i', v"' ? i &S rA "H '-., 1 ,.!M I" a - .-, 4 , ,Vf - . 7. EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, TUESDAY. APBIL' 15, 1919 IPr.i.i VVr - X. ' jrti Hi'ur. b.'i W s .,? ? It i l'4 If I h5 Iv K I f 1 I!. Eh raw r"1 l tcT US? R EXECUTED, REPORT t Wekerlo and Hungarian Baron Also Declared Slain by Communists RUMOR IS NOT CONFIRMED London, April 15. (By A. P.) A Copenhagen dispatch to the Exchange Telegraph Company says that the Acht Uhr Blatt and the Abendblatt, ot Ber lin, print reports received from trav elers to the effect that Communists at Budapest have executed Archduke Jo seph, Dr. Alexander Wclcorle. former premier, nnd Bnron Joseph Szteprenyi, minister of commerce. The report, the dispatch says, has not been confirmed. Archduke Joseph of Austrin-riungary was a son of Archduke Joseph Charles Louis and was born at Alrsuth on August t, 1872. He received n technical edu cation at the T'niversity of Budapest and later became commander of the Seventh Corps of the Austro-Hungar-ian army. During the war he was in command of the southern section of the eastern battlefront. It was reported on April 11 that he and his son, Arch duko Joseph Francis, had tnkon the oath to hubmit unconditionally to the Hungarian National Council, which was set up nfter the fall of the government led by Count Michael Karolyi. Dr. Alexander AVckerle has for the last fifteen years been one of the lead ing figures in Hungarian public life. In 1000 he formed n cabinet, which held office until April 21, 1000. After a brief interval. Doctor AVekerlc again was appointed premier, remnining in office until January 27, 1018. Kven after this time he remained in nominal control until April IS, 101S, when Count TIsza was appointed premier. After the assassination of Count Tisza, Doctor Wekerle was again nppointed premier, and remained in office until October 10, 1018. He was arrested in Budapest, February 15 Inst, being chnrged with participation in a revolutionary plot. Because of his ndvnnced age he was later freed from prison, but was in terned in Budapest. On March 25 he was arrested by the Communist govcrn . ment ot Hungary. Baron Joseph Szteprenyi, minister of commerce of Hungary, served in Doctor Wfcfeerle's cabinet during the summer of 1018. On February 28 he, was ar rested at Budapest on the charge of having engaged in n counter-revolutionary plot. On April 2 it was re ported that he might be sentenced to death. Survey of Schools Is Promised Soon Contlnnfd from Tact One Hon, school plant, the various types of schools, the results obtained and all other elements that deter mind effi ciency." The resolution continued : "That we urge the Board of Education to carry out the purpose of its resolution of one year ago, by causing such a survey to be made and that we pledge the board our support in the expenditure for this purpose of any necessary amount of school funds up to $30,000, borrowing the money for the purpose if need be in anticipation of the next tax lerr." Organizations represented nt the meeting were urged to take similar ac tion and notify the board of education. The dinner, which was presided over by Walter Lee llosenberger, chairman of the congress of presidents, was at tended by representatives of civic and business orgnni7ations. Results of school surveys taken in 160 cities and towns of the United tates, and the things that a school survey in this city would do, were ex plained by Doctor Kendall. Others who spoke for the school survey were Dr. Frederick Griffin, of the First Unitarian Church, and William Eld rldge, who expressed the business man's idea of a need for a surwy. "Living and Dead" Doctor Griffin, at whose church there was a conference on education Sunday night, addressed by Simon Gratz, of the Board of Education, nnd others, said in the course of his remarks that there are only two kinds of people in the world the living and the dead. The dead were those who had stopped learn ing nnd were still looking nt the world from the point of view of twenty or thirty years ago. The living were those who had open minds and made con stant efforts to broaden their knowl edge and improve the conditions about them. This apt characterization was heartily applauded. Mr. Eldridge remarked that if the J m ir lm m jTX UUO JLU.ltX& m .i . .. i mat manes cooking easy. "Dinet' Action" Oat Rangt , A "DiBJEUT AlriUN" gas range PJt does not require constant JDIRECT ACTION" ' , watching while the meal is being ' S rnnked. You can Dut the entire meal "' ii.L.?n tha nven at nnn time, set the hent i you Sr' ''a xetijrn fhe whole meal is cooked to 1 ,s;fl' turn. A labor 6aver especially Fjfy.4Aring the warm weather. Come in h "'. ind (let us show you its manv fea- turee. .svAlso a complete line of Quality G Ranges; Gas Water Heaters and - Refrigerators. All good values. STMEETS Jfi - S53E! -BSBMeSSBttatfaBSBBSMBMSBBMa rFWWWgwts- fe. utt . B $ t- " f a 3! ' L-mtK sf OK. ALEXANDER WEKERLK board of education met the demand for a school survey "it might case their conscience, if the survey showed the schools to be ns good as they believed, nnd if it disclosed serious defects would give them a new opportunity for public j service." Doctor Kendall said the school sur- J vey has come into existence because of the growing understanding ot the vital relation of the school and the nation, ami ino resulting nesiro 10 improve the schools by intelligent criticism Would Classify Pupils "One of the first jobs of a survey would be," he said, "to classify the children of different grades to deter mine whether the children were ob taining from the schools the proper training in their grades. This is now possible with a high degree of accuracy through psychological tests. i " r'hJ.TT:.r-f 2? I survey would consider the board of ed ucation first, then the superintendent of schools, the key to the situntion, and then the efficiency of the school' prin cipals. He told of the survey in Clevelnnd, where a year nnd three months were spent on the work nnd the cost was S48.000, paid for by the Cleveland I Foundation. He said that this surey. the most complete in the country, hnd stirred the city and brought about valu able improvements in tho city system. . "Sometimes," he remarked, "surveys i Wife of Former Sheriff to Be Burled originate because of n grudge or be- Friday cause of some one's desire to put a Funornl scrvicM for Mrs. Emily R. knife in the Board of Education. I k w,fc o form shrrlIt A. Lin. am against that kind of a survey. I , Aok ,,.. bc hcl(1 at ,,cr homCi have no use for any one who does not R2a w t VcnanB0 Btrcet, Friday aft point out the good things the school prnoon nt o 0.clock. board has done as w-ell ns the defects. Af,ker (Hcd nt hcr homc lart Any survey should be long on nccom- I f , o about tw0 plishments. This method has usually i "'K"1- been followed. 1 know of no , ewe I w prominPnt in church work, w-here any one has lost his job because J Identified with the activi- of a school survey. The condition, were "V'Tioga Methodist Episcopal corrected. Church, of which she had been a mem- "In a few cases, fakers have been lber for morc than twenty years, called in to do the job. Beware of them. , She WQS thc ,ittUg,ter of Mr. and Mrs. They only wnnt the money and are j)anh;I T Focht. quacks. Get men who can do the job Mrg cker is survived by her hus intelhgently nnd sympathetically. band and daughter, Mrs. John O'D. He told how the survey of Portland, Richmond, the wife of Lieutenant John Ore., schools showed thc Board of Edu- , O'D. Richmond, U. S. X. cation to be spending all its time in I Mrs. Acker wns to have celebrated doing administrative details. He said the twenty -fifth anniversary of her wed -this board held twenty-four meetings ding Friday. in two ana a nan montna nna in naai tion all members had committee meet ings. This was changed as a result of tlia survey so that the executives of the schools did the administrative work. This was one feature which prompted Mr. Smedley nnd Mr. Catharine to feel that the Philadelphia board does the right thing. Details to Experts "Our meeting took but thirty-five minutes the other day," he remarked, I "yet we were criticized for that. We1 i ,,.,,..,.., . , i leave all the details to the experts and ... .. , TrZZJlZ " PPrVe the completed work. Doctor Kendall called it the "highest , injustice to throw stones at the Board of Lducation. It is easy to criticize, he said, "but nothing is so detrimental to high-spirited officials as unjustified criticism." He said that in Portland, of the sixty-three suggestions made in the sur- I vey. forty -eight were adopted and only I three rejected. The others were not et acted upon. In Baltimore, he said politics had prevented nny advantage being taken of the survey which he nid ed in making, but he added that Balti more did not return to its old state exactly. "A survey will definitely change your school system," he said. "It is worth while if it but gives superintendents nnd teachers an analy sis on which to work improvement." Ho discussed the loss of time bv children who fail in school nnd the cost to the state. One city showed that one-third of all children failed at least once in the elementary grades. "Howl The House that Heppe bnilt FOUNDED IN ises ADOPTED C. J. Heppe & Son 1117-1119 Chestnut Street 6th& Tkomytan Stt. Heppe Victrola Outfits These outfits have been especially arranged for home use. Each outfit contains a Victrola and some records. The supply of these instruments ia very limited. You should make4 JTUUl iiUitl.ttBC AWVY. Special Heppe Outfits VICTROLA IV-A $22.50 Records your selection 2.50 Total cost $25.00 VICTROLA VI-A.. $32.50 Records your selection 2.50 Total cost ;35.00 VICTROLA VHI-A $50.00 Records your selection , .. B.00 Total cost ...,.$55.00 CM, phmt, or wrtt$ ftr, caUiUgvti U' i 1 '- " J V I.rlULUI llU.iu,!!., n.'iTMiaafi in. iiMiiii ii Mai ii'iimw many 'repeaters,' as wo called them, have you In Philadelphia?" Anions the thlnits that are studied by the survey, he said, are what the, schools arc doing for thecommunlty ; 1 how the salaries of teachers compare with other cities: whether the build lings and equipment are up to needs; I whether, for instance, the blackboards are too high in primary lyade, and how .the lighting is. I Health Is Factor He said that many adults wear glasses because of the bad lighting they had In the schools they attended as children "It is a crime to force I children to school by law and then ruin their health by bad lighting." "The greatest waste next to poor teaching," he said the survey discloses "Is the number who fall to go to school when they should. The loss of time , is equal to a quarter of the pupils en rolled in New Jersey. Ho said a survey would disclose whether the proportion of money spent on high schools compares with that spent on elementary schools. "It Is a crime against children," he said, "to have but one teacher to fifty pupils. It is criminal to build high schools at the cost of a million dol- Inrs nnd take it out on the primary schools with fifty-sir children In one bmnll room. " school survey will do jou all R00d. It will pav dividends in more tjmn tinancinl way." Dr QeorKC u. Rtrnycr, professor of education administration at the Teach ers' College, Columbia I inversity, will spenk at the City Club on April 28 on nu "nrtcetivc .School Hjbtem.' Six Months Wed; Suicide Married only six months, Nettle Kolisk, twenty-one-year-old wife of .!... T.Al!l- n ul.fn rflrnenter. of 14nfl lo,c Cnm,iPni committed ,,,, ln. ,.,.. nv hanclnt. She was found hanging to the hook of a door of the second-story front room Dy i-airoi mun Meilock. The noose made a part I of her dress. The young woman had , been neting strnngely and for a time was in nn institution, her condition being 1 due to illness. Deaths of a Day MRS. A. LINCOLN ACKER George A. Roe George A. Roe, forty-five years old, employment manager of the Warren Webster Company, Camden, N. J., died yesterday at his home in Colhngswood, N. J. A widow nnd two children sur vive him. He wns a member of the Royal Arcanum, the Knights of Pythias and the Golden Eagle. ev g. Gross .,..,.. i ' m -- . 0 Marietta, la., April 1,. Levi S. !.,.. ' ..'. , i j- , u Gross, eighty-two years old, died here yesterday from the infirmities of age. jIo wa) nffillatcd with manv banks turnpike companies as director. A vd(ow and several cWidrcn survive. To Preserve Teeth For Your Lifetime Sire your teeth with SOZODONT. It does not injure the enamel it kouie-cleam every crevice and cran ny and prevents decay; it keepi tht gums firm and healthy; stimulates circulation and neutralizes acidity and it is very refreshing to ute. FOR THE TEETH Liquid Powdar er Paste HOLD BV DEALERS EVERYWHERE ONE-PRICE SYSTEM IN Utl ,r.1 i?Ti, '. ...t! ." ' . ...... i.JKi.'teji.,J.ri4 imt, is at " rr t "4. 'v -rvmMivrvt riw Fee of Wheeler Fixed at $10,000 ContlnoNl from Fm On of American Light and Traction Com pany stock valued at $38,000. The stork was her property, she said. Mr. Wheeler told her he sold the stock through a broker, the witness tes tified. The money, she continued, was to have been used to pay for repairs on holdings of the Joyce Ilealty Company in Columbus, O. "I nsked him how he expected to pay for the repairs," asserted Mrs. Joyce. "He told me he expected to ask me for a fee of $10,000. Ho said he would bank the $10,000 fee and borrow $10,000 on I that account. The rest of the money he would obtain from me. The repairs would cost about $30,000." "What did he say he did with the proceeds?" asked Assistant District At- torney Taulane. "He said he had misappropriated them," was the reply, Objections Sustained William A. Gray, defense counsel, ob jected to the form of tho question. Ques tion nnd answer were ordered with drawn. "What did he say?" was Mr. Tau lane's ncxt query. "He said lc used the money for his own purposes," Mrs. Joyce replied. The witness testified that Mr. Wheel er on one occasion told her his services to her were worth $50,000. He said Philip N. Goldsmith hnd told him, so she continued. Goldsmith is a lawyer and public accountant. Later, Mrs. Joyce averred, Mr. Wheeler corrected himself on the amount ' he quoted Mr. Goldsmith as snying his services were wortn. nc then said Mr. Goldsmith declared he should nsk x $25,000 for his (Wheeler's) services, i Ma. Joyce testified she told Mr. Wheeler that her husband received j The Silent Partner The Noiseless Typewriter adds to the assets of your business by giving you the moral value of quiet. It earns money for its owner by sparing his nerves and hus banding his energy. ' It brings relief to the typist, ASK FOR BOOKLET AND IMFRESSIVC LMT OK L'SERS NOISELESS TYPEWRITER TheNoiseless Typewriter Company, 835 Chestnut St., Philadelphia fhone walnut s681 fat(&fcltWT gMOMGfr Will Introduce to the Public on Tuesday, April 22d Following Easter Monday 242-244-246-248 NORTH BROAD ST. Their new idea of lunching The Automat (The Largest in Existence) in Combination with a Cafeteria System. This combination has many advantages that will be quickly appreciated by the public. Food of a quality that has built up a daily patronage of 75,000 Philadelphians. Utmost Value Popular Prices In the meantime, don't go hungry; if you have not eaten at an Automat, try it, or if you prefer to be waited upon, we have a number of service houses. t Note addresses below: AUTOMATS 1321 Market 1425 Chestnut 1015 Market Junip.r balew Chettnut 33d Market EleTenth anal Ladlow SERVICE LUNCH ROOMS 1508 Market 106 3. EleTenth 730 Market 3d S. Thirteenth 29 N. Ninth Juniper below Chettnut 804 Arch Eleventh and Ludlow 134 Market 26 N. EleTenth 1432 South Penn Square Try' eur Cafeteria; Juniper "sl kii $5000 n year for managing her affairs in Columbus and that she had that figure in her mind ns proper compen sation for the former judge. Another Conversation The questioning then swung to an other conversation between Mrs. Joyce nnd the defendant. The witness said she directed the former judge to write down his indebt edness to her. "He said he would put everything down in black and white so I would un derstand it. After ha had made up the total he said he was surprised that it amounted to so much," Mrs. Joyce declared. By Mr Taulane: "What became of the money?" Mr. Gray objected and was sus tained. The prosecution then offered in evi dence the schedule said to have been written by Mr. Wheeler. According to the schedule, the defend .rimftrf w!n for 100 shre of 'the light and traction stock, sold for $37,377.25, but valued at $38,100; a balance duo on account of $702.02; a balance due as treasurer of the Joyce Realty Company of $3084.10; promis sory notes to Mrs. Joyce of $4500; promissory notes amounting to $5000, given to Mrs, Joyce, and an "indebted ness paid to me by Mrs. Joyce" of $10,260. Tho bchcdulc's total was $02,251.78. Mrs. Joyce said the defendant agreed to give her n judgment note for the total and agreed to transfer his life insurance to her. He said he would take out Any additional insurance she required, Mrs, Joyce asserted. Interest in the testimony of Mrs. Joyco has been heightened by her statements on the stand yesterday, when she said the judge confessed to ner that he hart embezzled the funds from her estate. "It's gone," she testified he told her when she asked about a $20,000 check. but to the employer it brings both relief and profit If you think otherwise, try it and see. 909 Market 1058 Market 818 Chettnut 244 N. Bread 1428 Chettnut 106 S. Eighth 202 S. Tenth 1302 Filbert below Chettat (Secead Fleer) jfW' "I harS embezzled it. But Mra. Joyce, you're a game loser." This occurred on March 7, 1017, she testified when sho had gone to former Judge Wheeler's office to find out why the $20,000 had not been used to pay two debts for which she had made out the check. The former judge of fered to shake hands with her, she aaid, but she refused and demanded to know why the check had not been used for the purpose intended. She also demanded to know where her stocks were, she said, and the defendant be gan telling her of some "unfortunate difficulties" arising through his con nection with a building operation, "I told him I didn't wnnt to know about his lifo history, but was con cerned only with my property," sho testified. "Then he told me." GUARD DEBS CLOSELY Additional High Powered Llahta Will Play Around Prison Monndsvllle. W. Va.. Anril in Th incarceration of Eugene V. Debs in the West Virginia nenltentlarv here was marked last night by the placing of ad ditional guards around the walls bv orders of J. Z. Terrell, the warden. Additional high-powered electric lights will be Installed outside the walls, the warden announced. Prison officials decided that t'nrv will determine upon a fixed amount of mail mac iun iimj rct-cne, iur iouay mere w-cro Indications of an overwhelming number of incoming letters for the prmouTL. imiucu jLerrcu -will CCHSOr all mall received or sent by Debs. . 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One of the most picturesque sights imaginable is to see this running water tumbling thru rough gutters for over 20 miles Into the old city. This is the people's drinking water upon it their health depends. Fortunately, Health looks at drinldnt; water from the point of pnreneti, irrespective of the beauty of Natate'e setting. Ptrroclc Water U matle from the stnaapofait of prac ticability and a safeguard to health to cleanse the body, not to use it as a depository for Nature's organic aad mineral matters. This is our reason for dlstilirnjr Nature's water by the Ptrrock process. Pttrock Water is delivered to offices and homes in sterilized, sealed glass bottles. Six large bottles or a fire-gallon demijohn, 50 cents. Oritr a . w WrU. If O vittr fall to ilwt, wt win, at nt rtsutt, ram tk mm ul mat at ctan. THE CHARLES E. HIRES CO., 210 S. 24th St, Philadelphia BOTH TJKWtt HARTFORD Tires are tire insur ance. They allow you to forget that part of your car between rim and road. 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