p, Vf -ri m I VI". 1 ,'J 10 EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER-PHILADELPHIA, FRIDAY, FEBRUARY 2o, 1921 ' ' U-tt.' B..jV .4 3R& .1. ' 4 MS . i Wi iM :u-' i f - ' 1 . " . L' l " . 'J 4 .' :.-., j i l .ft h.-hc 'u i '.ffw K W- ' M, ?i 4 ! Vi If Euening $uW tc We&gec PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY crnua li. k. cuirns, ruraiou, Cherlee II. I.udlnrton. Vic rreeldentl John C. Merlin, Treaeureri Charles A Tyler. Seeretarr, Philip S, Collins. John 11 Wllllatna. John J Bpurareon. (leorv F. OotJjmlth, Da; Id K. smiley, Dlreciom. KD1TORIAL HOAnF Ctbcii H. K. (.(.-nun. Chairman .pAVTO g. HHII.Br..." Editor JOHN C. MA11TIN... General 'nualneea'Manaree Published daily at Public Lbsies Hulldlnr Independence Square, Pnllail-lphla. AtUntio Citi pteia-lnkm nulldlng NW Vom Mi Ma-Ilncm Arc Dxtboit 701 Ford IlulMlnc ST. Lotus 613 Ulebt-Wmtrcrat Butfdins Cntcioo 1802 7Vfbun nulldlrt NEWS DUItKAVS. TTilltlNOTO.V DCKBll', N li, Car. rannavlvanla. Ate. and Utli 8t l!sw To flic UUlil1 The Sun BullJlnr JUhcpoK Ittnr-.it: London Timra Sl'DSCRIPTiOK TERMS The BtRMNO I'riLIC Lrl'Ola la eerrrd lo aut- crlbera In 1'hlIadrtphU and aurroundln tovma I tha rata of twelve (IS) cents per week, payable to tha carrier. Br mall to point outalde of Phlladelrhla In v tha United Statea Canada, or United metei poa- Ieeetons, pnetace fret, fifty (30) eenta pr month. Ix (10) dollars per Vaar. payable In advance To all for-Ian cotmtrlea on HI) dollar a month. NoTlcs SubscrlWa wlahlng addreea ollanced Bunt rlta old ua well aa new addroas. BKLL. Iitt CALMT KEYSTONE. MAIN SM0 KT Addrtlt otl ccfnmunlcoHoni to Svtninp Pub Ho JWgrr, Imlepndrnoe Square, rMloapMa, Member of the Associated Press TUB ASSOCIATED JVtESS f!tifve!v e tUIrd fo th' uee 'or republication of all tui ittpatchti ertMti to It or not offteru'lae credfJeil tn (Ma paper, and oho fwt local nitf p.jM(aned fArWn, . XII Hghft ff revMleaHon of apcctal dUipatehe herein fire txlen mrrved. rfclledetphll, Frldl.. February :5. 1K1 WHILE THE CITY SLEEPS IT WAS before the proper audience that Mayor Moure ipokc of "lejtialatlve bodies elected while jou sleep which liaraHtrinj; the administration nnd cater while you Bleep to the viclouB elements and the small-fry Kli UcinnB." Th nudienco was made tip of btiKinci men who are member of the Chamber of Cotnmerre, mid the occasion was the annual dinner of the chamber. Hut a single speech like this will not wake the men from their plumbers in KiifTicient numbers to prevent the election of a new legislative body in 10J3 like the one now aittins In the City Hall. This nevicpapor in 1010 stressed the im portance of nominating the right kind of men to the Council. It pointed nut what would happen if the citizen! neglected their duty. The truth of what we said was gen erally admitted. Hut so much attention was concentrated on the nomination of a. Mayor that th couneilmen were overlooked. The result is that the apparent majority in support of the Mayor which entered the Council chamber in January of last year has beon undermined by the deals of men more nxious for putting over their pet Job than In decent government. What has happened was made manifest when the Council passed over the veto of the Mayor an appropriation for 125 superfluous jobs in the Municipal Court and repassed an appropriation to the county commission ers for Sl.00tl.0on for the Municipal Court house after the Mayor had vetoed it on the ground that under the law the money should bf turned over to the Department of Iublic Works Soraethins bap been accomplished, how ever, for Mr. .Tohnson, president of the Cbamher of Commerce, sa.d at the dinner 'that this eourt has been made into a politi cal machine und an asvlum for political pat ronnge, und that its work has been so ex travaicantlv conducted as to be a public re proach. He aid nlo that until the abuses have been corrected publie sentiment will not unite for the expenditure of the money necessary to provide proper quarters for the coutt. But public sontimnt must be mor thor oughly aroused than it is nt the present time before the Citv Council will respect it The .Toh Combine has the votes. It is absolutely Indifferent to ordinary protests, even though those are based on the charge that the law fs disregarded. Nothing but fear for their political lives will Iad the members of the combine to change their course. And tliev lisve little fear, for they regard the present discuion -f the situation as merelv a flurrv an 1 n.-v n-" confident t'.nt the c'tj will not i.n.. fr.im its slumbers THE MAN AND THE JOB THK remarks that Mr. Hoover has been m,iking about the lVpi.tt tent of Com merce as nt present administered indicate that lit is the proper man to put at its head. The department, he says, consist largely of a group of scientific bure.tt.s whith hae only k remoe , otmoetion with utr.merce itself. Il- sa.vi, also, thar he .sees a nay fo make Jt a real I)epnrtmeut of ''.immerce. snd that nuch (ould be don" bi renrjfanfcation with out additional leg!.lHtim. As a matter of fjct. the depar'icent is in big or as little us the man who is at its head. It bus been insigniiliiint in tne past because little men have bien put in charge of it As was jointed oi,j here jesterdaj, in the present condition of ufTairs it fan be made one of the most important departments of he government if a m.in fit Mr Hooter's abilities is put over i Indeed, it ,an be niade so important 'hat in the fut ire it will a'trnct the abW' bi-lnes brains of the country Mr. Hoover p .' jp - ) Mr Hardin,; to deci'de whether lie i nrj t-erre tne ountrj better in 'lie department or in charge of tti work of Kii-njuitii relief in which be Is ii iw engaged. The iinswer ro this is that the work of Kuropean relief h temporary and thnt the emergency which make it iiifSMtr is rapidlv disappearing vvhile the derelupiiimt "f the Department of Commeri'' will demand th uttention of an able ma ii f"f manj tear Mr. Harding has recojniie.l tre f.. t.i urn! ban told Mr Hooter tiint Ins relief work need tio Interlerc Mtt hw tmrk as a mem ber of tin. ubiiMf ind Mr. Hooter bus greed V;HAT MARKET WONT STAND SKN'l IMKNTAUSTS have many a time dxiiini ed the pr.ee jiilng rule of busi ness which Is to (barge what the trallic will bear. Vet the rn workx prettt well In the long run. It puts p-iee up. and this is vbut is detioiiiiced Hut it also puts pr.crs down, nml this is uearlv always forgotten Just now it l working toward lower nriccs The irallic tumid beur high prli ei. flurin the war. hut Miidliions changed and the butcri- staved o it of the market When the Midtale Steel Cumpniiy reduced lie price of its prodii' t it, whs ttppljing the rule. The traffic would not bear the old prices If I he new pnrcs are not lot enough to produce bu-mcss thet will be re duced slill lotiir And the t'nifed States Steel Corporation i onfroiitcd by conditions similar to tho-. which the independent ,,lim panics are facing, will be compelled to make reductions A recent con lecture Is that in the near future it will . It steel for 510 a ton lee 'ban the pretailing pm e for the last two tears COAL IN THE SENATE SOMETHING! seems to have been ,ic.om pllalicil in the interest of coal users tfirough the Colder regulation bill, eten if at the last minute, the Senate shrank from hamllliijr with courage n problem that lias become a national shame As the Colder bill wan reported yesterday, nd ns It may finally be passed, it requires complete periodical reports of future sales, production anil rosin of blturalnoup nnd an ibraclte'mt the flelto Thus it would la possible for the government to obtain a clear knowledgo of trends, practices and profits in the industry. The clauseH in Mr. Calder's bill which were Intended to enable tho government to force Into the business of coal mining and distribution a little of scientific spirit nnd scientific order to eliminate, in other words, some of the nbuscs that long ago aroused the angry disgust of engineers like Hoover were struck out. That wasn't sur prising. The Senate hates Innovations. Hut It does seem to be succumbing to the pres sure of public opinion nnd it appears ready to provide a sort of federal surveillance over mining. It Is something to know that nn industry so fundamentally important as that of coal production may no longer be administered largely In the dark. NO: THE LEGISLATURE ISN'T SAVING EVEN THE DAYLIGHT! Bllle Like Those Intended to Lengthen 8umrner Days In New York and Jersey Are Dying at Harrlsburg TIMED new daylight-saving bills nro sleeping what mny be their last sleep In the lethal chambers of legislative com mittees at Harrlsburg. One, presented by Representative Daw son, of I.ackawannn county, is a trick bill of a familiar type intended to do the reverse of the thing for which it appears to be in tended. It would grant to all communities a right to make their own daylight laws. Doing thnt, it would, of course, make any thing like n stntc daylight-saving law Im possible. It is a bill clearly representative of tho purpose and sentiment of tho farm communities. Senator Oeorge Woodward, of this city, has Introduced a measure to establish day light saving nnd the longer day universally throughout Pennsylvania. A bill with the same purpose was presented in the House by Franklin Spencer Edmonds. None of these bills was considered or debated. All three were promptly submitted to commit tees and put in the places where they are likely to die for want of the sort of light and air that the Legislature hesitates to give to the people. The clan leaders, hindenburging about, and their followers lost in the ecstasy of re unions and reconciliations, haven't had timo to think of them. There has been nothing thus far to show that the Pennsylvania Legislature hat for a moment seriously con sidered proposals which already are nlmpst as good as accepted in New York and New Jersey. If current signs are not misleading, "New Tork will continue firmly us a daylight Fating state, despite the terrific pressure which influential farmers' lobbies have beon exerting nt Albany. The Senate has just voted against a repealer passed in the House. Local option of the sort proposed by Mr. Dawson ttus In forfo last year in New Jer sey. The rural districts lived by the con ventional time schedule, while the cities, especially those in the northern parts of the state, tuned their clocks with those of New York. You never could be certain of the time in Jersey. This year there has been a determined effort in the Legislature at Trenton for a state daylight-saving law. It probably will succeed. That would mean a large daylight saving block on the Atlantic coast nnd a difference of an hour in time between Phila delphia nnd all the important cities with which it maintains the closest communica tion. In Harrlsburg und ut Washington daylight-saving bills have failed consistently because of the unrelenting antagonism of the farmers, and the farmers sustain their ob jection with arguments thnt are in some ways forceful and reasonable. The hours and conditions of farm labor are dictated largely by the sun and the dew nnd the ancient and changele-,3 habits of flocks and herds. The dew falls in its own good time, despite anything that Congresses and Legislatures may do or suggest, nnd somebody has to be up early and tolling late if it isn't to be permitted to turn from a force for good to a force for destruction. Tho former who feels that he must shelter freshly gathered crops from the dew finds, for example, that though he must work late ho would have to be up an hour earlier under a state da light law. The habits of his herds are fixed unalterably according to the sun-and-dew time schedules. In turn, the schedules of milk trains are fixed. It is possible to understand the objection of the rural communities to a system that would jolt the whole sensitive mechanism of their universe rather seriously. And yet it is possible to believe that that samn uni verse might not suffer greatly or at oil : that the readjustments would be relatively painless und in no way damaging if it were attempted intelligently, with a little patience and with tolerance for the other fellow's point of view. Tanners do not look vwtli sympathy or understanding ut the insistent desire of the city man for an extra hour of daylight leisure in summer They themselves have all the w inds and open air nnd sunlight they want and n great deal more. They are not accus tomed to regard life in the open air as a thin? of luxury, n thing to be craved. That sort of thing has become n sort of bore to people who have to tussli with the soil through long hours of middnv beat The lift and the rest that a city deskman or a bank clerk or a tnc'.ory worker can get bv u flight into the open country on a sum 1 mer afternoon n fanner is likely to feel only on the rare instances when he can get in doors, strttcb his tired legs n a chair and pull down the blind N'ot knowing what the accumulated gasi s In a foundry are like, or i the strains of 'le city man's desk, or the i a' bo 'hnt million of town-bound people I have for an orcc.sior.nl whiff of country air ' or nn unobstructed look nt open sky, the I farmer ic disposed to rtgard daylight-saving scheme as ne- fads inventid by people who r 1 ate nothing better 'n think abou So. from tne farm countrr of the Middle West nD angry and impjtient er. went up when Congress was trying to decide whether to make the long summer dav a national in stitution The agricultural (oiinties have fought daylight saving in everv Legislature. They fought it bitterly in New York nnd thev Io Thev Reem to be losing even in New Jersey. The people in some of the dties have simply refused to give up the onlv rfood thing that thev ever Sot fo? nothing As a consequem e, the routine of existence has been badly confused bv unexpected varia tions of time in neighlKirlng areas A time seems to be coming when the farms will t,,1Ve to prove at least that their working systems cannot be changed or readjusted or fhnt the difficulties which the new time law involves for them are reallv insurmountable Thev will bate to show whether u little ingenuity on their part a urue reKourceniiness. a little of thu spirit of eliuritiiblo co-operation nnd, perhaps, a little extra expense, wouldn't make it possible for them to go along with the millions uho are fighting for nlr and ilea' 1 The trouole in Congress nnd in nnnj state ! I egislntures is that tho man who can muster the most votes and the most "Influmce," and not the man who can muster the most logic for his cause, invariablv and Ineiitahly get., I what he wants on the stntute books i Concressmen looked nt the census figures I found thnt farmers still have the most totes and the federal daylight law ttas instantly killed Now, because Congress hates to do its own thlnkiuifvand because manj auite l.egislaturos do not oven know how to do their own thinking, laws of a sort that seem to conflict with the normal and understand able desires of tho average man are multi plying. Hlgorous, sudden, revolutionary and wholly inflexiblo ns it was, the prohibi tion law was passed with a whoop and es tablished In a country that wbb given no time to prepare for it and make its acceptance easy nnd general through gradual psycho logical transitions. The da j light -saving bills were killed. Yot you never would hear of men secretly con spiring to work on into the twilight when line afternoons beckoned them out of mills and offices to the wholesome country. There could be no temptation to criminality In longer summer days. Illngn wouldn't be formed to evnde thnt sort of federal statute. If ever there was a needed law and a hu mane one It Ih thnt which failed most conspicuously in Congress when the emer gency time Rchedulo was changed and that has survived in some' of the states only be cause members of the Legislatures with large city-dwelling constituencies hnvo been afraid to kill it. The recent success of th daylight Ravers in tho Legislatures of New York and New Jersey ought to relnspire thoo who nre fighting for the daylight law at Harrlsburg. The Edmonds bill nnd the Woodward bill ought to be forced out of the committees for a hearing nnd for the sort of debate in which the farmers should bo required to state their case more explicitly than they have stated it thus far either here or in Washington. If the opponents of laws which were of infinite benefit to city working people can show that nn ndditionnl hour of da t light would really put them under great hardship and hopeless difficulties, the public at large will find it easier to do without the benefits of tthnt seems to city dwellers to be n wholly rational arrangement of the clock. Have the farmers ever tried to adjust themselves to the new system? Have thoy ever actually sought a way out? Or hove they merely reacted to nn Instinctive preju dice against n plan that happens to be of particular boncjit to people in cities, who are wrongly supposed to be nlways getting the best of things nt the expense of the ag ricultural regions? That is what tte ought to find out while we ore about it. If the Legislature isn't willing to bring the daylight bills out. Governor Spronl him self ought to tiBO his influence to that end. And be ought to use it without further delay. Spring is just around the next corner. SHORT CUTS Mandate debates appear td hate more than their tmare of Yap. Come to think of it, a man of Hoover's size could make any old job a big one. The bitter pill prepared for the sick man of Europe is being sugar-coated. The I'nlted States Senate will now pro ceed to heighten Hoover's popularity by fighting him tooth and nail. Plans for the City Iloautiful. we note, permit the property holder, within proper restrictions, to hold his zone. There appears to be growing likelihood that at last we nre to have n. really truly business administration nt Washington. Tenrose is reported to be angry nt the selection of Hoover for n cabinet position. Hut that isn't news. It is a foregone con clusion. Rightly or wrongly, there ar those who believe that Mexico will nooner or later try to take a Pall out of the Harding adminis tration. There is always suspicion that the open diplomacy of the loudon conference is re enforced by the brand turned out in a star chamber. The jwwcrful opposition expected to develop against the Develin bill to tax the real estate of public utilities should awaken public Intei est in tho measure. What consideration will Turkev affoid he Allies, more particularly Great Britain, for being permitted to regain Smyrna? In the name of the prophet. Figs. 1 The New York acrobats who were robbed in this city of $813 by a mun they hod befriended will probably use him for n mat the next time they run across him. First-class passenger rates fji Europe have been boosted 10 per cent. There might be less cause for complaint if steerage rotes from Europe to America were boosted 100 per cent. It is comforting to know that Director Furbush and his assistants will vee to it that the 1000 passengers of the Orizaba do not smuggle ashore any additional nnd un desirable immigrants. The conferees were seated at the table with the avowed intention of having all their cards fnee up. "What's the matter with making it stud?" some one asked, and har mony ruled forthwith. I The general superintendent of the Anti- Saloon League of America characterizes Mr. I Harding ns "a cold, intellectual proposi- I tion." Whrther this be libol or flatterv de pends entirely on the viewpoint. Advicts from Harrisburg seem to indi cate that in discussing the political welfare and the political future of some of our more or less well -known legislators it would be advisable to look for the woman. If the London conference can't do any thing with it, the matter of Turkey might be turned over to n committee of American farmers armed with little hatchets The re sult might be cause for thanksgiving The fact that a man who has just been released after nine months spent in Moya meiislug has been nble to prove thut he is not the man tt anted, that It was n case of mistaken identity, suggests the thought that somebody has been remiss in not giving him an opportunity to prove it earlier An order calling for two nnd -a half im h ui!Ts ou policemen's pants in New York city appeara roineidcntally with un adver tisement in all station houses setting forth that a former police lieutenant has resigned to enter thu tailoring business If there is anv connection between the two it Is graft that needs the cuds. t'ne suggestion of the Federation of Labor that the federal emplojment service be restored draws attention to the fact that it should never have been abolished. If the employment bureau was usefil during the war. and l' was, it should prote equally useful during the period of retonstruetlon ; and singular short-sightedness ttas mani fested in bringing it to an end Because there is no picture of Cuesar Itodne), of Declaration of Independence fame, available, a composite picture of all his descendants will be mnde and the result embodied in a statue to be dedicated In Wilmington July -L The sentiment back of the scheme is admirable but, well, aH n mutter of fact, the picture may bear less resemblance to Hodney than to bis wife's father. One never can to!! While John Ilarlejcorn no longer has any official residence in the I'nlted States, he oontinuos to awaken considerable interest as a lively trunsUnt. He hns been refused permission to use New ork ns a shipping point between Caniidn and Cuba, and there in likelihood that he will not even bo per mitted to grin at the Statue of Libertj from a Khlp traveling irom one lorvign port to an 1 other Meanwhile, ho gives enforcement 1 officials the merry ha-ha in every section of the country If he tun'M laughing fn Ills i .Icm' b is at least snickeing f rom a booties. AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Occupational Therapy, What It la, What It Doe and What It May Do When the Training School j Turns Out Workers n- SARAH I). i,ovniE SOME people were discussing not long since the possibility of doing without newspapers and getting the news by some other medium, I do not know if they were contemplating the possibility of the nub Ushers going nut of business. At all events, they could think of no substitute except general goeslp, or a series of dally current events classes with the on'e-timo reporters nnd journalists turned lecturers. In the early eighteenth century, when there were no newspapers In our sense, such cities as Paris nnd London had news rndcrs of two sorts a sort of public crier, who cried the news items In the parks nnd streets, ond the renders of news letters, who gathered groups about them in certain nd crtlscd spots ond read letters from the provinces or from abroad written for that kind of publication. I rather think that our generation has invented another way of spreading the news in our "propaganda lunches and dinners." I do not know just what I think about those "helps over hard places" for philan thropic organizations. Like any form of advertising, it pays more than it costs ; that is the propaganda does get over to enough new people to make It worth while to the organization, but I sometimes think it Is a dangerous misuse of hospitality to Invite one's friends to one's house to feed nnd then to bleed them. When the affair is arranged by o club and the members com bine to lunch together once n month and give the time to the discussion of some neighborhood activity about which they wish to be intelligent, I think both means and end arc justifiable. I WENT to n Long Table Luncheon at the Chestnut Hill Community House last week of the above, sensible get-together sort, nnd I was very much Interested in the community audience, nnd also in the neigh borhood activity tbat was discussed or rather reported, for there wus no dlscusslori. The Community House Is n left-over from war work and has proved so useful to the community that it is being kept on os a civic center nnd is running n very well patronized cafeteria as well. The subject discussed at tho February Long Table Luncheon was the introduction of occupa tional therapy into hosptnls und oanato riu. I got a good deal besides it very well served meal at thnt luncheon, but I got even more coming back to town on the train from Miss Florence Fulton, who is the dean of the Philadelphia School of Occupational Therapy. OCCUPATIONAL therapy is tho scientific name for what your baby does when he finds his bands to play with when he is lying on his back resting his little self. It is nny kind of a hand exercise that can be ptirsiiisi se-ith pleasure and with beneficial results by persona who arc weak or who ore semi-invalids. It is something to keep the mind pleasantly occupied while the body is more or less quiescent. Suppose a physicinn has n patient who is nufTering from overwork and who needs something to let his mind down easy. He can put the man to bed and then call in the occupational therapist, who would probably be a pleasant, quiet-voiced, youngish woman with nn artist's clever, composed hands. She would Interest the restless, tired mun In the making of something with his hands that would take a sort of pleasant monotonous skill, easy to ncqulre, easy to keep up and soothing In its very regularity of rhythm. While he was doing it his mind would be diverted but not fatigued, nnd under Its very monotony his muscles would relax nnd his nervous system lose its tension. Suppose, again, the physician bad a pa tient thnt needed stimulus. The therapist would then treat the whole situation from another standpoint. The occupation chosen for the hnnds nnd the eyes nnd the brain would intrigue the interest nnd gently tax the will power and subtly rouse the energy by leading up to a climax of effect. Suppose, again, the muscles of the patient were flabby and the mind relaxed, the occu pation chosen would be such as to use mus cular force and require tense concentration. THESE and other treatments for other phases of convalescence would be given by the therapist with the same care for re actions as n nurse would give any other treatment ordered by the doctor, und would be varied along u well-digested plan of pro Kresioii. In other words, the mind ot a patient is not allowed to play havoc with the body during the recovery from an illness or during a long Invalidism, as it so often does when it is left to its own devices and to weave its own sick and discouraged fancies. We all know how temporarily selfish invalids ran become and how exigent about all the little minutiae of their sickrooms und their restricted lives. Their egotism !h generally the result of a mind too much nt leisure, an activity tethered to too small a space, with nothing vital or even occup.ting to use vital ity upon. If that mind could be ocupled by some thing not related to past worries or future worries, on end in itself thnt is both pleas ant in the doing and worth mushing, which takes only the vitullty one can spare from the body's needs und no more, which con nects one little by little ttitli the real no tlvitles of the outside world, just as the body is being strengthened to go back and to go on, then much that bailies the doctor uud wears out the family and leaves a rut of invalidism on the patient difficult to eradicate would be uvoidid THE Philadelphia School for Training in Occupational Therapv was founded by the Natinnnl League of Woman's Service nnd was financed during the tvnr by the War Welfare Council. Of i nurse. Its reason for being then was the shell-shocked soldier and the con.alesccnt soldier and the permanently crippled soldier The Middle West had tried it out in its ever day liopitals and sana toria und found that whut was good for the soldier was Just as good for the civilian. Indeed, the new hnsplta's of the Middle West include workrooms for occupational therapy in all their p'uns without question. The doctors uccept itv aid us a matter of course. Here it It. bein tried out tentn titely: the very fact that it is a new thing puts ti question marl, over it. Even the specialists in ncrtous or mental diseases have not quite waked up to it so far as much personal contact goes betwten the neurologists and the alienists on one bund and the school finultv on the other, al though by consultation nnd adjustment a very facile and useful tool might be made practical for the doi tor's hand. D R KIRKHRIDK r much emphnsued !.! wavJ tllon of nntle.ltu StflVInn ,l.t...i nun , '- - -- I".....,. iuuntuN iiuiiRn with their hands aiuot.g his sick people out ut the iiospiwi 'or me insane nnn a cen tury ago. He bud a museum where the most curious nnd the nio-t artistic articles made bv the patients wen on view. Dr. Iliggs has done the same thii.g in his sanatorium in the llorkshires, nnd so ban Dr. Ludlum out at Oladwyne, but the idea of having n school to tench tear hers how to teach pa tients is the newest phase of Ihe old idea und one that desert es the quick encourage ment not only of tl public but of the physicians. Miss Florence 1 ult.m is n great find for such a school. Sho has something of the authority and ihtc than a little of the acumen of that remarkable inno, her father, the Kev. John Fulton, I). D., LL.D., the cleverest editor of the only great paper that the Episcopal Church has ever Inspired In this country She studied art in general as a painter, and then In tills country nnd in Europe made herself n master of the bookbinder's art in particular, so thut she stands high in that class. In connection with the White (late Studio out at Ilryn Mawr she and Miss flnrber huvc turned out class after class In stained wort In glass, wood carving, Illuminating;, painting nnd potitrj, modeling, flazlng, ttv, r-r ? w4 ft SOT t ,iWi'.,'P'u', ts 'Hi4'r,y",,rf',"' f tl SzALi 'c2 """mandate Ji uLM M QUESTION n Still JSj Mi Hl!li InHflK " NOW MY IDEA IS THIS Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia on Subjects They Know Best STEWART A. JELLETT On Fire Prevention aa Business Policy TJURE prevention as a fundamental of good business Is a phase which is often overlooked in this important subject, in the opinion of Stewart A. Jellett. construction engineer and chairman of the Arc prevention nnd insurance committee of the Chamber of Commerce. In addition to the appalling loss of life entailed everv car in this country through preventable fires, and the staggering losses of actual physical property, there also Is the very vital question of the loss in business sustained when a firm is forced temporarily out of business by a fire, according to Mr. Jellett, who puts this matter squarely up to the American business man with the aid or a list of official figures for the entire nation and for Pennsylvania. Mr. Jellett says : "The matter of fire prevention is nt last beginning to receive the serious attention of the American public. It has demanded our attention for many years, but except for fire Insurance experts, underwriting boards nnd others (often classed as cranks) It has re ceived but scant consideration. "Tho American business men have not considered the matter of fire prevention us of first importance or of nny great Importance, provided he was fully insured. It seemed to mnbe little or no difference to him that the fire was coined by his own or bis employes gross carelessness or that his neighbors suf fered fire nnd water damages, provided Ills own property losses were covered by lnsur- "This is a rrther severe indictment, but one that is justified by a htudy of conditions. 81,000,000,000 Estimated Loss "The Nntional Hoard of Fire I'nderwritcrs has recently completed a very careful survey covering fire losse.t on Insured risks occurring in the I'nlted States during 1015 to 11)10. inclusive. The total known loss was In the neighborhood of $1,410,000,000. Of this amount the stute of Pennsylvania alone shows a loss of practically $7oa40.000 and If is added to this n reasonable amount (say 5 per cent) to cover uninsured losfcs, which ore not reported, the totul of Pennsylvania s loss amounts to the enormous sum of ap proximately 508.000.000. a little short of 20.000,000 per .tear; und unfortunately this loss is not decreasing. The reported losses In Philadelphia for the year 1020 exceed $8,000,000. "The national fire losses for December. 100 totaled .141,000,000. compared with SS27.OO0.OOO In December. 1010. The figures just published by the National Roard of i Ire Underwriters are classified Into three groups fires that are strictly, preventable, rartly preventable and of unknown causes. "The strictly preventable equal 21.3 per cent of the total known fauses, and the partly preventable 40.0 per cent; the un known. 34.8 per cent. "It is fair to assume that nil equal per centage of the fires classed nnder unknown causes would. If the causes were known, be divided Into the first two classes in about tho ratio given. If this is done the final results show that about 118 per cent of the total loss of between $37,000,000 and $38,000,000 ip. resents the loss In Pennsylvania aloue in five Tears due to fires that were strictly patent able, or In other words, caused by gross carelessness or neglect. .... "This money loss, great as it is, is not the most serious loss, nor is It the total money joss The most serious lobs is that of life and' the maiming and crippling of many per sons caused by fires. Thlsloss in deaths has reached as high as 10,000 persons In one teur In the I'nlted States. The addltlonnl money loss to which I refer is the loss of business when ii fire occurs, which loss of business is not covered by Insurance. Iss of Utislness Serious Matter "It may happen that a manufacturer is fully repaid for the actuul physical loss of his property, and ot the same time he mny be practically forced out of business because of his Inability to fill the orders of his custom ers, It being impossible to replace the ma chinery and patterns within any reasonable time. To my mind this loss of business Is for a going concejn just as serious and In some rates more so than the loss of physical property. , , "The fire prevention and Insurancb com mittee of the Philadelphia Chamber of Com merce is endeavoring to bring this Important matter of fire prevention to the serious utten tlrfn of the people of Philadelphia us a para mount civic duty, one that should no longer be neglected. "We are not so much concerned with the iew bulldlnjs erected nnder the present GENTLY BUT INSISTENTLY -fl$sIILWffir4! laSSLLLLLLLLLVHIU T&F?iwtinMvwrif.. ''mtmsssaimKasiwA Jmimmm .HHPPR7miirl! feB ItUt Ii'lil'F B3hPPPT7T' iUT7 . LU.H il M rutf imm building lows and ordinonccs, because under these laws the protection of the buildings is carefully looked after. Exits, fire and smoke proof stairs, fire-escapes, etc., are provided for; but the great risk in Philadelphia lies in the old buildings erected before modern building methods were adopted, located in congested districts. These buildings are a continuous menace to the lives of the people who occupy them cither ns permanent homes or during working hours. "Many of theSo old buildings house a num ber of small manufacturers whose employes nre in many cases foreign born nnd not well acquainted with our language and customs and likely, In the cuse of nn alarm of fire, to become highly excited. A number of the old dwellings have been converted into tene ments, occupied by a number of families. o believe It is of the greatest importance that the inspection of such buildings be taken yitorously in charge by tho Department of Public Safety. "In nil our principal cities we spend large sums of money on our fire departments, but the amount of money that Is appropriated for the purpose of lire prevention as compared with the amount for extinguishing fires is notoriously insufficient. "The Department of Health is on the look put to prevent the spread of contagious and infectious diseases. It does not wait until the epidemic is in full swing before actually taking hold of the situation. Wo would blame them if they conducted the department in nny Hiieh way. "It is equally important tbat the office of the tire marshal should be equipped to, as far as is possible, prevent the occurrence of Arcs ond thereby lessen the menace to the whole community. Marshal Here Alive to Conditions '-We hate in Philadelphia n lire marshal, ill C.eorge W. Klllott who is fully olive to the seriousness of this situation, but his office is greatly undermanned by lack of in sufficient appropriations to carry the work on effectively. There should be constant, regular inspections by qualified, uniformed men of nil buildings of the cIbbh particularly referred to. so as to insure safety In such buildings, nnd change in occupancy from a tenant whose business Is reasonably safe to one whose business is notoriously unsnfe should be guarded ugalnst by requiring the Issuance of a license by the fire marshal. The issuance of this license would onto matically bring the building so occupied under regular supervision. "The National Hoard of Fire Underwriters in calling attention to Pennsylvania's known fire losses from 101! to 1010, Inclu sive, equaling the huge total of 78.340,000 calls attention to the fact that this money would build 15,007 houses nt $5000 each, sufficient to furnish homes for 78,340 per sons; a rather startling statement. "As soon ns we Phllndelphians fully real be that property destroyed by fire represents an utter and Irretrievable loss, just so soon will we become pructlcally interested In the importance of fire prevention. "There Is and can be no satisfactory ex cuse for further delay In n matter of such vital interest to our city's welfure." How to Avoid Typhus Trent tha :e-v Tori, Tribune The typhus of Europe which Is leaking Into New York through Immigration should not unduly alarm the country. America generally speaking, is tho land of the hath-' tub, and bathtubs and typhus are enemies Typhus Is caused by a louse, and none else" Ono must be bitten by this Insect to contract the disease. The average New Yorker can put his mind nt rest If he Is a consistent user of the bathtub a,nd observes the usual pre cautions of ablution. For the others, de lousing is indispensable. Tjphus has existed In New York for manj years endemlca ly. The Insect which spreads the disease epidemically must have long been n contact with typhus sufferers to carry o virile germ. Cleanliness Is the remedy. In eastern and central Europe, where clcanli ness does not prevnll, typhus thrives. Rut It can neter thrive In New York If New York remnlns normally clean. Immigrants should be introduced to New York and u delouslng station simultaneously, and tutored thereafter in the great American habit of bathing, Inoluslvo Trnm the New Tnrk Herald, The World, the Flesh and the Devil Ye make a pretty good league all by our- Behest - t What Do You Know? QUIZ What are tho (Jerman names for the provinces retained by France as a con sequence of the world war? Where are tho scenes of Khakerpeirt'i comedy, "A Midsummer Night's Dream," lald7 Of what state Is Careon City the capital" What was the title of General Lee's main army In the Civil War? What nre the colors of the Dutch Hai? What was the first name of Krupp, the Qerman cannon founder? What U the literal meaning of "dichi- hund"? What is tho meaning of the heraHls expressions dexter and sinister? What planets rotate between the earth and the sun? What Is the name of the last book C the Old Testament? Answers to Yesterday's Quiz 1. Charles I Charles V, emperor of tl.e Holy It oman Empires was king or Spain during the period of Its greater, world power. He ruled from 15H lo 1SB8. 2. A cyjrnet Is a young- swan. 3. Brand WhitIoc.lt was United States mlr- lBterto Belgium during the world fi A. The former German colonies In the P clflc ocean have been divided between Great Britain and Japan. S. Do la Huerta was president of Meslei Immediately preceding General ObfC' gon. C. Tom Taylor's "Our American Cousin" wns enacted In Ford'e Theatre on w night Abraham Lincoln was ass(- alnated. 7. A hidalgo is a Spanish gentleman. 8. The word literally means son of sonu- body, from "hljo de algo." 0. A cutworm is a caterpillar that cuta o joung plants level with the ground. 10. Ethan Allen Is particularly noted for M exploit In capturinu Fort Tlconderojit from the British on May 10, In', Loud Cries of Pain Will RIm From 'he New York Times.. Among ten causes of crime given by Pi' It. H. Gault. psychologist at Northwestern University. In his report as chairman . the Chicago crimes committee's committee on the origin of crlmlnalltya fine 1 1 !' that! place some way from the end of im list is given to "commercialized recreation. The term Ir somewhat enigmatic, n wbat the professor means by it can m guessed by anybody. Probably the gue . will be surest by those whom his use o tw phrase will most offend by the commfrcll izers of recreation, that is. There are manv of them, and the re of many kinds. What special or PrtlUr responsibility for crime some of them M" it is not easy to define and yet he Juoi ment of all the ages has been that tbere something wrong about making money on, of sport and amusement. The , everywhere nnd nlways holds hro' the "professional" In one way, if below "'a 5 another, and few parent u" '$" for their children a career In c0",n,f,frf Jl, iied recreation," profitable ns such careers often are. It Should Have Been Arranged ., - .,.. entir.ll SOMETIMES the incnunuon m .. world's nxls ,, Balks human Inclination very ha Hy. , And souls that should foregather are Uke Christinas gifts that come In ft' And that8ris'why so many men go seellM Out of all season for the tninrs v'i You kn'Sw'what I mean-there ..$ Who by themselves have done, wen, Rut Htiir'bave sighed for sometbint. !& for Instance, dlvcrteJ There's Henry Adams. "" nec,ef. " Into forgetting his sad, misfit , ,er Why couldn't be have live la , Uj ' tb And had the sense to marry Marioi a y Refore she o.qulthed and was : ' J,, Dancing to deans? Just think how Would have taken his lucid mind from oJ at0?;0enTy.rCnr?e9 K fffig Lacked due respect for human h'r, Oh, well. John Milton and the tfli Byron d Theda Rara "'ofnlU And II. O. Wells and f hnr.ran',.Trot.lr', Literals Borgia and Jrfnln.onrt ir k. lHIl WC JIUV I.mo.v --.- T nJlli'i. nromote more perfect; jiplw ,1 - i U. f.U. in the N: '""" M V A, fa'TlW Jctf" f J.'H j '