Page:Popular Science Monthly Volume 86.djvu/495

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WAGES AND SALARIES
491

Table III

Wage Rates of Males, California, 1911
Retail Establishments

Total
Employed
Per Cent, of Employees Earning Wage
Rates Per Year Less Than
$250 $500 $750 $1,000
San Francisco 5,389 4 14 29 57
Los Angeles 6,277 3 10 37 71

Wholesale Establishments, Males

Total
Employed
Per Cent, of Employees Earning Wage
Rates Per Year Less Than
$250 $500 $750 $1,000
San Francisco 8,300 1 7 23 52
Los Angeles 4,820 . . . . . . . 6 29 51

The Massachusetts Commission on Minimum Wage Boards reports on the wages of 3,761 women and on the annual earnings of 1,533 who were employed throughout the year. Many of the department-store employees not employed throughout the year leave for new positions, or are laid off in the dull season. All hut 33 of the 1,533 women employed throughout the year earned less than $500 per year. The hour rates of all of the 3,761 women show practically the same ratio.

Two other sources of information yield similar results. A well-made study of saleswomen and other mercantile employees, not including buyers or clerical assistants, was made in Baltimore by Elizabeth B. Butler. The total number of women covered by the investigation was 4,048. Of these women, 2,184, or 54 per cent., received a rate of pay of less than $250 per year, while 95 per cent, were paid less than $500.[1] These rates are apparently slightly below the rates in Washington. Among 1,760 saleswomen in the Washington stores, a quarter received less than $250, while less than nine tenths fell below $500.[2] Comparative studies indicate that the department store employees are paid at a higher rate than factory employees. Unfortunately the variations of age between the two occupations have not generally been taken into account. An Illinois investigation covering 2,556 department store employees showed that a twentieth received less than a $250 wage rate, and half less than a $500 year rate. On the other hand, a fifth of the wage rates were over $750.[3]

It seems evident that for most saleswomen in eastern mercantile

  1. "Saleswomen in Mercantile Stores," E. B. Butler, Baltimore, 1909, New York, Charities Publication Committee, 1912.
  2. "Hours, Earnings and Employment of Wage-earning Women in the District of Columbia," op. cit., pp. 22 and 23.
  3. Biennial Report of the Bureau of Labor Statistics, 111., 1908, Springfield, 1910, pp. 413-592.