Appendix to the Journals of the Senate and Assembly of the ..session of the Legislature of the State of California . numbered 3. It would have been easier to read the four charts in combination ifthe correlated factors had followed a scale of ascension or descension,but on account of the irregularity of the relationship of some classes ofinjuries and their severity measured in the position of some ofthe groups had to be changed. For example, in chart No. 17, sub-numb(>red 1. eye injuries take third place in the order of Nature ofInjury, and Part of Body, while in chart No. 18, subnu
Appendix to the Journals of the Senate and Assembly of the ..session of the Legislature of the State of California . numbered 3. It would have been easier to read the four charts in combination ifthe correlated factors had followed a scale of ascension or descension,but on account of the irregularity of the relationship of some classes ofinjuries and their severity measured in the position of some ofthe groups had to be changed. For example, in chart No. 17, sub-numb(>red 1. eye injuries take third place in the order of Nature ofInjury, and Part of Body, while in chart No. 18, subnumbered 2,these injuries take tenth place. The highest column in chart No. 17, subnumbered 1, refers to the12,68f^ bruising and cutting injuries occurrins: to the fingers, and thevery short and obscure column in the block at the junction of line four,fingers, under Part of Body, and line six, Cuts and Bruises,under Nature of Injury on chart No. 18, subnumbered 2, shows thatthe time lost due to cuts and bruises of fingers, averages about six days( per cent). The third correlated factor of average compensation. NATURE OF INJURY HEIGHT OF COLUMN DETERMINED BY NUMBER OF INJURIES
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Keywords: ., bookauthorcaliforn, bookcentury1800, bookdecade1850, bookyear1853