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jlishtd every Saturday it BY THE Publishing Company )FF1CE EUX.ES. BCLK, ONE. MS OP SCBSCBIPTIOS; one year, in advance, $3:0C six months, in advance xKW ( BULB TWO. IS OP ADVEBTI8ISO: I Advertising, One one Insertion,.. $1:50 sequent Insertion-. 75 Ir Legal notices due on or Jt publication. No proof 1 until paid for" RLLE THREE. JU.Y, HALF-YEARLT AKb ( YEARLY BATES: Ml CI H ilils I OCCPIED, are .: i 8 12 20 tree. 10 15 80 in Column 18 25 85 t Column ... 25 40 75 iron 40 75 125 V Regular Advertisement paid at the beginning of irter. j RULE FOUR. torlal Notices, except )ompaning the first Inser ui advertsement, will be 2o cents per line; Obitua- same. Simple announce- deaths or marriages free, f who wish to indulge In Vermed "personal notices," equlred to pay In accord- the nature of their art! RULE FIVE. AKKOUKCtKO ' dates: CANDI and District .Offices, $20 inty Ofllees:.. ............... 10 it Offices 5 RULE BIX. sfrom transient customers r written, for Job work, ad r, or subscription, must be anted by the Cash to obtain n. Accounts of regular ersdue and presented the icb month. ,st of Comt Terms. V to tiansfer the counties of a and Coahoma from the lith (II) to the twelfth (12) Ml District, and tue county Jlore from the twelfth (12) I eleven h (11) Judicial l)is- tnd to tlx ue times ror hoi' the Circuit Courts in mid et. 2. Bo It further enacted. e Circuit Courts of the Kiev- Irtlulnl District shall be hoi I continue for the times as Iter stated should the busl the Court so long reiilre. i county of Bolivar niin 2 on the flrst Monday of and September aim continue tuUUlul (Iii.vh. - ie county of Washington lining on the third Monday ,'lt and Bcptemiier. and con ventv-'our Judicial days. t county of Issaquena com- tr on the soventli Monday e flrst Monday in March and her, and continue twelve 1 1nvs. s county of Sunflower com g on the ninth Monday after st Monday in ninrcu auu be-, ami continue six I days.' e countv of Leflore, common eleventh Monday after the Iondny in March and Scp- !, and continue twelve juui ys. ibved March 20, 1374. m OF SUPERVISORS. )lar meetings are held by the j of Supervisors of each coun lie 1st Mondays of January, July, August, ana uciooer, ay continue in session 4 days I lOllglT. (lancry District; continue 0 In Tunica, 0 in Coahoma, 0 Mivar and 12 lu Washington: today (5th) January, Tunica (12th) " Coahoma m nmii " llollvnr (20tli) " Washington ndny, (Oth) April, Tunica " (13th) " Coahoma " (iOth) " Bolivar f" (27th) " Washington ndny (Oth) July, Tunica " (13th) " Coahoma 1 -nnn " Mnllvnr (27th) " Washington rtiday (Oth) October, Tunica (13th) " Coahoma (20st) " Bolivar (27th) " Waslngton ncerytlou" will be held In lens County 14th District, h Mondays after 4th Mon f January, April, July and ibe,r. - ierms of the Supreme Court mmence on the 8d Mondays Hand October. Town Council meets regular 1st Tuesday of each month I. MOBEIS Wholesale Dealer lu . 2IGN AND DOMESTIC VINES, LIQUORS, ;aro, Tobacco, ETC. 1ECT IMPORTER OF :rr.ia Wlr.ss, Chan- ;r.ti, Gr&ndys, Etc. berry St.. 0kekvillb 4. ' Mlii. vol. r. G. A. PULTON, BLACKSMITH. BlacksaatifclaK sirs Horse SbSttlMg. ALL MANNER OF Machine and Boiler Work done expeditious and skillfully. tShop on Mulberry street. North of Washington avenue. Green vine, ov.-t, un-iy. COAL! COAL WSTl will deliver coal anywhere In lh city, by the wagon load at Eighty Centra Box: AT THR-- "fTARD In any quantities at 15 Cents a Ditt. Coal Yard on Central arenut near the Wharf-Ilnat. J. M. WHITKHILL 4 CO., Ity H. B. Putnam. Agent. nQv21,'74iil0-tf. Beat and Shoo Storo. I- II AVE Inst receirel a largo stock of BOOTS AND SHOES, Or best quality and latest styles. And have secured ono'of the brick buildinjrs now boiuir' built by I. Isenberg, ou Mulberry St., where I win iteni in oopta ana snoes ex clustvelr. Until this store Is som ploted. Customers are inviled to call at in v store corner of Wash inrton and Locust sts. I also have a choice stock of Dry uoous, urocories, etc., cheap for cash. nov7,'7.j i.uoodmam 8. C. ELLIOTT. W. O. WKTHKBBH Elliott d Wotecrbcj, BLACKSMITHS. nAOzxi7n cno? tlAn thnronnhljr mcparH to mannCia lur W'ugoiu ml CsrrUKc, of njr ctjrls awl diMlrn. -KmeoBtiiiillv na hswl snd ftirsilcsl rcilucei n!c everything la (heir liar nfbnsW hum, trlrelwl rrniu lh nmt mutrrul Ihemsr- ketairimu. Awo new uunriu, wagou, as. umnviiiF) aot. i, iei-ni. EM DITLCR, SILVER 8 M X X II, Op ) OREKNVILLK, MISS. Tl?SPF.OTFITr.f.V InAtrma the nubile that he Is prepared tore fiuir yu utiles, uiocks anu jeweiry, n the most perfect manner, guar iiiiwiuK PBiiRiuution in an cases. AuifUst 27, 1870-qr J. LENQS5IGLD, Dealer lit Flour, Eaooa, Zicxd, Meitl, Corn, (sugar, Coffee, . HolttHseH, Cobaeco, Tin and Wooden Ware, uoTiorjo, CROCKERY, Jug and GIj:j Vtre. A.. IS. FTNTJLY So CO. DKAUiltS IX DBU G AND TTEI)ICnJE3; PERFUMERY, TOILET SOAPS, Paints, Oils, Dyes, Class. ALSO SODA AND rurSHAT. WATERS On Dranglit aallaEottlu. Corner Washington Arenne and Mulberry streets, Feb 6-(TO. GREENVILLE. G. EtIOG . DKALIS IN Faclly Grccsrlcs, OonfseUenrics, CANED-PRU1TS, PICKLkS ft PRESERVES, WINES & LIQUORS, TOBACCO & CIGARS. Also at my bar NICEST DRINKS are mixed by nersons who know exactly how they should be prepar- eu. aisu are nepi on nana. HAVANA CIGARS, of the richest fragrance. To those who desire a quelt Saloon, good Drinks, and fine Cigars, wt say, Try s7 Cdccn, Ou Mulberry Street. Greenville, liisslsslppl, July 6th, 1873-tf. W Ay Ay Ay v ty V a GREENVILLE, WASHINGTON CO., TV Eefc&ScM Frtttfts. All over the North and West eminent and lire-tried Republicans have expressed their condemna tion of the gross outrage perpetra ted upon Louisiana and upon lib erty by the recti) t military seixnre of her Legislature. The question has come home to thoughtful men, to those whom the Administration cannot buy and cannot intimidate, Is it better that the Republican party or the Republic itself shall perish f And the answer is as em phatic and as universal as the response to the signal gnu from beleagnrcd Sumter in 18ei. To show how wide-spread is this re volt agaiust Grant's last tyrannous attempt to crash s sovereign State, we have but to open the pages of any Republican paper of character and Indncuce. Tbey speak with but oue voice that of unqualified aud blistering condemnation, of this great Iniquity. Amongst the many who have, uttered their pro tests agaiust the oat rage we take the following from the Morning Herald and Gazette, of Utica, New York. It is a Journal older than the current century. It is pub lished in one of tho citadels of the strength of the Republican party, of which it is one of the honored and trusted organs. Its senior proprietor and mauager is Hon. Ellis II. Roberts, the present rep reseutative in Congress of the Oneida district. This paper rep resents au Intelligent constituency and supports the cause of its party with ability. In this able and In fluential Republican journal of the 19th January there is an edi torial headed : " Reconitruction o Falturt t " from which we clip the concluding paragraphs, for the especial perusal of our readers i "The people of Louisiana do not believe they are governed by au administration legally and fair ly elected. Hence, we believe, arises all the trouble in that State. Ueuce tho White League Hence the Cooshatta massacre. Hence tho Pcnn iusurrcctiou. Hence the iutliuidation of the negro. But, we are told, if we let these fellows hare control of the State govori ment they will redouble their out rages. Thoy will ostracise all who were not rebels with them. They will grind dowu the negro and frame their laws to his destruc tion. Why, then, did you restore these men to citischship after the rebellion ? Why did you not hang them, throttling them and their perpetual treason together? "Why did you graut amnesty to them, tnus enabling them to hold the offices which you now fear to en trust to them? Haviug dono all this, you must take the cousequen- ees, though the heavens fall. If they aro lu a majority there you must pass over the State govern ment to their coutrol, or you aro yourselves the traitors, commit ting treason against the constitu tion, which you framed to suit yourselves. "Events have demonstrated to ns that these meu ark in a majority iu Louisiana. - That being the case we believe that if tho control of the State is surrendered to them, ss our constitution requires it to be, there will be an end, at once and forever, to all trouble In Lou isiana. There will be no end to the trouble until that is done. Oh, but the negro must bo pro tected in his rights ; the new re bellion must be crushed, is the re sponse. True enough; but the negro can never bo protected in his rights until the white man is granted those rights which belong to him. The 'new rebellion is not a rebellion aaalnat the Union ; it is a rebellion agaiust the glaring injustice of the Kellogg govern mont, which' is forced upou the people of Louisiana by the army of the United States. "But the White League, shall we let that govern Louisiana? Yes, if it has a majority of the votes. What then will become of the poor negro ? The enforcement act protects him. If the whole machinery of the State govern ment were in tho hands of the White Leaguers, the negro would not s'uffer ss much as he does now. The enforcement act makes intim idation aud violence agaiust the negro an ofleuse agaiust the Fede ral laws. The Federal courts will protect him. The Federal mar shals will follow close after those who persecute htm. The Federal army, If need be, will see to It that this lair Is enforced to tho letter; that no cltlsen is deprived of any right that belongs to him. "This Is the only possible peace able solution of the Louisiana question. It Is the only constitu tional solution the only oue that carries oat the Republican policy of reconstruction." . Ai GatiiM f tie Conspiracy. New York Herald. In Louisiana the case is bad enough ss it is, but suppose that out of these even's should come a colludon of the people with the troops. What then? It would be a collision that would arise from popular fury, tut the citlsens are. It Is clear, resolutely resolved against the resort to violence. It would be au outburst of popular passion over riding the restraints of better judg ment Therefore it would not be resistance of the sort thst suddenly arose In September. It would not surrender at any formal show of au thority or In any spirit of discre tion. It would fight. Somebody would be hurt. Naturally the peo ple who wpuhl be most hurt would be the small force of United States troops on the spot, compelled to face a whole population of resolute and desperate spirits. The troops would be driven out and the people would hold theetty. Grant would, thereupon, "take command In per son." Me wouiu concentrate an the available force of the govern ment and endeavor to take the city; but he" would probably fail, for In support of the people of New Or leans would Immediately rally, to light their battles over again, the whole of the population of Missis sippi, Alabama, Georgia, Texas and Arkansas, and the men who once marched under the Confeder ate colors. We would be in the presence of a new rebellion, fomen ted by the Executive; and the President would call on Congress for troops and money. Would Congress vote them? There can be no doubt of It. It must be re membered that this Congress still represents the principles and the party that the country has repudl ated at the polls, and In the chance of a new conflict aad a revived re bellion It would see the hope of a renewed hold on the nation, It would vote the President the hun dred thousand men he wauts, and If within a year from this time Grant has command of one hundred thousand men the next election for the Presidency will be held at the Greek kslends, or whenever else His Excellency may please. By all means, then, let there be no con fllct, for that Is the thing that is most desired by the military sat rapy of the White House, which has Grant In Its hands. Fiit Type-Settiafr, Mr. John R. Pepper, a St. Louis printer, recently set 7,695 ems of solid nonpareil In Ave hours. In 1805, en the Jackson News, a paper published by E. M. Yerger ami John W. Ward, Mr. Thad. Potter, a black-eyed, nervous, restless wretch of a printer, set one hund red yards of solid long primer in twelve hours. His Honor John McGill, now Mayor of Jackson, but at that time foreman of the News office, will cheerfully qualify to the above assertion. If Mark Cheek should be so for tunate as to secure the contract for carrying the malls from Memphis to Vloksburg, he would punctually fullfll his contract. But this, we fear, will cause his bid to be reject ed, for the shysters at Washington can get more money from those who do not Intend to' carry out their contract than from Captain Cheek, who has never lost a trip on his contract from Memphis to .Napoleon. A magnificent ruin bn Tuesday night prevented the minstrels from coming to time with their perform ance. The raiu about six o'clock was terrific. Up to that hour the boys bsd fondly hoped that there wouldn't be much of a shower, JBut when the last great avalanche of water came, the curtain fell and the boys tossed up the sponge. The elemental opposition was a little too strong. The Khedive of Egypt has just presented to General Sherman's daughtsra set of Jewels valued at three hundred and fifty thousand dollars, In return for advlos given him by General Sherman, and for which that old brick, (unlike his communder-in-cblef, U. S. 6.) re fused to receive any compensation. Now if the tawny Egyptian will make a pass at Us he will did that we are not ' stuck up " like old Tecumseh. We will furnish him with all the advice he requires at half the above figures. " Wo pledge the Rcpublicsn par ty of Mississippi to economy and reform," said tho platform upon which Governor Ames was elect ed. The Republican Legislature redeems that pledge by voting dowu every measure of practical reform, and by the passage of a bill to provide for an army of ruf fians to provoke riot and blood shed and to further .plunder tho people. In the light of such acts, It would seem that the platform was a dolaiisi asi a euarc. t MISS. SATURDAY, FEU. CI, lSTrt. JtL The fast ef air Rtrnt War. Mr. David A. Wells has furnish ed the Cobden Club of England with an essay upon the erpenses, income and taxes of the United State. We copy the following stateuitnt of ihecat of th Rebell ion : The whole cost of the war to the Northern and Southern States from ISol to 1S4 is estimated as follows : Lives, 1,000,000; property, by des truction, waste, etc., $D,000,000,IK. The gross enpenditiires of the Uni ted States fiomJune 1861 to July 1800, S.,792,2.7,000. Of this the ac tual war expenses were about $,- 312,237,000. The expenses of States, counties, cities and towns in tlir) Northern States, not Vrpresented by funded debts, have been estimated al $o00,- 0 )0,000. The increase of State debU on the war account was $123 000, 000. The Increase of city, town and county debts Is estimated at $200, 000,000,000. Total war expenses of tj)6 loyal States and the National Government, $0,105,237,000. The estimated direct expendi tures of the Confederate States on account of the war were $2,000,000,- 000. Aggregated estimated expenses of the war to the country, North and South, $8,165,237,000. The total receipts froin all sources during the second year of thenar were Joss than $-12,000,000. Tho ex penditures were $00,000,000 per monthat the rate of $700,000,000 a year. ' ASkarpTrickr VatMsgtta Gtmetuiiaos, Osaritr . s, tarsal. Washington, D. C. Jan. 24. Among . the desperate measures suggested to save the Republican party and perpetuate its rule over the Southern States, is the proposi tion which wss broached In the caucus of the members of the House last Friday night hy Gen. L. Hurl but, of Illinois, that the Republi can majority should take advan tage of their opportunity, and at this session Appropriate money enough to supply the arqiy for two fiscal years ItiHteud of one, as has been the practice since the founda tion of the Government. This pro position, which almost borders on revolution, finds special favor urn ong tho cnrpet-tiaggers, and the mure extreme men like Butler and Morton. The Idea (it Is allegod) first came from the Immediate friends of- tho President, who, it is authoritatively stated, indorses the Hchune, aud is auxious to see il carried. The party lenders, who are driven aluiofct to the verge of despair, feel Unit unless they have free swing with tho military in the South, thore is no prospect whatever of be ing able to carry a single Southern Stute in 187H, and that, In fuut. un less the dliiirent rotton Republic-tin Htnte governments are misttilned as to-day In Louisiana and Mississip pi, not one ortiiem will be in exist ence us soon us the neoplo slinll have n chuncs to express their opinions at the polls. This Is how Bismarck lookod when meeting his enemies in de bate in the German Parliament: "His gigantic frame fairly trem bled with pnssioiii his gray eyes flushed, nnd heavy mousUche bristled ; a paper ho took up during the first speech, for purpose of rel- erence, vibrated visibly Jn the pns sloimtc grnsp of his sinewy hands, and ever and anon Ills closely but toned uniform btcamv tense almost to splitting across his huge chest, as he sat hack his shoulders and threw up his licud, reitrdinghls foes with that Implacable glance which never fails to shake the strongest nerves, when he durts It at on oljoet of his hatred or con tempt. In the course of nn experi ence neither brief nor ordinary, I have seen many remarkable men at moments when they have been expected to labor under excitement of the most vehement description ; but I have never yet witnessed the consciousness of unbounded power expressed in the pliyslquo and bearing of a human belugas I saw it In Prince Bismarck. As he stood forward, facing the house, the na turul sternness of his aspect accent ed by the natural rigidity of his military teuue, he looked to mo like a Colossus, unquestionably ca pable of bearing upou his mighty shoulders cares and responsibilities that would.crush a common mortal Into powder." l .- - . M "We can't undertake to run State governments in all the Southern Htates," said Mr, Lincoln. But what was difficult to "Honest Old Abo" is Just as easy as rolling offa log to his degenerate succes-or. It would be nice If a few regi ments of United States troops should surround the Htatehouse this morning aud admit only those whom tbey plossed to tbelegiala- II. k.ll. Tti.t'a a ' -rtlln la I rxtoUta-fl Jxa 1. 1 r (times Goad Xews far the Cows. .Who has not secu the barbarous operation of boring cattle for the hollow horu ? Ami who ever saw it and did not rejoieo that ho was not a cow? Well, tho cattle will be glad to hear that this barbarous custom is about to be done away with, aud that it was a practir.o of senseless cruelty. Professor Crcsy is the friend to cattlo who has ex ploded the "hollow-horn" hum bug, lit! tells the "cow doctors" there is no such disease as tho hollow bom. The professor has cut opcu innumerable horns and found them all hollow. Tho cure practised is.to.bom iuto the horn and iiiject somo remedy. Now, a littld common scuse ought to teach anyfarmcr that every horu Is as hollow as Ames's head. Horned cattle will be glad to hear that the surgery of the gimlet is uot neces sary to their health, as scarcely any of them ever get tliayugh life without being horribly bored. i . SckaoImatcs-w-Tlkfre They Are. Colonel John Forsythe, Editor of the Mobile Register, thus congrat ulates an old friend on the occasion of his elevation to a Bishopric: "Rev. Dr. Thomas M. Dudley, nf Virginia, recently of Baltimore, has been elected Bishop of Ken tucky, to succeed Bishop Cummins wbo was deposed for Insubordina tion.'' Ah! Tom, my boy, do you remember the 1 Dovlls of the Uni versity of Virginia? What Jolly times those were I Now you are a Bishop! Harry Teulman is a Judge. Otey is out West dealing faro. Not lohg we picked up Pt tertcn on the streets, dead drunk, and forwarded htm to Mississippi. Arnell, of Tennesfrf, turned radi cal, went to Congress, and died. War moth made Kennurd a Su preme Court Judre of Louisiana. Thompson was killed leading an Arkansas roglineut at Shiloli. All are struggling to keep our n'mes above watei. Yon n lone are Bish op, my dear Tom! From the news- paper omces or tue uuir, iroin Hu tu ro banks of the West, from luili- clal .seats, from tho studies of pro- lessors ana tue ccctesiusties, we take off our hats and cheer for the .new Kentucky Bishop ns the lies! uftniit.i ri.ii.tsa. i.t-i fvii inur iiiiaii..ii piHiiuu iiinrw ii lfr,il t-s. a Hiiviicuii truest friend and purest spirit old Virginia ever gave uirtti in." Merrill and Sheridan have pn raded tho statement that In some parishes iu Louisiana, tho white pcoplo had pledged themselves to no longer employ those who per sistently and blindly voted to ruin thcic. 'TIicbo military statesmen thought this was very outrageous on the part of tho white pcoplo ot Louisiana. What , then, do I hoy think of their mastor, who in his impotent- malico agaiust William Cullien Bryant, tho oldest and no blest Republican editor in tho Union, withdrew the government advertisements from tho New York Post? Mr. Bryant was a Republican editor when Grant was hauling wood. Mr. Bryant's grent ability contributed to c!c vato Grant to tho power he now abuses. But Mr. Bryant, like cv cry other independent Republican has dared to condemn the Louisi ana outrage,' and consequently lie is made to feel tho wrath of the offended administration. It is a pitiful proceeding ou tho part of the President, hut tho grand old editor soars far above petty spite, and tho Post will live and com mand respect, even though its col umns benr no olllclal patronage, We huvo this to say in regard to a telegraph to connect us with the pcoplo who livo remote from this headquarters of civilization this gem of the bottom and queen of tho swamps. Wo want nothing to mako us a perfect jewel of a city so much as wo need a tele graph. Wo can get it so easy if wo can get the business men of tho town to sail iu for it. How wo fretted nnd languished for news during the Interruption of navi gation hy tho ice. Important events wcro transpiring in the world beyond us of which we anew noining. wiiiio wo were. thus shut off, the merchant was buying cotton iu tho dark, and i litklng hundreds, perhaps thous ands of dollars without a fact up on which to base a calculation. Ono of our merchants had goods detained four weeks by tho Ice barrier, when a flash of tho wires would have sent hi gd career ing over tho railroad to Memphis, and he would have received them within thrse or four days from the date of M" order. Ills losses have been fr niore thou ho would be expected to contribute to tho se curing a telegraph, lit view of these things, the vexations, delays and losses wtich result from our unreliable mall arrangements, we urge our business wen to bestir the li tls cv.r-ct t:! iv o. sir. STEAM PLANING WORK SAW AND GRIST MILL. Urrriitiltc, 31iss. NB. JOHNSON & CO., ("ontrutors. Ituildent, ie.. regttoctnillv inform the nublin that tnrougii tno agency or tue aoove works, we are prepared to compete with builders in any part of the country for the construction of houses or bridges, and guarantee sMiiKiaction in pricesami quality oi wort, unr LIJMBRR YARD InGrecnvillo l now well stocked with choice varieties of seasoned rINE AND CV PRESS j which we offer at reasonable prices. Plans and sneclrteatioim for hous es lurnisiieti on application. UNDEETAKBE, A supply of both Metallic and Wooden Cases t 1 ot ull hand. sizes constantly kept on Our Wood Coffins in cot uo in Imitation of Metalics, and look full as well. Cost from III) to $10. ao cording to size mid trimming. 10. J8 rns 00 3 u a. e O n In 9 o 'A re 52 CD n B w 7) in B 3 P o. a a. B C 1 a. a S 2. tr 9 c 5 r I e 5 ft ft 99 O n 5 n t I w n tr o 8 5 r- O s ? S 5- S Elliott & Fousse, TIN, COPPER, AND Sheet Iroii-lVokera. Guttering:, Spouting and WELL. DUX VI27C Done on 1iort notice. ALSO DEALERS IN - Cooking and heating stoves PSrWe keep on hund all articles generally round in a lirst-ciuss TIN-HII01. Cush paid for old Brass, Copper Lead ami iron. WASHINGTON BTRKET. Bet. Mulberry and Locust. scpr. in. '7-1. SALOON! 32 KENNEDY & HANWAY. , Bestct WLYES $ LIQUORS Puro HavanaTlgars, Cull.orniu Wines, f airer lleer. Etc. ociO Mam (Street. Oreeuville, Miss. Sale of School Land. BY VIRTUE of the aiitiiority vi..fii in ma. and in pur suance of an order of the Board of Supervisors of llie county or wasn Ington, Htste of Mississippi, I will oflcr at public sale and lease to tho hiohoat bidder, at the door of the Courthouse, on Monday, February . .a im7,-. i i. l.. il. jj H. u. Ji7tt, m.Minl IIIIIURt 111 county aforesaid, described as fol lows, to wit: Section Hi, township 18, range 0, west; section 1(1, township 18, range n.west. J. W. PfLriS. County Superintendent KJuoutlon, January 2, 1875. 224t L. WILCZiriSKI ti CO DFALMISIK Bxy Cooda AND GROC Ell 1 13 &, BOOTS and SHOES, ' AKD PROFESSIONAL. F. VALLIANT, ATTORPi BY AT LAW GREENVILLE, MISS. Practice in Washington and Twa- quena counties, and in the United Mates Courts at Jackson. apit ClI AS. W. CLARKE. JOHX W. SU1IXIS- CLiBES It SHIELDS, ATTOBXEYS AT LAW On Walnut street, near the Courf' House Greenville, Miss. W. A, 1IAYCRAFT, ATTORNEY AT LAW, ' UREENVILLE, . - MISH. Makes the payment of taxes, tedsc , - tion, sale and leasing of lands speciality. W. A. l'EKCT. W. O. YCKOEK Percy Ct Tcxgcr, ATTORNEYS AT LAW. Greenville, Miss. W. K. TKItTU. D. M. BVCKKE't TRIGG Ac BUCKNEE , ATTORNEYS AT LAW, Greenville............. ....... .Miss. Office tit Bank Building, Main t. up-stalr g W. FERGUSON, JaTTOKJIETf AT ItAWf flTIUi rKACTICE 10 the la the Csart fV of Tuuica, Coaumaa, Boliva , Waaliiiictuu and Immtucub Csaatic t aud attend to the sale, purchase an t leasing of plantation sua payment t f taxes. ' W. uTrbcliM. Jothaa Sklaarr, Phelpft Cl Ciltlaner, ATTORNEYS AT LAW tlrceavltlo, Bias erWill nraclice In the H. ti. Courts, Supreme Court and thtf Courts or Washington, Bolivar and Sunflower Counties. foot. S.'74. f. A MOXTOOKBBY. a. . Hooaa. ATTORNEYS AT LAW, ' Rivkrtox, Bolivar county, KU. W.8. fARIBH, ATTORNEY AT XaVtf Maverbvillb, InMMiasM CMBljr. . October 8,'74-nB. Dr. N. C. Skinner, OFFERS HIS PROFESSIONAL SZtiYICES . TO THIS Citlsens of ChrecaTiU AND THE County at Lirro. Office at his dwelling on Maid Street. may 23, 1874. jyt. J. L. YOUNG, DENTIBT. Having located In Greenville1 respectfully informs the cltlr.cn thereof anil surrounding countrv that ho Is prepared lyattend to ail the duties appertaining to his pro fession. Those favoring him with ihclr patronage may rest assured that their work will he done In tho most thorough and skillful manner mid none but the host of materials used, -p Olllcont the residence of W. Hi Whcaticy, near the Court House. Parties desiring to be visited at their residences in the country, will lesve word al the oflce or st Fiuliiy's Drug Store; octl7-6m. Worthington, Buckrser & Co BAr::iE;:3r GREENVILLE, MISSISSIPPI Transact a General , Banking StLSiacCSs Collections made and proceeds remitted, on day received fRny and sell on commission all kinds Bonds, Sorlp and war rants, men 22, 187S. E. VVIHTK, CABINE? X2AC3& A5D UPIIOLSTEREa , DEALER tit- . A LLkluds of Farnltore, Mattresses ac. Bneclal sttentton paid to all kinds of n Duirs. all kinds of Matties es mado to order. Locust fit. between Washington if. and Main GREEK V1LLK.MI&3, nich 1, 1873-0m. Arthur o'cc::::::j, FASHION ABLIS EOOT TTAHre . BHOP OW irrjUBzstBT STsnrf, ? QreenYille, . . I'r'r'- June 6, 1874-uU. Livery & Clio C: AKt Fcsa crcrs THE nndorslgnsd hereby sneans ' to the public, that tisy Uvs U ken charge of their ON WAHHINOTCJ AVIir- i Best of attention rivea be ENTRU8 rrD TO T . STOCK for sale on tai v ly. - - , ( . '