TAUE T11E CITIZEN, WEDNESDAY, AUGUST 0, 1011. THE SCIENCE OF How Modern Methods af aajectEmpIoyer and 'Employee HINTS ON SCIENTIFIC MANAGE MENT OF IJUSINESS TO IN CKKASE 1MIOF1TH. (Mr. James Dodge has been very successful in Introducing methods of scientific management In the business of the Link Bolt Company of Phila delphia, and was one of the most ef fective witnesses called by Mr. Louis D. Brandels, counsel for the sea board shippers In the recent rate hearings before the Interstate Com merce Commission.) Five or six years ago, I was proud of the fact that I was the head of a concern which was so well managed that It would have been an Insult for anyone to suggest that we could .im prove our methods even In the minutest particular. But one rainy day 1 went down to the extreme corner of our grounds and found two men in a shed break ing up coal with a piece of joist. A year before, when the blacksmiths had been much driven and their help ers did not have time to bring in the coal and break It up for them, they had asked the boss laborer for two men to break coal. At the end of twelve months they were still at work and might still be If I hadn't found It out. This case, extreme as it was, showed how our magnificent management failed for we manufac ture and sell machines for crushing coal. "After a while Mr. Frederick W. Taylor told me that he was turning steel, cutting steel, at Bethlehem at a rate which to me was beyond credence. I went and saw him do what he said he was doing but I couldn't even believe the evidence of my own eyes, it was so remarkable. Mr. Taylor's tools which were made to work the hardest steel at first fail ed on cast Iron but after repeated Im provements ho produced some that did wonderful work on the softer ma terial. Then we found that we could sometimes do work, so far as the act ual cutting was concerned, ten times as fast as before. We did not turn out ten times as much product, be cause a great deal of the time was oc cupied In getting the steel or cast iron ready, and the time of prepara tion also had to be counted In. With modern guns we can shoot ten or twenty or thirty or forty bullets about as fast as we could shoot one with the gun which In the old days tooK nve minutes to load. So Mr. Taylor did with his steel. "It became apparent to us that if we were going to turn out work twice or three times as fast as we had done before, we must make a change In our scale of pay. Our rato was fixed and It didn't make much difference -whether a man made one or two tools a day or one an hour. But if he were Koine to make ten in an hour and so multi ply our output by five, it was annar ent that we needed some rudimentary accounting to make our pay harmon ize with the Increased speed nt which Mr. Taylor made us do our work. "At first the question came up as to whether the workmen would work at this increased rate of speed. We simply had to get men who would permit their tools to do the work at the new rate. A few of tho old men left us because after seeing their lathes turn around at a low speed for twenty or thirty or forty years it proved too great a nervous strain on them when the rate was increased so greatly. It kept them too intent upon their lathe expect ing a disaster. But the younger men were fascinated and the largo majority are still with us. The men In shops under scientific manage ment are well satisfied. A sympa thetic strike was called to aid the trolley car motormen and conduc tors In Philadelphia In 1910 that effected workmen in all sorts of en terprises. A certain factory running under scientific management was surrounded by four other establish ments. Throe of the four lost about one-half of their men through the sympathetic strike and In the fourth all went out. In the shop running under scientific management just one roan quit work. "Now this was no accident but Is because tho very best friends that the workmen have under scientific management are their employers. Formerly wo would tell a man we would give him ten cents for a cer tain piece of work. Then if ho re duced his time so that he could make two, we would reduce tho rate to five cents because we thought the man was making too much money. But we were getting twice as much work for tho same money while the uen had not been getting any more pay whereas we ought to have con gratulated tho man on what he made and both bo happy. "We adopted a now rule which was that a rate once set muBt not bo reduced unless the shape of the piece or the tool or method by which it Is made was changed and that a man should be paid when he did his work. It was a hard dose to swallow for sometimes men made twice or three times the wage they would have worked for gladly toy the day. Onco In a while when I went among them, a man would call out, "Well, I got you going to-day;" "How?" "I made eighteen dollars to-day." "Good, you might take me to the theatre to-night." "All right, boss, I will." All this time we were getting from a given floor space, from a fixed In vestment in light, heat and power, Insurance, taxes, all overhead ex penses and so on two or three times the product that had beon obtained before. Only the men's wges had increased, everything else stood the same. Every Item in the aggregate was steadily going down. We next studied Mr. Taylor's Idea of the function of machinery and the BUSINESS application of his rule that every man in the factory should do the kind of work for which he is best fitted and that only. If a man is good at a lathe, let him do that and nothing else. Every man admits it when his attention is called to It but it is only when you prove It to men that they fully realize It. We found, for Instance, that It cost us $53 a week for the men to get drinking water In one of tho shops. Nearly all of theso men wanted to drink; they didn't leave their work because they wanted to loaf. So wo hired a boy at flvo dollars a week to carry drinking water around the works. It increased a man's facility for doing his work. Wo hired lab orers at twelve dollars a week to help the machinists to get ready for their work and instructors to go around to help the men to do their right thing in the right way. What was the result7 We made more money and more product and yet wo were paying higher wages. There are now some 60,000 men working under scientific manage ment and they are engaged in struc tural work, foundries, cotton mills, printing and lithographing, office work, manufacture of electrical ma chinery, steel business, machine shop work and the paper business. The employers and owners of all theso factories are receiving about twice the product per man and per machine on an .average compared with tho former situation and tho workmen are receiving 30 per cent, higher wages. Such a Thoughtful Woman. When the man und woman started down the subway stairs the man felt in his pockets for t idiots. "By George!" he said. "Isa't that a shame? I've got to stop In all this mob nnd buy tickets." "Oh, no, you huven't," said the wo man. "1 have them. When 1 came downtown 1 remembered what you said about those people- who buy only one ticket at a time making such a nuisanco of themselves, so, as I had 15 cents to spare, I bought three tick ets. 1 havo two left. Wo can go right on through." So tho man and the woman drifted along with tho pushing crowd to the point where tho ticket chopper held them up and demanded tribute. Then the woman looked In her purso for the tickets. Suddenly her faco assumed a painful Manliness. "I I haven't got them," sho falter ed. "I was In such a hurry when I came through that I must havo drop ped all three tickets Into the uptown box." New York Herald. A Note That Was Paid. History Is constantly repeating it self. Once upon a time a landlady in Washington called on President An drew Jackson and told of a govern ment clerk who owed her a big bill for board. In those days it was easy to have access to the White House. President Jackson listened to her story and advised her to get a promis sory note from the clerk and put it in bank. Sho replied: "I've done that twice, general, and ho won't pay even then." "Is that so?" said tho president in surprise. "Now you go and get his note and bring it to me. I simply want to see it, and I'm sure that tho clerk will pay that note. Go and bring it to mo." Tho landlady did so, and soon return ed with tho promissory note. The president turned it over and wrote across tho back of it his own indorse ment: "A. Jackson." That note was paid at maturity. Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. Waves In Solid Metal. As illustrating the advances in metal Inrgy and engineering It has been demonstrated that solid metals may reveal by their structure the vibra tions to which they havo been subject ed. In explaining this phenomenon experiments have been shown proving that a beautiful wave structure can be Imparted to the surface of mercury by tho vibrations of a tuning fork, and that even the surface of solid lead which had been subjected to similar vibrations possesses a structure re sembling that of a vibrating surface qf mercury. Mild steel has been de fined as a "solid solution" of Iron and carbon, free from cinders. Metallur gists have doubled tho strength of steel as it was known in its early days. Scientific American. Relieved. "Where did you got theso examples of faultily constructed sentences?" ask ed Dr. Campbell, the great rhetorician. of n student "Out of one of your books, doctor." "What? Where? Out of one of my books?" "Yes, sir; out of your 'Rhetoric " "Out of my 'Ithetoric!' " roared tho doctor. "Impossible! Never did I make use of such language. You are mistaken, badly mistaken. But but where in my 'Rhetoric' did you find such composition?" ho demanded an grlly. "In the part, 'Sentences to bo Cor rected.' " "O-h-h-h-h-h! A-h-h-h-hl Yes, yes,1 said tho relieved doctor. Philadelphia North American. Too Much For Her. Calling ono day to see an old friend who was visiting her married son, I inquired of tho colored maid who an. swercd the bell, "Is Mrs. Smith at homo?' "Yas'm, sho home," tho girt replied, showing no inclination to Invito me in. "She here, all right, but sho got a misery in de hold." "Mrs. Smith senior?" I nskod with concern. "Seen mel" sho exclaimed suspicious ly. "Coso sho seen ma Huccomo she a la' seo mo wca sho hire me las' night bub own self?" And ebo indig nantly shut tho aMr-f4sat&m, RARE STATUE OF LINCOLN DISCOVERED IN FfiAtfCE Portrays Great Emancipator os a Boy. Presented to Colonel Watteroon. "Inspired of God. Henry Wnticr- son." Such is the Inscription the Ulmu of American Journalists wrote on a newly cast bronze statue of Abraham Lincoln. Tho whole storv is as inter esting as n romance, for no ono knew that a statue of the martyr president existed lu Frnnce. It was hidden awy and forgotten In tho lumber room of n medieval chateau, and it required the keen eye if a man with nrtlHtli tastes to discover it Ames Van Wart of Now York Is a grandnephew of Washington Irviiijr. Ho is connected with Paris as well n3 Trt-lnrtnn-nn.thf-ITiidRnn nnd Slnonv Hollow. Ho is also the owner of the j fine old Chateau des Grottcaux, near the royal town of Blois. He Is rich, yet he is n great sculptor. One d:iy when lingering with the ghosts of the old chateau In Touralne tho Idea struck him of producing a statue of "The Boyhood of Lincoln." ncre was the Impulse of the divine afflatus. united with the warm glow of patriot ism. And tho result is a masterpiece in the opinion of those who ought to know. The statue shows Lincoln as a thoughtful boy of seventeen. He Is wearing the ploy shoes, blue jeans nnd soft shirt of a backwoodsman. His ax is by his side. He has Just raised his eyes from Wecms' "Life of Washing ton." Tho expression conveys tho Idea that the backwoods boy has heard a whisper of his terrible destiny. "I saw him represented frequently In his old age, his work finished," says the sculptor, "but knew of no work representing him in his rail splitting days of struggle and prescient en deavor. I sought to represent him as I felt he was strong, simple, earnest. sad." The man who discovered the statue is Verncr Z. Reed, a Colorado banker nnd man of letters. Ono day his friend Van Wart asked htm to come to his chateau to sec a cast of a form he had Just mode. Mr. Reed, catching a glimpse of the statue of Lincoln, said: "But this is far and away tho best tiling you have ever done. All Ameri cans will be interested in it, and It must not remain hidden here In a lum ber room." The statue was sent to Paris for re production in bronze. Presently Colonel Wntterson, the biographer of Lincoln, Van Wart and Reed, went to seo the first bronze. The first sight tho ven erable colonel had of the statue pulled hlin up sharp. He looked at it intently and removed his bat. He turned to the sculptor nnd said: "I do not understand how you have been able to do it I oannot under stand how It was possible for you or 1 any otuor man. nut l know tno suape of Abraham Lincoln's head. I remem ber every lineament of his face, and when ho was a boy Lincoln was that." Mr. Van Wart decided to present the statue to Colonel Watterson. Tho colonel accepted gratefully, on condi tion that It should go to tho cltj of Louisville after his death. FUNERAL OF A DOG. White Hearse, Silk Lined Coffin and Roses For an Irish Setter. A funeral more elaborate than xuose given for many human beings was held at Buffalo for Taunt, an Irish setter, owned by Mr. and Mrs. Robex-t Cronin. An expensive coffin, lined with white satin, such as is used for children, held tho dog's body. A white hearse drawn by white horses carried it from the hospital to the railroad station, where tho funeral party took a train for West Falls. A carriage followed tho hearse. Mr. and Mrs. Cronin were ac companied to tho place of burial by two neighbors. The funeral attracted much atten tion. Before the coffin was taken away many took a last look at tho dog, which had been a general favor ite In the neighborhood. Tho body had been embalmed and the bead rest ed upon a satin lace trimmed pillow Around tho dead dog's neck was it huge bow of pink ribbon. At West Palls Taunt's body was low ered into a grave lined with hemlock boughs. Overhead is a wild cherry tree. Carnations and roses covered the top of tho coffin. Tho gravo is on a leautlful hlllsido overlooking Pike's Crock ravine, on Glen Rose farm. A Kimple granite shaft with tho letter ing "Sacred to tho Memory of Taunt" has boon ordered for the grave. Tno Cronlns havo no children, and Taunt from his puppy days has re ceived tho enre nnd attention usually bestowed upon a baby, being brought up on a bottle. At night tle dog slept on a feather bed. Latterly Taunt had lacn accustomed to drinking a couple of bottles of Bass ale before going to sleep. Rare Colonial Flag. W, T. Dennlston of Spokane cherish es an American flag' which has been in tho Dennlston family for 121 years. The flag, which Is of bunting and all hand sowed, was made In 1700. It Is a flag of tho Revolution, having thir teen stars and thirteen stripes. Gold Production Statistics. The gold production of Natal nnd Zululand for the year ended Dec. 31, 1010, woo 4,181 flno ounces, valued at $80,487, and there was also an estimat ed 112 ounces of fine silver, worth about $50, contained In the gold bul CANDIDATE, for 1'HOTHONOTAUV, To the Republicans ot Wayne Co. I take this, means of announcing myself as a candidate for the noml nation of Prothonotary at the pri maries, Sept. 30, 1911. To most of you I am known per sonally. During my seventeen years of service as a clerk in the Hones- dale postofllce my efforts have been to perform my duties faithfully and courteously to the patrons of the or flee and tho public generally. To the voters with whom I am not personally acquainted I would say that, since a severe Injury sustain ed by my father a few years before hie accidental death when I was six teen years old I have tried to make an honest living. My birthplace was in Texas township, district No. 4, Wayne county. .My school days were limited to the district school and the Honesdale High school. As a boy of eleven years I spent my summers slate picking on the Dela ware & Hudson dock and attended school during the winter. I also spent several summers working on a farm in Cherry Ridge. After school I entered the office of the Honesdalo Iron Works, known now as the Guerney Electric Elevator Co., where I stayed a number of years and later entered the Hones dale postofllce serving two years un der William F. Brlggs. I then went to tho Carbondale Lumber company as a bookkeeper, remaining with them until the apointment as post master of Miss Mary E. Gerety, who later became the wife of Hon. C. A. McCarty. In June, 1896, I returned to the Honesdale postofllce where I have been employed ever since. In coming bfore the people and asking their assistance and vote at the com ing primaries, let me say that I am no tool of any boss or bosses. I simply desire in common with every American citizen to better my condi tion. Your support will be appre ciated and if nominated and elected I will devote all my time and atten tion to the duties of the office to which I aspire. Most cordially yours, JOHN K. SHAItl'STEEN. I. G. SIMONS, Sterling, la. REPUBLICAN CANDIDATE FOR COUNTY COMMISSIONER. CANDIDATE FOR SHERIFF T. Y. BOYD. I wish to announce to the Repub lican voters or wayno county that I am a candidate for the nomination at the coming primaries for tho of fice of Sheriff. Your vote and you,r support in my behalf will be greatly appreciated, T, Y. BOYD, Boyds Mills, A. O. BLAKE AUCTIONEER & CATTLE DEALER YOU WILL MAKE MONEY BY HAVING ME Bell Phone 9-U BETHANY, PA: Roll of HONO AtterMon is called totne STRENGTH of the Wayne County i The FINANCIER of New York City has published a ROLL Or HONOR of the 11,470 State Banks and Trust Companies of United States. In this list the WAYNE COUNTY SAVINGS BANK Stands 38th In the United States Stands lOtli in Pennsylvania. Stands FIRST in Wayne County. Capital, Surplus, $527,342.88 Total ASSETS, $2,951,048.26 Honesdale. Pa.. December 1, DIGNITY and CONFIDENCE It is wonderful what an amount of dignity and confi dence one gets from the fact that he has a growing bank ac count. The possession of motl ey you have earned and saveo yourself makes you independent mentally as well as In regard to material things. Become a regular depositor in a good, strong, growing insti tution like the Honesdale Dime Bank We will help you with three per cent. Interest. Each new de positor Is presented with a use ful, as weH as ornamental house hold bank. We make a specialty of loan ing money to Wayne county peo ple. Business accounts solicited. Call and see us or you can do your banking with us by mall. Write and we will tell you how. JOS. A. FISCH, Cashier. E. C. MUMF0RD, President. EXECUTOR'S NOTICE. Estate of Anne Delezenne, late of the borough of Honesdale, Pa., deceased. All persons Indebted to the said estate are notified to make immedt ato payment to the undersigned: and those having claims against the said estate are notified to present them duly attested for settlement. HOMER GREENE, Executor. Honesdale, July 10, 1911. Ban savings spSf NEWEST PRODUCTIONS SWG IN OUR COMPLETE STOCK The House Furnishing the New Goods from the Manufacturer. The Floor Rugs in all sizes made can be had in Quality and Value Leads and Satisfies. Carpets more to be desired than in any year are bright, soft and harmon ious in blendings Window and Door Curtains and Portieres are all that heart and eye can tistic and captivating. The Floor in Mattings and Linoleums are Spring and Summer use. Glean, healthful and cool. Shades in all grades and standard sizes on hand. Special measurements made tc order and best goods furnished. Room Mouldings, Plate Rails and Bead finish in many new styles and cold's. Select your goods early and secure tho best before stocks are broken up in many patterns and styles. MENHEB & CO. Stores, Kevstone Block PI VWLVJl HONESDALE, PA. . F. Weaver Architect id Builder Plans & Estimates Furnished Residence, 1302 EastSt. The Home of the Honesdale National ORGANIZED 1836 f Progressive Conservative Successful Will extend every facility that good banking will justify. Accounts of individuals, firms and corporations soli cited. Correspondence invited OFFICERS: HENRY Z. KUSSELL--EDWIN F. TORRKY PRESIDENT. CASHIER. ANDREW THOMPSON - A. C. LINDSAY VICE PRESIDENT ASSISTANT CASHIER DIRECTORS: Henry Z. Russell Edwin F. Torret Horace T. Menner Louie J. Dorflinger Andrew Thompson Homer Greene James C. Birdsall E.B.HARDENBEROn Philip R. Murray German-American Home m Men A Women, young Aold. I lP3llt1PIlf. 11 StKcrlic A ch'I rl Cored, I IttHllllWllll Qniik Ac idTtrtblac Dattor. Fooltd, Df f Iftd or Ilobhcit Ton, Da't iit " The GERMAN AMERICAN TREATMENT. etrUtlr tieUntltl ComblsitUn Seltited A Conhlatd oil et 6000 Dllttriol Draif. to "It etch A twrj IndlTldul Cm, ! poiltlf elf tho Only Cure bo nttUr wtubioovcr jOBf Allmtnt or D Ik tie w7 b, eme or orlrla, bo aisttor who (tiled. Write, elate your Cio In etriet tonftdut. ACuretiUAItAJiiTKEU. IddreiiQLD GERMAN DOCTOR Lt Uux UHtfO. 1'hlUdelDhla, I'a. Department is Complete with the Best Designs and Colorings. wish, Design and Shading very ar Coverings just the thing for the coming - r