PUBLIC SCHOOL FINANCE 247 receive funds to which it is not entitled, while another district receives a smaller amount of state aid or none at all, because property is more generally assessed and the assessment ratio is kept at a relatively high level, doés not make equalization almost impossible and thus defeat the object of the system. The general relief grants are not intended to benefit only the needy districts. In fact, there may be some discrimina- tion against the needy districts. For example, a very poor district with less than fifteen pupils in average daily attend- ance is entitled to only $25 on account of the teachers’ quota, while districts that maintained an averagedaily attendance in the preceding year of fifteen pupils or more are entitled to $50 on account of each teacher. An offsetting factor, however, is that $25 to a very poor district with only a small school attendance may represent a larger proportion of the total expenses of the district than does $50 to a school district of the better grade. The pupil-days apportionment, as has been stated, depends largely on the residual amount in the state school moneys fund after certain special projects and the teachers’ quota apportionment have been covered. The residual amount varies considerably from year to year, and consequently a district is never certain as to the amount of funds it will receive until all of the other charges against the state school moneys have been determined. While this condition may constitute a handicap, it is difficult to see how it could be overcome without the adoption of some other system of aid that would not be based upon a residual dependent on a variety of factors. Although it appears that the equalization grants rest on an ansound basis and that the general relief grants are not made in accordance with needs, it would probably not be desirable to abolish these grants on the theory that assessed valuation is not a satisfactory basis for distributing state school funds. A school district naturally adjusts itself in accordance with the state distributions that it receives, and if a radical change were made considerable hardship would unquestionably result in certain instances. Nevertheless, it seems highly desirable that the system now in effect be analyzed by those in authority with a view to establishing standards as to assessed valuation that must be met if these aids are to be continued.