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SISTERS OF CHARITY f Use Pe-ru-na for Coughs, Colds, Grip and Catarrh —A Congressman’s Letter. Ia every country of the civilized world Sisters of Charity are known. Not only do they minister to the spiritual and intel lectual needs of the charges committed to their care, but they also minister to their bodily needs. With so many children to" take care of and to protect from climate and disease, these wise and prudent Sisters have found Peruna a never failing safeguard. Dr. Hartman receives many letters from Catholic Sisters from all over the United States. A recommend recently received from a Catholic institution in Detroit, Mich., reads as follows: Dr. S. B Hartman, Columbia, Ohio: Dear Sin —• * The young girl who used the Peruna was suffering from laryngi tis, and loss of voice. The result of the treatment waa most satisfactory. She found great relief, and after further use of the medicine we hope to he able to any aha Is entirely cured. ” — Slaters of Charity. The young girl was under the care of the Sisters of Charity and used Peruna for catarrh of the throat with good results as the above letter testifies. Send to the Peruna Medicine Co., Co lumbus, Ohio, for a free book written by Dr. Hartman. Ask Your Druggist for a free Peruna Almanac for 1904. I jNk. B I /y * I I ’wxr&cffiWß& RIFLE ®»PISTOL CARTRIDGES. 1W 1 “ It>a the shots that hit that count. ” Winchester I .ynT Rifle and Pistol Cartridges in all calibers hit, that is, they shoot accurately and strike a good, hard, pene- Cial trating blow. This ia the kind of cartridges you will get, if you insist on having the time-tried Winchester make. AU DEALERS SELL. WINCHESTER MAKE OF CARTRIDGES. ===y== ybursfora ClearHeach « , BROMOSELTZER ’ OI*D nVBITVMKmSMB & TELEPHONES FOR ALL PURPOSES. The Colored© Telephone Co. 14S1 Cluunp* OKMTEK, COLO. lf» g«lf dkmmn|angJk The following letter is from Congressman ■ Meekison, of Napoleon, Ohio: The Peruna Medicine Co., Columbus, O.: 1 Gentlemen: “I ( have used several 1 bottles of Peruna and feel greatly benefited there by from my ca- | tarrhof the head, i and feel encour aged to believe ! that its con tinued use will .fully eradicate a disease of thirty David Meekison. ' years’ standing.*’•—David Meekison. Dr. Hartman, one of the best known 1 physicians and surgeons in the United States, was the first man to formulate • Peruna. It was through his genius and 1 perseverance that it was introduced to thn medical profession of this country. If you do not derive prompt and satis factory results from the use of Peruna, write at once to Dr. Hartman, giving * full statement of your case and he will be pleased to give you his valuable advice gratis. Address Dr. Hartman, President of The Hartman Sanitarium, Columbus, O. fCAPSIOUI VASELINE (Ptrr rp 11 eot.i.*p«rmLS rm«) A snbstituto for and superior to mustard or any o<A«r plaster, and will not blister the most delicate akin. The pain-allayinc and curative qualities of this article are wonderful. It will Mop the toothache at once, and relieve head ache and sciatica. We recommend itaa the best and safest external counter-irritant known, also as an external remedy for pains in tbe chest and stomach and all rheumtfic. neuralgic and gouty complaints. A trial will prove whet we claim for It. and it will be found to be invalu able in tbe household. Many people say it is tbe best of all your preparations." Prico 1* cents, at all druggists or other dealers, or by sending this amount to us in postage stamps we will send yon a tube by maiL Mo article should be accepted by the public unless tbe same carries our label, as otherwise it is not genuine. CHBWBUOUON MFC. CO., BEGGS’ CHERRY COUGH SYRUP cans cMgha sad caMa Let your hope out, give it liberty, but see that your industry keeps close to it. The accuracy library is for co-operation in informa tion on the great time i of tbe S ources of < methods. \ enemies of easy errors and the friends of forethought, to re duce mutually expensive mis takes of mechanical, commer cial and professional people. THE MOSAIC METHOD. Monos was a city young man anil had a method of overcoming evil with evil. One day he found a man killing an other ma| ko he killed tho killer. His method was not appreciated by any one, so he went to live on a farm for forty years. He found a father-in-law who taught him a lot of common sense. When he had learned to do a few things right tlicn God called on him and gave him an order. Moses had a lot of zeal when he knew everything except how to do It right. Now that he knew how to do It right and had an order ho lost his , zeal. He wanted his bother to be given the order, so God let him have part of it. But by pushing Moses along God made him very useful and a practical leader. Moses got mad over the follies of his followers and then made a fool of himself for a minute. Ho might have lived longer and been more useful if he had asked God In place of getting mad. Moses got sick of the Mosaic meth od, as everybody does in time, and he learned by expensive experience to leave all glory and revenge to God. He might have learned all he did by observation and saved himhelf a lot of trouble. The Hurricane Angers. The old man had a place on the curbstone near a busy corner in a city, where he made canea and sold them on request. He did not offer them for sale, his working at It was his advertising plan, and he did not like to have crowds of moneyless curious collect around him, as that obstructed the sidewalk and probably endangered his privileges. At times the crowds would form and remain until he would have an angry fit like a hurricane. This made the trouble worse and Increased the size of the crowd, but when angers begin they do not very often stop to inquire where they are going to end. If they did they might end at the be ginning. On these subjects young people are able to start with the wis dom which elderly people stop with. Lifting the Hand Too Lato. A young lady had a twenty-dollar collection of plumes on her hat. It had taken her years to make this col lection. One evening while crossing a bridge the wind lifted the hat from her head and carried it beyond her reach. She lifted her hand, but too laie. The hat floated down stream and it had a chance to reach the Mis sissippi river and the ocean. Ever since this hat experience she has been more cautious and active, but her pre vious education might have included sufficient instruction and caution to have helped her save the hat. Some day the day school course of study will contain exercises in the Interest of preventing things getting lost. We can learn by intelligence just as well as by expensive experience. Diacovering a Market. How to find the person who wants to buy what you have to sell is an in teresting subject and one over which many are thinking. But if you happeh to have a rare kind of an article or the only thing of ita kind and it Is but one, so that only one person in the world is your market and a one time sale ends the transaction the hunt becomes much like that for a needle in a haystack. Should you ever be trying to do anything as difficult as this remember that while on the way to see a man wno does not want what you have you may meet a person who knows of some one who does want it Keep moving and think also. Advice and Practice. It Is easier to tell another person how to climb a greased pole than to climb it fourself. When we try. to follow the good advice we give away we may wonder If we gave too much of It away as everything seems to conspire to break up our resolutions. Is it best to expect perplexities and plan for them before we meet them? Over Work. There are times when any one who has to do anything has to do too much in too little time. It Is at such times that we wish for time and fore thought. strength and cheer. We may remember when we laughed too much gad wish that a little had been saved lor times when w* cannot smile. UMBRELLA REMARKS. There is one umbrella in a certain man’s collection —a kind of an um brella which in all right except in a rain. It makes a fairly good walking stick to frighten off the rain, but when it Is put up to protect you from the drops from the clouds it absorbs rather than sheds. It enjoys holding water and increasing its weight. Some one skillful in clothmaking may be able to explain this peculiarity. It ir» ■\ better umbrella than the kind which lets the water through. It may have been made for those who walk next to the person who is carrying it as it does cot drip at tho edges. Those who look for good dualities find them where others see nothing encourag ing. Some people could not bo blue over anything—but stop—If that is true then some people cannot be bright over any thing, and I do not want to believe that. That umbrella has to remain as it is, but you or I can change every hour, as we are the switchmen of our own qualities and dispositions. When we live liko a tree we remain as we were started and happen to grow, or if we exist like an umbrella wo exist as we are or happen to wear out or get lost, but we do not have to live like a tree or exist like an umbrella. We can grow Into better mentul condition every day as long ns we 11 vo and we can influ ence our environments to mutual bene fit. There is always just above every one the Eternal Parental Power over ready to lift up all who look up and reach up. Rubber Judgment. The shoo clerk thought that the pair of rubbers which he handed the customer would be about right for the boy at home, as tho customer said that the boy’s shoe was nine by three inches, but the customer asked tor heavier and larger ones. The clerk found a pair to suit the customer, and the customer carried them home, only to get the laugh on himself, as they were nearly an Inch too long and a quarter of an inch too wide—they were sizes too big fend very big for their size and kind of rubbers, anyway. But the customer kept cool and made m comparative study of rubbers and ot shoes and ot boys' feet, then he tied up the rubbers and saw the store again with a much less positive spirit and a more respectful hearing toward rubber department clerks in gencraj and in particular. This time the clerk was asked ques tions and consulted on quality, price and sizes. A better pair, with less weight and more fit at* the same price was secured and pocketed. Both cus tomer and clerk were polity and if the rubbers are not satisfactory in every way there will be another chapter to this record. A Path to Daylight. A list of perplexities frequently re viewed Is the beginning of solutions because a gain on some one of them will be unexpectedly secured and that victory will prove to be the key to conquering another one. Go over your work and make a list of the things which hinder progress, then read and reread the list, adding an idea as it comes to you. For First Things First. Plan to devote a day to a special piece of work and then, when the day Is nearly gone before the special work Is started, a wondering over where It went to is natural. But it is also natural to forget about the mistake ami a little later do it again. In order to grow we must remember .and in vest our experiences. Runaway Talk. You have seen a runaway horse jerking parts of a broken rig after him as he went on in a brainless way. You have noticed that some of us get to talking the same way and jerk parts of broken subjects here and there without any intelligent thought But to recognize error is the begin* ning of reform. i Boys and Bottles. A tribe of boys running around hunting for fun generally manage to worry some one. In one case they set bottles on the base of a plastered fence and It was their good luck not to do much damage before being stopped. Could such boys be coaxed to pick up broken glass in place of making It? Two Mon and Two Hooks. I Have you seen men level the broken stone for street paving? They have two big potato hook like rakes tidfl together and while one pulls the other pushes. That’is mechanical co-opera tion for their benefit and greater re sults. People all over the world need to know how to pull and push In uni son. I Whan to Bo Brighter. A lady cut across the street to catch a car and she ran into a wheelman. Her dress got the worst of it. but she caught the car. In taking short cut paths keep both eyes open and a little wider than usual, as you must think of several things when whero i others are sot thinking of yon. —, Til L.'im lit ÜbtC Manitau *Clte pass 5“ Fill! fßultoi Park Srlppla Cnrt Bum Visit Ludtlllt Elmwood Niw Castlf Grand Junct. SiltUkj Pullman Sleeping and ffolorabo flMManb . « lßaUwa^ Company Shortest Benaral -Best Offices -Route Damir C. n. SPEERS. G. P. A. California fi/!m§sSk\ ■■ .800k5... Ie r p iwivis Wl 7 j A Handsome Series of New and Useful Publications. The Southern Pacific Company has published for free distribution th* following books and folders, which may be obtained from any Southern Pa cific agent or T. H. Goodman, general passenger agent at San Francisco. If you apply by mail, enclose stamp for each publication. “Resorts and Attractions Along tho Coast Une” is a handsomely illus trated folder giving a description of the health and pleasuu resorts on the coast between San Francisco and Eos Angeles. “Shasta Resorts,” embellished with beautiful half-tone engravings, de scribes the scenic and outing attractions of the vast and wonderful Shasta region, the grandest of pleasure grounds. '’California Souti; of Tchaehapi” tells all about the charms of that re markably favored semi-tropic spot, Southern California. A Handsome May of California, complete in detail, reliable, skillfully indexed and full of information about the state's resources. It Is the only publication of it 3 kind conveniently folded for pocket use. “Summer Outing” is a .‘{2-page folder devoted to the camping retreats In the Shasta Region and Santa Cruz mountains. It appeals more directly to that large and growing class of recreation seeks who prefer this popular form of outing. Pacific Grove is the Chautaunua of tlie West, and this folder not only describes the pretty place itself, but gives a program of the religious and edu cational meetings, conventions, schools, etc., to lie held this summer. Other publications are “Lake Tahoe,” “Geysers and Lake County.” “Yo- Semite,” “Hotel Del Monte,” “Castle Crags,” each brimful of information about the places named, and printed in the highest style of art. A variety of California literture attractively illustrated, describing i*.s resources, famous resorts and numerous wonders, also maps and folders show ing routes, through trains and valuable information, may be obtained by ad dressing WILLIAM K. McALLISTER, General Agent. Southern Paciflce Co., 1112 Seventeenth Street. Denver. Colo. imi THE POPULAR LINE TO COLORADO SPRINGS, PUEBLO, CRIPPLE CREEK, LEAO VILLE, GLENWOOD SPRINGS, ABPEN, GRANO JUNCTION, SALT LAKE CITY, CGOEN, BUTTE, HELENA, SAN FRAN CISCO, LOS ANGELES, PORTLAND, TACOMA. BEATTLE. w REACHES ALL THE PRINCIPAL TOWNS AND MININO CAMPS Of COLORADO. UTAH AND NEW MEXICO. THE TOURIST’S FAVORITE ROUTE 4 | u —— TO ALL MOUNTAIN RESORTS. The only line passing through Salt Lake City en route to the Pacific Coast. mt\m bbtween DBNYBR mo IiIIIUUUU CRIPPLE CREEK SALT LAKE CITY nt nnntiTfi leadville ogden vl LLU 1 M1 1 GLENWOOD SPRINGS PORTLAND mriflli ° rano ANOELE r franci,co nino CHICA6O, si. nuis m s» mxasco. uAUd DINING CARS Florence And Cripple Creek Railroad And Associated Companies Chs connecting link between th* Gold Mines of the Gripple Greek District iui4 tbe mills and smelters In the valley below. 40 MILES 40 mt th* grandest mountain scenery mm •arth. Connecting ut Canon City and Florence with all Denver & Rio Grands Railroad trains from Hast and West. For rates, routes and llteratur* d*- scriptlve of tbe Cripple Creek dlstrlsv sail on or address C. F. ELLIOTT. Trento Manager, Denver, Cot*