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i We are Given Three Days to Sell Monday, Tuesday and Wednesday—not any later—The entire The Ilustration of Winter Garments we here present will bear favorable comparison with any stock must go — Prices such 'as were never goods in the market——either at bank- quoted before—we can’t specify too ; . rupt or special sale—both as to Myuch for time is too short,— up P We've got to condense all our material and finish, as well as business into three days and to price. Our aim is to apll)ly the knife to s give the customer the as it was never applied best that money will before—entrance as be- 4 fore on Farnam, just buy and in every ” above 16th street in the S. P. Morse Building for three days only. THE SEARCHLICHT OF TRUTH Tarned on the A, P. A, by a Retired Officer of the Order. SUPREME LECTURER - SIMS' INDICTMENT “A Comspirncy Against the Rights of American Cltizepship and a Menace to Honest, Popular Government.,” The recent split in the “Amorean: known as the American Protective gssocia- tion, served to disclose to public gaze some of the iuner workings of the organization and to show that its professed principles are but a cloak for mereenary ends. Mr, Walter Sims, for a long time supreme lecturer of the order, publishes in the Loyal American of Lansing, Mich,, a terrific arralgnment of the A. P. A, and asserts that he is ready to prove every charge. Mr. Sims addresses himselt to W. J. H. Trainor, the Canadian-American supreme president of the A. P. A., as follows: Dear Sir: It devolves upon me to per- form a very unpleasant duty, one that I could have wished would never have been requested of me. When I entered the A. P. A, 1 did 80 Dbelieving it to Dbe all that its published principles clalmed for it viz., a nonpartisan, liberal American or- ganization for the protection of the constitu- tional rights of ciizenship and our institu- tions and flag, but by sad experience I find that its political leaders of today have other objects In view than these which were so at- tractive at its inception. Under their un- principled control it has become so0 cor- rupted that it has degenerated Into a conspir- acy against the liberty of its members, & large per cent of whom are honest patriots. ‘Phese men, mere office seeking boodlers, have converted it into a secret political machine manipulated by professional politicians, an organization, as run today, dangerous in the extreme to personal liberty in the very insti- tutions which it was primarily organized to protect + * In order to simplify the situation I make and am prepared to Sustain the following charges against the corrupted A. P. A. as existing today: . Its secret partisan political methods are * conspiracy against the rights of American eitizenship and a menace to honest popular government. . Its constitution, by which despotic power is vested In its officers, is a violation of the constitutions of the several states and of the United States and a menace to the per- sonal liberty of its members. . Its usurpation of powers such as are alone vested In the constitutional courts of the republic,~and its refusal to allow its members to appeal from its actions to the clyil courts, make it organized Insurrection. 4. Its so-called advisory boards, in which are vested all the political action and liberty of its members, are a conspiracy to control their franchises of citizenship in violation of the constitutional and legislative provisions and laws for the protection of the independ- Its systematic persecution of its mem- and councils by the secret propagation nderous and libelous accusations, sus- pensions and expulsions by its officers for refusing to comply with their unjust, arbi- trary and illegal dictatorship s despotic and un-American. “g. Its claim to be a protective assoclation of the liberal institutions which are founded n the constitution under existing condi- tiohs s a misnomer, under cover of which At is organized as a secret political machine «un in the Interests of boodling politiclans. “1. As now cobstituted and controlled It Is the enemy of free speech, a free press, Mberty of comsclence, religious liberty and political independence. ‘The rest of the open letter has reference mainly to his connection with the order and Its attempt to deprive him of his rights inches long KERSEY CLOTH CAF Black only trimmed with black Thibet as _an_American citizen, from which we | make the following extracts: “That when it became evident in Cook county last fall that the only honest Ameri- can issue In the political campaign was through an independent party, not in any sense to be an A. P. A. party, but repre- senting the principles, and thereby giving the members of the ‘order an opportunity to vote without violating their obligations, a systematie persecution was inaugurated by the partisan political push in the order against all who had anything to do with the movement. Patriots and councils were sus- pended without law or justice, regardicss of consequences. “That T. B. Beaty, supreme secretary and state president of Michigan, C. P. John- son, state president of Illinois, professional politicians, together with a clique of poli- ticlans in the order, did maliciously conspire against.my liberty of citizenship and reputa- tion, because, as they confessed, I would spoil_their political plans—which plans con- sisted in the bartering of the vote of the order. in Illinols and Michigan. “Honest and reputable members of the order In good standing were denied the rights of free speech in councils, to our great damage, because said political clique had agreed to deliver the vote of the order to a certain political party. “Now, sir, while I still owe my alleglance to the avowed principles of the order, prin- ciples of liberty which existed long before it was ever thought of, I renounce what I never gave, all allegiance to its secret proscription, its unamerican practices, its unjust and [- legal acts, its corrupt political machinery, by which it has in the past, through unprincl- pled men who control it, become a political despotism, exacting from its members sub- mission to the secret abrogation of their American rights. “Its supreme constitution and code of pro- cedure, prepared by designing politiclans, be- stows despotic powers upon its officers, and thereby tends to the depriving of the citizen member of his political independence. Its obligations, as interpreted by its officers, makes it an offense worthy of expulsion for the citizen member to appeal for protection from its acts, however illegal and arbitrary they may be, to the eivil courts. It there- fore demands an allegiance to Its mandates through these men paramount to the rights of citizenship, seeking thereby to establish an ‘emporium In emperlo,’ in which the laws of the secret state are greater than those of the republic. In short, It Is aiming to do the very thing which ‘when practiced by o her orders it denounces as treason. Its so-called advisory boards are so constituted and em- powered as to become a secret political in- quisition, an' {nstrument in the hands of pro- fessional poiiticians, who usually conttrol them, by which to make merchandise out of the vote of the order, and terrorize the in- dependent voter who dares to exercise his franchise regardless of their proscriptive partisan mandates. If these boards order the members of the order to vote in violation of thelr obligations they are expected to do so or suffer the penalty, suspension and merclLess persecution. This you know, sir, to have been practically ex- emplified in Cook county and other places during the last campaign. Members of the order have been given practically to under- stand their obligations bind them to pro- testless endurance of these tyrannical acts. If they dare to investigate for themselves apart from the advisory inquisition the politi- cal situation they are threatened with perse- cution and expulsion. ~ The order fn many places has become such an instrument of persecution in the hands of boodling politi- clans that Its own members fear it as much did tae sons of liberty dread the lion's mouth of the inquisition in Venice centuries ago. Now, sir, facts which are not unknown to yourself demonstrate that the secret prin- c'ple of conduct in the order is the ‘political’ push’ rules, all others must be political clay in the hands of these official potters, Whom the ‘official push’ protects and exalts as its creature is exalted regardiess of right and justice, and whom the ‘oficial push’ seeks to destroy, he must be destroyed. Is this what protection to American institutions results M It so, we need an organization that will guarantee protection to individual liberty from the unlawful deeds of these self-styled protectors. What use have we of the Insti- tutions if there are no independent citizens to use them? “When I entered the order I was told that it was not a political organization, but an order destined for patriotic education in whieh the rights of citizenship were superior to partisan polities. I was given te under- 150 sweep, $695 inches JACKET long, made of Pox real BOUCLE CLOTH CAPE, Beaver Cloth, bound with Braid, el Jacket Chichilla or Cheviot, blues and blacks 26 inchay Jong J BOX JACKET, g made ¢ ,/ all the paw- 7 est maierials, Q50 @ w | yutil you ing now. In the §. P. Morse Co. stand that it tism and abo nated tyranny. Dut experienca teaches that the purpose of its leaders today is the establishment of a lawless anti-religious despotism in order to fight the despotic pria- ciples of religious zealotism. 1 remain re- spectfully yours. WALTER SIM; — - CLEVELAND THE COMING NOMINEE: Whitney Far Too Shrewd to Saeritice Himnelf. NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Chauncey M. Depew was interviewed in London by the World cor- respondent upon Pregident Cleveland. leveland,” he said, “is as certain to be the democratic nominee as the national con- vention to meet. Whitney could not be elected. He knows it and he is too shrewd a man to sacrifice himself.” What about the third term?"* “That has no influence with the mass=of the democratic party. They don‘t regard him as a Caesar nor fear Caesarism if he |is elected. It was different with Grant and Jackson and even with Washington. They were strong individual characters. Cleve- land has persuaded his party at least that he is only the mouthpiece of the best d sires of the people, with no personal purpos or even personal ambition. “ither he has extraordinary Iuck in ac- cidentally doing the right thing or he is real'y a great statesman. I confess T ara not sure In which aspeet I regard him.” NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—Ex-Spxker Crisp was surrounded by newspaper men as.soon as the steamer New York, oa wh'ch he was a passenger, arrived at her dock. On the siiver question he was not d'sposed to :pak and would not commit himself on. finane al sub jects any farther than to say ihat Englich capitalists were fast buying vp Amer.cin bonds, Mr. Crisp expressed himself . favor of the nomination of- Hon. Wiliam C. Whitaey ¢ the democratic nominee for presid:n‘. ‘‘H record as secretarr of the navy was good and showed him to be not only a capable, but a most desirable candidate at the present junc- ture,” said Mr. Crisp, CITY OFFICIALS UNDER A CLOUD. Charged with Forging Warrants Pay- able to Fictitious Ferson BUTTE, Mont., Sept. T.—Warrants have been Issued for the arrest of several ex- officlals, among them ex-City Clerk Perrin Irvine, and bis assistant, Phillip L. Miller, charging them witn forgery, committed dur- ing their term of.office. It s alleged that they issued warrants to fictitious persons, and drew from th2 city funds belleved to aggregate over $25,000. The accused are believed to have left town, as the palice have 50 far been unable to locate them. The administration of which they were members was elected on a reform ticket. The treas- urer, Simon Jacobs, committed suicids sev- eral ‘months ago, and was short in his ac- counts over $50,000. If Irvine and Miller are arrested, it Is predicted that they will make disclosures involving many others high in business and soclal circles of Butte. Not Trylng to Cormer Whent. MINNEAPOLIS, Sept. 7.—The Minneapolis Elevator companies have delivered 150,000 bushels of September wheat to the Peavy company, as agalnst a threatencd 800,000 bushels and most of the companies are now protesting full friendship for the Peavy com- pany, although it 1s well understood in the trade that the elevator companies are a great deal disturbed because of the, loss of car- rylng charges, the responsiblilty for whieh is credited to the Peavy company as a result of their active buying operations. The re- port that the Peavy company was endeavor- ing to “corner” September wheat Is known to be without foundation, as that company never speculates in wheat in any form. s Maryland in the Republican Column, NEW YORK, Sept. 7.—General Felix Angus, editor of the Baltimore American, is quoted by the Commerclal Advertiser on the political situation in Maryland. General Angus said: “The state will go republican tor the first time since the war. Haif of the democratic papers in that state bolted the democratic ticket and wil upport Lowndes for governor. It is almost a revo- lution in political sentiment, and I venture to say that Mr. Lowndes majority will be anywhere from 5,000 to 20,000. His election Is & foregone conclusion.” Our Proposition To Early Purchasers of WiNnTER CLOAKS | Select your winter garment now, Deposit one- third of the price and we will hold it for you are in need of it. Building, w: [ MILLIONS FOR PURE WATER! Mammoth Ditch Designed to Relieve Ohi- cago of Live Aqua, | INCEPTION AND PROGRESS OF THE WORK Reversing the Curre Sanitary and C Doses—En ively t of a River for mercinl Pur- rorvive Distinet- Chie 3 CHICAGO, Sept. 6.—(Special Correspond- ence of The Bee.)—There is an enterprise of both technical and geseral interest mow in progress in and near Chiczgo which for more than one reason deserves to be called a wonder. First, as a performance charac- terized In itself by its truly Chicagoan great- ness, and also for the lack of ostentation and Chicagoan modesty with which it has en conceived, begun and placed on the highroad toward successful completion. Even the official title of this list great feat of American engineering skill and public spirit, although born from a state of unendurable municipal calamity, has the seant of violet- like modesty. Six years ago it first saw light in the Ilinols state legislature -as “The Sami- tary Distrizt of Chicsgo.” This name ex- pressed much, but at the same time it meant nothing. But the good people of Chicago, who are just beginning to realize what a big thing is going on at thelr very doorsteps, it has been called the drainage camal, while with the thousands of men working at it, it is called simply in plain Anglo-Saxon “our big diteh.” Undoubtedly these two names are a good deal more expressive and more graphic than the official one, for it is nothing else than a channel big enough to be rated even in the [ jubflee day3 of canal building among the master works of its kind. The great enter- prise®in question is destined to drain for all time the big city of Chicago and her suburbs and to rid them quickly and thoroughly of their tewage, refuse and waste. It Is a canal—a real ditch, but one of such dimen- slons and at the same time of so peculiar a nature that it really is a connecting link be- tween Lake Michigan and the Mississippi river, so that after its completiop it will be the great Nving “waterway ULetween the mightiest system ‘of ' fuland lakes and the largest sewer system!of the continent, and therefore & part of the channel hetween the Guif of Mexico and the great Atlantic itself. This is no Chicago brag, not even a Chicago Jest. It is simply & part, a technical and gecgraphical part, finding even lately an echo In the cries of alaym of eastern newspapers, which deem the Niagara in Immediate danger of water depletion, and has also aroused most passionate /protests from Chicago's southern neighbors, alovg the Mississippi for reasons still more untenable. As to the Chicagoans themselves, it has been already hinted that tney omly vow begin to recognize in their drainage canal something more than an ordinary open air sewer. A few of them, however, are awakenmg to the still greater fact that the “big ditch” may be destined to become a powerful factor in Chicago's geographical and commercial development. and its effect may reach thousands and thou- sands of miles beyond the narrow limits of their city and their sanitary district. To understand this at once you will have to cast & glance at the topography of Chi- cago. It will be seen that the water- shed between the Lake Michigan and the northeastern Mississippl system stretches in immediate proximity along the western shores of the former, approaching them nowhere more closely than at that southwestern where two generations Nowhere, there- problem of a young commerclal metropolis been from the begin- ning one so great and peculiarly dificult as here, for, although only from twelve to In that way you that there was originally Box tront Boucle Jacket, with the new meion sleeves, 3785 | |'are sure of just the cloak you want—and you will save money by buy- Mail orders filled the same day as received. . &. WEmBERG & o, 16.h and Farnam Street, sixteen fect high, this watershed is yet suffi- cient to make the floods of Lake Michigan tributary to the Atlantic, while the lower waters of the Mississippl are from 150 to 200 miles to the west. As has already been said, this abnormal hydrographic condition is developed mowhere so distinctly and urgently than in Chicago itself. It is here that the watershed approaches the lake most closely, and here also that just west of (his almost invisible watershed the Desplaines river, flowing from north to south for many miles, cuts through Cook county and skirts thie edges of the suburbs of the city. How- ever, only a few miles from the city it turns to the Southwest, where it is called the Illinois river, and empties iuto the Mis- sissippi 280 miles further south. But that is not all. Besides this closest approach of the Mississippi watershed to Lake Michigan and the invasion of the former's water system by the Desplaines river, the city of Chicago has the Chicago river entirely within her limits, flowing to the east and emplying into Lake Michigan. To make it possible for this river to flow eastward at all and to be anything more than a swampy inlet, there are two branches, the North and the South Chicago rivers. running for twenty and thirteen miles, us indicated by their names, from exactly opposite direc- tions, toward each other, joining in the heart of the city and then flowing in the proud tength, say twelve whole business blocks, as the Chicago river into the lake. That is all in the world of the renowned Chicago river, and who, at the time when the Fort Dearborn garrison of 1830 did their little washing, if they had any at all, In_this swamp rivulet, would have dared "to predict that it would grow to be the greatest inland port of the world? Ii we_count but. the bulk of the annual tonnage and not Its value it is the third port in the world, In other words, it Is the main source of the unparalieled prosperity and the object of the, greatest pride of the city of Chicago. But at the same time it bas also become the kource of its greatest difficulties and its most incessant troubles. For apart from its function of reeeiving and sending cut the end- less fleets laden with lumber, gra'n, iron, coal and the many other stap'es of the great west, which are loaded and unloaded on this fifteen miles of river port, linel with docks, elevators, storehouses, lumber yards and fac- torles, this river has always also had the office of carry'ng off the who'e drainage and sewage of the metropolitan crganism grown up around it to the numb:r of one million and a hailf and more, And what this amounts fo will be illustrate] even to the most uninit'ated in’the most Init'atng manner Ly a singe simple fact, The great Chicago st-ck yards, known throughout the whole worid, are stu- ated at the south brarch of the Chicago r'ver, into which, in e-nsequence of a dsily shught ¢ of tens of thousands cf animais, they alcne empty an annual sewage equal {0 that of a community of & m'llion living human beings. If this one fact is not a sufficlent basis, to make another assertion true, under such circumstances Chicago will not have to wait t00 long to equal with her whole emount of sewage that of London. “But," you might interrupt, “ls the-e not the lake, one of the b'ggest, d:epest and fire t bodies of water in_the who'e world, close at the door and under the very noses and lungs of suffering Chicago? Why coes it n-t use it in the first place fir a nage exigencies, like New York and Boston their ocean Inlets and San Franc'sco her bay, without the in- tervention of the river?” No dcubt that this would be exactly the proper thing, were it not that the sweet and limpid waters of Lake Miek#zan have still ancther important use for the people cf Chieago, to which the briny floods surround'ng New York, Boston and San Francisco never would be made subservient by their adjacent populations. Without their lake the Chicagoans would not oniy be Ce- prived of the main source of their great com mereial activity and half driven to per'sh by starvation, but they would also be robbed of their only store and supply of drink'ng water and all die from thirst. Toe lake su-p'ies the whole demand of water for the purpo.es of drinking, cooking and other necess'ties of everyday life, upon which the thousands of Chicago people are as dependent cn thelr maternal lake as the infant on the mother's nourishing breast. And as to the latter the purity @f food is lfe's first and foremost question, 50 to Chicago the preserva tion of the purity of her lake's waters, as well as as thorough a check as possible on the river's pollution, has beem at all times the | father of the river: inch long Cape, beaver trimmed with Herculas braid, black and pavy 3485 most urgent problem of its municipal ex ence. This has been a life's problem and also a struggle for existence, Bigger and bigger and more and more expensive during the years of this struggle the great aqueducts have grown built way out in the lake and carrying back their immense streams of water in tunnels extending miles through their own element In the meantime the river has been fought by the city, fully recognizing its Jekyll and Hyde nature, and it has never ceased to con- front its dangers with all means at its ccm- mand and to abate them, at least where they were most insidious and urgent. But furtber out into the lake the immense aqu duets were projected and the more experi- menting done with the river the more the population of the city grew and the river's own infection and perversion of the lake in- creased, till at last health and welfare of over 1,000,000 were threatened with murder- ous impartiality by poisoned air and poisoned water at the same time. It is too .2uch to enumerate all the meas- ures and steps taken by the municipality of Chicago in the long run of her watery strug- gle for existence. They were at the best half measures, while the problem to be con- tended with has been from the beginning a whole and pitilessly complete one. And such a problem it remained till the state of distress created by it became at last abso- lutely intolerable, and in the year 1889 led to the creation of the “Sanitary District of Chicago.” By it the colossal task was put at once into the grasp of practicability—and not of practicability alone, but of the positive certainty—to be carried out in the very near future. To eft:ct all this and more it had been necessary, in the first place, to make this nmew Board of Health, administration and building, subservient only to the one groat purpose for which it had been created Next it was to be equipped with extensive powers, both of a technical and financial na- ture, which were indispensable to the suec- cess of 8o extensive a task. And last, but truly not least, the state of Illinois, in char- tering the new sanitary district of Chicago, put it beyond any connection with that Chi- cago city governmenc fragrant through the whole country as surpassing in the point of maladorous notoriety even the Chicago river itsell. This done, one or two years more passed, filled with all that quarreling and wrangling which seem, at least In this country, essen- tial with the beginning of great public en- terprises. But up to 1392 the work bad emerged only eut uf this stage of infantile discase sufciently before a final decision re- garding works of a technical nature could be reached, but also before the first ste's for its execution could be taken by making the ultimate selection from the four or five plane submitted. Two or three months later, September 3, 15 ‘Shovel day"—the first spadeful of dirt was taken out of Chicago's “'big diteh,” which is destined to hald in the history of bath modern metropolitan drainage and of canal building the place of a master work of its own. Since then, under the- presidency of Mr. Frank Wenter, a highly successful eitizen and business man of German extractlon, as- sisted by Treasurer Melville E. Stone and a beard of nine trustees, and under the techni- cal management of Chief Engineer Isham Randolph, the work has gone on ingly. In fact, In this three years it has made such rapid progress ihat the tre- mendous excavations will be completed in somewhat less than two years more. It will take then only the finishing touches of the lock and controlling works at both ends of the gigantic cut, and once more, as In primeval times, the floods of Lake Michigan will flow down to the southwest. Not as & whole and in such bulk as at the tipe when everything down from the lakes to the gulf was one big inland sea, but after all in & volume of 300,000 cubic feet of water p minute, and therefore enough to reach the Mississippi, some 300 miles farther south, s a river itself, a third of the volume of the , above the mouth of the Misslssippl There never was a doubl entertained con- cerning the nature of the work with which the engineers of the sanitary district would have to acquit themselves of the enormous task incumbent upon them—it could be but a canal. From the first chiéf engineer of the en- terprise, Mr. L. E. Cooley, to Mr. Isham Randolph's predecessor, Mr. Benezette Wil liams, who submitted, in the spring of 1892, five routes, ol f which was finally adopted they all had agreed that the cnly solution unfalter- | instance guarantee satisfaction or refund the money. of Chicago's life problem would be the digg! of a canal. The topography of Chicagy sy Chicago's earliest history jolned to urge the construction of an immense channel diverting a part of Lake Michigan and the whole of the Chicago river into the Mississippi system, La Salle, the French explorer, and first White man who ever stood®on the ground known today as Chicago, had reported, as far back as 1682, to the king of France, how easy and naturally it would be to connect Lake Michigan with one or the other of the tributaries of the Mississippl, stretching With their sources closely up to the very shore of the lake. As the loyal discoverer was also the first European to go down the Missis«ippi to its mouth, taking possession of all the new country in the name of his king, and naming the southern part of it in his honor, Louisiana, he knew very well what his proposition 'meant, and 200 years ago, in glowing terms, he described to hia majesty the greatmess of the explolt, te complete by such a canal connection the w interrupted waterway-of 5,000 miles, and em- bracing all that was then known of the la er United States, reaching from the French Canadas, at the mouth of the St. Lawrence, to the French Louisianas at the mouth of the Mississippi. Unfortunately, this first scheme of Michigan-Mississippl canal perished, togother with its intrepid originator, when he suce cumbed five years later to his own followers® mutiny In the wilds of Texas. But not for- ever. Immediate resurrection awal'ed it with the very first movements of what we call today the wonderful history of Chicago, When, 150 years after the arrival of La Salle, and twenty-thre2 years after (ha erecs tion of Fort Dearborm at the mouth of the Chicago river, the town of Chicago vas laid out, it was done by a commission created in 1829 by the legislature of the young back- woods state of Illinols under the name of a ““Cansl Commission,” empowercd to “loca canals, lay out towns, sell lots, and app! the precseds to the construction of canals. Chlcago, to be chartered as a eity In 1837, was the first town laid out in 1833 under these provisions. While the first canal con- structed under t was the Illinols and Michigan canal, bullt for nearly 100. miles from 1841 to 1847, and, notwithstanding the tremendous rattroad traffic grown up sinca then, with Chicago as a center, still, T Is today in use for mavigation between Chicago and the navigable headwaters of the 1llinoin viver at La Salle. This old canal has been in every respect tha model and the forerunner of new drainage canal. It 18 not only constructed through the same tract of country, and on the same line as I8 now its gigantic suc sor, but it has been used since 1574 as a ship canal for small craft, and also as help for the drainage of the city. This w accomplished by the erection of big pump- ing works near the spot whers the canal leaves the south branch of the Chicago river, and by pumping as much of the latter's infernal cargo of putrid offzl up to the canal level, and by dispatching in this way down to_the llinols riv.r and to the Mississippi. It was one of the many temporary steps and botch measures which were taken by the city to get rid of the foul contents of its river before they would reach the very heart of the city, and later on the lake, poisoning both Chicago's diet of air and of watsr. But how much, or more correctly, how little, could be effected to that purpose by a channel not over fifty-five fest wide, and not deeper than seven? What kind of cut and ditch will it take In reality to aes complish a diversion of Michigan waters sufficiently powerful to earry with them the whole of the Chicago river, and of Chi- c1go’s sewage backwards to discharge them Into the Mississippl system—that we will learn from an Inspection of the tremendous work 23 It 18 now goIDg on at the new draine Lage canal itwelf, which will be given in ams other letter next Sunday. UDO BRACHVOGEL. Protect Your Ohildren. Mothers would do well to atomize children’s throat and nasal passages morning and evening with Allen's Hyglenie Fluld—a positive preventive of all contagious diseases, such as diphtberia, scarlet and typhold fevers small pox, bronchitls, ete. It has a pleasant, aromatic flavor and is perfectly harmles: their Seutenced for ree Yenrs. LOS ANGELES, Sept. 7.—~Willlam Enseth, a Minnesota tchool teacher, was today sen- tenced to throe years in San Quentin prisom tor forgery. Enseth forged the name of L. A. Reddin of the Los Angeles Farm'ng and Miliing company to an order for $90,