Evening public ledger. (Philadelphia [Pa.]) 1914-1942, April 26, 1920, Night Extra, Page 8, Image 8

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EVENING, CTBIJG EDaERyHirAPELPHlA;. MO!NDA&PBnJrgft .ip20
- N
NIENTE SOLUZIONE
CIRCA L'ADRIATICO
chlcilnre l'lippHoazlono del Patio ll l,on- I
1 ilrn. II quulu asscgun Flume alln Jiiro
liiln i
l Sin ltomo, '." uprilc.--Contrnriii-nifiitp
n iiinntn p' stiito itnnitnzlato lu
' identic iigciiztn tclpgrnlli'lie rstcri', II ei
Irro, " iirublrnia Ailrintioo noue e'
Istato aurora tlofinltl Mimrnto rinolto.
I Oiianlo ul memorandum til Wilson del
0 dlccnitiro csso o' stnto ussnuito t-oltnuto ,
CHURCHMEN HEAR
OF WELFARE PLANS
II Supromo Conoillo Interalleatofc vZo SiurilV-! Diroctor Tustin First of Mayor'S
Docido Lasciarla a! Nogo
ziati Itato-Jugoslavi
robllshM ri1 DtntrlbutM Under
PERMIT NO 1141. t m
Authored Ly tho am nf Octphjr .
1017. on nio nt the I'ostofflco of rhll
lelphla. Pa. A fi mRtiVsn
rostnitr General.
I On. Nlttl ha prcscntnto ul Supremo
CuuriHo tin memorandum con il ouale j
l'ltalla ncwiittercbbe dl coneeilre rati- j
tonomia alia Dalmazin.
San Itemn, 'JO nprilc 11 Supremo
ConeUlo degli Alleati, rlletro rirliirMu
. Tl!. Ifl.Un. .l'tl.illo fin N'IMl
ici iruna .'" - - -; ,.,.,., ,,., ,,. .. , ... , ,, ..rr
t f i It IV... I MM II f tl 't I ' ' " ' I ' '
CHILE GETS FIVE WARSHIPS
Accepts Offer of Britain, Which In
cludes One Dreadnought
Santiago. Chili-. April 'Jtl. (l'.y A.
I'.) I'Im' warehips will he added to the
Chilean tuiy ii a result of neRotla
tloni bet w pi n the Ci.iUau und Unlish
lioMTiimentt.
ones, a Tturenu of Legal Aid and a
Btirwiu of Social Service.
Wbllo talking about the House of
Correction, Mr. Tustin wild the quea
tlon of whether the prohibition amend
ment would stand waH ansvere.d by tho
result!) -shrtwit in an inspection of this
city Institution. Jleforo prohibition be
came effective, paid the' director. 2000
inmates were housed there, wbllo tho
present figures show but -130. Corre
sponding decreases In tho number of
Inmates In the almshouses have ,also
already taken place, the director said.
'The result has been that wo now
liavo about 1400 cells, clean aid ready
for occupancy, with no one to put in
them," said the director.
"It is now ntnnned in nun thnci nll,
ned that for Crst o(jfCDkrs. m "" women, who
nlrrniU- im.lor th.. ilnnnrlment In lis "V.."r ""."'uu ? "u "" "c cum
.. . . .. .! -. ........ . ...-.,..,.-...... . iii 1 1 r ni n fli ma aii mi n tit. r a .
lion Begun last niKiit in inc . ni-Mnun c,ty two hurenut liav
Street llupti't Church. ' the Itiircnu of Charltl
uirepior tu i tiuiit- .. uuiin- ... lm mi .nu j.u .i vl a . . way lt w,,, ba.noslh1r to keen
T. Tii.tin was llie inaugural speaker, ny tomorrow, saui me director, ne 0 offenders nnnrt ( ii, 1 ,iU-i
I to dcM-rlhed the uorklnc of his dc-' hopes to have formed two additional oncnacra "PO" from the hardened
Cabinet to Address Civic
Instruction Class
partment and the good expected to com
from it.
Tho Itev. A. C. Baldwin, pastor of
the church, and the Men's Lcaguo of
I the institution joined in planning tho
I classes. Next Sunday Director of rub-
lie Safety Corteljoti will speaK.
Director of l'ublle Works Winston
and Director of Health Furbush arc
among other members of Mayor Moore a
official family who already have
promised to tell the church-goers of
their work.
Director Tustin outlined the organi
zation and work bo far accomplished by
tho recently created Department of Pub.
lie Welfare. After Mating that such
a uepnrtmcnt of n municipal govern-
m..... .. i. t- i.!nf ,. sii ment was llrst conceived In
... " -:"1 '."? :,V- i".:: nty in HIOS. the director explnl
IlJ inn iiik .i vtnn.-u m -' "onut
es and S I ?,r trough Just once j iehlin to templa
p1t5L. ".:-.. tin,7 continued the speaker. "In this
t lit t plnud
criminal, tho old offender, nnd prevent
any contaminating Inllucnces, whici! has
nlwas tended to cause a first offender
to lcavo jail n criminal, although not
such when committed."
Mechanics for Autombbile:
sood pay. To mtt
BEVERAGES
CAtfTBE
BEAT
f I
gMlP
FOR INSTANCE -
rr orrro ADFnrnn
. EUZABETH. N. J. 'f
nro Always sure 06 work. Tralhetl mechanics aro uuro olf
tho demand wo liavo arranged tho following 1
Short Special Coures
Dan Mechanical Course '
Dally except Halurfiay, 9:30 to 4:00 for i weeks, beglnnlrr, Monday, May
Tuition $60 I. ay "O,
Night Mechanical Course
Monday, Tuesday, thursday-nd ayTtSOto MOO for 10 weeks beglnaln.
Electrical. (Course
fcr automobllo mechanics. Monday, Tuesday, Thursday and Friday for 10 el.
boglnnlne Monday, May 3d Tuition $80 wwu
Th Instruction lo practical. Intensive, and thorough. Modern equipment to Ua-j
1'ull details furnished on request. Knrollmcnt inuot bo made by May 1, a:a
Y M C A AUTOMOBILE SCHOOL j
1131 Arch Hlrret
1021 Ludlow Street
C dl Trumlilteli. Jiimwo per gu """,. ,, .. , .. ,, ., ,
JTstcrl dclla Jugoslavia, hanuo denso i ,iirpo tornuloboat iletroprs of JMM5
cho la questione Adriatit'ii rimanga ui i ts curb, und :i transport.
tirsnr. ntl tra l due covern-. iwuiuim
tntrn.nlnvn. Cio m c annreso PCSi.
contrarlamcnte alio notizie preoedenti.
sccondo lo quail lu questione era stnta
slstcmatji In base al progetto necettato
ncl mcraorlale del 0 dicembre scorso dnl
Prcsidento AVilson.
l'reiious dipatclipi hate indirated
that the dreadnought in quiMiou is the
Ciinada, one of tuo battleships origi
nally built for Chile in England, both
of which the Briti-h requisitioned for
the war. The other vessels an- taken
by Chile to replace the tccoud dreadnought.
Precedent! telegramml nvevano rnp
nortato che nella seduta di ieri il Su
premo Coneilio iivevn pre-o in twamc lu c,-i-u c..i,ii.f. enf
questione Adrlatica c cho l'Dn. Nitti Spanish Socialists Split
nveva proposto uun Mxtpmazione chu Madrid. April 'M. (By A. V. The
scguiva nelle linee gencruli lo proposto Spniii-li Socialists havo delinitcly s-plit
dl Wilson nella nota del 0 dicembre. In and henceforth the party will be ditidod
base n questa nota Flume doveui for- into two mvMous one of commuui'.t',,
maro lino Stato Cuscinetto. per la quul who demand the introduction of bol
cosa si sarebbero opposti 1 l'rimi Mi- .she!m, nnd the other moderate So
nlstrl dl Fraucia ed Iiighiltcrra. ossoc; j oialisls. who will lollow the old political
vando che il territorio uribbo grntnle- line
inente limitnto il inruttere di-l nuo'o " " "
S,?'.l)i i- . ii .. Many Die in Japanese Fire
L On. N n tt (imbue t.Uto oonnie ,, ... , .... w. ,
fhe. la proposta lialiaim era niolto men- Honolulu, piil -I..- J";pres of pet
tlea a tiuella del Presidents Wilson, ma !",1VS ",'ro k',,1,,,1 , ,-"-,Kn! a,'r5's ,"'
dononostanto le due delegazioni iuglesc valuable timber laud destroyed by
frojiceso non vollero uccettare la nro- i forest tires in the Kaino district, liiro-
posta dl NlttL Essi avrebbcro dicbi- i shine Prefecture. Japan, according to a
urate cho l'ltalla avrebbo dovuto necct-
taro fl progetto Wilson intcramento o
cable from Toklo, received hero by the
rsippu Jiji.
FILING BOOK TREE
Send for 54-paee
book "Filing ss
profculon for
s omen" whl ch
jhonn Ihi" value of
study In this im
portant subject.
Give your file clerk
a course in filing
Send one of your bright girls to our
school. Let us teach her the science of
filing the fundamental principles which
underlie all filing systems day and even
ing classes.
An Al file calls for an Al file clerk.
Give your file clerk the opportunity to
enlarge her filing education and you will
be rewarded by more efficient service.
PHILADELPHIA SCHOOL OF FILING
910 Chestnut Street (DcPt K) Telephine Filbert 4436
Owned and managed by Library Bureau
fllkS
or.'.
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H lllllBIBIBIBIBBK55IIBIBIBIBiiB""55iv
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Phone or write for convincing demonstration in your office, on your work
SEE OUR EXHIBIT AT THE PHILADELPHIA BUSINESS SHOW. BOOTHS 111 AND 114.
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riiinrviwiniraiiHiirniini'iFrai, ma f: nnniirnra imiiiiiHinm I'luimmiiHMiTiWi
$76,000
Yet Lacking
of $100,000
Needed
By
May 1
PvBi'SeEBSEfiSHkiLLiy
L'J9HhejPB2BlrfePPPjP9EwEviSBPfl
iK'r'WtTrfTMeiw- I ejIb
The Henry Phipps Institute
of the
University of Pennsylvania
What
Is
Philadelphia
Going to Do
About
Every death by tuberculosis entails an economic .loss to the country of $8000, statis
ticians estimate. The country's average yearly death toll from tuberculosis, inround
figures, is 150,000. That means an annual economic loss of $1,200,000,000. In Philadelphia,
during 1919, tuberculosis in all its forms caused over 3000 deaths, an economic loss of over
$24,000,000. f
The purpose of The Phipps Institute is to prevent this loss. In its attack it-aups at
fundamentals a cure for tuberculosis or a method of prevention. Propaganda andl reg
ulation are necessary palliatives. Laboratory research must some day, somewhere, hit
the target. Why not here at The Phipps Institute with your support?
The facts about The Phipps Institute's work and needs were told recently at the Belic-
vue-Stratford by the country's most distinguished medical scientists.
What is Philadelphia going to do about it? then asked Owen J. Roberts. He said:
."Ladies and gentlemen, After what you have heard there is only one query I am sure you will put to
yourselves, and that is: 'What is Philadelphia going to do about it?' N
"We like to say we are the world's workshop, we like to say we are the greatest manufacturing city
in the United States. The tuberculosis propaganda has been so well done, and so widely spread,
that if you put the industrial benefit to Philadelphia by the continuance of The Phipps Institute
as the only reason why Philadelphia should keep it going, you could prove to the business man in
Philadelphia how, in dollars and cents, The Phipps Institute would return manyfold the dollars
invested by Philadelphians.
"Philadelphia is charitable. It' yu uuestion the people ot Philadelphia whether a hospital or an out
patient department is doing good work, and whether it should cease to go on, you have asked the
question, theansver to which with regards to The Phipps Institute would be that the people of
Philadelphia wanted that hospital work to go on.
"If you put lo the people of Philadelphia the query whether the best kind of sociological work that
could he done in the crovded centers of the community, and is being done for the citizens of Phil
adelphia, should stop or go on, you ought to get the answer froman enlightened commmunity that
it ought to go on ; you ought to get from a community that knows the work the answer that it ought
to go on. But, really, that is bricks and mortar. That is purely the economic side of it.
"It certainly ought to appeal to the people of Philadelphia. There is a. spiritual side to these, as
the gentlemen who have spoken have pointed out, that is far more material to the matter of stop
ping the aid to the work ef The Phipps Institute. The question is, shall the people of Philadelphia,
who cannot do the work themselves because they are not equipped to do it, sit by idly and not lead
the work in research for the country when, it has been pointed out, wo can lead that work by our
.dollars if not by our brains?
"Shall this work go down, or shall this work be done even better than it has been? Shall we. in
Philadelphia, while we actually ' are putting dollars back into the treasury of Philadelphia by
our services at home, do a larger, greater spiritual service outside of this community than in this
community by putting up what we can toward it; that is, a few dollars toward keeping the men who
arc giving their lives to this work at this work? It seems to me, as every man here has said, that
the question has only one answer, which is that it is absolutely unthinkable this work should stop.
4
"It is our business as Philadelphians, who have learned much of this work and are willing to learn more
about it, to ask our community to support this work as it has got to be supported. Let us
understand it is going to take, over the course of a few years, practically a tremendous sum to
put this work where it ought to be. It is not to be crippled, it is not to hobble along. We had better
close it and put a "For Sale" sign on the building and quit now than make a failure of backing that
Institute in the way it has got to be backed. It has got to be backed with a good many dollars.
"You and I have to give aH tne dollars we have, and find people who are so interested they will put
up the extra dollars that are so necessary to make the work a credit to this city and a boon to
the country."
$76,000 Needed by May 1 !
What Is Philadelphia
Going to Do About It?
The Family of Henry Phipps Pledges $500,000
toward a $:i,000,000 endowment fumJ, CONTIXGRXT upon the remainder being tub-s-eribed.
When this tfift, will become uvailublo in, of course, problematical. The gift
does not obviate the necessity for pitying current expcn.ses ufter May J, when the Invti
ttitc'o treasury mill lit empty. $100,000 inunt bo had to keep tho Institute open through
1121, or until an endowment is obtained. $70,000 of this Hum is atill lacking.
TIIF, HENRY TIIIPPS INSTITUTE FOUNDATION FUND
Make Checks Payable to Brown Bros. & Co.
Thii "Adv." 1b Paid for From u Fund Subset ibed for Tliut Purpose.
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