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SOUTHERN STANDARD MCMINNVILLE, TENNESSEE-SATURDAY, OCT. 3,1891. Star Pecis Many reculIar points mako Ilood's Sar saparilla superior to all other medicines. Peculiar In combination, proportion, and preparation of Ingredients, Ilood's Sarsaparllla possesses the lull curative valuo of tlio best known remedles. tho vegetable Fcculiar In and economy saparilla . Is cine of be said One its .c:4strcnKth Ilood's Sar- tho onlymedi- whlch can truly One Hundred Doses Dollar." Medicines In fv larger ana smaller Dottles "r require larger doses, and do not produce as good results as Ilood's. Peculiar In Its medicinal . merits. Ilood's Sarsaparilla accomplishes cures hith erto unknown, and has won for Itself the titio of ' Tho greatest bloodyiLlit purifier evor discovered." Vi reeuiiann its "good name s .at home," thero Is now nuoro of Ilood's Sarsaparllla yr sold In Lowell, whero Kjlt is made, than of allr -rf rother Wood purifier s.iftrcculiar in its phenomo- S nal record of sales abroad, S f no other nrcnaratlon has V .ever attained such dodu- T lUIUy 1U DU ftUUiU 4 Ulli, and retained Its popularity and confidence among all classes pcoplo so steadfastly. Do not bo Induced to buy other preparations, but bo suro to get tho Peculiar MedlchYV Hood's Sarsaparilla Sold by all druggists. ;i;iixfor$5. Preparedonly ly C. I. HOOD & CO., Apothecaries, Lowell, Mas. IOO Doses Ono Dollar Political Paragraphs. From Our Washington Correspondent. llepublican editors and stump speakers have been saying that none of the necessities of life are any high er now than they were before the passage of the McKinley bill. If these gentlemen are honest in their statements they will find that some body has imposed on them, when they go to buy their winter carpets, as the prices of carpets are from 15 to 25 per cent, more this fall than they were at the same time last year. This is a fact that any dealer In carpets will verify. Representative Mills about sized up the financial situation when he said in his opening speech in Ohio : "Let us not be deceived by superficial np- pearances. ' It is not the scarcity of money in the country, it is the scarc ity of money in the pockets of the people who earn It that produces the distress. If our circulation were to day double what it is, and it was all in the pockets of a hundred thousand people, our condition would not only not be bettered.but it would be worse than it is. It is not thesm.aH circu lation, it is the small distribution that plagues us." The republicans are sending cam paign specimens of tin-plate around. accompanied by the statement that it was made by Major McKinley personally. The Major certainly is not a skilled workman. If he, with out any previous experience, can make tin-plate, why should the al leged manufacturers of tin plate wish to import skilled workmen from abroad to do this work? There is nothing but humbuggery in this tin tin plate question, view it from any standpoint you please, and the American users or tin m its various forms are today paying out a great deal more money on account of the increase in the price of tin-plate, made necessary by the McKinley tariff, than will be necessary to pay the wages of all the xYmerican labor that will be employed in the tin-plate industry for five years to come. Oh fraud! one of thy most seductive Ivers & Pond Pianos. , . These pianos are of the highest grade. They contain that most de sirable improvement, the Soft-Stop, and they can be bought at fair prices and on easy payments regardless of distance from manufactory. A catalogue describing and pictur ing these pianos will be mailed free if you send a request and your ad dress on a postal card to Ivers & Pond Piano Co., Masonic Temple, 183 Tremont St., Boston. Scrofula is Ead. For all forms and variations of scrofula, which stands next to conta gious blood poison in the problems that it presents, S. S. S. is a specific. As a remedy for this disease, it stands pre-eminent and incompara ble. Where the ordinary treatment fails and it does fail in nine cases out of ten S. S. S. will effect a cure. Some of the testimonials that tho proprietors have on file, and others which they include in their pam phlets, describe cures that are almost miraculous. No higher tributes could be paid to the singular efficacv of this medicine than those which are embodied in these unsolic ited letters. Thelsuffering that has been saved by S. S. S. in these cases alone would place it at the head of all blood medicines. .1 . HlVELY k 0., WHOLESALE and JIETAIL DEALERS IX FURNITURE 0F ALL KINDS AND FOR ALL PURPOSES- V'i curry, law stocks of Iicdsteads, Preying Cases, Wusli Stands. Tallies, Chairs. ftr. tlio latest (lesiKiis, uiid can lurmsii miy article, made in our line on short notice. in McIMYILLE PRODUCE MARKET. Corrected weekly by Mead & Bitchey. Office Southern Standard, McMinnville. Oct., 2 1891. Wheat, "$ bushel new, 85 to 90 Corn; $ bushel ...to 80 Flour, $ barrel $4.50 to $5.50 Meal, $ bushel 80 to 90 Oats, B " 30 Eggs,$ dozen 12 to 13 Butter, $ lb 8 to 10 Hens, $ rb 5 Spring Chickens 8 to 12 Turkeys, m lb Ginseng, rb to 2,50 Beeswax, W lb 21 Feathers. W lb 35 Tallow, 39 lb VA Green Ilides, "p lb 2 to 3 Wool, unwashed, lb 20 to 23 II -t 1. -J Ol 4- OC stock Peas. bushel alwsw is ''protective tariff." White Beans, $ bushel It looks very much as if the Blaine p etp& i'i" v boom was being manipulated solely -y ' ' 7 Still Spreading Out. The Manufacturer's Record has established an office in London, hav inc recently sent over a member of its staff for that purpose. This step is brought about by the continued growth of British interests in South ern investments and the consequent expansion of the circulation and in fluence of the Manufacturers' Becord in ureat uritain. j$y means oi us London connection English investors will be kept more thoroughly in formed as to the resources, the in vestment opportunities, and tho pro gress of development, in the South, while the South will be enabled to keep in touch with financial London. English investors and financiers on the one hand, and the owners of GUILDERS' t t MATERIAL. SASH, DOORS, BLiNDS,f CEILING, SIDING, ;?l;crit:j,- MOULDINGS, LUMBER FOR ALL OT3SIS. Funeral UNDERTAKERS WE CARRY A HANDSOME LINE OF- fom, Coffins, Caskets, Burial Holes, Etc. HGIYEN t TO I EMBALMING AND THE DIRECTION OF EAST MAIN STllEETj McMINXVILLE, TENN Blackberries, VA to 2M Green Apples, per bushel NASHVILLE MARKET REPORT. Corrected from the Nashville American every Thursdav evenine. Wheat, from waaons, 20 to 88 Corn 70 to 80 Oats 40 to 38 Hav. prime timothy, per ton $14 to $10 Dried Annies '2-Vi Dried Peaches, halves VA to 3 " quarters 2 to 2 1-2 Dried Blackberries 3 leathers, prime... 3!ifu..0 Ginseng, dry to $2.75 Butter 9 to 16 Eggs to 13 Chickens, frying $1.32 to 2.16 " hens $2.16 Irish Potatoes, per bbl 75c. to $1. Wool, unwashed 19to20 " tub-washed, 29 to30 Southern properties and the projec- to keep other possible competitors off tors of Southern.undertakings on the the track in order that Mr. Harrison other, will be brought into closer Non-Rosident Notice. J. II, Ilonch vs. Mi A. Dudley. I N this case, now pending before me, at 1 the suit of J. II. ltoach vs. M. A. Dudley, in which it is alledtred that M. A, Dudley has removed himself from the County of Warren, privately, and that he has abscond ed, so that the ordinary process of law can not be served on him, and said cause having been set for hearing on the 24th day of October, 1891, at my house in said county. Now this is to notifv the said M. A. Dudley to appear at wy house on said day and defend this suit, or the same will be proceeded with ex parte as to mm. this Sept. 24, IKyi. T. M. FRAZ1ER, J. P. Non-Resident Notice. Y. A. Crisp vs. M. A. Dudley. IN this case, now pending before me, at the suit of Y. A. Cru-p vs. M. A. Dudley, in which it is aliened that M. A. Dudley has removed himself from the County of War ren, privately, and that he has absconded, so that the oulinary process of law cannot be served on him, and said cause' having been set for hearing on Saturday, October 21, 1891, at mv bouse in said eounty. Isow this i to notify the said M. A. Dudley to appear at my house on said day and defend this suit, or the same will be proceeded with ex parte as to him. ThisScjit. 24th, ISiH. T. M.FRAZIEK, J. V. A syndicate of capitalists are pre paring to re-open the Putnam coun ty oil wells, ten miles east of Cooke ville. Tho Standard Oil Company some years ago sank wells in that section und some 10,000 barrels of the crude article were obtained, but the expense of transportation to McMinn ville was so groat that the project was abandoned. If the pending ex nenments result in fending oil in paying quantity, the Spring Creek country, in which locality operations will begin, will doubtless be connect ed with Cookeville by railroad. (ion. liouliuiger, once tho French Minister nf War, : leader in the 1'rein'li Senate, and fV.r a time one of t lie must popular men in Kranee, j ... l 1. ... COmillllieC'l Ml.CIiK' ill I :IliMl Oil Wednesday. may get all the necessary wires laid for a renomination. "When this be comes certain look out for a mutiny in the republican camp, but it will be too late, unless all present signs are at fault, to prevent the consumation of Mr. Harrison's designs. We would much prefer Mr. Harrison as the republican candidate, as he repre sents everything that is most vicious in the republican creed more fully than any other one man in that party, and will therefore be the easiest man to defeat. Some people are disposed to criti cise Representative Mills because of his recent Ohio speech, whicli took the ground that the tariff is the su preme issue in the contest between the republican and democratic par ties and that all other issues are secondary, but no good democrat should do so. Mr. Mills is right. The tariff is the one issue upon which there is no division in tho democratic ranks and for that reason, if for no other, it must be kept at the front. Let us get possession of all branches of the Government first, then we can take up and settle inside the party all the other questions. Senator Sherman has written a let ter that is far from taking the rosy view of the republican prospects in Ohio that is prevalent, in the re publican press. ' It was written to a republican departmental official, and was intended to be personally shown by the receiver to every republican from Ohio that is employed by the Government. In it the Senator says that he regards it as imperatively necessary that every republican voter of the State of Ohio, now temporarily in Washington, shall at once return to the State in order to help brace up the weak-kneed members of the party who are showing a disposition either to vote against their old party or to stav at home. In consequence of this letter it is said that the depart mcnt officials have intimated that nil Ohio voters employed therein may take thirty days leave with pay whether their annual leave has all been used up or not. Evidently Senator Sherman isn't figuring on any fifty thousand majority. Speaking of Ohio, it is creditable to the prominent republicans now in Washington, that they, to a man condemn the recent attempt by cer tain members of their party in Ohio tc make Governor Campbell's private business transactions tho bifsisof an attack upon him. i Subscribe for the STANDARD. contact and made better acquainted. The Cosmopolitan. In its November number the Cos mopolitan will publish a series of let ters written by Gen. W. T. Sherman to one of his young daughters, be tween the years 18o9 and 18C3 and covering most of the important events of the war of secession. These letters present graphic pic tures of a great soldier amid some of the stirring scene in which he was a giant figure and in them the patriotic spirit of the Fed eral general is seen to have been most attractively tempered by a strong affection for the Southern peo ple. Tho fraternal feeling which glows in these letters is in refreshing contrast to the sectional bitterness which characterized the period, and they will constitute an interesting and important contribution to the lit-, ature of the war. MOEPOISD dz BILES, WHOLESALE AND RETAIL DEALERS IN HARDWARE, GROCERIES AND FARMING IMPLEMENTS. Agents for the Buckeye Mower, Star Thresher, Empire and Kentucky Grain Drill f iant Cane Mills, Tenuessee Wagons, and Spring Wagons. A large stock of Stoves, Plows, Iron, Paints, Bacon, Sugar, Cy flee, etc., always on hand a t MORFORD & BILES, old stand. We buy with Cash from first hands for small profits. The Golden Harvest Store is the Best Stove Made. PHETfttJS 1 III L I UIIUJ ROAD CARTS, BUGGIES Take your buggy, carriage, wagon ar.d farm implements of all kinds to GARTNER'S SHOP, and have them REPAIRED ff PAINTED. Everything in ALCKSMITHING, WAGON and MRME done Promptly find Cheaply. J. P. GARTNER. Spring Street, McMinnville, Tenn. THE Desirable for Ladies. HOODENPYL HOUSE, The new Fashion Journals publish ed by A. McDowell & Co., 4 WTest 11th Street, New York, are again on our table. The superiority of these journals is abundantly shown on every page. "La Mode" is the smallest of the three, and is intended for family use. It has many styles for children, and is only $1.50 per year or 15 cents per copy. "La Mode de Paris" is an elegant journal, filled with everything of the latest style in Paris. This is a great favor ite wih the ladies who wish to keep posted in the new styles as they come out. "Album des Modes" is also a popular Parisian publication, many ladies giving it the preference It is replete with such styles as aro patronized by the middle classes, its designs being neat and plain, yet all of the richest character. These three monthly journals claim to give the earliest fashions, and are all printed in Paris. They contain lessons in practical dressmaking, which are of incomparable value and easy to un derstand. "Mode de Paris" and the "Album" des Modes" are each $.'1.50 per annum, or Do for a single copy. Samples can be obtained from the house at single copy prices if tlicie is any difficulty in obtaining them from newsdealers. A Chicago dispnteh says that agents of the French (iovernment in this country have .made ptinliaMS of 2,i)0.lM barrels of Hour and 'J,imh),. (too bushel of jiniin. TENNESSEE. Corner Main and Chancery Streets. MCMINNVILLE, Is now ready fijr the reception of guests, and solicits both regular board ers and transient custom. Newly furnished throughout. -FIRST $ CLASS FARE,- Polite attention, Reasonable Pates. MPS. (i. W. HOODENPYL personally superintends every department and will spare no pains to please every guest. JONES BROS. DEALERS IX Dry Goods Groceries, CLOTHING, HATS, HOOTS, SHOES, ETC. We carry a well selected line of General Merchandise, and sell STRICTIST FOR CASH. Thus we are enabled to giye our customers the benefit of the LOWEST PEICES. We will make it to your interest to give us your trade. JOXT.S IMtOS, East Main Street, McMINNNILI.E, TENN. 1 1 EI (JUT PAGES fi no torn ro.K8 1 IPrivilriwor lctnrti, Mniwim, ArparatM, In i ri tlT t ' li . .' a 1 utliccrs 4I pupil from aw M-" !'ieh .! L3waiKai-lJ'!"t ' ?4."-i" i ' ' - j viinUgea in Mutsio. Art. pliu writ-, llonith. Aucmi- lv&iTP'i'''- 5 l iV MN" 1 Iblllty. Follr Ein'rpM G:.r-t.v...".. '.-... , i !f 1 1 H fl t2i 1 1 -Kf jj