Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 37, Number 291, 11 October 1912 — Page 6

PAGE SIX

THE RICHMOND PALLAJJ IU3I AND SUNTELEGRA3I, FRIDAY. OCTOBER 11, 1912.

QUAKERS EXPECT A GRUELLIMGCONTEST B. Johnson, a Local Boy, Will Probably Play Quarter Part of Game.

Tomorrow the Earlham college football team plays the University of Cincinnati in that city. Considering the excellent showing the University of Cincinnati made in last Saturday's game when it defeated Transylvania 24 to 0 propects do not look very promising for Earlham. The Earlham team has been put through a week of hard practice by Coach Thistlethwaite and shows considerable improvement over the showing made in last Saturday's game with Franklin college. The players handle the ball with less fumbling, but the tackling needs considerable improvement. The game tomorrow will be a hard one as the University of Cincinnati ranks well in Ohio athletics and appearsto be exceptionally strong this year. Cincinnati will go into the game determined to retrieve the lost honors of last year when the team went down in defeat before Earlham to the score of 9 to 0. Earlham needs a hard game to round the team in shape for the contest with Rose Polytechnical Institute -which is to be played on Reid Field a -week from Saturday. Rose Poly has a team composed of veterans and easily outweighs the Earlham aggregation. It is the opinion of Coach Thistlethwaite that this game -will be the hardest game of the season as Rose Poly ran up a score of 47 to 0 on Eastern Illinois college last Saturday and to all appearances has the strongest team It has had for years. The lineup in tomorrow's game will be the same as in the Franklin game with the possible exception of the position of quarterback. Benjamin Johnson, of Richmond, has been putting up a great fight for this place on the team and has been showing such skill in handling the team that Coach Thistlethwaite is undecided as to -whether Johnson or Vickery will be at quarterback when the game is cal'ed. SOUTHERN EDUCATOR H. H. Cherry to Speak Before County Teachers. H. H. Cherry, president of the State Normal School, at Bowling Green, Ky., has been secured to deliver two addresses before the meeting of the Wayne County Teachers' association, which will be held at the high school building, October 19. The first address, to be delivered at the morning session will be made on "Our Government and Education," and at the afternoon meeting will be on the subject, "The School; a Living Organism." Prof. Cherry is a brilliant and eloquent speaker. The full program follows: 10:15 a. m. Presiding Officer, Eleanor Newman, president. Invocation, Rev. W. O. Stovall, Pastor First Baptist church. Report of committee on constitution, O. L. Voris, choirman. Solo (a) Love in May Parker (b) High Ho Higgins (c) The Fountain Bruno Huhn Mrs. F. W. Krueger. Address "Our Government and Education," Pres. H. H. Cherry, State Normal school, Bowling Green, Ky. 1:15 p. m. (a) Flower Rain Schneider (b) Song of the Soul Breil Mrs. F. W. Krueger. Address "The Sf 'iool; A Living Or ganism," H. 11. Cherry. Reports cf Committees. General Business. Adjournment. COLLEGE CONFERENCE AT QUAKER SCHOOL President R. L. Kelly, of Earlham college, has made arrangements with a number of the young men delegates to the Five Year Meeting at Indianapolis to form a group to hold conferences at several of the Friends' col? leges after the Five Year Meeting has adjourned. Those who have promised their atttendance are George Hodgkin, special representative of the Young Friends' movement of England; Dr. Henry Hodgkin, one of the greatest historians of England and head of the London i Yearly Meeting delegation, and Earn- j est Taylor, fraternal delegate to the j Five Year Meeting from the London Yearly Meeting. These are all Eng-; lish university men. In addition to this list of speakers, President Kelly has the promise of L. Hollingsworth Wood, ot New York, and is expecting Henry Cadbury, of Philadelphia, Pa., to join the croup. No definite date has been fixed for the conference at Earlham, but it will follow soon after the close of the Five Year Meeting. With this excellent list of speakers, and the splendid support the Earlham studentbody always gives to religious work, the conference at Earlham is expected to be a success. President Kelly announced today that word has been received from Benjamin Haughton, of Cork, Ireland, stating that he expects to visit . Earlham. He will be present at the meeting of the West Richmond Friend6 church Sunday morning. Mr. Haughton la the fraternal delegate from the Dublin Meeting to the Five Year Meeting, which convenes in Indianapolis next week.

BLAME IT OW THE WOMflH

Because She Gets It Anyway. But It's Because She More Honest and Courageous than Men Who Are Social and Conventional Cowards.

BY ESTHER GRIFFIN WHITE. "I see," said the cynic, "that a man has been given a prison sentence for stealing a link of sausage." "Well," replied Sal, "that's no worse than Judge Fox blaming all the divorces on the women." "I don't see the connection," said the cynic. "That's just the point there isn't any," smiled Sal. "In other words," grinned the cynic, "there is no justice in this world." "You've about sa,id it," said Sal. "Or, in other words, when in doubt swat the woman." "Don't you think you're a trifle hard on us?" asked the cynic. "Now I know Judge Fox and I think he's a real nice man." "The judge is charmyig. I know him myself," replied Sal. "All the same I have noticed disposition on the part of his eminence to give the women a whack whenever he has a chance. In this divorce matter I mean," she added hastily. "Well, its about the truth," mumbled the cynic. "Women are never satisfied. They want the earth and then some. Never contented with what they've got " "If you mean a man, I agree with you," cried Sal. "Its the only sign of sanity any woman ever manifests after marriage." "Oh Sal," deployed the cynic, "how many, many times have I deplored thy horrid views upon our sacred institution!" "It isn't sacred. That's what's the trouble with the whole thing. People are .continually trying to make something sacred out of something well that isn't," she grinned in turn. "And that was an illustration," she went on. "What was?" inquired the cynic. "The man who stole a link of sau sage, said Sal. If ne d nave stolen another man's wife he'd have gone scott free and continued to enjoy life in his peculiar fashion. "But because he was nearly starved to death, had tried every way possible to earn an honest penny and had failed and then snatched this miserable sausage to sustain life, he was railroaded to the penitentiary. And yet , they say this is the land of the free and the home of the brave!" "I am, myself, inclined to believe," said the cynic cautiously, "that Mr. Theodore Roosevelt 13 not so far wrong in his position on the courts." "Fine! Splendid! Superb!" cried Sal. "This is the first time you have! admitted it." "Admitted what?" "That you're a Progressive." "I'm not I'm er I'm not," ended the cynic lamely. "Well, I am," said Sal. "and I'm not ashamed of it. I've noticed a lot ot men waiting to see which way to jump." "You do me a gross injustice there, my dear," expostulated the cynic. "You women are too impulsive too insistent too er too " "That's it. We are 'too,'" said Sal. "But not all of us. I am, though and so are a lot of others. Either you are or you aren't, you know. That's what's the matter with marriage. That's why Judge Fox says its the woman who's to blame. When the truth is she is merely honest and sincere. She knows exactly where sho stands domestically and emotionally. She isn't a weathercock for every wind to turn. When she finds out that she simply can't stand a man any longer she says so, j

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"Do you mean to Infer " "I don't mean to infer anything. Men will always hedge and side-step ; and back-pedal in matters of this i sort. They're all cowards, more or less, and hate to be brought to bat. "Besides they can always mitigate the miseries of a situation by the j thousand and one things a man can ! do to drown his sorrow." "What, in instance," asked the cynic curiously. "Oh well, for one thing, when things get to, be unbearable, when he's pushed to the last ditch, he can put on his hat, step out the door slam it, probably, which alway3 makes anybody feel better and betake himself into that vaguely defined, but delightful re- i gion, which 1 have hitherto referred to as "down town." "And what, may I timidly inquire, grinned the cynic, "do they do when they get there?" "That's it what!" exclaimed Sal. "Nobody knows. That is, the women don't. Possibly the other men do. They all stick by each other. That's where they have the advantage over the women. Women won't stick together. They never will realize the benefits of combination. If they did they could bring the men on the carpet in short crder." "Oh, do you Jthink so?" jeered th9 cynic. "I don't think I know!" said Sal oracularly. "Not that I give a hang," she added. "Oh, I thought maybe you did," murmured the cynic. "Well take another think," said Sal carelessly. "There's nothing that bothers me less. But it is the truth that men have a more extended field of operations. They can amuse themselves a thousand ways a woman can't just because she's a woman and is tied up with a lot of traditions traditions, be it said, evolved through the mighty intellects of men. "When a man gets the worst of it at home he can solace himself otherwhere without throwing his whole life out of gear. A woman can't. If she seeks solace she has to break the traces entirely. "Therefore when things get to the breaking off place she breaks 'em off By the route of the divorce court generally. The seeming initiative of women is merely an exhibition of their liner courage and greater sincerity. They refuse to put up with an anomalous situation. "They refuse, in short, to make a hypocritical pretense. "They get tired of the whole thing, in other words, and break away. "Something the man wants to do but is afraid to start. "Men are far more conventional than women. They are social cowards. They will lie and cheat and steal but they won't come out in the open and fight it out. "They're that way emotionally. "They'll go a thousand miles out of the way to avoid the issue. And they've got the thousand miles. "Women on the other hand are penned up at home. They can't go out and amuse themselves. "They can't go down to the office and sit with their heels on the desk and read the morning paper the while some cute little stenographer purrs in the corner. "When my lord gets through reading the sporting news and the markets he throws the paper on the floor, Btretches his arms out and murmurs a rueful 'heigho!' "What's the matter?" inquires the to We are the only store in Richmond who extends liberal credit at cash prices. We have been here a year in business which shows that our reliability stands the test. Our Line of LADIES' and MEN'S CLOTHES is now complete. Ladies' Suits. . .$15.00 Ladies' Coats at $7.50 to $20 Ladies Dresses at $6.50 to $25 Ladies' Millinery at Popular Prices.

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cute little one in the corner stopping her operations with the vanity bag. "Oh er breakfast didn't agree with me worried about that bond deal, too." "Oh, that's too bad," said the cute little one dabbing her nose with the chamois, seemingly unconscious of her employer's hypnotic gaze. "Why do you so mistreat your dear little nose, kiddo," he smiles. "Don't call me that horrid name," cries Mile, kiddo, with an encouraging smile and a play of the eye-lashes. "He gazes at her fatuously. "What a change from well, she's a cute little thing and her complexion is her own," he thinks incoherently. "Had a fuss with his wife," whispers Mile Kiddo to herself. "A good time to strike him for a raise."

"Oh, come, Sal," interrupted cynic, "things don't always go way you're one-sided views " "Pooh bah!," exclaimed the that Sal. "That's a man's last resort 'one sided views!' When you know all the time it's true and that madame is left at home to wash and dress the children, get their breakfasts, send 'em off to school, superintend the house-work, fend off the collector, mend his clothes " "Same old song," sneered the cynic. "Martyr woman and tyrant man " "Sure," said Sal cheerfully. "For when she sits down to a solitary lunch in tears he and Mile. Kiddo are feasting gaily behind the palms in the little restaurant round the corner where the high price of living is safely snowed under." "You make me think of Balzac, Sal," said the cynic. "Of Balzac!" vociferated Sal. "M mmm. Balzac once wrote a delightful book called 'Modeste Mignon.' And then proceeded to make Mignon say a lot of things that she really didn't say. It was his way of saying them. Mignon wouldn't have thought of 'em in a thousand years." "Really!" mocked Sal. "Really!" intonated the cynic. It yott era troabitn wjit kv.V: :iocaacno, eui t pation. indigestion, offensive breath or m .ease arising: from stomach trouble, tret a & II bottle of Dr. Caldweir hyaruv Papain. 1 ;K8it'vely uu.iraoled to cere veto.

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WIRELESS STATION ON HIGH SCHOOL Prof. Kelly Teaching Twen

ty-five Pupils the Intricacies of the System. Under the instructions of Prof. B. W. Kelly, of the local high school, a number of pupils are rapidly mastering the intracacies of wireless telegraphy. Prof. Kelly is teaching the wireless method to a class of about twentyfive high school boys. About twelve of this number have stations at their homes and are able to receive and send messages. It is planned to install a central station on the roof of the high school building within the near future and to communicate with high school students Bt Connersville, Indianapolis and Dayton. J According to Prof. Kelly the purpose of teaching wireless telegraphy is to give the members of that class practical physics. He says that most of the members are under classmen and

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have not as yet mastered the fundamental principles of the wireless telegraphy. The wireless class is divided into two sections. One section is composed of those who agree to know the code well enough by December 1 to receive

and send messages, and the other seo learn at least the sending code within a month after joining the class. COMMITTEE WILL PLAN PROGRAM A meeting of the program commit- ; tee of Chautauqua organization will be held tomorrow afternoon in the Commercial club rooms. The talent for the 1913 Chautauqua will then be se- . lected as near as possible. Some of the ' feature attractions will be Maud Balli ington Booth. Senator Gore and the Inj dians who give a pantomime sketch of j Hiawatha. Several musical numbers j are also under consideration. SOCIALIST SPEAKING Luella Twining, a speaker touring the country for the Socialist party, will address a meeting Saturday evening, October 12, at the corner of Main and Sixth.

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