lai About ihe Flowers On Your luiiuiur iiab,i Mucins Most artificial flowers are made by children in .disease-infested tenement houses under very bad working condi tions. Efforts made to stop the evil F ALL tho artificial flowers made In tho h 'n"ci1 States 74 per cent are mado In Now York city, nays a government ro- port. A report of tho Consumers' lcaguo of that city Allows that n largo propor tion of theso flowers aro made In tene ment houses and that most of tho work ors aro children whoso age rango from cloven down to four. It would ho shocking to somo to sco with their own eyes how tho boautlful flowers which adorn their hats aro niado by tho tiny hands of young children, somo of them inoro babies, who work from early morning until lato at night and cam from ten to fifteen cents n day. Yet tho purposo of this article In not to shock any one's sensibilities, but to lay baro facts and describe conditions as they aro, says Israel Zovin in tho Now York Ilornld. Somo ten or twelve years ago a few men and worn on woro sitting in the assembly room of a settlement houso llstonlng to tho talk of o charity Investigator, who, among other things, told a story of how, on a cold wlntor night, a poor family woro sitting huddled togotlicr round a small stovo and burning up u pack of old papers, which tho JoblcsK head of tho family bad dug up in somo place. "That was tho only fuel thoy woro ablo to get," tho investigator said. "Tho children woro clapping tholr hands with Joy, feeling tho warmth of tho flames penetrating tholr frail bodies. "Suddenly ono of tho childron, a thoughtful Ilttlo girl, stopped for a niomont and, becoming serious, asked her mother: 'Mamma, dear, plcaso tell mo, what do thoso poor children who havo no old papers do on a cold night llko this?" Tho women and men wuguoa; they thought It was clover! But there was ono man who did not laugh All night tho vision of thoso palo, emaciated chil dron sitting around tho stovo haunted him, and for a long timo ho was tor tured by tho heartache of feet of tho grim Joko, Ho is now ono of tho chlof workers of tho movomont to abolish child labor. It is not pleasant, theso facts relating to tho work of childron. Somo of thorn almost challenge credlbll Ity. For how could nny mother allow her tiny baby, tbroo or four years old, who is ovon too young for tho kindergarten, to sit indoors nil day long and work making imitations of flowers tho, child has never seen? 8ome Startling Cases, And yot I havo seen children bogln to learn to mako artificial flowers when they were only two years old. I do not Buy that childron of that ago aro compelled or coaxed by tholr mothors to work, but it is this way. Tho baby sits In n chair by tho tablo wntching mother nnd tho other children work. Tho baby strotchOB out its ImndB, grnbblng n petal or a loaf To satisfy his deslro tho mother gives tho baby a few potnls, showing him how to pull them apart. At throo or four tho child la already nu olllclont workor, ablo to earn about ton cents a day. Hero aro some of tho fucts: A mother and two daughters, living and work ing In a roar tenement, bo dark that an oil lamp must bo kept burning all day in order that thoy may sco to work, mako forget-mo-not wreaths. Thoy receive seven cents for one dozen .wroaths, and can earn $4.20 ovory 15 days, A frail, dollcato mother of livo childron sits at a tablo In tholr two-room Hat from morning until lato at night putting artificial borrlos on stoma. Sho earns from ten to fifteon cents a day. In a four-room flat, whore throo childron havo died of tuberculosis and two others woro sufforfng from it, a mothor and an olovon-your-old girl raado artificial rosea at J5 conta a gross. I In ono homo on a Suturduy morning four chil dren, ten, nine, six and four yeaxs old, woro found sitting by a tablo near tho ono window making vhorrlos, Thoy had been there slnco bIx o'clock In tho morning, and worked each day until eight o'clock nt nlffht. No child' abovo four or live 1b consldorod too young to work. Tho hours for all, whethor chil dren or adults, aro determined not by law, not by physical wolfaro, but by tho amount of work tho factory glvos out to bo done. If thero Ib an oxtra amount of work tho whole family work from half past flyo In tho morning until ten or olovou at night, and oomotlraoa even until ono or. two o'clock in tho morning, Btopplng only long enough to oat their scanty meal of spaghetti, dry bread and cot foo, on which thoy Boom to subsist. Breaking the Labor Law. In tho 105 families studied by tho Investigator for tho Consumers loaguo G01 childron wcro found. Wore than 18 per cont of theso woro fourteon years and over and woro contributing something to tho family Incomo; about 30 per cont woro five years and under, too young to work, though In u few cases children of this ago woro found helping with tho flowers. Out of tho remaining 40 per cont betwoon tho ages of bIx and fourteen who might bo found helping 14 per cont woro busily at work at tho timo of tho Investigator's call. At least 14 por cont, thon, ot tho childron who woro ablo to do UiIb work woro violating tho child labor law ot Now York state How many moro could bo Includod in this Hat it was impossible to ascortaln. Many families woro visited during tho morning, when tho children woro at school, and It was only through tho word of the mother that wo woro ablo to dotormlno whothor or not tho children helped with tho flow ers after Bchool hours, For tho most part only cases of childron who woro actually fojind at work were listed. Theroforo, tho estimate Is a very con urvatiyo one. mWTWmmMm Tho tenement houses whero most ot tho flowers are made aro of tho worst typo, with dark nnd shaky stairways. Tho crowded tenomont houses of tho "congested East side," of which so much hna boon snld In print, aro palaces in compari son to thoso rickety old structures. And in them tho children ot sunny Italy spend tholr days and nights. Ostensibly it Is tholr Inherent lovo for flowers that is drawing them to this work. It is not an onay matter to got tho confidence ot somo ot tho women and to mako thorn auswor questions. Thoy aro always suspicious that visi tors aro from tho board of health with a mission to mako trouble In somo houses no amount of arguing or 'coaxing will bring results not ovon tho assurnnco of tho children who return from school nnd nro nppenlcd to. However, thoro are aorno who nro quite willing to talk and to shed light on the situation. Thoy are not groody, but thoy are very ambi tious, and it is tholr ambition that Impels tbem to utilizer, every possibility of making monoy. Average $8 a Week. Thy aro all honest, hard-working people Tho children nro orderly and respectful, and thoro was a world of lovo in tho mothers' oyea on seeing them return from school and resumo tholr work separating potnls and pasting leaves on stonis. Tho earnings of heads of tho famllloa woro found to nvcrugo eight dollars a week, which, uccordtng to tho standard of living in that locality, 1b a fair incomo. A good many of tho mon work In flower factories and from them thoy tako work homo. Tho othtirs aro mostly shoemakers, bootblacks and pushcart peddlers. Ono of tho places whore children woro found at work aftor school hours had a restaurant and pool room on tho ground floor of tho building In which tho family lived. When thoro nro no diners in tho rostaurunt tho long dining tablo 1b covored with wreaths and bunches ot cherries and forgot-mo-nots, a mothor and her children working diligently at them. Tho proprietor ot this restaurant was also in tho rag business. In ono place n young woman, Murgarlta nozzonl, who looked quite different from tho gonoral typo she bolng blondo and, having bluo eyes was at work with hor Ilttlo girl, who soomed to bo a will ing nnd ambitious helpor. Little Olovanna, throo yoars old, looked llko n mlnlnturo of hor mother golden hnlred and oyes of the color ot violets. "1 don't want hor to help mo." tho mother said, "but sho Insists on doing that." And sho nccontuatod hor words by bonding over tho child and kissing her with nil tho fondnoBs of a mothor. Tho children ono moots horo In tho stroots aro all pretty, but their bonuty fades boforo maturity. Tholr physical development is Btunted by lcmg hours of work and vory Ilttlo play. Their child hood doos not last long. A ,glrl who Is married at fourteen 1b no raro case. Horo they mako tho stop from childhood right to manhood and woman hood, skipping over tho porlod of youth and maid enhood. Why Tony Sells Flowers. Such a child was Tony, who at thlrtoen becamo tho broadwinnor for tho family, selling llowors real flowers by day and helping his mothor make artlilclal flowers by night Tony was never a boy: ho never playod In tho strooto with othor childron, novor throw a ball in thp air. Tony's father kept a fruit stand on a corner, whoro he nlBo shlnod shooa -f Peoplb-- "GATLING GUN" PARKER Surprise nnd concern woro folt when it was learned that a United. States army mnehlno gun had failed to work during tho raid mndo by Villls ta3 on Columbus, N. M. Promptly tho war department set about preventing' a repetition of that breakdown by sending to tho border tho army's ma-chino-gun expert, MnJ. John Henry Parker of tho Twenty-fourth infantry, variously known in tho scrvico ns "Oat ling Gun Parker" or, more intimately, "John Henry." Major Parker has a noteworthy record, bocauso ho is tho man who demonstrated tho possibili ties of tho machino gun. This happened 18 years ago, dur ing Shafter's campaign, which cul minated in tho fall ot Santiago do Cuba. Tho man in tho street may not bo awaro of It, but Lloutonant Parker for such ho was then has been credited with turning tho tide of bat tlo at a critical period and making tho- capture and the retention of San Juan hill possible. More than that, his modest Ilttlo dotachment effectually halted the operating of a formidablo battery that might easily havo put many of Shatter's fleldpicccs out of action. In short, Lioutounnt Parker showed tho military world for tho lirst timo Just what tho machino gun could bo relied upon to do in tho hands of capable men. Ho anticipated nnd actually predicted the part that the machine gun has played in tho present struggle in Europe. Long beforo tho war with Spain Lieutenant Parker grasped tho tactical value of tho machino gun, and becamo so insistently an advocate of tho weapon that ho talked about it upon every possible occasion. Ho drew up plans for a suitable carriage, so that tho machino gun. ordinarily equipped with only a tripod, might havo tho fullest mobility and keep right along with the most advanced troops. So persistent was Parker in riding his hobby that other army officers thought him something of a boro and sometimes avoided his company. But 'his enthusiasm nnd theories havo been fully Justified, first by tho wprk of his machine-gun detachment In tho Spanish-American war, and now, even moro fully, by tho developments ot tho great conflict in Europe. VARDAMAN ON "FLUNKIES" I and roasted lieunuts. You could see him at this stand in tho early morning boforo peoplo went to work and lato at night after thoy returned homo from tho theater. He was thero in all kinds of weathor, and ho had been on tho same spot for 15 years. During this period his wifo and later hla children holped to swell his bank account by mak ing artificial flowers. When tho war bogau there was n run on tho bank where Tony's fathor kept his savings. Tho bank was closed, and then the poor man's reason gave way. Ho was taken to an inBano asylum, and Tony, not being able to keep up his father's business, took to soiling flowers as ins trade. And Tony is not tho only "man" at tho early age of thirteen. Owners of flower factories find it moro profitable to havo work done In tho tenements by women and children. Tho flower factories give out parts ql flowers petals, leaves, and stems to be made up Into whole flowors and wreaths by tho workers In tholr homes. Usually tho oldest child in tho fam ily calls, for these parts, which she carries homo lc a hugo pasteboard box. When tho flowers aro donf sho brings them bnck to the factory and the "bosa pays hor for tho work. The petals, which usually come from the factor) In bunches, mUBt bo separated and then pasted to gather with tho leaves and stems. Sometimes there are as many as nlno pieces which must be Joined before tho flowers nro ready to bo returned to tin factory. Buds are made by tying pieces of sill over a round ball ot cotton. Tho work, thougt Blow and tedious, Is not hard and can be dono vrltt very llttlg skill nnd practice, Whole families wen found busily working around a tablo in the kitcber or living room pasting and twisting and buncbiiif tho gayly colored flowers, which sometimes give tin only bright note to an otherwise desperately dlni;) home. m Worst Paid Work. Tho price paid for the work is perhaps the low est in any trudo. Prices vary from two cants i gross for pasting leaves on stems to f 1,40 n groxi for making flower wreaths. One girl of fifteen who had troublo with her spine, was found at wort putting berrios. on tho ends of uterus and reccivluf for the work only ono cent a gross. Sho told the lu vostlgator that sho made usually ten cents a day "But whou my Ilttlo sister helps roe," she added "I can mako fifteen cents a day." It 1b these conditions that tho Consumers' loagui Is striving to abolish. And tho activities ot tin Consumers' league are not limited to the, flower in dustry. Tho members of tho league aro working hard to lmprovo conditions In other occupations in which womon and young children aro employed, nnd havo boon doing great work in educating tho peoplo on tho dangers of woman and child labor under unsanitary conditions uy pointing oui tno dangers to the consumer through goods mndo In dark and atrloss homes, whero scarlet tover nnd other contagious diseases woro found to exist, tho leaders of the league have already accomplished many good rosults, But thero Is much work to be done. Fow reallzo how closely connected aro our own Uvea with Uio lives ot tho workers along cortaln industrial linen. It Is not only the health of the workers that is often at Btake, but tho conditions are a menaco to the consumers an well, and the danger to society Is groat. James K. Vardaman, Unitod States senator from Mississippi, has said mnny biting and even bitter things during his public career, and tho other day he took occasion to pay his re spects to a certain class of citizens of Washington, in tho course of an elo quent plea for better citizenship made beforo a mass meeting in Alexandria. There nro more flunkies to tho square Inch in Washington than I ever Baw In my life," declared tho senator, "and I verily believe that It you would stuff a colored laborer's qveralls with straw and label tho effigy 'congress man' or 'Benator,' you would soon havo half the population crawling to It." Senator Vardaman said that a pub lic ofllco should bo honored, but that tho man In that office Bhould be hon ored In accordance with his worth. Honest, fearless, patriotic men and women are needed at the ballot box today, Senator Vardaman told his audi- '''H ence, and if mistakes have been mado in the past they may be righted in tho future. The speaker expressed the fear that "in this nation dollar is tho god and commerce the religion of too many," DEMOCRATS' PUBLICITY MAN When the Joint flnanco and execu tive campaign commltteo of the Demo: cratic national committee selected Frederick W. Steckman as director of publicity for tho national committee in tho coming presidential campaign, it picked ono of the most experienced and popular of the newspaper writers and correspondents in Washington. Mr. Steckman, who was born in Princeton, Mo., thirty-six years ago, first wont to Washington about 1904 as correspondent of the St. Louis Repub lic. For somo years now he has been a political writer for the Washington Post und besides has covored the ,capl tol and tho Whlto Houso for the Now Orleans Daily States. However, he be gan his newspaper activities when ho was less than ten years old. ' In 1912 Mr. Steckman was in chnrgo of tho Chicago headquarters of tho Democratic national committee, and it was he who devised tho plan of MiUll cfiirlbutlw;i for tho campaign from great numbers ot peoplo. Tho fcdiewe ii'rlltd the commltteo more than ? 100,000. His excellent publicity work MADDEN, LONG LOST BROTHER Martin II, Madden, congressman from Chicago, Is not only wealthy. Ho (a aleo quite handsome. Nevertheless he U not satisfied with his physical make-up. Ho would be much bettor pleased if he worn budt along moro original lines. Tho trouble with him is that ho looks llko too many peoplo. Ho makes a specialty of being a ringer for tho long-lout brothers. On an average of onco a month ho gets a letter from somcono who has ueen his picture and claims him ao a brother thought to havo hecn lost at sea or strayed from homo years and yearn ago. Ono day he heard lrcm a woman, who said she had a locket with an "M' on It, and containing a boyhood plcturo ot hor long-lost brother that looked exactly llko tho ono ot Maddon in a Chicago paper. Maddon was obliged to tell her that his congres sional duties are too pressing to allow him any timo tor being n long-lost brother this year. Thia is only a eamplo Incident, ami Mr. Maddoa Is getting somewhat "peoved."