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    1. [VERMONT] 1876--Vermont News.
    2. Joan Bixby
    3. Source, Rutland Daily Herald--Sept. 19, 1876. VERMONT NEWS. There was a slight frost in St. Albans, Saturday. An ant-tobacco club has been formed in Peacham. The Lamoille county fair cleared $500 above all expenses. A Mrs. Miles has eloped from Middlebury and betaken herself to parts unknown. >From five acres, J. R. Walker of Springfield, raised 352 bushels of white Schonon oats. There was quite a heavy frost in Alburgh the 12th, which injured the buckwheat crop. Five hundred cords of wood were burned with the railroad woodshed, at Wilton, Thursday. Mrs. Sally Page, the oldest resident of St. Johnsbury, died on the 8th. She was 92 years old. Rev. L. M. Butler of Somerset, Mass., has accepted the call of the Baptist church at Townshend. Steward's Woodstock Woolen mills will start up immediately, with a prospect of steady business. The Richford Lookouts defeated the North Troy Palladiums, 29 to 9, at base ball, last Saturday. Geo. L. Schofield of Weathersfield, has lost three children within two weeks by malignant diphtheria. McKenzie's mill, in Bridgewater, which has been closed for a new wheel, will be started again next week. Transcribed by, Joan H. Bixby.

    03/04/2012 09:23:43