Maintenance of a Lobby to Influence Legislation: Hearings Before a Subcommittee of the Committee on the Judiciary, United States Senate, Sixty-third Congress, First Session, Pursuant to S. Res. 92 : a Resolution Instructing the Committee on the Judiciary to Investigate the Charge that a Lobby is Maintained to Influence Legislation Pending in the Senate, Part 4U.S. Government Printing Office, 1913 |
Other editions - View all
Common terms and phrases
addressed amendment answer Asso Association of Manufacturers attention Baltimore believe Bird Boudinot campaign CHAIRMAN Cleave Congress Congressman copy Coudrey Council for Industrial counsel court Cushing Dear Ferdinand Democratic district duplicate eight-hour bill EMERY examining letter feel fight follows FORAKER friends Gardner gentlemen give Gompers hearings Hotel House Industrial Association Industrial Defense injunction interview James January 28 John Kirby Judge Niles labor leaders legislation letter you wrote Louis M. M. MULHALL matter MCCARTER McDermott McMichael meeting morning MULHALL after examination National Association National Council Ohio organization paid present President question received referred representing Republican request Schwedt Schwedtman secretary Senator CUMMINS Senator NELSON Senator REED Senator WALSH sent session Sherman statement talk tariff commission telegram tion told unimportant Van Cleave Washington Watson week wish witness write yesterday York
Popular passages
Page 3762 - June, in the year one thousand eight hundred and eighty, before me personally came and appeared George Bell, Frederic C. Bartlett and Gilbert T. Sewall to me known and known to me to be the...
Page 3796 - District, which may require or involve the employment of laborers or mechanics shall contain a provision that no laborer or mechanic doing any part of the work contemplated by the contract, in the employ of the contractor or any subcontractor contracting for any part of said work contemplated, shall be required or permitted to work more than eight hours in any one calendar day...
Page 3796 - ... the proper officer of the United States, or of any Territory, or of the District of Columbia...
Page 3789 - If a party can make himself a judge of the validity of orders which have been issued, and by his own act of disobedience set them aside, then are the courts impotent, and what the Constitution now fittingly calls the "judicial power of the United States
Page 3805 - That no part of this money shall be spent in the prosecution of any organization or individual for entering into any combination or agreement having in view the increasing of wages, shortening of hours, or bettering the conditions of labor, or for any act done in furtherance thereof, not in itself unlawful...
Page 3796 - Is by the contractor or any sub-contractor. Any contractor or sub-contractor aggrieved by the withholding of any penalty as hereinbefore provided shall have the right within six months thereafter...
Page 3796 - No penalties shall be imposed for any violation of such provision in such contract due to any extraordinary events or conditions of manufacture, or to any emergency caused by fire, famine, or flood, by danger to life or to property, or by other extraordinary event or condition on account of which the President shall subsequently declare the violation to have been excusable.
Page 3796 - Territory, and in the case of a contract made by the District of Columbia to the Commissioners thereof, who shall have power to review the action imposing the penalty, and in all such appeals from such final order whereby a contractor or subcontractor may be aggrieved by the imposition of the penalty hereinbefore provided such contractor or subcontractor may within six months after decision by such head of a department or the Commissioners of the District of Columbia file a claim in the Court of...
Page 3807 - States, or a judge or the judges thereof, in any case between an employer and employees, or between employers and employees, or between employees, or between persons employed and persons seeking employment, involving or growing out of a dispute concerning terms or conditions of employment, unless necessary to prevent irreparable injury to property or to a property right...
Page 3787 - SEC. 2. That nothing in this act shall apply to contracts for transportation by land or water, or for the transmission of intelligence, or for the purchase of supplies by the Government, whether manufactured to conform to...