The evening world. Newspaper, January 19, 1915, Page 2

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4 a appre, or Lie pie new pulse to lift each and every man out of the rat ~“SOFRTIFIC’ WORK “METHOD INEVITABLE ASTON TAR DE sc “Hail ions Follows, sreatest hope to 4 ame | Q. (hy Mra. Ha - Writer's Testimony Before | of 9 unecrupnions employer, how tor . 5 could relentific management be used Industrial Commission. the work Way up. management not only gets out of the worker the most he can do for the employer, but gives him @ chance to show he can do better. “Beientifie management— 1 must al- ways emphasize the qualification that to the damage of the working people? . Not for long. If it is not honest employed the system will break dow Ta + the workers will be dissatisfied and ASSET the plan will not work uniess the workers co-operate in it. . @. How fur can it harmonize wii: Denies Financial Interests Are | uniona? A. it i# a great mistake tor lemployers not to foster the unions, Fighting Suffrage to Keep Q@. Do you think the Snancial tn- ; terests are working against suffra Down Wages. , . “LABOR’S BEST in order to keep down the wages of women? A, No, Ido not think they jare interested, Most of the men | ‘The United States Commission on| knew are suffragists. It len't the men Tadnetrial Relations put Miss Ita M.| whe ere preventing suffrage, it's the ‘Tarbell, historian of Standard Ol and | rarboll went Into a murvey of writer.and investigator of industrial | tne steel industry, beginning with her problems, through a severe croas-6x- | pirthood days in and about Pittsburgh. amination to-day after she had given prieen and twenty years ago General her views on “scientific management” stanager Lynch of the Frick az one remedy for social unrest. began applying the “safey-fr Commissioner Weinstock asked and followed it by trying to make the whether she agreed with L. D./ men tive happily and healthily, Brandeis that organized labor would! ‘the results, Minn Tarbell sald, nave | better bitch ap with selentife man-| proved many times worth the money arement, because sclentific manage-|and trouble, Strikere in the Wont- ment was going to be established | moreland district in the civil war in Whether union labor adapted itself to) West Virginia four years ago, told the principle or not. Misw Tarbell her there would have been no sirike maid calmly a@be agreed with Mr.| nad they been managed as woro tho Brandeis in his belief that acientific Prick miners. management was inevitable and) “There haw been a great change In ‘would be an asset to labor. the American Ideals of labor, In my Mra. J. Borden Harriman tried to! girinood everybody thought it wan a Néentifle management is an tm- “The great and just complaint of worker is lack of opportunity to Real scientific STEAMER DACIA DEFYING BRITISH, SAILS TO-MORROW — Persons Inierested in Her Cargo Announce She Will Start Py for Rotterdam. ENGLAND Ri , Notifies State Department of Her Refusal to Consent to the Sailing. | GALVESTON, Tex. Jan. 19, steamer Davia, carrying 11,000 b to sail Rotterdam to-morrow night, regard of British fons to atoamer’s purchane from its German owners by Americans. Local interests tified with the cargo let thin be known to-day, The British Consul is superviaing the louding of the #teamer, WASHINGTON, Jan, 19.—Tho State Department was notified to-day that) the Brifish Government will not con- gent to allow the atea © Dacia, r ea | cently transferred from German to American registry, to proceod to Rot- terdam under safe conduct with her cargo of cotton. The British objection waa based broadly on a reluctance to create a of cotton, In expected get Miss Tarbell to declare herself, on | virtue to work from sun to sun. We the stand, as an anti-suffregiat, but| were taught that we would go tailed. straight to the devil otherwise, 1 Commissioner Lennox asked Miss] practined 1t-—for a time.” ‘Tarbell how she would like to have| Rights to fair pay, to time off Mclency rales applied to her in her|for home and nocial life and to clean magazine work. living were once universally denied “If any one can teach me how to/to workers ae rights; they are now hold my pen to write faster and with | recognized, Mins Tarbell said, Jose fatigue,” said the witness, “how! The Cloth Craft Shop of Cleveland, te systematize my hourse, how to] the Pilgrim Laundry of Brooklyn and think more rapidly and more clearly,| the Link Helt Company of Philadel- I'l) weleome the help. 1 know of no| phia and Chicago were named by workers more under supervision and} Miss Tarbell as plants where honestly apeed requirements than journalis' applied scientific management was in ‘The witness was passed on to Com- | force and which profited by it. missioner O'Connell, who tried to| She said she knew of “olficiancy get Mins Tarbell to acknowledge she| perts” who undertook to inatall « ayn- was at least an enemy of unton Inbor, | tem of “scientific management” after ‘The best he could get wae a atate-}4 few hours or days’ study, Theso ment that although she belleved|#he branded as outright fakes, Ar- that complete union organ! ranging and teaching proper work sreyeed was often a matter of months, she sald, Mr. Walsh wanted to know if aclentific management was hoatile to organised labor. Mins Tarbell sald whe thought that organised labor, on the other hand, was hostile to the system and entirely wrong tn such & porition, “The union managers,” she sald, “eannot render a verdict from out- side. They should go into the shops and work for a year or more, They ought to work to let the workers they represent get the advantage of this @reat new idea, This is not an or- ganized movement.” In the plant of the Commonwealth Stee! Company—which recently re- fuged # $3,000,000 contract for shrapnel ~the working hours had been reduced from 12 to § hours, earnings had not decreased, and the output maintained —all by adopting real scientific man- agement, the witness anid, Basil M. Manley, an expert of the oommiaaton, waa put on the stand to testify in contradiction of Miss Tar- bell's impression that United States Stee! gonslaerably reduced the hours of 12-hour workers aince 1910. Congressman David J. Lewis, Chair- man of the House Committee of Labor and author of the bill for Gov- t-owned telephone and tele- h lines, followed Misa Tarbell on stand, pee a Se MRS. WALTERS BETTER DEAD, SAYS ROGERS Lawyer Says Neither He Nor She Have Anything to Live For, “|t were better for Ida if she were at first showed and then mild declined to change H i Fe i with Mother Jones of the leaders in the bien of Colorado in the Commissioper O'Connell Miss Tarbell quality She refused, saying an observer and & re- f i i 3 ri i i she had known numerous t ta to of faulty methods, faking ef i E t 5 ‘audience, which packed the of Estimate room in the City “was very muoh in sympathy the commissioners apparent at- cen against “solen- Moat of the faces and women seen a EFEy One comment among these after ‘Miss Tarbell's testimony was: peaking earnestly, with great ‘yapidity, Miss Tarbell took up solen- tie management. Take « : dead, for I hi little to It glass of Salts if your| une bet Lae le to live for and Back hurts or Bladder Thin wan the rtatement made by ‘ bothers. © Lorlys Fiton Rogers to a close friend when he war asked to-day what was the condition of Mra. Ida Walters, now convalstciug im Lebanon Hoa- mast have your meat every day, flush your kidneys with salts the killing of ber two children, .|_ lt became kuown to-day that last Friday Rogers, accompanied by his law partner, M. L. Jacobs, Robert Fessello and Mrs. Anna Koquenmora Rogers, hin first wife, went to the Bronx home which had been the scene of the tragedy and superintended the packing of his effects and furniture. All the furniture but that of one room Wan sent to a storage Warehouse, This latter consignment was ordered taken to the home of Mrs. Anna Roquemore Rogers, in the beck or si hed stomach sours, A eu ve maf wi a ts cloady, tull of sediment, the sore Irritated, relief two or three ian theet irritating yids t itat! to aah ‘ofl “the — ~~ HAMBURG-AMERICAN precedent wh it in felt, would be followed by many similar purchases of German ships in America and ef- forts to operate them on the former German trado routes. The British note does not under- take to assert the right of Great Britain to interfere with ships pur- chased and transferred to the Amer- lean flag in a legitimate way. THE EVENING WORLD | for | i] Young $13,000,000 Heiress Who Is to Wed H. H. Spaulding Jr. Peete eee) O04 OOOO ONOHEETEIENINOY® FPF LSFSISIDIH SESH GIST TSIS + FSHTSSH392 ® MERGE POO RODE The objection to the transfer of the | #OO00909060000-09646009006006-000400060646909:90900000 Dacia in that it was not genuine, it being intimated the British Govern- ment belleves the American pur- chaser really was acting for German principals, . The Dacta’s cotton cargo is not aub- ject t@ selgure, and the British note leaves it to be inferred that if the owners of tho cotton do not make other arrangements for its shipment to Germany, and the Dacia puts to nea, the cotton will be unloaded in an English port and placed at the dis. posal of the ownera to forward to Germany by another and neutral ahip or appropriated by the British Gov- ernment upon payment to the own- cra of its invoice value, The State Department has informed Mr, Breitung of Marquette, Mich., the owner of the ship, of the refusal of the British Government to promise not to seize the Dacia on this par- tloular trip. As he has stated to the department that the freight charges upon the cotton with which the Dacia is loaded would about equal the pur- chase price of the vessel, it is as- eumed that ho will take the chance of making the voyage, and if the ship is welzed will go before a British prise court. Btate Department officials believe euch a court would liberate the Dacia if the British Government is content, as it nays it Is, to take Ite stand on the genuineness of the transfer, in view of the evidence on that point which already has been submitted to the department, An the questions involved in the case of the Dacian are similar in many ways to those that enter into President Wilson's Government ship Purchase plan, it is of interest, not only to shippers, but to the Admin- iatration. On the outcome depends the cotton shipment problem, for it hax been declared that there can be no adequate shipment to Furope of the cotto w accumulated unless the German and Austrian ships tn- terned in American ports can be purchased and used by American citizens, MANDATE FOR THAW'S REMOVAL IS APPLIED FOR Associate of Jerome at Work on Case in Washington—Thaw* Is Not Excited. WASHINGTON, Jan, 19.—Deputy Attorney-General. Franklin Kennedy ot New York formally applied to-day for the Supreme Court mandate in the case of Harry K, Thaw. It will he issued on Thuraday, Mr, Kennedy said he and William Travers Jerome intended to leave New York Thursday night for Con- |cord, N. H., to present the mandate to the Federal District Court officials 4 will then demand the surrender of Thaw by his custodian, Sheriff | Drew of Coon, New Hampshire, MANCHESTER, N. H., Jan. 19.— SHIP REPORTED SUNK The Howbury shipPracsident, erroneously reported sunk by the Hritiah cruiser Berwick, tx safe in the harbor of San Juan, Porto Rico, | acoording (0 « cablemram which officials of the bie announced to-day had been received from te stesmers commander, Capt. Bovlembach, als said thoy had receiv formation ae to the Pracsident’ in'dan Juss atu ‘ . pouncement to-da: | Harry K. Thaw is awaiting quietly he arrival of the officers who will eturn him to the jurisdiction of Now York State, CONCORD, N, H., Jan, 19.—No at. tempt will be made to deiay the trans- fer of Harry K. Thaw to the oustody of the New York State authorities jupon the arrival here of the ne . Mias Catherine Barker, the §: 13,000,000 heiress, who, although she has not yet made her debut, announces her engagement to be married to Howard H. Spaulding herited her vast fortune from her builder, of Michigan City, Ind. dr. of Chicago. Miss Barker in- father, John H. Barker, the car U. S. CONSUL REJECTED FOR HIS WRITINGS. Nottingham Mayor Refuses Cre- dentials ot J. L. Cutright, of Nebraska. NOTTINGHAM, England (via Lon- don), Jan. 19.—On account of letters written by him and published in a newspaper at Lincoln, Neb., John L. Cutright, newly accredited American Vice Consul at Nottingham, did not take up the duties for which he came to this city, but returned to London, Mr, Cutright departed from Notting- ham after he had been informed by the Mayor and other city officials that he would not be acceptable as Vice Consul because his newspaper letters were regarded as expressive of pro-German sentiments. Before coming to Nottingham Mr. Cutright served as American Vice Consul at Coburg, Germany. While there he wrote the letters to which the Nottingham officials took excep- tion, Mr. Cutright is a son of John Cut- right, editor of the Lincoln Star and formerly private secretary of William J. Bryan. The son is a graduate of the University of Nebraska and had been in the consular service only a tew months. LONDON, Jan, 19.—The British Foreign Offico has no information concerning objectiona on the part of Nottingham officials to the assump- tion by Mr, Cutright of his duties American Consula right was not acceptable to the No tingham authorities he probably would be sent elsewhere, Mr. Cut- wight is #till in London and expects to return shortly to America. credited to Nottingham, were published in a Lincolm news) per. It is believed here that the let- ter written by Mr. Cutright and ob- Jected to by the Nottingham o‘icials appeared in an Omaha newspaper Dec, 13, 1914. 12 SS F. A. LANE KILLED BY TRAIN. (Bpetal to The Breniag World.) HACKENSACK, N. J., Jan, 19.—F, A. Lane, sixty-five years old, manager of the Studebaker Carriage Company of New York, living at West Pnglewood, was killed at 7.30 this morning, while attempting to cross the track ahead of the West Shore local on which he pected to go to New York. 4 two children, ridden Woman Saved From Fire. Fire started tn the apartment of | Miss Mary Cavanagh in the top story of No 619 West One Hundred and Forty-third Street this afternoon and safely down the stairs, Both a were gutted by the flames, but was hurt. | Sealine ae leary papers, according to an by his local leff and George torneys, Maurice Shu: F, Morris, ‘ da °} are STRIKER KILLED, MANY WOUNDED, IN JERSEY ROT (Continued from First Page.) Federation of Labor, who sald he was the niger of the strike and that he was present when the dep- uties opened fire on the atrikers, gave this account of it to The Eve- ning World: “The train about which the shooting occurred came to a stop at the Will- james and Clark station, as was the custom at that time in the morning. There were several hundred strikers about or near the platform, and a committee of them asked the conduc- tor of the train if they might get aboard to see whether there were any strike breakers on It, “Tho deputies, about seventy-five of them, were standing about the | Williams and Clark factory a hun- dred feet away, Our committee went on the train but did not find any strikebreakers, As they were coming off the deputy sheri! ned fire on the crowd about the There Was absolutely no provocation for the shooting, The strikers did not do one thing to provoke the fire, “lL have called a meeting at the Roosevelt Hotel, in Chrome, for this ‘ope! train, «| 4fternoon to protest against the out- rage. I shail ask that the militia be called out to protect the atrikers who behaving in the most orderly way.” a LOVES HER BABY BETTER THAN HER HUBBY’S DOGS Hence a Suit for Separation and a Broken Home for the Kaecks, Robert A. Kaeck, a well-to-do plumbing contractor of No. 2861 Cres- ton Avenue, has two dogs, a French “|bulldog and a dachshund that are very much attached to him. On Dec. 16, last, Mrs, Kaeck with their fifteen ~|months old baby Louise Katherine, left the house because Kaeck loved the two dogs more than he did his wife and child. Mrs, Kaeck says in papers filed in & separation suit to-day that she ab- solutely refused to bathe and brush or fondle the dogs and this annoyed ber husband. Ho says that his wife is of a jeal- ous, gossipy disposition and that his wifo's ister said the dogs should be done away with, “My wife by ill treating these two dogs lost no op- portunity to aggravate me,” he con- cludes. to the adjoining x u Mrs. Georgia ed: | nore fidden, ‘The screams of the woman's Goulds Have MP. two daughters Drought the fremen to) ST. LOUIS, Jan, 19.—It was ascer- ae ee eee ata a meae iurtied | tained here to-day at the office of the the entire holdings of the Gou nu day less than 241 shares, ei Uhnuad “stockholders hs at » now in progress Is devastated. Missouri Pacific Railroad Company that iy Missourl Pacific Railroad are to~ The result will be that an entire reorganization of u pany will take place March 14 meeting. TUESDAY, JANUARY 19, 1915. RUSSINS CAM “BSGAIS MORNE TOWARD PRUSSIA Hammer at the Line on the Warsaw Battlefront. Germans PETROGRAD, Jan. 19. (United Press).—Bloody battling for posses- sion of the northeast section of the Polish province of Plock has resulted successfully for the Czar's armies, it was announced here to-day, and the Germans are now being forced back to the frontier. | Artillery engagements, followed in several instances by infantry charges, occurred from a point east of Miaw: to the village of St, Rypid through- | out the day, Mlawa itself is in ruins, following successive bombardments by the opposing armies, and the country over which the fighting is Unofficial despatches say that the Germans are being heavily reinforced near St. Rypid and are making des- perate offorts to resume the offensive. | PETROGRAD (via London), Jan, 19 YAssociated = Press).—The German forces in Central Poland are contin- ulng their efforts to advance west of Warsaw between Sochaczew and Bol- imow, and southwest of ‘saw, be-| tween Skierniewice and Grodzisk, al- though their left flank is endangered by the advance of Russian troops along the right bank of the Vistuia, west of Plock, and the position of their right flank, according to Russian reports, is no longer tenable. | ‘This forward movemont of the con- | tre of the German line has been un- successful thus far, having been noted by Russian aeroplanes and checked | by artillery. All the trenches which the Germans | succeeded in taki @ been recap- tured by the Russians. It is now the concensus of military opinion here t! the German army must either force its way through the Russian line in the centre, where its present efforts are directed, or else ro- treat to the ta River, which would mean falling back to within about twenty-five miles of the Gor- man frontier. The Russian .move- ments designed to encircle the Ger- man flanks will make it impossivle, military men aay, for the Germans to maintain thelr present positions in the centre. The expected co-operation of Aus- trian forces from the southward has failed. The attempted advance of the Austrians east of Plotrkow, as well us in the Tarnow region, on the Duna- jec, has been checked by the effective work of the Russfan artillery. In the extreme north the Russians report a steady advance toward East Prussia, and in the extreme south they state that they are moving for- ward successfully in the Carpathians, Their northern movement has been retarded near Loetzen by the Ger- man fortifications and the general impenetrability of the country in the Mazurian Lake region. In the south the Russians, appar- ently, have occupied all the Carpa- thian passes and have succeeded in crossing the borders of Transylvania, the eastern portion of Hungary, poche ReeBaiton RUSSIAN TORPEDO BOATS SINK TURKISH STEAMER IN THE BAY OF SINO! :. SEBASTOPOL, via Petrograd, Jan. 19 [Associated Press).—A squadron of Russian torpedo boats ented the Bi of Sinope, @ Turkish port on the Black Sea in Asia Minor, and sent to the bottom @ Turkish steamer and three suiling vensela, The crews of all four ships were saved. The steamer appears tu have been the Meorges. If You Neglect | Your Scalp Your Hair Will Fall Cuticura Soap hampoos Preceded by light touches of Cuti- cura Ointment willsoftenand remove patches of dandruff, allay itching and quickly promote hair-growing conditions. Samples Free by Mail Cutleura and Ointment sold everywhere, Liberal sampte of cach matted free with 82-9 book, Address posteard “Cutours. ’ At 184 Russell st., Brookiya. M'CULLOUGH.—On Monday, Jan. 18, 1015, ELIZABETH V. M'CULLOUGH, Deloved daughter of the late James J. ard Ann McCullough ané sleter of Mary B, McCullough and auat of John A. and Grace V. Gilroy, Funeral from her late residence, Weirtield 1 on Wednesday, Jan. |, Interment Calvary Com. BOSTON CLUBMAN FALLS TO DEATH FROM WINDOW Richard C. Dixey, Suffering From Nervous Depression, Is Killed While Alone. (Special to The Evening We BOSTON, Jan. 19.—Richard C, Dizey, seventy years old, a member of. one of Boston's oldest families, clubman apd prominent in Back Bay life, ear- ly to-day fell from a third-story rear window of his home, No. 44 Beacon Street. Ho died before a physician arrived. Mr. Dixey had suffered from acute nervous depression, which had caused him to be carefully watched. Mr. Dixey was the father of Mrs. Gorham Brooks, wife of the Deputy ‘Treasurer of Harvard College. She was formerly Miss Rosamond 8, Dixey and one of the leading members of the Vincent Club and other organizations of the younger set. <> MRS. GRIFFIN PLEADS GUILTY THRICE MORE Three Additional Affidavits Charge Her With Getting $41,650 From Victims. Mrs. Clara H. Griffin, who, with her husband, pleaded guilty in the Federal Court yesterday to kaye | ments charging swindling was ar- raigned before Judge Crain in the Court of General Sessions to-day to plead to three indictments, Through her counsel, George Gordon Battle, she entered a plea of guilty to each of the three, Ono indictment charges her with obtaining under false pretenses $10,- 000 from Catherine Kennedy, hout keeper of the Great Northern Hotel, this sum constituting $6,000 of the victim's savings and $4,000 she bor- rowed from relatives, Another Indict- ment charges her with swindling Mary I. Cole, a dressmaker, out of $1,650, and the third with swindling Gustav E. Walter, a decorator, of No. 157 East Forty-fourth Street, out | of $18,000 in cash and $12,000 worth of indorsed notes. Judge Crain remanded Mrs, Griffin until Thursday for sentence. She and her husband will be sentenced in the Federal Court to-morrow. poached MILK CORPORATION FINED. Tube Man From Water Kaucet to Milk ‘The Terminal Milk Corporation of No, 186 Eleventh Avenue was found gullty as a corporation by Justices Simon, Me- Inerney and Salmon in the Court of Special Sessions to-day of adulterating {ts milk with water and misbranding a! bined milk and cream. A for each count was im- posed. Inspector Frederick Kantzman of the ith Board testified that when be vis- i e company’s plant.on Sept, 24 he’ found a line of tubing running from a water faucet to one of the forty quart 1. | ean of cot fine of $261 ; hed “18 quarts cream, 2 quarts Sang ma i Scare mee I] rnin it “That ie the first time ive at e milkman betng jn alliahce wit! ‘ Crotan evervenrs onid Justice Bahnod. “L always thought it was the towt pump.” ‘roton reservoir,” said with Resinol Here is a simple, inexpensive treatment that will almost always stop dandruff and scalp itching, and keep the hairthick, liveand lustrous: At night, spread the hair apartand rub a little Resinol Ointment into the scalp gently, with the tip of the finger, Repeat this until the whole scalp has beentreated. Next morn- ing, shampoo thoroughly with Res- inol Soap and hot water. Work the creamy Resinol lather well into the thescalp. Rinse with gradually cool- er water, the last water being cold. Resinol Soap and Resinol Oistment easily heal ecsema and similar skineruptions. Seld by oll draagiots. For comole Gen write to bs 27-8, Resinol, Baltimore, Md. You can buy Victrolas on most liberal terms at Authorised Victor Factory Distributers | We 420) Nt Bet, Gin & Oth Aves BUSTANOBY’S wy ean yeenerara is Smet cad jon. s0t, ‘heat iner Chott. # i ox Be ie Specialties All Hours. HE HEART OF THIS BIG CANDY MAKING ORGAN- IZATION ress. pulses with the throb of enterprise and prog- The newest creations in the world of sweets pad our Big, 7 gf spcdoneresinge 4 MOLASSES NUT OREAM STICKS— ‘These are dainty, slender, ollvery tubes of deliciously, flavored candy, Eee 10c ioe ‘The specified weight inclu a it requires 12 ‘Pom. Sat, the container in each case. Acker, Merrall & Condit EST. Company 1820 Quality that pleases your palate— prices that protect your purse. RICE—Noreca—Choice Head-—Natural uncoated—3 APRICOTS—Evaporated—Extra Fancy California—lb., 22 lbs. .20 OATS—A. M. & C. Rolled White—27 oz, package.... .10 CORN—1820" Fancy Michigan TOMATOES—10 oz. tin, 14 dozen .28...... ..tin Stewed and Strained for Soup or Sauce. ; MILK —Swiss Condensed—Extra Rich in cream—I5 oz. tin 12 pack, !5doz, tins .62; each .11 .05

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