Table 18. Variation of Actual Weekly Hours from Scheduled Hours Hours Full time ._......| Jvertime _.cooe--an Jnder & ean } and under 8 ._| 3 and under 156 .. 15 and over .....! Ondertime ........ Inder 4% ceeeee em + and under 8 _. and under 16 . 1% and under 30 3 arc under 40 nN and over That anni Tapsisins Total Cee Full-fashioned hosiery ecko ies Seamless hosiery Men ‘Women Men 1 Women. Number | Per cent Number | Per cent Number | Per cent | Number Per cent 1207 | 47.7 $07 36.7 18.9 172 7.0 1.6 60 7.4 111 8.1 1 Tol ae 67 39.2 187 | 28.7 28.1 1 .8 .8 TTT fo "0.4 479 185 188 8 98 2.4 4.5 1 QAO 29 9 1200 56.3 82.7 rtd b. 2.3 378 207 108 2 10 7 1 7 e 4 59 161 Od 6.5 11.3 12.4 33.7 6.0 1.5 328 ANYY 100.0 469 mcmama! 1850 3 100.0 3038 meneame 4319 for whom no record of actual hours could be obtained. (Chart 5). In the seamless hosiery industry there was only one occupational group in which hours of work were reported for 100 or more employes (Appendix Table V). Full time There was more full-time work for both men and women in the full- fashioned hosiery industry than in the seamless hosiery industry. Men knitters and women seamers and menders in full-fashioned hosiery had the highest proportion of full-time work. In no other occupational group except in the miscellaneous classification did as many as one- half of the men and women work their recular scheduled hours. Overtime More overtime work was reported for men in the seamless than in the full-fashioned hosiery industry. Of the men more than one-fifth of the full-fashioned knitting helpers, maintenance, and miscellaneous workers worked more than their scheduled hours. There was no oc- supational group in the full-fashioned hosiery industry in which more than 10 per cent of the women worked in excess of their scheduled hours.