rniH ESTOH . vl'l '.' EVENING PUBLIC LEDGER PHILADELPHIA, . FRIDAY, JUNE 2, 1922 At J!" .12 iWVf " v,vi , , ' it yj Jr w ir K- iffi, ; 3. V, i&lrv. iV nJCaW Sucning public Hcbgcr PUBLIC LEDGER COMPANY I CTRU3 H. K. CURTIS, Psesidsn?, Jehn C. 'Martin, Vice FrMldant nd Treasurer) CHtrln A. Tylfr, Secretary: Cnarla H. I.udlnK I.udlnK ten. PJilll? S. Cellins. Jehn R. William". .'nhn J. swargeen. ueerse r. ueiasmun. uavia ,, smiidi DIM Eitrtctara. .4VIP SMtl.TIY.. .TMIter HLM 4mu H ,.., L . JLJSJ S-. tIAJIllD Ofn'ral Puslnss Manacfr e:.j 'i if.'l'BbllnheJ dally at Pcbmc Leceeii Building ; JndtpndencJ Squars, Philadelphia. ;r,annTie cut. Prei-t'M(en Building t Year. m4 Mndnen Ave. 701 Ferd Tlulldlng 013 G!ete-Drmicrat Hulldlr.g rr.. en 1303 Tribune Building h&i' NHWS UfRUAUS: sCcW'M'wte.N ntntii-. Jf. K. Car. Pennsjlvanla Axe. and Hlh St Yeait Rraatc Tna Sun Bulldlrg XiSfcSOM Dnut Trafalgar Building SUBSCRIPTION TERMS The EvrsM.M) l'l si.it l.Ei.rii l i-i-rvrd te suri crlrwrs In Phlladtlphln and surreuhJIng tnns t t'.ia rate of twelve (12) cents per week. raabU ie the mrrler. Br mall ta points outside of Philadelphia In the United States, Canada or fulled SiatM r" r" ataalena, postage free, fifty (50) cents per month. Blx (10) Millars per eir. payable in advance. Te all foreign countries nie 111) dollar a month Netice Futscr1!ni wishing address changeJ must give old as well as nerr address. ELf, J000 rALMT KEYSTONE. MA IV 101 XT ASArett all eomrm-tcatiens te Tivenine FuWe Ledger, Independence Square. Philadelphia. I Member of the Associated Press 1 THB ASSOCIATED PRESS s exclusively ri titled te the use ter republication e oil itrttj Mtpatehe credited te It or net otherwise cedlted thlt paper, and also the local iuu'j pubilthed Vttriln. All riehti at republication of s. eelal dispatch Mrs art alto relented. J'hil.dtlphL, VriJit, Juir K WHAT KEPHART WOULD LIKE HARMON M. KEl'HART, former State Treasurer, indicated through his attor ney In Hnrrisbtirg yesterday that he would like the formal inquiry Inte the methods of handling State funds new making by Audi tor General Lewis te be confined te an effort te discover whether the State lest any money. Mr. Kephart has Insisted that the State lest nothing. Charles A. Snyder, former Auditor General and new State Treasurer, also Insists that, although half a million dol lars was taken out of the State funds, it was all put back again and that the State did net lore a dollar. Of course, he excepts $8000 which was misappropriated by Brlndle gad never returned. Auditor General Lewis very properly re fused te confine his formal Inquiry te the questions whether the State had lest any thing. The point ct issue Is' net whether the State lest any money, although the expert accountant say that it lest $11,000 in in terest through delay in depositing receipts In the banks. The use of public money for prlrate purposes is Illegal. There is circum stantial evidence that the money has been se used, even If we did net have the ad mission of Mr Snjder. What it Is hoped the Jnqulry will disclose is who used the money and who consented te its use. The use of it was as grievous a breach of trust as though a bank cashlrr had taken the funds of depositors for his private specula tions. The fart that he was fortunate In his speculations and returned the money would net lessen his offense. The expert accountants have discovered 'that there was jusgllng of the accounts of the'S.'ate Treasurer. They have found that checks made payable te the State were ex changed for checks signed in blank by Jehn A. Bell, of the Carnegie Trut Company of Pittsburgh, and thnt by this arrangement the public money was carried en the books of the Treasurer as cash in hand, while no one yet knows exactly where the cash was. The duty of "adjusting the public nc nc .ceunts." laid by law en the Auditor Gen eral, Is net done when he has merely dis covered whether the bonks balance, even though Mr. Kephart would like te have this view prevail. Mr. Lewis has appar ently set out te discover In whose Interests the accounts were juggled and whether the law was violated. In fact, he Is making a real audit which will disclose all the facts. Mr. Kephart ought te be co-operating with him Instead of seekln; te put obstacles in the way. A PROPER PARDON GOVERNOR SPROl'IS pardon of Con ductor Evans and Engineer Yeakel. sentenced te nine months' Imprisonment In connection with the tragic train wreck near Bryn Athyn, en the Philadelphia and Read ing Railway. Is unquestionably a response te public sensibilities regarding the disaster. The two railroad empleyes were found guilty of disebedience. but It was no secret that their delinquencies were by no means the sole causes nf the catastrophe. The practice c; discovering scapegoats for short comings In railway management for nntl quated equipment nnd insufficient trackage is of long standing. The public is net fooled, and It accept. with some uneasiness an exhibit of judg ment which evades certain rjiher embar rassing fundamentals. Had the coaches of the ill-fated train been of steel the laxity of Yeakel and Evans would probably have had less shocking con cen gruences. The Governer has acknewledger the Inequities of the cae by releasing these men after the expiration of one-third of their original term. THE INDIFFERENT LEGISLATURE FEW persons will dltagree with the Miner when he says in his let'.tr te the (;lt Club that a law should be pnssp ghing i0 tne city a. part et tne --urns received by th" State for automobile licenses. Thi im.nev "l'jTused for Improving p.iDllc highways, but net a ueiiar et it it spent within th city limits. Yet the licensed motorcars use the city Btrects nnd wear out the pavements. The need for an amendment te the Con Cen Con Btitutien which will permit the city te profit by its own public improvements is nlxe KMn. eraily aumitteu. it tne city could take by condemnation proceedings mere land than la needed for the bridge approaches it oeiild reaell the land at a profit. At present pri vate speculators will reup the profit. 'The Majer also wants better laws relat- , lac te gambling nnd te disorderly houses The present laws are inadequate and make conviction difficult. ' The last Legislature was nsked te act in these matters, but nothing came of it. The new Legislature te be elected in November will doubtless have an opportunity te con sider these things, but ns Legislatures sel dom de what is expected of them, h0 would be an optimist, indeed, who should expect -action In Harrlsburg next winter. 4' - ,118 THERE A BETTER WAY? fiR,lNATOIV "A"IUBU'S P"m that KM?it is shocked at the exin-ndit,.r " w$jX ,n tbe Pennsylvania primary election iffii'i,1tPe1',,,cnl P'ny He knows verv , ami " i't,,..Mj luiinni vuiinec op ,.nr. ,td en without the use of money. iw,. XM? Print"1 "JVU" for m' urea ' -Ija'a State with n large population. If hn Mrs are te ee rcacneu some one must nut k-the money. It Is useless te pretend tnat 'tmpalgn can be conducted for nuthlng . never nyc vecu be conducted nnd their -win w, iiui urcu jn .uiKsissippi, the hic,ui oeiimer, itarnsen, . ,ot"M'ae large in Mis- irania, but Harrison Wnu.l. sum. Bwnte.' !t twu :'9Sh about the nomination of Senater Tepper here, hut thnt Is chiefly because of the dif ference between the population of the two States and because of the different methods of campaigning. That large sums are needed is unfortu nate. It makes It difficult. If net Impossi ble, for a peer man te contest for a nomi nation with a candidate of the regular po litical machine, whether It be Republican or Democratic. And the primary system Increases the cost, for It lnys en the can didate or the machine the necessity of rais ing money te pay for two contests, one for the nomination and one for the election, If the energy spent In denunciation were de voted te finding a better way there might be hope of improvement. FAITH IN THE TREATY IS THE SAFEGUARD OF IRELAND Hew Desp This Is Is Shown by Cellins' and Griffith's Acceptance of Winsten Churchill's Warning te Extremists TJKL1EF that the majority of the Irish A- people ere eager for the execution of the treaty whereby the Free State te be erected will become a member of "the group of nations forming the British commonwealth of nations" Is an invalunblc safety valve in a situation overstocked with political explosives. Confidence lu the virtue of the compact produced last December at the peak of a crisis has obviously restrained the some times Intemperate Winsten Churchill, whose review of Irish affairs presented te the Heuse of Commens is candid and grave, but unmarred by trueulence. Among his most interested listeners en Wednesday, in seats reserved for distin guished strangers, were Michnel Cellins and Arthur Griffith. They heard the recent accommodation with the De V.cra faction denounced ns striking "directly at the pro pre visions of the treaty." They heard from the lips of the Colonial Secretary the decla ration thnt a breach of the December agree ment would be held by the Imperial Gov eminent te justify the resumption of "pro portionate liberty of action." This warning, of course, means nothing less than a reoccupation of Irish territory by the Rrltlsh in the event of treaty in fraction. Yet both Mr. Cellins nnd Mr. Griffith, the former of whom is chiefly responsible for establishing the "alliance" with Irish extremist republican- te which Sir. Churchill objects, pronounced the latter's discourse as "perfectly fair." The ostensible paradox In this estimate by these two Irish leaders is removable only by remembering that they and Mr. Churchill and the Rrltlsh Government are working toward an identical end. It Is a difference in methods which pro duces the apparent confusion. It may fur ther be said that it is disparity of pro pre cedure which has rendered the adjusting of Ireland te the new order se painful nnd seemingly prolonged. It Is the fashion with nations that have solved their fundamental problems In gov ernment te regard the struggles of ether peoples toward a groundwork of new ad ministration with skepticism and some dis dain. Utilizing the convenient cuptlen of "finished history," the English, for exam ple, are prone te dismiss lightly the old conflict of Cavaliers and Roundheads, the bitterness and antagonism engendered by the revolution of 1CSS nnd the intensity of the struggle ever the Iteferm Bill of 1832. In America, pride in the processes of self government conflict between principles nnd practice notwithstanding is undiminished by the recollection through the chroniclers of the chaotic period between the close of the Revolution and the adoption of the Constitution und the stormy entest waged ever that basic instrument. It is of record, moreover, that the spirit of the Constitution was net clearly defined until an epic civil war had been fought. While such instances of dissension in the establishment of democratic Institutions de net necessarily constitute excuses for strife and turbulence, they de at least counsel patience, toleration and sympathetic under standing in respect te similar struggles by politically younger peoples entering upon the day of oppertunit . There has long been a disposition in this country te lie contemptuous of our Latin nelghbers-ln their endeavors te master some trying problems of government. Side by side with much sentimental sympathy for Ireland there Is often a tendency te view with self-sufficient alarm each setback or misplay in its difficult approach te stabilized emancipation. It Is only seven months since the treaty proposing the Irish Krer State was nego tiated. Considering that Rhede Island pre ferred Ifolatien te union with her sister States from 1T67 te 1700, the period of cress-purposes and dispute in Ireland has net been proportionately long. The ad Interim ndmlnistratien, as Mr. f'hurch.ll calls It, has been vexed with problems demnndlng the utmost exercise of patriotism, political discernment and states manship. Mr. Cellins and Mr. Griffith, among ethers, have labored herelcallv te speed up the machinery wherebv the Free State will be duly set up and fortified with a constitution. They have been forced te cer tend with an embarrassing multiplicity of adverse forces, including these dominated by Im practical visionaries and honest idealists bv selfish politicians, by religious blgetsi by chronic marplets and by disorderly op portunists. Rewdyism and brutality have capitalized the situation as they have In- variably under analogous circumstances the world ever. Save for the vote early last winter by the Dall Eireann, the voice of the Irish people as a whole has enjoyed comparatively scant opportunity te be heurd en the subject of the Free State autonomy. The Ulster com cem com pllcntien nnd the ease with which this can be utilized te serve the purposes of trouble makers have prolonged some of the most unfortunate features of the rase. Michael Cellins' negotiation with n. Valcra and his republicans of ,, formula of election and ministerial procedure in volves a point nf extreme delicacy which Mr. Churchill Is right te regard with gravity. As an expedient te suppress dis orders and the outrages of conscienceless bandits and hooligans In the Seuth of Jr0!, land, denounced by both factions, It may be useful. What Mr. Cellins Is seeking te render possible Is the holding of elections for the previsional parliament, te be eventually ,lnwu?, unees ine..ireaiy witn consider ftUMhWt the VrtM'aHata cwsUtutlen -w P 'ff?? D,"'" rdJe thati four members of the Cabinet must be of the anti-treaty persuasion. It is here thnt the English are concerned for the validity of the treaty, since Article XVII of that document provides that .every member of the previsional government shall signify "In writing" his acceptance of that Instrument. The opinion Is said te be held in Dublin that the two Governments, the previsional nnd thnt of the Dail, will be found working side by side nnd that republican members of the Conlltlen Cabinet will have no office In the previsional government sanctioned by the treaty. In that hope is the answer te Mr. Churchill's warnings. Therein Is nlse thnt fnlth In the eventual triumph of the trenty which has nlready survived se many pitfalls. HOOVER'S COAL SCHEDULE SHOULD the coal strike continue through the summer the country will have reason te fear net only n coal shortage, but n coal panic. Under such circumstances specula tors couldn't be expected te resist the temp tation te profit enormously and unfairly through reserves of mined and prepared an thracite or bituminous. The agreement for n fair maximum rate at the mines, just entered Inte between Secretary Hoever and the operators, Is Important In a number of ways. It is ns much for the protection of the fair-minded coal operator as it Is for the protection of the consumer. It rigidly limits the opportunities of the occasional gamblers who have no objection te exploit ing any nntlenal crisis for their own ends. And It will de much te prevent fuel kiting of the sort which turned public sentiment against the coal-producing organizations during and Immediately after the war. Hoever's suggestion of a fixed rule under which consumers, assured new of stable and uniform prices, would buy their fuel In neighboring and convenient zones, and se avoid the wnste of long and needless freight hauls, is significant of what the Govern ment may attempt In the near future in bringing about better order in the anthra cite and bituminous industry. Haphazard buying or buying for shifting or chance markets Is one of the bad habits of middle men generally. Men of Hoever's sort have always seen the necessity for the elimina tion of almost Intolerable overhead costs in volved In the practices of coal men, who ac tually spend huge sums te send their prod uct ever long stretches of railroad te meet the terms of contracts entered Inte by chance or through nccidentnl association of Interests and without regard for economic losses which fellow all along the line when railroads are burdened te haul coal te points at which coal may be produced in almost unlimited quantities. THE SIEGE OF CONGRESS IT IS net often that a news report from Washington contains n sentence se packed with unpleasant significance as oue which loomed In Mr. Gilbert's dispatch te this newspaper yesterday. "Fer months," we were told, "Congress has been grinding away at legislation in which it does net be lieve!" The question under discussion was the soldier bonus. Obviously the majority in the Heuse nnd the Senate doesn't believe in the justice or wisdom of the bonus appeal and the scheme devised by Mr. McCumber and his committee te meet it. Congress has gene along, however, in Its usual way. And new it is seemingly prcparlnj te meet the subterfuge of lebbjists with subterfuge of Its own. There are slsns te Indicate thnt the new Renus Hill will be filibustered te death as the end of the session nppreaches. And members who have voted cheerfully enough for the bonus will be Feeretly grati fied te see the whole plan defeated or at least dclaved. The question here suggested is larger than the bonus. Why must the Heuse nnd the Senate seem te be actuated by hypoc risy? Why is Congress grinding away at legislation In which it does net believe? What will become of the whole Federal ad ministrative system If that habit is con tinued? The fact Is that Congress has been learning te obey the lash nnd the lnsh only, and that the whips of the big lobbies nre forever swinging ever It3 head. Until n new political conscience in America reacts te send better men te Washington, and until Congress is filled with men who cannot be whipped into submission by any self-interested or fanatical group, the people of the United States will continue te be burdened by laws crented upon order rather than in response te any popular desire or need. THE WAR-GRAFT INQUIRY ATTORNEY GENERAL DAUGHER TY'S plan for a sort of interior tribunal within the Department of Justice te survev war-graft cases new pending or selected for prosecution nnd te sift out these that may be "pressed te a successful conclusien'' hns many obvious disadvantages. It im plies, te begin with, that a jail sentence is the worst punishment that can be Inflicted upon a war grafter and that prosecution is useless in enses that cannot be sustained by evidence adequate te convince n jury of the actual guilt of accused individuals or groups. Thnt is net n proper view of the situation. Nine-tenths of the punishment which nor mally is Inflicted for crimes such ns the Attorney General's Department Is setting out te investigate comes with exposure and public criticism. If there were grafters clever enough te keep themselves within the limits of the law, while they took a criminal ndvantage of the Government and the pub lic In a crisis, they shouldn't be granted Im munity from the light of an official Investi gation. Opponents nf the Administration in Con gress, like the political enemies of Mr. Dnugherty himself, will net fnll new or in the future te draw the attention of the country te the unusual nature of the selec tive system in question, It will be inti mated and openly charged that the "sieve" In the Department of Justice could easily b? made te serve n double purpose. In the end it would be hard te prove that cases abandoned by the Department of Justice after a survey by the special tribunal were net put nslde for special reasons net de fined in the current statements of Mr, Dnugherty'H policy. Tbe Attorney Geni rral's office ought te fellow the conventional line of procedure. It should gather all available evidence and present It in the usual way before an open court. Other wise the Attorney General will almost cer tainly be accused by his enemies of actually playing favorites in the war-graft cases. u A Nebraska candidate Oblique for the United .States Senate is campaigning hv Indirection He Is traveling the State lecturing en the radio and never by nnv chance does he refer either te himself or te politics. After he has left town bllllxjards brletly announce his candidacy. There may be here n tip for Congress. Preceding n vote en the tariff or the bonus. Representa tives or Senators may talk briefly of base ball. golf, home brew or some ether foreign subject. The proceedings being free from bent need net be prolonged nnd the Natien's business will therefore be expedited. Mrs. McCermlck says Oh. Sir! Oser is a fortune hunter If Shakespeare be taken as authority the name of Mathllde's fiance ta lusKiui answer le an cnarssaa. m ail i n.rt lit eui. ur. cuniiise aan: ! i. i questions, te all pleas, atf it as? fee use!, abeglW,ABd netMM'ewfcMsli Uiit5 I'cMMren get practical attoveew. as a cenversaWa-al stensan. ' iViTea beaunl" --WHi? l fti . jZL7.t?l j'! BW---' - t ! Tn V1JJbbbbbbsbsV?vJ ' 'F ' utuwtmnc AS ONE WOMAN SEES IT Director of Public Health Gives Illus tration of Hew Technique Wins a Way for Itself While Haphazard Methods Are Scrapped By SARAH D. LOWRIE ONE of the most popular women of her day made a remark in my presence that has stuck In my mind ever since, while little by little I have come te agree with her verdict. "It is net se much what jeu de as hew you de it thnt counts," What the artist calls finish nnd the sci entist calls technique and the clergy call "manner" and the man in society calls charm nnd the drcssmnkcr calls style; what the teacher is partial te his scholar because of and the builder fires his carpenters If they lack Is just that power of doing a thing well, whatever It is, from n hundred yard dash te lending an orchestra. It takes trouble, but dear me, hew it snvea trouble In the end; and no way mere than In our Intercourse with one another. A compliment badly delivered can be a sort of Insult, and a rebuke well delivered need net be an Insult. It is all in the way it is done. There is nothing se stupid really as te have te undo what one hns done because it has been done badly; that Is, done without a clear realization of the consequences. And we say of n person that he hns poise or thnt he locks balance becnusc either he gets his balance before he moves te his end or he falls te poise his weight for a moment before he springs te the next point. A GREAT deal used te be sold about un conscious grace of manner, but manners have te be conscious nets until they become second nature nnd arc unconscious graces. I think, tee. that most of us can testify thnt the trouble we put ourselves te when we nre considerate well mannered is child's play te the trouble we nre put te for being inconsiderate bad-mannered. Se In our human intercourse it nctually pnys te have technique, just ns it docs In tennis or golf. We get there quicker by doing it well and In geed form. I am mere and mere struck with hew technique Is winning n way for itself along every line of work, nnd hew the old hap hazard guessing methods nre being scrapped. I saw an instance of that the ether day down en the office tnble of the Director of Public Health. There were three blue prints of the city streets showing the conditions in the city with regard te typhoid fever in the months of February, March nnd April. Very minute red dots Indicated the whereabouts of the cases ever the area of the city. In February there were two dots down in the Third Ward in a certain division and perhaps one street npart. In March there were about six red dots In the same locality, nnd In April some sixteen red dots or mere. The rest of the city wns practically Im mune, or nt least the cases were widely scattered, nnd with the cenvnlescenee of the case in any particular locality there had been no new cases. Plainly, something was wrong down there . in the Third Ward, and in thnt cne par ticular locality. The question was what? I asked the Director if they had found out, and he said yes, after a very careful sift ing of nil the possible means of infection, they hnd found the "carrier" et the disease. In this case the cause of the Infection was a woman who without being ill heiself was just a walking typhoid-fever carrier from the Infection that she nourished with her own bleed. She wns a cook, nnd with the feed she prepared she innocently, but none the less fatally, scattered poison. BEING new a proved carrier, she can be quarantined by the health authorities, which Is very hard en her. no doubt, but n life-snver for her fellow men. I thought ns I looked at the maps and followed the Direc tor's story of the expert agencies set In mo tion te track down the possible causes and prove the real cause hew much we owed te his technique nnd thnt of his associates under ills careful und progressive regime. Dr. Furbush has mere than most n sense of great nnd really Imaginable kindness in his way of accomplishing his great work of caring for the city sick. His first object, of course, wns te cure or te alleviate suffering of the body, but ns the new wards or the renovated old wards nf the city hospitals grew under his thoughtful planning nnd mul tiplied, he has shown an eager and per sistent desire te reach out and make the circumstances of Illness and of trouble nnd of death easier. Net enlv hns he done effective work ns agent of the city for the city sufferers, but the wuy it has been done is gradually being lifted up into a plane of scientific kindness ns well as brotherly love. Fer Instance, In the plnns for the morgue new under way out at the Municipal Hos pital there Is a real accomplishment of merciful kindness carried out in bricks and mertnr. Te these of us who have net had the agony of losing some one very near and dear of a contagious disease, the ruthlcssness of the burial prescribed by law and safety has never been brought home. But the Impessl- Diiuy out ni me .uunicipnt wards for con tagious diseases under ordinary circum stances for the family te sec the' body after death has wrought great misgivings nnd anxious pain in many hearts and minds. Often, tee, for persons te whom a burial service and friends nt the service arp In some sense a comfort nnd even a satisfac tion, the restrictions of the law concerning contagious and infectious cases are a real tragedy. BY THE arrangements of the new build ing out nt the Municipal Hospital, where all the contagious cases that cannot be cared for nt home nre taken, the new building te which thp bodies of the fatal cases arc taken after death has been made with n chapel te which any company can be admitted without fenr of contagion There is a place for the clergy te robe and for the family te gather, and then, where the altar would be in a church, there is a great glass window looking out en n little garden plot of (lowers, which in its turn Is con cen nected with nnether part of the building used for the reception and care of the bodies. The body in Its casket is placed in the bed of flowers, and then the curtain covering the window Is raised by an electric button, se that these whose right It Is te sec the body can de se under the most peaceful nnd least harrowing conditions possible. Then the curtain is drawn nnd the casket sealed hermetically and delivered te the family for burial. That seems an obvious thing te have thought of nnd te have done long age but it is one of the many things that are being accomplished by the far-seeing prevision of the City Council under the present direc torate for the hrst time. I SAW the firBt blue prints en that desk, tee, for the new plnnt out at Bvberrr-1 for which n fund of $:t(K).00() from the city Is just nvnllable for the segregation nnd core and training of the mentally deficient chll- ureii " " w. iiiu morons in the varying grades of helplessness The plant is te be built somewhat en the nliVn if Letwich Village, the New Verk Vta," colony for such cases. This In Interesting te PhiladclphtnnB because Its chief instlgate? nnd very efficient J-dmlnlstrnter hT ' of Dr. Themas Klrkbride, whose' work our own hesp tal for mental cases is Krl authoritative throughout the world. F,i,k lln Klrkbride has equaled his father's work JfiP n A'' ""S-fl'A. .,.1..i.?pWng Letwich YUiage " "iiuucipnin is actually accepting the work of oue of IPl. own "en These of us who were in his office the ether day asked the Director of Health If he bad any mere plans afoot, and he S,0v",l UB n plan for remodeling an old building fw n convalescent ward for children who Vew 8L.hf,rt !f "JJK" "? .""& .'ever or uipm""'"' " "" "liui ee aumcient t watched nnd brought up te par.nt home. te accommodate al the children who .will . A Li 1 In ' W 1 ffil 'V r1 J r- Jm- Ejpr BaAgv'cJBnSVLigBgiii mvP'iasu lgaftft l'l " C mtmmmmmmmmmmr90mmm3!lmM , aiiTi''nBJKilssat Jk 1 JsW l NOW MY IDEA IS THIS! Daily Talks With Thinking Philadelphia en Subjects They Kneiv Best CARL A. HUMMEL On New fdea In Athletic Training ANEW iden and one which is working out admirably in mass athletic trnlnltih is new being put Inte effect In Philadelphia, nccerdlng te Carl A. Hummel, supervisor of athletics for boys In the public schools. "Athletic- work," said Mr. Hummel. Is new being conducted en strictly scicntihe lines, especially when npplled te mess train ing. Therefore some innovations hnve been made and they are working very success fully. Te lllustrnte one of the mnin prin ciples which we nre new following. I will speak of a representative track meet. At the first track meet of the junior lilgli schools of this city, nt Kensington, which comes off in a day or se. each school will send eighty boys, divided into four teams of twenty each. "These eighty will be the honor students In the track and field work of the year nnd they represent the pick of from WOO te IbOU pupils. Eliminating the "Star" "The great point of this system is thnt it will ellminate the 'star,' because, each of the members of the four teams will take part in every nthletlc event. The points scored by each individual will go, net te him, but te his school. Then the tetnls will be added up and divided by the number of contestants nnd the uverage thus obtained will be the average nf the school for the event. The total of the points in the vnrleus events will be the nvernge of the school for the du.v nnd the meet. "This course has a number of distinct advantages. In the first plnce it does nwny with the possibility that nny one or two athletic boys enn 'run away' with the meet, nnd, in the second place, it does nwny with the danger of over-sperlnllzatlen in the sev eral events. "But perhaps the greatest nnd best of oil Is the effect which this method of scoring has upon the less brilliant of the contestants. The child which needs athletic training the most Is usunlly the one who does net rnnk nt the very top. The one who docs this Is usually sufficiently interested in the sport te de his best under nny circum stances nnd does net need the opportunities se much ns de some ethers. This method of scoring puts them all en a level, ns all the points scored by any of them go te the school nnd net te the credit of nny one con testant. Many Field Days Held "We nre tr.ving te get nwny from the spectacular In athletics und work, net only in the mass, but te encourage these exer cises which have been found te be the most beneficial te the children. Formerly only the best were chosen te represent the school nnd the scores were Individual, but new we nre getting te the idea of plnjlng gnjnes with greater numbers. We new hnve ten voile) bnfl courts nnd ten captnlnbnll courts, se that twenty teams arc nblc te play the games at the same time. Thus within two hours every child in n school will tnke part lu the game. "There are four essentials In athletics running', jumping, throwing nnd climbing. All games are simply some form of thesn four essential nthletlc activities; there is nothing else, us every activity falls into one of these four classifications, Te test the nil-round nthletlc ability of n child, nil thnt is necesbary is te tpst his ability In one activity In each of the four groups. "Jumping is nne of the most valuable p. erclses for children, nnd n long step for ward was taken when It was decided te have n jumping pit placed In every yard of the . nvl...lMn minnlnw nnd nil Uf city. 'iiirui ',,"",', """ s-iHuuing i-an be done equally well wllh a cement or brick vnrd. but the jar In jumping Is tee great te be safe en se 'hard n surface, 'therefore It hes been decided te take out eight of the cement blocks In every yard which has the nil-cement yards nnd put In a jumping pit of sand. Increase In Interest "The Increase in interest In athletics has been very noticeable en the pan of i. veunger people, during the Inst three years. It was undoubtedly festcrcil te n censid. ernble extent by the war euis, but it ml been retained and we arc doing nil wc cm te stimulate It. "The children practically conduct (ie,n nthletlc councils themselves nnd they ni-e closely linked up with the regular school work. Lath class has two teams and tin. captains of these tenuis form the council The teacher or principal nets' only in nn zzEZ? Xui'zizs virnuy HeJ5. no Thus the emetittratttu !? government. HONK ! HONK ! ! "Se great hns been the Increase in the interest in athletics tlfat new practically every child in the school Is n member of the school athletic association. Each one gets n button which admits him te nil the meets, except where the space Is limited, as In the enses of indoor meets, when u definite number is allotted te each school. It Is n notable fact that at the recent Penti relay carnivnl every high school, every junior high school, every continuation school and about eighty of the elementary schools in the city participated. At their own field day last Saturday. 0100 children attended and 400 teams took part in the contests. Ibis certainly leeks as though the interest in the best kind of athletics was perma nent. Mnny Activities Covered "This year there will be thirty-seven ath letic activities, se that each child will surely find nt least one in which he is cspecinllv Interested. Heretofore, the teacher has been busy training n team, say for baseball, and uwice hns devoted his time te eighteen bows, the first and second teams. "Under the new idea, the snme teacher C"" """"y handle from OTiO te 7."0 bevs. Willie one team plajs, members of the ether n, i n8 ,ft'rc,, timekeepers and ether effi- m , . r,ir" tllp 0,,lt'1' ,eam I,laVN and (he officials , an; chosen from the team which has finished. "In order that the signnls may be heard, the teacher uses a revolver te start und step the games nt the halves. This is neces sary, because sometimes us many ns slxtv slxtv feur tennis are plnjlng at one time. When the first group of two teams has finished plajing, their places nre taken bv the second, also made up of two sets of teams. It Is deemed inadvisable te have mere than two very argc groups, as otherwise the chil dren would get tired of nwaltlng their turn In the larger schools there arc from four te six nctlvitlcs going en nt the same tlme. "The same general plan has worked equally well In the elementary schools. This J ear the track meet occupied four davs and next year, with the Interest In nt'hletics maintained, this number will have te be increased. i "Wrc IV "lse KettlK nwnj from the classification as te groups, such as lie t heavy, etc nd nre nfse .hanging f? ,,i physical education te health education, w" try te Impress the children with the value f geed health und with the idea that b d health Is abnormal." a J"" What De Yeu Knew? QUIZ 1. Who Is the present I'renil. r nf Canada' - ""a R,M "? 3. What was the name of the tariff tnur Passed during the Wilsen udmlnlstrT i- JXt"11 ,'s " dragoman" t. wnOTJ! Xxt,Mi ""'" "EBSB 8 WSlberta? th "'ree Cl,lef rivc,s f ft. What Is copra" l' Hnnme? U'e hhrAMi M,c set its Answers te Yesterday's Quiz 1. Th.. Pxprtssleii. "At the fee- of C.anvi. 1W." metaphorically means at the feet of wisdom The quotation Is from the twenty.secend chapter of Acts thlrrt verse, which runs; "I am ve'rl v n man which am a Jew, born In Tnrsu? a city in Gullclu. yet brought up n this city at the feet of Oiimnllel at rt according te lha perfect manner if .V, law of the fathers, and S "..tt unto Cled, ns e nil are tiffi ,iiVylf!us :. I'rlnce Itupprecht of liavnrla, ene ef'the srArw?firwn.ttdne- though net in the direct mntn iini' Sua' Uarl W" KingilneCf a The Fortunate Isles Is another nnm the Canary Islands, aSwatehT,,',,' slen In the Atlant c Ocean eir n? const of Africa, "' erf the 4. A curbstone nretind the mouth of a wi, Is qilled n putenl, a Wt" 5. About 000,000 American soldiers actum reached the act ve battlefronts in .ily World War. """renta In the 0. The heroine of Shakespeare's m,,. "fymbel no." is imnnn' ,l s l,lil. 7. Columbus dlBCevertd Arncrlcn tlmt u . ?.il.L0"0 of tne Bahama Islands in1" '"lands, en n r rimy, S "Trtiat nn n vwl sl.t.i. a... jay" Is a quotation from Jehn nfC" den's play, "Arungzebe," Pry- ,,j i. ;."" ." r-lomerrow win I P?.mSr ' 5fnalS "" thank' you. i 5y - " reVthaW?' "a- mercl'" ' 10, Friday !8 the Mennmmsdan Subbath. SHORT CUTS All's Fair te the conscientious booster. Records and precedents are only niad ie dc smasneu. A few mere victories and McCumber win De .a wreck. - The seed book school of literature is new giving way te the railroad folder school. Senater Pat Harrison hasn't any Idea, Ivinf It tie... ,i I... I.. .j ,, I . ..,. it vui-m iu jj've 1'cejuc an cuueauea. .. , Study of musical comedy forces the be-' .7 . , ' th,'', ,sn,t Iulch thinking done In thinking parts. : Curpentlcr's willingness te fight Demp spy again shows hew n man will de 'niet anything for money. And the mere culpable Mr. Daugherty should prove thp grenter the necessity that Mr. Merse should stand trial. .Don't blame June tee much for yesttr day s weather. Just for a little while she thought her name was April. (loedness gracious! We're almost nt excited ever the McCermlck matrimonial affairs as vye are nt the possibility that cutis is inhabited. The allegation of Chicnge police that there is in existence u nntlenal ring of automobile thieves will interest rather than surprise car owners. ticrniany is due te discover that the money that makes the mare go is net born, of a printing press. Stabilization Implies u iiuifu ui iinuwicr color. Se far as wp knew Kensington Is the list community te crown her May Queen in June. This puts her eleven month" iincaii or tup precession. The New Yerk haberdasher from whom armed times srnle n hiitwli nt nuliin rli. ably hopes thev will eventually play the star,! i..,.i ,,, mill, Hum ei it party. noting tne Possibility nf tivn mure municipal golf links, our Official Janitor pridefully notes the fact that African Oelfl manes its own appropriations. A former Coverner of Texns and hi' win- arc netn candidates for the Democratic iioiimiuiieu ter tne united States Senate. Hew run they hope for harmony In the I'll! I., . Dispatch from Naples snys locusts are ill-Milling mips, cievcr and corn, ret "corn read "wheat, hnrlev nm! nnt"tlti "corn" which Jeseph hoarded in the land ui rK.M''' If it be true thnt thirty-one memberi , .,.,- .v.,, n Kimiuaiiiis cinss ac rrinccnw have never kissed n girl, it mny be a striklnl illustration of strict obedience te the ancient. ndjurntien ".Mind the paint." i. ln wer,(1 de move, quoted Dcniesthenrt Mcdinnis. Here's the Leiiisinnn I.eglell' tu re eensli crlnc a hill Xn nmliihit i,phi.,ei horse races, and It seems hut yesterday since nm uniiemiiu iiuu-ry was running. War stocks of poisonous gases and flame throwers are being Imrrlnii m ti, ,ii.trlt; surrounding Naple.s, where locusts. In some niaics a ioei neon, are eating up thp crepi. 1 he slogan nf the pest is prebnblv, "W Naples ami die." The author of "flood-by, Delly Graf," hns lust died in the Mnnlmii.n a,n ifei- pltnl. He was blind, insane, n pauper anj a reproach te the philosopher who dcclirti , he didn't care who wrote the Notion's !, It no migiu write its songs. Auditor General Samuel R. Lewis a"' Harmen M. Kephart, former Stat' Treasurer, have announced thnt they new ready for an Investigation. There " here cemmenuaiiie agreement. One epinwi However, inai tuncrences may develop ii". A New erk Judge has vrry prepetlf repudiated the unwritten law as justlncl' tleu for homicide. Hut the common- sense view nere expressed will continue s have little weight with u masculine jnl dealing witn u pretty woman whatever i etlcnsr. fl The pardoning of the Heading trJ men cenvicieti ei respensiDlllly rerj iiryn aiujii disaster win cause no amount of pretest. Culpable though law- leunutneui, tne public Is net. la te. stress taa errors that breuibt -the niuiSBiueni, ., VI &Kmm)LMJl, .,: -' .r ?,- .. NM vvAVWa'.! i'diWis. i,rZTyiO?l'l.tA