Abstract

Prosperity - Believe It or Not: II. New Standards of Living

Chase, Stuart | October 30, 1929 issue

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"Middletown" is in one of the North East Central States, well within the borders of the prosperous area. It is a city of some 40,000, a brisk manufacturing center surrounded by corn fields. In 1885 the town was a placid county seat of some 6,000 souls, still retaining much of the simplicity of pioneer days. Industry meant a bagging plant, a clay-tile yard, a feather duster shop, a planting mill, and a flour mill or two. The gainfully employed of Middletown engage in more than 400 different occupations. Seventy-one in a hundred belong to the working class and work mainly with their hands; twenty-nine belong to the business class.

See Also:

SOCIAL classes; CITIES & towns; COTTON trade; TEXTILE fabrics; FLOUR mills; OCCUPATIONS; WORKING class
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