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Definition of Department of Commerce and Labor
1. Noun. A former executive department of the United States government; created in 1903 and split into two departments in 1913.
Lexicographical Neighbors of Department Of Commerce And Labor
Literary usage of Department of Commerce and Labor
Below you will find example usage of this term as found in modern and/or classical literature:
1. The Law of Interstate Commerce and Its Federal Regulation by Frederick Newton Judson (1905)
"THE Department of Commerce and Labor. Pui?eg 351. The Department of Commerce and
Labor 352. Section six oC the Act 853. ..."
2. Guide to the Archives of the Government of the United States in Washington by Claude Halstead Van Tyne (1907)
"Department of Commerce and Labor. The Department of Commerce and Labor was
organized on July 1, 1903, under the act of February 14, 1903. ..."
3. The American Government by Frederick Jennings Haskin (1911)
"THE Department of Commerce and Labor. THE Department of Commerce and Labor covers
a wide range of governmental activities. The scrutiny of corporations, ..."
4. Ocean and Inland Water Transportation by Emory Richard Johnson (1906)
"The Department of Commerce and Labor touches those interests at more points than
any other department does, but the War and Treasury Departments have a no ..."
5. Convention by National Electric Light Association Convention, National Independent Meat Packers Association, University of Georgia College of Agriculture, University of Georgia Dept. of Food Science (1913)
"US Department of Commerce and Labor, Bureau of Standards. Reprint No. 173.
"Deflection Potentiometers for Current and Voltage measurements. ..."
6. Compiled Statutes of the United States, 1913: Embracing the Statutes of the by John Allan Mallory, United States (1914)
"The Department of Commerce and Labor, as an Executive Department, with a Secretary
of Commerce and Labor as the head thereof, was established by Act Feb. ..."