The Guthrie Daily Star (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 207, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 6, 1912 Page: 2 of 16
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PAGE TWO
THE GUTHRIE STAB.
WEDNESDAY MORNING, NOVEMBER 6, 1912.
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CO-OPERATIVE THINKING
tntpd and directed by the head* of
an Industry, will b« aatomaUr, and
of threefold nature:
11 1. Greater efficiency and growth
What the Results of Such a Pol- of Intelligence In the workmen.
I II,n I I- I-.,.. j I. More harmonious co-operation
icy Will Be 'or Employer a id on ^ 0f y,8 writer, with the
employers, and therefore a greatat
I feeling of contentment.
I: I. Greater production power, and
Employe.
AVIATORS DIRECT
ARTILLERY FIRE
THIS DIDN'T WORK
Everything In the world U the re-
sult of thinking.
Thing* that are good remit from
good thinking.
Things that are bad result from
had thinking.
If condition* are out of harmony
and out of kilter in an Industrial or-
ganizatlon, it la proof conclusive that
there 1* something wrong with the
thought processes of those in the or-
ganization.
And by virtue of the laws of dual-
ity, there cannot be bad thinking
among the operating heads of the
organization, without corresponding
bad thinking among the operating
hands.
Co-operative thinking is the big-
gest and most vital problem which
confronts the Industries today.
How far they /all short of co-op-
erative thinking Is shown In the vast
sum of money that is being spent to
organize labor. And In every case
the organization of labor Is away
from the employer. The method of
every labor organizer, regardless of
his affiliation, is always the same.
All are bent on organizing the em-
ployes away from the employer.
The workers, thinking to better
their conditions of toll, have willing-
ly dug Into their pockets and paid
the bill for such organization.
Up to a certain point, this expen-
sive banding together of the work-
ers has been profitable.
Up to a certain point It has In-
creased wages. Improved working
conditions, and shown the employer,
who In many cases has been alto-
gether self-centered and autocratic,
that such tactics must cease.
But today the worker. In the prog-
ress of his organization, has passed
a line of demarcation. He haa passed
the point where organization away
I from the employer *>aya.
Deeper than ever he Is digging
therefore better wages for the work-1 JUNCTION CITY, KAN. Nov. 4:_ |
ers and a reduction In the cost of Wireless messages were sent from an
the commodity produced. aeroplane at Fort RUey yesterday.
The success of an Industry con- uern. Henry Arnold, the army arta-
slsts of the caliber and quality of
tor, with Lieutenant Bradley, a wire-
the operating hand and the directing
head, plus the care with which both. exPert- "<*nded nine hundred
the relations of each to the feet, flying from Fort Riley to Ogden (
other, are maintained. and back, sending a number of mes- [
The care of Inanimate machinery Is which were received by Laent
a recognized factor everywhere. Moclt,T iicnaI corps at a field wireless
The care of the animate machin-
ery, or the workers, must be slml- Btatlon on the "UHery parade ground
larly recognized and maintained. Officers were immensely pleased
If the employer wiU only think with the result of the teats. Meesag-
for and of the worker, he will force eJ wePe £en^ a distance of five miles
the worker to think for and of the _ , . .... . ,
. . Cond.tionj permitting actual tests
JOO. |
Co-operative thinking is the t0 determine the practibUlty of di-
latest step in the growth and evo- recting artillery fire by means of an
lutidn In the Industries. In the begin- aeroplane wireless system will start
nlng. co-operative thinking obtained. at tomorrow morning, the
The industries have grown away ,. . „ ,
from It The complexity of the oilth F]e!d Aru11^ in « -
problems faced, the conflicts which junct-on with army aviators and wire
differences of opinions between less experts.
workmen and employers have engen- The office-s in charge ape more
dered the suspicion and hostility (haa pleased mlfh the pre,.min3rT
which have swept into powerful under- ,
enrrenu-these have reduced the co- tesU made lhig morninS- Th* ««
operative thinking with which the In- wireless outfits, which are practlca-
dustrles started. | Me up to a distance of twenty miles,
But the bigger and broader em- are used '
ployer. of labor have not lost sight ^ the offlwr8 lt win )
of the storm and stress of mislnfor- .
mation which has been assailing be for the aviator, to
their workmen. Imbedded in the oeive messages because of the noise
conduct of labor organizations, these made by the engine. This will not
clear-minled directing beads can see interfere In the work for which the
the Influences and misunderstandings , mn^aM wlre!<>88 „ ,
Tomorrow one or more batteries
of artillery will take the field ■
OlUF""
9
WHAT GUTHRIE GIVES
which have led their banded em-
ployes Into their hostile acta. They
are beginning to see and understand
that they must bear the expense and
put forth the energy required to or-
ganize employes back to the em-
ployer.
It will not be long before the fly-
ing remnants of the misguided labor
organizations of the past twenty
into his pocket to pay the bill of years, disintegrated by the force of
a correct organization born of a more
co-operative thinking, will show the
whole Industrial world that the old
of the new.
organization farther and farther
away from his employer. His as-
sessments and dues are yearly
mounting higher. And he has reach-
ed the limit of gain. His paid repre-
sentative, the labor leader, Is an un-
profitable servant The worker sees
this, and knows It But he does
not know what to do, does not know
whither to turn.
And so lt becomes the duty of the
employer to take a hand.
Every employer should realize the
simple fundamental truth that every
Industry Is a concrete whole, and
that, as Emerson puts it, a surplusage
taken from one part must be paid for
by taxing another part. It Is so with
every unit.
Today the industries are hard
against the struggle for continued
existence. None tan deny that the
present methods of conducting wage
controversies and the arbitration
of such controversies. If Indeed a
strike Is averted, cost more than
'either side gets out of It Money
I spent to purchase anything, in ex-
j cess of the actual value of the article "-be stockholders as well.
and
will fire on an imaginary enemy con-
cealed dehind the big hills on the
reservation. The observer in the ma-
chine will probably be Lieut. Brad-
ley of the Sixth F.eld Atlllery, and
he will use tbe wireless in transmit-
ting the range of the hidden enemy
to the field station with the artillery •
men and wilj also report the effect I
Is running before the searching light of shots fired. The tests will con-
tinue every day ttf.s week.
m.
Servants.
When men are selected to hold posi-
tions controlling the destinies ol
large forces of industrial endeavor,
their selection meatis two th ngs:
First, that they have shown capa-
bilities of sufficient power to control
the destinies of the intercuts placed
In their hands;
Second, that they have shown by
past accomplishments that they ace
worthy of the confidence placed In
them.
This Is true whether the people as
ETTOR JURORS ABE
IIBIBT AT BUTTE
THE GOVERNORS MANSION
BUTTE, MONT., Nov. 5.—An auto- |
mobile carrying Governor Edwin L- ;
SALEM, MASS., Nov. 5.—Having Norris- T- J- Walsh. Democratic can-
waived their rights to go to the poll* diiate for senator and S. \. Stewart,
. and vote today, jurors in the trial of Democratic candidate for governor, ^
_ Jos. J. Eitor, Artuo G-ovannitti and was assailed by a crowd listening .o |
whole agree or not, for the selec- Jos. Caruso, for the murder of Anna an orator ex'pounding Socialist doc-
tion is the selection -J the majority of; Lopizzo in the Lawrence strike were tr-nes here last night
the stockholders. Stockholders de- :a lhe court room as U5Ual today At_ The glass shield of the car was
pend upon the public for support, and
to the purchaser Is an economic
I waste, and good business demands
that lt be eliminated.
It remains for the employer to
1 pay for tbe organization of hU
' workmen back Into closer harmony
i with htm and his Industrial Meals.
; Why
. torneys for the defendants had a | smashed, Mr. Walsh s face was cut
natenoT'only the managing heads, but ^°UP of children, knlll workers and -nd fiBLa were raised t the governor
members of the Lawrence strike com- j anl* ^'r- Stewart. Half a dozen men
These men are capable, far-seeing mlttee on hand to testtify. ' seized the wheels of the car but the
i men. If their past actions show them Fred Morgan, secretary of the Eng- chauffeur, by throwing on the power,
worthy of selection as leaders in in- ,igh branch of the Industrlal Work-! ore the automobile from their grasp
sr rs«5%sr!3 rxi«' -- *• ——
an opportunity to f .rve the people first witness of the day, declared he
well. And when tl.ey state a truth, heard Ettor say in a speech to the
a fact that Is self-< vldent to the ob- strikers:
"When you go on the streets and
He should do so, In the first place, serving public, the same should re-
because the directing geniu's of in ce'*e careful attention, and the public, ,
dustry has found lt to be sound eco- should uphold the hands and adminls- p ' ' pu >our tands
nomlcs to expend vast sums to bring j tratlon of th«se men as long as they > our pockets and sing."
up to the highest grade of efficiency serve the public honestly and fairly. Pearl Shinburn, a mill worker, 14,
and productiveness the inanimate This Is true In private as well as testtified that she was one of
parts of the Industry—namely th«' public affairs, and the public must am] a "reguiar picket,
mechanical properties. J recognize and sujji rt ability if it
Everywhere the heads of indufr would continue to be prosperous.
tries are "scrapping" enormous ma "Is he a profitable servant?
chines with the hope that more im This should be the question In the
proved machines will overcome th<5 Hght of which the efforts of the head
waste involved in the replacement of an industry should be viewed. If
It Is uneconomical today to keep his work is a profit to the public, his
machinery in use which does not hands should be upheld. Tf he is an
unprofitable servant, he should be re-
moved.
the • and ** Bpe<J on
where the governor spoke.
SherifT John O'Rourke seized one
man in tbe act of throwing a rock at |
the automobile. Another who cursed I
the American flag and tore down the
i
|t£W-fj-r?
represent the highest point of effl.
clency attainable, and which cons
quently does not represent the great,
eBt possible earning power.
Mechanically, the Industries hav
attained the pinnacle of the greatest
productive power which the prop
ress of science and mechanics hal
thus far provided.
The next step—and lt la
and imperative
THE NOVEMBER "MEDIATOR."
"I never heard Mr. Ettor tell the
strikers to fight," she said.
"He always said, ' you can't fight
bayonets with your fists.'"
James Flavey, another striking
mill worker, told the jury of several
public speeches he had heard Ettor
make. "He always told us to fold
our arms," saiid Flavey, "and not to
give the police or soldiers a chance."
patriotic emblem displayed at a street j down a Confederate flag raised in
meeting of the Democrats, was pur- 1861 by Mr. Hall, who was then a pri-
' sued by a mob. The police reserves Vat.e in General Sterling Price's bri-
were called to arrest bim to save him
from further violence after he had
been severely beaten. A large crowd
joined in a monster demonstraion for
the American flag early today.
gade.
The D. A'. R. local chapter influenc-
ed the county court to place the flag
patriotism and hundreds of people
from all over the county were pres-
ent
The Epworth Lyceum Course will
open its annual program Thursday,
on the court house as a matter of Nov. 7.
GIRL
TO DEFEND TITLE
"The Mediator" Is familiarly known
In ths southwest ae "the little gray
magazine of the square deal." The
4 November Issue Is brimful of vigorous
logical articles that every workman and every
■is to bring the ht • employer should read. Its contribu- i -
man machinery also up to the high- tors number some of the foremost i _m
est potentiality possible of attain, th^^rs and writers of America and v NEW YORK, Nov. a.—Admirers o|
ment Nor can this be accomplished Europe. 1 the game of pool in this city And, in
by an attitude of Indifference toward j K Turner, the Industrial eoonom- | fact, all over the country, are Interest
the operating ha°^a. thefr fend ol tot contributes "The Golden Rule," a ,m1 in the contest for the worlds
tion^nd^h^ir^endencles of^lew t,,pical 111(1 rtcLg!ng Turner article, championsh.p title between Alfred De
tlon, and their tendencies or view- ghow,ng how ^ gold is re- .. . . .. ...
* ceding in the Industries before the Oro' the I,r6Sent hold<>r' and hl" old
No one can deny that a highlj triumphant approach of the square riTal, Frank Sherman of Washington,
trained and correctly thinking work- which begins at Doyle's Academy to-
man Is more efficient than the lgno j Ramsay Macdonald^leader of the morrow night For the first time in
rant and haphazard employe. Labor party In the house of oommons, a challenge match In .this city the
If lt Is good business to make end- wr(tes authoritatively of syndicalism, „ , . ,r, . ,
less and expensive lmprovemenU In ,he general strike theory of the Indus- 1 We ^ led OUt'
machinery with the expectation of In trial Workers of the World. Each frame will cons.st of only 14
creasing the earnings of an Indus ..New England's Bar Sinister" Is a ,>all8> the fifteenth being left on the
try. why does It not follow that the powerfU] editorial on the Lawrence ;able, and not tried for until the other
heads of the Industry should maks textlle g|tnatlon which the Ettor trial | 14 are racked.
similar appropriations for the lm
has again thrown Into the limelight
provement of Its human machlneryl Newton ^ contrlbutes "Get-
There are three essential steps in tlng the Safety Habit," an Illustrated
Improving workmen. by training story of the mighty movement for
them mechanically In the varlouj p^ter safety on the rail.
tasks; by recognizing the lmpor | c B Bartjett In "Help for the Doy"
ITALY BARS LADY LAWYER.
ROME, Nov. 5.—The career of Ita-
ly's first woman advocate, Signorina
tance of each man In the Industry, points out defects In the training of ; Teresa Labriolir, Doctor of I^ws and
granting each man this recognition, boys, and advocates more practical Professor of Philosophy in the Univer
and therefore creating harmony; and measures.
finally by creating a feeling of con. The e<ntor of "The Mediator" will 1
send a free sample copy of this pro-
gressive magazine to any reader of j
this paper who will request it by send-
ing a postcard to th* publication of-
fice, Cleveland, Ohio. [
tentment through systematic effort!
directed at the goal of taking ai
much care of the animated machinery
as of the Inanimate machinery.
The result of such a policy, loatt
slty of Rome, was cut short today by
the dec_sion of the supreme court
that women do not possess the right
to carry on the profession of an ad-
vocate. The court refused to allow
her name to be enrolled.
ST. LOUIS,, Nov. 5.—Barbara Glad
ys, an 18 year old nurse gjl, was ar-
rested today and charged., with hav-
ing set fire last Friday night to the
Berlin hotel, in which three persons
lost their lives. According to the
police sh6 confessed that she started
the fire for the 'love of excitement"
Her arrest followed the discovery
of & fire in the W.ndemere hotel ear-
ly today. Her employer, Rev. W. J.
Adamson, had moved his family and
the girl to the Windemere after the
Berlin hotel was destroyed.
The girl said, according to the po-
lice that she fired the Berlin by scat-
tering paper through the halls of the
second and third floors, and ign.tlng
them.
FIRST SINCE CIVIL WAR.
LIBERTT,/ MO., Nov. 5—For the
first time since the Civil war the
United States flag was unfurled to
the breeze over the Clay county court
house yesterday afternoon. General
John W. Hall, state commander of
the United Confederate Veterans of-
ficiated at the "raising." The last
American flag to fly over the court
house was placed there when federal
troops took possession and hauled
General
W arrant\
Anc^s ill /tlrn bp rbr r TKa the ciry o( tfuthm. p*t>
ol ike qualified voten ai u.d Gty. exprnact! ti an elfthca held fo Mid purr**.
receipt ai wtudi n haeby acknowledged, and other pubic beoefc*. don herein
C>tU!)Oin . the following described icai property and perns at a* led w the Court?
A trart erf land tu huached aad eighty leet SQuare. 10 that pari ol tbe City ol Gathne
Oa the Kwth by Hamaon A
on the ea« by Dwaei Boalewd tm the north b* Qewiawi A
BouJeraid. together with the Coovenboa Hal etwSeo by the City ol Guttne. and all other unpr
fcd appurtenances theretMo beianeina. and wamab the title 10 thr uiw
| TO>ttofD. That rSn deed liui take tSui and beraae abaokft only when ihe CtpKai ol thefeate of OUahoaa he
located in Gethrr
Z S U-'ttf anft to (Mid laid drvenbed
oi whatsoever nature.
In Cwtmonp cnbmof. the Ofy ot Guthne has cased the* preaenb to be evented b> its Board oi C
and atte«ed by «> CM and mi. purpart to the peovmow oi the Charter oi city, lbs fcr« <ky oi Ortoher. « the yenr oi
unto the said fcuif of ClUboni hee aad clear oi ai'l change*.
THE CITY OF GUTHRIE
Y?. 2t SL
STATE OF OKLAHOMA. LOGAN COUNTY, «.
BeioK -e. a Notary Pahhc * and far Mid Cauaty aod State, on thn irti day ol Ortchet 1912. peraally apprwd
J L^inJey. N M Carta and C C Clothier, to ae known to be the idnticnl penow who niUcnbcd the tume oI the
ihereoi to the h-egowg wtmment m ih B,^d oi Comm-Monet*. and ach arWledged to me thai hr executed
Kb hee and w4uniary artanddeedandMlhehwand wJuntary artandd«doi«chCuylorlhe
and purposes thereto contained - ,
17. 1915
- i.; ;.v v Jv " -Ir
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Hornaday, W. H. The Guthrie Daily Star (Guthrie, Okla.), Vol. 9, No. 207, Ed. 1 Wednesday, November 6, 1912, newspaper, November 6, 1912; Guthrie, Oklahoma. (https://gateway.okhistory.org/ark:/67531/metadc275646/m1/2/: accessed April 18, 2024), The Gateway to Oklahoma History, https://gateway.okhistory.org; crediting Oklahoma Historical Society.