[100] Book II, Chapter III.
[101] Report of the Industrial Commission, 1901, Vol. I, p. 18.
[102] Report of the Industrial Commission, 1901, Vol. I, p. 29.
[103] Ibid., p. 31.
[104] "Most members of combinations feel that the tendency is to make work more permanent under the combination form of doing business, inasmuch as the combination is better able to adjust the supply of goods to the demand, and thus to secure regularity in their productive conditions." Report of the Industrial Commission, Vol. XIII, p. xxxi.
[105] "Some of the witnesses are of the opinion that the industrial combinations give to the labor unions a decided advantage, inasmuch as it enable them to deal with the trade as a whole instead of with separate manufacturers." Report of the Industrial Commission, Vol. XIII, p. xxxii.
[106] Book II, Chapter I, Unemployment.
[107] Pittsburg Survey, Charities, XXI, p. 1063.
[108] Charities, XXI, p. 1035.
[109] Senate Reports, 52d Congress, 2d session, Vol. I, Rept. No. 1280, p. xiv.