a gE LIS ne a ae — — ti Cid omen tn il AD. SE tc oo nS AMR a AO AS PE sia ta i Bi POO 0 2 <A. Sig eee he eae TE Ta ne se ES ten se aaa NTE OT a Maine ae ROO git as agai a A ts neg A et ree C8 a hae ai — Ae Soh Oe * lie OP a a 3 a —ee eerteation . eT pennunntinate LL ental . ‘ r THe Dairy EXAMINER Is Published every Evening. OFFICE: INGS’ BUILDING, CORNER OF WATER AND GREAT GEORGE STREETS, Charlottetown, P. E. 1. KATES OF SUBSCRIPTION : Six Months, $2 59 Three Months, - - 1 25 One Month, . : = Une Week, _—_——— sw Advertising at most moderate raves. r monthly, quar ppli- Contracts may be male fo terly, or half-yearly advertisements, on & eation. W. L. COTTON, Manager. DaILy EXAMINER. iJ. W. MITCHELL, Oflice Sup’t THE Asan PEBRUARY L. 1333. -- The “Patriot” aad its Pet. Tur Patriot is nos satisfied with our treatment of William Dunbar Stewart. This is no matter for marvel. Like the ancient priests of Isis, the writers in the Patriot are anrious to maintain the credit of their oracle as long as the delusion will delude. W. D. Stewart ia a vain and an ignort man; the community generally understand this weil. But Mr. Stewart, by an alfectation of deep reading and an assumption of wis- dom, tries to biind the public as to his in- capacity ; and the Patrivi 1s only too wilung to plaster and varnish over the cracks in their wooden Deity. The Patriot asks: What has the Exantner to do with any one’s peculiarities if these have no bearing on the public interest!” The Examiner replies none. But Mr. Stewart’s oddi- ties and peculiarities are, unfortunately for him, so intimately connected with his public duties that whatever he dees in his eapacity of Commissioner of Public Works, is odd and peculiar. He defends the blun- dering legislation of the Government in which he holds a Cabinet seat, by long ex- tracts from Stuart Milland ‘*The Wealth of Nations.”. He acquired the position he holds through quotations fron philosophers and the quarterlies. He is in fact a Cab- iiet Minister and a Commissioner of Public Works by the sheer force of quotation. The eglected state cf the roads and bridges mark his incapacity for the post he fills, and he defends his bungling and unfitness with most learned axioms from philosophers and public economists, If deep reading, then, or the pretence ot it be, as the Patriot ex- preases it, a peculiarity or an oddity in. Mr. Stewart, it has been the ladder by which he has risen to where he is. William Dunbar Stewart lives, moves and has his being as a public man on the strength of his being a philosopher. And yet 1t seems that the Patriot would debar us from speaking of his pretensions to learning, on the plea that these are only the ‘ peculiarities ” and ‘¢ oddities” of Mr. Stewart. If the Patriot be right, Mr. Stewart is where he is through ‘‘oddities” and ‘“‘pe- culiarities,” and we feel not the slightest remorse in cutting away the scaffolding from this oddity and peculiarity and letting him find his natural levei. Mr. Stewart has, with his philosophic pretensions, made him- self ridiculous ; while bad roads and infirm tridges will not be compensated for in pub- lic estimation, by qnotations from Stuart- Mili and the Quarterlies. —s <> o-—-—— -- ———— Cost of Mails Iu the figures which we gave on Wedunes- day, showing the cost of the “* Northern Light,’ asa mail carrier, we overlooked several very importantitems of expenditure, of which we are reminded by a correspond- ent. No account was made of the interest on the money paid io Sewell, or on the money expended last year in repairs. ‘ihe price paid to Sewell was $70,000, and the airs in Pictou and elsewhere cost #40,- 000, and the interest on these two items in the four per cent at par, will be $4,400. Our correspondent, however, remarks ;— As the steamer this year is not forcing her way through the ice, but is (as described in the, Patriot) quietly resting onthe ice till her weight, combined with the action of the sea, opens a passage, (a process taking from three to seven days), it would be manitestly unfair to estimate her repairs at as high a figure as in the memorable year when she was sawed out of Charlottetown harbor through five inches of ice in twelve days. Let us then set down the irs for this year at $2,000 and we have an etpenditure of nearly $500 per week ; indeed f illy that amount if we add tie depreciation of this superb steamer from year to yrar. ~ faking now the corrected figures, the ac- count will stand thus :—- Train service, per trip, €C0 CO Service of men, provisions, Xec., 75 00 Coal, ; . ; ; ‘ 25 00 Interest and repairs, . > 166 66 Cost pertrip, . i . £326 66 These figures tell us that the weekly cost of the Nezihern Light, in her three trips, is close upon a thousand dollars, while a mail brought every day, via the Capes, costs the weekly sum of one hundred and eighty dol- —_..° ee Ye ~——--— Supreme Covrt.—In the case of the Queen vs. Martin Carroll the Jury bronght in a verdict of guilty of riot, but notas a ringleader. ‘ihe Queen Closkey for riot comaenced this morning. The Attorney General has withdrawn fiom the case and has put in his place the leading counse) for McCai nall, agau st viem a@ Hill of Incieiment las Leen found for pring shots from the Orange Ledge! !! Tuere has tecn no tidings of the North- ern Licht eivce last night. Hewever, the Snow hoe Clubiers have advertised for a tramp, and that is no bad sign of a south- oly wind. -¢ ‘ubiquitous sort of an individual, who is always vs. Thomas Mc-, 20 ane te | Supreme Court. ! | his pocket, eee se an et aoa Me . ee ee Tacn cones Mr. John Scott agan with & copy of the Constitution of the Orange Society im Joha Scott is an authority upon Tun following is the conelfston of Mr. all matters relating to the Constitution and | 'Palne’s address to the Jury in the caso of | tie Queen ve. Martin Carroll :— I-have hurriedly grouped the evidence te- rether, gentlemen of the Jury, for 1 fear you “annot remember all, unless, indeed, your memories are as good a3 those who are sworn aot to forget the deeds of the conquerer at the Boyne. First of the group is Patrick bowers, and, notwithstanding the stigma which both the Crown ev.deice and the Crown lawyers have attempted to place on Mr. Quirk and Mr. Bowers, they are respectable—yes, ani let me add, as respect- ible as any Orangeman. Mr. Bowers states that ‘‘five or six persons began the row; vad, in consequence of pistol shots being fired, . panic ensued. The crowd threw stones y cause of the pistol-firing exciting them. He saw shots from the lodge window.” John \Valsh also “saw pistol-shots fired by Johu Scott from the lodge window.” Now, gentie- nen, the impression upom my mind is, that the misguided young scoundrels among the rangemen rushed up stairs in hot biood after the first stone was fired at Me('‘annell, and were ready for war and bloodshed, ant their somrades in guilt and sin were safe inside the building and could fire upon the defenceless crowd below. And now I come to the traverser’s first ap pearance at the row. A great deal has been said «against him. We = are told that he is a roug: spun sort of a fellow, who can never keep his tongue still, and he bas been charged by some of the witnesses with singing ——eleven hours before listurbance—a song the burden of which was +‘ Home Rule for Lreland ;” and if he dil so, {am not aware that it is an in lictable offence, as probably Mr. Batt and other gentleman in ireland occassionally drive away their dreary thoughts by the repition, No harm in that, rentleman. Martin says he would not be ashamed to sing the same song in this Court, if he were allowed and had some join in the chorus. So there can be nothing improper iu it if he is willing to do that. The evidence of quite a number of witnesses proves that my client was not near the scene of disturbance when the row began. Gld Mr. Diamond has stated that Martin was there at the beginning. [do not pretend to say Mr. Diamond swore false, but he must have madea mistake. What importance can be attached to the testimony of a witness who drank a horn of grog imme diately previous to the disturbance, and then when he felt that dying outfortified himself well with another as soon as he could procure it. Mr. Diamond states that when the shot was fired from Quirk’s gangway the place was filled with men. Now we have the statsment apon oath of three or four witnesses for the rowa, denying that any one was seen in the gangway. ‘Thomas Lowrie ran at ouce to the piace where he saw the smoke, and declares that no one was there ; and furthermore states that the Orange procession had not then ar rivcd at the Lodge. Dudley Wright swears the same thing. Howthen can the evidence of Mr. Diamond who swears that Martin Carrol} was there at the commencement of the row in froat of the Lodge; and, furthermore, that the pistol shot from Quirk’s gangway was fired over the head of a number, Se reconciled with the testimony of Thomaa Lowrie end Dudley Wright? All are witnesses on the same side, of the case. Then comes an individual well- known in courts of law, one Frank Stanley, s present to prove anything. Francis is always on hand to take notes, In the midst of the wildest excitement he is always perfectly col- lected and cool. He is a sort of recording an- vel for the Orangemen. It appears that Iran- cis took the cover of an old copy of the constitution, and it would appear from his evidence that he went to work to col- lect evidence in a manner which cannot fail to call forth your warmest edmiration. Perhaps i may oat so collected that he made himself a sort of lecturer aud read the constitution to his comrades in distress before he desecrated its yellow covers by taking notes upon it. He nas the name of Martin well down in the list as one of the rioters, Now, then, I ask how could he write on such soft paper, with a lead pencil, in the midst of so much confusion ! No, gentlemen; he wrote it after he went home, and he put down not only those whom he saw there, but those whom he thought ought to be there. This is an attempt which has been made by the learned counsel] for the crown to prove that Martin was onthe grouad at an early stage of the disturbance. but, gentlemen, against Mr. rank Stanley, I will put the evidence of Mr. Alexander McDougall, a young man known to most of the people of this city, to be an ex- emplary person. fie states that Martin was seen by him crossing the square and going to wards the sceue of disturbance. He heard shots fired and saw stones thrown. and thought jit very singular that Martin was not engaged inthe melee. Witness Connelly states that Martin came to his place about seven o'clock in the evening. ‘Then, gentlemen, folowing up this strong and clear testimony, we have what, no doubt, may be considered stronger. Mrs, Carroll, the mother of Martin, states that he came home to tea, about half-past seven, and that is corroborate! by the testimony of Mariin’s sister, who states that she left Martin at his tea about twenty minutes to eight. \When she came up town, she heard shots fred aud saw stones thrown. My learned friend, for the prosecution, wiil tell you they were ali mixed up together, and their evidence is not reliable ; but, gentlemen, is it probable that a respectable woman like Mrs. Carroll would come into this court and give false testimony. Martin must have got scent of the row and went up town after he had finished his tea. But, gentleman, an attempt has been made to prove that the quarrel was premediated by Martin Carroll and others. Mr. Hooper states that Martin Carroll ysed threats at the wharf in the morning before the boat leftto gou the West River with the Orangeman on Sead, ‘Mr. Hooper states that Carroll said ** you are goiug away allright but it will be different when you return.’ Now, then, gentlemen, let us see what this testimony is worth. Mr. Hooper is a gentleman occupying @ seat at the City Council Board, and, it will be said, stands high in the Council. Put what is the fact? Mr, Hooper took a large horn of grog in the ;morning, and, we find, he continued this refreshing exercise all day to keep up his Lutch courage for the threatened melee in the evening. It is strange that in a crowd of two hundred people on the wharf, Mr. Hooper should have been the only one to hear such a threat as Martin Carroil is accused of uttering. Then, gentlemen, they procured Mr. John McKenzie to try and substantiate the fact of Martin Carroll being on the street at ihe com- ! . ° more attractions for him, about 8 o'clock, and though all available ;mencsinent of the row. John, you know, is a sort of curly-beaded: ee the Orangemen “ Bye-Laws of the Urder. Even if he stands 80 | high in the estimation of his brother Orange- men, he is not such an angel that his testimony ean be believed in this Court without some thing to support it. To give you a sunple of his statements, aud to show you how unreliable they are, he says he was in the Lodge room, ¢ with forty or fifty armed men, and he did not know a single man. What weight can you attach to the statement of a man like that, and yet it is the kind of e idence which has been offered here to con- vict the traverser at the bar. Then,gertiemen came a Mr. Newson who tells you he’ saw Carroll at the commencement of the row. He was thereso early that he heard the great booming of the gun fired from Quirk’s gang. wey, and then informs us he ran over to Offers and gulped down a gool horn of grog to save him, | suppo e, from dying. In all likelihood, ventlemen, he remainet in Offers, for being one of those shipyard rangers, the grog hi than the smeli of powder. But, gentlemen, I think that I have proved that my client was not on the ground in an early staze of thie quarrel ; and, further more, we have in evidence the fact, that when he dil arrive, it was to assist in the quelling of the row. Yes, gentlemen, the cause of the continued stone throwing was the Orange flay which floated from the top of the building, and Martin being quick-witted perceived that if the flag was taken down the row would cease, and he therefore exelaimed : ‘Cut the hatlyards of the flag and it will coma down,” Coupling this fact with his statement that ‘‘no Irishman would throw stones” and ‘‘none but pups would do go,” I think it very clear that the traverser at the Bar was no rioter. It will be sail that Orangemen have a right to walk and a right to fly their flag, and no man should de- mand the pulling down of that fiag. But when the flying of that flag stirs up animosity, and blood is shed in consequence and the peace broken, then, gentlemen, we have a right to disclaim avzainst those that bear it. But it will be said the Irish Society walks, and the St. Andrew’s Society walks; [ say long may they walk—they have no oaths to put down Popery and keep up Protestantism, or obliga. tions to sustain Popery and put down Protest. antism. 1 hope that the day will never arrive when religious wars and feuds shall desolate the homes of those who are now dwelling in peaceand harmony. I hope never to hear of such strifesas oncedevasted the Continent of Europe when the bitter feuds stirred up by religious societies led to long and bloody wars; when in every country went up the cry of the orphan and was seen the weeping of the widow mourn- ing for departed ones. Protestantism does not require to be supported by men banding to- gether and binding themselves by secret oaths. \When it requires such support las a Protest antwill say, let itfall. It is,and must continue to be, sustained by truth and the Word -of God. The law of this land doss not recognize re- ligious secret societies; neither does the law of Ireland. ‘he strife and cruelty and carnage which marked the contest in Ireland are now unknown, and the very spot on which were erected the scenes that our Orange friends strive to commemorate is now the smiling and peaceful valley of the Boyne. I have not. gentlemen, said as much about the firing of pistols as [ should like; but my learned friend, the counsel for the prosecution, is better postec in military matters than myself, and he will dilate upon the use of arms and give you the reason for using them on the i2tb of July last. Now, gentlemen of the jury, I must conelude, and in doing so would urge every one of you to act independ- ently, stand upon your rights, do not be swayed by one man or another, do not think what this party or that party will think of you, but weigh the evidence well, and I think if you do so, you must acquit my client. We shall endeavor to give a synopsis of Mr. Longworth’s speech, for the prosecution, in to-morrow’s issue. _——e @: Zip « —~————— The Entertainmeat last Evening. — Tue entertainment by the mein! ers of St. Patrick’s T. A. Society, in aid of the funds of the Ladies’ Relief Society, passed off very successfully last evening. The hal va well filled, and the Concert commiitee oi the Socie'y spared no pains to make those in attendance comfortable. The following programme was carried through In a very masterly manner, and all taking part ac- quitted themselves so equally creaditable that it would be invidious for us to make any distinction :— PART I. Instrumental Duet—Miss Newbery and Mr. Fletcher. Address, ‘* Public Opinion”—Mr. Caven. Song, ‘‘Comin’ thro’ the Rye” —Mrs. Strick- land. Song, ‘*The Standard Bearer” (by request)— Mr. Hermans, Harp Solo—Mrs. Kickham. Song, ‘f Barney O’ Hay’ —Mrs. Gaffney. Sonz, ‘*Shamrock’”’—Mr. Caven. Comic Song, ‘Don’t Wake the Baby,” Mr, Laws. PART II. Comic Address, Mr. Coyle, Song, ‘‘The Meeting of the Waters,” Mrs, Pennee. Solo Cornet, ‘““My Own, My Guiding Star," Mr. Fletcher. Sony, ‘‘Thou Art so Near,” &c., Miss Mc- Ewen. Song, ‘‘The Minstrel Boy,” Dr. Creamer. Song, ‘The Merry Zingara,” Miss Newbery. Ccmic Song, Mr. J. Walsh. 4 God Nave the Queen. —. Firs at Cascumrrc Waarr.—Yesterday morning the house of Mr. James F. White, Collector of Customs for this port, was re- duced to ashes. The fire was discovered means were used, nothing could be done to check the progress of the flames. The house was a large two-storey building well fin- ished throughuut, with a large kitchen. Most of the furniture was saved, but in a damaged condition. There were £1,500 in- surance on the building. Still, Mr. White loses heavily, as the house itself was consid- ered to be worth nearly double that amount, and we are told that the cellar contained stores to the amount of nearly $1,000. The fire is supposed to have originated in a de- fective flue; and having thus started in the} uy per part of the Luilding, none of the con ue . the ane sre saved. Mr. White’s entire loss wi rebably an.oupt to some- thing like €3,500.— Pioneer, ttt ee ts Me any oe * New Advertisements. mil A tlie tanta iat ata tt a ee. RANKINE’S BISCUIT ! ON CONSIGNMENT: 5 BOXES Soda, Graham, Pilot, Wine ») aud Butter, Fruit, Lemon, Cinnamon, Abernathy, gtc., for Sale at MANUSAC- TURERS’ PRICE. FENTON T. NEWBERY & CO. Ch’town, Feb. 15, 1878—3i - UNLESS © A LL OUTSTANDING ACCOUNTS are LAX. paid by lst MARCH, there will be an unpleasantness immediately after. Mind that, NOW! THEO. L. CHAPPELLE, Diamond Bookstore, 85 N. Side Queen Square. Ch’town, Feb. 15, 1878.-—3in eg a a enti | New Advertisments, , cecal acer liincettctenscerenaen rete ata SNE “MERCHANTS Marine Insurance Co'y OF P. E. ISLAND. NOTICE. ‘| NHE Annual General Meeting of the Share. in the Young Men’s Christin Association Hall, Charlottetown, on Wednesday, the 15th Mareh, AT THREE O'CLOCK, for the election of Directors for the ensni year and the transaction of other business, FENTON T. NEWBERY, Manager. Feb. 9, 1878—pat taw till meeting G00D BOOKS —FOR THE—- Farm, Garden and Household, /FXUE following Valuable Books will be sup- pliel from the Office of the Dairy Examiner. Any ons or more of these books will be sent, Post-Paid, direct, te any of our readers, on receipt of the regular price, which is named against each book :— Allen’s (R. L. & L. F.) New American Farm Book, $2 59 Allen’s (i. F.) American Cattie, 2 Ailen’s (L. F.) Rural Architecture, 1 50 American Weeds and Useful Plants, 1 75 Atwood’s Country and Suburbaa Houses, 1 50 Baker’s Practical and Scicntitic Fruit Culture, 2 50 Barry's Fruit Garden, 2 50 Bommer’s Method of Making Manures, 2 25 sreck’s New Book of Flowers, 1 75 Brill’s Farm Gardening and Seed-Grow- iog, 1 00 Proom-Corn and Brooms, paper, 50 cts. ; cloth, 7 Brown’s ‘!'axidermist’s Manual, 1 00 Caldwell’s Agricultural Chemical An- alysis, 2 00 Coburn’s Swine Husbandry, 1 75 Corbett’s Poultry Yard and Market, paper, 50 cts.; cloth, 75 Dadd’s Modern Horse Doctor. 12 mo., 1 Vadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 12mo., 1 Dadd’s American Cattle Doctor, 8vo. cloth, Dadd’s American Reformed Horse Book, 8vo., cloth, De Voe’s Market Assistant, Downing’s Landscape Gardening, Nggleston’s End of the World, Kggleston’s Hoosier School-Master, Eggleston’s Mystery of Metropolisville. Every Horse Owner's Cyclopedia, iamous Horses of America, Flax Cultare, [Neven Prize Essays by wet See es tes CD Qu © practical growers], . 30 Flint (Charles L.) on Grasses, 2 50 Fuller’s Grape Culturist, 1 50 Fuller's illustrated Strawberry Cuiturst, 20 Fuller’s SmaJ] Fruit Culturist, 1 50 Fulton’s Peach Culture, 1 50 Geyelin’s Poultry Breeding, 1 25 Gregory on Cabbages, 30 Gregory on Carrots, Mangold Wurtzels, Etc., Gregory on Onion Raising, Gregory on Squashes, Harris's Insects Injurious to Vegetation, Plain, $4; Colored Engravings, Harris on the Pig, Henderson’s Gardening for Pleasure, Henderson's Gardening for Profit, ifenderson’s Practical Dita tlerbert’s Hints to Horse Keepers, Hooper's Book of Evergreens, Hop Culture. By nine experienced culti- pe eae SaSSszzs SEs va' ers, 30 Hunter aud Trapper, 1 00 Hussey’s Home building, 5 00 Jobnson’s How Crops Feed, 2 00 Johnson's How Crops Grow, 2 00 Lakey’s Village and Country Houses, 5 006 Loring’s Farm-Yard Club of Jotham, 3 50 Mrs. Cornelius’s Yonng Housekeeper’s Friend, 1 50 My Vineyard at Lakeview, 1 25 Nichol’s Chemistry of the Farm and Sea, 1 25 Unions—How to Raise Them Profitably, 20 Jur Farm of Four Acres, paper, 30 cts. ; c oth, 60 Parsous on the Rose, 1 50 Phin’s How to Use the Microscope, 75 Phin’s Lightning Rods and their Con! struction, 50 Quinby’s Mysteries of Bee-Keeping, 1 50 Quincy (Hon, Josiah) on Soiling Cattle, 1 25 Quinn’s Money in the Garden, 1 50 Quinn’s Pear Culture for Profit, 1 06 Piley’s Potato Pests, pa., 50 cts.; cloth, 75 Roe’s Play and Profit in my Garden, 1 50 Stewart's Irrigation for the Farm, Gar- den and Urchaad, Stewart's Sheplerd’s Manual, Stoddard’s An Egg Farm, paper, 50 ets., c'oth, 75 Thomas’s American Fruit Culturist, new edition, Thomas’s Farm Implements and Ma- chinery, Tira Bunker Papers ; or, Yankee Far- ining, Tobacco Calture/ By fourteen experi- enced cultivators, Waring’s Draining for Profit and Health, Warisg’s Elements of Agriculture, Weidenmann’s Beautiiying Country Homes. A superb quarto volume. 24 lithograph plates, in colors, 1 White’s Cranberry Culture, White’s Gardening for the South, Wright’s Brahma Fowl, Wright’s Practical Poultry-Keeper, Ch’town, Feb. 14, 1378— FOR SALE, CHOONER ‘ PHCENIX,” 42 tons, 4 years old, now lying between Steam Navigation a Wharf and Peake’s No. 3 Wharf in Uhar- ottetown. For particulars and terms apply to A. A. McLgan, Mg [ian hla Clee lottetown, ar to the Subscriber, MALCOLM NICHOLSON, Eldon, Lot 57, Zs — bo — mw 69 f#2n S$ 2 a toto to = Oo SSERS to g 8 ss LECTURE & CONCERY, UNDER THE AUSPICES OF King Solorion Lodge No. 94.7. & AM. sien lini Tuesday, Feb, 19, 1878, —IN THE— (Athenzum), Charistictown, The Lecture will be delivered by brother the Rev. Alfred Osborne, Chaplain of the above named Lodge, on MASONRY, ITS HISTORY & PRINCIPLES. * After which a short programme of Musical & Literary Selections will be given by some of our most talented almateura. Complete Bills of Fare will be issued shortly. All members of the Fraternity are invited to appear in Masonic costume. The Chair will be taken by His Worship the Mayor, Brother J. 8. Carvell, Tickets 25 cents each, on sale at the : Stores of W. R. Watson, S. W. Dod Apothecaries Hall Co., and C. D Rankin ; also, o Peis Bros., and at the door of the all. Doors open at 7.30; Concert to commenes at 8, sharp. L. M. POOLE, EDWIN. G. BEEK, Chairman of Committee. Secretary. Ch’town, Jan. 31—3 t aw pat Buy the American XC MAHEN B, WHEELS —AND THE-- BAND HUB WHEELS, For Sale at W. E. DAWSON & C0’S. ————— A GOOD LOT OF AMERICAN WOOD STOCK, Spokes, Shafts, Ete. A FEW SHEET-IRON BODIES, with seat all complete, at Manufacturers’ prices, at W. E. DAWSON & CO’S. Jan, 18—2aw ar 3i SWEET ORANGES, PPLES, Lemons, Grapes, Figs, Nu és Onions, Raisins, Currants, Spices. ‘Ab kinds Crackers, Preserves, and the largest as- sortment of Confectionery to be had on the Island. Fancy Toys, Flour (by the bbl. or lb. ), Tea, Sugar, Soap, Candles, Pepper, Mus- tard, Vinegar, and a variety of Groceries, ALEX, McKENZIE, Queen Street, Ch’town, Dec, 27, 1877.—tu&fraw Rims, KING SQUARE HOUSE: WE HAVE A COMPLETE STOCK OF CARRIAGE GOODS Consisting in part of fron, Steel, and Castings, Spokes and Kims, Axtes and Springs. We call special attention to Henuy’s Pareyt Smneie Piy Cast Steel Carriage Springs, for which we are agents. We warrant each Set. es sa OUR PRICES ARE VERY LOW -*s BEER & SONS. Ch’town, Jan, 9, 1875. UY THE DAILY EXAMINE Bb forthe elibipee-innelendthemeeal holders of the above Company will be held: REFORM GLUE HALL OF SM ONT