| Massachusetts. Department of Labor and Industries. Division of Statistics - Labor - 1903 - 670 pages
...human element involved is at work to intensify and perpetuate itself. Now when it is said that ' ' the average wage earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage earner," the sa}'ing assumes unwillingness on his part, the sense of necessity ; and therefore a grievance which,... | |
| 1904 - 1062 pages
...full, as follows : "The average wage-earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wageearner. He has given up the hope of a kingdom to come, where...workingman. Singly, he has been too weak to enforce bis just demands and he has sought strength in union and has associated himself into labor organizations.... | |
| William Gifford, Sir John Taylor Coleridge, John Gibson Lockhart, Whitwell Elwin, William Macpherson, William Smith, Sir John Murray IV, Rowland Edmund Prothero (Baron Ernle), George Walter Prothero - English literature - 1904 - 710 pages
...organisation. . . . The average wage-earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage-earner. He has given up the hope of a kingdom to come, where...that the reward for his work be given to him as a working man.' (Preface, and p. 93.) In the pursuit of their class interests the unions are at one with... | |
| Connecticut. Bureau of Labor Statistics - Connecticut - 1904 - 582 pages
...made is as follows "The average wage-earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage-earner. He has given up the hope of a kingdom to come, where...that the reward for his work be given to him as a working man. Singly, he has been too weak to enforce his just demands, and he has sought strength In... | |
| Washington (State). Bureau of Labor - Coal mines and mining - 1904 - 374 pages
...made is as follows: "The average wage-earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage-earner He has given up the hope of a kingdom to come, where...that the reward for his work be given to him as a working man. Singly, he has been too weak to enforce his just demands, and he h?.s sought strength... | |
| Industrial relations - 1904 - 232 pages
...policies are based upon it. " The wageearner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage-earner. He has given up the hope of a kingdom to come where...will be a capitalist, and he asks that the reward of his work be given him as a working man." Belonging thus to a distinct social class, he is intent... | |
| New Hampshire. Bureau of Labor - Labor - 1904 - 304 pages
...made is as follows : "The average wage-earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage-earner. He has given up the hope of a kingdom to come, where he himself will be a capitalist, and; be asks that the reward for his work be given to him as a working man. Singly, ha has been too weak... | |
| Political science - 1904 - 652 pages
...members do not expect to rise from their class but with it. The wage earner in the words of Mr. Mitchell, "has made up his mind that he must remain a wage earner and that he will never become a capitalist." But the new unionist has gone further than this. Forced... | |
| Henry George - Economics - 1905 - 446 pages
..."The average wage-earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage-earner. He has given up a hope of a kingdom to come, where he himself will be...reward for his work be given to him as a workingman." 1 Conversing recently with a large cattle raiser in the " Panhandle " of Texas, I learned that the... | |
| New York (State). Dept. of Labor - Arbitration, Industrial - 1905 - 804 pages
...ourselves to it quite as definitely as to the physical facts which enter into the labor problem. If " the average wage earner has made up his mind that he must remain a wage earner,1' we have a new type of solidarity, new at least to this country. Xo other man amongst us has... | |
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