n JnnlJ.'ijmnjig'pwimi.iilL i-iiU-uHs-1 Sii-. iiii-fc ..lM stMi-Pifr.ii 3 i'. I. a, !v CtAnfttn dli Wgfcgrc FUItUG LEDGER COMPANY UrrtOs if. St coirns. rttiBi. Oftiiei II )jUilinitton,VlcPwiilltnt, JohnC Murtln, ifrf,rF Ana Treasurer! Philip B. Collins, John n. wlium. Directors, . EDiTonrAtiJiOAnm Cxbcs H. K. CcMIe, Chlfmn. Ife. fflfAL-T. r.tecutlre Editor JOHN d MARTM. General Business Manager -., iirir-n n i , . i hi Published a 1 1 y at rcBI.iO LtMtt Building, Independence Square, Philadelphia, tKTit, ,.,. Broad and Chestnut 8trel Atlantic Citt . .. rrfSS-r-'nlon BuIM!k NlW Toa 170-A, 3!etropolUan Tower CfttoMGO. ...91" Home insurance tlultdlng INOTN...,....,. S Waterloo Place, rail Mall, 8. W. . . NKWS BUREAUS t , , WAlHtftatOM fleiRAU ..... . .The Pott Rullding Nmr ITOSK ntiitio.... ...... i.... Th nun llulldln RtMK Hnrn ................. .00 Frledrlchstrasse V-fl.-tooK Hcttuu . . .,,,..,... ,2 Pall Mull Bait, B. TV. fM -ESjUU,. ..32 Rue Louis le Grand SU8SCMPT10N TERMS Br. tarrter, DslLt O.stT, alx cent. By mall, postpaid nntsM tt Phllaiielnhla. exepnt where forelKn oostare , In rMulred, DstLt omlt, ono month, twenty-five cents i lftl.T jslt, one ear, inree dollars aii mnu pun' ttrlptlotu payable In advance Bt. SOOfl WALNUT KI7VSTONE, MAIN 8000 ni i i .i 9 Attilrrit nit conrnunlcattoM to Evening Lfdger, indtptntttnee Square, rhlladelphla. It skkiw at thb riin.iDti.rim roTurric s SICON- clash Mail UAtTrn. V . A - PlIlWUrAFUIA, WEDNtSllAV FI.IllttMH 21, 1UIS. ft is better to hnve no statue than to have men ask whv you tccie honoied tn bronze. Battleships Arc Not Obsolete AMERICAN navnl constructors aro not far behind the Germans, even If they have not surpassed them. Francis T. Bowles, a shipbuilder who learned his trade while In the navy, has juot returned from Germany With a report that the exploit of the Ger man submarines In operating 800 miles from their base Is not remarkable. Five years ago the Salmon, an American submarine, went to Bermuda from New Yorlc and returned, a total distance of 1320 miles, or 660 miles from Its base. Our designers can make a ship to-, day which would doubtless surpass the Sal mon. The Importance of the submarine Is recog Titzcd by the Senate Committee on Naval Af fairs, which has amonded the naval appro priation bill so as to provldo for Ave seagoing vessels of this type. Instead of ono bb pro posed by the House. Senator Smoot Is anx ious that fifty should be built, and he has sought to offer an amendment to that ef fect carrying an appropriation of $30,000,000 for Immediate use. The Utah Senator is prematurely enthusi astic The war has not proved that the bat tleship is useless or that futuie wars are to be fought under water. The German cruisers have atqultted themselves well as com'merco destroyers, and the British battleships have thus; far succeeded In preventing any seri ous raid upon the English coast by a Ger man squadron. It is not likely that the Sen ate will follow Mr. Smoot's suggestion. ( It will be wiser If it waits until experts have decided what lessons the war has really taught before it enters upon any extravagant program in favor of one type of vessel. Senator Cummins 1b "Willin' " SENATOR CUMMINS has not yet said that he is not a candidate for the Republican IPresldentlal nomination next year. He Is not likely to say It. President Wilson can say that he is not a candidate In his own party because he knows that his party must nom inate him or admit that It has failed miser ably. But Mr. Cummins is not the whole Republican party, even If he Is a large part of what is left of the Progressive party. Other men besides the Iowa' Sonator nre eligible. We shall not be so unkind as to say thus early in the campaign that others would, make stronger candidates. Opinions differ on that point. Such strength as Mr. Cummins has comes from" Ws radicalism. He Is already toying with the question of prohibition, and has an nounced that the saloon must go. He would jot -the total prohibition vote on that issue If he would only announce his support of a prohibitory amendment to the National Con stitution. Perhaps he may go thus far be fore the summer is over and let the country know Just how he would abolish the saloon. He Is as strongly In favor of peace as of temperance. And he favors many other wholesome reforms, but the prohibition issue Is the pne on which his friends are appar ently counting the most. If they can pre vent the appearance of a Burchard In their councils with an unfortunate epigram about the opposition his boom Is likely to bo with us for several months. A Superb Animal Battling- With His Master IT Wllili do sport no harm If the notorious Jack Johnson falls to make an appearance at Juarez, This superb pugilistic animal, un trnmmeled by the discipline of social train ing, and nevertheless possessed of the means to gratify his brutal longings, by dedicating himself to a career of license and debauchery has managed to bring himself into general . disrepute, and there are leaders among his own race who are Inclined to think that he has done Jt great harm. He leaped into fame in his calling, without prejudice. In circumstances which called for moderation and tactfulness he displayed neither. Instead, he is a fugitive from Jus tice, a man without a country, a wanderer on the face of the earth. There is, it appears, a general desire In puglllstlo circles to bring his career to an end, but Is it worth while? There are many citizens, not prejudiced by any means, who are convinced that the best thing to do with Jack Johnson la to leave him alqne. He la flirting with a conqueror more certain than any man's punch. The sport of pugilism can well afford tq let things rest M they are and not search the highways and byways for Impossible "white hopes." The Golden Injunction jMTrNaW THYSEF" was inscribed in let XV tera of gold on the temple at Delphi, .- .. , .. 1 was the subject ot me enipn Bermon oy SUIiop WHHams, of Michigan, In St. Ste-. pijen Church here yesterday. From Greece to jpblladelphla, from the day of the oracles to this day in the twentieth century, these ttvo -words have containe4 the essence of f racUcal wisdom. Tha men who have risen hays known them- mtivm at the start. They have been intel !wtwUy hvueat and have never tried to de Ihwmselves, If they haye failed they iwiytf tftkywj count ef stock to discover the WIM J iJwMr wn lack of equipment, thefr w 8fc f femeaight or their own. Jack of i-Aiiajti &Rd industry. Their bmlns, their Afc tftW wJUti tb& Bhyissl strength, ';n mhi Ibe tools with whlett thy mu wj flwtr wav Th' 5em that they fflust wntam-ajwa te tatrt 4 tfcetr power and nmr altwi8, f jf wm t w tbm to an? youne person or any old person than to kndw himself. This is true Iti matters df the spirit as well as In physical affairs. Every wise per son will strip his soul bare and examine it to discover what It lacks. The coward must confront his cowardice and the traitor his treachery, the glutton his gluttony and the sensualist his sensuality It he wouttl know hlmoelf. Then, if ho Is please1 with the prospect, he can continue In his sensuality, his gluttony, his treachery or his cowardice, and know himself for what he Is Try It lo nlRht. when the rest of the world is asleep, and see what profit you can gel from the test. Do Worth-while Citizens Tonight JOHN G. JOHNSON declares that tho Con-nully-Seger-Costollo ordinance now before Councils Is legally defective, "and, I am In clined to think, fatally defective." There Is every reason to believe that It was made so deliberately. This means that $100. 000 of the people's money was to be used to hold an election, tho result of which would be foreordained to bastardy by tho courts. Not only, then, was It tho Intent of the obstruc tionists to defeat lapld ttanslt, but they pur posed, In addition, to waste $100,000 of otlifr people's money In doing It, to say nothing of the $500,000 already appropriated for tho re location of sewers preparatory to the con struction of the loop. Yet It Is the men saturated with such ex travagance who shout economy and expect to deceive this community. Tho city wakes tonight. Not the weak, the timid or the subservient, but the big, strong men of Philadelphia, with a glorious prece dent to urge them on and a broad vlslqn to guide them, intend to speak their will, to Inject some of their own spirit Into spine less Councllmen, to let It bo known that not one man, or three men, or a dozen men, through trickery or otherwise, will bo per mitted to strip the city of its future, hold it back, obstruct Its progress, bankrupt Its communal facilities and bind It Indefinitely to an antiquated syBtem which even Buenos Aires, In South America, has repudiated and tit ken measures to supplant. Tho crisis Is real. It cannot bo mistaken. Either citizens will have the kind of city they want or the kind of city a few design ing politicians want them to have. CltlzenB will either rule or be ruled, demand or be commanded, enforce their rights or be ridi culed and scorned. Not Councils as a whole, but an Inner circle of obstructionists stands in the way, men already pilloried before this community, who in the past fe. weeks have revealed themselves, the Interests they serve and the Influences that impel them. Let tonight's meeting be a smashing blow for the Independence of Councils us well as the freedom of citizens In tho ranhs. And let It be such a demonstration that its voice will drive the legislative body Into compli ance with the purpose of the community. HlKtorv Is In the making. Every citizen should make himself worth while by taking part In it. Real Burden Bearers THE burden of unemployment rests more heavily upon the shoulders of tho wife of the man out of work than upon anyone, else. She must feed her children. The instlnqt In her heart impels her to starve herself that her offspring may have food. She must be provident. She must make every scrap do its full duty. She must e that there Is no waste. She must make 25 cents do tho work of a dollar. And when tho clothes wear out and there is no money for new she must pinch and scrimp and patch to make the old last until the husband can get work and money to supply the needs of his family. Tho husband Is not heartless. He' bears his burden also. But It is the peculiar duty of the wife to look after the home Her care ful, self-sacrificing work in the back of tho house, while they put on a bold front In the sitting room, is now saving many n family from hunger and preventing tho appeal by many to the charitableness of neighbors for relief. The small savings are stretched to roako them last till the lean days pass and tho bread-winner goto an opportunity" to win tho bread. And tho heroio women who are doing this splendid work aro not complain ing. They ore fighting In the trenches for their homes oi truly as any soldier on the Continent, and they deserve all honor and all respect. John G. Johnson was learned In tho law before the University made him an LU D. It Is understood that the "Chln-Chln" dresses for spring wear are Intended espe cially for afternoon teas. There Is some reason to suppose that the Legislature Is considering a carnival .of good things for the Organization this session. It does not make much difference who the next Republican candidate for President Is, ho will pot have Champ Clark running against him. John D. Long says that thero would have been no war If there had been no German army. But would there have been any Ger many? Adam blamed the Hvoman, but when the bankruptcy court closes up the affairs of bis sons of the present day they blame "the trusts" for their failure, Albert J. Beverldge and Glfford Plnchot have been studying military strategy In Eu rope. 'Perhaps they have discovered the reason for their defeat In the great battle of Armageddon. Marse Henry Wfttterson thinks that Repre sentative Bartholdt should be expelled from Congress because of his German sympathies. But this Is too severe punishment for a mild advocate of world-wide peace. When Congressmen try to arouse the mili tary spirit by saying that New York is not safe from a foreign Invasion, do they ex pect the rest of the country to forget that New York was taken by the foreigners long ago? Praneis T. Bowles, builder of warships by profession, who has been in Germany on business since December 12, returns home with the oplrjon, for public consumption, that Gnmtay will win." Th Kaiser I mff tkat Gsnuariy will wta. WASHINGTON Id NOTHING AT ALL - - - - -i The Rest of the Country Is Itespon- 4 sible for Whatever Is Done There. The President Ought to Establish n Zone In Which Mr. Bryan Should Not Express Opinions. By J. C. HEMPHILL 'TON'T lake your politics from Wnshlng- J-' ton," said Senator Chilton, of West Vir ginia, "Go out Into the country If you really wnnt to find out what the people nre talking about nnd what they think on public ques tions." That Is very much tho same Idea that has been expressed by tho President on moro than one occasion. In his first talk to the newspaper folk ho charged them that he cared absolutely nothing about tho editorial opinions of tho papers, but thnt he was much Interested In what went out from Washington In the slmpo of "news"; that ho wished they would send out from Washing ton what the people of tho rost of tho coun try wore thinking about! nnd that Is what thoy havo been doing, because Washington, as siirh, counts for nothing. It has no politi cal standing. It has no opinion on any sub ject that need be considered by any candi date for any political ofllce. Its people havo less to do with their own government than tho Filipinos, who aro the subject of such tender solicitude on tho part of our very gcneroUB Government. Washington Itself Starts Nothing Washington Is simply tho clearing houBO of the opinions of tho rest of tho country as represented by the chosen spokesmen of tho several States, the opinions of Its own cltl rens count for nothing. Washington proper "starts nothing." "Tho country" to which Senator Chilton would appeal Is alone responsible for what ever Is done here, and tho country ought to be ashamed of much that has been done, and of nothing so much as of tho very sharp distinctions that havo been mado by tho majority of Congress In Its treatment of honest capital and honest labor. That thero Is honesty on both sides Is admitted frankly In private conversation but discredited In of ficial action. The lobby is right or the lobby Is wrong, according as It represents ono side or tho other. The. caucus Is right or tho caucus Is wrong, npcordlng as it decides one way or another on predetermined pol icies touching certain questions Involving po litical Issues. When a manufacturer or a shipowner shows his head the word passes down the line to hit It When a case Involving tho true rights of labor has been taken through all tho courts, ftom the lowest to the highest, and has been decided according to law and tho evidence, the "lobby," headed by n for mer Democratic candidate for President as a paid attorney, appears, nnd, backed by tho Congressmen holding "union cards," seeks to Back tho treasury to the extent of more than a quarter of a million dollars for tho sake of thoso who have been fairly convicted of violating the anti-trust law, the same law the violation of which by tho "men higher up," In tho opinion of tho holders of the "union cards," should subject them to Im prisonment In the penitentiary. To this base use has tho much-heralded cry of "equal rights to all, special privileges to none," como at last. What Everybody Ought to Knovv And this Is "official Washington." The country ought to know moro about It, fairly nnd squarely. The sugar planters In Louisi ana, the cotton manufacturers and their em ployes in tho Cnrollnas, tho Iron miners and their laborers in Alabama nnd Pennsylvania, the beet growers in the West, the rnllroad owners, managers, engineers, brakemen and shopmen all over the country, and tho farm ers ought to consider tho question without prejudice. The President ought tn toll the country about It. that only "ofllclal Wash ington" Is to blame for it, and that the trend of much that hns been dono hero has been toward State socialism, which means the end of representative government In the United States. Mr. Bryan, who has bepti much censured for his neglect of his proper official duties, persists In pernicious political activity. In an address to the Washington Chapter of the American Institute of Banking Saturday night ho expressed the opinion that tho pas sage of the Federal reserve act had "broken the political power of the bankers," and Imf mediately afterward declared that "If the President of the United States, the Senate and the Houso had not been freo from finan cial bias you could not have had this great boneflt, the reserve act." The President him self upon the passage of the net expressed his acknowledgments to tho Republicans in tho Senato and Houso, who nro commonly accredited with very close political connec tions with the bankers of the country, for their highly prized assistance In putting this law on tho statute books, nnd the Treasury Department of the United States will cheer fully testify to the invaluable aid it liaB re ceived from the bankers of the country In the measures of relief It has undertaken for the benefit of the business interests of tho country; and this was precisely the sort of "political power" the bankers exercised be fore tho new law was passed. Bryan Outside His Zone Not content with his statement, which' could only have the effect of discrediting the bankers, Mr. Bryan charged his audience thus: "Don't forget your depositors. I am told that more than 85 per cent, of the de positors Is the public, while tho remaining 15 ppr cent, are the owners of the bank. One of the failures of bankers Is to forget their depositors, and for that reason I have tried to have legislation passed which would pro tect them," Government ownership of rail roads followed the free coinage of silver, and Government guarantee of bank deposits Is the paramount Issue now commended to the people. Mr. Bryan's statement to the bank ers was utterly misleading and as mischiev ous as It was misleading. Bank depositors are already amply protected. The law pro vides for that. The law has provided for It all along. Bankers do not forget their de positors, else they would have no depositors. Not every man can bo a banker mora than every man can be a Chautauqua lecturer. Banking Is a legitimate business. It is reg ulated by law, and under the new banking law It Is very securely guarded. It would be as much the function of government to guarantee the merchant against loss on the goods that he sells, the farmer against the failure of his crops and falling prices on tho stuff that he raises, the manufacturer against the fluctuations of the markets anJ the lec turer against the fickleness of the multitude, which occasionally grows tired of platitude loguenily pronounced, u H wsoW b tsr tha i CiVik1!? . S . ". S T 1 ' ' li ;'M n r ,1 t' mu i i 111,. mA) "iftLi',lw&1LVKK<lMtln2CtlXMUtKti!BBKKOBto Government to guurantco bank deposits, Be sides, Mr. Bryan has no authority to speak for tho Government on questions of finance. That business belongs especially to the Sec retary of the Treasury, Mr. McAdoo, who does not Interfere with tho uffnlrs of tho Department of State. If the President would declare a zone Into which Mr. Bryan should not attempt to sail his lightly bal lasted craft thero would not bo so much mis understanding among the people "out in tho country" as to the sincere purposes of the Administration. COUNTING THE STARS Not So Formidable a Taslc as It Seems. Two or Three Hours Would Suffice. From tho University of Wisconsin Bulletin, DID you ever try to count nil tho stars you could see? Or, thinking this a hopeless task, did It ever occur to you that flvo thou sand would be a generous estimate of their number? This is true: Tho stars of the sky, visible from any one place, may bo counted In a few hours under ordinary circumstances, if tho night Is clear. They do not exceed two or three thousand, the exact number de pending upon atmospheric conditions and the keenness of the individual eye. Yet, however many nro seen, thero is al ways the vague Impression of more Just be yond tho limit of visibility. In fact, much more than half of what wo call starlight comes from stars thnt aro separately too small to be seen, but whose number is so groat as to more thnn make up for their in dividual falntness. Tho Milky Way is Just such a cloud of faint stars, and through the telescope breaks up Into shining points, each nn Independent star. These faint stars, which are found In every part of the eky, ns well aa In the Milky Way, ore usually called telescopic, tn recognition of the fact that they can bo seen only in the telescope, while tho other brighter ones nro known as lucid stars. Nearly nineteen centuries ago St. Paul noted that "one star dlffereth from another star In glory," and no more apt words can be found to mark the dlfferonco of brightness which the stars present. Even prior to St. Paul's day,, the ancient Greek astronomers had divided the Btars In respect of brightness into six groups, which the modern astron omers still use, calling each group a magni tude. Thus a few of tho brightest stars are said to be of the first magnitude, the great mass of falpt ones which are Just visible to the unaided eye are said to be of the sixth mag nitude, and intermediate degrees of bril liancy are represented by the intermediate magnitudes, second, third, fourth and fifth. The telescopic stars show among themselves an oven greater range of brightness than do the lucid ones, and the system of magni tudes has been extended to Include them, the faintest star visible in the greatest telescope of the present time being of the 20th or 31st magnitude. The word magnitude has nq reference to the size of the stars, but only to their bright ness. Some stars do not remain always of the same magnitude, but change their bright ness from time to time, and this not on ac count of cloud or mist In the atmosphere, but from something In the star itself. TheBe are called variable stars, and tq their number we must also add certain extraordinary stars that flash up unexpectedly where nothing had been seen before, abide for a time and then die away. These are called new or tem porary stars. FIFTH AVENUE, 1915 The motorcars go up and down. The painted ladles sit and smile. Along the sidewalk, mile on mile. Parade the dandles of the town. The latest hat, the latest gown. The tedium of their souls beguile. The motorcars so up and dowp. The painted ladles lt snd smile. In wild and Icy water drown A thousand for a rook-bound Isle, Ten tboussnd in a black defile Perish for Justice or a crown, The motorcars go up and down UrM Hxstiera tn CeUUr WsJtlA UNBALANCED IF ITALY AND RUMANIA JOIN ALLIES Kaiser's Spring War Plans Contemplate That Event Germany and Austria-Hungary See No Serious Menace in the New Foes Madness With a Method By DR. ERVIN-ACEL Reserve Lieutenant of tho Auetro-Hungnrlan army, managing editor of the Hungarian-American Reformed Sentinel, city rdltor of the Hungarian Dally. SOME thousands of Russians enptured, somo few yards gained by Joffre's men, some English ships torpedoed by Gorman sub marines and the chilly winter Is gone. The fighting armies aro frozen to the cold earth, and a pause In tho hostilities, looking like a deadlock, brings, temporary rest to tho frozen and weary combatants. Tho winter cam paign will scarcely develop any surprises, but while important strategical movements nro not to be expected when the battle ground Is In the ley grip of Boreas, the spring will tell a different tale: for all of Europe Is now preparing for that time. The German spring plan Is worked out upon the event of Italy's or Rumania's Join ing tho Allies. I venture to say that on August 3, when the Kaiser declared war on Russia, thero were tucked away In some dusty corner of tho drawer of Von Moltke's table tho moblllratlon plans against Italy and against Rumania. Those of which we now know agalnBt the countries of Russia, France, England, Belgium were not the only ones then prepared, you may bo sure. I am very well informed. Italy and tho Gorman Wall If Italy enters tho war she will try to break through the Austro-Itallan frontier nnd to land troops on the Adriatic shores of Hungary. But thero the mountains are so strongly fortified that a successful Invasion is Impossible. If Italy wishes to support tha Allies In the best manner, sho would trans port her troops by way of Torino-Lyons to the Franco-German battlefields. This would mean that General Joffro would have 1,200, 000 more men to contuse their skulls on the German Iron wall stretching from Basle to the North Sea. With the new English army the forces In France will Burely outnumber the Kaiser's forces three to one. On tho other hand bear In mind that the German western army Is protected by a triple line of fortifications stronger even than these of Antwerp: and furthermore tho fact that In accordance with the modern strategy of the great Von Moltke, a stronger army can win against Us enemy only by extending Its battlefropt. If the numerically stronger army Btretches out its line, the weaker must do the same to avoid the certainty of being surrounded. Under ordinary conditions the smaller force will be thinned by the extend ing and cut to pieces. The German at tack In August on Paris and the French English counter attack proved the truth of this theory. But can General Joffro extend the Franco German battle lino? In no case. For It rosts Its left elbow on little Bwltrerland, Its right on the shores of tho North Sea. There fore the Germans are strong enough to with stand the Allies even with Italy added to their number. And do not forget that Italy must leave a considerable army In Tripoli, too. What Rumania's Entry Would Mean The same thing Is trua ir reference to J Rumania. If she should throw her sword Into the balance of the conflict, she will be compelled to retain a garrUon of about 100,000 men at the Bulgarian frontier and another 100,000 men to guard her -shores against an attack of the Turkish fleet. With the remaining 3QO.O0O she will t,ry to invajia the South Carpathians. But tho South Car pathians ore twice as wild and ruggetj, as lx these same mountains in the north, where the Russians came over Into Hungary; moreover they can be defended easily with ono army corps. Therefore the result will be that, falling' in this attempt, Rumania's 800.000 men will Join forces, with Russia, or with Servla: for only In this way can they bo of tiny wlUUury value. Rum-nl&'s tstmneo Into tfc war irtU fc From tho New York Tribune. important to the Allies mainly because Russia can then send troops to aid Servln. Confronted by the Russlan-Ru- manlan-Servlan lino the forces of Austro- A.' ,1 , ., , .1 .,.- ts .. "-',. xiuutitiry wui reuiu uvyuuu uiu oavc, .uv uanuoo anu mo uarpatnians. this position will bo easy to defend and will require but a comparatively small force. Probably the men now fighting against Servln together tvlth thoso now stationed at tho Rumanian border will constitute a sufficient defense. The fact that Austro-Hungnry brought so quickly Into play against tho Russian In vasion quite fresh first line troops, till then garrisoned secretly In Transylvania, shows . that tho allies of Germany aro prepared to meet any emergency that may arise In the south. If Italy and Rumania both Join tho Allies there Is no doubt as to what turn tho gen eral Bcheme will then take. In Franco the Gorman Iron wall will have to withstand the furious attnckB of tho combined Italian, French, English nnd Belgian armies. In the south along the Itnllnn-Servlan-Rumanlw frontier, the Austro-Hugarlan troops U1 light a desparate defensive war beyond the Alps, the Save and Danube, nnd the ridges of the Carpathians. In tho east the main armies of General Hlndenburg and of Austria-Hungary will continue to grind between their powerful Jaws the millions of the Czar. As the new complications that may arise from Italy and Rumania taking sides with tho Allies, Germany and her confederates havo no fear. Germany and Austria-Hungary are resolved and prepared to struggle to tho bitter end against any and all' of their neighbors that may take up arms against them. This may be a madness, but Germany has put method Into It. Aspirant for Literary Rowards From the Detroit News. Frank Goewy JoneB, freed from the Ionia re formatory on parole, has seated himself at typewriter mounted on a kitchen table and djj clares that he Is determined to pay off ?500.vw In debts with the proceeds of fiction writing. He has his wife and child In his modest fat for Inspiration. He declares that he will pay more than the 60 per cent, of his gross earnlnsi, M specified In the conditions of his parole, ana after the hale million is disposed of will estab lish a fortune for himself through the labor of his Imagination. The namo of Mr. Jones has not loomed largo as nn author, He stands at the threshold whatever sort of career Is to succeed his fll" iruus iicniBveiuciiia 111 uimudu ,.,.. .... --- . m do not know Jut hpw familiar he is with puo- -j Ushers nor how clearly ne reauiea uiv ... one of a vast hopeful army whoso members " ready to forego everlasting fame, if need.,..r and to write lth an eye single to the market tin oi creditors " ws. ""-,., nnnB. stronger. Another advantage Is his sUcn" a! . j ...ic. .... hnu op his sake, for n yak. of his wife, his child, and those .to hjm ne owes uie nan miwwii, .h by the adventures of his manuscripts among we ed I tors. Ragtime Once in a While From the Ohio State journal. A musk expert out Eat has ben ladln i -- j HO.. I Kenalian rift re5t-u It a. ."an expression of the American people.- uui F""' "" r" ",t ri does not commend It. We have need to S " ?. 00?-. L?"L"".eror thsVul .? S.K" .r,t'. t. it burM- mat wHwiuwiiy wmwi ' ':.., There t V" .;..'7''.r; bH. his bh? . au UUi,uVuv --' -r -.- ,aBtUO, to tne -.rge oi uwmr - "-. , -hr m.y so ino nn auuuuiHui puritan tujiiiui. oiv You will notice that people who '"! ilnglnr or nummlng these light and ' airs are not endowed with deep nd ,?fBi mlndr. They sre happy enough but k to nsppiness uiiH noes uwuwu j i .iT. ,k b Mlv. either A ragtime now o4 ttaea J reUahed bv the wiMt mfO but It JS " JZ tat real life. It Is UMs avin. on M mim flrw ?bv f I ' I m I aid