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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Huron Signal, 1887-5-20, Page 1'.•�nr'rsrpt�P'a•.o.•n,.... ..-..� -•v. .•-•,-'watP+.'"gr^•s'-viii �� +mss■ INTELLIGENCE Yl)RTIETH V A t et ROLs SUMMON f GODERICH. ONT.. FRIDAY, MAY 20, 18 67. I21cOfLI.1t't•Dlet Rena t ui.s,.a ttti t store *Teen 1N ADYANCi THE HURON SIGNAL{ WHAT'S UP? 1 TETE NEW PARK. Is r•ebllebe•t er.,ry =`rlday Moraine. ba Mr -- i OILLICVDDY Hao... at their twice. North st OODICRICH, ONTARIO, Things That Are Happening The Stops that are Being Taken Around Us I by the Cotnm:ttee. FRIDAY. HAY 20e11. 18117. the nortb-east corner of the lot and . close to the fence on the north•wr.t aide of the park, the cattle sheds will hr I built. in the clothe of the southern sec- • tionofthe park&quarter-unit horse track i ! 1 ----- tie ft wide will be laid, with a sward on Ne 11014 tt 'glib NIs Lh11e l actin's The i The In orb •r lining I is le be newelsal ntt alas to remiss* that It N about Felten nits .ti s oll see %beetles -it Mire- A %Mara,..r 'be role* M/lb 4' mese ss plated 1mPfei emere., time that Robert Porter, ..1 simts.*, the amen. egg be merriest. • e/ridental member for West Huron, was, 'tilting the pans end spe_itinations ready! • fur the nest public buildings in l,..derioh. . The harvest will Moons he past, at•J the summer ended, and it !wits as if a tar. ' tea ptwatiee is likely to obtain. Iv in new tariff with reference t.. iron -and coal is right, whit excuse has the Government and its supporters to offer tor having taken an entirely d,tfir- ant course fur the past eight years ! 1f Tenter ti really • "heaverrb.wu titin ser," Tilley and 31cLelca taus: nave' been decidedly "4 the earth, earthy." R'• haves't baud the opinions of Rey Dr Putts, •.r Rev. Dr Wild, or Ret. Mr Milailpsn, er any of the other reverent i or irreverent tuft -hunters upon the action of Lord Lansdowne in areerine in .1. J C. Abbott as a Cabinet Mintstrren Sunday last There is an eppertuoity for them to exercise their talents in • legitimate sphere by dealing wi:b this Titration. And what is Mayor How- land doing that he hes wade no effort t•, "tighten up the string" in this matter Ve pause for a rrely Tut Toronto WorI,i admires the pluck with which tier Charles Tupper turned • deaf ear to the entrestts .d the Montreal iron manufacturers to re - c. insider inc.nsider the recvot tariff changes., During the last campupn Tom Cowan, of !;alt a "pndrwional" manufacturer, gars as his principal retain for desert• tt in; the Reform party prior to 18778. that _MacKenzie and Cartwright had "stub- bornly refused to rive e.: t.p the entreat - ties • f the manufacturers." What will Tem my to Topper now. We'll warrant he will take the stand of the World, and what was "etubbwrneai• in Cartwright and MacKenzie will be "pluck" in Top. per. --Well the three bylaws have been tarried, and, if se are to belie. a met .11e,anrr, already the g..rgeuus hues of the Sun of Prosperity can be discerned on the Square and down the side streets. The editor of the .1lu.uwe walks on his toe tips, and with a Jaunty strut lets the people know that "We did it, Hoorah Rut now that he ho. carried the bylaws by his own unaided efforts, now that he kao pilled all the votes in favor a the schemes, bow that he i. open for teud.trs for the construction of the works, wou1J'ut it be well fir his Serene High Mightiness to be • little generous, and not pulverize those whu .„ted against the scheme. There were some men who voted against the series of bylaws who hare moue inure to further the interests of thderich than the .11o,an,1 ever did or ever can do, and sisnpiy because these men rated as they eunscientuuely be- lieved to be right is no reason why they should be sneered at by the "•Juhany Raw” of the .Almanac. I have fully as much stake in the interest .d the town as the unballaated editor of the .Almanac, but I dun t see what he has to cackle over. The people of the town, 1•v a large majority, have own fit to incur a hems )• debt fur public impru:ewents, and the sapient scribe epee away •.tf int.. "hiq,h strikes,- as jubilantly as if he had won a 'tickle - plate. watch at a raffle. V% -hats the bila% rboutisg about anyhow r The town is not getting something for nothint—nn the contrary it is paying one hundred cents. if not m,re for *T� dollar's worth. , • —And right here I might state that I did not appose the waterworn scheme, 1 but I clod ■pp ee the scheme of some 0 our municipal legisat,rs who ever since away back in 18S:4 have been using the project to get cheap popularity as the January elections caste around. There was n..thing on earth to hinder the work that was necessary in getting up the date Pial suhunitrug the bylaws inside of six months from the inception u( the scheme ; yet for w.enths and. 1 might say, years it hung fire, and had it not been that I occssintnlly poked fun at the funeral procession, and tried tr. hurry the promoters along, it would hast hese sn election cry for municipal purp.•ses for years to Come. —With regard to the electric light. I must confess 1 d.n't approve of it for a town 0 the •;re of Guderich, and with - oat the introduction ..1 gas as an ad- junct. I don't think it will prove a good paying investment. Councillor Butler at tha public meeting bore me out in this regard, and suggested that an arrangement should be made by which the two systems of illumination should go hand in hand — The agricultural park was purchased last year, and needed no bylaw to _ voted upon fur its purchase were it set for the fact that money was required to farce and fit it up in the interest of the town, so that the original iavestmeet would not be a dead loos. — One tbiog, however, I hate always contended for. and that was that the me ries of schema should be publicly dis- cussed. ie cussed, and that the public should M taken into the confidence of the commit- tee on all eccasiobs. The result of the public meeting a week before the voting, when a flood of light was shed on the subject by J. T. Orrrnw, John Butler, J. 111. Colleen* and others, showed that 1 was not wrong in my original conten- tion in this helmet. and 1 feel satisfied tbet,shi old necessity arise again for pule lie aetien to be taken on any important aMtser She "davit lantern' system will sot tfe" ryyrted 10. ' :Tow their else neighbors have seen Otto gra in fix toil the mobile improve- tbstits, I hope they will prosiest• the sn•t ter most vilpw.•u.ly, and I, for my pest, will en my "avid hest to hold op lite hands ..f tk,.pbhtis men who are en- treated with thetoture prestress if the rarieemschmeea And 111 keep my rye open so that maddltenten .ill nntget be- tween the .114 end the enoMeetors for elf. es►eenW New is the time to mak• prepovwtio ns en that in the letting awl cab-Iwttiog of neee•ssry centraota the ( art of "ereaeine" will be guarded Tunic . trouble surname the Tories on , the questieu of who pays the duty on coal Since 11;9 • section of therm have, coateuded that the producer paid the duty, aid amongst those who ei con- Leaded was the Hamilton Spectator. An- 1 other section, led by Lachlan 1icCal- tum, „f Moak, arvued that the consumer paid the duty, and Lachlan argued his point au etruesfy that he got a special rebate irom the Government on all the coal that he sae on bis tog. Nue the vexed question tomes up again, and the Tories are at axes and sevens on it. The :Ipert.itor hangs tu its contention 'tbat the Yankee pn.ducer pays the duty, but Sir Charles Tupper eiaitns that the taking off of the duty will so belp the consumer, that with it and an increased pr.tt.ctive duty on manufactured iron in Casette, he will be able to boild up the iron trade of the Dominion. Since the Mail ceased to be in a000rd with the Tory party, the Hamilton Fps -fetor has I .adaawared tit pose as Gm laseling Chet. aervatiee journal, bet it will have either i to step down and nut, along with the Afoil, or tone its pipes to etherd with the Finance Minister. See one is blun- dering. Tug gentlemen's pert~, as usual, Awed* blaokgearde of themselves Tuesday .fternoon lea, when W;�'iem O'Brien was delivering hu address in the Queen's Park, Toronto. The Mail, e;lol.. and World denounce the blackguardly ex- hibition trade on the ocoassion by the organised band of Tory ewreinnia and ''loyalist*.' Mr O'Brien an cone._ lei himself that be feral hate- than Lord Elgin at the hands of the "loyalists.'' Lord Elgin was the (lovable/ General of Canada --tire (,Mases'. representative but that did sot hinder the "loyalist#" from rottisn-egteir him, er it did trot ,Ir env* the isrlismeet buildings from int destroyed by the loyalist mob "g.nUem.i." Thor average Tory "Iny1e1. et" w the same yeetetday, today and the t day atter. LATER Tia brutal sneak on Ws O'Brie* M. 1'., which we pnbli.h in smehlie enteron is another exhihitiaw of T..Iy •'Loyalty." We wonder i1 Rev. Dr' Pot ts, ass 1r Wild, Rev. Milligan. see the other .lerical invitees to rinlwee, • were .ish the roi6anIy assailants ! As the Toronto journals all see 'rte ease)' os r► Brien is a - ' eft to the city. • t...-. -iia easiest. A s ►x. A meeting .1.the Futdic works cum. the inside of the mire e for the holding •A Cased.,nten games and other such ring eompetiti.ts. At the north east quar- ter of the horse track will he located the grand stand. which will be constructed settee was held ra the town clerk's to hold • goodly number ,f spectators. ' There will be a .,dr. .ran:r on \Iacdt�l- ald street f•.r pedestrians, and a cattle- ' entrance from the Internati.nal !toad, There will be a distance of 40 feet be- twren the outside edge of the horse -track land the fence on the east, west and south side. office Wednesday evening, to •rrarve for the taking of immediate steps to pre- pare the new Agricultural Park for the btldiug of the fall stow 0 the %Vest Huron Agricultural Society, It was euied tc go on at once with the necessary de - given to hate the p:at:a and specifica- tions with regard to the Ier.!l:uy and draining made ready at once. he new !'ark comprises fifteen acres situated on Britannia Road, and extends back to the present cricket gronocle. It was purchased last year from the ex- ecutors of the blacdonald estate, and, when all the contemplated uncture- meets are made. will be one of the hneat I for the delivery of lumber before the 1st and most convenient parks in Western of July, Hens of the fencing will be nowt l)ntann. plated hy that date, but the committers rr•i ..st• Thursday morning chairman Bingham of public works has given instructions to Bat • large fa'herint of theother side ..funded A new empire on the sh •res of the pubic entice committee and C••un- the street inspector to repair the fence was there, evidently determined on midi the Pacific. A number 41 these CsLf•xe cillos ltutler.J•wdan,C.,lborne,treasurer on the south side so that the Caledontrn chief, ..r as they called :r, •'fon. Mr via piourer., pr•ioahly w htndred or Hurtnn and A. Mc1) Allan, president of 'games wry be satisfactorily held in the south side ..f King strut; followed by s lather. They t".ars a Potomac steams the West Huron .lgncuttn►al Society, cricket ground this year. It is under. h,",ting tnoh, for the most ;art ed a er auJ hada sail down the river, during inspected the emends ani drew up •disco.!, however, that the new Park will of ~.vont A.slams, winch cnt.hed aid which they orkauiz�.l • Calif' rnu Pion. plan in connection with the proposed be thoroughly fenced. and everything crowded theta until they were "Im..et I k h d J impn,retaeuts, and instructions were The work of fencing has been let to John H. Johnston, and will, we under- stand cat in the neighb.xhnoal o1 l$1,OW, as it is to be 8 ft. hit:h,aid done ie a th••rougbly workmanlike manner. Owing to the necessity fur wine under draining, and the further fact that the I contractor has not made arrangements Oar THE COWARDS ! 1 FROM WASHINGTON Au Organized Gang of "Loyal -1 What Has Tratspired at the Una Attack G Brien. United t8tates Capital. ♦ treads. ir./rel Nwm.s. Lweeat.r le Ass..laites eeettnp. t ■.i Ibe Irish i4Ii.r ►nether Kabibi. ens-Tlaer." The ibis .f '• irleisb Patrpiay.•• 1. n...I T , Prom the Toronto World. !from oar ti;'vcial Cor:•espoa trot. It was generally understood in the sVeshiujt..., 'lay 1':. risihenna .r tae Pre.ldrw' + t ieN newspaper guild yeet-rdar afternu..0 The pa.t week wit full of interest to teat Mr O'Brien and Mlr Kilbride w;u1J the ie,pls ••f •t�'.•lio{t.,n a. .e 1 is to leave for Ottawa last eremite, Mr 9.• the hundreds ••t strangers oho came Brien did nut go, lint instead he had s bither thr,uvh interests ac,rntitr:, husi• Brady ezpertence with a Toronto swh, 0501 and sr,cia'• i ,nay say there were He had bran out driving durinip the Ai - hotel ns;dorsal Mn.rntioos. First cams tern000,as wee fully recorded elsewhere„ the hotel pn.prdrtort. 'representing all and towarda shutter time returned t„ the !e•dhtg ciilrs and the leading hotel. the Rossin House. H+, Mr Kt:bride, th+ 1nttad Dieter, wt., is:ked over J. A. Mulligan, R. R. Teefv and D. P. matters ..1 mutual interest. exchanged Cahill dined together. At t 3'i the par• i•leas add eapetientw, and had $ zoos fiat. vutwra•iv Then there xas the American : urgtcsl Association. which was in session herr, and the Society of the Aruty of the Cuinber'anil, which he d its a 1 :veno; and unveiled the When they reached the street a large stator it had erected to l:Artiekl with gathering of sy.nl.•ithizen gave dates muck emote+.ere i•o+op and ceremony, tor Mr 4YBriee, •ud started to follow Amt rt,:urd■v tner •ii.g saw an assem. him. Mr 1)'Briee acknowledged the -fits.. 4.1 geti'.lamrn .itch .a the world greeting, and after he hod moved A few 1"s ratr'v witee.•..r. This was the tr started out fr •tn 1 „rk-strut entrance of the hotel t.. take • walk. Means Mul- ligan and Cahill on each side of ]Ir tl'- I:nen, and Mr 'Fiore escorting Mr Kit bride at seine distance behind. yards be requested fits friends not to "F•.ri.-nnan —toe era who crossed w, as he was only et ing out for a mountain an 1 pion, braved the tee qui• t walk. They c,wphrd with the hells of the .1t.t,r'ic seas, er the fervid 1.uas end fevers of the torrid z .neo and li:iru and hi+ escort ea;ke.i 11unt the n►otr, met heft* and a'wf.t the dei t, - improvements. There will be three entrances, one from Britannia road, one from the atrrwt reading to the Ioteri,s- ter s . ss..cia ton. pan s a ranee will be in readiness for the h�;Jm� of shuvrd off the pascnteut i.rto the nod. ioCuwrJ, • .J then recitals of inci•.lenh, At King snit Bev -streets the :nob, not,aaveotaree, Anil reminiscences t1 their the A{ricultural Fair of the Nest Huron satisfied with M"its and zr.ant, cavo ei earlier (tape, which showed that this. ffuciety during the month of September. tionsl Salt-Biock, and another from the Below we give a diagram of the Ralik and 'notion encs. Mr 0 I;nen and hi. rued leading to the cricket ground. A proposed improvements iiia: can Le lo..k- friends. with a vow to avoiding their as - large agricultural hall will be erected ailed fr an early day : saiLnts, turned down Bay -street, But • pression 1i, the throwing of stones and j "Jesuits of the new world are still young enough to en) .y themselves. On last Friday. Prescient t':eveland, for the first time in his life. male a rel. *renege to the twnb .,f G''.rge •it'ashing. BRITANNIA ROAD. e sheds 8 Agr. Hall 1 Ent. x Off PI TORONTO LETTER met one mai from Huron's sh.•res in Tie tanto, 1 am riled to say, who wishes any - The O'Brien visit the TOipiO te[ thick less than a fur hearing for the the Hour ,..,._ es 1assk,reas City a Meg Tleettaf ds Heir Part .a aal.wy. Tos,rro. May ie.:- Thee of oe who have lined in the western p.rtinn of (Entail, and inhaled the freer and more fraternal air of Versa, Io . with mingled feeling* of $mnseasoot, pity and contempt upon the bigoted illiberal and unfriendly feel- ing pm/treeing between the (range -Tory wing, and the Cathohee of this city. Inst me say in parenthesis that the former parry are generally the atwrrestrs. Liberty of speech is today threatened in • Toronto. and hateful things are said, en cause We O'Brien, the talented and 1eloquent editor of 1'nit.d Ireland Ins ' dared to emu* to Canada and appeal t., the en.deratanding and the ...momenta of 1 the peeple of this find. i hare been 1 immeshed at the intolerwnee ..f some elherwise respectable and estimable To- ronto folk. i rennet understand it. Not only do they net want to hear the ase of the teimnts of the Lai.:.lnwne estates, het they do Int want anybody aloe to hear the Irish champion. Dr Kane, his skirts elutt*a with the Weed of the uwlsappy triennia .f the Heifer rents—riots h'meeted by Lu intemperate and enehrietien her.neuee ams harts, end wae feted and applauded ey the very mew whit today say that Wm. O'1lrimw mast Mot be hear'. 1 I•ant .wa treat Irish editor, 1 was present at Saturday's meeting in the Park. I suppose there were 8.010 people there. Many of them were there to protest against O'Briton's awning, and to oppose freedom of speech ; but many were there to see Ne errwd. The speeches wen frothy, and little besides religious bigotry and servile toadyism to the Lard of landsdow.e was viten. I ass ashamed to bare to say that seem church dignitaries aid "popular" promoti- on make the meanest wort of toadies where a live lord is onncerned, feddwiw Smith was the only speaker who gave anything like ■rretttent ; and hie eita- tir.0 et }eatery ware learned root inter- esting, even if his conclusions were eat exactly correct. • All tient elf nicely ; but 1 could not help thinking what a dry .4 "bigotry" and "trial re -soreness' would hire been raised had say of O'- Briens friends and then were hundreds there attempted to annoy the speakers, or prevent a hearing. i like t.. hear both sides : end so 1 attended the Park 4 legalgy Tory meeting en Saturday, ani that's why i want to be neer enough to hear O'Brien t•.morr-w, Think ••1 it. ie the evening •.f the nineteenth century liberty of spaeeh ,s threatened in the chorea City .d Ontario. they were followed, and the e.ist-throw- ing continual. lit R2110 Secretary t'+hill 1.0. 1- was as filo Invitati. u of the wid- was hit in the cheek with an egg, which ow .1 tarn. Logan, who a now regent ••f broke and spindled over Mr MulIu tt'. "cot t ernes Asa oiation. Tho a President, Mrs Cieveland and abut • theAsrioht e grpawryiarternac.ae riNVealltiotgaur. nes end. dozen tamheerr Cin•yteoit.J.reqa uIestao ienwthaherkeadftern- Resales of all aorta flew fast. They torn- tinea. Arriving there they spent an rd westwaisi ou :he north side of litel liner or so rambling about the historic hares!) street, and ttett the reel troubier'i(�t, sed returned. to the city after began. right. Mr O'Brien and erery min with him. Teo thea hens soldier bey. fr •m all including several re;e,rters, were struck over the United States will be ironing with stones. But the only ones Wit into Washiogt on for the National Drill. were injored were Mr M. Wall. the/ he The first comp.ay to arrive will 14 the Associated Press • emr of New York, eeksbnrg Southrnns,thea the Indian - aid Secretary Cahill. Mr Wall was hit Indian- apolis Light inrantry, the L•.vis.n• with a stone which cut through his het. Rifles, and the 'Iuscatine R:11es. Sun - inflicting • severe scalp wound on the day will be the h:rsiest day far arrivals, right side of the head. It hied prelim- however, and before midr.rl.,S it is rate ly and for a few minutes Mr Well was Pected that every ecnipany trill be pat - len stunned that he knew not where h. tared on the camp ground. was. Mr Cahill was hit in the back ot• Miss Clara Barton, presilunt :,f the the Mead with a clone just as he had Red Cress S ciety, will have charge of stooped to dodge another which went the hospital of the encampment. ands whizzing by. His head was cut. his hat (been local physicians and surgeons will 4tprnagei and he lose his eye -glasses be on her staff, as also veteran army Mr i) Brien was hit three times with nerviest end a number of vulw.teers from Tem - stones but he sstlered ret. its;ury. Jlr the Training ; chcul for nurses. Mulligan, too, felt the touch of a atone Perary hospital barracks are brine erect - bot be escaped unhur•. ed, and thewithers will be well cared Mr James Clancy rel the ,.w York for when they vet sick. Aen.hl. and Mr J A. Kellogg of the New T.. the rnajarity of P•^7-4. of this Turk tu*, who were at the scene of the city, the necessity of a host 1'41 depart - trouble, took charge of 31r !!tall, and led mens t.. the Natv•nal Drill seemed to be him up Bay -street to Reimers drug the (int roggntian t.. them that the store, when his injuries were attended coning week of military doge.). was tn. Mr Cahill had his had bandaged likely to place among us sick and suffer. later on, Mr Wall then went to the ing then, atrangere and sn'd•en whit Rosen Hoes sod wrote out his de- 'emit! nerd treatment and are. Thiel epochs.. ' then probably not one person in a In front of the Inekunith shep of Mr 1 hundred had realized that then could be Thomas Lai..r• jr., at No. 72 Wellington 8, isn't^* feature cenisected with the street, the owed Rede a rose st Mr 1 great hnliday week, or that es much display etmld develop as $ part of itself, eggs. A friend opened the door of Lilnr's an actual necessity, demanding the same whop lied said : "Chase in hen. Mr I means of relief, the gamy weychful cars, ._ O'Brien " Rat Cork's M 1'. got inside I tender ymp•thv, wise provision and hurriedly, and:Messrs Mulligan and 1 firm central that an equal maker of cabin .1,11 stuck t.. him. H. walked I soldiers might rapers to a v.•ritable through the shop and went out at thn camp or actorl campaign hack door. Mr Kithnd, had got sops- 1 A .nntnent's rpM•eti..n, hnwerer, shod from his friends The stenos that' nista it apparent that it would he im- were thrown sisereted every pen, of glass i passible to hone th..ueande of men hers in the doors and windows of talnt's 1 under any feria of enlistment. from ship. The crowd roshel in after Mr !their wets spread his. sehject to O'Brien and followed firm to the end of it tehange of all hahit. of lits. food. water, the shop. Mr !aloe had shout thirty elevate neeePsane. end rest. And place bicycles in his pda'ie awaiting repatrs,attd them in competitte. settee .ver man at these were stood about so that anyine his meet and hest. for the spanns of nine going in quietly would here to pick his days. witheot any of them falling ill way. Act the m•.h wits in a hurry and ne ne dtng can or tr.mtm,.t. Jr 4.411 be they rushed straight ahead. The bier. wenderfel, indeed, if thin he not some e'en were knocked right sad left sed who will never return to their Peewee. eight .d them were early ruined. In ; — two ewe the hob. were knocked dean 1 net, and the spokes sted out like bristly hair. The fine columbi• rimer. belong- ing to Fred roster of the Wanderers' Bicycle Club suffered greatly. 1,4 was an extraordinarily good machine,and )1r Foster had sent i, down to Lelor's for slos•ing. He was to start with it this morning for Wwdet.nsk, where he ea poets to do bit work nu the 24th. Mr Labe. of mane, is respnwmible tor the machines in his places. Ile estimates kr hies at about 112i00, and he will gee poet redress from the este. The only one in the shop at the time was Thomas B eckley, se employe. After earning nut hy the hack down Mr O'Hrietes party ,nesht refers in s piens in the lane at the rear, behind elk restaurant, and in front of the old R+y&I (pars Musa. The pikers .f the Tw.tele would net day jean where shelties wee heal tut! the World Imtrnel that it wise en tee tailor shop of tiv Perrin Wath. They nw+eised thee* f.w over half an '0.11. et s. and then aniseed' Sty, Wain House hy s rear door. Forest fires are dot* *rinse samara in the limits in the Misessaipps .!•wrest Ont. They have, during the pawl ten •IsT•, te.,ne ine.lcwlable .linage. snit •.think bus a spell of rain will sheet the scram O'Brien with hoots And yells, stones and A Gann Paarns.—The fallowing reelutiun was passed at the last moiet- ies of the quarierly heard of the Varna Meth•dist church: "Whereas. the Iona has come, sronnrieg to the rules of our church, se well as in the Pruvidenee Iof G.d, fee the Rev. A. S Smith to eater his cenn.cttnn with ei as our pare `tor, we. the un lsrsigned mem`en of the `quarterly b. roi, ea..u.•t, at this our leer bard mewing under his pastorate, close withont hesrieg twiimon•t. •e the elle. nestnrslt. ceerneel .04 s.ut.dr:es...1 his preach's,. to hie seal for the ...hating' of souls and to his general efli:iency - ..tchmen •.r the wall. of our beloved Trio. .n 1 we would earnestly pray that the hissing of the Lord. which nuk.th rich .0.1 aldsth no sorrow. may "treed him and Mrs Smith upon all their future fields of labor, and that when their labors in the vineyard of the Lord close. meal eters not only from this, hist bis after and fstnrc fields of their haboire, may (leek their disdain's' nn high. James G. Blaine has no intestine a< pin; t o iS•irope this summer.