Newspaper Page Text
HERALD AND NEWS. JULY 23, 1903. Hair Falls "I tried Ayer't Hir Vigor to stop my bair from falling. One balf a bottle cured me." J. C. Baxter, Braid wood, HI. Ayer's Hair Vigor is certainly the most eco nomical preparation of its kind on the market. A little of it goes a long way. It doesn't take much of it to stop falling of the hair, make the hair grow, and restore color to gray hair. II M toll. All trsfrtfts. If your dnirrt.t cannot supply yon. Mod at op dollar and will zprwt you a bottle. Be tar and girt the name it! your nearest niirru office. Adilreas, J. t. A ItK CO., Lowell, Saw. BUSINESS CARDS. E. 0. BLANCHARD.D.D.S. DUBOIS 4 CAY'S BLOCK, RandolDh. - Vermont DR. WALTER M.KELTY DENTIST. AADOLPH, - VERMODT. PreaerTatloo of ibe natural teeth a specialty. Prepared to do all kln.lt ut plat wurk. Orar Ih Buck Priming Co., Marchanti Row R. M. CHASE, M. D.,D.D.S. DENTISTRY A SPECIALTY net b el, Vt. O. M.RICE, DBNTIBT. Chelsea, - Vermont At Wet Fairies the last three working daya of arb month. . Particular attention siren to regulating and araeervtna' the natural teetn. Past of ane.lbetle. given. F. L. BECKWITII, DENTIST, OFFICE: HATCH'S BLOCK, Chelsea, VL Crown and Bridge Work a specialty HERBERT A. ALLEN D. D. S. Office at Residence, RandolDh Center, - . Vermont. JOHN P. GIFFORO, A. B., M. D. Special attention sriven to Eye, Ear, None and Throat, including the Scientific Fitting of Glasses. OFFICE IN TEWKSBI KY'S I! LOCK Office Hours: 10 to 12 A.M., 3 to 5 and 7 to 8 P. M. Telephone connection Residence, Highland Ave. Randolph, Vt. GEO. W. SCOTT, M. D., . Homeopathic Physician & Surgeon Office, Scott'a Block, Main St. Office Hour until 9 A. M., 1 to 2 and 7 to P.M. Kesidence, corner School and Bummer Hta. Telephone connections. Dr. A. C. BAILEY, PHYSICIAN SURGEOX. OFFICE, Cor. Pleasant St. & Randolph Ave Open from 7 a. m. to 9 p. m. DR. F. C. ANGELL, Office, Stewart's Bll, Main St. Ofnoe Hours: 8 to 10 a.m., 2 to 3 and 7 to v p. M. Residence. 9 Frospect St. Telephone Connections, DRS. L. A. RUSSLOW & C. J. RUMRILL, PHYSICIANS & SURGEONS. Office Hours, 8 A. M. to 8 P. M. No. S Merchants Row GEO. L. STOW, Attorney and Counsellor at Law, Master and Solicitor In Chancery and Notary Public with Seal. Orlice at House, Main St.. Telephone Connection. Chelsea, Vt. H. W. McINTYRE, CIVIL & MECHANICAL ENGINEER. Prop. Electro Plating Works. Office' and Works, Richmond Block RandolDh. Vt. INVESTORS Peelrin to realtr the Larire Interest and Profit. Malll In legitimate Mining. "11. Timber ami Smelter Investment ami Itivi.lvnd-paylng In dustrial 8t-kN. listed and anllst.!. .houM .end flitronr Bo-'kleta, gtvinir full intt.rmation maile.) FREE. txt'La. Later Co., Bunker and Bniaern, M Brr.adwaT, N. Y. (basle. H. Bakkett. Special Ajrt., Sharon, Vt. To the well prepared young man and woman business life bold opportunities great aa those in anv nrnfession. The COUBEG&. and School of Shorinand and Telegraphy offers the beet preparation. 24 experienced teachers. Valua hie lecture. 500 position, secured for our graduates annually. send at once for catalog. Address CAR NELL da HOIT. Albany, N. Y. rerms, Adv't Rates, etc. HERALD AND NEWS, ... Randolph, Vt, QUEEN MOUNTAIN STATE, " " i. a. Joaaaoa, Publisher. THE BETHEL COt RIEB. ... Bethel. Vt. i, i t wiL.ua. PnblUaer. ROCHESTf R HERALD. - fcoebcater, Vt E M. H.avaT, Fubll.ner. WHITE Rl EH HfcRALD. South Royaltoa, Vt M J. Hiuint, Publiaher rME CHEL5E A HhRALl), - Chelaaa. Vt. HaaasET O. BixsT, Pabliabar. acta! srerare eoniblned clrcnlattoa for tbs yaar l:HJi, iM copies weeaiy. Saber rtptlon, . . S1.00 par ea. (MeentaMtraoataldaol V.raioBM All aabacriptluna paTabla in advance and all pa para diaooatmued when tlmeestilre. anleaa r.n.w.a AI'VEHTISIXO RiTtS SPACE. ALL PAPEK8. HAM AWT OTUtB Par ta. par yr. Col.S9la.yr, 8.M S1M.N S.OS S1M-M SS.M 1M.M Minimum rharr la Wo Additional Ratea lor .pacta) po.ltloa. tteadtnf aollcee, doabx rata. LeWal and Local Atyrtielii. Liberation, po.tln and aeirar notice.. SI tor I week. ; e.tate notice., i ; .peclal leaal notlcea. lOo. r.r line for week., obttnarlea ordinary length, I and W copiea fnral.bed ; reaolntlona, 60c.; carda of thank., l6c.iunollclled poetry, c. per Una. No tice. In "Want" solumn or at head of any town cor respondence lOo. per Una first tniertlon wbea Bve line, or le.. are ud. When more than Ire. ad ditional line, at sc. each. Subsequent Iniertton.. sc. per Una If threa tinea or mora are taken. If not, lew. per Una par week tor three waeka, after lbal6e.narllne. L. H. JOHNSON, Proprietor, Randolph, Vt. EDITORIAL NOTES. We hear little about the Marconi trans-oceanic wireless nowadays. Has it "lushed out ?" Bryan is slamming Cleveland all the while, and all the while is helping Cleveland's presidential prospects. They are raising more corn and less hell than formerly in Kansas, and con sequently are healthier and happier. Grover Cleveland is tladdy again. Our only living ex-president, as well as the present Incumbent, are expo nents of the large-family idea. The granite trouble was settled on the give-and-take principle each side gaining something and , conceding something. It's not a bad rule to fol low. Up to date, the Burlington Clipper has made but one journalistic convert to its lynching propaganda and that, we are sorry to note, is the usually sensible Groton Times. A negro was lynched in South Caro lina on suspicion that he knew where a murderer was secreted. That offense is grave enough to warrant hanging a "nigger" in Tillman's state any time. The Swanton Courier avers that it can name a man who is Senator Proc-' tor's equal. By all means name him If Vermont has another Rodlield Proctor, the secret should not be locked in the Courier's breast. There is a small Democratic boom for Judge George Gray of Delaware for the presidency. He has made him- self solid with the coal miners by serving to their satisfaction on the arbitration commission. He was one of the peace commissioners that arranged the treaty with Spain at the close ot the war. Judge Gray is a strong man and would make a worthy antagonist to President Roosevelt. China, acting under permission granted by Russia, has agreed to open several Manchurian ports to the trade of the world. This is a concession secured by our able Secretary of State Hay, and many bouquets are tailing bis way. Russia was willing long ago to give the United States special trade privileges, but Hay had started out to secure the "open-door" policy, and would not be put off with a sop, which would have been a rank abandonment ol principle for selfish motive. Really, there is nothing remarkable about the anxiety and sympathy uni versally felt and expressed by Protes tants concerning the Pope's condition, except that it should seem remarkable. Why shouldn't the two great divisions of the Christian church, both accepting the same God, the same Saviour and practically the same revealed Word, have an intimate and friendly interest in all that makes for each other's wel fare? Let bygones be bygones. Actual union may be impossible: indeed, better work may be done by continued separation. But let the feeling be kindred, not hostile. Time and energy are worse than wasted when Protestant and Catholic fight etich other, instead of the common foe. The newspaper publisher has to be on his guard constantly against the chap who tries to whip somebody through the columns of the press. All sorts of sly tricks are thought up to deceive the publisher, who will not knowingly lend his agency lor such purposes. Sometimes innocent little personals float in innocent on their lace but which contain a nidden meaning that is well understood in the little community affected. For this reason, editors always request the names ol the persons tarnishing such items. A sleek dodge that we never saw tried before came under our observation recently. A party nserted an advertisement that read quare and business-nte, but which was in reality a "dig" at somebody. He paid for the ad. too. "TAXING THE FARMER." .Veil, whose fault is it ? One would thiuk Iroui the Randolph Herald that some alien, irresistible, uialicn power had the Vermont larin er bv the collar and w'as holding hi nose to the crindstone with uiirelent- inr iorce. As matter ol fact our legislature i: so overwhelmingly agricultural In U make-up that it Is practically the Gen eral Assembly of the farmers of Ver mont. All the laws ever enacted in tbi state have been enacted by farmers Eveiy law now on the statute book is kept there by farmers. Now it the case is as stated by the Randolph Herald, wny don t tne larm ers take right hold and remedy their wrongs and enlorce equity in law ami taxation r We would like to have the question answered, for we are Iree to confess that it stamps us, alter many years ol inquiry. For a quarter of a centuiy we hav been trjing to induce the farmers to disburden themselves of their heaviest load the paying of taxes on land which they do not own. With this re form for a starter, others would follow and a new era would open for the farmers of Vermont. Talk about "New Vermont." No new Vermont is possible as long as Vermont farmer insist on carrying this millstone ol double taxation hung about their necks. Is any one shortsighted enough to think that this or that meth od ol dealing with the liquor question can radically affect the body of Ver mont farmers ? bull tne larmers wno rule us go on in the old way and meekly bear their self-imposed burdens aud wear them selves by means of a premature death from care and wony into a world where we trust mortgages and taxes are unknown. Shall it be lore ver thus? Or will the farmers of Vermont arise in their might, set their laces to the morning and right their wrongs ? fBurlingtori ews. This rejoinder is apt, and contains food lor thought. The News asks why, if the farmers of Vermont are burdened by the existing tax system they don't adopt a more favorable sys tem, having the power to do 60 by be ing generally in the majority in the law-making bodies. The News says it is stumped by its own question. It is something of a mystery, we agree. Double taxation of mortgaged real estate is one of the crying abuses that our state endures, nnd it falls hardest on the farmer seeking to pay for a home, or to stem an adverse tide We have heard this matter discussed and debated for years and we never beard a single person undertake to justify the principle of the existing system. It is universally condemued I be theory that the holders of one species ol property, to wit, the im movable kind, should be treated differently and burdened more heavily than the holders of another kind, to wit, the movable species, is rankly abhorrent to all ideas of justice. So is the theory that because a man has a nominal title to lands, houses or any thing he should pay taxes on it, though he may be owing lor all or a large part of the purchase price. Not only that, but the person who has sold it is also taxed lor the interest he still holds iu it, so that this interest is doubly taxed. The inequity and the iniquity nre too apparent to require extended comment. But and here the trouble comes how are you going to change matters without making them worse? This is the rock upon which successive fanner legislatures have grounded and is the only reason that can be given why the system was not altered years ago, The larmers and others, 1 as well lack not the disposition to abolish double taxation, but they do lack the knowledge or the courage, or both, to frame any act that is so tree from objection, so sale Irom criticism, as to insure its adoption. So, in spite of the grinding wrong, they continue to stagger along nnder their load year after year, quite hopeless of ever being able to cast it off. At every session ol the legislature there are not lacking bills without number to do away with doub'e taxa- tion. Some of them provide that the mortgagor and mortgagee shall each bear taxation according to their respective interests in the property a lair adjustment, it wonld seem. But this means a serious shrinkage in the grand list and might entail added bur dens to the debtor class, owing to the consequent rise in the tax rate and the prospect that creditors would decline to assume their part unless compen sated by higher Interest. As the bulk ot farm loans are placed by banks and are exempt from local taxation, the benefit ot such a proposed division, either to the borrower or to the com munity, is open to serious question. Disease takes no summer vacation. If you need flesh and strength use Scott's Emulsion summer as in winter. Send for free sample. SCOTT BOWNE, Chemiara, aoa-ali Pearl Street, New York. 90c and fi.oo; all drcfgista. Another favorite remedy is that when real estate loans are placed at a rate not exceeding 4 1-2 per cent they shall be exempt from local taxation. This might work well if local tax rates were alike throughout the state, but its effect under existing coudilious would be to drive money out of the poor and hard-taxed communities into the richer towns, au undesirable thing to do. This proportion also runs up against the banks, which could not, it is claimed, afford to jace farm loans at this low rate. A radical plan would be to exempt all money loaned on real estate at whatever the rate, the idea being that under this scheme the interest rates would fall to a level that would favor the borrower. This idea is not kindly received bv the farmers, who lear that they would lose more than they would gain. The whole subject is very complex and quite beyond the grasp of the ordinary legislator, be be farmer or not. It is commonly considered in a desultory, despondent way and shelved at the close of the session as one of the unsolvable problems. Our own opinion has long been that legis lators are too negligent of this impor tant matter and that they should not be scared by its seeming magnitude. It is not to be expected that such rad ical changes as should be made can be made without some disturbance, but the ulllmate object a fair and equable division of the tax burden Is suffi cient to warrant some trimming here and there. SUICIDES AND ACCIDENTS. A 19-year-old boy named Murray was drowned in the Connecticut river at Bellows Falls July 12 while bathing. Murrav was riding on a log and was carrieil down stream beyoud his depth. Murray Durkee, aged 21. of Barre, was killed near Middlesex, July 17, while at work on J. S. Viles' electric plant wires. His neck struck a live wire, 15, (nk) volts passing through him. He died before the doctors arrived. William A. Patrick, one of fhe best known and oldest residents ol Rutland, was found July 15 in the cellar of bis house unconscious. He had fallen down the cellar stairs and fractured bis skull. How the accident happened is not known, but he probably bad an attack ot dizziness. Dr. G. S. Bidwell of Waterbury met with a serious accident July 1. He was making calls in the vicinity of Wheeler's mill when the bit broke in his horse's mouth and the animal ran away. Dr. Bidwell was riding in a road cart and this collided with a lum ber team, throwing hiin onto a pile of logs, breaking his jaw and cutting sev eral severe gashes about the head and lace. An accident occurred Tuesday, July 7. at the portable sawmill owned by Counter Bros., East Charleston. The clothing of Fred Counter caught on a pulley which drew him around, break ing both legs and arms and tearing ins t iuiuui aim injuring nun severe ly, from the effects of which he died lit a few hours. A wile and little son survive him. Mr. Counter had re sided in East Charleston only a few u: . 1 -. . v. : 1 . ; v ; mourns, ine burial was at Hurke, his former home. Lecll McKenzie. who lived on a farm in Cabot, died Monday morning, tne i.HD, irom lockjaw, the result or a bullet wound received on July 4. Mr. McKenzie's revolver was on the chair beside his bed, and in the night be took hold of it to lower the hammer and It was discharged, the ball enter ing .Mr. -Mckenzie g leg between the knee and hip. The accident was not considered serious until the following Sunday, when lockjaw set in, and then be failed rapidly until the end. A head-on collision occurred July 14 at North Bennington station between the northbound flyer and a freight train on the Rutland railroad that was trying to make a switch. The flyer was running at a fair rate of speed aud passengers claim that the air brakes were not applied. J he accident oc curred on a curve, so that neither en gineer could see the other engine un til near each other. The engines were considerably broken up. One wom an's wrist was broken. One traveling man was Druiseu on tne side, ana one man s knee cap was - injured. Pas sengers were making ready to leave tne car when the coiiwou occurred. A shocking and fatal accident occurred in the north freight yard ot the Central ermont at St. Albans shortly after ten o'clock Sunday night. juiy 12, wnen .Maynara livan. brakeman employed in one of the switching gangs, was run over and instantly killed. Ryan, wbo had been in the employ or the road just a week was walking backward between some moving cars, trying to uncouple them while they were in motion. He stumbled and lell backward length wise directly on the rail and one car ran over him, almost cutting him completely in halves. Rvan left a young wite, to whom he was married asi ct:jieuiuer. Mrs. J. T. Potter, aged 70 rears. was drowned late July 17 by 'walking from the dock in Burlington into Lake Champlam. In the night, while Mr. Potter was getting a drink of water, Mrs. Potter lett her bed. A briel search was made for her. but Mr. Pot ter retired without notifying anyone of her disappearance, lne next morn ing at about 6 o'clock A. C. Stonghton, baggageraaster for the Central Ver mont railway, found a woman's bodv w hile fishing. The police were noti fied and while the body was being tak en to the otlice Mr. Potter notified the department ot the disappearance of his wife. Mrs. Potter had a shock several weeks ago, but had apparently recovered from the effects of it. The only cause assigned for her death is temporary insanity, resulting from the shock. BhenmaUamANeiuaJia. Entirely Tr-riaileale QUOTED AND NOTED. Being the Fruit of a Cursory Trip of the Scissors Among Our State Exchanges, With Now and Then Word of Our Own. Moutpelier, as somnolent as it is, piuduiis in the course of eveiy year tlve-lold the vice that Rutland does. Rutland News. My, but that's a bad one on Mout pelier ! Unless we greatly mistake the signs ol the times, tool legislation has seen its best days in Vermont. The "Age of Reason" is dawning and with it sets the false aurora of a fossilized and pre-bistoric past. Vergeunes Fluter prise. "Hope springs eternal," etc. But wait until the next legislature sits and hear the same old biennial howl about fool legislation. Ferh.ip th" wih is father to the thongul," but this paper believes that the campaign of VJ"i will find the Re publican party of this state united in the support of Theodore Roosevelt for the presidency, with a dislinct under standing on all sides that Senator Prector will go back to the Senate and that the local option liquor law will quietly undergo several necessary amendments at the bauds of the next general assembly to enable it to secure the iair Ami thorough test that it de serves. St. Albans Messenger. We dislike to shy a stone into the Messenger's placid political pool, but how is the matter of the governorship to be determined without projecting the liquor issue In some form unless our present executive consents to hold over ? Senator Dolliver of Iowa believes in bringing a boy up to be independent and to rely upon his own resources. In a recent address he said : "If I knew a man who had t?HXv0 and a boy, and if he would take the advice ol a passing traveler, I would say to him to keen the two as far apart as jiossible. It will be better fur the boy and better for the $ lmi,o). t. Jolrtisbury Republican. And Dolliver is right. Dolliver' wife, by the way, was a Vermont girl, born in Hartford. Her father, a very wealthy man, sent her to seminary and college and prepared her for a life of refinement. The daughter, at final graduation, surprised him by thu addressing him : "Now, lather, you have raised me and given me a good education at heavy expense. From this time on, for the next five years, I am going to earn my own living aud will not accept a penny from you." She took a school at f.VK) a year, which had been about bcr pin money allowance, and though it was bard work she' stuck it out. When she married Dolliver, at the end ot the five years, her father surprised her by a check covering Just double the amount of her former regular annual allowance. It is being constantly affirmed on the one band that drunkenness is increas ing and on the ether denied. This paper's opinion on this point may not amount to much but Is given for 'what it is worth, and the opinion is founded 00 the observation, with exceptional opportunities to observe with advan tage. During the first month nnder licftise there was a big increase in drunkenness, but during the past month, so far a we have been able to observe, conditions have not been much different than under the old pro hibitory law. There ha certainly been a big Increase in the consumption 01 liquors, but increased consumption doe not always mean increased in temperance. The lovely thing prom ised by license advocate are not ma terializing very last, nor has the dire calamity predicted by ome prohibi tionists fallen upon the community. The police are no more anxious to ar rest a man now than they used to be and the citizens of the village of all shades of beliefs shirk all responsibili ty for the enforcement ot law now inst as they always did. .Those who kick the longest and loudest have no great er ambition to come ouf into the open than they used to have. It is the per sonal conviction ot the publisher of this paper that at the present time conditions do not differ materially from what they did under the prohibi tory law. Bellows Falls Times. This is a clear and candid statement Irom a writer whose predilections are naturally in favor of prohibition, yet who makes no efforts to juggle with I'rtCts to sustain his theory. Well Known Machinist. ft, TJ T r . . . - - a-c.iairoi ron nenrv, . x ., suffered from Inflammatory Rheuma tism, was generally run down. He savi : Mr. Smith, druggist, advised my taking Dr. David Kennedy' Favorite Remedy ; said he recommended it as be knew it to be a gnod medicine. I got bottle and it cured me." Or Data Kennedy's Fseortte Remedy Is tt XlTlr"?! t"n if all srje acid trouKe. in 5 i il B'adder. Lrear ar.d B ood S er-iers. Rlveumanvn. Dywpaia and Conatiperjoo. or th mMkmttn tweuixtr tp wr-m. AJ I drusgiaa aeil k i th NSW SO CENT 812 1 WKu rtfuar 1.00 sua bortw. .T vht)! WQWQQttl, n. T. . .: a eaaeay aoae eel I t radical care sarra, Ha; Frrrr aa tali la UmA. aw. ta IV.. I M a T" ZL r - aaai iiss WrwC4 WASTING SICKKES3 LOSS OF FLESH AND STRFsrr WHICH PUZZLES Mr. Allaire- Wa. F.mB a- -nd Her Phy.,cian c Not Help Pier. . How many men and w05ea , . ing from a debilitating illnens t- ,",'r dcxtorscan and no isls, , 'J0' d Jctor. can find ti,. .H v. .L ""'""' lory uruinar.v uitdic nta f. 1 cure. A recommendation of . to air is often the result of fru tlL 01 menting. Many, however are nT. follow such advice and ou, n W ","e " natelynud no benefit after all .1' orl'" pens, and trouble. Th, f" , ,"",.. was the experience of Mr :wr1!,a. of No. 4 kOm fit (Hat U ;! She says:- u'1""'. Mi. was so greatly rundown in w , that the doctor ho ... huZ satd I would never get v.'?i , wretchedly ill," she continued' i I" loat so much n.-eh that I ,as lJ than skin and bones and 1 l" white. I couldn't eat ntr l-p, work-in fact, was so tlii .' ' more days in bed than I dn out of i,, suffered considerable twin the J thel.ver, my stomal uut J l and I was so miserable that 1 bf. , think the doctor was riuht. m at the house to see me, 1 told bun 1 .1 fminiv In a iv. 1 1. vt. ill. ... . i r, . tor Pale People a trial. 'All ihvt said, 'do so. There is nothing morel'-., do for you.' "Imagine my feelinps when kfter ui . Dr. William.' P.nU Kin. I f '1 a HIUI hit I faj able to do my washing and irnning -J a . u.u ioi jjccii auie to even i;-, for three years. I kept on uii, IV, medicine lor awhile longer sud 1 entirely cured." Dr. Williams' pink: Pills for Pal pie, the medicine which curtd Allaira and thnnunrl. r,f mi.. unfailing specific for all disease tn,?J unntrunir nervetwo fruitful cmM j nearly til the tilmenti to hi h mtnk:U is hir ThfV II1BV taW hmA J. . or - ill be Miit por.tie.d on rwtipt i-rii-w, ulx7 lh'i i mix ixnei io (hj. Um nnd fifty cent, by t he Ir. Medicine C unijny, bebenecudy. S. . CURE FOR HAY FEVER. F. E. Brysn Ssy Hyomel Will C Relief Sold Under Guarantee, The season for hay fever is t.me( a band and many people feel that tber ij be obliged to leave town in order to reii the sneezing, watery eye and annoying symptoms ot Ibis diatom-. summer disease. F. E. Bryan wishes us to announce tint when Hyomel ta used, either si a prrvral Ive or cure, there will be no hay few. He advises tb use of Hyomel daily lor two or three weeks before the naual lia for the annual appearance ot hay fete. In this way the attack will be prevemei If, however, the preventive treatment not started soon enough and Ibe dJa conies on, use Hyomel six or seven boa daily and also rub Hyomel Bt.a thoroughly into the noatrili both morn ing and nlgbt. Tbia treatment will re lieve at once and give a speedy and per manent cure. Hyomel actually brings into yoor o home climate filled with oioot and ket: Ids balsams, the same air tbat oh breathes at tbe White Mounuini or xf bewlth resorts. There is do stomach dosiog bn Hj- omel Is used. It la Nature's own miw for curing all diseases ot tb rwpirt'.orf organs, and la breathed through s a pocket inhaler tbat accompanies nerr outfit, so tbat the medicaled sir react the minutest air cells, killing all rr and soothing and healing the irnu'd mucous membrane. It la the one treatment for hT Irnr where F. E. Brvan guarantees to rr-ioa the mouev if it doe uot give aalistartioa. All who are subject to bsy fever m"" begin its use at once so as 10 pre diaeeae. SPECIAL CLUB RATES. Till" PAPER and RlTLASPet WKFKLY HRKAMoneyr..l- Sot good la e.tera Verm-'ut-, THIS PAPKB and MIRBOB ASDJ Jf KARMKKoneyear I'W THIS PAPF.H and THR HOST05) J WKEKLY JUl'KNAli one year, I." 1 mod only la Verns'St i t THIS PAPKK and KKWYOBKjJ THKICK-A-WKKK WOULD one'year, THIS PAPKR and THK 'K1l5 YORK TKIlitNE rV'KKKLK RfJYIICVt, THIS PAPER and THF K"1i YORK TKllM .N r: FA K It I K, THIS PAPKR and the nUBMO-l JJ TOM WEKKLY FKKK l-KKSS1" one year, THIS PAPF.R and BARRK M B DAILY TKLKGHAM.om year.." Till PIPFicand KT.ALHAS DAILY M K9Et.ft.K one ' Add 25 cents when papers cr " addressee without this stale. SEND DIRECT TO ME OR 'T YOUR POSTMASTER. L. B. JOHNSON, ... M Our Market Letter this contains facts relatine 1 thf Financial Situation, Ba::f:i'n Ohio, St. Paul, LouisvilU A -vfb" ville, and Amalgamated. should be pleased to J"0 j II T-M t ill sVi.' -A-Kf ' iff i '- '- X Jt-eSr'''-)!'? 1 HAIR BALS-U ser fmi'S " rfu Co B.ir to ne ";;!, - . .... , I, i. a - w.)