mmFw, .TYdW w& mw1? '". v 9 Y y irr y-i; n 4 s i ,v Kf ,f m i. 8 fcf- . ; ftuenmg JubUc eDger' 't PUbLIC LEDGER COMPANY, crura if. k. cruris, pbmidest Vjohn C, Martin, Vice t'rnld'Pt and Treasurer: (ftarlee A. Tyler, Secretary: Char'ea II. I.udlnR ton. rtilllp 8. Coll'rn, John II.- Wllllama, John J. fpurseon, Oeorce F, Goldamltti, David E. flintier, iBIreetnre. AVtH B. BMII.KT. .Editor OHM C. MAItTIN.... General Umlneee llnnuucr L I'ubllahed dally at PniMo Lena. Uullillnjr v independence square. l'niisiieirmin. 'Atlintio Citt... Prtaa-l'nion Building Kn- TonK..., , 3iU Mill"ii An; Jpnaorr.. .............. .701 Ford DulMlnr Mr. I.ncn 013 aiobf-Drmocrat MulMIng 'Cn ioQO 1302 Trillin Building f 7 NBW8 UL'llEAL'a: wianiKOTON DcatAO. . If. H, Tor, Tonnayivanla Ae and 14th Bt. Niw Toik Ilciiriu ..... The Sun Tlulldlng fcoxtio.s IJCRKiu Trafalgar IlulMlftg SUItSrntlTtON TIIIUIH The Erzsiso resMO I.twrn In nerved to sub- terlhera In Phllndelphln iind eurroundlnc town it mo rate or iweivo u- centa per ee-t, payatile o tho carrier,. 3 Ily mall tbVr. Ily mall tb'rolnta outalde of Philadelphia In the United Btnten. Canada, or I'nltrd Mtatei poa- fceeelnne, poetace free, fifty (00) eenta per month. fix urn aouar per year, payable in advance. To all foreign count rice one (II) dollar a month. I rfOTtOH Subscribers wlehtrur addreea chanced k muai gie om aa Men aa new addreaa. ELL. 1000 VALNUT KEYSTONE. MAIN 101 C7Addrrts all communication lo Evening Public .. ixaaer. ina'pennenee square, J'AInrfelpnKi Member of tho Associated Press TUB ASSOCIATED rKESB Ij tictuHvilu en titled .0 tht ec for r ubllrnflcm of all newt dlepatehea credited to it or not otherwlee credited in this paper, and al.io tht local newit published fherein. All riohtii o rcpuollcaflon of special dUtpatches Herein are alio reserved. i rfallidtlphll, Friday, Jnly IS, 1921 CHILDREN IN THE STREETS MAGISTRATE DOUGHERTY, threat ening yesterday to put line on parents who permit tliclr children to piny recklessly In heavily traveled streets and to cultivate bnblt of riding on the tailboards of trucks and wagons, desired, apparently, to put unusual emphasis on a needed word of teaming. Traffic laws and the rules established and accepted for the regulation of motor vehicles reflect the desire of the authorities and Motor drivers to keco the streets safe for vcrybody. It is not asking too muoh to nxgest and even demand that parents do their necessary part toward keeping little children from accidental injury. The yearly number of traffic accidents in which children ore hurt grows steadily. Public opinion and the opinion of jurios arc usually satisfied to put all the blame on motor drivers. Yet a broader view ought to be encouraged for the greater safety of children themselves. There ought to be rigidly enforced police tnles to discourage the youngsters who daft In and out of heavy traffic currents seeking free rides, and parents themselves should be the first to discourage and even punish that extremely dangerous habit. UP TO THE EXPERTS NOW fAT THE present historic moment there jri. is probably less public disposition in the United States to discuss the compli cated detailed aspects of the Irish situation than for perhaps a century. This attitude is not only inspired by feel ings of the most heartfelt end hopeful ex pectancy, but by the knowledge that at last tho problem is In the hands of high official xperts. "I am sure," declares Mr. Do Vnlera, thot the atmosphere in England and Irc knd Is ripe for peace." Mr. Lloyd George is unquestionably eager to find a basis of settlement. The meeting in London begins under auspices considered almost unimaginable a few months ago. The spectacle Is n tonic for civilization, Which has of lato freely lamented its own deficiencies. Honorable peace in Ireland would warrant In mankind a return of something of its old yride. END OF AN EYESORE RESIDENTS in the neighborhood of Forty-second street, between Spruce and Locnst, will learn with grntlficutlon that the plans have been drawn for the new DUildings for tho Episcopal Divinity School to be erected on the site of the Chirk rcsl dence, and that estimates of the cost have been asltcd from contractors. The plans provide for n dormitory, a chapel, a library, lecture rooms and resi dences for the faculty. There is ample room on the nve-ncrc tract for this group of buildings without covering it all. The buildings can be surrounded by lawns and walks in such a way as to add to the at tractiveness of the whole neighborhood. The plot Is an offense to the sight nt the present time. The Clark residence was torn down a few years ago, but since the trustees of the Divinity School bought the land it has been allowed to grow up to weeds and underbrush. The fences have fallen down and rubbish of various kinds has bepn dumped on it. If the work of building is to begin In the fnll it will not be much more than n year before grace ond beauty displace the present iinsightllness. SCHOOLS AND BUSINESS SO FAR as appears, the survey of the local school system begun by the Edu cational Committee of the Chnmber of Com merce Is for a different purpose from the urvey now in progress under the direction of the State Superintendent of Public In arruction. The Chamber of Commerce is apparently Interested in n standardized system of busi" ness education which, while decreasing the percentage of Illiteracy, will also equip the graduates of the schools for an intelligent understanding of the work which they will have to undertake when they begin to earn a living. The Interest which the business men in the Chamber are thus taking In the schools Is R wholesome thing. They would not be troubling thcmsolves with the matter if they had not become convinced that the best way to secure well-equipped recruits for their establishments is to look into the training that these recruits receive in school. If the business men Insist that the graduates shall be ablo to write on intelligent letter and to understand tho elementary principles of arithmetic and to know something about the reography of tho world as well as of their fro country, it may come about that the boy and girls not so equipped will be kept In school until they mako up their de fclencles. , .INSPIRATIONAL FOREIGN POST AN AMICAlirJS special Providence ap X pears to goern our relations with France as reQected In the personalities of llho American Ambassadors to that Republic. Robert Bacon ond General Horace Porter characteristically exemplified the existence ef these happy conditions. Precedert was admirably sustained by Myron T. Ilerrick, Who rsturns to hli former post in Porui Mcipient of the most cordial good win of the afire French nation, and Hugh C. Wallace, tho retiring legate, now back In America, Nema also to hare preserved the traditions. France has returned the compliment by ending such statesmen of high ability and persona charm as Cnmbon and .Tussnrond, the latter now tho veteran In point of serv ice of the diplomatic corps in Washington. That the duties of nil thesp representa tives on both sides were rendered easier by & freedom with which Americans and Frenchmen oro enabled to speak well of curb other is undeniable Envoys from J?rto have of late years seldom or ncter J been criticised at born lor wwjnlwi I friendliness toward the Nation to which they have been assigned; nor have any of our Ambassadors In exchange been in vidiously accused of being "pro-French." "All" iVance," declares .Mr. Wallace, "is at work, nud the people are looking forward to a long period of peace nfter the great struggle they have passed through. Franco Is coming back rapidly. Sho is working and saving." Americans are unreservedly glad of this progress. The sincere affection binding the two Republics Is inevitably an inspiration and an aid to their constituted representa tives. Encouragement of this sort develops the best in diplomatists as In less elevated indi viduals. Since tho Franco-Prussian War at least virtually all our envoys to Paris have been intrusted with congenial tasks that Inake for success. WORLD-TROTTING STATESMEN PICK UP USEFUL KNOWLEDGE Lloyd George and Lord Curxo'n' Might Get a Finishing Education In the United States PEACE conferences und discussions that begin with prayers and end in rioting are not new in these diverting times. Rut there Is something odd nnd peculiarly sig nificant in thp circumstances of an interna tional congress for disarmament which has among its preliminaries the i-ort of violent battle which Lord Northcllffe Is wnglng ngnlnst Prime Minister Lloyd George and Lord Curzon with a view to keeping these two dominant members of the Rritish Gov ernment out of the I'nlted States nnd away from the conference at Washington. Now wo know that the desire of Englishmen is really fur peoce In our times and in the times to come. The Northcllffe press flew into a thunder ing rage when it learned that the Rritish Premier and his Foreign Secrotnry were about ready to assign themselves to a new and imposing American mission. It called Curzon "pompous and unfit." It dismissed Lloyd George as an impossibility because "in tin United States ho Is viewed and dis trusted as the man who encompassed Presi dent Wilson with his wizardry." North cllffe is in deadly earnest when he tells the people of the Isles that the greatest desire of mankind will surely go unsatisfied if there is not truth, frankness, plain dealing and general straightforwardness at Wash ington when the statesmen of the world sit down again to strive for continuing peace. Rut America is not afraid of Lloyd George. It knows him. The Rritish Prime Minister Is unquestionably the Sentimental Tommy of international politics. Is he not always revealing a desire to do great and good things In drnmntic ways, while the spotlight shines warmly upon him? Isn't he always ready to regard the mere post ponement of a question as a happy solution? Rarrie's Tommy could live a bright life time in n day and forget tomorrow utterly nfter he had evaded a crisis or a decision for twenty-four hours. So can Lloyd George do. Curzon is a vastly different sort of person. He may be pompous. He is not altogether unfit. He Is perhnps the ablest living advo cate of government for and by big business. He was amused by the Versailles Confer ence. While Mr. Wilson talked of self determluatlon in Paris, Lord Curzon was quietly about the business of establishing British control in Persia. It is precisely because Lloyd George and Curzon are ns they are that they should .me with the Rritish disarmament mission to the United States For they hnve a great deal to learn, ami travel in foreign lands always has been good for the minds of Em nerors, Kings, Premiers and even Presi dents. Other men may be depended upon to make the pence of the world. Curzon or Lloyd George alone or together certainly couldn't be depended upon to make it. Rut why should they be denied an opportunity to acquire knowledge? The Washington conference, ns President Harding appears to contemplate It, will hnve two central purposes. It will endeavor first to find a prncticul woy for the elimination of armament competition between nations thnt ought to be friendly. And It will de liberately try to drag out into the light for publtc scrutiny tho plans of limited groups In various countries who. for criminally selfish rensons, consistently obstruct the work of those who want to make nn end to wars. It will be In many ways nn ad vertising conference, n conference for pub licity. Vncient Kings with becoming beards nnd nice personalities used to travel abroad to make new friends. A Premier or a Presi dent with charming manners nnd the gift of expression can do much to moke his people understood to other peoples nnd to win for himself a sort of friendship which his own land ultimately must share. If the war proved anything conclusively It proved that the nations of the enrth need above all things better acquaintance with one another nnd interpreters of ability nnd intense earnestness. Sooner or later we shall realize that all statesmen ought to travel the world at Intervals and get down from their pedestals and mingle with the crowds and seize opportunities to talk di rectly nnd simply with the peoples of for eign countries. A look at the United States and Cansdn would be good for Lloyd George. It might even bring enlightenment to Lord Curzon. NOT TOO MANY LAWYERS THREE local lawyers hnve announced thnt they are candidates for election as delegates to the Coiihtitutional Convention. There should be lawyers in the convention ns n matter of course, but it would he n mistake to have it composed entirely of lawyers. Tho Constitution lays down tho funda mental rules for the management of the Stnte charities, for the conduct of the public educational system, for the chartering of corporations nnd for a dozen other activities of the people. Thcfre rules cannot properly be revised unlets the convention contnius men fnmillnr with the matters affected. It is manifest that the delegates should be representative of all tho interests in the Commonwealth. These Interests Include politics as woll as other things. Political experts can guide the convention from the rocks of visionary and impractical changes, for thoy know better than the politically Inexperienced what can be done and what cannot be done. It Is their busl ness to understand the state of public senti men. Yes, whoever else may be In the convention, there must be a leaven of poli ticians. They, however, can be trusted to see to this. Such danger as there mny be lies In the possibility of too large a repre sentation of the politicians. It Is not too early for public-spirited citizens interested in bringing the Consti tution up to date to nnnouuee their candi dacy and to begin to seek the support of the voters. The redrafting of the Constitution is too big n task foT mere ward workers to under take, but unless better equippod men offer themselves there will be grnvo dnnger that the word worker will get the nomination in many cases. The men who drnfted the law providing for the convention foresaw this danger and provided ngalnst It Governor Sproul Is authorized to name twenty-flvo of the dele gates, and It Is assumed that he will select rrnun of the most rerrrcsentattv citizens , mmtm 1 nt4. jfe EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, assumed thnt tho abilities of these men wl'l be so great that their advice will have to be considered (seriously by tho elected dele gates. Rut however this may be, It Is up to the voters to nominate nnd elect the high est type of men who can be Induced to serve. FOOLING WITH EXPLOSIVES mHERE is not the slightest justification - for the Hall proposal Increasing tlm price of gas, passed by Council yesterday. At the best it is a makeshift. At tho worst It Is n surrender to the gas company. The gas question Is the most dangerous explosive thnt tho politicians of this city ever handled. It cleaned the gang out of the City Hall once. It was the provoca tion for the first Committee of One Hundred ever appointed. It has burned the fingers of every man who has ignored the rights of the people in tho premises. We note these fn'cts for the information of the members of City Council who are now monkeying with tho matter. Councilman Hnll Ignores tho recommen dations of the Gas Commission for the ne gotiation of a new lenso. He proposed not long ago thnt the price of gas should be raised to $1.26 a thousand cubic feet and thnt the U. G. I. should get $1 of this sum. Then ho got n bill for gas consumed In his house for six months and professed to be so outraged by Its amount thnt ho hastened to call on the president of the U. G. I. He remained with that official for nearly nn hour and came nwny smiling. Now he proposes thnt the price of gas shnll be $1.10 and that the gas company shall receive $1 of this amount nnd that the rest shnll go Into the City Treasury. The present price is $1, ns every one knows, and twenty-five cents of this is paid over to the city by the gas company. Mr. Hall's plan is to give the gas com pany twenty-flvo cents more for ervery thousand feet that it now sells, and to do this as a temporary expedient pending the negotiation of a new lease. The negotiation of that lease cannot be postponed indefi nitely, for the present lease expires in 1027. So long an the city retains the present price of gas it has something to trndo with when it comes to mnkc the terms for a renewal of tho lease. The moment It sur renders tills ndvnntage it becomes almost powerless to force an equltnblo lease from the operating company, and it puts Itself In the position which the city now occupies in relation to the P. R. T., with which it is trying to negotiate a lease for the opera tion of the Frnukford clovatod line. The P. R. T. is in n position virtually to dictate the terms to the city. It cannot be com pelled to operate the Frnukford line. The city hns no hold on it of any kind. . Rut so long as the price of gns remains at $1, one-qunrtcr of which is turned into the City Treasury, the city will bo able to say to the gas company that if it will make such and such extensions of its plant and If it will provide gas of such and such a stand ard of heat or light it may charge such and such a price, n price based on a fair estimate of the cost of manufacture and distribution. The Hall plan should be vetoed nnd the plan of the Mayor, recommended in accord ance with tho findings of the Gas Commis sion, is the one that ought to be adopted. It provides for a conference between a committee of Council, the Gas Commission nnd the City Solicitor, on the one hand, and the gas company on the other, for the pur pose of agreeing on the terms of a new lease which shnll take the place of the old one nnd which shall provide for such extensions of the plant ns are necessary to meet the growing needs of the city. HAIL! MEN of the matchless Jimmy Shechan's mold arc not often Irreverent or reck less in the presence of their accepted auto crats. They seldom fail to manifest all needed signs of humility nnd grntitudo when they happen within seeing distance of the Presence. Rut the Rolshuvik mood of iconoclnsm seems to he spreading danger ously even about City Hall. "What king?" demnnded Jimmy Sheehnn when a guard stopped him at the door of Councilman Hall's sanctum with the an nouncement that he must wait until tho king, who was within, finished his busi ness. "King who?" "Vare!" said the City Hall guard In a frightened whisper. "I thought," sold Mr. Sheehnn, In the manner of n man whose soul was suddenly illumined by the spirit of '71, "that we had douo uwuy with kings!" Have the years diminished Mr. Sheehnn' h powers of logical perception? Who but a king would give him half a wagonload of monoy each year for doing next to nothing In the office of tho Register of Wills? Does he suppose that the (to use his own term) jack comes from On High? Does he be lieve thnt the people relinquish all this wealth voluntarily? Perhaps the City Hall guard under-stated the case. Had Jimmy been told that Uio Ameer of Ambler, Brother to the Seven Bright Ones of the Political Zodiac and Heaven -Sent Protector of the Poor was within Mr. nail's chamber he would prob ably have understood and IcisBcd the floor nnd gone upon his way. A JUDGE UPON JUDGES RESIGNING us contributing editor of the Puw.io Lhdokh, William II. Toft lias tnkon particular pains to emphasize "the degree in which a Judgo should sep arate himself from general activities ns a citizen und member of tho community, " The point, he admits in his valedictory, "Is not usually fixed by statutory law, but by a due senso of propriety, considering the naturo of his office, and by well-established custom." "A Judge," maintains the Chief Justice of the United States Supremo Court, "should avoid extra-judicial nctivitios, not only because they may put him In an atti tude actually or seemingly Inconsistent with absolute impartiality in the discharge of his judicial duties, but olso because he owes his whole time nnd energy to Ills judicial work." There can be no qnestion that the Na tion's highest judicial officer hns admirably expounded his own ense, Its application, however, need not be narrowed. It is here with respectfully referred to President Judgo Brown, of the Municipal Court of Philadel phia, and to his colleague on the bench, Judge Eugene C. Bonniwcll, and to any other Judges who are Inclined to dabble In the unjudicial business of give-and-take politics. There may be some justification for the action of the powers that be In Insisting that slnekers In custody be made to com plete their prison terms so thnt there will be no future difficulty In enforcing the draft In case of another war, but it Is regrettable that another and mora effective means to jfrfr0."-" 'iViynTi'i? jf1"1 1 AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Report of Visiting Nurses Opens Up Wide Field for Those Who Desire s to Do Good In the World By SARAH D. LOWIUE SOME ONE remarked about Cha'rles Dickens that tho orily character' he ever used that could uot bo found at least ; in shreds and patches In real life was Miss tavcrsham In Great Expectations. And yet, "lly enough, hers was tho only character tnnt ho did not crentc, since her strange case nail been reported nnd had been verified in J will contest nnd cnm'e to Dickens' notice through tho newspnpers of the day. A woman I know said she could never see n l"iy that was as exciting as the tilings that had hnppcncd In her own. family, and I. for one, am always turning the corner of life ou some little dramn thnt seems too strange, or too good, or too exactly balanced to bo true. I heard of rather a beautiful and beautl rally worked out little drnma not long ago that has stuck in my mind to wonder about, THERE wns a certain lady of this city , .who was "given" to that somewhat old fashioned virtue, hospitality. To entertain guests was ns natural to her ns to provldo for her own large family. She wns In a certain sense "in society," but she wns never very formally of society. The per sons that she entertained might bo fnshton able, might be plain, might be stupid and might bo clever, they might also be rich, or just ns likely poor the point with her was, 1 A. ey -f?r ,Viy reason need her hospi tality? Would It bo convenient or both convenient und pleasant, or only convenient and plcnsuut but also in n sense necessary, because they were poor or lonely or ill or troubled, or wanting n good time without Knowing how to get it? Or were they going somewhere, or coming from somewhere nnd needed n perch? Or were they friends of her friends, or Just ns likely ns not uo one's friends 7 Her house wns not n largo house, her Income was not a largo income nnd her life was an Immensely nctivo one outside her homo, but the great passion of her llfo waa hospitality. If she had to chooso the kind of gueoc she got the greatest satisfaction out of, it would be one who wns ill. She liked to fcol that every possible thing that could be devised to make thnt person comfortable was being done. She sometimes sacrificed her fnmily on tho altar of this enthusiasm, and sometimes thoy rebelled I have been told. Aot when she asked poople in to die that she could make them feel wanted nnd cared for up to the last moment thnt they seemed to hove understood; but she sometimes had very inconvenient illnesses harbored in her spare bedroom, with nurbes spilling over into the family rooms; Illness such ns insanity, thnt brought even n dangerous clement, ccrtnlnly a very disturbing one, Into tho house. Perhaps the reason she herself took oven such disturbances calmly was she wab VerV milnli fntnrnita.1 in t.nUin.1 .......... ..rl was always helping persons of ability to go into the profession. She had n score of trained nurses who were her devoted and grateful friends, on whom sho could call for help for hor friends. So well was this known, indeed, that even doctors relied on her to get them ono or nnother of her good nurses if they were put to It for a specially skilled ono for a difficult casa. NOW It so happened that when this bounteously hospitable womnn enmc to die she wns stricken very suddenly awo from home and in a placo where there were no nurses available except one charity nurse employed to work among tho poor, who could only come by tho hour. So that this woman, who had been so noted for minis tering to ill nnd to dying persons in hor own homo, wns n guest when sho died, and wns beholden for tho skillod care thnt she got to tho kind ministrations of a visiting nurse. And I am told by her family thut ull the sweetness nnd caro sho had given to others in hor own house were, ,lt seemed to them, given back with unmeasured kindness in the two short dajH she lay uuconsclous und dyiug in some one's else house. If she lind hod any premonition of what wns to be her fate in going out of tho world, she could not have devised her life more aptly to prepare for It. But she hnd had uo premonition ; sho had only followed the good and engcrly generous dcslrt.s of her heart. ONE aftermath of the little drama or shall I say epologue at all events what an outsider observes as the direct conse quences of tho way that woman happened to live, and die, is thnt all her childreu arc iu one way or another interested in help ing ill people, especially those who are emergency cases and need emergency nursing. My attention was cnlled to tho fact that more than one of them wns keen about visiting nurse organizations aud then the possible reason for this keen In terest came to me. WE SOMETIMES have to have a poign ant lesson which touches our own safety or comfort or happiness or thnt of those near to us in order to enter into even tho obvious needs of other persons, but the need of public nurses, upon whom the pub lic can call for pgrt-tlme service, thnt very straitened incomes can afford, is too nppnr ent to need uny prodding of personal dungor or sorrow. I received from the Director of Public Health today, or from his office, a plea that is to be send brondcust for a Inrger stnff of city nurses to be used in connection with tho public schools. It looks like n well-thought-out plan. Aftor rending it over my eye fell on a blue book that lias lain on my desk for two months or more the year's story of tho Visiting Nurse Society. There are certain things on a hot and stifling evening In town, when the people in the little streets escape to tho deserted pnve ments of the larger empty streets tor a chance to breathe, that one is thankful for ceitain chances one has to help, even if the help Is only vicarious thut is done with one's money by some one else. At such times I fiud in; self thanking the men and women who nre keeping opeu the public baths in Philadelphia ; aud the men and the women, but especiully the mirscj, who arc supporting tho Visiting Nurse So ciety. Their record last year, which thoy will exceed this yenr, was over 10,0(10' visits made by sixty-live nurses in the eight cen tcrs In the town branching out from the main center at Thirteenth and Lombard streets. The cost of a nurse for nn houi is seventy-five cents, and the cost of run ning tho society Is 51"r,()00 a year. Over 2000 patients are cared for In this way out of a population of something over u mil lion. There is no Stnte aid, and if the pn tlents cannot pay tho full amount, tbo nurse goes anyway nnd some one else pays some oue who cares, which Is wheru you and mysolf can come in. THERE Is in Italy an ago-old society known as the Mlsoilcordla. The per sons who belong to It are from all rnnks of life and are volunteers. Their services arn rendorcd in secret, for during the time thoy nre on duty they wear a covering on the face thnt only shows the genoral outline nnd the eyes. They bury the pauper dead and in time of pestilence or culumlty of other sorts, they nttcud to the sick nnd dying and needy. It is pnrt of their religion, this service, and they volunteer for life o. for a set period of years, to be culled upon by tho superior of the order nt specified times. The fact that they wear n habit, yot aro not recognizable as Individuals dur ing their time of sorvico, is at once a pro tection und nt the same time a sort of open Bosame to plnocs where they would bo un welcomo or possibly even in danger should thoy offer their services ns men and citizens with a noino and an address. I was thinking 4s I read tho report of the Visiting Nurses thnt it lny within our power to belong to n great society of "R,.c orrts of Misery nnd Records of Good Re coverles," Wo may, In Imagination, put on the well-loved uniform of the Visiting Nurse nnd go incognito not in our persons, but in mi,- own nower. nono tho less. lw money is jowcfr and UMt U our money It FBIDAy, JULY IS, 'TRET ,-jJ.uAiiy id , IN , . V.ji ' W - ' '', VfiKJ.j Will 2&K'1 -tVY il XTnrTTrrnna rmrrr,-, i I SHORTCUTS ! iuvv mi iuurS 10 inio Daily Talks With Thinhing Philadelphia on Subjects They Know Best WILLIAM DICK On School-Cost Accounting COST accounting, or a report to the tax payer on what he Is getting for the money he pays for public school service, has becomo nn indispensable feature of public school administration, nccording to William Dick, secrctnry of tho Board of Education. "Only In comparatively recent yenrs," said Mr. Dick, "has cost uceountlng becomo a distinctive featuro in public school ad ministration reports. "School authorities of a decade or two ago seemed content with statements show ing enrollment and attendance of pupils, receipts and expenditures, with limited sub division thereof no particular attention being given to uniformity in tho varied forms of presentation. "This prevented nnythlng like intelligent comparisons with other cities or towns inorp or Icis similar in character, size or locality. Education Costs Moro "However, in the over-increasing cost of public education, through the almost uni versal recognition of the fact that the pres ervation nud progress of nuy notion depend upon tho proper education and training of Its outh, we nre now spending millions where we ouce spent thousands. "Tho taxpayer who provides tho 'where withal' for tho schools (and in no branch of public service more willingly) Is entitled to the fullest accounting of his money where It goes, whnt It accomplishes nnd what It costs. Of course, until some method Is devised of measuring the output of the public schools thoro ciui be no defined state ment of the profits attained. In other words, there enn bo no declaration of divi dends ns in the case of financial or indus trial corporations. "All that can be shown In denllng with this human product. is the effect of improved methods of instruction und orgnulzotlon the uplifting of tho mental and physical qualifications of our future citizens nnd the betterment of the school plant. The profits can only be accounted for us future provision against the high cost of lgnornuco. "With these nlms In view school offi cials, national, State ond locnl, ore work lug moro and more in unison not only to show with much more detail than heretofore what Is represented In public school expendi tures, but in addition to bring nbout u standardization of the forms of presenting such facts thnt ull who will may read In telligently. What Public Wants to Read "Ono difficulty Is that people cannot or will not tako the timo to read anything in the way of public statements except the headlines or that which is 'written up' In a manner that will cosily appeal to their Imagination. "Statistics of nuy kind nro always dull reading and often misunderstood. "Perhaps thero is no special part of the work In any public department whero moro time aud Inbor nre expended with a view to acturacy thnn in the preparation of volumi nous statistical reports for general distri bution, nnd so little understood ami appre ciated. Often the statistician is frowned upon ns a general nuisance nnd trouble maker, but when information is demanded upon any particular Hue or the inquisitive and ever-occurring questionnaire arrlvos, for which school board members and school offlclalo throughout our country nre particu larly notorious, and recourso is made to his flguros, tho value of his work Is more ap parent. "To get the average taxpayer to compre hend wlint is being done with his money, statistical reports must be 'picturlzed,' so to speuk, and so we find the up-to-date method of presenting this Information in tho forms of diagrams, graphs, etc., and even tills is not sufficient. To 'put it over' tho figure and dlngram work must be fol lowed by unalysls and short, pungent son tencos bringing out tbo salient facts shown by the statistics the cost of this, that or the othor function or activity and its rota tion to tho total expenditures. Much Money Is Needed "All of this requires nn outlay or expen dlture of public money, which is often not obtainable -becnuse the appropriating body is not always easily persuaded In advonce as to tho efficacy of such expenditures, "In school ndmlnlHtrntion, like all other business operations, 'it pays to advertise.' "Ah nn Illustration, the Detroit School Board, which hns approved on 18,000,000 building program now under way to meet Ifa eoriiilrmnnnte In n.l.ll.lAn ... ,.- . 1,. .v..-....-.,. . i'""'''"" i""" unuuoi 1921 - NlfcH RIPE, BY HECK!" pays Its teachors (excepting a few positions) higher salaries than any other city except New York has adopted the policy of pre senting periodically to the public through a deportment of research ond publicity a read able presentation of facts bearing upon the school needs of thnt city. That department has a corps of experienced workers under the supervision of 11 certified accountant nt nn annual cost of about $70,000. "Does it pay? Well, look at what Do troit Is doing!" What Do You Knotv? QUIZ 1. What Is a tabard? 2. Whnt was the great siege In tho Crimean War? 3. Who wero tho first aviators to make a non-stop flight across tho Atlantic? 4. What is nn encyclical? 6. Who was Phlllls Wheatley? 6. In what country Is tho fnmous Alpine pealc Mont Diane? 7. What Is the origin of the music of "For Ho'a a Jolly dood Fellow"? 8. What Is meant by the Land of Cockaigne? 9. Who 1r tho present Premier of Canada? 10. What Is purroo? . Answers to Yesterday'o Quiz. 1. Harry Hawker, who recently lost his life Iu on ahfilnno nccldent, is famed for his nttompt to make a non-stop flight across tho Atlantlo In 1910. His ma . cnino fell Into tho ocean, but ho was rescued and carried safely to tho Brit ish Isles. 2. Tho Spnnlarda call their own langungo Castellano. 8. The Russo-Japanese War ended with the u"e7.nf1910rSmOUth' N' "' ntB0 4. The Decameron, a collection of 100 stories Is tho chief work of Boccaccio, tho Italian writer. It first appeared In ths fourteenth century. 6. The letter L stands for fifty in Roman notation, 6" aeMlssrissippl! Sharp w""ams s rora 7 "n?" '? .tno J11081 famous of the Fhrtow German composer Von 8' ""L'I't."' of th0 Graminaceous or Brassy family, a natlvo of India, bear- eeda CrP f SmaU '"'"oUs 9. Theodore Roosevelt wry of tho Navy Is Assistant Seore- 10. Tho chief sources of natural rnhhni- nP. Brazil, Bolivia, Java, RoYnoo East West laajiKrma and Coylo"? Today's Anniversaries 78n5'.Lr,eh;i0(..fofP'"wspaper. ...... ... ..w.vu . vt'uaiuilliuopic. ,1P8rMurai.WUB P,nccd upon the of Naples by Bonupnrte, under tho throne tho title of iving juuemm jxnpoicon. 1840 Louis BonnnartB T.-r, ti.n. . died. Born September 3, mg. "0,lnna' .i.18i!n Ill;cftnb,,ialm,et f tho Pope's au thority proclnlmcd at Rome. 1851! Eleanor Parke Cnstiu t . ndoiitod daughter of George wLhin1''' died at Audloy, Vn. dZ t u S "' Va., in 1770. ot AoinBUm, .JTi1rPr,?,C0 ,Teromo Napoleon was polled from Frnuco. s ex- 1883 Charles II. Stratton (Tom Thnmt, by'fLnoraS 'nDub" '- ST. SWITHIN rnllOUGH not too .r,,i..t . J. We lovo a folry ;ior ' 7 ' n0Pe' So cherish thus St. Swlthln'n h Nor try to dim his glory!1 S dpe Now If today It rains, he snys. And sets the world ronlnlnV Twill rain each da, for" fo ?' days- Unless tho sun Is shining. r But If the day is fnr, wlly Away with all complaining, I-olr. forty dnjs will gladden men Except when It Is raining. Here all good men and true mnv sCe M,nU mny iL tbi? bacon : ffPJPre ptM.and wise la iw - I Tills Is the dnv nn n-lifo), Q a!iLiJ gets wny with his annual bluff. St. Swithin and the Groundhog split the mcicoroiugicni yenr Deiwcen tuera. It is understood thnt Councilman Hill considers tbo British thermal unit a ial.' Innt 000. I The man who wants Congress to put A L AllAKII I Khln ! I.AM11 It lH kfu.l. A.t-f U I'lUCilU UIUO 1UW BIljQ il JH U OlUlUie IQ.UX. Silly, wo call it. When n cow fell Into a Scrnnton cm! mine it wos butchered where it fell. Anotlt drop in meat, but no effect ou coal. J There were women, children nnd bran men nt tho baby show nt Belmont Mansion yesterday. Tho last named were the jud. Perhaps he Is King Vare becauw Ml enemies "crowned" him; meaning (as llttli Benny would say) that thoy dotted him on, tho bean. . . 1 Thn Inhnr ennrtnrrA to ffnln what1 propaganda a short time ago was unable t' uo it is uriving unemployed men oaci u me inrms. "110 tact Uint a corset company outer' tlscs n diaphragm flattcner." rcmarW 'Tho fact thnt a corset com miterj Pericarp, "ought to be good for a wheat, And we'll let it go at that. Perhaps tho proponents of tho latest Prohibition Bill nre of the opinion that til patient who needs more than a pint' of whisky in ten days Is bettor dead. Prince Hnshim of Afghanistan says thil although polygamy exists in his countrt, educated men feel ono wifo is quite chomj. "And sometimes moro than enough," 'laoj the Chronic Grouch. There Is unconscious irony In the'fW that un association of nations, which Sent' tor Borah has consistently attacked, Is llkerf to be brought about by a movement In Tvhick. ho wns primarily active. Whilo a Now York iceman was hf fined $10 for driving a lame horw, W worth of ice melted in his wagon outoWt In this cose Justice should have W skates Instead of lcadon heols. News from Bcnvcrdalo, Pa, csujts tit reflection that it is a queer kink In hum" nature that causes otherwise roputsble cltl zens to break tho law In order to awake rospect for tho low in tho breasts of aliens. The sighting of a pirate ship i becomo a nightly occurrence. And it W bo nothing but a coustor traveling witawj lights in order to save oil. It is neaiast ttl law, but there aro captains who Ilk graft. Hnll has his own idea as to what tkl playground In Hell's Half Acre should M called, but Negro citizens will hardly W foolish enough to permit Counc 1 wlthom protest to rob a member of their race i civic honor. The American dollor Is a good fcJJ ' abroad nnd a grouch ot home. He j higher by tho boys ho loafs with than wj folks he lives with. And he won ' J worth moro ut homo until no is ruitu what lower abroad. By having the courage to flout It, TtjK Ident Harding grows In popular favor I ho gains political strength by brtl-?5,1S old crowd that professes to own It. wsiys summed up. means it cnlled for nerve w wi tho truth nbout tho soldiers' bomn. Ventnor, N. J., City Council . tj months ago pnssed a resolution totmm smoking during sessions out of rcspoci n women members. Now tho women i" selves wnnt the smoking resumed, .uJ toes have their good points, It seems. Mombors of the crews of Pa,"hlnr and tenders stationed In the nelihwrW" of tho target lit order to give ""'J'S should it be necessary, to bomWni ; plnnes, might well bo pardoned if toy porlonccd some slight nervous trepidation- ittuii. .1.. i. -nr. ,,ic-i.hnn continue line 1 lie in tin- v Li i. mwli to nffright the perusers of the shlpp ng n 1 tne rem scat 01 war reiumns . -- y, high wa vs. Drivers nnd guards of '".,( tlonal Motor Freight Corpora on. u ' v service men, are equipped ".,-, and blackjacks, nnd, further ttu'r":ia I, road banditry, now carry "aDV(m;vii i"Woade it the.ioad band-oon'M-i St .. I I II lnlMlfi)ii I m nam mmmi,. -" w if 4& ..- -'f -.-JWi iM.4 n iX.