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Show - MINES AND MINING mm I taMs CURE THAT CATARRH Our climate with Its Sudden changes conducive to catarrh which is s chronic Inflammation of the mucous membrane surface of head nose or I throat. One month's local treatment with Paxtine Toilet Antiseptic will convince the most skeptical that Paxtine la not a paliative but a specific for conditions. Paxtine Is a perfectly harmless antiseptic and germicide in powder form which contains all of the antiseptic qualities of liquid antiseptics, but with other valuable cleansing, germicidal, and healing ingredients added. Just a little in a glass of water as needed used as a spray and gargle, will not only remove the accumulated secretions, but heals the Inflammation, destroys the germs of disease, and dispels the disagreeable odor caused by chronic catarrh. For sale at all druggists, 25c and 60c a box, or postpaid upon receipt of price. The Paxton Toilet Company, Boston, Mass. Send for a free sample. A missionary, during a Lenten tea, said, pointedly: I have established missionary trees all over the country. But perhaps you dont know what a missionary tree is? A missionary tree is one whose profit goes entirely to missions. "A Roxborough farmer has in his apple orchard a golden pippin tree that helps to support the Chinese mission. A Florida woman has an orange tree that helps to uplift the cannibals of New Guinea. A California nut farmer devotes a walnut tree to the spread of thefUth In Zanzibar. "Missionary trees, the speaker ended, "are very good things, but the principle that underlies them need not be confined to farms and farmers. NE evening in the early summer of 1901 1 stood, awed but keenly ex- pectant, on the balcony of the Eth1 nology Building at the I I Exposition in Buffalo. By my side I was a short, chubby man in an old r suit of clothes, a negligee shirt and a string tie that had come undone and was flopping over his capacious chest. It was a warm evening, and he had removed his battered straw hat, which he held In his hand. The size of the hat was No. 8. The man was Thomas A. Edison. Before us spread that dream In frozen music, the buildings fronting the esplanade, mall and rSE ALLEN'S FOOT-EASwas done, th Astiaeptie powder to be ibakea into Ibe iboM plaza of the exposition. The twilight tor tired, nchinc feet. Ittnkestbe atinf out of ooraa and the moment had arrived for the night birth end bunions sod makes walking s delight, bold For the first time everywhere, 8&c. Htfuu rubetituter. For FRKB of that dream into splendor. trial package, address A. B. Olmsted, Le Boy, li.I in history architecture was to be made alive at night, more living than by day. Half a million A Good Score. Incandescent bulbs were hid along the transverse What's bogey at your suburb? lines of the buildings. The current was turned Forty cooks a year. Last year we on and they simultaneously bloomed. Ensued a bad only 41." Exchange. spectacle for which a Caesar would have bap tered a province a joy that brought a gasp of who For your own sake, dont wait until it ecstacy from every one of the million happen. ftnvHe a- hpadacher tentb-ach- e. eawTtT earache, or some painful accident. squinted his eyes. The Edison, Hamlin Wizard Oil will cure it. Get s bottle now. poetry missed him. The gallop of scenic history, over the verge of a new era missed him. The Let us never be discouraged by any glory of the spectacle itself missed him. Instead, difficulty which may attend what we be glanced shrewdly and carefully all around on know to be our duty. Dowdier. the entrancing wonder, then cautiously into his battered straw, hat and said: "I could put every filament into that hat! 'Economics, mechanics these obsessed him. That brain, which required a No. 8 hat for covering, could think only of the compressed fact that all the space occupied by the vibrating, eng source of that gigantic ergizing and spectacle could be replaced by about two pints of water or a quart of human brain. - Edison la a rare man. In his speech, of which he la as careful aa of his filaments, he pulls the core from a field of Ideas and thrusts It at yod as if it were a poniard. You think about what he says for a week, a month; and In years you dont forget It. All of this Is leading up to a consideration of The experience of Motherhood is a said a few weeks ago when the wizard-sagtrying one to most women and marks what Not a select audience sat In his atudlo and watched distinctly an epoch in their lives. hun-ydrthe first performance of the klnetograph, that .one woman in a is prepared or fabulous Instrument --which is destined to reprounderstands how to duce plays, operas, public spectacles with the jproperly care for her-elf- T action, the color and the voice Intact or The great old Inventor was gratified once ly every woman now-- Another thrill had come Into his life. His. again. has medical adays latest adventure into the unknown had prosat the treatment 'time of child-birtpered, and. his. friends and associates clustered many approach about him with congratulations, with questions, )but the experience with with assurances. an organism unfitted for the trial of For some time Edison was silent. He Is gratestrength, and when the strain is over ful that he is deaf. Then he squinted from one her system has received a shock from to the other, and said: which it is hard to recover. Follow"Before long youll be working that in an aeroing right upon this comes the nervous ll be able to pack It into a strain of caring for the child, and a plane. distinct change In the mother results. ! A There is nothing more charmingthan Rather a fragile packing-case- . a happy and healthy mother of chil- Rather a small compass In which to place a under right grand opera. A curious dren, and indeed child-birt- h Did Edison conditions need be no hazard to health mean what he said? Didcomparison. he know he was what or beauty. The unexplainable thing is about? that, with all the evidence of shattered talking Ever since I heard that Edison said that. I nerves and broken health resulting In connecfrom an unprepared condition, women have been thinking of moving-picture- s Ana not always In the will persist in going blindly to the triaL tion with It isnt as though the experience way he meant bubbles in connection with the came upon them unawares. They have klnetograph. A ample time in which to prepare, but la cheap. It Is easy to make If they, for the most part, trust to chance vou know hrw.( It la fragile. It la very alluring, ana pay the penalty. colors, all forms. It appeals uniIn' many homes once childless there it refectsto all children. Sages ponder over it. Poets are now children because or the fact versally that Lydia E. link hams Vegetable celebrate It. Artists reproduce it. Conundrum. Why la a moving picture like a Compound makes women normal, ? healthy, and strong. First, you' find them everywhere. Any woman whoa would like On the back streets of Reno I saw the pictures special advice in regard to this matter is cordially invited to of the bull fight at Guadalajara, write to Mrs. Pinknam at Lynn, Guadalajarans now look on the Mexico. Tbo moving pictures Mass. Her letter will be held in of the prize fight st Reno. .strict confidence Arenas, the southernmost port la I saw Chileans applaud moving pictures of the Bowery and the New York' water front. On- the Bowery I saw pictures of the battleship fleet entering the harbor of Punta Arenas. On. an Island 2,000 mllea out in the Pacific Ocean the exiled lepers of Molokai gather dally before the flickering wonders of a world which before had been but vaguely In their dreams. The Sunday evening young people's class of Eau. Claire, Wisconsin, looks in pity on the transplanted and resurrected life of Molokai which passes before their eyes on the screen. A group of travelers in the luxurious saloon of, kn ocean liner study the lifelike pictures of tie country for which tey are bound. The beggars who line tbe patbv ya of the tourist Imploring backsheesh give up their pennies to see tbe living presentment of their prey bounding to them over the ocean wave. Tn Ireland excited Eskimos applaud the hero-.- . Ism of a cowboy who rescues a captured maiden from the redskns. Half-waround tbe World, Insure Yor Shoe 1 'n Northern Russia, tearful peasants sorrow over he pictured plight of a French lover. Miners, Quvrymav Farmers, and Outside Workers The Bengalee moves down. Mowringhee Road double tbe vnr of their iboea by Md (he nd gives up two pennies to see tbe luneral of n heel Site nh aKoUfc heel. The ilihi ting' Edward to see It actually move. The Una leather, (upper! th counter, ease eho moan oro In the alleys of Zamboanga gor without by doubting wear. Sold by ho dealer reedy fitted, er Sued to any eho by wear cobbler. II yoer htld n extra shirt, that be may view the reception of be 'I tupplied, write . Yew taqinry bring - J booklet. Universal as Froth. mtnvB snot acnixm ea - sorms, wm. A carload of tailings f Facts About Motherhood glory-workin- e w ed h, Xor-you- soap-bubbl- soap-bubble- soap-bubble- soap-bubbl- e soap-bubble- At-Pun- ta tbe-worl- - METALLIC HEELS AND COUNTERS y d, Nai . L c -- t: ' n. - Should the Adamson-Turne- r gold discovery In the hills near Wlnno-mucgo down thirty feet more it will prove the greatest gold strike ever made tn tbe state Is the opinion of the well known Nevada mining operator, William Rea, In an inters view In Salt Lake. winze sunk from ths In a forty-foo- t t level of the Melesaa claim of the Mendba-Nevad- a Mining companys property at Ploche Is one of tbe best showings ever opened up In that well knwn old property, which produced ' over $500,000 before tEeT present own- era secured control. A decision has been rendered by the Interstate commerce commission against the freight department of the -Oregon Short Line Railway company regarding coal shipments to Butte. Hereafter the shippers will not have to pay freight on the coal as It leaves the mines, but as It enters Butte. Tbe United States circuit court of appeals at Denver has reversed th decision of the UnltedBlfftel' court for the district of Colorado In ' the Lost Bullion Gold Mining company case and ordered n new trial, Th promoters were sentenced December 25, 1907, on charges of using the malls to defraud. Several mining men Just In from in. ' peering the Gold Dollar, the new t southmiles twenty-eighstrike gold west of Battle Mountain, Nevada, declare that It Is one of tbe best things they ever saw In that- part of the- country. On the frank Hutchlaon group vein haa been exposed, a thirty-foo- t e'ght Inches of whlcu show $1,500 to the ton In gold. Governor Shafroth of Colorado on Thursday exploded a bomb in the ranks of Democratic roemberi pftb .... legislature by a caustic criticism of their failure to enact the pledges of the last Democratic platform, warning them that "an avalanche of public sentiment is coming, and calling the attention of the peopi of Colorado to the conditions existing at the - state house. Two big mining deals have just hen consummated, covering three of most promising undeveloped tbe claims In the camp of National, Nev, J. L. Workman having, disposed of White Rock No. 1 claim for the price of $250,000, with a large Initial cash payment, tbe ground being alongside the National Mines property; also two other claims In the immediate vicinity for the sum of $100,000, of wh'ch $20,- -' 000 was the first cash payment in tbe A bill baa been introdued Massachusetts legislature to regulate listing of mining stocks. The president and majority or the directors must first file s sworn statement giving name, location, amount of stock and the name, address and stockholdings of each shareholder, and true description of property; within thirty day of., annual meeting must file statement of condition, assets and at request of 25 per cent of the shareholders. Inspection shall be made by mining eng'neera; If stock Is Impaired by mismanagement, officers , shall be personally liable. Beaver Moscow of the at Shipping county, Utah, haa been resumed. Tbe accumulation of ere and the large reserves of developed ore In tbe mine give the appearance of a steady output from the Moscow for some time to come. Since tbe Installation of the new pumping plant about :800 feet of drifting haa been done upon the 2,200 level of the Centennial Eureka mine, at Eureka, Utah. As two drifts are aeing driven, tbe work has only been carried on to a distance of about 400 feet from the shaft , Patrick Burke, manager of the Black in the Horae and Jack White.mln Coeur d'Alene, who waa tn Spokane recently, said that .the 150 ton concentrator at the .first ..named property. J near Murray, will be operated by a double ahlft In a short time. ca E bare-heade- concen- tional, Nev., were unloaded In Salt Lake last week. The shipment will net the owners about $25,000. The Utah Copper company has given out its sixth annual report for the year ending December 31, 1910. The production for the year was 89,019,511 pounds, at a coat of 8.069 cents. Sixteen huge dredges, eachcostlng from $150,000 to $300,000, are now In operation In the vicinity of Dawson, Alaska, each dredge, with its fourteen men, performing the work of not less than 500 shovelers. The Copper River railroad from Cordovan torKennikot la opening up a great country for both quartz and placer mining. .The Guggenheim are heavily Interested In there. Provision! and machinery can now be taken in there cheaply. F. A. Heinze baa applied to the New York curb for permission to list the stock of his Porcupine flotation West Dome Mines, Ltd. This company is capitalized for $3,000,000, 600,-00- 0 shares, par $5, of which 500,005 shares are outstanding, Check aggregating $1,779,574, In payment on dividend No. 11 of 50 cents a share, have been mailed from the offices of the Goldfield Consolidated. This payment make the total of $4.10 a share paid by the Consolidated company to date. The rush Is now on to Idltarod, the new camp 1,200 to 1,500 mllea down the Yukon from Dawson. About 4,000 people wintered in there. Every berth has been engaged out of Seattle for three months ahead. The camp will probably produce'IS.oOO.OOO thlaaea--so- tedw. -- and trates from the National mill at rlze ring would not endure any pictured sexual depravity. To me that was a wonderful revelation of Anglo-Saxopsychology. Thus it will always be In our theater, whether the admission price be Overrents or two dollars American audiences want action; they want thrills; they want desperate courage and wild heroism; but they want It all clean. They want the good to triumph, the guilty to be punished, and wrong to-b- e avenged. A Parisian manufacturer offered $200,000 for u the right to make moving pictures of the Passion Play. His offer was refused. He went back to hia studio, engaged a company Anywhere, everywhre, you find them. In the of very skillful actors, rehearsed - them carefully United States you el have to bunt a town of and reproduced the Passion Play,- almost as well less than 2,000 lflhabknts If you wish to eacape as it was originally done, and the cost was about the moving pictures.. a twentieth of what he offered for the original. Five millions of kerlcans dally visit these 1 This manufacturer had an eye on a new field shoVs. for the moving picture. While bla imitation will, The exhibitors paylll, 000,000 a year for their films. The public ps $67,600,000 a year to see perhaps, find' a comparatively small market. It cannot hope to reach the class that would have them.,. -- 1" Mr. Edison purchased a guaranteed reproduction of the average weekly royalty therefrom of $8,000. 1 Oberammergau play; vl., the churches. So it la a pretty big business, pretty thor- For the churches have not yet come utterly nn der the sway of the moving picture, despite the onghly organld, qolte anlveraal in its reach, In its universality. fact that the Congregational and Presbyterian churches of Redlands, California, showed moving Tbe child of tbe poor, with a clay pipe and the suds from the .weekly wash, can have just as pictures all last summer In their outdoor pavilion. good a time as any rich yonng fellow with an ImYet the moving picture manufacturers are deported meerschaum and the best castlle. So It Is with the novlng-plctur- e shows. It revoting a lot of time and money to religious subjects. quires little capital to run them. A long room, Joseph Going Into Egypt, "The Repulse of Herod, "Jepbthahs Daughter, "The Relief easily darkened, a nhe-fee- t square patch of white of Jericho, and "The Wisdom of Solomon" ars cloth, some benches (or the spectators, an opera- - few of the- - subjects ator at ten dollars aveek.xnd a rented film, now-taof moving-picturplays founded on Biblical accounts. the place of It company of actors, stage While tbe moving pictures are battering' at th scenery, propertied lights and a properly doors of the churches they have already parequipped building.' tind the poor boy gets as - much value for his nkkel Out as the rich boy can get tially scaled the walla of tbe achool-houseof every seven subjects passed by tbe National for any number of dollars. Yet. they ran Into 4tngcr that no soap bubbles -- .Board of Censorship, one Is classed as "pedagogical. can allure. Fire Is of these the most patent In the catalogues of tbe manufacturers one Of tbe moral dangen we will apeak later. It finds films that show lessons In "agriculture, la through the moral that we can see aeronautics, animal life, bacteriology, biography, more clearly tbe novlng picture gossamer biology, botany, entomology, ethnology, fisheries, tinsel. geography, history, Industry, kindergarten studla tbe danfirst and most vital Fire, however, ies, mining and metallurgy, microscopy, milifire In Paris, In which ger. ,Tbe Charlty-Baiaa- r tary and naval life, natural history, ornithology, so many women were trampled to death by cowpathology, pisciculture, religion, travel and as caused by the fall of a spark ardly men, a zoology." film which upon some celluloid moving-pictur- e It looks like the catalogue of an educational bad been dropped into a basket. In Canton 600 publishing house. Yet It is only the list- of films men, Cblnamen, wen burned to death in a fire that may be and are ordered by "the trade. In a moving-picturshow house. In Quito, EcuaSubjects under these lists ars shown dally In the men and women a dor, fifty lost their Uvea in 7,500 theaters that exhibit moving pictures In this similar calamity. country. They form entertainment, not InstrucIt speaks well for the widespread and contion. They have put the stereoptlcon out of of the stant vigilance fire departments of th business, not the schoolmaster. United States that no great catastrophe haa yet For the public schools have no more surrencome to - the moving-picturbouses of this to tbe new an), plausible Invader than bav dered country. tbe cburcbea. Lives have not been lost In ths moving picture shows. Lives have been lost through tbe moving-pictur- e Why? shows. Why not teach children history by showing Where once tbe dime and nickel novels sugthem scenes from tbe lives of great men, gested ways of crlm to unbalanced youth tbe pageants from tbe great moments that are duly moving picture has come to make a more ready and laboriously recorded In the books. Why not and more potent appeal. The printed word is it end watch Georgs Washington cross the Delanever so ardent with an Impressionable mind as ware on tbe moving picture sheet. Instead of th seted word. having to puzzle your bead over the dry print Several way have been thought of Jo lessen ief that records It on unlivened page? Why not evils. Charles Sprague Smith, late-chlearn about lb growth of flowers pleasantly, by r these obvious of th Peoples Institute In New York, watching a picture Instead of having lo patiently dissect tbe flower and1 then piece It together thought he had solved the problem when he Induced the manufacturers of the moving pictures again under tbe Instruction of a botany textto agree to a national board of censorship. book? Such pictures can be and are constantly Tbe ' manufacturers, good trade diplomats, shown. Do they not mean the revolution of ' pedagogy? readily asaented, and then saw to It that tbe board of censorship should be advisory and not Not long ago tbe New York Board of Education The result is that many picture antagonistic. appointed a committee totnvesttgate this subthat create havoc among youthful minds when ject, and find out If it were feasible to install moving-picturmachines In the various schools shown on th publle screen natbe by get tional board of censorship. of the city. Superintendent Maxwell was on the No. This bubble that Edison has loosed upon , committee. I saw him a few day after th exus will play itself out Just so far aa tbe instincts hibition. of tbe whole people of this country will permit; He waa not very enthusiastic-- , about the picno farther, no sooner. tures. On night I went to a prlx A method will never bd devised that will save fight Only men wege present The casual observer might have any human being the labor of learning," he said. said they were all tough men. After the fight We learn only by taking thought, and that Is a canvas waa erected in th work. You cannot Insert learning work,-harand an ring and nouncer said, "An exclusive film will now be" hypodermically- - You cannot swallow ,lt in tabshown to the members of this club. loid form. There is but one way to take It. and The cturw proved to be of French manufacthat It the oldest way known. You will find after have vanlabed that ture and portrayed a vile aftuatlon ln a Hve. mil nf these Instantly biases and a storm of execration burst It will be the newest way, too from tbs audience. The running of tbe film was Wblch throw the moving picture right back - stopped and the picture removed where it belongs In th theater. It can bav no before It wss no 11 shown. Grim silence greeted tbe removal of permanent place In the church. It can have be auxll It may tbe canvas. th school, though In real place - Tbe crowd that Uorted In tbe action of tbe - iary to either, or botlk n Ober-ammerga- 1 - soap-bubbl- y kes e soap-bubb- - e - e - -- e 1 J 909-foo- -- ; |