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the ^urrciU ijcuis of the ,?lat). ^ ^ Hnnmnn a *rr?r tv^tm i i rUSTEK & WILMS have just rccievcd their STOCK OF SPRING GOODS. They were selected by one of the firnf, in person, and boi^ght ^0^ .after the DECLINE Pfl PAIGES, FOR CASH. We can sell a great many goods AT AND BELOW what they would have cost * EAELY IN THE SEASON IN THE Northern Markets. Our Stock is complete, and we can Safely say that we are prepared to Sell Goods as Low as similar goods can bo bought in this or any , TiTfTn TTTin-nmr/w ? nmuUflUiVIWU1 DlAKliiiiiT. |] Wc request all in want of goods <, to look at our Stock before pur- i chasing. < No Trouble to Show Goods. | May 11 19 If ] "7 HEAD All! UifiEST. 1 take this method of returning thanks to my customers for their liberal patronage bestowed upon me sii ce 1 commenced business on my own account, and I ilatter myself that the patronage thus bestowed can be attributed in a great measure to my desire and aim to deal strictly upon the Basis of Fairnoss and Honesty to N one and all. My goods are marked down at i a /i xt 1 hhj lutYunbiiguiu ituu uiurcuy commend themselves to all who pur- i chase. In these days of close, com petition I make it a rule to keep abreast of the times, andnotonly ^ keep a large and attractive stock of GENERAL MERCHANDISE, but mark them down at Rock bottom prices; and while I do not make it a rule to undersell, yet I know that my prices arc sis low if not a Little lower than than the Lowest, L taking as my motto, that old but A practical maxim, j) /'SHORT PROFITS and QUICK i IS SALES." Pi ' Especial attention is called to JL my 11 IMMENSE SPRING STOCK II now on hand. These goods have 11 heen seloctcd with great care and HJ embrace all the I NOVELTIES OP THE SEASON. | IV The young Gentlemen in my WF ^ ajiyjloy are ever ready at their anxious to show goods, and ] B con8^er n0 trouble but a pleaIs ft sure. Soliciting a continuance B of your kind favors. BJ J. E. COLTON. UEjrJUHSD NEWS ITEMS. Fatal Fall From a Balloon.?Fayetlo Mo. Juno 20?E. L. Stewart, aeronaut, made an ascension here on Monday in an old hot air balloon which hurst when it had attained the height of about 2,000 feet. The balloon and aeronaut came down with a rush and both plunged into llonne Jcinive Crock. Stewart's body was recovered. A Woiilu-Hk K.wisui'.n Oaimlmiku.?Alexandria. Va, June 20.?A negro boy aged IS, met an eleven year old daughter of Etjgar I.ec, in Fairfax county yesterday and attempted rape. The girl's erics brought assistance tin time to save her and capture tl"* * egro. A attempted to lynch tl?' ..-oundrcl but after lie was strung up to a troo cooler counsels prevailed. He was let d ?\vn and consigned to jail at Fairfax C. II. Mruniut and Kouukuy.?Cicinnati June 20. ?A lime Star special from Prospect, Tenn, says that James Ticc, elexk in Campbell's store, was killed with an axe last night aud the store robbed. Three negroes were arrested. While the in" quest wns in progress a mob took ouo of the negroes, Wesley Warren, out of jail and hung him, the others were released. ?- - ? - - ? A lit. Pin Lie an CcniosiTY.?Jmlgo Kelly's friends arc trying tc raise money enough to pay olfhis debts. Whenever a Republican Congressman is discovered who iiass.it iu the house for a number of years without making a pile of money the admiration of people who know him aud are frieudiy to him is greatly excited, and they are ready to do most anything forthopiodigy. Judge Kelly, it. appears, comes within this category. A Youxo Husband's Dkspkuation.?Chicago, June 18.?Adolph Ehrkc, aged 35, married a pretty Qermrn girl of this city in Ncvcuibor last. Mrs. Ehrko sued her husband for divorceOn Saturday he handed her a revolver and requested her to blow his brains out. She declined and Ado'ph left in an angry mood. To-day he became intoxicated, sought his wife, and fired twice at her, one bdliet lodging in her neck a:ul the other iu her right cheek. As she fell he turned the weapon on himself and sent two bullets into his brain, falling dead on the prostrate 1*1.1-111 rtfllm m?m?i. I.~ - 11-1 -1 . ..... ,iv aii|>i>i-au<i no iiiiil ir.urucrcu. She will recover. This is tho ihiril murder and tlio second suicido which have "occurrc 1 in Chi-? eugo during ilic past forty-eight hours. Whiskey has figured as a factor in every crime. Will t:ii: Qukkn go Ouazy.? London, June 'JO ? 7Yulh prints the following statement in regard to the condition of the Queen:* "Tho Queen lias for t\*v months Leon in a state of mild , melancholia, which in course of lime, if not re. lieved, would probably become very difficult to treat. Iter condition line naturally caused great anxiety, because of tho tendencies of her family. Ilcr Majesty and the princess licatrice will this autugnn go to the vicinity of Florence Italy, where they will remain two months." o Tub Tklkimionk or tub Futvuk.?I ashed Judge Cleukley the other night what lie thought would bo the direction of invention ami progress the next thirty years, "l should, say," ho replied, "tho application of tho principle of the telephone to tho other senses. A few year# ago the distance at which you could hear a sound was limited. Now it is practically without limit. You can smell a tlowcr only a short distance. I do not 8oo why a telephone for tho nose might not enable you to sniell a rose in New York even though you were located in Atlanta. So of ilto lasto and touch. A new application of the principle of tbo telephone might enable you to remain in Atlanta and kiss your wife in London { or taste a berry in l'aris. The tclcsuopo haa already mado tv-clumsy step in this direction for Ihoeigbt. Wo would have thoughttho man crazy a decade ago who sdfd you could stand in Now V'ork in 1881 and hear every noto of a concert in Boston?qrito as crazy as the man who now predicts that in 190.1 you may sit down in Atlanta, see a theatrical representation in Cincinnati, taste a fresh oystor in Baltimore and shako hands with a friend in Savannah, all at the same time. In these days it is only tho impossible that happens."?Atlanta Constitution. Tub Srrro.s-Sin klus Tbaoboy. ? It is generally believed in Charlotto and Mecklenburg bounty that the killing of J. G. Sitlon by Shields was a foul and brutal murder. Tho evidence will probably develop the fact that the accusation of his sister's seduction was ouly a cover, and that his real purpose wr.3 to annihilate Sitton's testimony in a caso pending against him for house burning. Tho focliugs of the community have assumed a dangerous and restless shape, and fears arc entertained that tho slayer may yet he lynched. Efforts of counsel will doubtless be made to have the venuo changed, on the gr?Und that lie cannot have a fair trial in ('liarlollc.?11 ill Herald -? ? A Tnmiiui.rt Rxi>i.ob.,'>?.--Ureonvillo Juno 20 ,?A terrible boiler explosion t\?ok phico about 1 [>' clock toda^r on the farm of Robert (' Willi man, about eight miles south of tho city. Ten lien wore near variously engaged iif tho work of I' threshing wheat, ami seven of them wove injured ?{ho engineer, Ned MeCrayer, colored, fatally. MoBrttyer's right arm and shoulder were ierrihiy mangled, and tho aide of his faoe frightfully spalcfed and lora* Ho died shortly after the accident. Kiisha Wilson, colored* is very seriously wounded and scalded. B. P. Cox, white, Charles Carter, whito, Andrew Rhodes, while, Butler I'erry, colored, and a nogrolaboror, whose natno has not been learned, received injuries more or less serious ii their nature hnt none of them thouorlit tn tn\ fatal The cause of the cxptoaion was a dcfec'.ivo steam gauge, which Mollrayer was hailing flown with his hand at the time to prevent the engino blowing off sicani. In this way it is thought too much steam was allowod to accumulate. Heavy parts of the engino wcro thrown seventy-five yards. The thresher was considerably damaged V ONLY."* Only a trifle, yet broken Arc seals that wcro heavy and strong ; Only a word, lightly spoken. Yet the soul burstcth forth into song. Only a dew drop, yet brighter The verdure of meadow and lawn : Only a sunbeam, yet lighter And fairer the rosy-hucd dawn. Only a day, a mere glimmer Of time, as it vanishes fast ; Only a day, growing dimmer 'MiiLpliadows and gloom of the past. , Only a day, yet forever Its impulse shall with thee remain ; And the fruit^gf its labors shall never He given to ripen again. Only a day?just the rinnle Of a leaf on life's stream flowing fust; Vet bearing an argosy triple? The future, tho prcscut, the past. Tinio was, when it glittered leforo thee, A part of futurity's dream, And brighter tho heavens were o'er theo With hope-stars Utopian beam. Time is, when it hovers around thee, And lingers an hour by thy side ; While spells of fair promise that bound thee Go drifting away with the tide. Time will be, when dawncth the morrow, When vanished for aye it will be ; A token of pleasure or sorrow Its only rcmcmbraucc for thee. Only a day, nor yet ever Its moments forgotten shall be, Till bubbles of time-stream forever Are whelmed in eternity's sea. Endi.nu is MarmAOH.?Daltimore, June 19. ?A short time ago Cecil County society wad ?et gossiping by tho elopement of Mrs. Charles Uoiuhart with Mr Norman Whillock, both of I'ort Deposit, Md. Interest was added to tho affair l>y tho wealth and high social position of the erring la ly's husband. Mrs. llciuhart had uui, ?uug ucoii a who. sue crew up to bo a young woman of remarkable beauty and noted brilliancy of conversation. She shone in her social circle as its leading belle, and nt one time was engaged to marry Whit lock, with whom she after ward eloped. Whit lock was not wealthy,, and when Charles lleinhart came along ho was accepted, and they wore married less than two years ago. lleinhart resided a majority of liis time in Port Deposit, but he had a large drug store in Washington, lie was a young man of tiuo address and great popularity, and is quite wealthy. Mr. lleinhart lavished the most costly presents upou his wife. She dressed in elegant stylo and licr ever-r-whim vat ;?atiftrd. {U*-*?,U?M r3. lleinhart got a largo sum of money from" her husband, joined W bit lock on tho train and runaway with him. itcinhart atonco instituted suit for a divorco, which resulted in a docrco being grant oil a low weeks ago. Last Satur iwy .luriliau i> iniIUCK ailU JiUUlUai'l 8 UlVOVCCil wif?! were marrirj ut ttie Continental Hotel at l'hihidclphin. It is stated that they will return to fort Deposit ami make it their home, despite the feeling which their escapade has aroused. When 11 eifKits Siioli.d Come In. ?Farmers often hesitate whether to have their heifers to coiitu in at two or three years old. The purposo held in view in raising them may douide this questiou< It" the object is to make the best possible milking aniuiuls, it will be belter to have them couie in at two years old. If the purpose is to uiaku beef animals as well as milkers then it would be preferable to have them come in at three years old, or oven^ lator. the development of doep milking capacity is au artificial acquirement, so to speak. It is the result largely of truiuiug. It is also aiilcil l>y feeding and breeding. Maiffpulationsof tho udder, as in hnudniilking, are the foundation or starting point, (or the very wonderful milking capacity of the domestic cow. In a wild statu, the cow, like the Luflfalo, gives only mil': enough to sustain her young and that only for a few months. No extraordinary productions of milk ever oocurin wild animals, though they are as well fed and as hcathful and vigorous as in a domes tic state. The cattio which have been turned out in tlio pi tins of Texas,^vhcro llioy have an abundance of food the year round) have their milking qualities run down to n low standard in a lew generations ; showing that hand-milking is as necessary to bus taining an abnormal secretion of milk as it is in developing it in the first place. Cows derive their milk from tho food they oonsiiuic, and large quantities of milk tJau only result from high feeding ; but such feeding' must bo douo undcrstaudingly and at the proper time, or it may have an effect quite tho reverse'of what is aimed at and desired. To feed a cow high when plic is not in milk?that is, to givo her more food than would bo necessary to maintain a healthy and vigorous condition ??quau?;ty which would produce fattening or an extraordinary development of flesh, tends to chcck*rnthcr than to devolop milk sccrotion ?? Remark by Cardinal do Ilofz, which is is as 'rue now as it was when it was uttered: "A politician must often change his opinions if ho wishes always to remain in tho same party." "*VHY FAB MESS DON'T PROSPER. .Not long ago I found a brother farmer in a vcrj- bail stato. lie said that it had actually come to it that a man could not make a living farming in this country, and if lie could find anybody to give bis land to be was going to hunt new grounds. I was sorry for him, for he did look power fully long faced. Says T : "Have you tried to make a living farming ?" "Have I tried!" ho said, with a look that indicated that 1 was a fool "I have worked myself and folks nearly to death, and we have been getling poorer every yet r." ''That is strange/' says I; "some people do make a living right here in this couutry. I have not found it htrd lu do." Af^rr Ir king a long look at me, bo said : ' [ c:i.ic% u.y last cotton to market lolher day, and when 1 went to square #up 1 was left in dcit for meat and bread last year, and now l have got everything to bay t tits year. Them merchants just take all a poor iarinor can make, and then they ain't satisfied. We all work hard and have nothing, and wo arc always in debt. This is uo country for a white man." As he said this his voice trembled and lie shook. It ftl'ifln mr? rnnl n.M'f" ^ ? 1 ' * y ***, tvua ovil j } I'Jl I1U n i? ^UUU^ JKli U working man. S:ii?l I: "How do you manage, Zoko Pitkin ? Do you make a good garden and have plenty of vegetables in thair season ?'' Looking down at his feet, ho replied : "Do you reckon I have got nothing to do but paddle iu a garden ? I tell you it i? aM r can ^Jo to work my crop.:<s^VVoll," says I, "you have been on the tauia place fifteen years?reckon you have Jo(o of fruit of different sorts to cat in summer aid fall and put up for winter." "t reckon I ain't. 1 need my land for my crop." "Do your raise plenty of Irish and sweet potatoes to do you ?" "Plenty while they lust, aud that ain't long." "Do you keep cawfc to give you milk and butter?" "Souietiaie3." "Docs your wife raise many chickcua and turkeys, aud such like?" "IIow can 6hc, when she has to help me with the crop ?" "Do you make plenty of corn, oats and hay for your own use?" "Of course I don't, when I am obliged to plant a"Tull crop of cotton to pay my debts aud buy something to eat." Several fob Iowa silting a von nil said : "That's what's the utaticv with Sid}io." Says I, "Frieuds, arid Zeke 10hJ^CnJ all the rest of you. You say you can't uiake a living, anil the truth is you aro no! try tug to make a living. You are tiying to makemouey by raising cotton to buy a living with, and there is no reason in that. Now, listen to rnc a little, for your own good : You and your's work the year round to make cotton and then you got your meat from 1,000 miles away, corn, flour, hay and so on come the same way.? The Yankees sell us their grass at a high price, and we work ourselves to death to kill grass. If you will do as I toll you, inside of three years every one of you wil' l><? easy." Several of thom spoke right up and said. "Let us hear it." "Very well," says I. "Go home to night and got your wives and children all around you and tell them just how*you have been doing, and how t "K,.s worked. Then say, 'I propose to turu over n now leaf. First, wo will not spend one cent wo can help, not a cent for tobacco, whiskey uor clothes mora than is uccessary. Wo will get cows enough to give us plenty of milk and butter, and wo will attend to them, and we will get some sows and pigs and look after them. There will he a good garden and plenty of chickens raised. We will plaut plenty of potatoes, corn, and whatever is to live 011. In short, wo will go in for making a living first, and something to sell next.' You will find all will agree to it. Then just stick to that for throo years, and my word for it you will ucvcr say again that a living can't be made in this couutiy. Now if any if you doubt it come to sec ....,1 r .-m oi. !...? :? ...... 1... .1? auil I will show you that it is dune." 4*iCiwi:iiuuso" is the naino of a thriving town Florida. Young ladies living there do not dar.) to name the placo of their lvtsideuc.: in the hearing of atrangcrs. I ? p ,cf 11 is stated that every mau is made for tho world. We may say of some men tha* we wouldn't have any uioro made like them ?for the world. A Motsouiw Tokxado?Chiliicotho Mo;, June ,13.?A tornado visited th's district yesterday. A nmnher of buildings wore unroofed hero. Dennis Wolf was killed at his r.. idenca five miles Southeast from ti; in city, ^iie bouse was demolished nuu Ho iitmiiy earned through the air about uve fcnadrcd feet nnd Mrs. Wolf's slcul, badly out At Utioa th6 Baptist brick church was demolished and at Summer City eleven buildings were destroyed, thousands of trees uprooted and three-fourths of (he a p. plo crop of the vicinity destroyed. Kcosomy of Oats.?Now that our farmers have gone so largely into the cultivation of oats, \ro desire to give them a few practical liinfs in regard to its euououtic use. The old style plan of feeding in the sheaf is wasteful in the extreme, as any fanner can ascertain who takes the trouble to observe. One hundred pounds of sheaf oats of fair quality will thresh out sixty eight pouu Is of shelled oats, all weighing thirty-two pounds as the standard weight for a bushel j thin would make two bushels and lour pounds of grain. In feeding sheaf rials 11111111.1: ?.i ill i innl.1 ni. I'll"" , , V. v.. J XIUIV VI "IVI W |l> I day, is what is considered a proper allowunco for an animal doiug steady f.irui work. This 25 pounds of sheaf oats contains 17 pounds of shelled oats, equal to a half bushel undone pound over, which, though entirely too much grain, yet it is necessary to give litis much in the sheaf to allow for the wnwto occasioned by tbis manner of feeding, as theauimal is sure to loose much of the grain while biting at of chewing upon the straw. In feeding shelled oatf, from six to eight quarts is ample for a pleasure or road horse, aud a peck aud a half or twelve quarts, which is equal to twclvo pounds, is a liberal daily feed for a horse or a tnulo engaged nt hard ploughing. It will thus be seeu that feeding shelled oats iuvolves a saving of five pouuds per day, as against feeding in the sheaf, which is equal to a saving of a littlo more than one fourth on every bushel. Now, as the toll for threshing is only onetenth, aud as tho straw, properly housed or stacked, is just as valuable lor long forago after threshing as before, it can readily be seen how great is the economy of feeding tho shelled oats over the wasteful plan of fecdiug in the sheaf. An economy wich involves the saving of twenty-five bushels out of one hundred, is something worth considering, and therefore wo trust the readers of the Aiken Recorder, will ponder upon thes substantial facts and profit by them. At one time there existed ia this section I a prejudice against oats as food for working animals, it bciug claimed (hat it was not strong enough aud therefore corn was better. Never did there exist a goater fallacy.? Oats is the best grain iu the world lbr horses, as it abounds iu those elements which give strength and health to the ^ui* v . A.JI ? *-? dm _ imi mnnmniny na.Plfloii a*.?Hu nnnstant use of Indian curb fs more than apt to do. While wo advocate an occasional change of food for the horse or mule, we arc constrained to believe that no cereal is so nutritive and w.solesonic for a constant diet as clean shelled oat*. We hope therelore that our farmers will increase the acreage year by year given to this valuable cereal, and that tlicy will economize in its use. by having every bundle shelled carefully and preserving every pouud of straw ? Aiken Recorder. Journeys of Two Little Girls.?Mr. O. M. Sadler, of the Southern Express Company, was in the city yesterday having in his charge two young girls, 9 and 11 years old, who recently arrived in this country from Urazil, and up to yesterday had been in charge of a relative at Hock Hill. The story of their travels is an interesting oue. Some years ago a Mr. SuhoQeld, of Summit Hill, I'ike county, Miss., wont to South America and settled in business. 11c married and a fnw vr>ar? nftr?rwnr<l? his wife died, leaving the two children on his hands. lie was soou attacked by eonsumption, and fearing to die there and leave his children alone, lie sold out everything he had and bought them tickets to this country and scut them over herein charge of a friend. Their grandfather, Uov. L. Schoficld, an old gentleman 70 years old, lives at Summit llill, Miss., and wa9 anxious to have the two children sent to him, but was in a quandary as to how to proceed, as they arc so young to travel such a journey alone. Mr. Sohoficld is a Mason and through the (Jrand Master of thu Hodge at Jackson, Miss, opened communication with Mr. M J. O'ilrieti, (Jouortl Superintendent of the I Southern lixpross ('?>:npiny, laying the ease before hint. Asa result, Mr. O'Hrien instructed Mr. T. 1'. (jillespio, the superiu. tcudcut, who at ouce arranged for their transportation to tho old Mississippi homeI The children were taken from here to At> hinta under Lho pcrsoual cave of Mr. W. J. Cross well ami from thero they arc to be sent ou their journey in charge of another specially appointed agent, with instructions not to leave ti cm until they reach lho arms of their grmdfathcr. The girls are hatned Georgia Eunice and EdithL. Schofiold, aud arc bright, intelligent 'children. This is one instance of the benefits of Masonry, aud ono can but admire the action of a corpora tion that interests itself in two little waifs and cares bo tenderly for them as tho Ex-, press Company did in this iustauco.? Char* hifr Journal? Observer - ? The sweetest roso grows upon the sharp est thorns. ? , - -T Getting his Money's Worth.?A man, a little tophenvy, says the New York War It J. rushed into n Sixth avenue telegraph oflicc, seized a telegraph blank and a stub pen with a ball of dried ink on the end and, by propping himself against the counter, managed to write the following message: 'Kale : I won't be home till morning. Harry." What'll that cost ?" said the man, handing (he message through the porthole to the manipulator of electricity. "Let mo see Seven words?15 cents." "Fifteen, ch ! How much for ten words ?" "The same juice; anything uot exceeding ton will cost you 15 cents to any address in this city," answers tho operator, making a spring to muzzle an instrument that was sputtering as if it had delirium tremens. "1'ui^bound to have the worth of my mouey out of your corporation, then," said the man, bracing himself against the counter as lie traced on a blank this clear nice" sage : "Incomprehensibility, manufacturers, transcendentalism, Constantinople, concavoco 1 vex, Massachusetts, assassination, Pennsylvania, imperturbability, philoprogcnitivcn ess." nfPI - - * more, string lliat on your wire auil scdiI her at a 2.40 gait," 6aid the tnau, with a look of vcugcaucc*in his eye. The operator counted the words, but volunteered the information that there was no sense in the message, and that tho dictionary must have t>ccn ransacked for the longest words. ' I know there's no sense in it. but Kato'lj understand it all the same. Sho'll know I'm on a drunk anyway when I send a message at this hour, whether it's sonse or uot. I made 'cm long, on purposc^to break tho back of your darned machine. Stiovel 'em iu and start tho crank. I'm in for a good time. Never mind tho expense. Here's your 15 ccuts." And the man ran out aud hailed a passing cab. .j. Tiie 1?ad 15oy in a New Hole.?"Say, did I tell you about pa aud ma having t-ouble ?" said the bad boy to tho grocery . * * "No, wlvat's the "Well, jfou soo, ma wants to economize iraSTieoTr . nor since ho quit drinking and reformed, and I have kept on growing until 1 am bigger than he is. Funny, ain't it, that a boy should be bigger than his pa? Pa wanted I a new suit oi clothes, and ma said she would fix him, aud so she took one of my old suits and made it over for pa, aud he wore them a week before he knew it wis an old suit made over, but one day he found a huudful of dried up angle worms in the pistol pocket that I had forgot when 1 was lishing, aud pa laid tho angle-worms to ma and ina had to explain that she made over one of my old suits for pa. He was mad and took them off and threw them out tho back window, and swore lie would rover humiliate himself by wearing his son's old clothes. Ma tried to reason with him, hut ho was awful worked up and said he was no old chariiy hospital, and he stormed around to find his old suit cf clothes, but ma had sold thorn to a ; luster of puris imago peddler, and pa hadn't anything to wear, and he wautcd ma to go out in the nllcy and pick up the suit he threw out tho window, but the rag man had picked them up aud was going away, and pa ho grabbed a linen duster and put it ou and went out after tho lagpiekcr, and he run and pu after him, Mid tho rag man told a policeman thoro was an escaped lunatic from tho asylum, aud lie was chasing pcoplo all ovo the city, and the policeman took pa by tho linen ulster aud pulled it off, and lui was a sight when they took him to tho polieo station. Ma and me had (o go down and bail him out, and the police lent us a tar> pan 1 in to put over pa, aud we got hiui home, and he is wearing his summer pants while the tailor make* liim a now pair of clothes. 1 think pa is too excitable and too particular. I never kicked on wearing pa's old clothes, and I think ho ought to wear uiino now. Well, I must go down to the sweetened wind factory and jerk soda," and the boy went out and hung up a sign in front of the storo : "spinngo for greens, that the cat has made a nest of over $un? day."?Peek's Sun. The busy bee is held up as an cwnmpla ot industry to the boys, yet what a terrible example he is. If boys wero like bees you couldn't put your nose into tit i sohool-roocu without getting it thumped. Wo approvo of tho organization of loinpcranco schools for children and young people, nnd hail this movement as tho dawning of a bright day for the cause of temperance. Never spend your money je&no yout have it. w