Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 42, Number 293, 20 October 1917 — Page 4

PAGE FOUR

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, SATURDAY, OCT. 20, 1917

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SON-TELEGRAM

Published Every Evening Except Sunday, by Palladium Printing Co.

Palladium BuHdlne. North Ninth and Sailor Streets. 1

R. G. Leeds, Editor. E. H. Harris, Mgr. Entered at the Post Office at Richmond. Indiana, as Second Class Mall Matter.

MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS.

The Associated Press Is exclusively entitled to the nse

for republication of all news dispatches credited to it or not otherwise credited In this paper and also the local news published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved.

ed, but in this instance the trustees are receiving the plaudits of the people. . . .

Our schools must be the hotbeds of patriotism not only now but always. If professors in the colleges and universities and teachers in our public schools cannot pledge loyalty to our country and its war, they ought to be ousted without delay. ' . Academic freedom, like free speech, cannot be made a cloak to hide disloyal utterances and disloyal doctrines.

"Blighty Corner" is Popular With U. S. Soldiers in France

Academic Freedom

Prof. J. McKeen Cattell was ousted by the

trustees of Columbia University for writing con

cressmen acainst sendine drafted men to

Europe. .

He has sent a letter of protest to the newspapers in which he deplores the entrance of the United States "into a war of aggression." He

adds his opinion that "our people have no heart for this war into which they have been driven." Can you wonder at the action of the trustees of Columbia University? Was there any other course open to them? Did he not richly deserve to be kicked out? A man holding the opinions of Cattell has no business instructing American youth at this time. We might just as well have German professors in the universities. Usually the public sympathizes with the professor who is ousted because he holds opinions that differ from the orthodox views of university trustees. The plea of academic freedom usually is warmly championed by the people and press and the dismissed professor is praised and exalt-

'S

Whale Meat Tastes as Good as Beef

From Woman's Home Companion.

EVERAL kinds of new sea food are beta? nut on

the market," says the November Woman's Home Companion. The writer of the article on sea

food says: "Whaling is not what it used to be, but there are

still some one thousand five hundred of them killed each year on the Pacific Coast. In the body of each of these whales there is ten thousand pounds of first class meat. The Japanese whalers retrieve this meat and find ready market for it at home. The American whaler throws it away. "It is a fact not currently appreciated that the whale is not a fish. Its flesh has no fishy taste whatever. The whale is a warm-blooded animal, is a mammal which suckles its young. Its flesh is therefore comparable with that of other mammals such as the cow; it is steak. An enterprising whaler last season brought some whale meat into Seattle and placed it in the butcher shops and had it served at the hotels. It sold for ten cents a pound, and the hotels served steaks for forty cents that would have coat a dollar-fifty had they been beef. Guests ate of the whale meat and pronounced it as good as beef. Last year, also, the same experiment was tried at Long Beach, California, and the whale meat sold readily in the butcher shops and was liked by consumers. So it is earnestly urged, in these trying times, that housekeepers and hotels use the steak of these 1,500 whales, which is equal in nutritive value to the meat of 100,000 prime porkers."

PARIS, Oct. 20. One place which many American soldiers viBit In Paris is the British "Blighty Corner," officially known as the "Foyer du Soldat Anglio." It Is conducted by a group of English and American women as a place where Canadian, Australian and New Zealand soldiers who cannot go home for their ten days leave may find a welcome. It has all the facilities of an up-to-date club, with perhaps a little more of the air of "home" than an ordinary club. Tea is served

every afternoon to all comers by the wives of British officers, and there is every afternoon and evening a program of music and entertainment. "My visit has given me much pleasure," wrote the Prince of Wales In the

visitors' book. "Ditto" wrote the Duke of Connaught. On the occasion of the Duke of Connaught's visit, the cheers of the Canadian soldiers were so lusty aa to offend the ears of some of the residents of a fashionable hotel in the Place Vendome nearby. They filed a complaint with the police, but the police replied: "They are authorized to make as much noise as they please. The British soldiers were not told to make less noise

Revelations of a Wife BY ADELE GARRISON

CHAPTER XXVn "I SHALL PAY, OUT OF THE MONEY I SHALL EARN" I am bowed to the earth with shame when I think of the moment when I flung into Dicky's face the money which he had tossed me so contemptuously a moment before. Dicky was so angry because I had paid a long standing bill of his that appeared to have lost the Instincts of a gentleman. But that was no reason, I told myself a moment after my outburst, that I also should return to the prlml-unplear ant situation. I had risen from my seat when I threw the bills at him, and I faced him with a feeling at my heart I did not recognize. I could have struck him to the ground in that moment. The next I was so abased In spirit at the exhibition of temper I had given that I would have given anything to get anywhere out of sight or sound. I stooped mechanically, picked up the bills, folded them, and laid them upon the table near us. Then I spoke and my very voice was new to me, hoarse and trembling from the effects of the rage which had so shaken me. "I truly beg your pardon, Dicky." I realized that I had used the old childish phrase my mother taught me. "I am very sorry, very much ashamed that I did that. But I do not think you realized how you humiliated me when you flung that money In my lap

with such sneering contempt in your manner." i "How do I look when I sneer? This way?" and Dicky twisted up his face grotesquely. I stared at him In amazementEvery trace of his anger was gone. He was adopting his usual method of disposing of a quarrel, doing some silly or fantastic thing, which cleared the atmosphere, and which al6o, I shrewdly suspected, appealed to him in that it enabled him to avoid an apology. He put out his hands and grasped mine. "You are super-sensitive, Madge and I'll be tanged if I can get some of your viewpoints, but that's no reason why we should spoil our evening over old Toi-.raine and this bill. It's paid now, and there will be no more, I promise you to disturb your Iron sense of justice. You may wear the flowers and eat the bonbons I bring you without a qualm." He could not or would not grasp the fact that anjthing deeper than the mere non-payment of the bill lay beneath my resentment. It was partly this, partly something within me that makes it impossible for me to "kiss and make up" immediately after a quarrel, as many women do, that made me withdraw my hands. . "Please sit down, Dicky, and let me talk to you seriously for a few minutes," I pleaded. "There are some things I must tell you, some thlng3 we must settle together if we are to have anv peace. I detest this bickering. I

believe much of it could be avoided if

we could decide finally as to some things this evening." Dickv sot down with such a resign

ed and bewildered look upon his face that I could have laughed if I had not been in such deadly earnest. "Shoot," he said laconically: then, with a twinkle in iis eye. "I beg your pardon. I forgot your training. Please elucidate." I igTored the pleasantry. I did not know how long Dicky would listen to me. and I wanted to waste no words. "Dear boy," I began, "won't you talk over with me the amount of money you can afford to spend upon the housekeeping, and then hand me that amount each week upon a certain day?" "Well, I'll be" Dicky Interrupted himself with a blow of his flst upon the table. "Have I been letting you get short of- money? Why In thunder didn't you ask me for more?" "You don't understand," I patiently explained. "I have more than enough with these" I Indicated the bills I had laid on the table "to last another week. But I cannot bear to come and ask you for money, Dicky, a3 if I were a child or a Bervant." 'Can't bear to ask for money? What nonsense is that?" Dicky's voice held much indignation. "Aren't you my wife, and isn't everything I have Just as much yours as it is miner' "That is what I thought when I paid the cleaner's bill," I interrupted de

murely, "but you didn't agree with me." "That's an altogether different proposition. You shouldn't take things out of my hands,'- Dicky returned shortly; "but you ought to know that I'm only too anxious to lavish everything I can get on you, and then you talk about hating to ask me for money. That makes a fellow feel fine, to hear his wife of three weeks handing out a line of talk like that. You must love me a lot if you feel that way." "Dicky, can't you really understand my feeling3, or are you wilfully blinding yourself to what I am saying?" I demanded. "Suppose it were yon who were managing the living, would you like to come to me for everything?" "You are supposing the most arrant nonsense. It has nothing to do with the case," Dicky replied arrogantly. "Look here, Madge, do you realize where you are drifting? Yaull be the most rampant feminist going if you don't look out. Two or three days ago you sprang that nonsense about earning the equivalent of a servant or something like that; I'm glad ; you seem to have forgotten it, and now you come with this rot about not wanting to ask me for money. Do you think I'm going to be niggardly and

dole you out a quarter at a time? That Isn't the proposition at all; but this allowance business looks to me just as if your wife was some kind

of a hired housekeeper. How can you tell how much you'll need each week? Lots of unexpected expenses come up. If you had zn allowance you'd deny yourself everything so as to keep within it!" Evidently, Dicky stopped talking only because he was out of breath. I seized the opportunity to try to catch my argument. "Dicky, you must listen to me," I said firmly. "I am In deadly earnest both about an allowance and about earning some money to pay the maid. I had not forgotten that at all. I simply have waited until I could talk to you about it. I want to know whether you object to my taking that study club's history class one day each week because you feel it would interfere with some of our pleasure trips together, or because you object to my earning money in any way. If it be simply the interference, I will try to find come other way of earning the money." "The devil you will!" Dicky sprang to his feet. "Dicky!" I exclaimed. "Never mind the French. If you can't stand a mild word like that you had better go up and take your seat at the right hand of Gabriel or Abraham, or whoever runs the ranch, right away. But let me tell you one thing: you will earn no money "outside. I will not have it. Do you hear me?" I closed my eyes for an Instant to gather strength for the answer I knew I must give Dicky. Then I stood up and faced him. "Let me understand you fully. You will not plan for a regular housekeeping allowance, nor will ypu give your

consent to my earning money?" "You are eminently correct in both suppositions.' "Then, do you hear me?" I said Icily. "This money," picking up the bills which I had laid upon the table, "I shall use. When It is used up I shall arrange to have the tradesmen's bills sent to you for payment. Kati'e wages and any incidental expenses, including my clothing, I shall pay out of the money I personally earn." I faced him steadily, waiting for the

outburst I knew would come. Dicky never was taught to control his tem

per wnen ne was a child. As a result, when he does give way to it he is positively terrifying. He stood elarine at me. his fnon

reddening, bin hands clinching and unclinching. Then with a sudden oath, he snatched the nearest thing to his hand, a cut glass vase of mine, one of

my treasures, and dashed it against the hearth of the gas grate, shattering it. The sound of the hrealrin!?

glass seemed to bring him to himself

i could almost see the words of apology trembling on his Hps. But he did not uttor them. Instead, ho apt his

lips, and went into his room, where I

neara him rushing around like mad. I sat motionless gazing at the shattered vase, waiting. In a few minutes he came out of the room in his evening clothes, with his high hat and stick. Without a word or a glance at me he went out to the living room, closing the door after him with a slam. Where had he gone? My prophetic soul gave mc the answer. To Lillian Gale's, of course.

The British naval boot is of a light pattern, owing to its being chiefly used for deck duties.

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FOUNTAIN CITY, IND.

when they blew up the mines at Messines." Twice a week the men at "Blighty Corner" are taken to visit the old corner of Paris. An Interesting Incident occurred this week when a party visited the church of Jeanne d'Arc. The priest presented them with souvenir medals representing Joan of Arc. "But there are only three Catholics among them," he was told. 'It does not matter," replied the broad minded priest. "They all serve the same Master and General."

IS

Mrs. Clayton Dougherty and daughter Maxine Marie, and Mrs. L. D. Dougherty spent Tuesday afternoon with Mr. and Mrs. M. C. Harrison and family. Mr. and Mrs. Lawrence Mitchell and family and Mr. and Mrs.

George Skinner and family motored to j

Camp Taylor at Louisville, Ky., Saturday so they could spend Sunday with their sons who are in training. Mrs. Elizabeth Gardner was at Richmond one day this week. .... Mrs. Eva Hollingsworth and daughter Imogene, and Mrs. George Lewis, all of Lynn, spent Wednesday with Mrs. J. J. Overman The Loyal Daughters Class of the Christian Sunday school is planning to give an entertainment in the near future.. ... .Word has been

received from the boys at Camp Tay-j lor that the following three boys fromi this place, Ralph Reynolds, Lawrence' Harrison and Michael Nocton have j been transferred to Co. D, Engineers! Corps Mrs. Jennie Overman spent! Wednesday with Mr. and Mrs. Orlaj Hinshaw Mrs. C. C. Fulghum and! daughter Ruth, were at Richmond ; Wednesday Several young people from this place are planning to at-i tend the basket supper at New Mad-i lson, O., Friday night.

"Make One Car Do

Work of Two

Advised by C. & 0. The C. & Q., in a general pamphlet.

advises shippers to load cars to full capacity to "make one car do the work of two " With this reduction the railroad company estimates that several million tons of coal will be saved, a benef t in the face of the present severe coal situation. The pamphlet calls attention to the fact that the railroads hauled 750,323 tons of bituminous coal In June, an increase of 26.2 per cent over June of last year.

THOUGHTS TO TH4NK . ABOUT The next tick of the clock is tomorrow. Adversity will often arouse the genius In men, while good fortune may conceal it from them and from the world. Work in the be6t Interests of your employer and make his success most sacred to yourself; loyalty on your part will lead you up the ladder. The expense of having a house that you own stand vacant month after month Is greater than the expense of a "For Rent" or "For Sale" ad. Telephone 2834 and ask for a Want Ad Taker.

Cliff Dwellers Still Exist.

Although the earliest cliff dwellers were prehistoric, cave dwellers have

existed In almost every age of the

world. The ancient Horites . derived

their name from their practice of liv

ing In caverns and subteranean abodes.

An Arab tribe In Palestine still occu

pies the mountainous caves, and a ;

tribe of cliff dwellers has been recent

ly found in Mexico.

HOT TEA BREAKS A COLD TRY THIS

j

Get a small package of Hamburt

Breast Tea, or as the German folks call it, "Hamburger Brust Thee," at any pharmacy. Take a tablespoonful of the tea, put a cup of boiling wafer upon it, pour through a sieve and drink a teacup full at any time. It is the most effective way to break a cold and cure grip, as it opens the pores, relieving congestion. Also loosens the bowels, thus breaking a cold at once. It is Inexpensive and entirely vegetable, therefore harmless. (Adv.)

..liii.i4.uiW'1

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tins of rheumatism, gout, lu

Dago, strains, sprains, stur joints

and sll muocle soreness. Generoue size bottlae at all drocsstai 25s, 50c 1. 00.

cm

U M

Anybody can cut pricces but it takes brains to make a better article. Elbert Hubbard. The CHURNGOLD factory is run by BRAINS which have produced "A BETTER ARTICLE." The better article costs more to produce, therefore, you will -pay us a trifle more for CHURNGOLD than to the merchant who offers you a "Cut Price" margarine. Get a package of CHURNGOLD today. You will find Quality in every pound.

CMUMNGOLD STORE

Phone 1702.

No. 7 and 6th St.

V. K. CRANOR, Mgr.

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f-ge. It is well worth the price. TW bentaiaeJ Remedies U. C.iiUii-iiU. Oiw

Its Kghtness, its long, low, E ' i sweeping lines, its beauty of ffl Eft design and finish enabled the KllSilf Wk Stir) Milburn to win a host of new ; W'.K Jgf3 friends for the electric. &rlg4SfOM m SIM I mechanical reliability S M and .sturdiness, the ease of .fep Jn& operation and the economy $L f&lgj of electric power make it the l Wm car of the hour for every use mWM mm but long tours. ' - fepfcMfe? wh mmtmmM swSM chenoweth auto co. KiaeiiMMg 1105-1107 Main St. . Phones 1925 and 2826 IMT . tMWi- P$T