To Regulate the Textile Industry: Hearings Before the Subsommittee of the Committee on Labor, House of Representatives, Seventy-fifth Congress, First Sissions, on H. R. 238, Volumele 1-9U.S. Government Printing Office, 1937 |
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Pagina 177
... week would mean 43 cents an hour ; a 35 - hour workweek at $ 18 a week would mean 51 cents an hour ; a 40 - hour workweek at $ 15 a week would mean 37.5 cents an hour ; and a 40 - hour workweek at $ 18 a week would mean 45 cents an hour ...
... week would mean 43 cents an hour ; a 35 - hour workweek at $ 18 a week would mean 51 cents an hour ; a 40 - hour workweek at $ 15 a week would mean 37.5 cents an hour ; and a 40 - hour workweek at $ 18 a week would mean 45 cents an hour ...
Pagina 191
... week . We feel this is fair and equitable and that the 40 - hour limitation should not be applied to such employees making over $ 35 a week , as office manager , mana- gers of billing departments , converting departments , and so forth ...
... week . We feel this is fair and equitable and that the 40 - hour limitation should not be applied to such employees making over $ 35 a week , as office manager , mana- gers of billing departments , converting departments , and so forth ...
Pagina 294
... weekly wage for a 40 - hour work week . Discussions have ranged from this wage and hour recommendation to the extremely drastic provisions of the original H. R. 238 which called for an $ 18 minimum weekly wage for a 35 - hour week minus ...
... weekly wage for a 40 - hour work week . Discussions have ranged from this wage and hour recommendation to the extremely drastic provisions of the original H. R. 238 which called for an $ 18 minimum weekly wage for a 35 - hour week minus ...
Termeni și expresii frecvente
40 hours 40-hour week average believe BESSE Bureau of Labor Census cents Chairman CHENEY child labor committee competition Congress CONSTANTINE consumer cotton textile court earnings EDGERTON effect Ellenbogen bill employees employment established fabrics fact favor Federal Trade Commission figures GILDEA girls give going GORMAN Government GUTTERSON HANKIN hearing HINRICHS hosiery increase interest interstate commerce JOHN LESINSKI KELLER knitting labor costs Labor Statistics labor unions learners legislation manufacturing matter ment mills minimum wage MURCHISON National National Recovery Administration North Carolina operation percent person plants present provisions question RAMSPECK rayon reason regulation represent ROBERT RAMSPECK Robinson-Patman Act SCHNEIDER selling SMITH South spindles standards statement subcommittee subsection Textile Commission textile industry textile products thereof thing tion trade practices trying underwear industry unfair United violation wage and hour WELCH wholesale Woolen workers yarn