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THE CRASH. The Liars Let Loose-and in the Editorial Columns Tell us "Everything is Brighter! And Beg the Common Citizen to Leave his Savings where the Dollar Devil may Swipe it up And Promise to Resume-over in Canada The papers are still at it, telling them that things are now settledthe trouble is over. It has been the breakfast-lie, the dinner-lie, the supper lie-in every daily issue since the first attack in February, when gold went to a premium in New York City-and specie payments refused for three straight days! EVERY DAY-then, now and tomorrow-these servile hirelings of the Wall Street billions serve out the old lie, baked to a crisp, and leathery with age. And in their financial columns they let out a gleam of the awful truth! The thousands, the tens of thousands, the hundreds of thousands of weeping women and children and moaning old grandfathers, whose ALL has been swept away, get no hearing from the dominant-dollar gold-bug hireling press. At the head of the daily press financial columns (fine print-rarely read-full of technical terms) they will spread out in large type: "LARGE BUYING ORDERS FROM LONDON Give a Great Boom on 'Change, Healthy Tone Resumed. The Trouble all Over," etc., etc. And two inches below, in fine agate type: "London, July 21.-Stock market weak, inactive, spiritless. No transactions. There have been declines in all the securities dealt in." Then come the list-and !-every trade in American securities has been a SALE! Just to show, at the expense of wearisome reading and expensive type. setting, we give the substance below of the financial column in the St. Paul Daily Dispatch, on the 22d inst.-the day when "the sky brightened!"-As follows, (the first head is, "ENDS the Milwaukee Troubles.")MILWAUKEB, Wis., July 22.-The South Side Savings bank opened as usual this morning, but closed their doors at 10.30. The' report of the bank made on the first Wednesday of this month is as follows: [We leave this out-too long.] G. C. Trump was president of the South Side Savings bank, and J.E. Koetting, cashier. There was considerable of a run on this bank during the flurry in June, at which time a large number of saving depositors gave notice of the proposed withdrawal of their money at the end of thirty days. It is thought that this, together with the tying up of a large amount of money in land speculations, good investments, but not now available, was the cause of the suspension. The Milwaukee National bank failed to open its doors this morning. Runs are in progress on all the leading banks in the city. Judge Noyes, president of the Milwaukee National bank, has given out the following statement for publication: "This bank I consider perfectly solvent. It has $500,000 assets over liabilities. In ordinary times it would pay all depositors in full within three months, leaving a'surplus of 200 cents on the dollar for distribution among the stock-holders. The reason for closing today is the one that has been so much repeated in the last sixty days. The public know it without being told. The shrinkage and withdrawal of deposite, and the inability of customers to meet their obligations to the bank, led the directors to the conclusion that it is for the best interests of all concerned to close the doors at this time. Fortunately the depositors in this bank are such that no one will be seriously injured by the delay in obtaining their money. A meeting of the stockholders will doubtless be called soon to vote on the question of a resumption of business or of going into voluntary liquidation. The comptroller of the currency has been notified of the situation." The run on the Merchante Exchange bank is enbsiding in consequence of the posting of a guarantee signed by Charles Pfister, the Vogels, John Black, Julius Goll and other wealthy stockholders. A repetition of the guarantee made at the time of the Plankinton bank failure by Capt. Pabst and the other brewers will doubtless be made at the Second Ward Savings bank. The crisis will doubtless be passed in Milwaukee today, as today's failures have cleared the air of all menace for some time to come. [So it has been said of this very city at every fresh failure! Behold next day! The closing of the Milwaukee National bank was a surprise even to some of the stockholders. S. M. Peyries, who owns a block of the bank stock, says there is no reason why the bank should have closed, except that the officers were afraid to stand a run. A statement made a few days ago, showed that the bank has assets in excess of liabilities amounting to between $500,000 and $600,000. People who were not posted, could not believe that the bank, which was one of the oldest in the city, had failed, and scores of people walked into the entrance, read the brief notice, announcing the bank's suspension and walked out again. The news of the trouble to these two institutions, together with the failure of the Commercial bank and Mr. H. M. Benjamin yesterday, threw the city into a small panic, and runs were at once started on a number of the other banks. Crowde soon gathered in front of the German-Ameri an