Wage Earning and Education by Rufus Rolla Lutz
page 120 of 187 (64%)
page 120 of 187 (64%)
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only men operators. Where light weight materials are used, as in the
manufacture of dresses and waists, delicacy in handling is required, and nearly all the operators are women. [Illustration: Diagram 7.--Distribution of 8,337 clothing workers by sex in the principal occupations in the garment industry] Four-fifths of the men and two-fifths of the women employed in the industry are of foreign birth and the majority of the native born workers are of foreign parentage. There is an increasing demand for workers who understand English, due to the fact that they are able to follow directions more intelligently. There are relatively few workers under the age of 18. Many firms will employ no one under this age because of various complications which arise in connection with the age and schooling certification of girls between the ages of 16 and 18. Of 25 women's clothing factories visited during the Survey only nine had any workers under 18. According to the report of the Industrial Commission of Ohio for 1914 only eight per cent of the workers employed in making men's clothing, and less than two per cent of the workers employed in making women's clothing were under 18 years of age. EARNINGS In general the wages paid in garment making compare favorably with those of other manufacturing industries. This is particularly true with respect to the earnings of women workers. A considerably larger proportion of the women employed in the garment industry earn what may |
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