Monthly Review
October 1929
EDITORIAL
As electro-platers our business
requires us to fight corrosion of metals and we spend many hours in practice
of this research
and much money.
Yet, as men, we never stop to consider
that if corrosion takes such a prominent
part in our industrial life is there ”a human corrosion taking place
in our minds and bodies?”
Do we appreciate the knowledge we
are getting from research, as we used to, when we were keenly prosecuting
the investigations
that lead us up to our
present
positions; or have we just corroded with conceit as to our superior knowledge
and become a body of dreamers and theorists, who do not practically apply
results of investigations, but just sarcastically criticize from our exalted
ideas and
ego?
In our daily work we have many opportunities
to be helpful to our research associates and to reap many new thoughts if
we would condescend to at least
familiarize
ourselves with the results of their work. Try and practice some of then:
and report our findings to either our branch or the research committee,
which will
be of real interest and help, right up-to-date and of a real reference
value of a permanent nature and a sure prevention of human corrosion.
“LOOKING
FORWARD IN THE ELECTRO-PLATING INDUSTRY”
Mr. Charles Proctor
of New York Branch, Founder of American ElectroPlaters
Society
I think I still retain the key of
this city that was presented to us eleven years ago. I have carried it with
me for many years, and I still
believe
that that
key is still with me that unlocks many of the doors in this city.
As
you notice by the program, I am going to talk to you about ”Looking
Forward in the Electro-plating Industry.” Some thoughts I
may express may sound a little bit out of the ordinary, perhaps,
but
still, in my estimation,
it is a part of the future of this great organization.
More than
a decade has passed away since this great city of Detroit invited
our Association to hold its sixth annual convention here,
and I believe
that I voice
the sentiment of every person present here today when I state
we are glad to come to Detroit again to hold our Seventeenth Annual
Convention,
to
enjoy its
hospitality, to marvel at
its wonderful growth in a decade and during our stay to look forward ”towards
another decade in the growth of our Society which must of necessity result,
in order to keep step with the great
advances
that have been made in the electrodeposition of metals in this
great and marvelous city and will continue so in the coming years.
Our votaries
and guests have come from the north, the south, the east and the west and
from our great neighbor to the north,
the
Dominion of Canada,
all have
come for that one express purpose, to make this Seventeenth
Annual Convention a memorable one in the history of the Society and
lay plans
for its future
and the continuation of the work started twenty years ago.
As the founder of the
Society the milestones that we have passed by during those
twenty years have to me been glorious ones and although they are but
memories in
the infinity
of time in their passing, they have made our glorious country
greater than we ever
dreamed of and our Society greater than its forebears ever
could scarcely concave.
We keep ”Looking forward” to
greater possibilities as all great organizations must do that are so welded in
the commercial greatness of these
United States
and its future prosperity. Theory is only of value when
it becomes the hand-maiden of practice, when they become welded into a great
universal unit of production
on an economic scale of great magnitude, such as it is
possible
to behold in this remarkable city of Detroit with its great
manufacturing
plants.
”Knowledge is Power,” is
the motto of our Society, but learning is only valuable when it means actual
knowledge, and knowing is only
valuable when it means doing, creating, adding to the possessions of
the efficiency of men,
to
the great uplift of your Society and its future.
Members
of our Society have had visions that others could actually do its work
for them; they have created by their efforts fairly large sums of money to be expended in the exploitation of theory, which every
member of the Society possesses himself, but still the years pass on and the results of the labor of theory, without putting it to work in actual practice has,
in my opinion, proved negligible and of no commercial value to the industry. Especially is this true in this great
commercial city of Detroit.
The tremendous production
in the automobile industry in this city and its environs does not depend
upon theory, it depends upon practical, commercial, economic
results, as all other branches of industry must do if they continue to exist
in this age of competitive production.
I believe it was Henry Ford who
is responsible for the statement that if the great industrial plants were
operated
upon the same basic plans as the United States Government they could have
never continued to exist. To dream dreams and see visions is admirable
if you make the dreams come true; if you translate the visions into stone,
marble,
iron and glass you accomplish a purpose. But to dream and see visions and
then pass away like one of the dreams, leaving nothing behind that is worth
while, whatever amount of learning or knowledge you may have absorbed into
your brains, even as a sponge absorbs water that can be removed with little
pressure, is of no value to industry.
We are still waiting to
learn all about chromium plating from Washington, D. C. We still possess
the theory.
We are still awaiting the solution of
the problem of spotting-out copper, bronze and brass plated ferrous and
non-ferrous metal goods. We are still anxious to know why articles made
from sheet copper, bronze and brass ”spot out” when lacquered
when they have never gazed into plating solutions or bathed themselves
in an alkaline or acid bath. We may know in a few years if we wait patiently,
but in the meantime we might arrange to have our compressed air tanks
made from copper and heavily coated inside with block tin so there would
be
no danger of iron rust forming in the compressed air tanks due to exposed
iron which is acted upon chemically by moisture and the acetic acid the
lacquers may contain, which causes brownish red spots when articles are
sprayed with lacquer contaminated with iron acetate which is precipitated
in the final drying operation as the solvent is evaporated upon the finished
plated surface by heat.
It might be advisable for the great
automobile plants of Detroit to open wide their doors so that our research
associates
in Washington might
enter
in and learn how to chromium plate on a tremendous commercial productive
and economic scale and they would then throw all their theories to
the winds because they would be able to observe results in mass production,
the great important factor in the race for commercial supremacy.
The
combination exploited theory and practice of spotting out of copper, brass
and bronze plated iron and steel can, I feel sure, be
eliminated
if we visualize correctly the true cause of the spotting out, realize
that the spot as due to chemical action of the impregnated plating
solution in the pore that absorbs moisture from the humid atmosphere
surrounding
the porous spot and acts as an oxidizing agent. When the pore becomes
filled
with absorbent atmospheric moisture it overflows and oxidizes the
metal deposit surrounding the port or hole which we so commonly term ”spotting
out” which is so disastrous from a financial standpoint in
the electro-plating industry.
Have you ever given serious consideration
to the value of commercial phosphoric acid when used as a neutralizing
factor for the cyanides
and the metal cyanides and the free alkalies that are occluded
in the pore
or minute pin hole in the basic metal? We all know the value of
ferric phosphate when applied to steel or iron by the boiling process based
on the Coslett patent and a well known rust proofing process for
iron and-
steel exploited in your city of Detroit.
Is it not possible? I believe
it is because in-a measure I have proved it that an aqueous solution of
commercial phosphoric acid
approximating
three fluid ounces per gallon of water heated to 200; degrees
Fahr. may solve the spotting problem. Surely the cyanides occluded in
the pores
of the basic metal would become neutralized by absorption of
the dilute hot
phosphoric acid’ solution and due to expansion of the
metal when immersed in the solution at 200 degrees Fahr. direct
from
the cold rinsing waters after plating. The time of immersion
to be determined by actual tests of the plated product. I have
seen
copper and brass plated cast iron immersed in such a solution
for an hour without any detrimental influence upon the deposits.
If
ferric phosphate protects iron and steel from rusting, then
it is logical to presume that after the cyanides have become
neutralized in
the porous spot or pin hole and ferric phosphate remained,
the inside of the
spot would become rust proof and even if moisture was absorbed
later through the lacquer coating during the excessive humidity
of summer,
no spotting
would result because no oxidizing factors would be left behind
after the treatment to cause an oxidized spot, surrounding
the porous spot
or hole,
if you so desire to term it, in the basic metal by atmospheric
moisture absorption.
Possibly these suggestions may be
worth while. Try them out and then make your reports upon your success or
failure
to
the Supreme
Editor
so the data can be printed in the Monthly Bulletin.
We have
all come to this Seventeenth Annual Convention in this- city of Detroit
\to work and to play. To work for
the
up building
of the
Society, to look forward into the future possibilities
of the Society and to the
electroplating industry as a whole, and when you come to
consider its future in your deliberations as delegates
and representatives
of your
respective
branches, give serious thought to the Society doing its
own research work. Here in this city of Detroit, establish a
working research
division for
the benefit of our entire electro-plating industry and
for the benefit of the entire membership. You will find willing
hands
and financial
assistance to help the cause along.
Your constitution is
so written that this work is a part of it. Let us go and do what we should
have done years
ago. Do not
let
any member
betray
its principles for self aggrandizement or for the benefit
of any other society or organization. Be steadfast, hold
on to
its principles,
or
go down in defeat.
If you can visualize clearly you
will see that this is being done to the detriment of our Society, which
is a
practical society of
practical men. May your time spent in Detroit at this
annual convention be of
great
benefit to you all. Profit and pleasure combined in
unlimited measure, and it is my sincerest wish that you will all
be fully
repaid for
your attendance at this, the Seventeenth Convention
of the Society.
Let us all have faith in the future
of the Society. There will be many hands eager to retard its progress,
yet those
who have
faith, who believe
that right is right, will triumph. If we stick to
the principles and
ideals of the Society, we shall always win; though
the
thunder of misunderstanding may crash above and the
lightning of
malice blind
us now and then,
we shall
win all that is worth while as a great industrial
and educational society and shall accomplish in fact the
principles inculcated
in its constitution.
Hold on ’become your’ own
master of your profession. Master the fundamental
principles of chemistry only so far as necessary
to be able to make a true analysis of your solutions.
You do not have to be a graduate chemist to accomplish
your purpose. Yon do not require any knowledge
of organic chemistry to analyze a plating solution.
Under a competent instruction you can learn in
two weeks all that you want to know about the analyses
of plating solutions. Better still an instructor
that has made a study of electro chemistry. In
your spare moments study the engineering part of your
profession, how to do things mechanically and control
the operations by electrical control. Study from
the knowledge you possess from years of practical
application the improvement of your plating’ solutions,
the maximum metal content that can be safely carried
and the maximum current densities permissible in
electro-plating defined surface areas as single
units or per tank load and the minimum expired
time permissible
to give you standard deposits. When you know thoroughly
these fundamental factors you have traveled a long
way in looking forward in the electro-plating industry.
A graduate chemist or metallurgist must learn control
of solutions under intensive production even as
you have done by years of practical application
as a
plater, before chemical control became such an
important factor.
There is nothing extraordinarily
new in the art
of electroplating in this great city of Detroit
so
far as
the deposition
of copper and nickel
is concerned, as the basic factors for a rust
proof and finished metal surface on steel, satisfactory
for a final deposit
of chromium as we
see such products today. The basic factors were
used more than forty years
ago, but the metal concentration of the solution
has, however, been greatly increased so that
current densities
are permissible
at least
twenty times
greater than even ten years ago
The control of
the hydrogen factor in the deposition of copper and nickel has made these
great changes in the rate of metal deposition possible. When you have learned
from observation the intensive results accomplished in electro-plating,
as I trust you may do before leaving Detroit, you will then understand and
realize
the reason why that in all the world there is no other city like Detroit
that can possibly produce similar results in the electroplating of nickel,
copper and chromium, especially on such an intensive productive scale as
is now done. But still such results are only in part what a successful
master plater should know and what has been acquired by men that have made
a complete
study of the art in all its details. And then when your work is accomplished
and you return to your homes again you should be proud of an art that has
a history that goes back more than a century. And you as practical platers
have carried on the work through the passing years and made the art what
it is today. Looking forward to its future is still with you. You are its
masters.
Its destiny remains with
you. The society grows in numbers and continually it extends in membership,
now
numbering
one thousand three hundred
and has established branches from east to
west from
Boston, Mass., on the
Atlantic Coast to Los Angeles, Cal., on the
Pacific Coast, and it will continue
to grow in number if we co-operate one with
each other for its welfare. Co-operation is the great
big factor
in this
modern world
and if
we continue to co-operate, work in unity
and harmony for the up building of the Society,
then you will have earned a just and great
reward. You will then
be
a true and loyal member of the American ElectroPlaters’ Society
and all that it represents in these United
States.
“EXECUTIVE FOREMANSHIP”
J.
M. Carmody
I am inclined to think that if those
of us that have been interested in incentive plans the last twenty-five years
get our heads together, almost
any reasonable
question that might arise can be answered—not by myself, but by some
of the fellows whom I see around me. I feel quite sure that we can do it.
Some
few evenings ago, a policeman on the corner of Fifth Avenue and 42nd
Street saw a naked man running up the street, and he hollered at him, saying, “What’s
your name?” “My name is MacDougall.” “And where
are you going?” asked the policeman. He replied, “I’m
going to a strip poker party.”
(Mr. Carnody removes his coat. Laughter.)
Well, Mr. Chairman and Friends,
in my judgment it was too bad to interrupt the discussion that was under
way for
anything that I might be able to
say to you.
My speech is not very long; it is a hot light, and I enjoy speaking
to you even as little, perhaps, as you enjoy listening to me. However, some
of the
questions
that arose struck me as indicating the necessity for the very kind
of
meeting we have here tonight.
My subject, as I understand it,
is that of “Executive Foremanship.” The
kind of responsibility that a foreman has, depends, of course, on
the size of the plant, on the character of the product, and, as these Westinghouse
men have
said, on the company’s standards. And you only have to look
about you, you only have to look in store windows, you only have
to examine
the commonplace
things that you pick up and pay for day by day, to realize that we
are a long, long way from any sort of standard in our quality of
production in this country.
Now the foreman can’t set
the standards; the foreman can only attempt to produce, with the men he has,
and
with the wages he is permitted to pay,
the
standards that his organization says it is necessary to deliver
to the customer in order that the salesman may not be ashamed to make
another call. The standards
are set as far up in the organization as there is character in
the organization. If you have got a four flusher at the top, your standards
will wiggle and woggle.
(Applause.) If the man at the top of your institution is a man
of
character, who himself believes in telling the customer what he
will get, and then insisting
on his organization producing it, you will get that production,
because that kind of man has guts enough to talk to a board of directors,
if necessary,
about quality standards.
Now all men aren’t built that
way. A great deal of business is done on the temporizing basis. “Let’s
get by. Let’s produce what will
enable us to stay in business.” I don’t know whether
I can be of any help to you at all, without saying that we have
to keep those things in
mind.
Let us think for a moment what it
means to be an executive foreman in an organization that believes in quality
standards
An organization
that
believes
in quality
standards, in my judgment, believes in treating the men who
are employed by that company
right,’ as nearly right as they know how to do it. How
many of us know what is right ? We come as near to it as we
can, but there are standards of
right even among people who say they are right.
There is a very
good story in a recent issue of either the Atlantic Monthly
or Mercury (I have forgotten which) about
this old lady
Stevens, who
ran the community
she lived in, and her father ran the community before her,
and she had ideas of carrying on that tradition as long as
the family
should
live.
The tradition
was broken by an experience that it is worth any man’s
while to look at if he is dealing with human beings.
Well,
a foreman, assuming that there are some standards in the
organization, and assuming that you say that you need
foremen, it seems to me that
a foreman first of all must have some qualities of leadership.
And I don’t believe
that anybody can he a successful leader unless he is at
least reasonably unselfish. And if he is reasonably unselfish,
then he will be reasonably generous. And when
I say ”generous,” I mean generous in his attitude
toward the men who work for him.
A man who possesses leadership
possesses courage. Not only courage to fire some poor
fellow who can scarcely defend
himself, but
courage properly
to represent that man’s idea to the man above,
whether he be superintendent, general superintendent,
factory manager,
president of the company, or what not.
Just those things
alone, those responsibilities alone, throw a very considerable
burden on a man who pretends
to be a
executive foreman.
Now other things are required of
him. He must be a teacher, as was pointed out by both men who read papers
here tonight,
papers
that
were carefully
prepared, as mine has not bee. He must be a teacher.
He ought to know at least the fundamentals
of the job. He ought to be helpful to new men who
come in, and he ought to be
helpful to men who have been on the job for some
time and who for some reason or another may not be doing
the best
they can
possibly
do. He
has to do all
of that. Not only should he be a teacher in the technique
of his job, but in my
opinion he should be a teacher in the mode of conduct
that will help the men to get the best results from
the time
they put their
feet
inside the
plant.
After all, those of us that started to work some
thirty year, ago, when we worked twelve
hours a day, and gradually saw the time stepped down
to eleven, and ten and nine and three-quarters and
nine and
a half and
eight, and
so on
and so forth,
realize
that after all, we spend a very considerable part
of our time in the shop, under the direction of some foreman
or
some superintendent,
or
some factory
manager,
or what not,—more tine there than we spend
in our own home with our families. We certainly spent
more time when I started to work, and we still spend,
I
think, perhaps more time on the whole.
Another thing
that the modern foreman is required
to do, even beyond the foreman of thirty years
ago, he
must have
an open
mind. After
all, science
has made
tremendous strides in the last few years, and there
is scarcely a discovery, either in pure
science or in applied science, that doesn’t
soon find its application right down to our own
job. After all, the strange thing about it is that
it
takes so
long for some of these things to come through.
For instance, this electrical control that is reaching
perfection, has been very, very slow. Now whether
the
difficulty is with us, who had not the minds to
accept
and to apply it, or with the engineers who didn’t
think fast enough, or work hard enough to force
control through to us, I don’t know. But
when we remember that the little electric light
is fifty years old,
celebrating its golden jubilee this year,
the development has been comparatively slow.
And
so it is in chemistry. It has been slower than
it should have been. I think that is due practically
to
the fact
that those of
us that can
help in the application
of these new ideas did not receive them with
sufficiently open minds. We have been too prone to resist the
new ideas as they
have come
along.
I spent three years in the coal
mining regions of West Virginia, ending that period about three
or
four years
ago. There were
cases in the
community in
which I lived where men, born in the mountains,
left their wives because their wives
had their hair bobbed. Now we think that is
strange; we think that is peculiar. But to those men it
wasn’t peculiar at all. The women got
the idea faster than the men. The men resisted,
they
had no other way out. They couldn’t
beat their wives because there was some sign
of justice, but they left their wives. But
after all, they were no more narrow minded
than those
of us who, not
comprehending some of the scientific productions
of the day, say, ”It can’t
be true,’’ or ”It won’t
work.”
The sane thing is true to a degree
with various forms of wage incentives. This
group incentive
is not especially
new; it
is having a greater
vogue at this
moment than it has had for many, many years.
But the group
incentive is probably one
of the oldest incentives in our human experience.
After all, we are less than three hundred
years from a period
where’ all production was carried on
under what might be called domestic economy.
Almost universally, the things that a family
needed were produced by the family as a whole.
The exceptions
required
exchange with other families on the basis
of barter. Out of that relationship, there
grew
up for instance in Europe, such fairs as
the Leipig Fair, which
carries on to this day. In fact, throughout
the continent of Europe, those men who have
come from Europe, or are from European ancestry,
realize this situation. Throughout
Europe the fair, today, is the market place,
the bartering place, for a great many products.
And
I can believe that there never was a more
cohesive group economy than that of
a particular
family.
I can visualize it clearly, because
I was
born on a farm.
I recall very vividly the fact that not
only did we raise our own sheep and shear them
and scour
the wool,
but
my grandmother
carded
the wool
and skeined
the yarn
and wove the cloth that we wore. Even in
my own time, in a
hill farm in Pennsylvania. Now that was
as close to that European economy as
we could
cone; it was as
close to this group incentive that these
men are talking about as we need to get
for an example of what incentives will drive
men
on.
We have it again in baseball. Where
is there a finer example of group incentive
than in
baseball itself
? While each
man has a
specific
job, if you take
the amateur teams, the teams on which
you and I
played as boys, 110 man’ ever
refused to back up another man if he was
in the spirit of the game. He went any
place that he’ might go. And some
of that amateur spirit carries on today,
even in the professional baseball field
that has become so ‘highly commercialized
that the play spirit has almost been completely
eliminated from it. I can recall Red Dugan,
when he was catching for Philadelphia,
going down to third base regularly
to take a throw there. And I never failed
to see Steve O’Neill, when
he was catching for Cleveland, cover first
base, and he was a rather heavy fellow
to do it, but he was down there. Why? Because
of the group incentive, the group spirit,
playing for that particular team as against
some other team.
I am afraid I have said nothing
to you that will help you in your deliberations.
We have
heard
about material
control.
We
have heard
about the necessity
for setting up standards. I have
had enough experience in research to appreciate
the
necessity for that. I spent many
years in time study
work
on production, and I can appreciate
the work that these
men have done
in trying to set
up
some specific
standards
of production, and some quality standards
that would be sufficiently or reasonably
attainable,—so attainable,
in fact, that men were sure, with
the
right kind of effort, always to surmount
the standard. That is the only kind
of standard
that will get real results, so far
as I know. As a matter of fact, that
probably is the reason why the Taylor
task method has died out in our modern
enterprises.
Those of you that recall the work
of Fred Taylor remember that more
than
forty-five years ago, he started
talking about and writing about incentives
based on time
studies that were accurately taken.
And even the men who succeeded him,
some of them, never got beyond the
setting of tasks for specific individuals.
It
was only when Harrington Emerson
and
Frank Galbraith came along and some
men with
just a slightly different vision,
that they began to appreciate the
necessity
for setting up standards that would
bring the group action together.
I
believe, as I look back over my
own experience and as I look out through
factories that
I visit week after
week,
from the
Canadian border to the
Gulf of Mexico;
and from the Atlantic out beyond
the Mississippi, I question whether we still
have the guts
and the brains
to set
up the
right kind
of
incentives, incentives
that will get men to do their utmost
and stay there. If we do it the
chances are ten to one that somebody will
come along and shave off a penny or two pennies
or five
or fifteen,
within
six months,
destroying
again all
the
good work, all
the co-operation, all the encouragement
that these men got.
I got a very
interesting example of that some twelve years ago.
I happened
at
that time to
be Chairman
of a production
managers’ group in the
city of Cleveland. We had between
100
and 150 men, from almost all
the industries in
the city We met once a month.
We traded experiences, and all
of
us learned from the others. But
one fellow told me how he got
production without a financial
incentive at all, and this was
what he did. He was assembling
batteries. The regular hours
were
from seven to five. And he realized
that several fellows,
during the week, two, three,
four or more, on Tuesday, laid
off and
went to the ball game. Then he
talked to them about it, and
they said, well, they didn’t
always get a good seat on Saturday
as they wanted, Saturday was
a big day, and there were big
crowds,
and they liked the game so well
that they would go occasionally
anyway, even though they had
to pay for it. He said, ”I’ll
tell you what I’ll do.
You fellows are now getting through
at five o’clock;
you are making such and such
a production. During the summer,
while the team is home, every
man
who has his normal day’s
production cleared up at two
o’clock
is through.” What happened?
Within three days, every ma;
was through at two o’clock,
and had his full production.
Now
that is the kind of incentive
that we haven’t the guts
to apply all the time, you
see. One might say of that
fellow
that he was a rotten production
man, that his time studies
were bad, and so on and so
forth.
I don’t think
so. I think he was normal.
I don’t
think he was any worse than
the rest of us, not a bit.
I
had an experience of that
sort myself. We had a slack
season.
We had to face
the problem
either
of
laying
off the whole
crew, part
of the
crew, or
reducing
the hours. We were working
eight hours a day. We reduced
the hours
to six. We
reduced
the
hours to five. And
in the five
hours we
not only
got eight
hours
production; we got nine,
based on standards that had been
set by fellows who had
been setting standards
for a good
many years
in
that one industry.
It is
just one of those things
that happen.
I will tell you one more
thing, and then I’m
through. In 1913, I went
to Cuba to take charge
of a plant. I was a good
deal
younger than I am now,
and had a great deal less
experience,
although I didn’t
think so; in fact, I thought
then
that I knew a great deal.
It wasn’t an easy
job. Almost everybody in
the plant
spoke Spanish and I spoke
none. We had three or four
Americans
who spoke English, and
some of them spoke a little
Spanish,
but for the most part they
had been there longer than
I had and wondered why
the hell I came,
and in one or two cases
they had been promised
the job
anyway, and I couldn’t
blame them for not cooperating.
But at any rate, I pitched
in, like any young fellow
will do, three thousand
miles away from home without
a
ticket back, and
tried to increase production,
tried to straighten up
the plant, the yard, and
so on
and so forth, and to do
it we worked from seven
in the
morning until half
past five or six at night,
seven days a week, for
about four weeks—and
Sunday work isn’t
very common down there.
There
weren’t many places
for an American to go except
on Sunday, and I should
have been going I was pretty
tired.
My chief, who had preceded
me, but had been promoted
to general superintendent,
was away on a two weeks’ vacation.
When he came back, he looked
around and asked me about
one or two things, and
there was something that
was buried
and we didn’t get
it out. We were walking
over
the town. He said, ”Well,
how are you getting along
with so and so?” And
I said, ”George,
we are doing the best we
can.” He
said, ”I will tell
you something.” (He
was about my age, too.)
He said, ”I will
tell you something, Jack.
No man
is ever doing the best
he can.” God! I was
as hot as could be. If
he hadn’t
been six inches taller
and weighed forty pounds
more,
we would have fought. But
I am glad we didn’t.
He was right. When I got
home and thought it over
I saw he was right. The
reason he had a better
job than
I had with that organization
(he had been there seven
years and went there a
perfect stranger just as
I did)
and got along, was because
he had more brains, more
sense, he had a better
and a sounder philosophy—he
had a harder philosophy
for himself. Most of us
are hard-boiled
with other people but not
very hard-boiled with ourselves.
He
was hard-boiled with himself.
He worked like that, and
he helped me a whole lot.
I don’t think that
any single thing that happened
to me in Cuba (and I was
there a long time) did
me as much good as to have
George
Wall say to me, ”Jack,
no man is ever doing the
best he can.”
I would
like to see the fellow
that was dissatisfied
with
the answer to
come
back to these Westinghouse
fellows and
let them
clear it
up. I think
they
can. Maybe I have got
too much confidence in them;
I don’t think so.
(Applause. )
CHAIRMAN KENNEDY: I am
glad Mr. Carmody said
what he
did, and
he brought home
to us some
very vital
facts
we have
seldom heard in
a convention
like this, and
I think that I voice
the sentiments of every
delegate
here when
I say that we
appreciate
everything he
said.
A. E. S. PAGE
Assembled Expert Scraps With and Without Significance
Remember When—
Young people
went to bed before their parents.
”Whoa” and ”Giddyap” were
the only stop and go signals of city traffic.
Men wore rubber collars and when
they became soiled they would clean then with a damp cloth.
Typewriterless
offices used to advertise for hell ”with a good
handwriting.”
You could get a dish of ice cream
and a bowl of cookies for a nickel.
He that is all ”I’s
. . .” can’t
see beyond his ”KNOWS
. . . !”
Years ago some of the wise granddads
said everything had been invented that could be invented.
Children were plentiful
and many families had their own baseball teams meeting other family teams.
Every
first class barber shop had bathrooms and Saturday afternoon we went there,
took our bath, and had a shave
and haircut,
all for 55 cents.
What Did He Mean?
A gentleman of a very excitable and emotional nature
had the misfortune to lose his third wife. He took
the affliction
very
much to heart
and fainted at the
grave.
His friends were fearful for his
life. Among them was a German who spoke English brokenly.
He stooped down
and felt the gentleman’s pulse, and looking- up said: ”He’s
all right, he’ll re-wive.”
— Mrs.. George H. Hilge.
Bombs
were thrown only by anarchists.
This is Funny
One day two Englishmen and an Irishman were working on a road. As the day
grew warmer, Pat the Irishman took his
coat off, and hung it on some bushes. When
he wasn’t looking the Englishmen drew a donkey’s head on
the coat. In the evening when the men were ready to go home, the Englishmen
stood near
by to see what Pat would say about the coat.
“Well,” said Pat, “which one of you guys wiped his face on
me coat?”
— Emil Zurian.