Making Both Ends Meet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about Making Both Ends Meet.

Making Both Ends Meet eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 231 pages of information about Making Both Ends Meet.

Another strong worker, employed on heavy material, though she liked the bonus system, and said “it couldn’t be better,” had remained at work at about the same wages as before, because she was a little ahead of the others before and earned $8 a week; and now, as there was hardly more than enough of her kind of work to occupy her for more than four days a week, she still earned about $8.

One folder was made very nervous by a constant fear that she would not earn her bonus.  She always did complete the necessary amount; but when the system was first introduced, she had been sleepless night after night.  Though this sleeplessness had passed away, she still took a nerve tonic to brace her through her work; and this was the case with another folder.  The mothers of both these girls urged them to return to week work.  But this was of poor quality—­odds and ends—­and the girls disliked it, and persisted in the new system.

In tying ribbons around the bolts of material, the girls sit at work.  Their wages had been $1 a day for tying ribbons around 600 pieces; and now, on a bonus for 1200 pieces, is at times for quick workers, as high as $11.  But the ribbon tying was not steady work.  It is applied to only some of the material, and the task and bonus here are intermittent.  The girls who knot, or run silk threads through the selvages, paste on tinsel ribbon, and wrap are younger than the other workers.  Their wages before had been from $5.80 to $6 a week.  Now they are in some cases over $8; in others about $7; in others about $6.  The work reaches them in better condition than before.  They said it was more interesting, and the chief difficulty was in lifting occasionally a greater number of heavy pieces in piling.  Seats were provided for these workers except for those at tinselling; and if they found they were able to complete the task easily, they sat at the work.  At the heavier work, the girl at yarding, the folder, knotter, and ticketer, all worked tandem, and if the girl at yarding loses her bonus, all the girls lose the bonus.

In the last process of stamping tickets and ticketing, the girls work without one superfluous motion, with a deftness very attractive to see; and both here and at book folding justify the claim made by Scientific Management that speed is a function of quality.  The wages here had been $6 before, and were now in full time from $9 to $10.  As the task before had been combined with various other processes, it was, as in other cases, impossible to determine how much the work of each worker had been increased.  The present task was that of ticketing 39 bundles of 5 pieces each hourly, with different rates for different amounts of tickets, and was not considered at all a strain.  But at the ticketing connected with the adding machines the work was not differentiated so carefully.  More of the heavy work came to these ticketers, and the lifting was sometimes too exhausting.  But the work was better than in former times, and the wages of from $9 to $10 were thought just, if a higher rate had been added for the heavier work here.

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Making Both Ends Meet from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.