EVENING LEDGEfe PHILADELPHIA, EHTJRBDAY. JANUARY 21. 1015. s : j ffrcntttg 5ggj& Iffri&gcr PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY CtltUS IL K CttttTIB, PjunlBJtsr. John C Martin, TresBureri Charles H Ltidlngton, ' J fM"n B. Collln. John n William. Dlrctor EDITOnlALDOAnD: Cues II. K. Couth, Chairman. r. II, WHAtEY KtceutlTB Editor W 1 T IH i ii ' " JOHN C. MAUtIN.... ....general nmlness Manager , ruMIhcJ dally at fustta Lxdokr tiulldlnr, Independence Square, Philadelphia. JLr&jra CttnAt. ......... .Broad and Cheatnut Streets Atuntio Cur.....,,.., i ... ....rrrsJ-Unlon Building Kbit ToiK... ,.,,.. 1T0-A, Metropolitan Tower Chicago....,,.... ....SIT Home Insurance DulldlnR ZNtoH.......... .8 Waterloo FlAce, Tall Mall. B. W. news bureaus t Rittntv noaut) ........... ..The rofrtof Building: , WoniKiiTO'v lloaiMtf, .The 1'oit BulMlnt New ToK noBKiU... i.x ..The Tlmr.i HuilJInc Cunl.l.M BniiSAO ................. .no Frledrlchatraees London nrjaF.iU... ......... ..J Pall Mall Eat, S. W, Piais IJBJEAn. i ........... ....82 Hue Louis le Grand SUBSCnUTION TERMS Br carrier, Diit.t Onlt, six cents. By mall, poatpatd putaide.of Philadelphia, except where foreign poelage li required, Oktvt O.si.T, one month, twenty.flve cents) Daily Onlt, one year, three dollars. All mall sub scriptions payable In advance, BELL, BOOO WALNUT KEYSTONE, MAIN 8000 BO" Aidrett all communication to Evening Ledger, Independence Square, Philadelphia. Vntokd at tub miLAnixruu roiromcs AS BlCOrfD- CUSS Kilt- UATTSH. ' riiiLADELrnu, thuiisday. jANUAnr ai, 191a, 'I ffAere Is plenty of "vacuity trimmed with lace" end every once in a while it marries tome degenerate descendant of so-called foreign aristocracy, and adver- g5 Uses its wardrobe. A Dnty and an Opportunity TftB chief of the Bureau of Foreign and Domestic Commerco la right when ho says that the time is ripe for a rapid expansion of foroign trade. He la subtle, too, -when ho exhibits figures which demonstrate the Im perative necessity of an annual balance of exports over Imports amounting; to half a billion dollars If wo are to hold our own. "Wo owe Europe approximately that amount. Which must be paid either In goods or In rold. Payment In goods means wealth, pay ment In gold means bankruptcy. Europe Is strlckon. Its workers are In the trenches at the battle front Instead of In the mill and factory. There will bo a rjcarclty of labor for tho next generation and a con sequent scarcity In the product of labor. The United States Is at tho door of a great op portunity and a great duty. Its duty Is to produce a surplus for the consumption of Europe and Its opportunity lies In tho need of the bleeding nations. The farmers, manu facturers and bankers will do their share It the Government will permit them. Robbing America to Feed Europe THERE aro numerous suggestions forth coming as to how tho people of the United States can get along without bread, or with out so much bread as thoy are accustomed to uso. All sorts of substitutes for wheat loaves are proposed, while some of ur en terprising economists have declared that hardship In the matter of food will bo a good thing for the country, for It will teach economy. These things are Interesting, of courso, but they are not particularly satisfying to the poor man, who only knows that the wheat crop was a bumper one and he Is required to pay more Instead of less for his bread as a result. Then enter that old scapegoat, sup-ply-and-demand. But the demand has been artificially creatod by wasteful and destruc tive, tactics abroad; and so our own supply must bo artificially conserved by heroic ac tion. The dilemma Is man-made and It must be man-solved. The Bat as News THOSE ladleB who attended tho Russian feto at the Bellevue-Stratford should not bo aggrieved that a description of the antics of a bat in tho ballroom occupied more space in the report of the affair than the description of the more charming but less uncommon performers. The reason for this is found In tho facta themselves. "While the bat was about no one had eyes or attention for anything else. Therefore, the faithful chronicler of tho news mustireport t-hat happened, and he did It with a careful precision that Is the admira tion of his superiors and the delight of the readers. The bat Is news, because It was for the time tho thing the people were Interested In. The unusual is always diverting and sometimes Informing, It Is the thing which makes us alt up and take notice. An automobile run ning up Market .street is so common that no one turns his head to see It, unless It be to dodge. But if George "Washington had seen a motorcar about Independence Square ho would have forgotten all about the Revolu tion to go out and look at It. And an ocean steamship ort Broad street would attract almost as many spectators as go to watch a circus parade. The man who Bald that It Is better to bo different than to bo right under stood the art and science or attracting atten tion. And the Bellevue-Stratford bat we mean the winged one could not have planned better If ho hod wished to get into tho lime light. A New Kind of a Trust THE lawyers in tho Attorney General's jtHce In "Washington should give careful consideration to the status of the Forgers' Trust, the existence of which has Just been disclosed. There Is an exceedingly nice point involved Jn the classWcatlon of this com bination. Does it exist for the purpose of restraining trade and driving competitors to the wall, or is Its primary purpose the pro motion of business and Its protection from undue Interference with those who would destroy It? The forgers are no worse than the steel Manufacturers, or the oil producers, or the tobacco men, if we believe all that has been Bald of the great combinations which they hava organized. If the Attorney General will fait to his assistance the acute legal mind Of the Secretary of State he may be able to decide whether to Invoke the Sherman law In thl case or leave tho officers of the trust to the tender mercies of the criminal courts. What Is Shaking Europe? SEISMOLOGISTS will soon be telling us why the Alps and the Apennines are trembling; on their foundations and why earthquakes h&va been felt in Switzerland, Wwtera Austria and Eastern France, as well H throughout the whole length of Italy, Jn rtadlnif Sicily on the west and tha 'Greek jalaada on the east The shocks began In the Abruszl, but Within a wwk tbay have spread to tn north. and wuth along tha erf at moun tain www. uirgiBg tst ?m tissual $,ftem mm t srit Imwfllmg'mm tt ogi itt&mm 1 rHf iff Kftto 44. ftn' I: tUMi war $ Mmt - S ? - , - ihi J-i S?fc. -jBcf?- J,Tf2kj ...-g, fe-ijryj gRfe-l . ij a question about which men of science and laymen may speculate to their heart's con tent. Soma man familiar with tfie compara tively slight jar that It takes to send an ovatahcher hurtling down a mountain side will doubtless como forward with tho theory that tho cannonading In progress In tho Bouthcrn theatre of war for the past flvo months has shaken the earth to Its founda tions, and that tho vibrations passing through tho rocky masses havo finally produced tho appalling catostropho which Is for tho mo ment dlvldlpg the attention of the world with tho war. A Peremptory Mandamus A PEREMPTORY mandamus, has Issuod from tho Common Pleas Court roqulrlng Councils within 30 days to comply with the law and give effect to tho housing act. This is the answer of competent Judlolnl authority to tho attempt of the municipal legislature to emasculate by Inaction a law of the Com monwealth of Pennsylvania. Tho City Solicitor, In his official capacity, will appeal to the Supreme Court. This will assuro some delay, and delay Is what tho antl-sanltarlans In Councils want. They havo an Idea that thoy can pcrsuado the Legisla ture to take tho tooth out of tho prosont housing act. They fancy that Harrlaburg can be persuaded to retract, to taka a step backward, to swallow Ub own conclusions and substitute a mako-bellovo housing law for the real housing law that Is now on tho Btatuto books. They reckon without their host, for In his Inaugural address Governor Brumbaugh put the full weight of his authority behind tho principle Involved. A now and toothless measure will not get by him. Ho Is fore armed because he Is forewarned, and "slip ping one over on him" will not be so easy as some of tho Organization men Imagine. Tho Governor Is not of the samo typo as Select Councilman Eduard Buchholz, who is also a Real Estato Assessor at 13000 a year as well as an expert on bathtubs. Tho Gov ernor has spent most of his life directing tho ignorant Into the paths of knowledge and cleanliness, but Mr. Buchholz, whoso Ideas of progress are novel, says that tho "poor devils who como from Russia and other Euro pean countries never had a bathtub in their own country and thoy certainly would not know what to do with one if they had It In their tenements." Fifty years ago there wero few bathtubs in tho world, yet after strenu ous efforts and careful education most people In this United States know now how to use them. A peremptory mandamus from the court and another from tho peoplel Councils Is not a big enough obstruction to stop the progress of sanitation and decent living. Orgies of Progress IT IS beginning to appear that Mr. Villa tackled a bear when he began wrestling with Carranza, and there is some reason to OBsumo also that "Washington made a bad guess when It picked the Juarez bandit as a winner. There is some decency left in Mexico. There are people there who will not and cannot countenance tho orgies which Villa has Introduced Into government, True, most of tho awful things he does have been kept from public knowledge In tho United States, although every now and then reports of typical Incidents leak through; as when Gen eral Scott waited patiently for an interview, and Villa, somewhere else, waited Impa tiently for his prey to be brought to him, In tho form of a Spanish girl, whose reputa tion for beauty had reached his ears. Carranza is not a paragon by any means, but In comparison with Villa he shines lumi nously. Our own President, meantime, de clares that blood-letting and murder and rapine and pillage are the privilege of the Mexican peoplo, In which they should bo per mitted to indulge to their full content. They ore doing It. Terror That Reason Allays THE effect of the German airship raid upon the .east coast of England Is almost en tirely psychological. A few houses were wrecked by bombs dropped from the Invading aerial fleet, six persons were killed and about a score were Injured. This material damage Is not commensurate with the risk taken by the invaders. But the British have been dreading such a visit ever since the war be gan, and last year and the year before the whole country was excited by reports that German aeroplanes had been seen at night over various coast towns, When the airships actually cross the North Sea It mat ters not what they are, Zeppelins or aero planesthe actuality strikes terror to the heart of the timid and makes the brare won der what It portends. But the terror will react Into determina tion. The Inviolability of British soil Is a sacred tradition not to be disturbed with Im punity, and the British will tako a grip upon their courage, hasten the drilling of their vol. unteer armies and send them across tho Channel at the earliest possible moment to reinforce the troops on the battle line. The Germans, perhaps, do not make allowance for this psychological Jacking up of the British courage by these affairs. But It la the most noteworthy result of tho aerial raid, as well as of the sortie of German warships which attacked tho coast towns a little farther north a few weeks ago. Notwithstanding the momentary panic, the intelligent Englishman knows that the Zep pelins have not yet done anything which Jus tinea the belief that they can be used for actual military attack. They are useful as scouts, but that is about all. They can frighten people by dropping bombs, but the bombs do not hit what they are aimed at. England U still safe from invasion If she keeps command of the North Sea with her navy. What Pennsylvania needs as much aa a new Constitution In the law books la a new conscience In the voters, 1 11 SI M- W -! HI '! The District of Columbia really ought to be -dry" for h protection of the innocent and unsuspecting Congressmen. Better sell those 31 old fire engines for Junk before they fall at a fire, and a whole ware house, with lta contents, is reduced to ashes. What srudg did the Mercantila Library have against the Washington Memorial Library at Valley Forge that 1 should sad to t ii99 valutas ot 0Qvernmnt report to m ma on its ovs xntfve for intsmung THE LITTLE PEOPLE AND ClTt STREETS The Unsubdued Frontiers of Civilized Society Stories of the City Jungles. Making tho Streets Snfo for Children. (Dy a Member of the Child Federation) THE South Philadelphia Branch of the Child Federation recently sent a representa tive to tho meeting of the Hoard of Recrea tion to urge consideration of certain matters pertaining to tho Interests of children who piny In tho stroets, especially as touching streets In which they might well play under supervision. The Board of Recreation appointed a corn mltteo to Investigate tho feasibility of using as play space, under supervision, tho street areas Immediately adjoining small city play grounds and school yards which aro used as public playgrounds, "Getting children oft tho streot" has been, tho slogan of many 'efforts In tholr behalf. As a symbolic expression this represents vvoll enough what needs doing. Aa a matter of fact program It Is a folly and an Impossi bility. For thousands of families In our crowded quarters tho "homo," If constantly lived In by tho normal group of from flv6 to ten persons, must become a hotbed of 111 health. Yards, gardons, private grounds? Oh, not Tho street and tho street alono Is tho resource for life. Tho Streets ns Doorynril Change the homo7 Yes, by every practica ble mensuro of education and of economic progress. Tho surest method Is to provldo lncreaso and security of Income, but that seems, In view of tho unskilled economic leadership from which our city and our na tion suffer, a silly dream, at least as a thing to expect today or tomorrow. But why not attack tho street as an Imme diate program, whllo working at other lines of Improvement? Paronthctlcally, lot us urgo that we never practice tho fallacy of chrono logical sequence In social Improvement mat tors, thinking and saying, "this must bo done first or before that." Tho law of social Im provement is analogous to tho law of tho expansion of gases In physics, rather than to the axiom about the straight lino as the shortest distance between two points in geomotry. We aro to wolcomo pressure at any ono point as a symptom of an equal pressure In every other direction, evon though wo may not seo theso other pushlngs and may fall to understand or lke the goalv. toward which they aro making. Now, tho streets ore tho dooryards and play spaces of millions of children, taking cities in any number under view, and will so continue. They aro at this moment more easily within community control and man agement than tho conditions of housing, the provision of playgrounds, tho rate of wages; In short, than any one of the big general social reforms which aro to alter significantly tho background of child life. No matter what special provision for playgrounds, recreation centres and so on bo made, the street U and must be part of the city child's home outfit. Nothing can be dono which will evor "keep him off tho street," except partially as to ln t or ort and fractionally as to tlmo. Life in the Jungle It Is probable that child life in tho forested Jungles has Its own conventions and safe guards as woll as dangers. Even In tho land of tho Bandarlog (see Kipling's Junglo Books as convincing authority), the elders havo worked out a system of life for their young, and by this system little people are prepared to become elders of quality and parts, fit to conduct tho system for the next supply of little people and so on, and so on, to the result that the race shall con tinue without deterioration which la prob ably tho only real business that a race has to attend to. At any rato, If It falls In this business It can succeed In no other, though It may keep Its head above water a long time. There is a slckenlngly close likeness In many physical particulars between un pleasantnesses of the primitive Jungle life and the Uvea of many people in the crowded, poverty-damaged, avoided areas of American cities In which wo find the real and as yet unsubdued frontier of civilized society. And here the constructive, socially minded citi zen Is the frontiersman, cutting down and clearing oft the obstacles to reasonable liv ing; building up the things which shall re main. What can he do with the street? Aa it stands It is an active, formative, living and constant Influence. Its Interest Is vivid, Its hold tenacious, usually unbreakable. Here are two or threo pictures of its work. Firo Worshipers A frosty twilight. A tuppenny hapenny bonflro In the gutter, hardly larger than might be built on a tea tray, Is tended zealously by a bunch of tho little people who busily feed It with every eorap of paper, wood and dry refuse that can In any way be coma by. Not one of the half dozen firo worshipers counts his ago at more than eight years. They crouch so close to tho blaze that danger seema to clutch at them from every wavering blaze. Two of them I know and greet, "Hello, Dominic, How are you Jlmmy7 Does the policeman let you have a Are like that? It Isn't election, you know." Out flashca a quick arm In a vivid ges ture toward tho blue coat a half square away, "Oh, yessum, we ain't allowed to have It, but he's a good cop, He don't do ua nuttln'. We like him. We get peanuta for him." It's a Fight Christmas Eve about 8 a'clock. Sixteen-year-old John Is driving a grocery wagon and, with one of his pals. Is help ing itwo feminine agents of Santa, Claus de liver Christmas dinner baskets In the nar. row streets and alleys of the th ward. Suddenly a peculiar piercing whistle splits the air, John's head Jerks to attention and his answering whistle travels back before the cleft in the air haa had time to close. Round the corner from the wider street dashes a chunky boy on the dead run, John's horse Is stopped before the boy Is near enough to speak, and John leaps to meet the panting word. "How soon can you come? We've got a fight," "I can no I can't, I'm helping with these d Christmas baskets," Then, turning to the supervising agent of Santa, who listens with interest the more Intense because John Is a volunteer, free to stop at any preferred call of pleasure, ha inquires, "How much more'long will It take? With a sudden access of calculating- optim ism she responds firmly, "About half an hour, I should say. "Hot stuff," iy h$ foot-loose acout, "we'll hold it back till e'ejo" "fUght-ftru be wit yt, OJdtep, lany, iturry up , blM i wattiifl --- As thoy hustle along tho agent says, "Whoro la your fight, John?" "On street." "Docs your gang fight mostly north or south of your own street?" "Huh, we don't caro, wo fight anywheres wo can get It." At 11 o'clock, ns they part, tho agent says, "I'm awfully sorry wo couldn't get through, and you had to miss your fight." "Oh, never mind," says John, "wo have lots of them. I was glad to help you." More Episodes of the Jungle Many episodes of girl Ilfo In tho city Btreota nro such as to make the soul shudder. There grows on tho mind, through an extended sojourn In tho Jungle, an understanding of tho frequency of such episodes and tho part adult men play in them. It in unspeakably base and horrible Ono Is struck with amazed horror to find how widespread Is tho expec tation of sex danger to little girls, and how often tho fear of tho risk is Justified by tho ovent. No ono ploco of knowledge of tho street Is so damning an indictment of human backwardness in tho caro of offspring. In stinct degraded to unreason, not grown up to reason, seems tho basis of life. The Child Federation stands for tho Idea that slnco (note we say since, not If) children nro to Hvo In and be formed by tho street, the street must be mado a place whero children may safely live and be formed. It hopes to hammer out of its studies of child life and Its surveys of conditions a concrete program of certain practicable measures of streot uso3 and development. Some points aro already cloar, somo things aro being tried already In othor cities. We hopo shortly to present an account of such efforts and to indicate In some detail tho work to be done In our own city. THE PRIDE OF THE LOW-BROW Illustrated From History, Our Supreme Achieve ment in Fiction. By BURTON KLINE HISTORY, our supreme achievement In fic tion, has somowhere among her fascinat ing records the story of a stag dinner given by Plato to a bunch of his friends. But, being not quite certain of tho table manners of Diogenes, the Grecian Emerson had omitted that most celebrated of lowbrows from hla banquet. Whereupon Diogenes promptly came to the dinner anyway and, arriving right in the middle of it, he pained them all by kicking up tho rugs and yelling In a fury, "This Is how I trample on the pride of Flaitol" "But with still greater pride, O Diogenes!" Plato gently Insinuated; for the rare old boy was always there with tho ready answer. There la the whole essence of low-browlsm. And there Is the complete answer to It. Now and again you read In your newspaper of tho death of some hermit who haa retired from society In a great huff. The old fellow bad probably applauded himself all his life for being a strong man, quite above the disgusting follies of life In Philadelphia. Strong? He was nothing of the sort. Dio genes, "trampling on the pride of Plato," was not more 'haughty than he. Tho great thing is to wear trousers, eat scrapple, Hvo life according to all tho rules, and be somebody In spite of It, History also records the pithy remark of a certain French man who was running for Senator, When asked why he was doing so, he answered, "In order not to seem eccentric,"" Everybody else In his district was running for Senator, and he was too well-bred, too strong, to seize an easy opportunity for seeming to be su perior to his fellows. There was a real man. He saw that no one is really on the way to distinction till he has conformed to all the rules. The low-brow who" wears overalls to a wedding may think he Is trampling on the pride of Plato, Instead he la confessing to an enormous love of himself. It isn't brains, but the lack of brains, that thinks to win not by beating tho game but, by busting the nlles. There's the weakness of the Socialists, Their philosophy Is a confession that they can't play the game and want the rules changed In their favor. Among the many distinctions of George "Washington, one of them, perhaps the most lmpprtant, has been forgotten. George waa perhaps the loveliest dancer of his age. Now go to any dance, and you will meet many men who scorn to be thought "lovely" dancers. They feel superior to grace, but In reality grace Is superior to them And they confess that fact- in their very defiance. They expect to wn by not playing the game. Whereas jjhe great thing is to be as upert In thamlnqetaa you are In the J?real deney. - Pity the poor JowVgrow, He thinks he is "being himself," when he Is only tripping tha dancers. Sense and Spirit There 1 ever a tilvorce between the world of sense and the world pf spirit, end the question of how much love we may expend upon ex ternal thpg will always arts, and will always b a cans of perplexity to thost who do yiot show to abandon temlre to the genaral drift p Miwual Me. This quMttaa i as dlffl At a thf nte qurtlt of what we our Wty twwa !! and gut diittM toward m r ..H,l us, vMH J rl "' J Hllf Some of the Reasons Why Industrial Insurance Is to Be Regarded m SOMEBODY Wrote tho other day that tho tlmo has now como when tho public rec ognizes that tho employer is In duty bound to look after and take care of his employes It was a few days ago, also, that tho Penn sylvania Manufacturers' Association, through its president as spokesman, said: "Wo shall support any measure" (in tho Stato Legisla ture) "which we think will promote Industry and improvo tho condition of Industrial work ers without endangering tho first ossential to their comfort and happiness wages." Tho association declares itself to bo in favor of the principle of workmen's compensation, and says that It wants Pennsylvania to havo a workmen's compensation law. These threo facts aro full of significance. The writer who referred to tho employer as a guardian of tho wolfaro of the omployo misconceived entirely the now social spirit In Industry which ho thought ho was Interpret ing. The adoption of his idea would lead to the worst kind of class legislation. The last thing that tho workers want, and certainly the last thing that they should have. Is pro tection through any form of employers' paternalism. Labor Is not asking for work men's compensation as a favor; neither is it trying to get something for nothing when it makes the demand. Mutual Advantage or None The quotation from tho statement of tho Manufacturers' Association Is so worded that it seems, in part, to express tho views of tho rearguard of retreating paganism In Industry. That tender solicitude for tho comfort and happiness of the workers, that firm deter mination not to do anything which would endanger their precious wages, rests on no truer sanction than does tho practice of rank ing1 the workera a Uttlo lower than machines But the complete statement of tho associa tion as to Its attitude toward workmen's compensation shows that tho members of that body regard themselves neither as phil anthropic patrons of labor nor as victims of oppression, and that, therefore, thoy are of sound mind on one of tho most Important questions to como before the present Legisla ture at Harrlaburg. Thoy are not out for workmen's compensation as a charity or as a surrender. Social legislation, if It Is to bo worth whllo, must be founded on the advantage of both or all parties concerned. The law of advantage which has made every Inch of nonomic his tory promises tho universal adoption of In dustrial Insurance. A square deal for Indus try's rank and file stands on a par with a f square deal for Industry's captains. If "social and economic Justice" means anything at all It means the opportunity of overy employer and every employe to put forth his utmost effort for himself. Co-operation toward that end Is the way to economic freedom. It is tho democratic way toward greater democ racy. An article on "American Kultur," re cently published on this page, dealt with altruism and self-interest as the allied forces which are building a splendid national effi ciency. Enlightened self-interest brings em ployers to the support of workmen'a com pensation. Tho Folly of Obstruction True, the making of a compensation law is accompanied by more or less conflict; but the less of It, the great- thfl gain for both aides. Tho New York law has been called excep tionally severe on the employers, though the Judgment time (s not yet, the statute having been In operation toq short a time. But if the employers got the worst of it, they may blame themselves. In a few years' tlmo sev eral bills were drawn up, two of them find ing their way to the atatute books, and each one after the first waa regarded by the labor forces as a new and bigger victory, Had the employers withdrawn their violent opposl tlqn earlier In the legislative history of the New York law and co-operated mors, will Ingly In the framing of a bill they undoubt edly would not have lost so much ground, In the States which still lack compensation laws the employers are not likely to adopt the policy of obstruction. Nothing can stop the progress of industrial Insurance. Eyery country In Europe, except Switzerland and Turkey, haa workmen'a compensation, and o have the following 2 States of the Unions New Hampshire, Massachusetts, Connecticut Rhode Island, New York, New Jersey, Mary land, West Virginia, Ohio, Kentucky, Michi gan, WUconsIn, Illinois. Minnesota, Iowa, Ne braska, Kansas, Texas, Louisiana, Arizona, Nevada, California, Oregon and Washington. In a dozen or mora other States bills will be considered by the Legislature this year. No State which has once enacted a com pensation law has changed U ralnd'ubout Us underlying principle, Maryland atarted the ball rolling In thla country with a law which waa afterward declared unconstitutional, but that State came back a little later with a constitutional statute. Ohio began with an elective act After its repeal Dudlsy R. Ken nedy, peeial county tot the Youngstown Bai and. Tube- Company, one of the J herib to to prawnt ijwuroac fund of A JOB FOR JUSTICE. J rv' v"' .a. .y- iM-iipr- j. xh - J! VH J" EMPLOYERS' SIDE OF COMPENSATION Matter 01 social, Katncr liian Llass, Legislation. By RAYMOND G. FULLER that &tate, said : "There has been no btmI i2 found with that act, except that It Hi M go far enough in lta provisions toward toS? ing It compulsory for employers to tni iJ honco waa not as universally token UnP iaSo 01 as wouia liavo been If the ting tages of compensation had been morewiiliSr u..u;.B,.uuu Uy uiuiJioyers ana empiom Ohio passed a compulsory act In 1913. Employers In those States havln 3 pensation aro not seeking to have tha ftitj utos repealed. As tho National Civic Fedd? uon reports, experience under the aclj hS mostly removed the objections which too? nlnVHI"0 WrrnA nn.,ln..n ... 11 I. .1 r.., .ei. i'.uviuuo iu moir pussige, T6n indorse the principle of workmen's comjipai? uon. inoir criticism concerns tho form ff which it Is variously embodied In tha alffif cnt States. Industrial Accident Board) ? port active co-operation among all pwdJ witn respect to proposals for itahitaT amendment. It Is, therefore, not JtirprijSf that tho Pennsylvania Manufacturers' Aag w.v.v.., .,,,..,1, m v u, , ia uumjjeriaaiign iaw Wt this State, should coll attention to the iet that tho form of the law Is a question ntBT Justifies dlff. renco of uplnlm. The Question of Cot J Tho principal remaining objection Mists to tho cost of compensation. Data irtlsf afford a true comparison of the cost tpjt? ployers In settlement of accident cUi& under tho new laws and settlement unders! previously existing system, or lack of BjitSt aro not yet available, though It appears il4 in ucium casn tno employers as a wnoie ro out more In real compensation In a jtm period than they did under the old UabUtj laws. H. H. Kinney, secretary of tbe,lM Angeles branch. of the State Industrial Ar dent Bureau of California, Is quoted tuftSk lng that tho emnlovers In that State narteC all told, than before the law went Into eSct Certain It la that many economies must fc reckoned In striking tho balance, Flnucljf advantage to the employer consists partlrj? thn fnnt thnt nHllntlnn hpphmpa fired. Hi .t .. ,., i.i -,J.. s.,n.'T WUI1 UaillllUlU Ilia JJIUUUU1U UUUUCUk lVB,.vi. current period and add It to the cost of'gT finished product. Tho ultimate comw. pays It In such proportion and In wt6 tg tangible fashion that it passes unnoticed. to truth ia that a compensation law ion at add a burden. It rather regulates a bonte' that already exlBted In some form or and distributes It by means of lrwurwj. This ideal result will bo more compel realized when nets are both compuliorjr m uniform, and tho desired uniformity wWJ the sooner achieved tho faster the indKiaw States adopt the provisions of the twigs acts wbjeh experience shows glye tho Wg Kiiltn S Thn rnnt nf rnmnpfinnrlnn and the CGfi.lL Insurance aro subjects which merit uwnjjj tailed treatment, and will, therefore, b Cfc sidered In a subsequent article. TS iwrn of the ambulance-chasers and the reduces of litigation suggest only a few of the J2 tages to employers protected by a C0B',S tlon law. M Social Not Class Legislation- M There are certain economics that MJL. not only to employers, but to the PwWi lareo. One la the saving In trial court 3 especially where the administration wm law Is Intrusted to an accident b0"Jg: largo Industrial centres at least one-j; ino lime or tno inai wuna -- employers' liability litigation, The Kg saves a great deal, also, In poor ttmM pendltures. This economy Is the more p Ing when It la considered that, with Sfe or their families who are placed m "- where they are compelled to e Jj this kind, there Is danger that 'Sl H1I ,a wpiV enntie-h to acquire thS P; More Important than money con'llJfrt.ff irreater sense of common Interest, employer and employe. When botb T vate ana social aavaniaHoa - compensation are Bummed up.tne rf Am n h a nractlcal expression of " 5 that we are all members of one boor. TO A PnOEBE-BIRD Under eaves, out of the wet. You nest within my "' You never sins for me, and l You have a golden speech. You sit and quirk a rapta tall Wrinkle a rawed crest, Then pirouette from tree to ran And vault from rail to nest. And when In frequent, witty trigs" You grayly slip and fadet And when at hand you realist Demure and unafraid, And when you brtar your brood t Of Iridescent wings ., And green Its dewy In your Your silence I what lHf Not of leather that snh. I To swlu 9T PMOao or Jf"? O Phoete, With our lack vl " j What poafto Jrw ,,, mtg wiwtr wnmtt, to m - . . . . . .. .. . .. . . . . . . . - . . .... .- ...... ! ! gg