Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 38, Number 121, 1 April 1913 — Page 3

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRA3I. TUESDAY, APRIL 1, 1913.

PAGE THREE.

EVERYTHING TO BE SHOWIUTJIG FAIR Exhibits Being Prepared For International Exposition.

A DIFFICULT TASK Universal Event Will be Epitome of Human Achievement. SAN FRANCISCO, April 1 The most wonderful and elaborate classification of exhibits ever made for any International exposition Is that which has been prepared for the PanamaPacific International Exposition to be held In San Francisco in 1915, to commemorate the opening of the Panama canal. In the vast work of getting ready for a world's fair, perhaps no feature is of greater importance than the planning of the manner in which the exhibits shall be displayed, in order that their inspection shall prove of the greatest benefit to the visitor, no matter what his walk in life. A modern universal exposition is an epitome of human achievement containing in logical relationship man's words and work. It constitutes a compendium, for ready reference, of the, accomplishments of all peoples in all phases of their activities, both dictionary of human development. Because of this development, and because public opinion becomes more critical as the years go by, the task of creating a classification of exhibits becomes more and more difficult with each succeeding exposition. It must satisfy present conditions of art, science and manufacture. With these fundamental conditions confronting him Captain Asher Carter Baker, U. S. N., (retired) Director of Exhibits, has devoted the past ten months to the plan and preparation of a plan of classification that is pronounced marvelous by the best known experts on the subject. The document has just been issued by the exposition, and bears the endorsement of Dr. Frederick J. V. Skiff, Director-in-Chief . of the exposition and well known International expert on classification, under whose supervision it was created by Captain Baker. The classification includes eleven departments: Fine Arts, Education, Social Economy, Liberal Arts, Manufactures and Varied Industries, Machinery, Transportation, Agriculture, Live Stock, Horticulture and Mines and Metallurgy. These departments have been divided into 136 groups, subdivided ' into 800 classes. The utmost care has been given by Captain Baker to the classification of each department, and in many instances notable departures from the methods followed at previous expositions are apparent. For example, the visitor to San Francisco in 1915, will find that the department of electricity has been eliminated as' such, and the classes are " distributed in those branches of human activity where they are used. The majority of electrical exhibits are classified under machinery, and electricity is made a group in that department. The exhibits which will be grouped in the Transportation exhibits palace will be wonderfully arranged, according to Captain Baker's plans. As the exposition is to celebrate the opening of .the Panama canal, a distinct maritime event, It is the intention to feature marine exhibits under the marine section of transportation exhibits. In the Transportation palace will be shown the exhibits of all the great steamship companies; water transportation of all countries, navigation and commerce; characteristic boats of all .nations; a complete exhibit of motor SUFFERED AWFUL PAINS For Sixteen Years. Restored To Health by Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound. Moretown. Vermont "I was trouTbled with pains and irregularities for i sixteen years, and was thin, weak and nervous. When I would lie down it would seem as if I was Groin? riarht down out of sight into some dark hole, and the window curtains had faces that would peek out at me, and when I was out of doors it wraild seem as if something was going to happen. My blood was poor, my circulation was so bad I would be like a dead person at times. I had female weakness badly, my abdomen was sore and I jlbad awful pains. "I took Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and used the Sanative Wash and they certainly did wonders i for roe. My troubles disappeared and I ' am able to work hard every day. " MrsT fW. P. Sawyer, River View Farm, Moretown, Vermont. Another Case. Gifford, Iowa." I was troubled with female weakness, also with displacement. ' I had very severe and steady headache, also pain in back and was very thin and tired all the time. I commenced taking Lydia E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound and I am cured of these troubles. I cannot praise your .medicine too highly." Mrs. Ika Max. pxojoLE, Gifford. Iowa.

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boats, their engines and motors; pleasure yachts,; sail and steam yachts, which are generally shown by models; methods of water transportation; the great water industry of the great lakes, showing the transportation of ore; methods of unloading; models of the great battleships of the world; an historical exhibit of models of the ships of the early navigators of England, Holland, France and Spain thereby making an international exhibit in all its forms. A remarkable classification has been effected by Captain Baker In the department of Social Economy. Representation will be had of all phases of the important economic questions which agitate the world at the present day. Fifteen groups, including 52 classes are found necessary in this department alone. Special attention has been given to the care of juvenile dependents and delinquents. The Fine Arts exhibit is another department in which the Panama-Pacific International Exposition is to outdo all previous world's fairs. Particular interest attaches to this exhibit because of the awakening in art which has manifested itsel6 throughout the western hemisphere in the last decade. Finer paintings, and more of them are owned in the United States today than at the time of the expositions at Chicago and St. Louis, and in consequence it is expected that the exposition at San Francisco will include the finest loan exhibit ever made in this country. So with all of the other departments above mentioned. Housed in the magnificent palaces which the best architects, artists and sculptors of two continents have planned surrounded by courts of Oriental beauty,

and set in a landscape bounded by j ocean, bay and smiling hills, the ex- ' hibits of the Panama-Pacific Exposij tion at San Francisco in 1915, will constitute a marvel of completeness, of unexcelled classification and of in- ! finite educational value. STRAIGHT AT IT. There is no use of our "beating around the bush." We might as well out with it first as last. We want you to try Chamberlain's Cough Remedy the next time you have a cough or cold. There is no reason so far as we can see why you should not do so. This preparation by its remarkable cures has gained a world wide reputation, and people everywhere speak of it in the highest terms of praise. It is for sale by all dealers. (Advertisement) Amusements At the Gennett. April 2 National Troubadours. April 5 "The Real Thing." April 17-18 "Miss Bot White." At the Murray. Vaudeville Matinee and Night. Murray. The bill offered at the Murray yesterday was of the pleasing variety. Mott and Maxfield present an amusing wheeze entitled "The Manicurist and the Salesman," which proved one of the hits of the bill. Miss Maxfield is a little lady possessing lots of magnatism and reminds one of the famous "Eva Tanguay." The Milo Duo are a clever pair of musicians. Miss Milo's cornet solo, accompanying her self on the piano was a clever act that met with liberal applause. The remainder of the program was well received. Henrietta Crosman. The attraction at the Gennett Theater Saturday, April 5th, will be Henrietta Crosman, she of the charming smile, irresistable personality and the happy faculty of putting folks in a good humor the elasticity of which seems endless. Miss Crosman brings her charming comedy, "The Real Thing" which was conceded the Maxine Elliott Theater, New York, success of last season, with the original cast and production. In shaping "The Real Thing," its author, Catherine Chisholm Cushing, , had the heroine of "Mistress Nell" in j view for the part of the "widow" and i it was said of her last season that no j more appropriate selection could have ! been made for the sparkling, fascinat- ; ing relict than this talented commedienne. ! The story of "The Real Thing" teaches a moral to prospective and young wives and a warning to older ones but the lesson is so sugar coated and sown with the seeds of humor that its absorbtion is a palatable one. Murrette. Motion pictures of Richmond at the Murrette kept that beautiful theater well filled yesterday afternoon and last night and caused more laughs than any picture ever shown in Richmond.. The Palace. For today, at the Palace, a stupendous war drama wonderfully staged, showing scenes of destruction and conflict, scenes of melting tenderness and scenes of heroism and bravery, entitled "The Pride of the South" is being shown. It can be safely said that this is the most massive and of greater magnitude than anything of a like nature ever before attempted in the production of a motion picture. This Broncho headliner contains a tremendous cast and depicting scenes of spectacular and wonderful dramatic impersonation. Even excluding the scenes of conflict and sensationalism, the dramatic story unfolded would still prove a wonderful feature. The Bow and Arrow. One carious result of the stody of tbe mural paintings and engravings on the walls of caverns in the Pyrenees occupied in ancient times by men is the evidence which ft has afforded that bows and arrows were already in ose at that very early period. In a grotto at Niaux bisons, horses, deer and wt!5 goats are represented and arrows art shown sticking into many of tbe an: mals. Some of tbe arrow heads thus placed are colored red. Harper's Week

Flour-M ill and Grist Mill Industry

WASHINGTON, D. C, April 1. ( chant mills reported for the flour-mill Statistics for the flour-mill and grist-; and gristmill Industry, 19.4 per cent mill industry of the United States for j were under corporate ownership, as the calendar year 1909 are presented i compared with 17.2 per cent in 1904. in a bulletin soon to be issued by ) While corporations thus controlled less Director Durand of the Bureau of the than one-ifth of the total number of Census, Department of Commerce. It I establishments, the value of the was prepared under the supervision of i products of these establishments repW. M. Stewart, chief statistician for J resented 66.6 per cent of the total manufactures. i value of products for all merchant The report of this industry distin- mills engaged in the industry In 1909, guishes three classts of mills: (1) - and 60.3 per cent in 1904. These

Merchant mills whose chief products i are intended for human consumption, (2) merchant mills whose chief products are those commonly used as feed for live stock, and (3) mills en gaged exclusively in custom grinding. Mills reporting the purchase of any part of the grain which they grind are J classified as merchant mills, even I though a large part of their business may consist in custom grinding. Custom mills, on the other hand, are those engaged exclusively in custom grinding, whether for toll or for a stipulated charge, including those where grain already ground is sometimes given in exchange for the grain to be ground. Practically all of the custom mills are small, and so also are a considerable number of the merchant mills. Of the 23,652 mills canvassed for 1909, more than half (11,981) were custom mills, but of the total value of products $938,699,958 only $55,115,553, or 5.9 per cent, was contributed by this class of mills. More than threefourths of the merchant mills were engaged chiefly in the manufacture of wheat flour and other products intended for human consumption, and the value of the products of these mills , was $832,790,364, or 88.7 per cent of the total for all mills combined. The flour-mill and grist-mill industry is one in which the cost of materials constitutes a very large portion of the total value of products, the process of manufacture itself being relatively simple and inexpensive. The total cost of the materials used by all mills in 1909 was $813,391,347, which was equal to about seven-eights (86.7 per cent) of the total value of products, while the value added by manufacture (that is, the value of products less the cost of materials) was only $124,808,611. The flour mills and grist mills of all classes combined gave employment in 1909 to an average of 88,849 persons, of whom 46,467 were wage earners, and paid out $35,167,693 in salaries and wages. The quantity of grain ground was 872,950,743 bushels, the greater part being wheat and corn. Minnesota Ranks First. Minnesota is by far the most important state in the flour-mill and gristmill industry, ranking first at tli censuses of both 1909 and 1904 in the average number of wage earners employed in merchant mills, in value of products, and in value added by manufacture. During 1909, 104,042,999 bushels of wheat and 12,340,167 bushels of other grains were used in the merchant mills of that state, and 22,737,404 barrels of wheat flour were produced, or more than one-fifth of the total for the United States. The number of wage earners employed in the merchant mills of that state increased 7.7 per cent during the decade ending with 1909, and the value of products 67.7 per cent. In New York, which ranked second among the states, the merchant mills used 30,073,407 bushels of wheat and 40.271.9S6 bushels of other grain in 1909. More corn, buckwheat, and ots were ground In New York than in any other state. Larger percentages of Increase from 1899 to 1909 are shown for New York than for Minnesota. Kansas ranked third in value of products and in value added by manufacture in 1909. Of the nine states that led in respect to value of products, Kansas shows the most rapid development in the milling industry j during the period from 1899 to 1909, ! the number of wage earners increasing 68 per cent and the value of products 221.1 per cent. Still higher percentages of increase, however, are shown for some of the states in which the j industry has attained importance only ; during recent years, such as Okla-; homa, Idaho, Louisiana, Wyoming and.; Nevada. Corporation Increase. In 1909, of the total number of mer-

Woman's Beauty is Based on Health

To Have Health, Bowel Movement Is Absolutely Necessary How Best to Obtain It. . If woman's beauty depended upon eosmetios every woman would be a picture of loveliness. But beauty lies deeper than that. It lies in health. In the majority of cases the basis of health, and the cause of sickness, can be traced to the action of the bowels. The headaches, the lassitnde, the sallow ekin and the lusterless eyes are usually due to constipation. So many things that women do habitually conduce to this trouble. They do not eat carefully, they eat indigestible foods because the foods are served daintily, and they do not exercise enojigh. But whatever the particular lean Be may be it is important that the condition Bhould be corrected. An ideal remedy for women, and one .especially suited to their delicate reiQUirements, is Dr. Caldwell's Syrup JPepsin, which thousands of women endorse highly. Mrs. Jennie Snedeker, 1041 West Monroe street. Chicago, testifies that she is "cured of grave stomach and bowel troubles by using Syrup Pepsin and without the aid of a doctor or any other medicine." AH the family can use Syrup Pepsin, for thousands of mothers give it to babies and children. It is also admirably suited to the requirements of elderly people, in fact to all who by reason of age or lnjrmitr oauot staad harsh salts, cathartics, pffls or purgatives. T2ta atttstf ahyw aictdafl for 1 Qr

figures show an appreciable increase

during the five-year period in the relative Importance, as measured by value of products, of establishments under corporate ownership. In 1909, of the total number of wage earners reported for merchant mills, 9,053, or 22.9 per cent, were employed in establishments under individual ownership; 7,488, or 19 per cent, in those under firm ownership; and 22,912, of 58.1 per cent, la those owned by corporations. kj There was considerable variation in the relative importance of the establishments operated by individuals, firms, and corporations, respectively, in the dierent states. Thus in Minnesota, the principal flour-producing state establishments controlled by corporations constituted 38.2 per cent of the total number of establishments, gave employment to 85.3 per cent of the wage earners, and reported 87.2 per cent of the total value of products. In Pennsylvania, on the other hand, corporations controlled only 4 per cent iof the establishments, and these establishments gave employment to only 20.2 per cent of the wage earners, and contributed only 27.4 per cent of the total value of products. Value of Products. Of the 11,691 merchant mills report ed for 1909, 138, or 1.2 per cent, manu factured products valued at $1,000,000 or over. In 1904 there were 87 establishments of this class out of a total of 10,051. While such establishments represented a comparatively small proportion of the total number at both censuses, they reported a considerable proportion of the total value of products 36.1 per cent in 1909 and 28.5 per cent in 1904. On the other hand, the small establishments that Is, those manufacturing products valued at less than $20,000 constituted more than onehalf (51.2 per cent) of the total number of merchant mills In 1909, but the value of their products amounted to only 6.2 per cent of the total. The great bulk of the output of the merchant mills waB turned out by establishments having products valued at $100,000 or over, such establishments reporting 72.6 per cent of the total value of products in 1909 and 67.8 per cent in 1904. More Grain Ground. The total quantity of grain during 1909, 872,950,743 bushels, represented an increase of 37,807,118 bushels, or 4.5 per cent, over the amount reported for 1899. The merchant mills devoted primarily to the manufacture of products intended for human consumption used 84.3 per cent of the total quantity reported for 1909; those producing mainly feed for live stock, 8 per cent; and the mills engaged exclusively in custom grinding, 7.6 per cent. The value of breakfast foods manufactured in 1909 and included with "food preparations" approximated $37,000,000. Of the total quantity of grain ground in merchant mills, wheat constituted 61.6 per cent in 1909 and 64.6 per cent in 1899; corn formed 26 per cent in 1909 and 24.8 per cent in 1899; and oats formed 6.2 per cent in 1909 and 6.5 per cent in 1899. The total quantity of wheat flour reported for 1909, 107,108,461 barrels, represents an increase of 3,584,367 barrels, or 3.5 per j cent, over 1899. On the basis of the total quantity of wheat and wheat flour reported, an average of 4.7 bushels of wheat was used to produce a barrel of flour both in 1909 and 1899. The number of mills producing wheat flour decreased from 7,685 in 1904 to 7,342 in 1909. Since in 1909 the total number of merchant mills was 11,691, it appears that a great many did not grind wheat. Minnesota, the most important flourproducing state, shows a decrease of MRS. JENNIE SNEDEKER best their effect is enly for that dayj while a genuine remedy like Syrup Pepsin acts mildly but permanently. 1 It can be conveniently obtained at any drug store at fifty cents or one dollar a bottle. You will find it geutle in action, pleasant in taste, and free, from griping, and its tonic properties' have a distinct value to women. It la the most widely used laxative-tonic in America today and thousands of famines are never without it. If no member of your family has ever used Syrup Pepsin and you would like to make a personal trial of it before buying it in the regular way: of a druggist, send your address a postal eard wOl do to Dr. W. R CaldwU, 417 Washington street, Montieefio, Illinois, aod a tea aamjpia btUa

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WILL HOLD OFFICE TWO YEARS LONGER Law, Recently Passed, Gives County Superintendent Until 1917.

Charles O. Williams, County Super intendent of Schools, will hold his office until August 1, 1917, instead of until 1915, two years longer than the term he was elected, as a result of a law recently passed by the state legislature. Mr. Williams is one of the best educational organizers in this section. The object in passing the bill was not primarily tc extend the term of office for the men now holding the positions of county superintendents, but to facilitate administration work. The superintendent makes his report largely from the report of the township trustees. If both should happpen to be unfamiliar with the office some difficulty might be encountered in properly reporting the progress and conditions of the schools. 68 in the number of wheat flour mills, and a decrease is shown for each of the five classes of mills except those producing less than 1,000 barrels. Decreases in the total number of mills which produced wheat flour took place also in New York, Ohio, and Missouri, which ranked third, fifth and 6ixth re spectively, in the production of such flour in 1909. hut the number increased slightly in Kansas and Illinois, which ranked Becond and fourth, respectively. The Cincinnati Enquirer defines a hotel as a place where you swap dol lars for quarters. ALCOHOL 3 PER CENT AVcgelaWcRieparalwnfrissirailaring tteFoodanilRcgula ting die Stomachs andBowdsi Ptomctes Diglionfkfifur rtess and ItetXontainsnettkr Opium.Morphitic norJliaeraL It W NOT NARCOTIC, JMttitSdxjttilttttd Him Strtlm Ctonfxil Suqpr . ftafegrwn fbnr. mm mi S.r??l.lUil, Aperfect Remedy for Consflfnon , sour ssuuhui.luuu WormsfonvalsHrasJcvtnsaness andLoss OF SLEEP. Facsimile Sigaamrtof 1 NEW YORK. Exact Copy of Wrapper. oiler LD

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Tuesday. Thursday and Saturday Afternoons and Evenings

GREAT BOOK BAEGMN Five Big Volumes, $2.35 REGULARLY SELLING AT $12.00 Clip this Coupon

THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM Everybody's Cycloyedia DAILY COUPON This coupon, if presented at the office of The Palladium on FRIDAY, APRIL 4, or SATURDAY, APRIL 5, will entitle the bearer to one five-volume set of Every body's Cyclopedia (regularly selling at S12) For $2.35

MAIL ORDERS, ADDRESS THE PALLADIUM, RICHMOND, IND. The Sets are too bulky to be- sent by mall, but out-of-town readers can have them for the $2.35, the set to be sent by express, shipping charges to be paid by the receiver. OUT-OF-TOWN READERS need not wait until the days of distribution, but send orders any day of the week and shipments will be made pramptr on the distribution days.

29 WILL GRADUATED

Eaton Commencement to be Held on May 29. EATON. O., April 1. The annual commencement exercises of the Eaton public schools will be held Thursday evening. May 29. in the opera house, when a class of twenty-nine will receive diplomas. Dr. W. O. Thompson, president of Ohio State University. Columbus, will deliver the class address. The graduates follow: Hawley Ashworth. Willard Ashworth. Ray Knox, Frank Brower, Clyde Hardin. Walter Poos, Leonard Markey. Nixon Unger, Clement Parks, Ralph Schatz. Albert Tyrrell. Gale Vaughan; Misses Mabel Chevalier. Lora Brookley. Ruth Galloway, Laurel Hendricks, Fern Killgallon. Nellie Johnson. Melva Koffer. Marguerite Marker, Ruth Petry, Stella Ridenour, Harel Ross, Martha Sherer. Lillian Shannon. Ethel Stephens, Ruth Thompson and Clara Wright. I NOTICE. ! I aii memoers or i oeur we i-iou j Lodge Knights of Pythias are hereby ; notified that on account of flood dis- ! aster, the entertainment which was to . be given on April 1st. will be postpon- j ed until further notice. . Committee. ' 31-;t Two Inscription. j Gladstone was once staying at a ; country house where it was the prne- j tice for each guest to write in the vlsl- ; ' tors book his name and profession , when be went away. It so happened that his great rival, the Earl of Beaconsfleld. was staying In the same house at the time. Lord Beaconsfleld. in signing the book, characteristically wrote as his profession, "Patriotism." Mr. Gladstone (who probably did not know what Beaconsfleld bad written) signed as his profession. "Apprentice.' 1 For Infants and Children. The Kind You Have Always Bought Bears the Signature c of A jjK Use VX For Over Thirty Years o) HI A Skating

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Mr. Suburbanite "Missed my train! And not another one for an hour! It's the same thing every Monday morning:. I never can gt nay breakfast till the last minute," iify Drvdgo "IIow silly! Tell your wife to use Fels-Naptha Soap. She need only rub the clothes with Fels-Naptha Soap and soak them in a tub of cool or lukewarm water and can get your breakfast on time." You shouldn't expect Fels-Naptha Soap to do everything claimed for it unless used in the right way. Give it a chance and it will cure yourwash-day ills. Soap the clothes with Fels-Naptha Soap, roll, soak, in cool or lufewariri water 30 minutes, rub lightly, then rinse. That's all. Don't boil the clothes or use hot water. Fels-Naptha Soap was made to save you from the trouble of boiling, and hard rubbing. Direction for oafca mnd many ttot m of Fla-S apt hm Soop mr yrMtvd tkm rod and gnon c ropier. MURRAY TODAY Blanche Msad and Sparkle Lorenze's Entertainer The Dance of the Violins Milo Duo Mott and Maxfield PALACE Today A Massive, Magnificent War Spectacle -THE PRIDE OF THE SOUTH 3 PARTS 3 with a Tremendous Cast. (V1URR TODAY Motion Pictures o! Richmond And 3 Other First Class Pictures Admission 10c MONEY We loan money on household goods, pianos, teams, fixtures, etc., without removing tnea from your possession. Payments can be made In weekly, monthly, or quarterly installments to suit your Income. In case of sickness or loss of work, time will be extended without extra charge. Get our terms before borrowing. Private Reliable THE STATE INVESTMENT AND LCAN COMPANY Room 40 Colonial Bldg. Phone 2580. . Take elevator t Third Floor. Richmond. Indiana.

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