Word: shared
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Dates: during 1910-1919
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...There is no better way of realizing what the class committees are up against than to estimate the quotas which each class must raise in order to successfully gain the desired goal of $15,250,000. Boston's share, amounting to $6,000,000, is a little less than two-fifths of the whole...
...will be seen that the classes from 1881 to 1900 are called upon to raise $400,000 per class, of which Boston's share would...
This natural growth of organized labor led to two results, both detrimental to the consumer. On the one hand, the contentions for profits on inventions and improved management by employers and employees resulted in a compromise whereby both share in the profits...
This in itself, is fair enough. But we are faced, either by understandings between capital and labor which all to take into consideration the public for by capitalistic solidarity which interferes with the free play of competition. The result is that the public does not share in the benefits growing out of inventions...
That inventors should receive good rewards from their inventions cannot be denied, for without inventions modern business methods would never have been possible. But it is equally undeniable that the public has a right to share in the improvements. A diminishing cost of production must benefit the consumer. In order to safeguard him, the public must make itself heard above the wranglings of labor-capital disputes...