The fact that misrepresentation and misdescription have become so common in the knit underwear trade that most dealers no longer accept labels at their face value, does not prevent their use being an unfair method of competition. A method inherently unfair... TRUTH IN FABRIC. - Side 11av United States. Congress. Senate. Committee on Interstate Commerce - 1937 - 69 siderUten tilgangsbegrensning - Om denne boken
| United States. Federal Trade Commission - 1922 - 248 sider
...accept labels at their face value, does not prevent their use being an unfair method of competition. A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...manufacturer's business may suffer, not merely through a competitor 's deceiving his direct customer, the retailer, but also through the competitor's putting... | |
| 1922 - 410 sider
...accept labels at their face value, does not prevent their use being an unfair method of competition. A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...does it cease to be unfair because the falsity of the manufacturers' representation has become so well known to the trade that dealers, as distinguished... | |
| 1924 - 280 sider
...used to cover mixtures of wool and cotton that no one was deceived by such labels, the Court said: A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...manufacturer's business may suffer, not merely through the competitor's deceiving his direct customer, the retailer, but also through the competitor's putting... | |
| 1924 - 854 sider
...used to cover mixtures of wool and cotton that no one was deceived by such labels, the Court said: A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...manufacturer's business may suffer, not merely through the competitor's deceiving his direct customer, the retailer, but also through the competitor's putting... | |
| 1924 - 580 sider
...accept labels at their face value, does not prevent their use being an unfair method of competition. A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...from consumers, are no longer deceived. . . . the Commission was justified in its conclusion that the practice constituted an unfair method of competition... | |
| 1924 - 440 sider
...Commission.9 The Supreme Court reversed the Circuit Court of Appeals, using this expressive sentence :10 "A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...manufacturer's representation has become so well known (5) New Jersey Asbestos Co. v. Fed Trade Com., 264 Fed. 509; Klnney-Rome Co. v. Fed. Trade Com. (7th... | |
| 1928 - 1138 sider
...accept labels at their face value, does not prevent their use being an unfair method of competition. A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...distinguished from consumers, are no longer deceived." False advertising and selling the commodity as and for a different commodity has been denounced by... | |
| Dexter Merriam Keezer, Addison Thayer Cutler, Frank Richardson Garfield - 1928 - 736 sider
...accept labels at their face value does not prevent their use being an unfair method of competition. A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...against have become aware of the wrongful practice. The honest manufacturer's business may suffer, not merely through a competitor's deceiving his direct... | |
| 1922 - 360 sider
...because those competed against have become aware of the wrongful practice." It may as justly be said that a method inherently unfair does not cease to be so, because those appealed to by it have become aware of the wrongful practice. And it is inherently unfair to characterize... | |
| United States. Federal Trade Commission - 1933 - 878 sider
...them if the lumber had been rightly named, are diverted to others whose methods are less scrupulous. "A method inherently unfair does not cease to be so...against have become aware of the wrongful practice." Federal Trade Comm'n v. Winssted Hosiery Co., 258 US 483, 483. The careless and the unscrupulous must... | |
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