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Census Bulletin

The National Association of Hosiery Manufacturers, Inc., of New York, issues monthly data on production, shipments, and stocks of all types of hosiery. Special studies on imports and exports, based on Bureau of Census data, and special quarterly surveys on average hourly earnings are assembled for the membership. An annual bulletin, Hosiery Statistics 16) is available. [Pg.25]

No industrial census has been taken in Cuba it is not known when one will be taken.) Boletin de estadisticas, irregular, 1945-. Statistical bulletin, issued irregularly, usually for a 2 to 4 month period. Economic statistics, principally prices, money and banking, wages, and public finance. In LC. [Pg.53]

Estadistica, quarterly, 1943-. Each issue contains a selected annotated bibliography of recent Latin American statistical publications, with special emphasis on census volumes and statistical yearbooks and other major compilations of data of the 22 American republics. The first issues of new bulletins and journals are listed, but no succeeding issues however, articles, and sections of special interest are shown under their proper subject headings. A section of news notes immediately preceding the bibliography contains information on statistical studies and publications programs launched by statistical agencies. In LC. [Pg.56]

Suggest consulting bulletins of other bureaus within Department of Commerce Foreign Trade Stalistics Notes (Bureau of Census). See Monthly Catalog of Government Publications, Superintendent of Documents, Washington, D. C. [Pg.474]

In lieu of the strictly chemical engineering books, sources of general information which are used, not only in their own rightful functions but also to compensate for the lack of information, include (1) bulletins of manufacturers of chemicals, (2) bulletins of the manufacturers of special materials and metals, (3) publications of university laboratories and experiment stations, (4) pamphlets from industrial and trade associations and industrial institutes, (5) government publications from various bureaus, such as Chemistry and Agricultural Economics in the Department of Agriculture, the Bureaus of Census, Mines, Patents, and Standards in the Department of Commerce, as well as the Internal Revenue in the Treasury Department, and the U.S. Tariff Commission. [Pg.38]

The time series on the aggregate number of chemists in the labor force can be obtained from the occupational breakdowns of the U.S. Census of Population. Some of the problems caused by changing occupational classifications over the last hundred years are discussed in Sections A.l and A.2 these issues are analyzed (and variant measures proposed) in lA, Edwards, 1943, and lA, Kaplan and Casey, 1958. An alternate source for estimates of the population of employed chemists and chemical engineers is the Bureau of Labor Statistics. Bulletin 1781 of the BLS, Employment of Scientists and Engineers, 1950-70 (lA, 1973), was particularly helpful. See also Bureau of Labor t2itistie, Manpower Resources in Chemistry and Chemical Engineering, Bulletin 1132 (lA, 1953). Readers particularly interested in the employment of chemists in academe, government, or industry are referred to the detailed discussion in Chapter 5. [Pg.501]

Munroe, 1908. Charles E. Munroe. Chemicals and Allied Products . In Department of Commerce and Labor, Bureau of the Census. Manufactures 1905. Part IV. Special Reports on Selected Industries. 397 512. Bulletin 92. [Pg.506]


See other pages where Census Bulletin is mentioned: [Pg.47]    [Pg.396]    [Pg.378]    [Pg.106]    [Pg.611]   
See also in sourсe #XX -- [ Pg.219 ]




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