The Savannah tribune. (Savannah [Ga.]) 1876-1960, November 17, 1888, Image 4

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THE BIG KRUPP FACTORY. JJFE IN THE GREAT IRON AND STEEL WORKS AT ESSEN. Nearly 12,OOO'Men Employed—How the Employes of This Gigantic Workshop Are Governed. The steel-casting works of Krupp at ■Essen, Germany, says a Philadelphia Press correspondent, cover an area of •ftbout 1000 acres land in which 11,211 meh are employed lu the production of steel, and also in the manufacture of countless different articles, such as axles, , wheels, etc., for locomotives and rail road carriages; rails, switches and sleep ers for railways, tramways and mining railways; springs—spiral and leaf—for locomotives and carriages; parts of all kinds of machinery used for any purpose; 'bridge material and rolls; material for large pumps as used in mines; all requi site steel and iron material for the build ing of ships of all sizes, for war and commercial purposes; cannons of every caliber—the production of them having exceeded 20,000—and last, gun cart ridges, artillery wagons and shots. The gross production of iron and steel j averages 280,000 tons per annum. I For accommodations of traffic and shipping in the establishment are used 28 locomotives with 883 freight car riages. About 35 miles of narrow and broad gauge railroad line is laid through the establishment. One chemical labora j tory, one photographic and one litho j graphic studio, one printing oflice and a I book-binding establishment are at work for the sole use of the firm. Telegraph i and telephone < ommunication goes all ■ over the factory and an engine company with 68 firemen and 38 fire alarms is also > there for the benefit of the establish ment. The entire establishment is surrounded I by a high wall or a fence. There are i only certain gates where the workmen are allowed to enter. This is done for the purpose of having them under thorough control. The relationship be tween the firm and the workman cannot | be better illustrated than to compare it ! with a large family. Krupp and his I officials assume the right to shape and i regulate the entire doings and existence I of their workmen, not only in the I factory, but also at home, and this is I how it is done. At 6 a. m. the men I have to be at work. Every one is pro | vided with a check, on which is his num- F ber. . When he enters the gate where he i works he puts this number into a large I box. Does he happen to be one or two I minutes late, he has an hour deducted ; from his work. Is he an hour late, he I loses a quarter of a day, and so forth. I Punctuality has to be observed and ex i Riises are not accepted, except in un- I Usual cases. I The working hours are,on the average, 1 thirteen a day, with a reduction for 1 dinner from 12 o’clock until 1:3 ) o’clock. A The men get paid by the day, or else they are engaged in piece work, but in .Jieitbcr case the wages are about the B *same’. . 0 A man who works by the piece cannot make as much as he wants to. You see, Jit seems to.be the principle of the firm j that no employe shall make any more wages than he wants in order to maintain j himself and his family, if he has one. i Therefore, the man does not get paid ac | cording to his ability, but more so accord- I ing to what he w'ants. It is hard to de- I termine the wages of the employes on | this account, in order to compare them I with American wages. Living is re- I markably cheap in Germany, and the 1 diet is totally different from what it is in I America. But I should judge, from dif r fercat inquiries which 1 made ot a num- A her of workmen engaged at different J places in Krupp’s establishment, that 70 w cents a day is about the average pay a<of an emplove at Krupp’s. 4 At Tt. m. a great bell is tolled in the fir ?rks, which can be heard for miles -ej kund, and then the workman goes a 1 pie, and if you will follow me you will J | how the member! of this large family X 1 kept depending on their “great” rat ser, the mighty Krupp. A number eii stores are situated all around in the a’tl dibo'rhood, where the workman can utl t his wife or his children to buy MW ’' )ds on a card. Ready money is not 1® jfuired of him. The clerk looks at the m /rd and puts the amount of the bill against the purchaser’s name in a large |nd the next pay-day the amount iris taken oil the man’s wages, that settles | it. In these stores anything may be had for money—clothing, shoes, dry goods, millinery goods, house furniture, grocer ies, meat, et<^ t Now then, ’ the workman has come home, which is again in a house belong ing to Krupp, in the immediate vicinity of the works, where has been erected a pretty little village. The street are wide ! and lined with beautiful beeches on each side. The houses are each sur rounded by a large garden and each is four stories high. In every house dwell five families, each home being completely secluded from all others. The accom modations are perfect, all modern im provements of comfort are to be en joyed, and the people could not wish for any thing better. The rent is always de ducted from the husband’s wages on every pay-day, and the worry of an ap proaching rent-day never troubles him very much. A small strip of a garden, where a few vegetables may be raised, belongs to each home too, and the people do not pay any “xtra for this. Every "Wednesday and Saturday there is mar ket held in the colony where the house wives can go to get their provisions for the home. Such is the home of Krupp’s workmen, which, though it is enjoyed by him, belongs to the master and is pro vided for by him according to his idea and as he thinks proper. After supper the men light their long pipesand they go forth to the saloon, to * ait behind their beer aud talk politics, play curds or amuse themselves other, wise. Krupp knows this, and he has also provided for beer. There are eight large beer halls and a dancing and con cert hall, bowling alley, billiards, etc., where the men get the largest and best glass of beer for the least money. Beside that, however, the colony has also several schools, where everything is taught except religion, but nevertheless Krupp does not ob ject to religion, as he has also built a fine church at the place, and the clergyman is paid out of his private purse. However, the dominant power of this great machine of discipline does not end yet. "When the workman is sick—aye, even when he is dead—the corporation of Krupp still holds out its influences over him or his family. Every workman is compelled, as soon as he enters into the employ of Krupp, to pay to a sick fund a small percentage of his wages. Out of this fund the physician will be paid when the laborer is sick, the chem ist gets the payment for the medicine, and the family of the sick father gets a small sum to pay the running expenses of the house. SCIENTIFIC AM) INDUSTRIAL. A Berlin scientist says salt is con ducive to longevity. Brass solder may be made by using twelve parts of brass, six parts of zinc, and one part of tin. Antipyiine in doses of one to three grains is recommended by Sonnenberger as a remedy for whooping cough. A gas stove has been invented to rival the bookcase folding bed. It is con cealed m a handsome colonial clock case. Lithium is the lightest metal known and is worth $l6O per ounce. Gallium is the costliest metal known and is ■worth $3250 per ounce. It is asserted that, under certain con ditions, the bark of the quilla tree of Chili possesses cleansing properties supe rior to those of the best soap. Wonders are being continually ac complished by electricity. A French electrician thinks he will soon be able to produce a thunder storm at will, A correspondent of the Liverpool Mercury says that he heard some cornet playing from a phonograph which had been repeated more than a thousand times, and all the notes were as clear and distinct as ever. A new carpenter rule has been in vented by a Boston mechanic. It is of novel construction, and aside from its uses as a rule makes a very handy bevel or square, in which legs may be ad just ably clamped in any desired position. The tax collectors’ receipts of the ancient Egyptians were inscribed on pieces of broken crockery. Some of them, from the British museum collec tion, have been translated, and show the tax in Egypt under the early Ca sars. A new chain wrench for plumbers is especially adapted for use in connection with pipes, and is so constructed that the pipe may be turned from right to left, or vice versa, without removing the wrench, while it permits of tightening the chain less than the length of a link. The French in Cayenne are said to hold in great dread the Lucilia hom inivorax, or man-eating fly. This in sect lays its eggs in the mouth or nos trils of sleeping, and especially of drunken, individuals, and the hatched out M/e w usually produce a horrible death. The Colt arms factory at Hartford, Conn., will soon begin the manufacture of the 5000 navy revolxers for the United States Government. The new piece is a rive-shooter of thirty-eight calibre. Besides being self-cocking, all the cartridges may be instantly removed by a pressure of the thumb. Blacksmiths, who sometimes get hold of fractious horses, will appreciate the device cf a Sidney (Ohio) man. The invention is a horseshoeing rack, and consists of a pen, readily adjustable to the size of any animal, and in which a horse can be securely fastened, the rack being made so that it can be readily taken down and moved out of the way. French chemists now obtain from the essence of birch bark, by rectification, an essential oil which possesses among other proprieties that of being fatal to insect life, and an electrically insulating tarry substance; and these two products are so treated and combined with other substances as to produce an anti-oxidiz ing compound and an insulating material capable of the same applications as ebonite. By means of recent improvements made in the manufacture of rilles as many as 120 barrels can now be rolled in an hour by one machine. They are straightened cold and bored with corre sponding speed, and even the rifling is done automatically, so that one man tending six machinescan turn out sixty or seventy barrels per day. With the old rifling machine twenty barrels was about the limit of a day’s work, but the improved machines attend to everything after being once started, and, when the rifling is completed, ring a bell to call the attention of the workman. An Inquiry as to Our Flag. Which is the correct form: “Stars and stripes” or “stripes and stars?” Logically, “stripes and stars” is the correct form; the act of Congress of April 4, 1818, by which our present flag is authorized, dec’ares that “the flag of the I a.ted States be thirteen horizontal stripes, alternate red and white, that the Union be twenty stars, white on a blue field; and that, on the admission of a newjj’t ite into the I nion, one star bo added Jo the union of the flag.” From this it is evident that the stripes are tho more important, and that therefore they should precede. But custom has ordained that tho stars shall precede the stripes; ami as neither rittnSUs official for the flag it doesn’t make ’Shu of difference. - A to Turk Sun. I WOMEN WED. No Romance Whatever Nowadays in Finding a Husband. A man asked me the other day how women find husbands. It was such a puzzling question to me that I constitu ted myself a committee of one and went round among a lot of married women to see how their husbands proposed to them. I There wasn’t one who had ever had I an absolute romance of love! There wasn’t one whose husband had gotten down on his knees, caught the loved one's hand and besought of her, unless she wished to see him stark and cold with a broken heart, that she would wed him! There wasn’t one who had ever known the rapture of being held, with a pistol at her head, while the brave lover pronounced that unless she accep ted him, he would kill her and then himself! There wasn’t one who had been gained even at the dagger’s point, and not a single wife had been drugged and wedded while in a semi-conscious state! Dorothy,l confess to a certain amount of disappointment. The nearest I could get as to how the question of marriage had been reached was always that they had drifted into it. This is deliciously vague, but it seems to mean that they knew the man, that he had the privilege of holding their hands and criticising their frocks for some time,and that then,when there was no special excitement in Wall street, a presidential election wasn’t going on, nor anything else that was distracting, they suggested thnt it was about time for them to got married. This is the general experience. And I think it a sin and a shame. Few Women have more than one opportunity to marry, and that ought to be accompanied by all the frills and frivolities that the best novel writer dreamed of. Tie Howells and James business in tl e way of classic love making may be most desirable for nervous people; it may calm and soothe them, but when cham pagne and love aro offered it wants to be sparkling, and it wants to taste as if such nectar had never been offered be fore. The cigarette imbued, white-skinned, colorless eyed, smooth-faced young man that is so prevalent just now will never offer anybody anything but the flattest cider for champagne, and when it comes to this, I say, give me ice water and platonic.— Maid York Star. A Desperate Boy. Ulysses Nelson, a fifteen-year-old col ored boy, gave a remarkable exhibition of dare-devil pluck at Hastings, Neb., the other day. Nelson r ached Hastings after midnight, preceded by a telegram from Holdridge where he had stolen a watch. As he stepped from the train policemen Balcombe and Clark stopped him and told him he was their prisoner. The boy whipped out a revolver and fired. Balcombe fell mortally wounded, and the lad disappeared in the darkness. Clark notified the Sheriff and Chief of Police, and six men went to the depot yards to hunt for Nelson. They found him in a patch of weeds and told him .to surrender. He made no answer, and Clark and another man walked into the weeds. As they did so Nelson jumped up and fired, sending a ball close to Clark’s head, who ran. The boy fired again, and this time the ball took off one of Clark’s fingers, and was stopped by his watch. Then the officers blazed away at the woods until their ammuni tion was gone, when Nelson sprang from his hiding place with a revolver in each hand, backed to where the officers had tied their horses, mounted one, and rode oft'. After getting ammunition and re enforcements the officers followed the boy, overtook him, and firedat him u n til they killed his horse and he had no ammunition left. Then he surrendered. He had a fatal shot in the bac k of his neck, received in the weeds. Ex-Speaker of the Assembly of tho State of Xcw York., State of New York, Assembly Chamber, I Albany, April 16, 1886. f My family for the last twelve years have been using Allcock’s Porous Plasters, and have found them wonderfully efficacious in coqghs, colds, and pains in the side and back. About ten years ago I was thrown from a wagon and badly bruised. In three days these plasters entirely removed the pain and sore ness. Twice they have cured me of severe colds which threatened pulmonary trouble. They also cured my son of rheumatism in the shoul ders, from which he had suffered two years. James W. Husted. The Southern Pacific K. R. has mortgaged its road for $33,000,000. Honey-Moon. •'Say, Perkins, old boy, why don’t we see you at the club any more'?’ Has your mother-in law shut down on you?” “No, Brown; the fact of the matter is, my home is so happy now that there is no inducement for me to leave it. You look incredulous, but it’s a positive fact. You see, my wife used to suffer so much from func tional derangements common to her sex, that her spirits aud her temper were greatly af fected. It was not her fault, of course, but it made home unpleasant all the same. But now, since she has begun to take Dr. Pierce’s Fa vorite Prescription, she has been so well and so happy that we are having our honey-moon all over again.” The kitchen of the White House in Wash ington, D. C., is run by a colored woman. A Poser I Why will you suffer with indigestion, consti pation, piles, torpid liver and sick-head acne, when a few cents will buy Hamburg i igs enough to relieve your distress at ouce and ef fect;a cure in a few days? 25 cents. Dose cue Fig. Mack Drug Co., N. Y. Safety to mother ami child and less liability to all unpleasantness after confinement result from thouse of Mother’s Friend. There are 493 mountain peaks in the United States more than lO.IOJ feet ill height. Vso the surest remedy for catarrh —Dr. Sage’s. Eight iniH-ionury ships are now cruising in tho North Sen. Beat, easiest to use and cheapest. I’iso's Remedy for Catarrh. By Drugg sts. 60c. A Secret Os good health is found in the regular move ment of the bowels and perfect action of the Liver. These organs were intended by nature to remove from the system all impurities. If you are constipated, you offer a “standing in vitation” to a whole family of diseases and ir- 1 regularities which will surely be "accepted,” and you will have guests unwelcome and de termined. All these unhappy conditions may be averted by the timely use of Dr. Pierce’s Pleasant Purgative Pellets. Powerful for the effectual regulation of the bowels and Liver, establishing a healthy action of the entire wonderful organism with which we are cre ated. The composing room of the New York Times is in the thirteenth story. If Sufferers from Consumption, Scrofula, Bronchitis, and General Debility will try Scott's Emulsion of Cod Liver Oil with Hypophosphites, t ‘ ey will find immediate re lief and permanent benefit. The Medical Pro fession universally declare it a remedy of the greatest value and very palatable. Read ; ‘‘l have used Scott’s Emulsion in several cases of Scrofula and Debility in Children. Results most gratifying. Mv little patients take it with pleasure.”— W. A. Hulbert, M.D., Salisbury, Statistics show that this year’s potato crop is the largest ever raised in the U nited States. The Special Offer Os The Youth’s Companion,of Boston, Mass., which we published last week, should be no ticed by our readers, a< the opportunity comes but once a year. Any new subscriber to The Companion who will send $1.75 at once, can have the paper free to January 1,1889, and for a full v< ar from that date. This offer includes four holiday numbers, for Thanksgiving, Christmas. New Year s and Easter, all the Il lustrated Weekly Supplements, and the An nual Premium List, with 500 illustrations. Really a $2.50 paper for only $1.75 a year. If afflicted with -ore eyes use Dr. Isaac Thomp son’s Eye’water. Druggists sell at 25c. per bottle. - Possesses many Important Advantages over all other prepared Foods. BABIES CRY FOR IT. INVALIDS RELISH IT. Makes Plump, Laughing, Healthy Babies, Regulates the Stomach and Bowels. Sold by Druggists. 135 c., 50c., SI.OO. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO., BURLINGTON, VT. Baby Portraits. A Portfolio of beautiful baby portraits, printed on fine plate paper by patent photo process, sent free to Mother of any Baby bom within a year Every Mother wants these pictures; send at onoe. Give'Baby’s name and age. WELLS, RICHARDSON & CO,, Props., Burlington, Vt It’s Easy to Dye WITH PipaowDvfS Superior ,N /WXL j T Strength, Fastness, Beauty, /wR (OfeL. AND I ) Simplicity. Warranted to color more goods than any other dyes ever made, and to give more brilliant and durable colors. Ask for the Diamond, and take no other. 36 colors ; 10 cents each. WELLS, RiCHARDSON & CO., Burlington, Vt. For Gilding or Bronzing Fancy Articles, USE DIAMOND PAINTS. Gold, Silver, Bronze, Copper. Only io Cents. Bvincr-M»ehlneT"|TlTlTl t once establish iIJIjLI le in all parts, by fj jl fl ting- our machines JII 11 I goods where the people can »l« them, we will-send free to oho person in each locality, the very best sewing-machine made in world, with all ths attachments. » will also send free a complete a of our costly and valuable art spies. In return we ask that you >w what we send, to those who ▼ call at your home, and after 15 jnths all shall become your own opertv. This grand machine is ide after the Singer patents, hich have run out: before patents run out ft sold for SO3, with tho r tachments, and nov sells for Best,strongest, most use machine in the world. All i s e. No capital required Plain, brief instructions given. Those who write to us at once can se cure free the best sewing-machine in the world, and the finest line of works of high art ever shown together in America, TICUBdcfO., 140. Augusta, Maine. B Ely’s Cream Balm? 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The uulu who has invented troiu three n) in to live dollars m a Rubber Ciat, and < not 8 KY'uc'it that will keep at his first half bout's experience tn om » fn ,w‘s I’r Iv n ast >nn finds to his sorrow that it Is s Vl’ui.rV Jw hard;y a better protection than a mos- ■■■■ _■ sI.ICK LK, a name familiar V > y qulto netting, not onlv feeta chagrined w w Cow-boy Jk nt being so budly ukeii m, but also M | ff* A I »" e ' r ’t feel* It be <io« s not look exactly Uka ftru ’ wrr **. j >ah Ask tor the “ r usll UKAND” fiu< kkk I I ■■■ I W and take no other. Uyuur •tqrtr r diru i»<»t hav<* the >un bp aci’<t for descriptive catalogue. A. ©ETF.RSON’S MAGAZINE I Is the Cheapest and best of the lady'., I books, excelling all others as a uiagazlao of literature, art, and fashion. r @IGHT original novelets will he gfvbi, * during 1880, besides numerous short stories, from the pens of some qf th* most popular writers of the day. Ou» list of contributors Is unequaled. * ©HERE will be, in 1889, 14 elegant steel plates; large double-sized colored fashion plates, and handsome fancy or woik-tabls patterns, printed in colors, monthly, b» sides hundreds of fine ©VERY number will contain a full-size yapei dress - pattern, worth the price of ths number in itself, as it will enable a lady to cut out her own oT her children’* dresses. ©ENOWNED places and people will furnfsJj subjects for handsomely-illustrated arti cles; these, with a series of papers— “ Talks by a Trained Nurse”—will prove valuable features for 1889. ©IOK-ROOM, toilette, cooking, and cthei recipes; articles on the garden, house furnishing, and household management; also a mothers’ department, make •*Peter son” invaluable to every woman. ®UR fashion department will contain the newest and most stylish designs in drese for ladies and children, both for everyday and outdoor wear; also the latest style* in bonnets and hats. ©OW is the time to subscribe or to get up * tlub. Terms, 82.00 per year, with great I reductions to clubs and elegant premium* for getting up clubs. Sample copies fro* to those desiring to get up clubs. PETERSON’S MAGAZINE, 306 Chestnut St., Philadelphia, Pa. Blxntiox this EiFza. EVERY KIER’S WIFE Sees some of her Poultry gill I*. die each year without LwVd knowing what the matter ESKiWti was or ilow to effeut 8 j! remedy if she does recog- nine the Disease. This la I II wA Bot 89 at an ex ’SjSgialliLpense of 2-5 ccuts (in VWnMi/ f. Wl stamps) she cau procure EM a 100-I'nge BOOK giving the experience of a practical Poultry Raiser (not au amateur, but a man working for dollars and cents) during a period of 25 years. It teaches yqu howto Detect and Cure Diseases; howto Feed for Eggs and also for Fattening; which Fowls to Save lor Breeding Pur poses; nod everything, indeed,you should kuow on this subject. P iiop-'l,jj r 134 Leonard Street. N. Y. City. MEN AND BOYS! Do you want to learn all about go. a Horse f How to Pick Out a Good One ? How to Know Im per lections aud so g. -J tliiard again-l Fraud? How Detect Disease and effect a cure when same is <%& possible ? How WYi to Tell the Age by tho Teeth? What to call the Z Different Parts of the Animal? f f JI, . , How to Shoe a Horse Properly f Ail this, and other Valuable Information relntlna to the Equine Species cun be obtained by reading onr 100-PAGE ILLI STRATED HORSE BOOK, which we will forward, ?."nW 25 CIS. IN STAMPS. HORSE BOOK CO.. 134 Leonard St., N. Y, The Only Printing Ink Works In the South. HODGE & EVANS, Manufacturers of all kinds of Printing Inks, ATLANTA, GEORGIA. JONES - FREIGHT jMgK. jr/ a Ton Wagon Scales. I ron be.eri, Bearings, Brads - Tare Beam and Beam Box for Every Blxe Scale For free pridf UM J mention this paper asd addrtoM A <. W JONES OF Bl NGN ASATO N. W v BINGHAMTON. N. fc HOW MANY LINKS IN THE CHAIN? $155 IN CASH CIVEN AWAY! Mail your answer with Soc. silver, and you will receive free for six months the brightest and most interesting family newspaper in the U. S. First correct guess will also receive frkk SSO in cash; 9d,|25; 3d,516; 4th,slo; stb,ss; next 50 $1 e»ch. Premiums will be distributed March 1, 1889, and names of winners published in Thu Family Frirnd,—a splendid newspaper worth many times the prict asked, which should be in every home. Address Publishers Family Friend, Chicago, 111. We Cure CATARRH - \ where all other remedies fail. OUT J method of direct and coutinuoutf LA d \ medication of the whole respire V X WrX tory system produces same effect t \ \as a favorable change of climate. No smoke or disagreeable odor. W'fF ILLUSTRATED BOOK giving full y I particulars,free upon application. COMMON SEHSE CATARRH CURB £« State St., Chicago, HL ||S| Plso’s Remedy for Catarrh is the Best, Easiest to Use, and Cheapest ggß H 8 Sold by druggists or sent by maiL SS KU 50c. E. T. 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