Public accounting consists, in general, of the verification and analysis of financial records and their interpretation thru statements and reports, the installation of bookkeeping and accounting systems, the preparation and correction of tax returns, particularly those pertaining to income tax, and the conduct of special investigations. Bookkeeping, on the other hand, pertains mainly to recording financial transactions in books of account. The public, as such, is not interested in the fitness of the bookkeeper, that being a matter of concern only to the employer. In the work of the public accountant, however, the public usually becomes an interested third party. For instance, when a corporation engages a public accountant to audit its books...