Legislative Establishment Appropriation Bill for 1936: Hearings Before the Subcommittee of the Committee on Appropriations, House of Representatives, Seventy-fourth Congress, First Session, on the Legislative Establishment Appropriation Bill for 1940 |
From inside the book
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Page 4
... material and many thousands of pamphlets . I suppose that the total collection would be in the neighborhood of 200,000 volumes . We have been very strict in the selection of the material and we are constantly weeding out and discarding ...
... material and many thousands of pamphlets . I suppose that the total collection would be in the neighborhood of 200,000 volumes . We have been very strict in the selection of the material and we are constantly weeding out and discarding ...
Page 5
... material no longer needed in order to keep it down to a working collection . Mr. SAUNDERS . May I say at this point , Mr. Chairman , that no human being could have supplied the information that was required by the various bureaus with ...
... material no longer needed in order to keep it down to a working collection . Mr. SAUNDERS . May I say at this point , Mr. Chairman , that no human being could have supplied the information that was required by the various bureaus with ...
Page 17
... material is needed because of the growth of the work of the Bureau . STENOGRAPHIC - REPORTING SERVICE Mr. RAUBAUT . What is this reporting service ? I do not under- stand that . That is a new item , $ 5,340 . Mr. SAUNDERS . That is the ...
... material is needed because of the growth of the work of the Bureau . STENOGRAPHIC - REPORTING SERVICE Mr. RAUBAUT . What is this reporting service ? I do not under- stand that . That is a new item , $ 5,340 . Mr. SAUNDERS . That is the ...
Page 32
... material designed to familiarize the public with the services of the various bureaus and divisions of the United States Department of Labor , and to portray graphically and visually through the use of specifically designed exhibits ...
... material designed to familiarize the public with the services of the various bureaus and divisions of the United States Department of Labor , and to portray graphically and visually through the use of specifically designed exhibits ...
Page 33
... material for all bureaus and divisions of the United States Department of Labor , $ 4,400 , to provide for adding two employees to this section , one for designing , preparing , and assembling exhibit material and models , and one for ...
... material for all bureaus and divisions of the United States Department of Labor , $ 4,400 , to provide for adding two employees to this section , one for designing , preparing , and assembling exhibit material and models , and one for ...
Common terms and phrases
additional administrative amount appropriation assistant BACON balance BEAMAN bill Budget Capitol power plant cards cars catalog Chairman clerk cost course Department of Labor Disbursed District of Columbia Division DOCKWEILER elevators ELGEN employees Employment Service equipment expenditures expenses Federal fiscal year 1936 funds GIEGENGACK Government Printing Office HIBNER House Office Building increase industry installed International Labor International Labor Organization June 30 KAHN legislation Library of Congress LUDLOW LYNN maintenance material MCMILLAN Members ment miscellaneous Miss LENROOT months necessary operation organization percent personnel Poplar Point position present printing and binding purchase PUTNAM record reference repairs and alterations requested ROMNEY salaries SAUNDERS Secretary PERKINS Senate Sergeant at Arms session SHANKS SINNOTT SNYDER statement statistics submitted Supreme Court TARVER telephone tion TISDEL United United States Code ZIONCHECK
Popular passages
Page 170 - for the purpose of enabling the United States, through the Children's Bureau, to cooperate with State public welfare agencies in establishing, extending, and strengthening, especially in predominantly rural areas, public welfare services for the protection and care of homeless, dependent and neglected children and children in danger of becoming delinquent.
Page 242 - ... (1) that employees shall have the right to organize and bargain collectively through representatives of their own choosing, and shall be free from the interference, restraint, or coercion of employers of labor, or their agents, In the designation of such representatives or in self-organization or in other concerted activities for the purpose of collective bargaining or other mutual aid or protection...
Page 242 - ... no employee and no one seeking employment shall be required as a condition of employment to join any company union or to refrain from joining, organizing, or assisting a labor organization of his own choosing...
Page 83 - Secretary and any officer or employee of the Treasury Department, upon request from the Committee on Ways and Means of the House of Representatives, the Committee on Finance of the Senate, or a select committee of the Senate or House...
Page 52 - ... person designated by him. Amounts appropriated for the expenses of the joint committee shall be disbursed one-half by the Secretary of the Senate and one-half by the Clerk of the House.
Page 60 - Whereas also the failure of any nation to adopt humane conditions of labour is an obstacle in the way of other nations which desire to improve the conditions in their own countries...
Page 243 - ... representatives of producers of more than two-thirds of the annual tonnage production of such district or each of such districts in a contracting group during the preceding calendar year, and representatives of the majority of the mine workers therein, shall be filed with the Labor Board and shall be accepted as the minimum wages for the various classifications of labor by the code members operating in such district or group of districts.
Page 8 - Labor to be prevailing for the corresponding classes of laborers and mechanics employed on projects of a character similar to the contract work...
Page 293 - ... attendance at meetings of educational associations and other organizations, rent and equipment of offices in the District of Columbia and elsewhere, purchase of books of reference, law books, and periodicals, stationery, typewriters and exchange thereof, miscellaneous supplies, postage on foreign mail, printing and binding to be done at the Government Printing Office, and all other necessary expenses.
Page 262 - Office; but the Public Printer, with the approval of the Joint Committee on Printing...