Select Problems in Historical Interpretation: Government and the American economy, 1870-presentHolt, Rinehart and Winston, 1954 |
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Page 334
... increase their incomes to that level , in terms of the 1935 situation , this would have meant an increase in expenditures for food of approximately 1 billion 900 million dol- lars . The expenditures of these people would have been increased ...
... increase their incomes to that level , in terms of the 1935 situation , this would have meant an increase in expenditures for food of approximately 1 billion 900 million dol- lars . The expenditures of these people would have been increased ...
Page 364
... increased 10 cents per hour . There was an increase of 10 cents per hour in all other hourly rates , and an equivalent increase in all tonnage and piecework rates which will net under normal expected earnings an increase of not less ...
... increased 10 cents per hour . There was an increase of 10 cents per hour in all other hourly rates , and an equivalent increase in all tonnage and piecework rates which will net under normal expected earnings an increase of not less ...
Page 366
... increasing their rate five ( 5 ) cents per hour , and in addition to this five cents an hour increase gave them one - half cent advantage of a percentage boost in October . That this rate was increased again on March 16 , 1937 , at ten ...
... increasing their rate five ( 5 ) cents per hour , and in addition to this five cents an hour increase gave them one - half cent advantage of a percentage boost in October . That this rate was increased again on March 16 , 1937 , at ten ...
Contents
I | 2 |
PHILOSOPHERS OF LAISSEZ FAIRE | 4 |
Andrew Carnegie and the Accumula | 10 |
Copyright | |
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action administration agricultural American amount asked authority believe Board called capital cars cent charge Cleveland coal combination committee common competition Congress contract corporation cost course courts deal demand economic effect employees fact farm farmers Federal force give important increase individual industry interest issue labor land legislation less major manufacturing material matter means ment million monopoly nature necessary operation organization party persons political possible practice present President Problem production profits Pullman question railroad reason received refining regulation relations representatives result road secure Senator Standard Oil steel strike supply things tion trade transportation trust union United wages whole workers York