From a waiter, or a porter, or a janitor’s
point of view, tipping is wrong only when it is meager.
They regard this form of compensation as not only
just but usually too sparingly bestowed.
Unquestionably, with any reform in
the manner of compensation to persons engaged in domestic
or other serving capacities, must go a reform in the
attitude of the public toward servitors. The patron
who abuses his privileges, who exacts of employees
far more than he has the right to ask, who treats
them as automatons without sensibilities or self-respect such
a patron must be handled simultaneously with the change
in manner of compensation.
Employers, particularly in hotels
and like public places, will have to give more attention
to seeing that employees are not mistreated by the
swaggering, blatant, selfish type of patron. This
type abounds and has been developed largely by the
tipping custom, that is, the extremely servile attitude
assumed by servitors in order to stimulate tipping
has brought out the opposite quality of domineering
pride in the patron.
THE SORE SPOT
No feeling so rankles in the mind
as the sense of uncompensated labor. The thought
that patrons have gotten something for nothing leaves
a sore spot in the thought of servitors. And
if they are employed in places where the only compensation
they receive is from the gratuities of patrons, this
soreness is incurable. The next time the patron
appears he will be made to feel the displeasure of
the employee. Thus, in one sense, it is the system
that is wrong, a system which does an injustice to
both employee and patron.
Every employee has a fairly clear
idea of his duties. Most employees scrupulously
refrain from doing more than the duties for which they
are paid expressly. Hence, when an employee over-steps
this boundary he has fixed in his own mind, he has
the sense of uncompensated labor. He feels a
grudge either against the employer or the patron.
He looks to one or the other to supply the extra remuneration
for the extra service.
As a consequence, personal service
workers are nursing a grievance much of the time.
Their conversation and thoughts are about some patron
who has failed to compensate them, or has, in their
judgment, inadequately compensated them. They
devote little time to thinking of a reform in the
system that would give them an adequate compensation
from the employer and do away entirely with the patron-to-employee
form of compensation.
THE MARTYR
The tipping system is so established
now that the individual who opposes it must be prepared
to play the role of martyr, whether employee or patron.
Employers who profit by the no-wage system dislike
employees with a degree of self-respect that makes
them rebel at gratuities. Such wages as are paid
are so nominal that the employee cannot subsist upon
them alone. He either has to quit that line of
work or enter it and conform to the conventional methods.
BAGGAGEMEN
Tipping men who call for and deliver
trunks has become a fixed custom in the cities and
is expected, though not so often practiced, in the
smaller towns. The transfer company theoretically
charge for the complete operation of moving the trunk
from the home or hotel to the railroad station.
But the men on the wagons or trucks exact tips for
carrying the baggage up and down stairs or elevators.
The question is, are they entitled to this extra compensation?
The baggagemen argue that their business, strictly
interpreted, is to carry the trunk from the house
to the station and that going up stairs and into rooms
is an extra service. Hence, they stand around
and make it evident that they expect compensation
from the patron, in addition to their wages from the
company.
Their position is not tenable.
A patron pays the company to get his trunk from wherever
it may be and to deliver it to its destination.
Whatever operations are necessary to get the trunk
are the natural duties of the company and its employees.
The charges of the company are, or should be, based
on the complete service. The exaction of extra
compensation in the form of tips by the employees,
therefore, is an imposition. In calling the company
no person, tacitly or openly, agrees to the argument
that the trunk is to be moved from curb to curb.
The understanding is that your baggage
is to be removed from its customary place in the home
to the customary place in the station or other destination.
It would be as reasonable for baggagemen to dump a
trunk outside a station and demand a gratuity from
the railroad for bringing it inside, as to demand
a gratuity from the patron for taking the trunk up
or down stairs. Tipping to baggagemen is unnecessary.
If the company pays inadequate wages the remedy lies
not from the patron through tips but from the employer
through the payment of increased wages.
BOOTBLACKS
Of late years the custom has grown
up to tip bootblacks. This is in addition to
the regular charge paid for the service and has no
justification except in the false plea of the servitor
that if the patron does not tip him he will have no
compensation. Here it may be stated that the
thought that the tip constitutes the only compensation
the employee receives is the chief influence in the
mind of the patron. He feels a pity for the employee
even though he objects to the bad economic system
that enables employers to engage workers on such a
basis. The employees exploit this thought in the
mind by leading the conversation with the patron into
the channel of compensation. At some time during
the service he lets the patron know that the tips he
receives are his only compensation and this arouses
the sense of obligation in the patron who does not
like to have his shoes shined for nothing, even though
the payment at the desk covers the transaction.
Any one who has patronized a restaurant
regularly, or a bootblack stand, or a barbershop,
or manicurist, or any public place, will recall how
invariably the servitors bring up the subject of tipping
and always with the suggestion that they would be
disabled financially if it were not for the generosity
of the public.
This is all a carefully and skilfully
planned campaign to exploit the patron.
BARBER SHOP PORTERS
Patrons who do not tip barbers frequently
tip the porters who brush them down. On the surface
it seems that the porter’s attentions in a barber
shop are extra and deserve extra compensation.
Yet, theoretically, no master barber would admit that
a patron of his shop has any other charges to pay
than the regular tariffs. The porter is there
as an extra measure of service from the shop.
Practically, however, the shops all proceed on the
assumption of tipping. The porter is a much-aggrieved
individual if he is overlooked. In any sound economic
system, the porter’s compensation should come
exclusively from the shop. If his attentions
are decided to be extra, there should be a regular
scale of compensation, as for a hair cut, which the
patron should pay. So long as his services are
furnished by the shop without being included in the
regular shop tariffs, the patron owes the porter nothing
for his attentions.
The solution of the whole tipping
problem lies in the foregoing postulate that
if any employee is in a position to render an extra
service there should be a regular scale of charges
for such service. It is the irregular compensation,
depending upon the whim of the patron, that makes
the practice economically unsound. No hotel, or
other employer, should have on the premises any employee
whose compensation depends upon chance. If a
hotel stations an employee in the washroom he should
be there distinctly as part of the service for which
a patron pays at the cashier’s desk. A
porter in a barber shop should be engaged exclusively
at the shop’s expense as part of the complete
service for which a patron pays to the cashier.
Employers, however, are much too shrewd to scatter
employees around on the formal understanding that the
patrons are to compensate them. They pretend that
they are engaged as an extra measure of courtesy or
service from the employer and then are educated to
exact, through tips, their compensation from the patron.
DOOR MEN
It would seem that if there were any
place where the patron might feel free to forget his
coin pocket, it would be in the use of doors.
But it is customary now to tip door men. That
is, you have to pay to enter a hotel, a restaurant
or other public place in order to spend money with
the employer. The employer will smile blandly
and assure you that no patron need tip the door man,
but the door man will give unmistakable evidence to
the contrary. The tipping of door men shows how
the custom grows with what it feeds upon. To
the devotee of the custom every underling has an itching
palm that must be scratched with a coin and the employer
rejoices because it relieves him of wage-payments.
Tipping doormen is incomprehensibly weak. Elevator
men are in the same class.
GUIDES
In parks and other public places where
the employer or the Government furnishes guides and
where patrons pay a regular fee for being shown the
sights, the guides carefully cultivate the tipping
propensity. Their most common method is to start
a conversation about how inadequately they are paid
for their work and the high cost of living. They
play upon the sympathies of the sight-seers until
at the end of the trip the feeling is strong that
the guide should be remembered. He pockets the
gratuity and looks for other game. The patrons
overlook the fact that if he is underpaid the employer
or the Government is at fault. He often works
in the appearance of extra attentions to create the
sense of obligation. It is clearly a case of
double compensation for one service.
HATBOYS
The cloak-room is one of the best
devices for throwing the item of wages to the shoulders
of patrons. For some one to check and guard your
hat and overcoat while you see a show or dine has
a speaking likeness to a real extra service.
But it is as counterfeit as the other pretenses of
extra service. It is every restaurant’s
or theater’s duty to provide for hats and coats
of patrons. The meal or the show cannot be enjoyed
unless this preliminary function is performed by the
proprietor. When two dollars is paid for a theater
ticket it also pays for this service, and extra compensation
to the attendant in charge may be defended as charity
but not as an obligation. A patron who buys a
meal in a restaurant owes the cloak-room attendants
nothing. He paid for their service in paying
for the meal. Tips to hatboys are superfluous.
JANITORS
The autocrat of the basement is a
man with a grievance even when generously tipped.
From his viewpoint he is called upon to do a score
of things outside his duties. Must he do these
for nothing? He must not. The only question
is who shall pay him. The janitor should be hired
by employers upon the understanding that the renters
have the right of way in utilizing his services.
Or, apartments should be leased with a clear understanding
of the janitor’s duties, so that he will have
no lee-way to exploit the renters. On the face
of it, the idea of defining a janitor’s services
so that everything outside of the regulations would
be extra service for which the renter should compensate
him, seems difficult of execution. But the difficulty
is less real than apparent. And in the meantime,
the janitor regularly is tipped to do things for which
he is paid by the employer. He is “out for
his” as eagerly as the waiter or the Pullman
porter. Hallboys in the apartment houses are
equally avaricious. Now and then the metropolitan
papers contain letters to the editor complaining of
their exactions pathetic letters from well-to-do
persons paying thousands of dollars’ rent for
apartments! One way out would be to insert in
a lease that the renter shall receive full and equal
service without extra compensation to employees.
MANICURISTS
These young women have the best psychological
opportunity to exact tribute, particularly where the
patrons are men. The personal contact is influential,
and the plaintive tale of meager salary and small tips
which she purrs into your ears, the meanwhile flashing
a languishing smile it’s a great
little game which she plays for all it is worth!
Some of them receive eight dollars a week in “salary,”
and the tips amount to enough to make their income
thirty-five a week and more. The employer has
the fifty, seventy-five cents or a dollar charge for
the service as practically clear profit. Many
men tip the manicurist as much as they pay for the
service. Perhaps many of them feel that they get
their money’s worth in social enjoyment not
believing that the young woman bestows the same charm
upon every other male victim! “I feel sorry
for that little Miss Brown. If it wasn’t
for the tips she couldn’t live on her salary,”
said one sympathetic man. He objected to tipping
as a rule, but here was a clear case where it was
worthy! No use arguing ethics with him.
MESSENGERS
The custom of pay to telegraph messenger
boys by the recipients of messages is peculiarly reprehensible
because it is fixing a standard of graft in his mind
that will work out into worse practices in maturity.
A boy given a tip has had his self-respect punctured
in a dangerous way. He may grow up and out of
such a conception of compensation, but it will be
a struggle, and much of our police and other public
graft had its origin in the cultivation of the belief
that “tips” are proper. A messenger
boy has absolutely no claim upon a patron for extra
compensation. The price of a telegram includes
the cost of delivery.
STENOGRAPHERS
Public typists often expect gratuities.
The regular charges are for “the house.”
They want something for themselves on the side.
Sometimes the tips are so large that the employer
gets greedy and requires them to be turned in, as
proved by the following extract from a want ad in the
New York Times:
“Remuneration half of
all you make with weekly guarantee of $20;
proceeds net more than guarantee.
No smoking; tips must be
turned in.”
It seems self-evident that anything
given to stenographers beyond the regular charges
for the work is pure waste. They cannot possibly
give any service in return, and cannot retain the
proper self-respect in accepting something for nothing.
Many of them, however, take the tips simply to avoid
offending patrons.
The list of tip-takers is too extensive
for individual consideration. Bath attendants,
bartenders, house servants, clerks and so
on through a lamentably long list, have the same moral
disease. The contagion is spreading in an alarming
way. Of course, the whole system is riding for
a fall.
The spurious and specious arguments
of employees in behalf of the custom and the timorous
acquiescence of the public will alike yield before
a robust and elemental Americanism.