. 1265-8 (1960).
October 1960, Bull. 1285-15 (1961).
October 1961, Bull. 1303-16 (1962).
October 1962, Bull. 1345-15 (1963).
October 1963, Bull. 1385-16 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-16 (1964).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-12 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-16 (1966).
Bridgeport, Connecticut:
June 1951, Bull. 1044 (1951).
Buffalo, New York:
January 1950, Bull. 991 (1950).
January 1952, Bull. 1085 (1952).
April 1953, Bull. 1116-20 (1953).
September 1954, Bull. 1172-1 (1955).
September 1956, Bull. 1202-2 (1957).
September 1958, Bull. 1240-3 (1959).
October 1959, Bull. 1265-4 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-31 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-29 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-30 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-33 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-36 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-36 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-38 (1967).
Burlington, Vermont:
March 1961, Bull. 1285-57 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-50 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-50 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-47 (1964).
March 1965, Bull. 1430-51 (1965).
March 1966, Bull. 1465-54 (1966).
March 1967, Bull. 1530-52 (1967).
Canton, Ohio.December 1959, E ull. 1265-10 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-29 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-62 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-64 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-64 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-59 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-58 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-58 (1967).
Charleston, West Virginia:
April 1960, Bull. 1265-48 (I960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-60 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-61 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-61 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-57 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-65 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-70 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-61 (1967).
Charlotte, North Carolina:
April 1960, Bull. 1265-39 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-58 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-60 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-58 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-55 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-61 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-67 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-64 (1967).

Wages and Hours
February 1965, Bull. 1430-47 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-40 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-44 (1967).
Detroit, Michigan:
December 1951, Bull. 1086 (1952).
October 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
October 1955, Bull. 1188-2 (1956).
January 1959, Bull. 1240-12 (1959).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-25 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-37 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-38 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-47 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-43 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-43 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-45 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-48 (1967).
Fort Worth, Texas:
November 1959, Bull. 1265-13 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-23 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-19 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-27 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-19 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-24 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-26 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-28 (1967).
Green Bay, Wisconsin:
August 1960, Bull. 1285-2 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-2 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-3 (1962).
August 1963, Bull. 1385-4 (1963).
August 1964, Bull. 1430-3 (1964).
August 1965, Bull. 1465-4 (1965).
August 1966, Bull. 1530-5 (1966).
Greenville, South Carolina:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-46 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-63 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-70 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-68 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-68 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-69 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-74 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-66 (1967).
Hartford, Connecticut:
October 1951, Bull. 1059 (1952).
Houston, Texas:
January 1952, Bull. 1084 (1952).
June 1960, Bull. 1265-56 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-78 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-79 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-82 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-81 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-82 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-85 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-85 (1967).
Indianapolis, Indiana:
December 1951, Bull.^1075 (1952).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-22 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-28 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-27 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-26 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-30 (1964).

136




Wages and Hours
December 1964, Bull. 1430-30 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-31 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-37 (1967).
Jackson, Mississippi:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-26 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-42 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-44 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-43 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-41 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-44 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-44 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-43 (1967).
Jacksonville, Florida:
May 1952, Bull. 1110 (1952).
December 1959, Bull. 1265-14 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-30 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-21 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-39 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-32 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-38 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-41 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-39 (1967).
Kansas City, Missouri:
October 1951, Bull. 1064 (1952).
October 1952, Bull. 1116-4 (1953).
December 1956, Bull. 1202-6 (1957).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-23 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-18 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-24 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-22 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-26 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-26 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-27 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-26 (1967).
Labor markets, major. (For more detailed information,
see specific city under above heading, this section.)
1951- 52 (summary report). Wages and Related Bene­
fits, 40 Labor Markets, 1951-1952, Bull. 1113
(1952).
1952- 53 (summaries and special analyses). Wages
and Related Benefits, 20 Labor Markets, 1952—
1953, Bull. 1116 (1953).
1953- 54. Wages and Related Benefits— Major Labor
Markets, 1953-1954:
Pt. I, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
Pt. II, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
Pt. Ill, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
1954- 55 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 17 Labor Markets, 1954-55, Bull.
1172 (1956).
1955- 56 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 17 Labor Markets, 1955-56, Bull.
1188 (1956).
1956- 57 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 17 Labor Markets, 1956-57, Bull.
1202 (1957).
1957- 58 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 19 Labor Markets, 1957-58, Bull.
1224-20 (1959).
1958- 59 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 20 Labor Markets, 1958-59, Bull.
1240-22 (1959).

Wages and Hours
Miami, Florida:
December 1959, Bull. 1265-6 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-33 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-31 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-33 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-29 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-29 (1965).
December 1965, Bull 1465-30 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-31 (1967).
Midland and Odessa, Texas:
June 1966, Bull. 1465-84 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-78 (1967).
Milwaukee, Wisconsin:
March 1952, Bull. 1099 (1952).
April 1953, Bull. 1116-19 (1953).
April 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
November 1955, Bull. 1188-3 (1956).
May 1958, Bull. 1224-18 (1958).
April 1959, Bull. 1240-16 (1959).
April 1960, Bull. 1265-43 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-64 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-57 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-59 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-56 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-58 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-61 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-76 (1967).
Minneapolis—St. Paul, Minnesota:
November 1951, Bull. 1068 (1952).
November 1952, Bull. 1116-7 (1953).
November 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
November 1954, Bull. 1172-5 (1954).
December 1955, Bull. 1188-8 (1956).
March 1957, Bull. 1202-14 (1957).
January 1958, Bull. 1224-10 (1958).
January 1959, Bull. 1240-11 (1959).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-21 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-39 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-36 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-38 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-39 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-39 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-38 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-42 (1967).
Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-55 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-69 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-68 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-69 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-71 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-68 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-72 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-72 (1967).
New Haven, Connecticut:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-41 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-46 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-34 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-37 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-37 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-34 (1965).

138



Wages and Hours
January 1966, Bull. 1465-37 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-41 (1967).
New Orleans, Louisiana:
December 1951, Bull. 1074 (1952).
November 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
November 1955, Bull. 1188-5 (1956).
February 1958, Bull. 1224-11 (1958).
February 1959, Bull. 1240-14 (1959).
February 1960, Bull. 1265-32 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-48 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-43 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-44 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-42 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-53 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-47 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-51 (1967).
New York, New York:
April 1951, Bull. 1037 (1951).
January 1952, Bull 1101 (1952).
February 1953, Bull. 1116-16 (1953).
February 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
March 1955, Bull. 1172-13 (1955).
April 1956, Bull. 1188-17 (1956).
April 1957, Bull. 1202-17 (1957).
April 1958, Bull. 1224-15 (1958).
April 1959, Bull. 1240-17 (1959).
April 1960, Bull. 1265-44 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-65 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-58 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-79 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-72 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-80 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-82 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-83 (1967).
Newark and Jersey City, New Jersey:
November 1951, Bull. 1081 (1952).
November 1952, Bull. 1116-11 (1953).
December 1953, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
December 1954, Bull. 1172-8 (1955).
December 1955, Bull. 1188-10 (1956).
December 1957, Bull. 1224-12 (1958).
December 1958, Bull. 1240-9 (1959).
February 1960, Bull. 1265-28 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-40 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-45 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-46 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-49 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430^15 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-50 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-55 (1967).
Norfolk-Portsmouth (Hampton Roads), Virginia:
February 1952, Bull. 1088 (1952).
Norfolk-Portsmouth and Newport News-Hampton, Virginia:
June 1961, Bull. 1285-82 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-75 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-75 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-77 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-77 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-77 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-82 (1967).

Wages and Hours
November 1965, Bull. 1465-28 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-23 (1967).
Rochester, New York:
January 1952, Bull. 1087 (1952).
Rockford, Illinois:
April 1960, Bull. 1265-47 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-68 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-69 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-55 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-60 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-63 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-66 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-68 (1967).
St. Louis, Missouri:
January 1952, Bull. 1095 (1952).
December 1952, Bull. 1116-12 (1953).
January 1954, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
February 1955, Bull. 1172-10 (1955).
February 1956, Bull. 1188-9 (1956).
November 1957, Bull. 1224-5 (1958).
October 1958, Bull. 1240-4 (1959).
October 1959, Bull. 1265-5 (1960).
October 1960, Bull. 1285-10 (1960).
October 1961, Bull. 1303-18 (1962).
October 1962, Bull. 1345-17 (1963).
October 1963, Bull. 1385-21 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-22 (1965).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-22 (1966).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-27 (1967).
Salt Lake City, Utah:
December 1951, Bull. 1069 (1952).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-32 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-32 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-25 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-28 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-33 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-32 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-33 (1967).
San Antonio, Texas:
May 1961, Bull. 1285-71 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-63 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-78 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-74 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-81 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-78 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-84 (1967).
San Bernadino—Riverside—Ontario, California:
November 1959, Bull. 1265-15 (1960).
September 1960, Bull. 1285-4 (1960).
September 1961, Bull. 1303-11 (1961).
September 1962, Bull. 1345-9 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-9 (1963).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-8 (1964).
September 1965, Bull. 1465-20 (1966).
September 1966, Bull. 1530-14 (1966).
San Diego, California:
September 1962, Bull. 1345-10 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-13 (1964).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-12 (1964).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-21 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-24 (1967).
140



Wages and Hours
San Francisco-Oakland, California:
January 1950, Bull. 996 (1950).
January 1951, Bull. 1028 (1951).
January 1952, Bull. 1076 (1952).
January 1953, Bull. 1116-9 (1953).
January 1954, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
January 1955, Bull. 1172-7 (1955).
January 1956, Bull. 1188-7 (1956).
January 1957, Bull. 1202-8 (1957).
January 1958, Bull. 1224-8 (1958).
January 1959, Bull. 1240-13 (1959).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-17 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-36 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-37 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-34 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-36 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-37 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-43 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-36 (1967).
San Jose, California.
September 1965, Bull. 1465-19 (1966).
September 1966, Bull. 1530-10 (1966).
Savannah, Georgia:
June 1960, Bull. 1265-53 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-76 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-80 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-60 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-69 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-64 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-69 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-69 (1967).
Scranton, Pennsylvania:
December 1951, Bull. 1078 (1952).
August 1960, Bull. 1285-8 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-8 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-5 (1962).
August 1963, Bull. 1385-8 (1963).
August 1964, Bull. 1430-2 (1964).
August 1965, Bull. 1465-3 (1965).
August 1966, Bull. 1530-3 (1966).
Seattle, Washington:
September 1951, Bull. 1057 (1952).
August 1956, Bull. 1202-1 (1956).
August 1957, Bull. 1224-1 (1957).
August 1958, Bull. 1240-1 (1958).
August 1959, Bull. 1265-2 (1959).
August 1960, Bull. 1285-7 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-6 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-4 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-10 (1963).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-9 (1964).
Seattle-Everett, Washington:
October 1965,Bull. 1465-9 (1965).
October 1966,Bull. 1530-22 (1967).
Sioux Falls, South Dakota:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-29 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-17 (1960).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-15 (1962).
October 1962,Bull. 1345-13 (1963).
October 1963,Bull. 1385-20 (1964).
October 1964,Bull. 1430-15 (1964).

Wages and Hours
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Automobile Industry,
1922, Bull. 348 (1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Motor Vehicle Industry,
1925, Bull. 438 (1927); 1928, Bull. 502 (1930).
Automobile repair garages and shops.
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947- September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Auto Dealer Repair Shops, AugustOctober 1964, Bull. 1452 (1965).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt.
60 (1954).
Wage Structure: Auto Dealer Repair Shops, Summer 1958,
Rpt. 141 (1959).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Gasoline Filling Stations
and Motor-Vehicle Repair Garages, 1931, Bull. 578
(1933). See also Bulls. 540 (1931) and 566 (1932).
Automotive dealers. See under Retail trade, this section.
Baking industry. (See also General trades, this section, for
union scales of wages and hours of labor, 1915-1933.)
Union Wages and Hours in the Baking Industry:
June 1, 1942, Bull. 735 (1943).
July 1, 1943, Bull. 778 (1944).
July 1, 1944, Bull. 816 (1945).
July 1, 1945, Bull. 871 (1946).
July 1, 1946, Bull. 914 (1948).
July 1, 1947, Bull, 936 (1948).
July 1, 1948, Bull. 954 (1949).
July 1, 1949, Bull. 977 (1950).
July 1, 1950, Bull. 1014 (1951).
July 1, 1951, Bull. 1053 (1952).
July 1, 1952, Bull. 1123 (1953).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Bakery Industry— Bread
and Cake Departments, 1931, Bull. 580 (1933).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in the Bread-Baking
Industry, 1934, Bull. 623 (1937).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in Union Bakeries,
June 1, 1939, Bull. 673 (1940).
Banking industry.
Earnings of Bank Employees, Spring and Summer of 1943,
Bull. 774 (1944).
Industry Wage Survey, Banking, November-December
1964, Bull. 1466 (1965).
Wage Structure: Banking Industry, Mid—1960, Rpt. 179
(1961).
Barbers.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1927, Bull. 457 (1928).
May 15, 1928, Bull. 482 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Bituminous coal mining. See under Mining, and under Wage
chronologies, this section.
Boilershop products industry.
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
142



Wages and Hours
Boot and shoe industry. See Shoe industry, this section.
Bottling-house workmen, and Brewery workers.
Union Scales of Wases and Hours of Labor:
May 1, 1915, Bull. 194 (1916).
May 15, 1916, Bull. 214 (1917).
May 15. 1917, Bull. 245 (1919).
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929. Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Brass manufacturing.
Wage Chronology: The Anaconda Co., 1941-58, Rpt. 197
(1961).
Brick industry.
Productivity Cost in Common-Brick Industry, Bull. 356
(1924).
Building materials and farm equipment dealers. See under Re­
tail trade, this section.
Building trades. (See also General trades, this section, for
union scales of wages and hours of labor, 1915-33.)
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades.
May 15, 1936, Bull. 626 (1937).*
May 15, 1937, Bull. 657 (1938).*
June 1, 1939, Bull. 674 (1940).*
June 1, 1941, Bull. 680 (1942).*
July 1, 1912, Bull. 730 (1943).*
July 1, 1943. Bull. 767 (1944).*
July 1, 1944, Bull. 815 (1945).*
July 1, 1945, Bull. 862 (1946).*
July 1, 1916, Bull. 910 (1947).*
July 1, 1947, Bull. 930 (1948).*
July 1, 1948, Bull. 951 (1919).*
July 1, 1949, Bull. 976 (1950).*
July 1, 1950, Bull. 1011 (1951).*
July 1, 1951, Bull. 1051 (1952).*
July 1, 1952, Bull. 1124 (1953).*
July 1, 1953, Bull. 1152 (1954).*
July 1, 1954, Bull. 1175 (1955).*
July 1, 1955, Bull. 1192 (1956).*
July 1, 1956, Bull. 1205 (1957).*
July 1, 1957, Bull. 1227 (1958).*
July 1, 1958, Bull. 1245 (1959).*
July 1, 1959, Bull. 1269 (I960).*
July 1, 1960, Bull. 1290 (1961).*
July 1, 1961, Bull. 1316 (1962).*
July 1, 1962, Bull. 1355 (1963).*
July 1, 1963, Bull. 1397 (1964).*
July 1, 1964, Bull. 1432 (1965).*
July 1, 1965, Bull. 1487 (1966).*
July 1, 1966, Bull. 1547 (1967).*
Bus companies, interstate.
Wage Chronology: Western Greyhound Lines, 1945-63,
Rpt. 245 (1964).
Busdrivers. See Transit industry— local, this section; also
General trades, this section, beginning with Bull. 457.
Butchers. See Meatcutters and butchers, this section.
Candy and confectionary industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Candy and Other Confectionary
Products, September 1965, Bull. 1520 (1966).
Wage Structure: Candy and Other Confectionary Products,
November-December 1960, Rpt. 195 (1961).

Wages and Hours
Western Union Telegraph Co., 1945-53, Rpt. 160
(I960); 1943-63, Rpt. 160 (Rev. 1964); 1943-67,
Bull. 1545 (1967).*
Community wage surveys. See Area Wage Surveys, this section.
Contract cleaning.
Industry Wage Survey, Contract Cleaning Services, Sum­
mer 1961, Bull. 1327 (1962); Summer 1965, Bull. 1507
(1966).
Wage Structure: Power Laundries and Dry Cleaners,
April—July 1960, Rpt. 178 (1961).
Copper. See Mining, this section.
Copper wire industry.
Wage Chronology: The Anaconda Co., 1941-58, Rpt.
197 (1961).
Cotton industries.
Cotton and Synthetic Textiles, Wage Trends, 1950-53,
Rpt. 50 (1954).
Earnings and Hours in Men’s Cotton-Garment Industries
and in Plants Manufacturing Single Pants Other Than
Cotton, 1939 and 1941, Bull. 719 (1942).
Earnings in Cotton-Goods Manufacture During the War
Years, Bull. 798 (1944).
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April
1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950); January
1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Cotton Textiles, May 1963, Bull.
1410 (1964); September 1965, Bull. 1506 (1966).
Wage Chronology:
Berkshire Hathaway Inc., 1943-64, Rpt. 281 (1964);
1943-66, Bull. 1475 (1965);* 1943-69, Bull. 1541
(1967).* For earlier years, see Northern Cotton
Textile Assns., this listing.
Dan River Mills, 1943-65, Bull. 1495 (1966).*
Northern Cotton Textile Assns., 1943-48, Bull. 970
(1949).*
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods Manufacturing:
1920, Bull. 288 (1921).
1922, Bull. 345 (1923).
1924, Bull. 371 (1925).
1910 to 1926, Bull. 446 (1927).
1910 to 1928, Bull. 492 (1929).
1910 to 1930, Bull. 539 (1931).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods Manufactur­
ing and Finishing, 1916, Bull. 239 (1918); 1918, Bull.
262 (1919).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cotton, Woolen, and
Silk Industries, 1907 to 1914, Bull. 190 (1916).
Wages in Cotton-Goods Manufacturing, Bull. 663 (1938).*
Wage Structure: Cotton Textiles, November 1954, Rpt.
82 (1955); August 1960, Rpt. 184 (1961).
Cotton industries, New England mill.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, 1927-28, Bull.
476 (1929).
Cutlery, handtools, and general hardware industries.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid—1952 and Mid—1953, Rpt.
60 (1954).

144



Wages and Hours
Department stores. See Stores, retail, and Retail trade, this
section.
Drug and proprietary stores. See under Retail trade, this
section.
Dry cleaning. See Contract cleaning, this section.
Dyeing and finishing of textiles.
Industry Wage Survey, Textile Dyeing and Finishing,
Apri 1-May 1961, Bull. 1311 (1961); Winter 1965-66,
Bull. 1527 (1966).
Wage Structure: Textile Dyeing and Finishing, April 1956,
Rpt. 110 (1956).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Dyeing and Finishing of
Textiles, 1930, Bull. 537 (1931); 1932, Bull. 588 (1933).
Dyers. See Cleaners, dyers, and pressers, this section.
Eating and drinking places. (See also Hotels, motels, and res­
taurants, this section.)
Industry Wage Survey, Eating and Drinking Places, June
1961, Bull. 1329 (1962); June 1963, Bull. 1400 (1964).
Electric generating and distribution equipment.
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Electroplating and polishing industry.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
Wage Structure of Electroplating and Polishing Industry,
January 1945, Bull. 875 (1946). See also Bull. 952
(1949), entitled above.
Engineers, professional.
Employment and Earnings in the Engineering Profession,
1929 to 1934, Bull. 682 (1941).
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical,
and Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60, Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61, Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62, Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963, Bull. 1387 (1963).*
February-March 1964, Bull.1422 (1964).*
February-March 1965, Bull. 1469 (1965).*
February-March 1966, Bull. 1535 (1966).*
Explosives industry.
Average Hourly Earnings in the Explosives Industry, June
1944, Bull. 819 (1945).
Fabricated structural steel. See Iron and steel industry,
this section.
Factory workers. (See also Manufacturing and nonmanufac­
turing industries, specific industry, and Wartime, this sec­
tion.)
Factory Workers’ Earnings, May 1958, Bull. 1252 (1959).*
Factory Workers’ Earnings: Distribution by StraightTime Hourly Earnings, April 1954, Bull. 1179 (1955).*
Factory Workers’ Earnings in Selected Manufacturing In­
dustries, June 1959, Bull. 1275 (I960).*
Initial Report: Factory Workers’ Earnings, May 1958,
Rpt. 144 (1959).
Spendable Earnings of Factory Workers, 1941-43, Bull. 769
(1944).
Farm equipment dealers. See Retail trade, this section.
Farm workers. See Wartime, this section.
Federal employees. See White-collar workers, this section.

Wages and Hours
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Hat industries.
Earnings and Hours in the Hat Industries, 1939, Bull. 671
(1939).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Hawaii. (See also Labor and industrial conditions.)
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico,
and Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
Heating apparatus.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
History of wages.
History of Wages in the United States from Colonial
Times to 1928, Bull. 499 (1929);* with Supplement,
1929-33, Bull. 604 (1934).*
Hosiery and underwear manufacture.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery and Underwear
Industry-(ies):
1907 to 1914, Bull. 177 (1915).
1922, Bull. 328 (1923).
1907 to 1924, Bull. 376 (1925).
1907 to 1926, Bull. 452 (1927).
1907 to 1928, Bull. 504 (1929).
1932, Bull. 591 (1933).
Hosiery manufacture. (See also Wage chronologies, this sec­
tion.)
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas:
September 1948—January 1949, Bull. 969 (1949).
April 1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
January 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Hoisery, February 1962, Bull. 1349
(1963); September-October 1964, Bull. 1456 (1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Hosiery, November 1952, Rpt. 34 (1953).
Hospitals.
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in Hospitals:
Atlanta, Georgia, September 1956, Bull. 1210-11
(1957).*
Baltimore, Maryland, June 1956, Bull. 1210-4 (1957).*
Boston, Massachusetts, August 1956, Bull. 1210-6
(1957).*
Buffalo, New York, June 1956, Bull. 1210-3 (1957).*
Chicago, Illinois, August 1956, Bull. 1210-5 (1957).*
Cincinnati, Ohio, September 1956, Bull. 1210-9
(1957).*
Cleveland, Ohio, November 1956, Bull. 1210-7 (1957).*
Dallas, Texas, November 1956, Bull. 1210-8 (1957).*

146



Wages and Hours
Los Angeles-Long Beach, California, January 1957,
Bull. 1210-14 (1957).*
Memphis, Tennessee, December 1956, Bull. 1210-12
(1957).*
Mid-1960, Bull. 1294 (1961).*
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, March 1957, Bull.
1210-15 (1957).*
New York, New York, February 1957, Bull. 1210-16
(1957).*
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July 1956, Bull. 1210-10
(1957).*
Portland, Oregon, May and July 1956, Bull. 1210-2
(1957).*
St. Louis, Missouri, June 1956, Bull. 1210-1 (1957).*
San Francisco, California, November 1956, Bull. 1210—
13 (1957).*
Industry Wage Survey, Hospitals, Mid-1963, Bull. 1409
(1964); July 1966, Bull. 1553 (1967).
Hotels, motels, and restaurants.
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Hotels and Motels, June 1961,
Bull. 1328 (1962); June 1963, Bull. 1406 (1964).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Hotels, March-June 1960, Rpt. 173
(1961).
Indexes.
Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Occupa­
tions and Metropolitan Areas, Bull. 1427 (1965).
Wage Indexes.- Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Oc­
cupations and Metropolitan Areas, 1907-66, Bull. 1505
(1966).
Industrial chemical industry. See Chemical industry, industrial,
this section.
Industrial machinery. See Machinery manufacture, this sec­
tion.
Iron and steel forging.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Iron and steel industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Basic Iron and Steel, March 1962,
Bull. 1358 (1963).
Industry Wage Survey, Fabricated Structural Steel, October-November 1964, Bull. 1463 (1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, May 15, 1929,
Bull. 515 (1930).
Wags Chronology: United States Steel Corp., 1937-48,
Bull. 970 (1949);* 1937-55, Rpt. 106 (1957); 1937-60,
Rpt. 186 (1961); 1937-64, Rpt. 186 (Revised 1965).
Wage Structure: Fabricated Structural Steel, March 1957,
Rpt. 123 (1958).

Wages and Hours
Wage Chronology: International Harvester Co., 1946-57,
Rpt. 162 (I960); 1946-61, Rpt. 202 (1961).
Wage Structure in the Machinery Industries, January 1945,
Bull. 861 (1946).
Wage Structure: Machinery Industries, Winter 1954-55,
Rpt. 93 (1955).
Wage Structure: Machinery Manufacturing:
Winter 1955-56, Rpt. 107 (1956).
Winter 1957-58, Rpt. 139 (1958).
Winter 1959-60, Rpt. 170 (1960).
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Wages and Related Benefits in the Machinery Industries,
Bull. 1160 (1954).
Women Production Workers in the Machinery Industries:
Employment Distribution; Earnings, Winter 1952-53,
Rpt. 98 (1956).
Manufacturing and nonmanufacturing industries. (See also
Factory workers, Southern States, specific industry, and
Wartime, this section.)
Composition of Payroll Hours in Manufacturing, 1958,
Bull. 1283 (1960).
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Com­
pensation Practices for Production and Related Work­
ers; Composition of Payroll Hours: Manufacturing Indus­
tries, 1962, Bull. 1428 (1965).*
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Re­
muneration Practices for Production Workers in Manu­
facturing Industries, 1959, Bull. 1308 (1962).
Employment and Earnings Statistics for States and Areas-.
1939-62, Bull. 1370 (1963).
1939-63, Bull. 1370-1 (1964).
1939-64, Bull. 1370-2 (1965).
1939-65, Bull. 1370-3 (1966).
1939-66, Bull. 1370-4 (1967).
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the United States:
1909-60, Bull. 1312 (1961).
1909-62, Bull. 1312-1 (1963).
1909-64, Bull. 1312-2 ’(1964).
1909-65, Bull. 1312-3 (1966).
1909-66, Bull. 1312-4 (1966).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, Bull. 1016 (1951); 1951 Supp.
(1953) ;* 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
History of Wages in the United States from Colonial Times
to 1928, Bull. 499 (1929);* with Supplement, 1929-33,
Bull. 604 (1934).*
Hours and Earnings in the United States, 1932-40, with
Supplement for 1941, Bull. 697 (1942).*
Industrial Survey in Selected Industries in the United
States, 1919, Bull. 265 (1920).*
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954) ; Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt. 60
(1954).
Meatcutters and butchers.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).

148



Wages and Hours
Meatpacking industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Meat Products; Part I: Meatpack­
ing; Part II: Prepared Meat Products, November 1963,
Bull. 1415 (1964).
Wage Chronology:
Armour and Co., 1941-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* 1941—
58, Rpt. 165 (I960); 1941-60, Rpt. 187 (1961);
1941-63, Rpt. 187 (Revised 1963); 1941-67, Bull.
1481 (1966).*
Swift and Co., 1942-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* 1942-63,
Rpt. 260 (Rev. 1964).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughtering and MeatPacking Industry:
1917, Bull. 252 (1919).
1921, Bull. 294 (1922).
1923, Bull. 373 (1925).
1925, Bull. 421 (1927).
1927, Bull. 472 (1929).
1929, Bull. 535 (1931).
1931, Bull. 576 (1933).
Men’s clothing industry. See under Clothing industry, this
section.
Metal trades. See General trades, this section, for union
scales, 1915-24.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Metalliferous mining. See under Mining, this section.
Metalworking industries. See specific branch, this section.
Metropolitan areas. (See also Area Wage Survey, this section.)
Trends in Urban Wage Rates:
April-October 1944, Bull. 809 (1945).
October 1944 to April 1945, Bull. 846 (1945).
April to October 1945, Bull. 860 (1946).
April 1946, Bull. 891 (1946).
Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Occu­
pations and Metropolitan Areas, Bull. 1427 (1965).
Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Occu­
pations and Metropolitan Areas, 1907-66, Bull. 1505
(1966).
Milk industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Fluid Milk, September-October
1964, Bull. 1464 (1965).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
Wage Structure: Fluid Milk Industry, April—June 1960,
Rpt. 174 (1961).
Millinery workers. See Hat industries, this section.
Millwork.
(See also Furniture industry, this section.) For
the years 1915-24, see bulletins listed for those years
under General trades, this section.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Mining.
Anthracite and bituminous coal. (See also under Wage
chronologies, this section.)

Wages and Hours
Petroleum industry.
Earnings in Southwestern Petroleum Industry, April 1943,
Bull. 762 (1944).
Industry Wage Survey, Petroleum Refining, December 1965,
Bull. 1526 (1966).
Wage Chronology: Sinclair Oil Companies, 1941-63, Rpt.
225 (1964); 1941-64, Bull. 1447 (1965).*
Wage Structure: Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas Pro­
duction, May-June 1960, Rpt. 181 (1961).
Wage Structure: Petroleum Refining, July 1959, Rpt. 158
(1960).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Petroleum Industry, 1920,
Bull. 297 (1922).
Wages in Petroleum Drilling and Production in the South­
west, April 1944, Bull. 810 (1945).
Pipelines industry.
Compensation Expenditures and Payroll Hours, Pipelines,
1964, Bull. 1528 (1967).
Plastics industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Miscellaneous Plastics Products,
June 1964, Bull. 1439 (1965).
Wage Structure: Miscellaneous Plastics Products, Jan­
uary—February 1960, Rpt. 168 (1960).
Police departments. See Municipal employees, this section.
Portland cement. See Cement industry, this section.
Pottery industry.
Wages, Hours, arid Productivity in the Pottery Industry,
1925, Bull. 412 (1926).
Printing and publishing.
Earnings and Hours in Book and Job Printing, January
1942, Bull. 726 (1943).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours in the Printing Trades:
May 15, 1936, Bull. 631 (1937).*
May 15, 1937, Bull. 655 (1938).*
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, May 1, 1915May 15, 1933. See General trades, this section.
Union Wages and Hours in the Printing Trades:
June 1, 1942, Bull. 739 (1943).*
July 1, 1943, Bull. 781 (1944).*
July 1, 1944, Bull. 820 (1945).*
July 1, 1945, Bull. 872 (1946).*
July 1, 1946, Bull. 912 (1947).*
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Industry:
January 2, 1948 and July 1, 1949, Bull. 979 (1950).*
July 1, 1950, Bull. 1018 (1951).*
July 1, 1951, Bull. 1062 (1952).*
July 1, 1952, Bull. 1134 (1953).*
July 1, 1953, Bull. 1155 (1954).*
July 1, 1954, Bull. 1176 (1955).*
July 1, 1955, Bull. 1194 (1956).*
July 1, 1956, Bull. 1207 (1957).*
July 1, 1957, Bull. 1228 (1958).*
July 1, 1958, Bull. 1247 (1959).*
July 1, 1959, Bull. 1271 (I960).*
July 1, 1960, Bull. 1292 (1961).*
July 1, 1961, Bull. 1315 (1962).*
July 1, 1962, Bull. 1357 (1963).*
July 1, 1963, Bull. 1399 (1964).*
July 1, 1964, Bull. 1434 (1965).*
July 1, 1965, Bull. 1489 (1966).*
July 1, 1966, Bull. 1549 (1967).*

150



Wages and Hours
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in the Print­
ing Trades:
June 1, 1939, Bull. 675 (1940).*
June 1, 1941, Bull. 708 (1942).*
Professionals.
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical,
and Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60,Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61,Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62,Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963,
Bull.1387(1963).*
February-March 1964,
Bull.1422(1964).*
February-March 1965,
Bull.1469(1965).*
February-March 1966,
Bull.1535(1966).*
Puerto Rico.
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico,
and Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
Radio (including phonograph) manufacture.
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Railroads.
Pennsylvania! Railroad Wage Data, Bull. 514 (1930).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-28, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Chronology: Railroads— Nonoperating Employees,
1920-62, Rpt. 208 (1963).
Rayon industry.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April
1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950); January
1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Wage Chronology: American Viscose, 1945-63, Rpt. 277
(1964).
Wages and Hours in Rayon and Other Synthetic Yarn
Manufacturing, 1930, Bull. 546 (1932).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Rayon and Other Synthetic
Yarn Manufacturing, 1932, Bull. 587 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Manufacture of Silk and
Rayon Goods, 1931, Bull. 568 (1932).
Wages in the Rayon Industry, May 1944, Bull. 806 (1945).
Ready-to-wear, women’s stores. See Stores, retail, this section.
Reconversion period.
Workers’ Experiences During First Phase of Reconversion,
Bull. 876 (1946).
Restaurant workers. See Hotels, motels, and restaurants, this
section.
Retail trade.
Employee Earnings in Retail Trade:
Apparel and Accessories Stores, Bull. 1220-5 (1957),
1338-5 (1962), and 1380-5 (1964).
Automotive Dealers and Gasoline Service Stations,
Bulls. 1220-4 (1957), 1338-4 (1963), and 1380-4
(1964).
Building Materials and Farm Equipment Dealers, Bulls.
1220-1 (1957), 1338-1 (1962), and 1380-1 (1964).
Drug Stores and Proprietary Stores, Bull. 1220-7
(1957).

Wages and Hours
Wages and Hours cif Labor in the Cotton, Woolen, and Silk
Industries, 1907 to 1914, Bull. 190 (1916).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Manufacture of Silk and
Rayon Goods, 1931, Bull. 568 (1932).
Slaughtering industry. See Meatpacking industry, this section.
Small-arms industry.
Wage Structure-Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Soft drink establishments. See Bottling-house workmen, and
Brewery workers, this section.
Southern States.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Eight Metropolitan Areas
of the South, June 1965, Bull. 1533 (1966).
Employee Earnings and Hours in Nonmetropolitan Areas of
the South and North Central Regions, June 1965, Bull.
1552 (1967).
Employee Earnings in Nonmetropolitan Areas of the South
and North Central Regions, June 1962, Bull. 1416 (1964).
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1917).*
Wages in Nonmetropolitan Areas, South and North Central
Regions, October 1960, Rpt. 190 (1961).
Stamped and pressed metal products.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt.
60 (1954).
Statistics.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for States and Areas:
1939-62, Bull. 1370 (1963).
1939-63, Bull. 1370-1 (1964).
1939-64, Bull. 1370-2 (1965).
1939-65, Bull. 1370-3 (1966).
1939-66, Bull. 1370-4 (1967).
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the United States:
1909-60, Bulk 1312 (1961).
1909-62, Bull. 1312-1 (1963).
1909-64, Bull. 1312-2 (1964).
1909-65, Bull. 1312-3 (1966).
1909-66, Bull. 1312-4 (1966).
1909-67, Bull. 1312-5 (1967).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Steel industry. See Iron and steel industry, this section.
Stone workers. See Clay, stone, and glass industries, this
section.
Stores, retail. (See also Retail trade, this section.)
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, Jan­
uary 1950—January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Wages in Department and Clothing Stores, Large Cities,
Spring and Summer, 1943, Bull. 801 (1944).
Street laborers, unskilled. See Municipal employees, this sec­
tion.
Street-railway employees. See Transit industry— local, this sec­
tion.
Sugar industry.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cane-Sugar Refining Industry,
1930, Bull. 547 (1931).

152



Wages and Hours
Synthetic textiles and fibers.
Cotton and Synthetic Textiles, Wage Trends, 1950-53, Rpt.
50 (1954).
Industry Wage Survey, Synthetic Fibers, February-April
1966, Bull. 1540 (1967).
Industry Wage Survey, Synthetic Textiles, September 1965,
Bull. 1509 (1966).
Wage Chronology: American Viscose, 1945-63, Rpt. 277
(1964).
Wage Structure: Synthetic Fibers, October 1958, Rpt. 143
(1959).
Wage Structure: Synthetic Textiles, November 1954, Rpt.
87 (1955); August 1960, Rpt. 192 (1961).
Teachers, public schools. See Municipal employees, this sec­
tion.
Teamsters. For union scales, 1915-33, see General trades,
this section. For later bulletins, see Truckdrivers and help­
ers, this section.
Textiles. (See also specific branch of industry, this section.)
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-28, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Miscellaneous Textile Industries, October
1953, Rpt. 56 (1954).
Theatrical employment.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1918, Bull. 259 (1919).
May 15, 1919, Bull. 274 (1920).
May 15, 1920, Bull. 286 (1921).
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Tire industry.
Wage Chronology: Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. and
B.F. Goodrich Co. (Akron Plants), 1937-66, Bull. 1484
(1967).*
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Automobile Tire Industry,
1923, Bull. 358 (1924).
Tobacco industry.
Cigar manufacturing.
Industry Wage Survey, Cigar Manufacturing, April—May,
1961, Bull. 1317 (1962); April-May 1964, Bull. 1436
(1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Cigar Manufacturing, April 1955,
Rpt. 97 (1955).
Cigarette manufacturing.
Industry Wage Survey, Cigarette Manufacturing, JulyAugust 1965, Bull. 1472 (1965).
Wage Structure: Cigarette Manufacturing, May 1960,
Rpt. 167 (1960).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cigarette Manufac­
turing Industry, 1930, Bull. 532 (1931).

Wages and Hours
Federal Classification Act Employees, 1924-60, Rpt. 199
(1961); 1924-64, Bull. 1442 (1965).*
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. and B. F. Goodrich Co.
(Akron Plants), 1937-66, Bull. 1484 (1967).*
Ford Motor Co., 1941-55, Rpt. 99 (1956).
Franklin Assn, of Chicago, 1939-61, Rpt. 215 (1962).
Full-Fashioned Hosiery, 1941-48, Bull. 970 (1949).*
General Motors Corp., 1939-49, Bull. 970-2 (1949);*
1939-55, Rpt. 164 (I960); 1939-60, Rpt. 185 (1961);
1939-63, Rpt. 185 (Revised 1964); and 1939-66, Bull.
1532 (1966).*
International Harvester Co., 1946-57, Rpt. 162 (I960); and
1946-61, Rpt. 202 (1961).
International Paper Co., Southern Kraft Division, 1937-67,
Bull. 1534 (1967).*
International Shoe Co., 1945-64, Rpt. 211 (1963); and
1945-66, Bull. 1479 (1966).*
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. (California Company), 1937-64,
Rpt. 231 (1964).
Lockheed—California Co. (A Division of Lockheed Aircraft
Corp.), 1937-67, Bull. 1522 (1967).*
Martin-Marietta Corp. (Baltimore Plant), 1944-61, Rpt.
232 (1963); arid 1944-64, Bull. 1449 (1965).*
Massachusetts Shoe Manufacturing, 1945-64, Rpt. 209
(1964) ; and 1945-66, Bull. 1471 (1966).*
New York Laundries, 1945-64, Bull. 1453 (1965).*
North American Aviation, 1941-57, Rpt. 163 (I960); and
1941-64, Rpt. 203 (1965).
North Atlantic Longshoring, 1934-61, Rpt. 234 (1962).
Northern Cotton Textiles Assns., 1943-48, Bull. 970
(1949).* See also Berkshire Hathaway Inc., this list­
ing.
Pacific Coast Shipbuilding, 1941-64, Rpt. 254 (1965).
Pacific Gas and Electric Co., 1943-66, Bull. 1499 (1966).*
Pacific Longshore Industry, 1934-65, Bull. 1491 (1966).*
Railroads-Nonoperating Employees, 1920-62, Rpt. 208
(1963).
Sinclair Oil Companies, 1941-63, Rpt. 225 (1964); and
1941-64, Bull. 1447 (1965).*
Swift and Co., 1942-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* and 1942-63,
Rpt. 260 (Revised 1964).
The Anaconda Co, 1941-58, Rpt. 197 (1961).
The Boeing Co. (Washington Plants), 1936-64, Rpt. 204
(1965) .
United States Steel Corp, 1937-48, Bull. 970 (1940);*
1937-55, Rpt. 106 (1957); and 1937-60, Rpt. 186
(1961); 1937-64, Rpt. 186 (Revised 1965).
Western Greyhound Lines, 1945-63, Rpt. 245 (1964).
Western Union Telegraph Co, 1945-53, Rpt. 160 (I960);
1943-63, Rpt. 160 (Revised 1964); and 1943-67, Bull.
1545 (1967).*
Wage differentials. (See also Shift differentials and opera­
tions.)
Intercity Variations in Wage Levels, Bull. 793 (1944).
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Wage Differences and Establishment Practices, Bull. 1173
(1955).
Wage Differentials and Rate Structures Among 40 Labor
Markets, 1951-52, Bull. 1135 (1953).

154



Wages and Hours
Wages and related benefits by major labor markets. See
Area Wage Surveys— Labor markets, major, this section.
Waiters.
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1918, Bull. 259 (1919).
May 15, 1919, Bull. 274 (1920).
May 15, 1920, Bull. 286 (1921).
Water transportation.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
White-collar workers. (See also Bank employees, Area Wage
Surveys, and Office workers, this section. See also specific
profession.)
Federal White-Collar Workers, Bull. 1117 (1953).
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical,
and Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60, Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61, Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62, Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963,
Bull.
1387(1963).*
February-March 1964,
Bull.
1422(1964).*
February-March 1965,
Bull.
1469(1965).*
February-March 1966,
Bull.
1535(1966).*
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico,
and Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
Salary Trends: Federal Classified Employees, 1939—
60 and July 1960-July 1961 (supp.), Rpt. 200 (1961);
and 1939-64, Bull. 1444 (1965).
Trend of Earnings Among White-Collar Workers During the
War, Bull. 783 (1944).
Wage Chronology: Federal Classification Act Employees,
1924-60, Rpt. 199 (1961); 1924-64, Bull. 1442 (1965).*
Wholesale trade. (See also Groceries, wholesale, this section.)
Earnings in Wholesale Trade, June 1958, Bull. 1253 (1959).
Women’s clothing industry. See Clothing industry, this
section.
Woodworkers. (See also Furniture industry, and Millwork, this
section.)
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wool textiles.
Industry Wage Survey, Wool Textiles, June 1962, Bull. 1372
(1963); and November 1966, Bull. 1551 (1967).
Wage Structure: Wool Textiles, September 1957, Rpt. 134
(1958).
Woolen and worsted goods manufacturing.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April
1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950); and Janu­
ary 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cotton, Woolen, and
Silk Industries, 1907 to 1914, Bull. 190 (1916).

Workers’ Representation, Foreign
Workers’ representation, foreign countries. See Labor conditions
and industrial relations, foreign countries.
Working conditions. See Child labor; Collective bargaining, by
industry or occupation; Employment outlook; Hygiene, industrial;
Labor and industrial conditions— Hawaii; Legislation; Munition
factories, Great Britain, World War I; Shipbuilding and repair;
U.S.S.R.; Wages and hours— specific industry or occupation; and
Women workers.
Working life, length and pattern of. (See also Labor supply.)
Tables of Working Life for Women, 1950, Bull. 1204 (1957).*
Tables of Working Life, Length of Working Life for Men, Bull.
1001 (1950).*
Workmen’s compensation. (See also Accidents; Conventions, meet­
ings, etc.,— Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions.)
Administration.
Problems of Workmen’s Compensation Administration in
the United States and Canada, Bull. 672 (1940).*
Workmen’s Compensation in the United States, Bull. 1149
(1954). See also Bull. 301, entitled below, and Legis­
lation, this section.
Court decisions. See Court decisions affecting labor.
Insurance systems.
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Insurance and
Administration, Bull. 301 (1922).
Lead poisoning.
Deaths from Lead Poisoning, 1925-1927, Bull. 488 (1929).
Legislation. (See also Administration, this section; and Legis­
lation— Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws.)
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the
United States and Canada up to January 1, 1920, Bull.
275 (1920).
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the
United States as of January 1, 1925, Bull. 379 (1925).
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the
United States up to December 31, 1917, Bull. 240
(1918).
Compensation Legislation of 1914 and 1915, Bull. 185
(1915).
Labor Legislation of 1916, Bull. 213 (1917).
Occupational-Disease Legislation in the United States,
1936, Bulls. 625 (1937), and 652 (1938).
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including Workmen’s Com­
pensation Legislation, Bull. 654 (1938).
Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the United States and
Foreign Countries, Bull. 203 (1917).
Workmen's Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada, Bull. 272 (1921).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada, 1920-1922, Bull. 332 (1923).
Workmen's Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada as of July 1, 1926, Bull. 423 (1926).

Yugoslavia
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada as of January 1, 1929, Bull. 496 (1929).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Foreign Countries, 1917 and 1918, Bull. 243 (1918).
Seamen.
Settlement for Accidents to American Seamen, Bull. 466
(1928).
Workmen’s Compensation and the Protection of Seamen,
Bull. 869 (1946).
Statistics. See Accidents— Methods.
Women and children.
Effect of Workmen’s Compensation Laws in Diminishing the
Necessity of Industrial Employment of Women and Chil­
dren, Bull. 217 (1918).
Workmen’s compensation, foreign countries. (See also specific
country.)
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Insurance and Ad­
ministration, Bull. 301 (1922). (British Columbia and On­
tario.)
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the United
States and Canada, up to January 1, 1920, Bull. 275 (1920).
Problems of Workmen’s Compensation Administration in the
United States and Canada, Bull. 672 (1940).*
Workmen’s Compensation and the Protection of Seamen, Bull.
869 (1946).
Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the United States and For­
eign Countries, Bull. 203 (1917).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the Latin American
Countries, Bull. 529 (1930).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada, Bull. 272 (1921).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada, 1920-1922, Bull. 332 (1923).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada as of July 1, 1926, Bull. 423 (1926).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada as of January 1, 1929, Bull. 496 (1929).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Foreign Countries, 1917 and 1918, Bull. 243 (1918).
Worksharing. See Collective bargaining, general— Layoff.
Workweek, length of. See specific industry or occupation under
Employment outlook; and Wages and hours.

Y
Yugoslavia.
Labor Law and Practice in Yugoslavia, Rpt. 250 (1963).

☆ U.S. GOVERNMENT PRINTING OFFICE: 1968 0 - 2 9 0 -6 4 2

156



Wages and Hours
Chattanooga, Tennessee:
September 1960, Bull. 1285-14 (1960).
September 1961, Bull. 1303-4 (1961).
September 1962, Bull. 1345-8 (1962).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-5 (1963).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-10 (1964).
September 1965, Bull. 1465-7 (1965).
September 1966, Bull. 1530-8 (1966).
Chicago, Illinois:
April 1951, Bull. 1034 (1951).
March 1952, Bull. 1105 (1952).
March 1953, Bull. 1116-15 (1953).
March 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
April 1955, Bull. 1171-14 (1955).
April 1956, Bull. 1188-15 (1956).
April 1957, Bull. 1202-15 (1957).
April 1958, Bull. 1224-14 (1958).
April 1959, Bull. 1240-18 (1959).
April 1960, Bull. 1265-45 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-66 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-64 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-65 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-66 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-72 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-68 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-73 (1967).
Cincinnati, Ohio:
February 1952, Bull. 1096 (1952).
February 1960, Bull. 1265-31 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-59 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-55 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-54 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-58 (1964).
March 1965, Bull. 1430-55 (1965).
March 1966, Bull. 1465-57 (1966).
March 1967, Bull. 1530-56 (1967).
Cleveland, Ohio:
October 1951, Bull. 1056 (1952).
October 1952, Bull. 1116-3 (1953).
October 1954, Bull. 1172-2 (1955).
October 1956, Bull. 1202-3 (1957).
June 1958, Bull. 1224-19 (1958).
September 1959, Bull. 1265-1 (1959).
September 1960, Bull. 1285-11 (1960).
September 1961, Bull. 1303-13 (1962).
September 1962, Bull. 1345-14 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-11 (1964).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-13 (1964).
September 1965, Bull. 1465-8 (1965).
September 1966, Bull. 1530-13 (1966).
Columbus, Ohio:
April 1952, Bull. 1109 (1952).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-38 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-41 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-28 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-25 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-18 (1964).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-15 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-20 (1967).




Wages and Hours
Dallas, Texas:
June 1951, Bull. 1043 (1951).
August 1952, Bull. 1116-1 (1952).
September 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
September 1954, Bull. 1172-3 (1955).
October 1955, Bull. 1188-1 (1956).
October 1956, Bull. 1202-5 (1957).
October 1957, Bull. 1224^1 (1958).
October 1958, Bull. 1240-5 (1959).
October 1959, Bull. 1265-3 (1959).
November 1960,Bull. 1285-21 (1961).
November 1961,Bull. 1303-20 (1962).
November 1962,Bull. 1345-21 (1963).
November 1963,Bull. 1385-15 (1964).
November 1964,Bull. 1430-25 (1965).
November 1965,Bull. 1465-24 (1966).
November 1966,Bull. 1530-25 (1967).
Davenport-Rock Island—Moline, Iowa:
October 1960, Bull. 1285-16 (1961).
October 1961, Bull. 1303-17 (1962).
October 1962, Bull. 1345-18 (1963).
October 1963, Bull. 1385-12 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-20 (1964).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-16 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-19 (1967).
Dayton, Ohio:
June 1951, Bull. 1041 (1951).
December 1959, Bull. 1265-9 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-41 (1961).
January 1952, Bull. 1303-39 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-35 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-40 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-31 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-39 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-45 (1967).
Denver, Colorado:
November 1949, Bull. 985 (1950).
January 1951, Bull. 1029 (1951).
November 1951, Bull 1066 (1952).
November 1952, Bull. 1116-8 (1953).
December 1953, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
December 1954, Bull. 1172-6 (1955).
December 1955, Bull. 1188-6 (1956).
December 1957, Bull. 1224-7 (1958).
December 1958, Bull. 1240-7 (1959).
December 1959, Bull. 1265-11 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-27 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-33 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-32 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-34 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-32 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-33 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-32 (1967).
Des Moines, Iowa:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-30 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-43 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-42 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345^2 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-44 (1964).

135

Wages and Hours
February 1965, Bull. 1430-47 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-40 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-44 (1967).
Detroit, Michigan:
December 1951, Bull. 1086 (1952).
October 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
October 1955, Bull. 1188-2 (1956).
January 1959, Bull. 1240-12 (1959).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-25 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-37 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-38 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-47 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-43 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-43 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-45 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-48 (1967).
Fort Worth, Texas:
November 1959, Bull. 1265-13 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-23 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-19 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-27 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-19 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-24 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-26 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-28 (1967).
Green Bay, Wisconsin:
August 1960, Bull. 1285-2 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-2 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-3 (1962).
August 1963, Bull. 1385-4 (1963).
August 1964, Bull. 1430-3 (1964).
August 1965, Bull. 1465-4 (1965).
August 1966, Bull. 1530-5 (1966).
Greenville, South Carolina:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-46 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-63 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-70 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-68 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-68 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-69 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-74 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-66 (1967).
Hartford, Connecticut:
October 1951, Bull. 1059 (1952).
Houston, Texas:
January 1952, Bull. 1084 (1952).
June 1960, Bull. 1265-56 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-78 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-79 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-82 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-81 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-82 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-85 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-85 (1967).
Indianapolis, Indiana:
December 1951, Bull.^1075 (1952).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-22 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-28 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-27 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-26 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-30 (1964).

136




Wages and Hours
December 1964, Bull. 1430-30 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-31 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-37 (1967).
Jackson, Mississippi:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-26 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-42 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-44 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-43 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-41 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-44 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-44 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-43 (1967).
Jacksonville, Florida:
May 1952, Bull. 1110 (1952).
December 1959, Bull. 1265-14 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-30 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-21 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-39 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-32 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-38 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-41 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-39 (1967).
Kansas City, Missouri:
October 1951, Bull. 1064 (1952).
October 1952, Bull. 1116-4 (1953).
December 1956, Bull. 1202-6 (1957).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-23 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-18 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-24 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-22 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-26 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-26 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-27 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-26 (1967).
Labor markets, major. (For more detailed information,
see specific city under above heading, this section.)
1951- 52 (summary report). Wages and Related Bene­
fits, 40 Labor Markets, 1951-1952, Bull. 1113
(1952).
1952- 53 (summaries and special analyses). Wages
and Related Benefits, 20 Labor Markets, 1952—
1953, Bull. 1116 (1953).
1953- 54. Wages and Related Benefits— Major Labor
Markets, 1953-1954:
Pt. I, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
Pt. II, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
Pt. Ill, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
1954- 55 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 17 Labor Markets, 1954-55, Bull.
1172 (1956).
1955- 56 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 17 Labor Markets, 1955-56, Bull.
1188 (1956).
1956- 57 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 17 Labor Markets, 1956-57, Bull.
1202 (1957).
1957- 58 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 19 Labor Markets, 1957-58, Bull.
1224-20 (1959).
1958- 59 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 20 Labor Markets, 1958-59, Bull.
1240-22 (1959).

Wages and Hours
1959- 60 (summaries and analyses). Wages and Re­
lated Benefits, 60 Labor Markets, 1959-60, Bull.
1265-62 (1961).
1960- 61. Wages and Related Benefits. 82 Labor
Markets, 1960-61, Bull. 1285-83 (1962). Wages
and Related Benefits, Metrooolitan Areas. United
States and Regional Summaries, 1960-61, Bull.
1285-84 (1962).
1961- 62. Wages and Related Benefits. Part I: 82
Labor Markets, 1961-62, Bull. 1303-83 (1962).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: Metrooolitan
Areas, United States and Regional Summaries,
1961- 62, Bull. 1303-83 (1962).
1962- 63. Wages and Related Benefits. Part I: 82
Labor Markets, 1962-63, Bull. 1345-83 (1964).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: Metrooolitan
Areas, United States and Regional Summaries,
1962- 63, Bull. 1345-83 (1964).
1963- 64. Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 80
Metropolitan Areas, 1963-64, Bull. 1385-82 (1965).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: Metropolitan
Areas, United States and Regional Summaries,
1963- 64, Bull. 1385-82 (1965).
1964- 65. Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 80
Metropolitan Areas, 1964-65, Bull. 1430-83 (1965).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: Metropolitan
Areas, United States and Regional Summaries,
1964- 65, Bull. 1430-83 (1966).
1965- 66. Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 84
Metropolitan Areas, 1965-66, Bull. 1465-86 (1966).
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: Metropolitan
Areas, United States and Regional Summaries, Bull.
1465-86 (1967).
1966- 67. Wages and Related Benefits, Part I: 85
Metropolitan Areas, 1966-67, Bull. 1530-87.
Wages and Related Benefits, Part II: Metropolitan
Areas, United States and Regional Summaries, Bull.
1530-87.*
Lawrence, Massachusetts:
February 1956, Bull. 1188-11 (1956).
May 1959, Bull. 1240-21 (1959).
Lawrence—Haverhill, Massachusetts:
June 1960,Bull. 1265-57 (1960).
June 1961,Bull. 1285-79 (1961).
June 1962,Bull. 1303-76 (1962).
June 1963,Bull. 1345-77 (1963).
June 1964,Bull. 1385-76 (1964).
June 1965,Bull. 1430-75 (1965).
June 1966,Bull. 1465-80 (1966).
June 1967,Bull. 1530-77 (1967).
Little Rock-North Little Rock, Arkansas:
August 1960, Bull. 1285-6 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-1 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-7 (1962).
August 1963, Bull. 1385-3 (1963).
August 1964, Bull. 1430-7 (1964).
August 1965, Bull. 1465-6 (1965).
August 1966, Bull. 1530-1 (1966).
Los Angeles, California:
January 1952, Bull. 1094 (1952).
February 1953, Bull. 1116-14 (1953).



Wages and Hours
March 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
March 1955, Bull. 1172-12 (1955).
Los Angeles-Long Beach. California:
March 1956. Bull. 1188-13 (1956).
March 1957, Bull. 1202-11 (1957).
March 1958. Bull. 1224-13 (1958).
March 1959, Bull. 1240-15 (1959).
April 1960, Bull. 1265-35 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-52 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-53 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-62 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-59 (1964).
March 1965, Bull. 1430-57 (1965).
Los Angeles-Long Beach and Anaheim-Santa Ana-Garden
Grove, California:
March 1966, Bull. 1465-59 (1966).
March 1967, Bull. 1530-65 (1967).
Louisville, Kentucky:
May 1952, Bull. 1112 (1952).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-49 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-51 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-48 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-50 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-42 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-51 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-49 (1967).
Lubbock, Texas:
June 1960, Bull. 1265-51 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-67 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-74 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-72 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-75 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-73 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-79 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-75 (1967).
Manchester, New Hampshire:
August 1960, Bull. 1285-1 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-3 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-2 (1962).
August 1963, Bull. 1385-1 (1963).
August 1964, Bull. 143(M (1964).
August 1965, Bull. 1465-2 (1965).
August 1966, Bull. 1530-4 (1966).
Memphis, Tennessee:
November 1951, Bull. 1067 (1952).
January 1953, Bull. 1116-13 (1953).
January 1954, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
February 1955, Bull. 1172-9 (1955).
February 1956, Bull. 1188-12 (1956).
February 1957, Bull. 1202-13 (1957).
January 1958, Bull. 1224-9 (1958).
January 1959, Bull. 1240-10 (1959).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-19 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-35 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303^40 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-36 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-35 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-40 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465^)2 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530^0 (1967).

137

Wages and Hours
Miami, Florida:
December 1959, Bull. 1265-6 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-33 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-31 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-33 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-29 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-29 (1965).
December 1965, Bull 1465-30 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-31 (1967).
Midland and Odessa, Texas:
June 1966, Bull. 1465-84 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-78 (1967).
Milwaukee, Wisconsin:
March 1952, Bull. 1099 (1952).
April 1953, Bull. 1116-19 (1953).
April 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
November 1955, Bull. 1188-3 (1956).
May 1958, Bull. 1224-18 (1958).
April 1959, Bull. 1240-16 (1959).
April 1960, Bull. 1265-43 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-64 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-57 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-59 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-56 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-58 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-61 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-76 (1967).
Minneapolis—St. Paul, Minnesota:
November 1951, Bull. 1068 (1952).
November 1952, Bull. 1116-7 (1953).
November 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
November 1954, Bull. 1172-5 (1954).
December 1955, Bull. 1188-8 (1956).
March 1957, Bull. 1202-14 (1957).
January 1958, Bull. 1224-10 (1958).
January 1959, Bull. 1240-11 (1959).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-21 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-39 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-36 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-38 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-39 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-39 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-38 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-42 (1967).
Muskegon-Muskegon Heights, Michigan:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-55 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-69 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-68 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-69 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-71 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-68 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-72 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-72 (1967).
New Haven, Connecticut:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-41 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-46 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-34 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-37 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-37 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-34 (1965).

138



Wages and Hours
January 1966, Bull. 1465-37 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-41 (1967).
New Orleans, Louisiana:
December 1951, Bull. 1074 (1952).
November 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
November 1955, Bull. 1188-5 (1956).
February 1958, Bull. 1224-11 (1958).
February 1959, Bull. 1240-14 (1959).
February 1960, Bull. 1265-32 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-48 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-43 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-44 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-42 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-53 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-47 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-51 (1967).
New York, New York:
April 1951, Bull. 1037 (1951).
January 1952, Bull 1101 (1952).
February 1953, Bull. 1116-16 (1953).
February 1954, Bull. 1157-3 (1954).
March 1955, Bull. 1172-13 (1955).
April 1956, Bull. 1188-17 (1956).
April 1957, Bull. 1202-17 (1957).
April 1958, Bull. 1224-15 (1958).
April 1959, Bull. 1240-17 (1959).
April 1960, Bull. 1265-44 (1960).
April 1961, Bull. 1285-65 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-58 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-79 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-72 (1964).
April 1965, Bull. 1430-80 (1965).
April 1966, Bull. 1465-82 (1966).
April 1967, Bull. 1530-83 (1967).
Newark and Jersey City, New Jersey:
November 1951, Bull. 1081 (1952).
November 1952, Bull. 1116-11 (1953).
December 1953, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
December 1954, Bull. 1172-8 (1955).
December 1955, Bull. 1188-10 (1956).
December 1957, Bull. 1224-12 (1958).
December 1958, Bull. 1240-9 (1959).
February 1960, Bull. 1265-28 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-40 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-45 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-46 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-49 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430^15 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-50 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-55 (1967).
Norfolk-Portsmouth (Hampton Roads), Virginia:
February 1952, Bull. 1088 (1952).
Norfolk-Portsmouth and Newport News-Hampton, Virginia:
June 1961, Bull. 1285-82 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-75 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-75 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-77 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-77 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-77 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-82 (1967).

Wages and Hours
Oklahoma City, Oklahoma:
October 1951, Bull. 1070 (1952).
August 1960, Bull. 1285-3 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-5 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-6 (1962).
August 1963, Bull. 1385-2 (1963).
August 1964, Bull. 1430-5 (1964).
August 1965, Bull. 1465-5 (1965).
August 1966, Bull. 1530-6 (1966).
Omaha, Nebraska:
October 1960, Bull. 1285-13 (1960).
October 1961, Bull. 1303-14 (1962).
October 1962, Bull. 1345-12 (1963).
October 1963, Bull. 1385-14 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-17 (1964).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-13 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-18 (1966).
Paterson—Clifton—Passaic, New Jersey:
May 1960, Bull. 1265-50 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-74 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-71 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-76 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-62 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-71 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-76 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-67 (1967).
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania:
May 1950, Bull. 1008 (1950).
October 1951, Bull. 1060 (1952).
October 1952, Bull. 1116-5 (1953).
October 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
November 1954, Bull. 1172-4 (1955).
November 1955, Bull. 1188-4 (1956).
November 1956, Bull. 1202-7 (1957).
October 1957, Bull. 1224-6 (1958).
November 1958, Bull. 1240-8 (1959).
November 1959, Bull. 1265-16 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-24 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-25 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-31 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-31 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-28 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-35 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-35 (1967).
Phoenix, Arizona:
March 1952, Bull. 1103 (1952).
April 1960, Bull. 1265-42 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-55 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-54 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-57 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-54 (1964).
March 1965, Bull. 1430-56 (1965).
March 1966, Bull. 1465-62 (1966).
March 1967, Bull. 1530-59 (1967).
Pittsburgh, Pennsylvania:
November 1951, Bull. 1082 (1952).
December 1956, Bull. 1202-9 (1957).
December 1959, Bull. 1265-20 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-44 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-35 (1962).




Wages and Hours
January 1963, Bull. 1345-40 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1335-38 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-21 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465^16 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-46 (1967).
Portland, Maine:
November 1959, Bull. 1265-12 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-19 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-26 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-24 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-22 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-21 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-23 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-17 (1966).
Portland, Oregon:
June 1951, Bull. 1042 (1951).
September 1952, Bull. 1116-2 (1953).
September 1953, Bull. 1157-1 (1954).
April 1955, Bull. 1172-16 (1955).
April 1956, Bull. 1188-16 (1956).
April 1957, Bull. 1202-12 (1957).
April 1958, Bull. 1224-16 (1958).
April 1959, Bull. 1240-20 (1959).
May 1960, Bull. 1265-49 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-72 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-72 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-73 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-67 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-70 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-73 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-79 (1967).
Providence, Rhode Island:
December 1951, Bull. 1071 (1952).
December 1952, Bull. 1116-10 (1953).
March 1956, Bull. 1188-14 (1956).
March 1960, Bull. 1265-34 (1960).
Providence-Pawtucket, Rhode Island:
May 1961, Bull. 1285-70 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-66 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-70 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-65 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-67 (1965).
Providence-Pawtucket-Warwick, Rhode Island:
May 1966, Bull. 1465-65 (1966).
May 1957, Bull. 1530-70 (1967).
Raleigh, North Carolina:
September 1960, Bull. 1285-5 (1960).
September 1961, Bull. 1303-10 (1961).
September 1962, Bull. 1345-1 (1962).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-7 (1963).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-6 (1964).
September 1965, Bull. 1465-10 (1965).
September 1966, Bull. 1530-7 (1966).
Richmond, Virginia:
October 1951, Bull. 1058 (1952).
February 1960, Bull. 1265-24 (1960).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-26 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-22 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-19 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-23 (1964).
November 1964, Bull. 1430-19 (1964).

139

Wages and Hours
November 1965, Bull. 1465-28 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-23 (1967).
Rochester, New York:
January 1952, Bull. 1087 (1952).
Rockford, Illinois:
April 1960, Bull. 1265-47 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-68 (1961).
April 1962, Bull. 1303-69 (1962).
April 1963, Bull. 1345-55 (1963).
April 1964, Bull. 1385-60 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-63 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-66 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-68 (1967).
St. Louis, Missouri:
January 1952, Bull. 1095 (1952).
December 1952, Bull. 1116-12 (1953).
January 1954, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
February 1955, Bull. 1172-10 (1955).
February 1956, Bull. 1188-9 (1956).
November 1957, Bull. 1224-5 (1958).
October 1958, Bull. 1240-4 (1959).
October 1959, Bull. 1265-5 (1960).
October 1960, Bull. 1285-10 (1960).
October 1961, Bull. 1303-18 (1962).
October 1962, Bull. 1345-17 (1963).
October 1963, Bull. 1385-21 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-22 (1965).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-22 (1966).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-27 (1967).
Salt Lake City, Utah:
December 1951, Bull. 1069 (1952).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-32 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-32 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-25 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-28 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-33 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-32 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-33 (1967).
San Antonio, Texas:
May 1961, Bull. 1285-71 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-63 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-78 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-74 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-81 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-78 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-84 (1967).
San Bernadino—Riverside—Ontario, California:
November 1959, Bull. 1265-15 (1960).
September 1960, Bull. 1285-4 (1960).
September 1961, Bull. 1303-11 (1961).
September 1962, Bull. 1345-9 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-9 (1963).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-8 (1964).
September 1965, Bull. 1465-20 (1966).
September 1966, Bull. 1530-14 (1966).
San Diego, California:
September 1962, Bull. 1345-10 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-13 (1964).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-12 (1964).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-21 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-24 (1967).
140



Wages and Hours
San Francisco-Oakland, California:
January 1950, Bull. 996 (1950).
January 1951, Bull. 1028 (1951).
January 1952, Bull. 1076 (1952).
January 1953, Bull. 1116-9 (1953).
January 1954, Bull. 1157-2 (1954).
January 1955, Bull. 1172-7 (1955).
January 1956, Bull. 1188-7 (1956).
January 1957, Bull. 1202-8 (1957).
January 1958, Bull. 1224-8 (1958).
January 1959, Bull. 1240-13 (1959).
January 1960, Bull. 1265-17 (1960).
January 1961, Bull. 1285-36 (1961).
January 1962, Bull. 1303-37 (1962).
January 1963, Bull. 1345-34 (1963).
January 1964, Bull. 1385-36 (1964).
January 1965, Bull. 1430-37 (1965).
January 1966, Bull. 1465-43 (1966).
January 1967, Bull. 1530-36 (1967).
San Jose, California.
September 1965, Bull. 1465-19 (1966).
September 1966, Bull. 1530-10 (1966).
Savannah, Georgia:
June 1960, Bull. 1265-53 (1960).
May 1961, Bull. 1285-76 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-80 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-60 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-69 (1964).
May 1965, Bull. 1430-64 (1965).
May 1966, Bull. 1465-69 (1966).
May 1967, Bull. 1530-69 (1967).
Scranton, Pennsylvania:
December 1951, Bull. 1078 (1952).
August 1960, Bull. 1285-8 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-8 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-5 (1962).
August 1963, Bull. 1385-8 (1963).
August 1964, Bull. 1430-2 (1964).
August 1965, Bull. 1465-3 (1965).
August 1966, Bull. 1530-3 (1966).
Seattle, Washington:
September 1951, Bull. 1057 (1952).
August 1956, Bull. 1202-1 (1956).
August 1957, Bull. 1224-1 (1957).
August 1958, Bull. 1240-1 (1958).
August 1959, Bull. 1265-2 (1959).
August 1960, Bull. 1285-7 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-6 (1961).
August 1962, Bull. 1345-4 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-10 (1963).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-9 (1964).
Seattle-Everett, Washington:
October 1965,Bull. 1465-9 (1965).
October 1966,Bull. 1530-22 (1967).
Sioux Falls, South Dakota:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-29 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-17 (1960).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-15 (1962).
October 1962,Bull. 1345-13 (1963).
October 1963,Bull. 1385-20 (1964).
October 1964,Bull. 1430-15 (1964).

Wages and Hours

October 1965, Bull. 1465-17 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-12 (1966).
South Bend, Indiana:
April 1960, Bull. 1265-38 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-54 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-52 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-52 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-51 (1964).
March 1965, Bull. 1430-54 (1965).
March 1966, Bull. 1465-55 (1966).
March 1967, Bull. 1530-57 (1967).
Spokane, Washington:
May 1961, Bull. 1285-77 (1961).
May 1962, Bull. 1303-73 (1962).
May 1963, Bull. 1345-66 (1963).
May 1964, Bull. 1385-78 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-79 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-75 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-80 (1967).
Tampa-St. Petersburg, Florida:
September 1966, Bull. 1530-9 (1966).
Toledo, Ohio:
March 1961, Bull. 1285-50 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-47 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-51 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385-46 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-50 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-49 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-50 (1967).
Trenton, New Jersey:
March 1952. Bull. 1104 (1952).
December 1960, Bull. 1285-25 (1961).
December 1961, Bull. 1303-30 (1962).
December 1962, Bull. 1345-29 (1963).
December 1963, Bull. 1385-27 (1964).
December 1964, Bull. 1430-35 (1965).
December 1965, Bull. 1465-34 (1966).
December 1966, Bull. 1530-34 (1967).
Washington, D.C.:
December 1959, Bull. 1265-18 (1960).
November 1960, Bull. 1285-22 (1961).
October 1961, Bull. 1303-12 (1962).
October 1962, Bull. 1345-16 (1963).
October 1963, Bull. 1385-17 (1964).
October 1964, Bull. 1430-14 (1964).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-14 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-15 (1966).
Waterbury, Connecticut:
March 1960, Bull. 1265-36 (1960).
March 1961, Bull. 1285-56 (1961).
March 1962, Bull. 1303-48 (1962).
March 1963, Bull. 1345-49 (1963).
March 1964, Bull. 1385-48 (1964).
March 1965, Bull. 1430-49 (1965).
March 1966, Bull. 1465-52 (1966).
March 1967, Bull. 1530-54 (1967).
Waterloo, Iowa:
November 1960, Bull. 1285-20 (1961).
November 1961, Bull. 1303-23 (1962).
November 1962, Bull. 1345-20 (1963).
November 1963, Bull. 1385-18 (1964).



Wages and Hours

November 1964, Bull. 1430-23 (1965).
November 1965, Bull. 1465-18 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-21 (1967).
Wichita, Kansas:
September 1960, Bull. 1285-9 (1960).
September 1961, Bull. 1303-7 (1961).
October 1962. Bull. 1345-11 (1963).
September 1963, Bull. 1385-6 (1963).
September 1964, Bull. 1430-11 (1964).
October 1965, Bull. 1465-11 (1965).
October 1966, Bull. 1530-11 (1966).
Wilmington, Delaware:
September 1960, Bull. 1285-12 (1960).
August 1961, Bull. 1303-9 (1961).
Worcester, Massachusetts:
January 1952, Bull. 1077 (1952).
June 1960, Bull. 1265-52 (1960).
June 1961, Bull. 1285-80 (1961).
June 1962, Bull. 1303-82 (1962).
June 1963, Bull. 1345-80 (1963).
June 1964, Bull. 1385-79 (1964).
June 1965, Bull. 1430-76 (1965).
June 1966, Bull. 1465-83 (1966).
June 1967, Bull. 1530-81 (1967).
York, Pennsylvania:
February 1960, Bull. 1265-27 (1960).
February 1961, Bull. 1285-45 (1961).
February 1962, Bull. 1303-49 (1962).
February 1963, Bull. 1345-41 (1963).
February 1964, Bull. 1385^15 (1964).
February 1965, Bull. 1430-46 (1965).
February 1966, Bull. 1465-40 (1966).
February 1967, Bull. 1530-47 (1967).
Youngstown-Warren, Ohio:
November 1965, Bull. 1465-25 (1966).
November 1966, Bull. 1530-29 (1967).
Automobile and other motor vehicle (and parts) manufacturing.
Industry Wage Survey, Part I: Motor Vehicles, Part II:
Motor Vehicle Parts, April 1963, Bull. 1393 (1964).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Chronology:
Carolina Coach Co., 1947-63, Rpt. 259 (1963).
Chrysler Corp, 1939-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* 1939-53,
Rpt. 161 (I960); 1939-60, Rpt. 198 (1961); 193964, Rpt. 198 (Revised 1964); and 1939-66, Bull.
1515 (1967).*
Ford Motor Co., 1941-55, Rpt. 99 (1956).
General Motors Corp., 1939-49, Bull. 970-2 (1949);*
1939-55, Rpt. 164 (I960); 1939-60, Rpt. 185
(1961); 1939— 63, Rpt. 185 (Revised 1964); and
1939-66, Bull. 1532 (1966).*
Wage Structure of the Motor Vehicle Industry, Bull. 706
(1942).*
Wage Structure— Motor Vehicles and Parts, 1950, BuJI.
1015 (1951).
Wage Structure: Part I— Motor Vehicles, Part II— Motor
Vehicle Parts, July 1957, Rpt. 128 (1958).
141

Wages and Hours

Wages and Hours of Labor in the Automobile Industry,
1922, Bull. 348 (1923).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Motor Vehicle Industry,
1925, Bull. 438 (1927); 1928, Bull. 502 (1930).
Automobile repair garages and shops.
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947- September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Auto Dealer Repair Shops, AugustOctober 1964, Bull. 1452 (1965).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt.
60 (1954).
Wage Structure: Auto Dealer Repair Shops, Summer 1958,
Rpt. 141 (1959).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Gasoline Filling Stations
and Motor-Vehicle Repair Garages, 1931, Bull. 578
(1933). See also Bulls. 540 (1931) and 566 (1932).
Automotive dealers. See under Retail trade, this section.
Baking industry. (See also General trades, this section, for
union scales of wages and hours of labor, 1915-1933.)
Union Wages and Hours in the Baking Industry:
June 1, 1942, Bull. 735 (1943).
July 1, 1943, Bull. 778 (1944).
July 1, 1944, Bull. 816 (1945).
July 1, 1945, Bull. 871 (1946).
July 1, 1946, Bull. 914 (1948).
July 1, 1947, Bull, 936 (1948).
July 1, 1948, Bull. 954 (1949).
July 1, 1949, Bull. 977 (1950).
July 1, 1950, Bull. 1014 (1951).
July 1, 1951, Bull. 1053 (1952).
July 1, 1952, Bull. 1123 (1953).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Bakery Industry— Bread
and Cake Departments, 1931, Bull. 580 (1933).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in the Bread-Baking
Industry, 1934, Bull. 623 (1937).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in Union Bakeries,
June 1, 1939, Bull. 673 (1940).
Banking industry.
Earnings of Bank Employees, Spring and Summer of 1943,
Bull. 774 (1944).
Industry Wage Survey, Banking, November-December
1964, Bull. 1466 (1965).
Wage Structure: Banking Industry, Mid—1960, Rpt. 179
(1961).
Barbers.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1927, Bull. 457 (1928).
May 15, 1928, Bull. 482 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Bituminous coal mining. See under Mining, and under Wage
chronologies, this section.
Boilershop products industry.
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
142



Wages and Hours

Boot and shoe industry. See Shoe industry, this section.
Bottling-house workmen, and Brewery workers.
Union Scales of Wases and Hours of Labor:
May 1, 1915, Bull. 194 (1916).
May 15, 1916, Bull. 214 (1917).
May 15. 1917, Bull. 245 (1919).
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929. Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Brass manufacturing.
Wage Chronology: The Anaconda Co., 1941-58, Rpt. 197
(1961).
Brick industry.
Productivity Cost in Common-Brick Industry, Bull. 356
(1924).
Building materials and farm equipment dealers. See under Re­
tail trade, this section.
Building trades. (See also General trades, this section, for
union scales of wages and hours of labor, 1915-33.)
Union Wages and Hours: Building Trades.
May 15, 1936, Bull. 626 (1937).*
May 15, 1937, Bull. 657 (1938).*
June 1, 1939, Bull. 674 (1940).*
June 1, 1941, Bull. 680 (1942).*
July 1, 1912, Bull. 730 (1943).*
July 1, 1943. Bull. 767 (1944).*
July 1, 1944, Bull. 815 (1945).*
July 1, 1945, Bull. 862 (1946).*
July 1, 1916, Bull. 910 (1947).*
July 1, 1947, Bull. 930 (1948).*
July 1, 1948, Bull. 951 (1919).*
July 1, 1949, Bull. 976 (1950).*
July 1, 1950, Bull. 1011 (1951).*
July 1, 1951, Bull. 1051 (1952).*
July 1, 1952, Bull. 1124 (1953).*
July 1, 1953, Bull. 1152 (1954).*
July 1, 1954, Bull. 1175 (1955).*
July 1, 1955, Bull. 1192 (1956).*
July 1, 1956, Bull. 1205 (1957).*
July 1, 1957, Bull. 1227 (1958).*
July 1, 1958, Bull. 1245 (1959).*
July 1, 1959, Bull. 1269 (I960).*
July 1, 1960, Bull. 1290 (1961).*
July 1, 1961, Bull. 1316 (1962).*
July 1, 1962, Bull. 1355 (1963).*
July 1, 1963, Bull. 1397 (1964).*
July 1, 1964, Bull. 1432 (1965).*
July 1, 1965, Bull. 1487 (1966).*
July 1, 1966, Bull. 1547 (1967).*
Bus companies, interstate.
Wage Chronology: Western Greyhound Lines, 1945-63,
Rpt. 245 (1964).
Busdrivers. See Transit industry— local, this section; also
General trades, this section, beginning with Bull. 457.
Butchers. See Meatcutters and butchers, this section.
Candy and confectionary industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Candy and Other Confectionary
Products, September 1965, Bull. 1520 (1966).
Wage Structure: Candy and Other Confectionary Products,
November-December 1960, Rpt. 195 (1961).

Wages and Hours

Cement industry, portland.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Portland Cement Industry,
1929, Bull. 525 (1931).
Chauffeurs, and teamsters and drivers. See General trades,
this section, for union scales, 1915-53. For later bulletins,
see Truckdrivers and helpers, this section.
Chemical industry, industrial.
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Industrial Chemicals, November
1965, Bull. 1529 (1966).
Wage Structure: Industrial Chemicals, August 1955, Rpt.
103 (1956).
Chemists and chemical engineers, income.
Factors Affecting Earnings in Chemistry and Chemical
Engineering, Bull. 881 (1946).
Manpower Resources in Chemistry and Chemical Engineer­
ing, Bull. 1132 (1953).*
Cigar manufacturing. See under Tobacco industry, this section.
Cigarette manufacturing. See under Tobacco industry, this
section.
Clay, stone, and glass industries.
Industry Wage Survey, Structural Clay Products, JulyAugust 1964, Bull. 1459 (1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Structural Clay Products, May 1954,
Rpt. 77 (1954); and April-June 1960, Rpt. 172 (1961).
Cleaners, dyers, and pressers.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Clerical workers. See Area Wage Surveys; Banking industry;
Office workers; and White-collar workers, this section.
Clothing industry.
Men’s clothing.
Earnings and Hours in Men’s Cotton-Garment Indus­
tries, and in Plants Manufacturing Single Pants
other Than Cotton, 1939 and 1941, Bull. 719
(1942).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage
Areas, September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953
(1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Men’s and Boys’ Shirts (Ex­
cept Work Shirts) and Nightwear, May-June 1961,
Bull. 1323 (1962); and April-June 1964, Bull. 1457
(1965).
Industry Wage Survey, Men’s and Boys’ Suits and
Coats, October 1963, Bull. 1424 (1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Men's and Boys’ Dress Shirts and
Nightwear, May 1954, Rpt. 74 (1954).




Wages and Hours

Wage Structure: Men’s and Boys’ Suits and Coats,
March 1958, Rpt. 140 (1959).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Men's Clothing In­
dustry.1911 to 1914, Bull. 187 (1916).
1911 to 1922, Bull. 329 (1923).
1911 to 1924, Bull. 387 (1925).
1911 to 1926, Bull. 435 (1927).
1911 to 1928, Bull. 503 (1929).
1911 to 1930, Bull. 557 (1932).
1932, Bull. 594 (1933).
Women’s Clothing.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas,
April 1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950);
and January 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040
(1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage
Areas, September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953
(1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Women’s and Misses’ Coats
and Suits, August 1962, Bull. 1371 (1963); and
August 1965, Bull. 1508 (1966).
Industry Wage Survey, Women’s and Misses’ Dresses,
March-April 1963, Bull. 1391 (1964); and March
1966, Bull. 1538 (1967).
Wage Structure: Women’s and Misses’ Coats and
Suits, February 1957, Rpt. 122 (1958).
Wage Structure: Women’s and Misses’ Dresses,
August 1960, Rpt. 193 (1961).
Work clothing.
Industry Wage Survey, Work Clothing, May-June 1961,
Bull. 1321 (1962); May-June 1964, Bull. 1440
(1965).
Wage Structure: Work Clothing, July 1953, Rpt. 51
(1954).
Coal mining. See Mining, this section.
Common labor.
Hourly Entrance Rates of Common Laborers in Large Cities,
Spring and Summer of 1943, Bull. 775 (1944).
Hourly Entrance Rates Paid to Common Laborers, 1942,
Bull. 733 (1943).
Communications.
Earnings of Communications Workers:
October 1952, Rpt. 49 (1953).
October 1953, Rpt. 72 (1954).
October 1954, Rpt. 96 (1955).
October 1955, Rpt. 108 (1957).
October 1956, Rpt. 121 (1957).
October 1957, Rpt. 138 (1958).
October 1958, Rpt. 149 (1959).
October 1959, Rpt. 171 (1960).
Industry Wage Survey, Communications:
October 1960, Bull. 1306 (1961).
1961, Bull. 1342 (1962).
1962, Bull. 1389 (1964).
1963, Bull. 1426 (1964).
1964, Bull. 1467 (1965).
1965, Bull. 1521 (1967).
Wage Chronology:
A. T. and T., Long Lines Department, 1940-64, Bull.
1443 (1965).*

143

Wages and Hours

Western Union Telegraph Co., 1945-53, Rpt. 160
(I960); 1943-63, Rpt. 160 (Rev. 1964); 1943-67,
Bull. 1545 (1967).*
Community wage surveys. See Area Wage Surveys, this section.
Contract cleaning.
Industry Wage Survey, Contract Cleaning Services, Sum­
mer 1961, Bull. 1327 (1962); Summer 1965, Bull. 1507
(1966).
Wage Structure: Power Laundries and Dry Cleaners,
April—July 1960, Rpt. 178 (1961).
Copper. See Mining, this section.
Copper wire industry.
Wage Chronology: The Anaconda Co., 1941-58, Rpt.
197 (1961).
Cotton industries.
Cotton and Synthetic Textiles, Wage Trends, 1950-53,
Rpt. 50 (1954).
Earnings and Hours in Men’s Cotton-Garment Industries
and in Plants Manufacturing Single Pants Other Than
Cotton, 1939 and 1941, Bull. 719 (1942).
Earnings in Cotton-Goods Manufacture During the War
Years, Bull. 798 (1944).
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April
1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950); January
1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Cotton Textiles, May 1963, Bull.
1410 (1964); September 1965, Bull. 1506 (1966).
Wage Chronology:
Berkshire Hathaway Inc., 1943-64, Rpt. 281 (1964);
1943-66, Bull. 1475 (1965);* 1943-69, Bull. 1541
(1967).* For earlier years, see Northern Cotton
Textile Assns., this listing.
Dan River Mills, 1943-65, Bull. 1495 (1966).*
Northern Cotton Textile Assns., 1943-48, Bull. 970
(1949).*
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods Manufacturing:
1920, Bull. 288 (1921).
1922, Bull. 345 (1923).
1924, Bull. 371 (1925).
1910 to 1926, Bull. 446 (1927).
1910 to 1928, Bull. 492 (1929).
1910 to 1930, Bull. 539 (1931).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cotton-Goods Manufactur­
ing and Finishing, 1916, Bull. 239 (1918); 1918, Bull.
262 (1919).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cotton, Woolen, and
Silk Industries, 1907 to 1914, Bull. 190 (1916).
Wages in Cotton-Goods Manufacturing, Bull. 663 (1938).*
Wage Structure: Cotton Textiles, November 1954, Rpt.
82 (1955); August 1960, Rpt. 184 (1961).
Cotton industries, New England mill.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, 1927-28, Bull.
476 (1929).
Cutlery, handtools, and general hardware industries.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid—1952 and Mid—1953, Rpt.
60 (1954).

144



Wages and Hours

Department stores. See Stores, retail, and Retail trade, this
section.
Drug and proprietary stores. See under Retail trade, this
section.
Dry cleaning. See Contract cleaning, this section.
Dyeing and finishing of textiles.
Industry Wage Survey, Textile Dyeing and Finishing,
Apri 1-May 1961, Bull. 1311 (1961); Winter 1965-66,
Bull. 1527 (1966).
Wage Structure: Textile Dyeing and Finishing, April 1956,
Rpt. 110 (1956).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Dyeing and Finishing of
Textiles, 1930, Bull. 537 (1931); 1932, Bull. 588 (1933).
Dyers. See Cleaners, dyers, and pressers, this section.
Eating and drinking places. (See also Hotels, motels, and res­
taurants, this section.)
Industry Wage Survey, Eating and Drinking Places, June
1961, Bull. 1329 (1962); June 1963, Bull. 1400 (1964).
Electric generating and distribution equipment.
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Electroplating and polishing industry.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
Wage Structure of Electroplating and Polishing Industry,
January 1945, Bull. 875 (1946). See also Bull. 952
(1949), entitled above.
Engineers, professional.
Employment and Earnings in the Engineering Profession,
1929 to 1934, Bull. 682 (1941).
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical,
and Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60, Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61, Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62, Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963, Bull. 1387 (1963).*
February-March 1964, Bull.1422 (1964).*
February-March 1965, Bull. 1469 (1965).*
February-March 1966, Bull. 1535 (1966).*
Explosives industry.
Average Hourly Earnings in the Explosives Industry, June
1944, Bull. 819 (1945).
Fabricated structural steel. See Iron and steel industry,
this section.
Factory workers. (See also Manufacturing and nonmanufac­
turing industries, specific industry, and Wartime, this sec­
tion.)
Factory Workers’ Earnings, May 1958, Bull. 1252 (1959).*
Factory Workers’ Earnings: Distribution by StraightTime Hourly Earnings, April 1954, Bull. 1179 (1955).*
Factory Workers’ Earnings in Selected Manufacturing In­
dustries, June 1959, Bull. 1275 (I960).*
Initial Report: Factory Workers’ Earnings, May 1958,
Rpt. 144 (1959).
Spendable Earnings of Factory Workers, 1941-43, Bull. 769
(1944).
Farm equipment dealers. See Retail trade, this section.
Farm workers. See Wartime, this section.
Federal employees. See White-collar workers, this section.

Wages and Hours

Fertilizer industry.
Hours and Earnings in the Fertilizer Industry, January 1943,
Bull. 751 (1943).
Industry Wage Survey, Fertilizer Manufacturing, April 1962,
Bull. 1362 (1963); March-April 1966, Bull. 1531 (1967).
Fire-department employees. See Municipal employees, this
section.
Fishermen.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Flour and other grain mill products. See Grain mill products,
this section.
Food stores. See under Retail trade; and see Groceries,
wholesale, this section.
Footwear manufacturing. See Shoe industry, this section.
Foundries.
Ferrous.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas,
April 1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950);
January 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage
Areas, June-December 1947, Bull. 975 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Iron and Steel Foundries, No­
vember 1962, Bull. 1386 (1963).
Wage Structure: Gray Iron Foundries, April—June
1959, Rpt. 151 (1959).
Ferrous and nonferrous.
Industry Wage Survey, Nonferrous Foundries, JuneJuly 1965, Bull. 1498 (1966).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and
Areas. Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952,
Rpt. 36 (1954).
Wage Structure:
Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952 (1949).
Nonferrous Foundries, May 1960, Rpt. 180 (1961).
Foundries and machine shops.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Foundries and Machine
Shops:
1923, Bull. 362 (1924).
1924, Bull. 422 (1927).
1927, Bull. 471 (1929).
1929, Bull. 522 (1930).
1931, Bull. 570 (1932).
Freight handlers. See General trades, this section for union
scales of wages and hours of labor, 1915-25, inc.
Furniture, homefurnishings, and appliance stores. See under
Retail trade, this section.
Furniture industry. (See also Millwork, this section.)
Hourly Earnings, by Industry, Selected Wage Areas:
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
September 1948—January 1949, Bull. 969 (1949).
April 1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
January 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Industry Wage Survey, Wood Household Furniture, Except
Upholstered, July 1962, Bull. 1369 (1963); May-June
1965, Bull. 1496 (1966).
The Wage and Hour Structure of the Furniture-Manufac­
turing Industry, October 1937, Bull. 669 (1940).



Wages and Hours

Wage Structure:
Household Furniture, 1954, Rpt. 76 (1955).
Wood Household Furniture, Except Upholstered, April—
May 1959, Rpt. 152 (1960).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Furniture Industry, 1910
to 1929, Bull. 526 (1931); 1910 to 1931, Bull. 571 (1932).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber, Millwork, and
Furniture Industries, 1915, Bull. 225 (1918).
Garages, repair. See Automobile repair garages and shops, this
section.
Gas, natural. See Petroleum industry, this section.
Gasoline filling stations. See Service stations, this section.
General merchandise stores. See under Retail trade, this
section.
General trades.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 1, 1915, Bull. 194 (1916).*
May 15, 1916, Bull. 214 (1917).*
May 15, 1917, Bull. 245 (1919).*
May 15, 1918, Bull. 259 (1919).*
May 15, 1919, Bull. 274 (1920).*
May 15, 1920, Bull. 286 (1921).*
May 15, 1921, Bull. 302 (1922).*
May 15, 1922, Bull. 325 (1923).*
May 15, 1923, Bull. 354 (1924).*
May 15, 1924, Bull. 388 (1925).*
May 15, 1925, Bull. 404 (1926).*
May 15, 1926, Bull. 431 (1927).*
May 15, 1927, Bull. 457 (1928).*
May 15, 1928, Bull. 482 (1929).*
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).*
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).*
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).*
May 15, 1933, Bull. 600 (1934).*
Glass, clay, and stone workers. See Clay, stone, and glass
industries, this section.
Glassware and glass-container industries.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas:
September 1948—January 1949, Bull. 969 (1949).
January 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Industry Wage Survey, Pressed or Blown Glass and Glass­
ware, May 1964, Bull. 1423 (1964).
Wage Structure: Pressed or Blown Glass and Glassware,
May 1960, Rpt. 177 (1961).
Glove industry.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wages and Hours in the Glove Industry, 1941, Bull. 702
(1942).
Grain-mill products industries.
Earnings in the Grain-Mill Products Industries, 1941, Bull.
712 (1942).
Industry Wage Survey, Flour and Other Grain Mill Products,
November 1961, Bull. 1337 (1962).
Granite and stone trades. See General trades, this section.
Groceries, wholesale.
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).

145

Wages and Hours

Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Hat industries.
Earnings and Hours in the Hat Industries, 1939, Bull. 671
(1939).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Hawaii. (See also Labor and industrial conditions.)
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico,
and Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
Heating apparatus.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
History of wages.
History of Wages in the United States from Colonial
Times to 1928, Bull. 499 (1929);* with Supplement,
1929-33, Bull. 604 (1934).*
Hosiery and underwear manufacture.
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Hosiery and Underwear
Industry-(ies):
1907 to 1914, Bull. 177 (1915).
1922, Bull. 328 (1923).
1907 to 1924, Bull. 376 (1925).
1907 to 1926, Bull. 452 (1927).
1907 to 1928, Bull. 504 (1929).
1932, Bull. 591 (1933).
Hosiery manufacture. (See also Wage chronologies, this sec­
tion.)
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas:
September 1948—January 1949, Bull. 969 (1949).
April 1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
January 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Hoisery, February 1962, Bull. 1349
(1963); September-October 1964, Bull. 1456 (1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Hosiery, November 1952, Rpt. 34 (1953).
Hospitals.
Earnings and Supplementary Benefits in Hospitals:
Atlanta, Georgia, September 1956, Bull. 1210-11
(1957).*
Baltimore, Maryland, June 1956, Bull. 1210-4 (1957).*
Boston, Massachusetts, August 1956, Bull. 1210-6
(1957).*
Buffalo, New York, June 1956, Bull. 1210-3 (1957).*
Chicago, Illinois, August 1956, Bull. 1210-5 (1957).*
Cincinnati, Ohio, September 1956, Bull. 1210-9
(1957).*
Cleveland, Ohio, November 1956, Bull. 1210-7 (1957).*
Dallas, Texas, November 1956, Bull. 1210-8 (1957).*

146



Wages and Hours

Los Angeles-Long Beach, California, January 1957,
Bull. 1210-14 (1957).*
Memphis, Tennessee, December 1956, Bull. 1210-12
(1957).*
Mid-1960, Bull. 1294 (1961).*
Minneapolis-St. Paul, Minnesota, March 1957, Bull.
1210-15 (1957).*
New York, New York, February 1957, Bull. 1210-16
(1957).*
Philadelphia, Pennsylvania, July 1956, Bull. 1210-10
(1957).*
Portland, Oregon, May and July 1956, Bull. 1210-2
(1957).*
St. Louis, Missouri, June 1956, Bull. 1210-1 (1957).*
San Francisco, California, November 1956, Bull. 1210—
13 (1957).*
Industry Wage Survey, Hospitals, Mid-1963, Bull. 1409
(1964); July 1966, Bull. 1553 (1967).
Hotels, motels, and restaurants.
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Hotels and Motels, June 1961,
Bull. 1328 (1962); June 1963, Bull. 1406 (1964).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Hotels, March-June 1960, Rpt. 173
(1961).
Indexes.
Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Occupa­
tions and Metropolitan Areas, Bull. 1427 (1965).
Wage Indexes.- Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Oc­
cupations and Metropolitan Areas, 1907-66, Bull. 1505
(1966).
Industrial chemical industry. See Chemical industry, industrial,
this section.
Industrial machinery. See Machinery manufacture, this sec­
tion.
Iron and steel forging.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Iron and steel industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Basic Iron and Steel, March 1962,
Bull. 1358 (1963).
Industry Wage Survey, Fabricated Structural Steel, October-November 1964, Bull. 1463 (1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, May 15, 1929,
Bull. 515 (1930).
Wags Chronology: United States Steel Corp., 1937-48,
Bull. 970 (1949);* 1937-55, Rpt. 106 (1957); 1937-60,
Rpt. 186 (1961); 1937-64, Rpt. 186 (Revised 1965).
Wage Structure: Fabricated Structural Steel, March 1957,
Rpt. 123 (1958).

Wages and Hours

Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Wage Structure of the Fabricated Structural Steel Industry,
January 1945, Bull. 866 (1946).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Iron and Steel Industry:
1907 to 1915, Bull. 218 (1917).
1907 to 1920, Bull. 305 (1922).
1907 to 1922, Bull. 353 (1924).
1907 to 1924, Bull. 381 (1925).
1907 to 1926, Bull. 442 (1927).
1929, Bull. 513 (1930).
1931, Bull. 567 (1933).
Iron-ore mining. See under Mining, this section.
Knit-goods industry. See Hosiery and underwear manufacture;
and Knitted-outerwear industry, this section.
Knitted-outerwear industry.
Annual and Hourly Earnings, Philadelphia Knitted-Outer­
wear Industry, 1943, Bull. 830 (1945).
Employment and Earnings in the Philadelphia Knitted-Outer­
wear Industry, 1944 and 1945, Bull. 887 (1947).
Labor markets, major. See Area Wage Surveys, this section.
Laundries, power.
Hourly Earnings, Selected Wage Areas:
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
April 1949-November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
Industry Wage Survey, Power Laundries and Cleaning
Services, June 1961, Bull. 1333 (1962).
Industry Wage Survey, Laundry-(ies) and Cleaning Services,
June 1963, Bull. 1401 (1964); Mid-1966, Bull. 1544
(1967).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt.
60 (1954).
Wage Chronology: New York Laundries, 1945-64, Bull.
1453 (1965).*
Wage Structure: Power Laundries and Dry Cleaners,
April—July 1960, Rpt. 178 (1961).
Laundry workers, union scales. See General trades, this sec­
tion, beginning with Bull. 259 (1919).
Leather and leather products industries.
Earnings and Hours in the Leather and Leather Belting
and Packing Industries, 1939, Bull. 679 (1941).
Industry Wage Survey, Leather Tanning and Finishing,
March 1963, Bull. 1378 (1963).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Leather Tanning and Finishing, May
1954, Rpt. 80 (1954); May 1959, Rpt. 150 (1959).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Leather Industry, 1932,
Bull. 589 (1933).
Legislation concerning. See Labor, Minimum wage, and Wage
payment under Legislation.
Life insurance.
Industry Wage Survey, Life Insurance, May-July 1961,
Bull. 1324 (1962).




Wages

and Hours

Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
Linemen, union scales. See General trades, this section, be­
ginning with Bull. 302 (1922).
Longshore industry. (See also General trades, this section,
beginning with Bull. 431 [1927J).
Cargo Handling and Longshore Labor Conditions, Bull.
550 (1932).
Wage Chronology:
North Atlantic Longshoring, 1934-61, Rpt. 234 (1962).
Pacific Longshore Industry, 1934-65, Bull. 1491
(1966).*
Lumber industry.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, 1927-1928,
Bull. 476 (1929).
Wage Structure: Southern Lumber Industry, April 1953,
Rpt. 45 (1953).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Lumber Manufacturing,
1921, Bull. 317 (1923); 1923, Bull. 363 (1924).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber Industry in the
United States.1925, Bull. 413 (1926).
1928, Bull. 497 (1932).
1930, Bull. 560 (1932).
1932, Bull. 586 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Lumber, Millwork, and
Furniture Industries. 1915, Bull. 225 (1918).
Wages in the Basic Lumber Industry, 1944, Bull. 854
(1946).
Wages in the Basic Lumber Industry in the Far West, 1944,
Bull. 840 (1945).
Machine shops. See Foundries and machine shops, this sec­
tion.
Machine-tool accessories industry. (See also Machinery manu­
facture, this section, for additional data on earnings and
fringe benefits.)
Wage Structure of the Machine-Tool Accessories Industry,
January 1945, Bull. 868 (1946).
Machine-tool industry. See Machinery manufacture, this sec­
tion.
Machinery manufacture.
Earnings in the Manufacture of Industrial Machinery, 1942,
Bull. 720, Part I (1942); 720-A, Part II (1943); and 720B, Part III (1943).
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas:
September 1948—January 1949, Bull. 969 (1949).
April 1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
January 1950 to January ] 951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Machinery Manufacturing:
March-May 1961, Bull. 1309 (1961).
March-June 1962, Bull. 1352 (1963).
March-May 1963, Bull. 1388 (1964).
March-May 1964, Bull. 1429 (1965).
April—June 1965, Bull. 1476 (1965).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).

147

Wages and Hours

Wage Chronology: International Harvester Co., 1946-57,
Rpt. 162 (I960); 1946-61, Rpt. 202 (1961).
Wage Structure in the Machinery Industries, January 1945,
Bull. 861 (1946).
Wage Structure: Machinery Industries, Winter 1954-55,
Rpt. 93 (1955).
Wage Structure: Machinery Manufacturing:
Winter 1955-56, Rpt. 107 (1956).
Winter 1957-58, Rpt. 139 (1958).
Winter 1959-60, Rpt. 170 (1960).
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Wages and Related Benefits in the Machinery Industries,
Bull. 1160 (1954).
Women Production Workers in the Machinery Industries:
Employment Distribution; Earnings, Winter 1952-53,
Rpt. 98 (1956).
Manufacturing and nonmanufacturing industries. (See also
Factory workers, Southern States, specific industry, and
Wartime, this section.)
Composition of Payroll Hours in Manufacturing, 1958,
Bull. 1283 (1960).
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Com­
pensation Practices for Production and Related Work­
ers; Composition of Payroll Hours: Manufacturing Indus­
tries, 1962, Bull. 1428 (1965).*
Employer Expenditures for Selected Supplementary Re­
muneration Practices for Production Workers in Manu­
facturing Industries, 1959, Bull. 1308 (1962).
Employment and Earnings Statistics for States and Areas-.
1939-62, Bull. 1370 (1963).
1939-63, Bull. 1370-1 (1964).
1939-64, Bull. 1370-2 (1965).
1939-65, Bull. 1370-3 (1966).
1939-66, Bull. 1370-4 (1967).
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the United States:
1909-60, Bull. 1312 (1961).
1909-62, Bull. 1312-1 (1963).
1909-64, Bull. 1312-2 ’(1964).
1909-65, Bull. 1312-3 (1966).
1909-66, Bull. 1312-4 (1966).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, Bull. 1016 (1951); 1951 Supp.
(1953) ;* 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
History of Wages in the United States from Colonial Times
to 1928, Bull. 499 (1929);* with Supplement, 1929-33,
Bull. 604 (1934).*
Hours and Earnings in the United States, 1932-40, with
Supplement for 1941, Bull. 697 (1942).*
Industrial Survey in Selected Industries in the United
States, 1919, Bull. 265 (1920).*
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954) ; Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt. 60
(1954).
Meatcutters and butchers.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).

148



Wages and Hours

Meatpacking industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Meat Products; Part I: Meatpack­
ing; Part II: Prepared Meat Products, November 1963,
Bull. 1415 (1964).
Wage Chronology:
Armour and Co., 1941-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* 1941—
58, Rpt. 165 (I960); 1941-60, Rpt. 187 (1961);
1941-63, Rpt. 187 (Revised 1963); 1941-67, Bull.
1481 (1966).*
Swift and Co., 1942-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* 1942-63,
Rpt. 260 (Rev. 1964).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Slaughtering and MeatPacking Industry:
1917, Bull. 252 (1919).
1921, Bull. 294 (1922).
1923, Bull. 373 (1925).
1925, Bull. 421 (1927).
1927, Bull. 472 (1929).
1929, Bull. 535 (1931).
1931, Bull. 576 (1933).
Men’s clothing industry. See under Clothing industry, this
section.
Metal trades. See General trades, this section, for union
scales, 1915-24.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Metalliferous mining. See under Mining, this section.
Metalworking industries. See specific branch, this section.
Metropolitan areas. (See also Area Wage Survey, this section.)
Trends in Urban Wage Rates:
April-October 1944, Bull. 809 (1945).
October 1944 to April 1945, Bull. 846 (1945).
April to October 1945, Bull. 860 (1946).
April 1946, Bull. 891 (1946).
Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Occu­
pations and Metropolitan Areas, Bull. 1427 (1965).
Wage Indexes: Long-Term Trend Data for Selected Occu­
pations and Metropolitan Areas, 1907-66, Bull. 1505
(1966).
Milk industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Fluid Milk, September-October
1964, Bull. 1464 (1965).
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954).
Wage Structure: Fluid Milk Industry, April—June 1960,
Rpt. 174 (1961).
Millinery workers. See Hat industries, this section.
Millwork.
(See also Furniture industry, this section.) For
the years 1915-24, see bulletins listed for those years
under General trades, this section.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Mining.
Anthracite and bituminous coal. (See also under Wage
chronologies, this section.)

Wages and Hours

Hours and Earnings in Anthracite and Bituminous Coal
Mining:
Anthracite— 1919 and 1920; Bituminous— 1919,
Bull. 279 (1921).
Anthracite— January 1922: Bituminous— Winter of
1921-22, Bull. 316 (1922).
1922 and 1924, Bull. 416 (1926).
Wage Chronology: Anthracite Mining Industry, 1930—
59, Rpt. 255 (1963); 1930-66, Bull. 1494 (1966).*
Bituminous coal. (See also under Wage chronologies, this
section.)
Hours and Earnings in Bituminous Coal Mining, 1929,
Bull. 516 (1930).
Hours and Earnings in Bituminous Coal Mining, 1922,
1924, and 1926, Bull. 454 (1927). See also Bulls.
279, 316, and 416, listed above.
Industry Wage Survey, Bituminous Coal Mining, No­
vember 1962, Bull. 1383 (1963).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Chronology: Bituminous Coal Mines, 1933-48,
Bull. 970 (1949);* 1933-66, Bull. 1461 (1965).*
Wage Structure in Bituminous-Coal Mining, Fall of
1945, Bull. 867 (1946).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Bituminous-Coal Mining,
1933, Bull. 601 (1934).
Iren ore.
Wages in Iron Mining, October 1943, Bull. 787 (1944).
Metalliferous mining.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Metalliferous Mines,
1924, Bull. 394 (1925).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Metalliferous Mining,
1924 and 1931, Bull. 573 (1933).
Nonferrous metals.
Wage Chronology: The Anaconda Co., 1941-58, Rpt.
197 (1961).
Wage Structure of the Nonferrous Metals Industry,
1941-42, Bull. 729 (1943).
Wages in the Nonferrous-Metals Industry, June 1943,
Bull. 765 (1944).
Motion picture theaters. See Amusements, this section.
Motormen and conductors. See Transit industry— local, this
section.
Motortruck drivers and helpers. See Truckdrivers and helpers,
this section.
Motor vehicle industry. See Automobile and other motor ve­
hicle manufacturing, this section.
Motor vehicle repair garages and shops. See Automobile re­
pair garages and shops, this section.
Municipal employees.
Earnings and Wages Practices in Municipal Governments
of 15 Cities, 1944, Bull. 848 (1945).
Entrance Rates and Full-Time Hours of Common Laborers
Employed by Cities, September 1935, Bull. 627 (1937).
Salaries and Hours of Labor in Municipal Fire Departments,
July 1, 1938, Bull. 684 (1940-41).
Salaries and Hours of Labor in Municipal Police Depart­
ments, July 1, 1938, Bull. 685 (1941).



Wages and Hours

Salary Trends: Citv Public School Teachers. 1925-59,
Rot. 194 (1961); 1925-63, Bull. 1448 (1965); 1925-65.
Bull. 1504 (1966).
Salary Trends: Firemen and Policemen, 1924-61, Rpt.
233 (1962); 1924-64, Bull. 1445 (1965).
Wages and Hours of Labor: Common Street Laborers,
1928, Bull. 484 (1929).
Musicians. See Amusements, this section.
Nonferrous metals industry. See Mining, this section.
Nonoperating employees, railroads. See Railroad industry,
this section.
North Central region.
Employee Earnings in Nonmetropolitan Areas of the South
and North Central Regions, June 1962, Bull. 1416 (1964).
Employee Earnings and Hours in Nonmetropolitan Areas of
the South and North Central Regions, June 1965, Bull.
1552 (1967).
Wages in Nonmetropolitan Areas, South and North Central
Regions, October 1960, Rpt. 190 (1961).
Nurses, registered. (See also Hospitals, this section.)
The Economic Status of Registered Professional Nurses,
1946-47, Bull. 931 (1948).
Nursing homes.
Industry Wage Survey, Nursing Homes and Related Fa­
cilities, April 1965, Bull. 1492 (1966).
Occupational wage surveys. See Area Wage Surveys, this
section.
Ohio.
Average Annual Wage and Salary Payments in Ohio, 1916
to 1932, Bull. 613 (1935).
Paint and varnish industry.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, Septem­
ber 1948—January 1949, Bull. 969 (1949); and January
1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 11 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
June-December 1947, Bull. 974 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Paints and Varnishes, May 1961,
Bull. 1318 (1962); November 1965, Bull. 1524 (1966).
Paper and paper products industries.
Earnings and Hours in the Paperboard Industry, Bull. 692
(1941).
Industry Wage Survey, Paperboard Containers and Boxes,
November 1964, Bull. 1478 (1966).
Industry Wage Survey, Pulp, Paper, and Paperboard Mills,
January 1962, Bull. 1341 (1962).
Labor Cost of Production and Wages and Hours of Labor
in the Paper Box-Board Industry, Bull. 407 (1926).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, 1927-28,
Bull. 476 (1929). See also Bull. 540 (1931).
Wage Chronology: International Paper Company, Southern
Kraft Division, 1937-67, Bull. 1534 (1967).*
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Paper and Pulp Industry,
1923, Bull. 365 (1925).
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions, 1933, 1934, and
1935, in the Paper-Box Industry:
Folding, Bull. 620 (1937).
Set-up, Bull. 633 (1937).
Pavers and curb setters.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, 1927-28, Bull.
476 (1929).

149

Wages and Hours

Petroleum industry.
Earnings in Southwestern Petroleum Industry, April 1943,
Bull. 762 (1944).
Industry Wage Survey, Petroleum Refining, December 1965,
Bull. 1526 (1966).
Wage Chronology: Sinclair Oil Companies, 1941-63, Rpt.
225 (1964); 1941-64, Bull. 1447 (1965).*
Wage Structure: Crude Petroleum and Natural Gas Pro­
duction, May-June 1960, Rpt. 181 (1961).
Wage Structure: Petroleum Refining, July 1959, Rpt. 158
(1960).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Petroleum Industry, 1920,
Bull. 297 (1922).
Wages in Petroleum Drilling and Production in the South­
west, April 1944, Bull. 810 (1945).
Pipelines industry.
Compensation Expenditures and Payroll Hours, Pipelines,
1964, Bull. 1528 (1967).
Plastics industry.
Industry Wage Survey, Miscellaneous Plastics Products,
June 1964, Bull. 1439 (1965).
Wage Structure: Miscellaneous Plastics Products, Jan­
uary—February 1960, Rpt. 168 (1960).
Police departments. See Municipal employees, this section.
Portland cement. See Cement industry, this section.
Pottery industry.
Wages, Hours, arid Productivity in the Pottery Industry,
1925, Bull. 412 (1926).
Printing and publishing.
Earnings and Hours in Book and Job Printing, January
1942, Bull. 726 (1943).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours in the Printing Trades:
May 15, 1936, Bull. 631 (1937).*
May 15, 1937, Bull. 655 (1938).*
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, May 1, 1915May 15, 1933. See General trades, this section.
Union Wages and Hours in the Printing Trades:
June 1, 1942, Bull. 739 (1943).*
July 1, 1943, Bull. 781 (1944).*
July 1, 1944, Bull. 820 (1945).*
July 1, 1945, Bull. 872 (1946).*
July 1, 1946, Bull. 912 (1947).*
Union Wages and Hours: Printing Industry:
January 2, 1948 and July 1, 1949, Bull. 979 (1950).*
July 1, 1950, Bull. 1018 (1951).*
July 1, 1951, Bull. 1062 (1952).*
July 1, 1952, Bull. 1134 (1953).*
July 1, 1953, Bull. 1155 (1954).*
July 1, 1954, Bull. 1176 (1955).*
July 1, 1955, Bull. 1194 (1956).*
July 1, 1956, Bull. 1207 (1957).*
July 1, 1957, Bull. 1228 (1958).*
July 1, 1958, Bull. 1247 (1959).*
July 1, 1959, Bull. 1271 (I960).*
July 1, 1960, Bull. 1292 (1961).*
July 1, 1961, Bull. 1315 (1962).*
July 1, 1962, Bull. 1357 (1963).*
July 1, 1963, Bull. 1399 (1964).*
July 1, 1964, Bull. 1434 (1965).*
July 1, 1965, Bull. 1489 (1966).*
July 1, 1966, Bull. 1549 (1967).*

150



Wages and Hours

Union Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions in the Print­
ing Trades:
June 1, 1939, Bull. 675 (1940).*
June 1, 1941, Bull. 708 (1942).*
Professionals.
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical,
and Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60,Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61,Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62,Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963,
Bull.1387(1963).*
February-March 1964,
Bull.1422(1964).*
February-March 1965,
Bull.1469(1965).*
February-March 1966,
Bull.1535(1966).*
Puerto Rico.
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico,
and Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
Radio (including phonograph) manufacture.
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Railroads.
Pennsylvania! Railroad Wage Data, Bull. 514 (1930).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-28, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Chronology: Railroads— Nonoperating Employees,
1920-62, Rpt. 208 (1963).
Rayon industry.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April
1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950); January
1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Wage Chronology: American Viscose, 1945-63, Rpt. 277
(1964).
Wages and Hours in Rayon and Other Synthetic Yarn
Manufacturing, 1930, Bull. 546 (1932).
Wages and Hours of Labor in Rayon and Other Synthetic
Yarn Manufacturing, 1932, Bull. 587 (1933).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Manufacture of Silk and
Rayon Goods, 1931, Bull. 568 (1932).
Wages in the Rayon Industry, May 1944, Bull. 806 (1945).
Ready-to-wear, women’s stores. See Stores, retail, this section.
Reconversion period.
Workers’ Experiences During First Phase of Reconversion,
Bull. 876 (1946).
Restaurant workers. See Hotels, motels, and restaurants, this
section.
Retail trade.
Employee Earnings in Retail Trade:
Apparel and Accessories Stores, Bull. 1220-5 (1957),
1338-5 (1962), and 1380-5 (1964).
Automotive Dealers and Gasoline Service Stations,
Bulls. 1220-4 (1957), 1338-4 (1963), and 1380-4
(1964).
Building Materials and Farm Equipment Dealers, Bulls.
1220-1 (1957), 1338-1 (1962), and 1380-1 (1964).
Drug Stores and Proprietary Stores, Bull. 1220-7
(1957).

Wages and Hours

Food Stores, Bulls. 1220-3 (1957), 1338-3 (1963),
and 1380-3 (1964).
Furniture, Home Furnishings, and Appliance Stores,
Bulls. 1220-6 (1957), 1338-6 (1963), and 1380-6
(1964).
General Merchandise Stores, Bulls. 1220-2 (1957),
1338-2 (1962), and 1380-2 (1964).
Miscellaneous Stores, Bulls. 1338-7 (1963) and
1380-7 (1964).
Summary Report, Bulls. 1220 (1958), 1338-8 (1963),
and 1380 (1964).
Employee Earnings and Hours in Retail Trade:
Apparel and Accessory Stores, Bull. 1501-5 (1966).
Automotive Dealers and Gasoline Service Stations,
Bull. 1501-4 (1966).
Building Materials, Hardware, and Farm Equipment
Dealers, Bull. 1501-1 (1966).
Food Stores, Bull. 1501-3 (1966).
Furniture, Home Furnishings, and Household Appliance
Stores, Bull. 1501-6 (1966).
General Merchandise Stores, Bull. 1501-2 (1966).
Miscellaneous Stores, Bull. 1501—7 (1966).
Summary Report, Bull. 1501 (1967).
Initial Report: Employee Earnings in Retail Trade, October
1956, Rpt. 119 (1957).
Rubber industry.
Wage Chronology: Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. and
B.F. Goodrich Co. (Akron Plants), 1937-66, Bull. 1484
(1967).*
Wages in Rubber Manufacturing Industry, August 1942,
Bull. 737 (1943).
Salary structure.
Salary Structure Characteristics in Large Firms, 1963, Bull.
1417 (1964).
Sawmills and planing mills.
Industry Wage Survey, Southern Sawmills and Planing
Mills, June 1962, Bull. 1361 (1963); October 1965,
Bull. 1519 (1966).
Industry Wage Survey, West Coast Sawmilling, June 1964,
Bull. 1455 (1965).
Wage Structure: West Coast Sawmilling, 1952, Rpt. 7
(1953); July 1959, Rpt. 156 (1960).
Scientists. (See also Chemists and chemical engineers, and
Engineers, professional, this section.)
Employment, Education, and Earnings of American Men of
Science, Bull. 1027 (1951).
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical,
and Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60, Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61, Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62, Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963, Bull, 1387 (1963).*
February-March 1964, Bull. 1422 (1964).*
February-March 1965, Bull. 1469 (1965).*
February-March 1966, Bull. 1535 (1966).*
Seamen. (See also Water transportation, this section.)
The Earnings and Employment of Seamen on U.S. Flag
Ships, Bull. 1238 (1958).*
Service stations. (See also Retail trade, this section.)
Wages and Hours of Labor in Gasoline Filling Stations and
Motor Vehicle Repair Garages, 1931, Bull. 578 (1933).



Wages and Hours

Services for the blind.
Salaries for Selected Occupations in Services for the
Blind, May 1961, Bull. 1322 (1962); January 1966, Bull.
1500 (1966).
Sheet-metal industry.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt. 60
(1954).
Wage Structure— Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Shipbuilding and repair.
Earning in Ship Construction Yards, Fall of 1942, Bull.
752 (1943).
Hourly Earnings in Private Ship-Repair Yards, Spring 1943,
Bull. 763 (1944).
Hourly Earnings in Private Shipyards, 1942, Bull. 727
(1943).
Wage Chronology:
Bethlehem Atlantic Shipyards, 1941-62, Rpt. 216
(1962); 1941-65, Bull. 1454 (1965).*
Pacific Coast Shipbuilding, 1941-64, Rpt. 254 (1965).
Shoe industry.
Earnings and Hours in Shoe and Allied Industries During
First Quarter of 1939, Boots and Shoes, Cut Stock and
Findings, Shoe Patterns, Bull. 670 (1939).
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas:
September 1948—January 1949, Bull. 969 (1949).
April 1949-November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
January 1950—January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Industry Wage Survey, Footwear, April 1962, Bull. 1360
(1963); April 1965, Bull. 1503 (1966).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Chronology: International Shoe Company, 1945-64,
Rpt. 211 (1963); 1945-66, Bull. 1479 (1966).*
Wage Chronology: Massachusetts Shoe Manufacturing,
1945-64, Rpt. 209 (1964); 1945-66, Bull. 1471 (1966).*
Wage Structure: Footwear, March 1953, Rpt. 46 (1953).
Wage Structure: Footwear Industry, April 1957, Rpt. 133
(1958).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Boot and Shoe Industry:
1907 to 1914, Bull. 178 (1915).
1907 to 1916, Bull. 232 (1918).
1907 to 1918, Bull. 260 (1919).
1907 to 1920, Bull. 278 (1921).
1907 to 1922, Bull. 324 (1923).
1907 to 1924, Bull. 374 (1925).
1907 to 1926, Bull. 450 (1927).
1910 to 1928, Bull. 498 (1929).
1910 to 1930, Bull. 551 (1932).
1910 to 1932, Bull. 579 (1933).
Silk industry.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April
1949-November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).

151

Wages and Hours

Wages and Hours cif Labor in the Cotton, Woolen, and Silk
Industries, 1907 to 1914, Bull. 190 (1916).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Manufacture of Silk and
Rayon Goods, 1931, Bull. 568 (1932).
Slaughtering industry. See Meatpacking industry, this section.
Small-arms industry.
Wage Structure-Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Soft drink establishments. See Bottling-house workmen, and
Brewery workers, this section.
Southern States.
Employee Earnings and Hours in Eight Metropolitan Areas
of the South, June 1965, Bull. 1533 (1966).
Employee Earnings and Hours in Nonmetropolitan Areas of
the South and North Central Regions, June 1965, Bull.
1552 (1967).
Employee Earnings in Nonmetropolitan Areas of the South
and North Central Regions, June 1962, Bull. 1416 (1964).
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1917).*
Wages in Nonmetropolitan Areas, South and North Central
Regions, October 1960, Rpt. 190 (1961).
Stamped and pressed metal products.
Occupational Earnings: Selected Industries and Areas.
Studies Between March 1951 and May 1952, Rpt. 36
(1954); Studies Between Mid-1952 and Mid-1953, Rpt.
60 (1954).
Statistics.
Employment and Earnings Statistics for States and Areas:
1939-62, Bull. 1370 (1963).
1939-63, Bull. 1370-1 (1964).
1939-64, Bull. 1370-2 (1965).
1939-65, Bull. 1370-3 (1966).
1939-66, Bull. 1370-4 (1967).
Employment and Earnings Statistics for the United States:
1909-60, Bulk 1312 (1961).
1909-62, Bull. 1312-1 (1963).
1909-64, Bull. 1312-2 (1964).
1909-65, Bull. 1312-3 (1966).
1909-66, Bull. 1312-4 (1966).
1909-67, Bull. 1312-5 (1967).
Handbook of Labor Statistics, 1950 ed., Bull. 1016 (1951);
1951 Supp. (1953);* and 1967, Bull. 1555 (1967).*
Steel industry. See Iron and steel industry, this section.
Stone workers. See Clay, stone, and glass industries, this
section.
Stores, retail. (See also Retail trade, this section.)
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, Jan­
uary 1950—January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Wages in Department and Clothing Stores, Large Cities,
Spring and Summer, 1943, Bull. 801 (1944).
Street laborers, unskilled. See Municipal employees, this sec­
tion.
Street-railway employees. See Transit industry— local, this sec­
tion.
Sugar industry.
Wages and Hours of Labor in Cane-Sugar Refining Industry,
1930, Bull. 547 (1931).

152



Wages and Hours

Synthetic textiles and fibers.
Cotton and Synthetic Textiles, Wage Trends, 1950-53, Rpt.
50 (1954).
Industry Wage Survey, Synthetic Fibers, February-April
1966, Bull. 1540 (1967).
Industry Wage Survey, Synthetic Textiles, September 1965,
Bull. 1509 (1966).
Wage Chronology: American Viscose, 1945-63, Rpt. 277
(1964).
Wage Structure: Synthetic Fibers, October 1958, Rpt. 143
(1959).
Wage Structure: Synthetic Textiles, November 1954, Rpt.
87 (1955); August 1960, Rpt. 192 (1961).
Teachers, public schools. See Municipal employees, this sec­
tion.
Teamsters. For union scales, 1915-33, see General trades,
this section. For later bulletins, see Truckdrivers and help­
ers, this section.
Textiles. (See also specific branch of industry, this section.)
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-28, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Miscellaneous Textile Industries, October
1953, Rpt. 56 (1954).
Theatrical employment.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1918, Bull. 259 (1919).
May 15, 1919, Bull. 274 (1920).
May 15, 1920, Bull. 286 (1921).
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Tire industry.
Wage Chronology: Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. and
B.F. Goodrich Co. (Akron Plants), 1937-66, Bull. 1484
(1967).*
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Automobile Tire Industry,
1923, Bull. 358 (1924).
Tobacco industry.
Cigar manufacturing.
Industry Wage Survey, Cigar Manufacturing, April—May,
1961, Bull. 1317 (1962); April-May 1964, Bull. 1436
(1965).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wage Structure: Cigar Manufacturing, April 1955,
Rpt. 97 (1955).
Cigarette manufacturing.
Industry Wage Survey, Cigarette Manufacturing, JulyAugust 1965, Bull. 1472 (1965).
Wage Structure: Cigarette Manufacturing, May 1960,
Rpt. 167 (1960).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cigarette Manufac­
turing Industry, 1930, Bull. 532 (1931).

Wages and Hours

Transit industry-local.
Street Railway Employment in the United States, Bull. 204
(1917).
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor, 1921-31, inc.
See bulletins listed for those years under General trades,
this section, and Bull. 476 (1929).
Union Wage Rates of City Streetcar and Bus Operators:
July 1, 1943, Bull. 766 (1944).*
July 1, 1944, Bull 814 (1945).*
July 1, 1945, Bull. 856 (1946).*
Union Wages and Hours: Local-Transit Operating Em­
ployees:
July 1, 1946, Bull. 903 (1947).*
October 1, 1947, Bull. 933 (1948).*
October 1, 1948, Bull. 957 (1949).*
October 1, 1949, Bull. 981 (1950).*
October 1, 1950, Bull. 1019 (1951).*
October 1, 1951, Bull. 1061 (1952).*
October 1, 1952, Bull. 1133 (1953).*
July 1, 1953, Bull. 1153 (1954).*
July 1, 1954, Bull. 1177 (1955).*
July 1, 1955, Bull. 1193 (1956).*
July 1, 1956, Bull. 1208 (1957).*
July 1, 1957, Bull. 1229 (1958).*
July 1, 1958, Bull. 1244 (1959).*
July 1, 1959, Bull. 1268 (I960).*
July 1, 1960, Bull. 1289 (1961).*
July 1, 1961, Bull. 1313 (1962).*
July 1, 1962, Bull. 1354 (1963).*
July 1, 1963, Bull. 1396 (1964).*
July 1, 1964, Bull. 1431 (1965).*
July 1, 1965, Bull. 1486 (1966).*
July 1, 1966, Bull. 1546 (1967).*
Wage Rates of Union Street-Railway Employees, June 1,
1942, Bull. 731 (1943).*
Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions of Union StreetRailway Employees, June 1, 1941, Bull. 701 (1942).*
Transportation. See specific type of, this section.
Truckdrivers and helpers. (See also General trades, this sec­
tion, for union scales, 1915-33.)
Union Wages and Hours: Motortruck Drivers and Helpers:
July 1, 1943, Bull. 771 (1944).*
July 1, 1944, Bull. 812 (1945).*
July 1, 1945, Bull. 874 (1916).*
July 1, 1946, Bull. 911 (1948).*
July 1, 1947, Bull. 928 (1948).*
July 1, 1948, Bull. 955 (1949).*
July 1, 1949, Bull. 978 (1950).*
July 1, 1950, Bull. 1012 (1951).*
July 1, 1951, Bull. 1052 (1952).*
July 1, 1952, Bull. 1125 (1953).*
July 1, 1953, Bull. 1154 (1954).*
July 1, 1954, Bull. 1178 (1955).*
July 1, 1955, Bull. 1195 (1956).*
July 1, 1956, Bull. 1206 (1957).*
July 1, 1957, Bull. 1230 (1958).*
July 1, 1958, Bull. 1246 (1959).*
July 1, 1959, Bull. 1270 (I960).*
July 1, 1960, Bull. 1291 (1961).*
July 1, 1961, Bull 1314 (1962).*



Wages and Hours

July 1, 1962, Bull. 1356 (1963).*
July 1, 1963, Bull. 1398 (1964).*
July 1, 1964, Bull. 1433 (1965).*
July 1, 1965, Bull. 1488 (1966).*
July 1, 1966, Bull. 1548 (1967).*
Union Wages, Hours, and Working Conditions of Motortruck
Drivers, June 1, 1939, Bull. 676 (1940).*
Wages and Hours of Union Motortruck Drivers and Helpers:
June 1, 1941, Bull. 705 (1942).*
June 1, 1942, Bull. 732 (1943).*
Underwear industry. See Hoisery and underwear manufacture,
this section.
Union scales. See General trades, and specific industry or
trade, this section.
Upholsterers. (See also Furniture industry, this section.)
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 530 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Urban rates. See Metropolitan areas, this section.
Utilities.
Industry Wage Survey, Electric and Gas Utilities, July 1962,
Bull. 1374 (1963).
Wage Chronology: Commonwealth Edison Co. of Chicago,
1945-63, Rpt. 205 (1964).
Wage Chronology: Pacific Gas and Electric Co., 1943-66,
Bull. 1499 (1966).*
Wage Structure: Electric and Gas Utilities, July 1952,
Rpt. 12 (1953); September 1957, Rpt. 135 (1958).
Wage chronologies (Changes in wage rates and related prac­
tices.):
Aluminum Co. of America, 1939-61, Rpt. 219 (1962).
American Viscose, 1945-63, Rpt. 277 (1964).
American Woolen Co., 1939-48, Bull. 970 (1949).*
Anthracite Mining Industry, 1930-59, Rpt. 255 (1963);
and 1930-66, Bull. 1494 (1966).*
Armour and Co., 1941-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* 1941-58,
Rpt. 165 (I960); 1941-60, Rpt. 187 (1961); 1941-64,
Rpt. 187 (Revised 1965); and 1941-67, Bull. 1481
(1966) .*
A. T. & T., Long Lines Department, 1940-64, Bull. 1443
(1965).*
Berkshire Hathaway Inc., 1943-64, Rpt. 281 (1964);
1943-66, Bull. 1475 (1965);* and 1943-67, Bull. 1541
(1967) .* For earlier years, see Northern Cotton Textile
Assns., this listing.
Bethlehem Atlantic Shipyards, 1941-62, Rpt. 216 (1962);
and 1941-65, Bull. 1454 (1965).*
Bituminous Coal Mines, 1933-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* and
1933-66, Bull. 1461 (1965).*
Carolina Coach Co., 1947-63, Rpt. 259 (1963).
Chicago Newspaper Publishers’ Assn., 1939-61, Rpt. 201
(1962).
Chrysler Corp., 1939-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* 1939-53, Rpt.
161 (I960); 1939-60, Rpt. 198 (1961); 1939-64, Rpt. 198
(Revised 1964); and 1939-66, Bull. 1515 (1967).*
Commonwealth Edison Co. of Chicago, 1945-63, Rpt. 205
(1964).
Dan River Mills, 1943-65, Bull. 1495 (1966).*

153

Wages and Hours

Federal Classification Act Employees, 1924-60, Rpt. 199
(1961); 1924-64, Bull. 1442 (1965).*
Firestone Tire and Rubber Co. and B. F. Goodrich Co.
(Akron Plants), 1937-66, Bull. 1484 (1967).*
Ford Motor Co., 1941-55, Rpt. 99 (1956).
Franklin Assn, of Chicago, 1939-61, Rpt. 215 (1962).
Full-Fashioned Hosiery, 1941-48, Bull. 970 (1949).*
General Motors Corp., 1939-49, Bull. 970-2 (1949);*
1939-55, Rpt. 164 (I960); 1939-60, Rpt. 185 (1961);
1939-63, Rpt. 185 (Revised 1964); and 1939-66, Bull.
1532 (1966).*
International Harvester Co., 1946-57, Rpt. 162 (I960); and
1946-61, Rpt. 202 (1961).
International Paper Co., Southern Kraft Division, 1937-67,
Bull. 1534 (1967).*
International Shoe Co., 1945-64, Rpt. 211 (1963); and
1945-66, Bull. 1479 (1966).*
Lockheed Aircraft Corp. (California Company), 1937-64,
Rpt. 231 (1964).
Lockheed—California Co. (A Division of Lockheed Aircraft
Corp.), 1937-67, Bull. 1522 (1967).*
Martin-Marietta Corp. (Baltimore Plant), 1944-61, Rpt.
232 (1963); arid 1944-64, Bull. 1449 (1965).*
Massachusetts Shoe Manufacturing, 1945-64, Rpt. 209
(1964) ; and 1945-66, Bull. 1471 (1966).*
New York Laundries, 1945-64, Bull. 1453 (1965).*
North American Aviation, 1941-57, Rpt. 163 (I960); and
1941-64, Rpt. 203 (1965).
North Atlantic Longshoring, 1934-61, Rpt. 234 (1962).
Northern Cotton Textiles Assns., 1943-48, Bull. 970
(1949).* See also Berkshire Hathaway Inc., this list­
ing.
Pacific Coast Shipbuilding, 1941-64, Rpt. 254 (1965).
Pacific Gas and Electric Co., 1943-66, Bull. 1499 (1966).*
Pacific Longshore Industry, 1934-65, Bull. 1491 (1966).*
Railroads-Nonoperating Employees, 1920-62, Rpt. 208
(1963).
Sinclair Oil Companies, 1941-63, Rpt. 225 (1964); and
1941-64, Bull. 1447 (1965).*
Swift and Co., 1942-48, Bull. 970 (1949);* and 1942-63,
Rpt. 260 (Revised 1964).
The Anaconda Co, 1941-58, Rpt. 197 (1961).
The Boeing Co. (Washington Plants), 1936-64, Rpt. 204
(1965) .
United States Steel Corp, 1937-48, Bull. 970 (1940);*
1937-55, Rpt. 106 (1957); and 1937-60, Rpt. 186
(1961); 1937-64, Rpt. 186 (Revised 1965).
Western Greyhound Lines, 1945-63, Rpt. 245 (1964).
Western Union Telegraph Co, 1945-53, Rpt. 160 (I960);
1943-63, Rpt. 160 (Revised 1964); and 1943-67, Bull.
1545 (1967).*
Wage differentials. (See also Shift differentials and opera­
tions.)
Intercity Variations in Wage Levels, Bull. 793 (1944).
Labor in the South, Bull. 898 (1947).*
New England Labor and Labor Problems, Bull. 1212 (1957).*
Wage Differences and Establishment Practices, Bull. 1173
(1955).
Wage Differentials and Rate Structures Among 40 Labor
Markets, 1951-52, Bull. 1135 (1953).

154



Wages and Hours

Wages and related benefits by major labor markets. See
Area Wage Surveys— Labor markets, major, this section.
Waiters.
Union Scale of Wages and Hours of Labor:
May 15, 1918, Bull. 259 (1919).
May 15, 1919, Bull. 274 (1920).
May 15, 1920, Bull. 286 (1921).
Water transportation.
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
White-collar workers. (See also Bank employees, Area Wage
Surveys, and Office workers, this section. See also specific
profession.)
Federal White-Collar Workers, Bull. 1117 (1953).
National Survey of Professional, Administrative, Technical,
and Clerical Pay:
Winter 1959-60, Bull. 1286 (1961).*
Winter 1960-61, Bull. 1310 (1961).*
Winter 1961-62, Bull. 1346 (1962).*
February-March 1963,
Bull.
1387(1963).*
February-March 1964,
Bull.
1422(1964).*
February-March 1965,
Bull.
1469(1965).*
February-March 1966,
Bull.
1535(1966).*
Salaries of White-Collar Workers in Hawaii, Puerto Rico,
and Alaska, May-June 1963, Bull. 1392 (1964).
Salary Trends: Federal Classified Employees, 1939—
60 and July 1960-July 1961 (supp.), Rpt. 200 (1961);
and 1939-64, Bull. 1444 (1965).
Trend of Earnings Among White-Collar Workers During the
War, Bull. 783 (1944).
Wage Chronology: Federal Classification Act Employees,
1924-60, Rpt. 199 (1961); 1924-64, Bull. 1442 (1965).*
Wholesale trade. (See also Groceries, wholesale, this section.)
Earnings in Wholesale Trade, June 1958, Bull. 1253 (1959).
Women’s clothing industry. See Clothing industry, this
section.
Woodworkers. (See also Furniture industry, and Millwork, this
section.)
Union Scales of Wages and Hours of Labor:
1927-1928, Bull. 476 (1929).
May 15, 1929, Bull. 515 (1930).
May 15, 1930, Bull. 540 (1931).
May 15, 1931, Bull. 566 (1932).
Wool textiles.
Industry Wage Survey, Wool Textiles, June 1962, Bull. 1372
(1963); and November 1966, Bull. 1551 (1967).
Wage Structure: Wool Textiles, September 1957, Rpt. 134
(1958).
Woolen and worsted goods manufacturing.
Hourly Earnings by Industry, Selected Wage Areas, April
1949 to November 1949, Bull. 1005 (1950); and Janu­
ary 1950 to January 1951, Bull. 1040 (1951).
Hourly Earnings in 10 Industries, Selected Wage Areas,
September 1947-September 1948, Bull. 953 (1949).
Wages and Hours of Labor in the Cotton, Woolen, and
Silk Industries, 1907 to 1914, Bull. 190 (1916).

Wages and Hours, Foreign Countries

Wages and Hours of Labor in Woolen and Worsted Goods
Manufacturing:
1916, Bull. 238 (1918).
1918, Bull. 261 (1919).
1920, Bull. 289 (1921).
1922, Bull. 327 (1923).
1924, Bull. 377 (1925).
1910 to 1926, Bull. 443 (1927).
1910 to 1928, Bull. 487 (1929).
1910 to 1930, Bull. 533 (1931).
1932, Bull. 584 (1933).
Work clothing. See Clothing industry, this section.
World War II. (See also other bulletins for wartime years, this
section.)
Earnings in Cotton-Goods Manufacture During the War
Years, Bull. 798 (1944).
The Changing Status of Bituminous-Coal Miners, 1937-46,
Bull. 882 (1946).
Wage Structure-Metalworking Industries, 1945, Bull. 952
(1949).
Wages in Manufacturing Industries in Wartime, Bull. 756
(1943).
War and Postwar Wages, Prices, and Hours, 1914-23 and
1939-44, Bull. 852 (1946).
Wartime Wages, Income, and Wage Regulation in Agricul­
ture, Bull. 883 (1946).
Zinc. See Mining-nonferrous metals.
Wages and hours, foreign countries. See Labor conditions and in­
dustrial relations, foreign countries— Labor in— specific countries;
Labor Law and Practice— specific countries; Labor Legislationspecific countries; see also Wage policies, foreign countries.
Waiters. See under Wages and hours.
War contracts cutbacks.
Effect of War-Contract Cut-Backs on Selected Plants, Bull. 818
(1945).
War Labor Board, National. See National War Labor Board.
War workers. See Munition factories, Great Britain, World War I;
also Aircraft manufacture; Reconversion; Bull. 819 (1945) Ex­
plosives industry; and Wages and hours— Ammunition-loading in­
dustry.
Warehousing operations. See under Accidents— Rates, types, etc.
Wartime.
Consumers' Prices in the United States, 1942-48, Bull. 966
(1949).*
Demobilization of Manpower, 1918-19, Bull. 781 (1944).
History of the Shipbuilding Labor Adjustment Board, 1917 to
1919, Bull. 283 (1921).
Labor Legislation of:
1917, Bull. 244 (1918).
1918, Bull. 257 (1919).
National War Labor Board, Bull. 287 (1922).
Problems and Policies of Dispute Settlement and Wage Stabi­
lization During World War II, Bull. 1009 (1950).*
The General Maximum Price Regulation, Bull. 879 (1946).
Wartime Prices, Part I, August 1939 to Pearl Harbor, Bull. 749
(1944).* (Only Part I has been published.)
Wartime Wages, Income, and Wage Regulation in Agriculture,
Bull. 883 (1946).



Workers’ Education

Wartime, foreign countries.
Employment Situation in Certain Foreign Countries, Bull 864
(1946).
Food Situation in Central Europe, 1917, Bull. 242 (1918).
Price Trends and Price Control in Foreign Countries Since VEDay, Bull. 873 (1946).
Wartime Prices, Price Control, and Rationing in Foreign Coun­
tries, Bull. 851 (1946).
Washup time. See Collective bargaining, general— Washup, clean­
up, and clothes-change time.
Watch repairmen. See under Employment outlook.
Water transportation. See under Wages and hours.
Weekend work. See Collective bargaining, general— Premium pay.
Welders. See under Employment outlook.
Welfare plans, collectively bargained. See Collective bargaining,
general— Health and welfare insurance.
Welfare work. See Health, recreation, and welfare conditions.
White-collar workers. See Employment outlook— Banking occupa­
tions, Office workers, specific occupations; and under Wages and
hours.
Wholesale prices. See Prices, wholesale.
Wholesale trade. See under Wages and hours.
Women workers. (See also specific subjects.)
Dressmaking as a Trade for Women in Massachusetts, Bull. 193
(1916).
Effect of Minimum-Wage Determination in Oregon, Bull. 176
(1915).
Effect of Workmen’s Compensation Laws in Diminishing the
Necessity of Industrial Employment of Women and Children,
Bull. 217 (1918).
Industrial Experiences of Trade-School Girls in Massachusetts,
Bull. 215 (1917).
Postwar Employment Prospects for Women in the Hoisery In­
dustry, Bull. 835 (1945).
Tables of Working Life for Women, 1950, Bull. 1204 (1957).*
The Boot and Shoe Industry in Massachusetts as a Vocation for
Women, Bull. 180 (1915).
Women in the Lead Industries, Bull. 253 (1919).
Women Production Workers in the Machinery Industries: Em­
ployment Distribution; Earnings, Winter 1952-53, Rpt. 98
(1956).
Women workers, foreign countries. See specific country.
Woodworkers. See under Wages and hours.
Woolen and worsted goods manufacturing. See under Wages and
hours.
Work injuries. See Accidents; Workmen’s compensation. See also
Conventions, meetings, etc.— Industrial Accident Boards and Com­
missions; Poisons, industrial.
Work stoppages. See Labor-management disputes— Strikes.
Worker mobility. See Occupational mobility.
Workers’ education. (See also Vocational education and training.)
A Guide to Labor-Management Relations in the United States,
Bull. 1225 (1958).*
Adult Working-Class Education in Great Britain and the United
States, Bull. 271 (1920).*
Case Studies in Union Leadership Training, 1951-52, Bull. 1114
(1952).*

155

Workers’ Representation, Foreign
Workers’ representation, foreign countries. See Labor conditions
and industrial relations, foreign countries.
Working conditions. See Child labor; Collective bargaining, by
industry or occupation; Employment outlook; Hygiene, industrial;
Labor and industrial conditions— Hawaii; Legislation; Munition
factories, Great Britain, World War I; Shipbuilding and repair;
U.S.S.R.; Wages and hours— specific industry or occupation; and
Women workers.
Working life, length and pattern of. (See also Labor supply.)
Tables of Working Life for Women, 1950, Bull. 1204 (1957).*
Tables of Working Life, Length of Working Life for Men, Bull.
1001 (1950).*
Workmen’s compensation. (See also Accidents; Conventions, meet­
ings, etc.,— Industrial Accident Boards and Commissions.)
Administration.
Problems of Workmen’s Compensation Administration in
the United States and Canada, Bull. 672 (1940).*
Workmen’s Compensation in the United States, Bull. 1149
(1954). See also Bull. 301, entitled below, and Legis­
lation, this section.
Court decisions. See Court decisions affecting labor.
Insurance systems.
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Insurance and
Administration, Bull. 301 (1922).
Lead poisoning.
Deaths from Lead Poisoning, 1925-1927, Bull. 488 (1929).
Legislation. (See also Administration, this section; and Legis­
lation— Labor— Text, summaries, and reviews of laws.)
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the
United States and Canada up to January 1, 1920, Bull.
275 (1920).
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the
United States as of January 1, 1925, Bull. 379 (1925).
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the
United States up to December 31, 1917, Bull. 240
(1918).
Compensation Legislation of 1914 and 1915, Bull. 185
(1915).
Labor Legislation of 1916, Bull. 213 (1917).
Occupational-Disease Legislation in the United States,
1936, Bulls. 625 (1937), and 652 (1938).
State Labor Legislation, 1937, Including Workmen’s Com­
pensation Legislation, Bull. 654 (1938).
Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the United States and
Foreign Countries, Bull. 203 (1917).
Workmen's Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada, Bull. 272 (1921).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada, 1920-1922, Bull. 332 (1923).
Workmen's Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada as of July 1, 1926, Bull. 423 (1926).

Yugoslavia
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Canada as of January 1, 1929, Bull. 496 (1929).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States
and Foreign Countries, 1917 and 1918, Bull. 243 (1918).
Seamen.
Settlement for Accidents to American Seamen, Bull. 466
(1928).
Workmen’s Compensation and the Protection of Seamen,
Bull. 869 (1946).
Statistics. See Accidents— Methods.
Women and children.
Effect of Workmen’s Compensation Laws in Diminishing the
Necessity of Industrial Employment of Women and Chil­
dren, Bull. 217 (1918).
Workmen’s compensation, foreign countries. (See also specific
country.)
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Insurance and Ad­
ministration, Bull. 301 (1922). (British Columbia and On­
tario.)
Comparison of Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the United
States and Canada, up to January 1, 1920, Bull. 275 (1920).
Problems of Workmen’s Compensation Administration in the
United States and Canada, Bull. 672 (1940).*
Workmen’s Compensation and the Protection of Seamen, Bull.
869 (1946).
Workmen’s Compensation Laws of the United States and For­
eign Countries, Bull. 203 (1917).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the Latin American
Countries, Bull. 529 (1930).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada, Bull. 272 (1921).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada, 1920-1922, Bull. 332 (1923).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada as of July 1, 1926, Bull. 423 (1926).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Canada as of January 1, 1929, Bull. 496 (1929).
Workmen’s Compensation Legislation of the United States and
Foreign Countries, 1917 and 1918, Bull. 243 (1918).
Worksharing. See Collective bargaining, general— Layoff.
Workweek, length of. See specific industry or occupation under
Employment outlook; and Wages and hours.

Y
Yugoslavia.
Labor Law and Practice in Yugoslavia, Rpt. 250 (1963).

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