BWp^(iBPPw^SOT|H^l8owlw!g? and art, not " HHSbll by the masculine Variety of inWg To say t'>* truth .the fashion of ^Indies'dress lias proved a perilous and onMMceasful subject for preachers and religious jP'. Vrriters, and, indeed, heathen moralists and political economists found it as intract bio and unprofitable. The State has, long lace, retired from the contest with extravagance in dress, and ignominionsly contents itself with sharing the profits of folly it can not repress The severnl sumptuary laws of Greece and Rome failed to arrest the extravagance that hurried onward to the dissolution of society and the State, and the tariff laws of modern nations seem to have as little salutary influence. The Church has again and again made spectal efforts to control the tendency to extravagant decorative dressing. The Apostles remonstrated against it in the earliest days of Christianity, and the attire of devout ladies was reduced to plainness, as long as the first fervor of earnest piety continued to spiritualise the life of the Church. But pride, vanity, and ignorance of lh? trno S- 1!' and dr jm, reproduced themselves under the rigidly mown surface of the ecclesiastical sward, and when the pnstornl sevthes be came blunt, ami the mowers less diligent and unsparing, the briara- of the temnle heart shot up again in profusion and vigor, and flowerea out as exuberently as ever, in tinsanctified gowns, forbidden jewelry, and Incomprehensible multiformity of hair.? Whenever the general corruption of manner# has overwhelmed the dieipline of the Church, and driven the more earnest and sensitive spirits into the position of protesters and reformers, ladies' dress has been pretty sura to make a prominent item in the oill of indictment against the times, and to have been specially provided against in the reformatory discipline. As far hack as the evi-dnys of Isaiah, we can trace this controversy, nnd we nre sorry to say, note the inefficiency of reason and revelation to conquer the love of display which has always been the weak point with the beautiful sex. . The denunciations of Isaiah, which wc rend In his third chapter, did not prevent the maidens and matrons of Jodnh from follow ing their own heads, until they suffered all the terrible consequences he foretold. The Moravians and Quakers, nnd Methodists and Puritans, and many other bodies, thrown off from time to time by the great, religions orbs as they became cool nnd earthly through organic condensation, expressed themselves vigorously against extravagant and showy dress. The (junkers tried to aettle the matter forever, by adopting a costume that should he final in cut, and unchangeable in color, and the Methodists, in early days, were little less positive and exact in their dealing with this intractable subject. The preachers ntnl prominent brethren appeared only in sen.i lunnr coats, and the sisters in Quaker bonnets, nnadorn ed by ribbons or flowers?to snv the truth, ttnndornnlde by any art of miilinery ; being completely, finally, irrcclnimahly ugly. That blessed man, John Wesly, who was as restless as a planet, and as Lucnn said of cicsar, "thought nothing done, while ought remcincd to do." undertook to grapple ?i?l> this great hydra, which he considered a direct descendant of the glih-tongued r''ptile that turned the head of our first mother in Kden. Mr. Wesley's "thoughts on dress," became canonicid nnd were read wi'h great unction and pungent hortation, at times set for the exercise by the Discipline. Sermons on dress, and denunciations of dress in sermons weio very common, and the stringent rules of the society forhade the "putting on of gold," long after the preachers read them .by the help of gold spectacles, and all the iaters who could gel rings ami breast pins, appeared at church with them. " Monstrous bonnets " were officially denounced long after that irreligious fashion had given place to head attachments, small cnontrh, one would think, to appease the mnstindig nant enemy of prodigality in lints. Hut Quakerism and Methodism got the worst of the contest The Quakers made a fundamental point of their adopted raiment and resolved to tight it out on that line. It was drab and gray against the world, and the plucky Friends have exhausted their vitality on it The world has laid close siege to them, and so closed the roads by which supplies should come, that the garrison is dying out by course o' nature. Methodism only saved itself by compounding with the enemy. The doors of class meetings and love feasts wero opened to decorative dress. The grim Weslcyan eatiati* were submissively spiked at the luucu nou'; nnu 11 was un<l?r**on(l would not lie let off ntrninst offenders, however threatening the muzzles might look. So flowers, jewels, satins and I noes endured plensnntly the rending of the " thought.* on ores*," and coquettish liltle hats nndrd their feathers approvingly to the antique denunciation of " high hea ls" and " monstrous bonnets." So Methodism was saved from - becoming a missionary association of leather girdled and locust eating .John Baptist's preaching violently in the wilderness, and make n respectable pastoralty of bioaleloth and city stations. Otlo-r Churches succumbed to the expugnnlde Indies as completely and ignominmisly as ours We a.e ?Id enough t* remember well the drapery of three congregations in Baltimore, a Baptist, a Presl yterinn, and an Episcopalian, Mr. Fin lay'a Mr. Nevins'.nnd Mr llenahaw's. In our boyhood, the Indies of these dressed with great plainness. Scarcely a how of rittbon adorned their nest straw bonnets.? Feathers were almost unknown to the sanctuary. Professors and non-profet-tors eould be distinguished in the ehurch almost as readily as the keys of a piano. Mr. Ilen. shaw's female disciples were, perhaps, the most severely dress.-.I, and it was often remarked that, they were more self denying and exemplary than their dissenting sisters of Bight street. We need not. tell how differently the ladies of St, Peters' and the First Church armv themselves now Ti.n difference in dr.se I'fwwn religions nnd Irreligious Indies ha* -'(sapp-ared, nnd the subject seems to hr r. Incn dropped out of relig ious dieeussioiis. I'iiretrained in its wildest excc*r*, fashion i* lot riot in the fullness of folly and wastefulness. Mantua makers and milliners ami hairdressers have multiplied and strengthened, until the nildacious nmuzonian host loud the lenmlc world captive at their will. There is appearently no strength nor courage in the Church to eomlmt them. One religious party hae come to look upon fashionable dresa as no evil, and lh? other regards it as unmanageable. Yet evil it is ; moat eeri one, most continual evil. In this age of unfettered and well assisted thought, is it well that the minds of women who have opportunity for cultivating aiul using them, should be fully taken possession of and occupied by passion for dr. as? It ix well tluit female taste, that exquisite and iustir etjve Mouse of propriety and beauty which the munific.-nt Ci eator gave to woman for the refining and adorning of society, should be starved and drugged to death by fash ion f Is it nothing that the very possibility independent thinking and individual PtRaftrSfNd fbr it, opened to-h?l*young Feature Oy herGl T T*lt nothinf: timtthe ' Lpompanion* ami helpmeets of men aro fraught that the attractiveness and influence fof women and their place In the world are Mb h? chiefly determined by the quality of their drew, and their worth measured by the yard stick* 7 Is it nothing that heartless wealth is ever throwing itself into competition with moral dignity, and that mind is always confronted with millinery 7 Is it nothing that the love of this world in one of its crudest and emptiest forms, usurps the affections that should be placed upon things above f Is it nothing thnt the study of the mind and feeling of the heart, ana devotion of the time of the young women of the country are given almost wholly to the idolatry of dressf Is it notiiing that poverty ana misery are continually compelled to see the exhaustive finery of laced and embroidered selfishness, and fo say bitterly in their heart, M These toil not, neither do they spin, yet Solomon iu all his glory was not arrayed as they I" Is it nothing that the talent, the one talent giv on to many?their money?a sacred trust for the use of tho poor, should be utterly wasted and perverted by the purchase of surplusage and gowns ? Is it nothing that widows and orphans starve and freeze, that ladies may wear lace and diamonds, because fashion must send the surplus menus of our people to pamper the man milliners of Paris or bribe foolish peasant girls to sell their glorious suits of hair, that it tuny be hung in unnatural bunclies of capillary ugliness to the occuputs of American women f? There is one excuse /or this perversion of means from charitable to decorative uses, and it is bold and lame enough.? It is said, tlint to spend money in frip peries and unnecessary dresses is a benevolent use of it, because it gives employment to the people who manufacture these things. But what is to become of the immediate dependent upon charity f What are you doing for the sick and tlie aged, and the impotent, ami the overburdened, whose employment does not' feed their families 1 when you pay a hundred dollars for a dress or prolt I pttdor! for n bonnet you pay nearly fifty dollars of it, as a voluntary tax to the government for the great privilege of wearing tIre coveted tiling, and of the remaining fifty a third goes to swell thecoffres of Stewart or some oilier fat impor'er.atid of the little remainder you pay in exchange, and freight, and insurance, and exporters' charge a very considerable part. So that perhaps not twenty dollars reaches tho laborer for whose benefit you profess to spend it.? Verily you choose a most tortuous and expensive channel for your ehnrit ies. One would | think you would" liml it more beneficent to distribute your hundred dollars lie re, not to help those that can labor, but those that cannot. Again yon buy tlie labor of a woman who can make garments. You say that yon do so to give her work. Very well. Is it better that she should make one fine dress f.?r you. or six plain ones for nnor I women wlio litive no comfortable or decent clothing? There nre hundred* of such nhoul you when you deliberately the flannel they do; and there aro hundreds of little girls cdd for lack of clothing, when you command yyiir seamstress to provide another dress for your turgid wardrobe, In stead of a half do*, n for their backs No, there is no benevolence in vour wasteful, vain, tasteless overdressing. " \ ou know in your lieai t. that it is not uimdtiahnese, but. the other thing that decides your expondiI lure. You know that your paltry excuse will not do when llo shall fay, " Inasmuch as ye fed and clothed and visited " their. Dear ladies, we arc really sorry for you.? You know and feel the truth of what w*> say ; but you art* In bondage to fashion.? | You have sufl'ered it to bind you band and j foot. It takes nil you have?lime, thought, I feeling, money, prure', and it returns you nothing. Do break away from it. -Dress as you think you ought. Wear vour gowns until they are no long r worth wearing.? Don't put on uncomfortable or nnsight'y tiling* beenV130 " tlicv nre worn." Don't vie witli vulgar wealth in its characteristic dressing. Be plain, be simply attired ; try and dress so that nobody will notice your dress. Cultivate your inind and heart, and they will decorate you as jewels and laces cannot Let your adoring be the ornament of a meek, and quiet, and loving spirit; of a generous, brave heart ; of an enlightened ami well stored mind. Be more than clothes carriers or bonnet posts, or bearers of pan| niers for milliners and modiste*. Be wo: men ; sweet, pretty, intelligent companions, j and refiners and comforters of men. Be | wile women?mother women?sister women?holy women?not fashionable woni-n ?and we will all rise up and call you blessed?Jialtimore Kpixc?pal .1/- thojist. Co its' and Hogs.?From carefully conducted experiments, by different | person*.it lias been ascertained that one i bushel of com w ill make a little over i 10.V pounds of pork?gross. Taking I the result as a basis, the following deduction* are made, which all our farmI ers would do well to lay by for a cons venient reference?That, When com sen* for J2J cents per bushel, pork costs 1 .J cents per pound. When corn costs 17 cents per bush, el, pork costs 2 cents per pound. | When corn costs 25 cents per bush! ol, pork costs 3 cents per pound. When corn costs S3 cents per bush* I el, poik costs 4 cepts per pound. When corn co*ts 50 cents per bushel, pork costs 5 cents per pound. The following statement shows what the faimer realizes in his corn when sold in the form of pork : When pork sells for eight Cents per pound, it hiings twenty five cents per j bushel in corn. When pork sells for four cents per i pound, it brings thirty-two cents per , bushel in corn. VVIj. ii pork sells for fivo cents per pound, it brings forty five cents per bushel in corn Marrtaob.?Jeremy Taylor says of marriage : Marriage is llie mother of the world, and preserves kingdoms, and fills cities, I and churches, and Heaven itself. Ce libacy. like the fly in the heart of an ! apple, dwells in a perpetual sweetness, ! but sits alone, and is confined and dies j in singularity ; tut marriage, like the useful bee, builds a house and gathers . sweetness from every tlower, and labors and unites into societies and republics, , and sends out aimies, nnd feeds Lho I world with delicacies, and keeps order, and promote? the interest of mankind, | and i* the state of good the things to ; which (rod hath designed the present, constitution of the world. make the idea* 5 flogging biro to that he fcoWda't |{t$ak tei^4 hour*. An exchange says : lever let people work for you gratia. Two years ago a man oarried a bundle for us, and we have been lending him twenty five cents a week ever since. TO THE PUBLIC. The Pavilion Hotel, - - CHARLESTON, S. C., SO LONG *nd ably condneted by th? late II. L. ASB9 HUTTKRHELT), will still 1'1 k~ kept open fur tlie accommodation of i he traveling public. And its former friends and patrons will find the usual accommodations and attentions be i stowed on them as formerly, andthe public favors, already so well eetabllshel as THE HOTELof the TRAVELING MERCHANTS of the South, will, by earnest efforts, be faithfully preserved. Oct 25 22 ' tf SCHEDULE OVER SJC?R.R. 3S3 trVZJZZ GENE UAL SUPT'S OFFICE. Cnam.KSTo)* S. C., Nov.' 3, 18C>, ON and after WEL>NESI?A. November 7, 1800, the PASSENGER TRAINS will run as follows, viz. : Leave Charleston 8.00 A. M. Arrjvo at Columbia. 5.20 1'. M. Leave Columbia.. 0.50 A. M. Arrive at Charleston 4.00 P. M. Titnorun mail Thai*. Leave Augusta 5.50 P. M. Arrive at Kingsvillo 1.05 A. M. Arrive at Columbia .........J3.00 A. M. Leave Columbia 2.00 P. M. Arrive al Kingsvillo 3.40 P. M. Arrive al Augusta 12.00 night. II. T. PKAKE. General Superintendent. Nov 15 25 tr Greenville & Columbia R R. GENERAL SUI'TS OFFICE, > COLi'MRiA. Sept. 21, 1866. ) PASSENGER TRAINS will run daily, (Sundays excepted) as follows: j.uavc vuiuuioin lit. i 'j.li) A. Al. I " AVton nt 9.05 " " N?wlierry nt 10.:t6 " Arrive nt Abbeville nt. 3.111 1\ M. " at Andernon nt 6.10 " " nt Greenville at 6.40 " Leave Greenville at 6.00 A. M. " Awlerroti nt 6.J10 '* " Abbeville nt......... 8.116 " " Newberry nt 1.20 P. M. Arrive at Alston nt 2 45 " " nt Colombia nt 4.40 " J. 11. LjinSALl.E, General Superintendent. Nov 15 25 tf SWAIN'S (fjii A 3"" Lri J J j-A U LHj j-A ;j J0It the sure and speedy euro of Scrofula I or King's Evil. White Swelling, I'Iceriiu.? Sores, Rheumatism, General Debility, and all diseases arising front impure hlood. This Medicine has acquired a very extended and established celebrity in most pnrts of the world, both in hospituls and private practice, which its efficacy alouo has sustained for nearly thirty years. whxt? Uli'o ^it-Sold hv WALTER & WESTMORELAND, maxs/ox house uuilihsg. January J 32 tf WOOD'S Hair Restorative. For sale by WALTER & WESTMORELAND, ma xsiox house iiuilh/.vo. January J 32 tf MRS. ALIES S HftIR fiiSMEl MRS. ALLEN'S ZYLOBALSAM. V5t- For sale by WALTER & WESTMORELAND, .1/J .VV/O.V house du1ld1so. January 3 32 - tf" TOOTS worn FOR THE HAIR. I F?r sale by WALTER & WESTMORELAND, MA SS/OS hOl'SR BUILD/SO. January 3 .32 tf J* Aim Y "S TRICOPHEROUS, T VOX'S KATIIAIRO*. _|j F or sale by WALTER & WESTMORELAND. MA SSI OS ll'jlSK BUILD ISO. .Tanunry A 32 tf 1 / in G A I>S. English Linseed OIL I " '\J IO'i Uols. So. 1 Tanners' OIL 5 llbls. Kerosene OIL 100 Gals. No. 1 Lubricating OIL. A large stock of Window ayd Showcase of all sixes. Just reCeivuil'-nnd for sale low, at Walter a Westmoreland's, MA S'SIOS HOUSK BUILD ISO. January 3 32 tf BRILUAHT PITfMRElttfL OR KEItOSEiYElOIIv. JUST RELIEVED and ALWAYS to b? fount! at WALTKlt A WESTMORELAND'S, Alnusion Houee Building. Dec 20 ? 30 tf Notice. ' WE rcupeetfully 1nvRo all per*on* owing n?, to come forward tod pay up.? X word-to the wise i* anfficient tA j*vo ? We can he found at the'oliULntimer Hotel. Come <ind scttlo Boon, or you will have <rj>ata to i>?y. . >? . A. J. YASDEIWRIFT A CO. Jan 3 33 tf GROCERIES, FAMILY OOWDSTOMQi, nILKS POPLINS * ':?T^?v ? . MOHAIR <fe SCOTCH PLAIDS ALPACCAS, Striped & Plain PRINTED DELAINS GINGHAMS ,'."V CALICOES BOMBAZINES The above Articles wc can furnis PERFUMERIES I1AIU OILS SOAPS TOOTH BRUSHES EDGINGS & INSERTINGS CRAVATS - COLLARS Gents Buck GLOVES Ladies GLOVES RICE Brown and Crushed SUGARS MADDER INDIGO * SULPHUR COPERAS STARCH Colgate's No.l SOAP Give them a call before making be deleimined to please yen. GRADY, Fl Greenville, S. C., Nov. 15, I860. AND MEDICINES, i H K rpilE subscriber has received nnd keeps X constantly on hand, the above, A/'Prtirn WITH A TAIIIW* STOCK OF Fancy Articles, Among which may be found, GOLD PENS, Pencils nnd Points WINES?Sherry, Maderia and Sweet Fine quality of FRENCH BRANDY Linseed Oil, Train Oil Kerosene Oil?both Burning and Lu bricating Sweet Oil SPIRITS TURPENTINE White Lead PAINTS?All colors, dry and in Oil CONGRESS WATER MEDICINE CHESTS GLASS and PUTTY BRUSHES, of all kinds COMBS. POCKETT BOOKS LOOKING GLASS PLATES Ladies' Purses, of finest styles KEROSENE LAMPS, with Chimneys and extra Burners Mustard, Cayenne Pepper TOBACCO, of superior qualities Spice, Fancy Soaps Transparent Slates, for Drawing KIS1I HOOKS, Fiddle Strings PERFUMERY INK Superior article of Ladies' Traveling VALISES Pocket Flanks, various sizes r tTtvnnvct!' oA?n : ,!-i u/iuii ouai , nuptjriur itriicie Fine .SPONGES. TATENT MEDICINES of nil kind* All of tile above Articles can be bad at low down rates fur cash. Give me a call at my old stand. HT I 'ersons sending Orders, most send the money ? CREDIT CANXOT UK GIVEN. HI, B. EA REE* _ Dec 0 - 28 tf . . c* . ' NEW BOOK STORE MASON & JONES, Ulalia St., Near the P?*l Office, | . Columbia, S, C ? Have ox hand a pink pto^k of SCHOOL, LAW, St KMC A t. AM) MIIVfiPF r A VtS/ki.'sJ D/Wii'G At f A t* L~. BOOKS; ES V ELOPES, WfiiT/JfU pa run, ooi.h Pes s, asp Ol'HE 11 STAT10SKHY, Pocket Cutlery and Fancy Article*; * ALSO BIBLES, IfYMX BOOKS, Pit AY Ell BOOKS, MUSIC, AT LOW PRICES. * AH Order* Promptly Attended to. Sept 27 - 17 > .. flm LAW CAIID. COODLETT & THOMAS, Attorneys at Law, * . AMD .? . solicit ota g i p. q u i j v, TTAVH tVis day-- formed a Copartner-, . AX ?Mp >n tW jiractt r? of -A.fi VV aflJ Y^}15JTY On tho W>?tern Ctrenit in U>? old Court ITouae FLtlMintj. to. doolJt.CIT, ' ? * M TIIOMA*. i ? Dt? M ' 10 If * u . * / * SUPPLIES, M, M? 0!m part, of broadcloths casstmeres satinets shaker feannel Anr^n A m A XTWWT viAivn rjuAimwtu CANTON FLANNEL 4 4 SHEETINGS 3 4 SHIRTINGS. iA in Variety and in Quantities. RIBBONS BELTS BUTTONS THREAD HOSIERY CORSETS CREWEL Cotton A Silk HANDKERCHIEFS, AC., AC. FIG BLUE Cbowing and Smokinj? TOBACCO Carolina Bell SNUFF PEPPER GINGER SPICE NUTMEGS CLOVES, AC. your purchases elsewhere, and they will ERGUSON & MILLER. 25-i f Assistant Assessor's Office. Usrrun States IstehsaL Hetkmk, ) ( REiNviuR, S. 0. Nov. 27, 1866. f \ OTJCE i* hereby given that I have J. w opened my bookr, ready to receive I Returns. Parties inu?t make their re*urns promptly, or mey will l)e clfult witli in accordance with the law. r. n. cuurrroN, A??t Ass'or, Regiment, including Town, Nov 29 27 If Internal Ro venue Notice. ASSISTANT ASSESSOR'S OFFICE, ) United Status Internal Revenue, > Greenville, S. C., Oct. 22, 186rt. ) THE undersigned, ?? Assistant Assessor j of Division No. 24, (which Division extends to nil the territory within the limits of the Third Regiment, together with the Town of Greenville,) hereby gives notice that he has opened his ottice over the store oeeupicd by Csireton A Brother, opposite to Williams ?fc W'hitmire's store. Merchants, Manufacturers, Distillers, Retail Dealers, Peddlers, Auctioneers, persons following Professional Employments, and all others who arc required to take out License by the Excise Laws of the United States, are hereby notified to make application at once tor said Lieense, or they will be held liable to all lire penelties for a violation of the Internal Revenno Laws. P. D. CURE I ON, Ass't Ass'or' Division No. 24, 3d Collection District, s. a Nov 15 2? tf Internal Revenue Notice. ASSIST A NT ASSESSOR'S OFFICE, United Stairs Internal RevenDk, ' Division No. 24. 3d Regiment, Greenville, 8. O., Nov. 0, ' NOTICE hohorehy given that WHISKEY must not be removed from the Dis triot until the Tax on the same required by the U. S Internal Revenue Laws has been paid. Any person found violating this provision of the law will be rigidly dealt with. P. D. CIXRETOX. Anhlsnl Division No. '24, Regiment. Nov 15 15 If j. & f. it. Iffiw, IMI*oRTKRA AND T>KA1.KR? IN Hardware, Cutlery, GUNS, PISTOLS, IRON, STEEl^PQJWARE, GROCDKIES, PAINTS. OILS, W S H 2D <D W <B IL A S S * dbc. . COLUMBIA, S. C. JOHN AOXKW, COLUMBIA, ft. C. - ' T. R. AONEW, NEW YORK. Dbc 27 1 ' 31 -8m Walter A WrHtmorcland. Draggisti and Apothecaries -? MANSION HOUSE BUILDING, OKKENVIM.K, S. C. t* "" V . _ CONSTANTLY on hand n general Assortment of ? f MEDICINES I Cll KM ICA L8 , PAINTS, . OILS DYE STUFFS ; BRUSHES ELASSWARE > PERFUMERY and ' V ' . FANCY ARTICLES. ' Together w'*h cgtfrjr Acllclo comprising the Stock of a Druggist or Physician. / WALTEft k WESTMORELAND. ' Dec 20 *" * SO KEROSENE LAMPS, /"\F VARIOUS Sizes and Styles. Also, . KJ C>Lt> I. A HPS Mended and Re fitted at WALTER k WEHTMOJtELA^[>'?, Mansion House ltuilding. Dee 20 30 tf v- . - " . ... . , ^r gg '^8 yyiprvrxg in ^DIFFERENT RAILRO^H ??MjB WILL FIND '''wSSk Omnibuses, Carriages ^ AJTO Baggafe Wagon*. % In Readluns U Carry then to - ' ] Jf VfSESg and from hli FREE OF CHARGE* '* Reepontiblt per* one in attendance to r#> ceiee Check* and Baggage. T. ?. NICKERftOfr, fmnhn Ang as ia tf STATE OF SOUTH CAROLINA, orrentii.lb district. ass is CQ w n w ??. Bill for Sale n/ lAtnd to pay Debt*, Jt Jamb P. Moouk, Administrator t8 Aumikta T. Wkstfikld, et al. fl^HE following paragraph from the ,D?| cretal Order of Chancellor Johnson in the above case is published for the Information of those interested. ?. ' . | It Is farther ordered that the Commissioner of this Court do forthwith publish a rule, reqnlrine 'he creditors of the said DAVID G. WESTFIELD deceased, to ooree In within nine months from the publication of said rule and establish by proper pro of, the nature and amount of their claims against said deceased. J. P. MOORE, 0. E. O. D. Commissioners Office, Wept. 24, 1864* Sep 27 ? '* 17 9m Sullivan, Stokes Sc Stokes. | GREENVILLE.S.O. WILL practice in the Courta of Law and Equity. Office on the Public Square. All business intrusted to their care will receive prompt attention. Ciiahi.es P. Sullivan, Jon* W. Stokes, Edwabd F. Stokes. July 19 V -17'-* if Piano For Sale. A GOOD second hand PIANO FORTE may be hnd oti very reasonable terms. Apply to JULIUS C. SMITH. Auctioneer, office near the old Conrt House, Greenville .8. C Nov 17 .as-tf Assistant Assessor's Office, U. S INTERNAL REVENUE. > Grkknv ille.-S. C. Deo. ?, 1866. J PERSONS following the professions and businesses enumerated below, or who have followed them, must take out License therfor, or suffer the penalties. Licenses for 1864, 1866 and 1866 must be paid, for which my Books are now open: Iawv?n? RIO (Ml Physicians and Surgeons?$10 00 Dentists?$10 00 Manufacturers?$10 00 Photographers?$10 00 Apothecaries?$10 00 bank Dividends, and addition to surplus funds ?five per cent Dank profits, not divided or added to surplus?five per cent Insuraneo Companies, dividends and additions , to surplus funds?five per cent Railroad Companies, dividends, interest on 1 bonds addition to surplus funds?five per cent Auctioneers?$10 00 " ? annual sales not over $10,1000 00 ?$10 00 Antioneers, annual sales over $10,000 00? $20 CO Ural Kstate Agents?$10 00 Tobacconists?$10 00 Confectioners?$10 00 Conveyances?$!<> 00 Dealers, retail?$10 00 " wholesale, annual sales not nrer $50 000?$50 00 Dealers, retail liquor?$25 00 Distillers of Spirilous Liquors? f 10Q 00 Distillers of apples, grapes or peaches, distilling 50 hhls and leas than ISO bbls per yoar?$&0 00 Distillers of apples, grapes or peaches, distilling less thAn 50 bbls?$20 00 .* Pedlers, 1st Class?$50 00 2d ?K-2K no 8d ? ? |il 6 00 ? 4th ? ? $10 00 " of Dry Good, io original packages, or Jewelry?$50 00 Eating Houses?$10 00 Express Carriers or Agents? $10 0? Horse Dealers?$10 00 Hotels, yearly renting $200 00 or I?M-~ 810 ??0 Hotels, yearly renting over $200 00?$5 00 for every $100 00 or fractional part thereof, in addition to the $10 00 ^ Insurance Agents, demeelio, annual receipts not exceeding $100 00? $6 00 Insurance Agents, domestic, annual receipts exceeding $100 00? $10 00 Insurnnoe Agents, Foreign?60 00 Miners?$10 00 I'lnmraers and Gas fltters?$10 00 Incopie, exceeding $IW>0 00 and not exceed* ing $5,000 00?fivo per cent Income, encoding $5,000.00, oxcoss?10 per cen*. .. ; . *1 . Billiard Rooms, for each table?$10 00 Bowling Alleys, for each alley?10 00 Itutdhurs-?$10 00 ** who sell from carts, exclusively?$5 00 Stallions and Jacks? $10 OO Livery Stable Keepers?$10 00 , . V. D. Of It ETON, ? Aslsstaat Assessor; U. B. Internal ltevenoa. Dec *8 .. T. W.DAVIS, WATCH MAKES. G9t \ WOULD. RaepeatfuTIy Inform the people of Ureenvillo If?/ jB?nri the surrounding conn try, he hae r ^From hi. OI.D STAND in the Twi. lett House, to a more CONVENIENT one, three doors North of the Mm.eion House, neat door to Piekle A.Poor, on Main Street, where he t? prepared to do all work in hiejtne of business, at short notice, in a workman like manner, and on reasonable terras, Aug 80 - r It W V ? <