Word: boosted
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Dates: during 1940-1949
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...railways, seized by the Government nine weeks ago to avert a strike, were returned last week to private ownership. The three holdout brotherhoods (engineers, firemen, switchmen) agreed, at long last, to the same 15½?-an-hour wage boost which had been accepted some time ago by all the other railroad workers...
Their reasons were simple. A federal court had enjoined them from using labor's ultimate weapon, the strike (TIME, July 12). More important, their colleagues, the conductors and trainmen, were already demanding another 25% wage boost. The engineers, firemen and switch men wanted to get the 15½? raise tucked away so they could quickly get in line for another helping...
...because, they said, even while they had been arguing, the cost of living had gone up. The conductors and trainmen, who had accepted the 15½? increase last fall, were also whistling down the track again. They had decided that the time had come to demand another 25% boost...
After that, the rest was easy. The coal operators caved in quickly and signed a contract which was a complete victory for John. It calls for: 1) a $1-a-day wage increase;* 2) renewal of a union shop; 3) a boost in the welfare-fund royalty from 10? to 20? a ton. Estimated cost to the operators: more than $200 million a year. Expected increase in the price of coal...
...million gross). Luckman claims that Lux, which had dropped to third place in the toilet soap field, is No. 1 again. So, says he, are Lever's Rinso and Lux Flakes. In the first quarter of 1948, when U.S. soap shipments slumped 17%, Luckman managed to boost...