Newspaper Page Text
6
Tri-Weekly Market Reports
COTTON |
NEW YORK. Nov. 26.—The cot
ton market showed renewed firm
ness early today with January and
all later deliveries making new high
records for the season because of
the relatively high cables, reports of
a strong tone in the stock market,
rallies in foreign exchange rates, and
the issuance of comparatively few
notices against December contracts.
The opening was firm at an advance
of five to fifteen points, and the ac
tive months soon showed net ad
vances of thirty to thirty-five points,
with January selling at 35.05 and
March at 35.30. December advanced
to 35.60, or within fifteen points of
the recent high record, and thirty
six points net higher. Liverpool
cables attributed advances from an
opening decline in that market to
trade calling.
The December notices were esti
mated at about 7.700 bales. Their
circulation appeared to be causing
no special liquidation, but after the
early buying had been supplied on
the advance to 35.08 for January
and 35.32 for March, the market
eased off under scattered selling.
There were reactions of some 20 to
‘>s points from the best, but the of
ferings were not heavy and prices
steadied up again later on bullish
advices, and the reports of an in
creased demand for cotton goods in
the local market lajte last week.
January was selling around 04.J9
and May 35.44 at mid-day or _4 cO
26 iioints net higher.
The market showed Increasing
firmness during the midle of the aft
ernoon on reports that December
notices had been stopped and that
both Bremen and Liverpool were buy
ing spot cotton in the southwest.
December sold up to 35.69 or 44 points
net higher and later months made
new high records with January sell
ing at 35.10 and May at 35.57 or 37
points above Saturday's closing.
NEW YORK COTTON
The following were the ruling prices in
the exchange today:
Tone, steady; middling, 36.15 c: quiet.
Last Prev.
Open. High. Low. Sale. Close. Close.
Jan. .. 34.85 35.12 34.84 34.98 34.98 34.73
Mar. .. 35.10 35.34 35.05 35.21 35.21 34.97
May .. 35.35 35.59 35.28 35.43 35.43 35.20
July .. 31.65 34.1J3 34.<10 34.til 34.65 34.50
Oct. 28.67 28.85 28.65 28.65 28.65 28.6.>
bee. ..35.32 35.73 35.30 35.64 35.60 35.25
NEW ORLEANS COTTON
NEW ORLEANS, La., Nov. 26.
Better cables than due, accounts of
more doing in American cloth mar
kets and of an increase inquiry in
Manchester, put the price of cotton
sharply higher today. Prices made
new high records for the season on
all positions, January touching thir
ty-five cents a pound for the first
time. In the first half hour the ac
tive months gained thirty-four to
forty-four points.
At the highest of the morning
prices were 34 to 46 points up. Real
izing from the long side became,
enough to check the upward move
ment and bring about small reac
tions, January, at noon, trading at
34.90. The undertone held steady
because of reports from Arkansas
•*.hat large spot houses htd swept
that state mare of spots over the
week-end. . „ ,
Telegrams from the Carolinas, not
ing more business in cloths in spite
of the higher range of prices, caused
another spurt in values in the after
noon on,which January rose to 35.06,
where the list stood at gains of ?7 to
47 points.
\ NEW ORLEANS COTTON
The following were the ruling prices ill
the exchange today:
Tone, steady; middling, 34.75 c; steady,
. Last frcv.
Open. High. Low. Sale. Close. Close.
Jan. .. 34.75 35.06 34.70 34.96 34.94 34.59
Mar. .. 34.87 35.25 34.85 35.11 35.10 34. <C
May .. 34.90 35.25 34.86 35.13 35.11 34.78
July .. 34.30 34.63 34.28 34.52 34.46 34.16
Oct. .. 28.51 28.59 2a.38 28.40 28.40 28.30
Dec. .. 34.47 34.98 34.47 34.92 34.88 34.44
SPOT COTTON MARKET
Atlanta, steady, 34.25 c.
New York, steady, 36.15 c.
New Orleans, steady, 34.75 c.
Galveston, steady, 34.90 c.
Savannah, steady, 34.57 c.
Wilmington, steady, 34.37 c.
Norfolk, steady, 34.50 c.
Houston, steady, 34.75e.
Montgomery, steady, 34.12 c.
Augusta, steady, 34.50 c.
Memphis, steady, 34.75 c.
Charleston, steady, 34.55 c.
Pallas, steady, 34c.
Boston, steady, 36.15e.
Mobile, steady, 34.25e.
Little Rock, steady, 34.75 c.
ATLANTA SPOT COTTON
Atlanta spot cotton 34.25 c
Receipts 1,099
Shipments * 519
Stocks 37,883
COMPARATIVE - PORT RECEIPTS
Last Year. Today
New Orleans 6,705 11,261
Galveston 14,182 11,501
Mobile 33 267
Savannah 412 1,831
t’harleston 551 1,431
Wilmington 626 3.291
Norfolk 2.781 2,823
New York ... 350
Boston 50
Pacific Posts 400
Various ... 24,116
Total all ports 40,756 35,858
COTTONSEED OIL MARKET
Open. Close.
Spots 11.10(<i H .50
January ....
February .... 11.10@11.50 11.45fe11.59
March 11.56@11.59 11.62@11.64
April 11.55@11.75 11.68@11.75
Jlsv 1t.75®11.80 77.76@11.85
June 11.754/11.HQ 11.75fe11.95
November .... 11.00@12.<K>
December .... 11.25fe11.45 11.23feT1.28
Tone, firm.
ATLANTA COTTONSEED PRODUCTS
MARKET
’Corrected by Atlanta Commercial ®x
change.)
Bid. Asked.
Crude oil. basis prime tank..slo.oo >.....
Cottonseed cake, 7 per cent
car lots
C. 8. meal, 1 per cent am-
monia, car lots 44.00 -5.0 G
l). S. meal, at common rate
4 points, car lots 41.00 42.00
C S. hulls, loose, car 10t5.... 19.00 20.00
0. S. hulls, sacked, car lots.. 22.00 23.00
Linters, first cut, 10@llc.
Linters, second cut (cottonseed hull fibei
or shavings, 7® Bc.
Linters, c.'aan. mill run. 5®6%c.
metaiTmarket
NEW YORK, Nov. 26.—Copper, quiet;
electrolytic, spot and futures, 13fe!3’i.
Tin. strong: spot and futures. $4.67@6.57.
‘ Iron, steady; No. 1 northern, s2l .00fe;
22.00; No. 2 northern. $20.'90fe21.00; No. 2
southern, $20.00fe22.00.
Lead, steady; spot, $6.85fe7.00.
Zinc, quiet; East St. Louis, spot and
ui-ar-by, $6.40.
Antimony, spot. sS.Bofe9.oo.
Sugar Market
NEW YORK. Nov. 26.—N0 sales occurred
In the raw sugar market early today and
prices remained unchanged, on the basis of
sic for (tubas, cost and freight, equal to 7.78 c
for centrifugal.
The feature in raw sugar futures was a
severe break which carried all months ex
cept December well under the previous elose.
Opening steady and 1 to 7 points higher,
the market gained 4 to 11 points net on
further European buying and strength
abroad, but encountered considerable liqui
dation at the advance. Eventually stop
loss orders appeared and prices gave way
rapidly, showing 3 to 11 jxiints net loss
during tha noon hour.
Refined sugar was unchanged to 10 points
higher witli the range on fine granulated
from 9.15 c to 9.25 c.
Refined futures, nominal.
MINNEAPOLIS - QUOTATIONS
MINNEAPOLIS. Minn.. Nov. 26.—Wheat,
No. 1 northern. sl."7%fe 1 J 2%.
Corn, No. 3 yellow, 68e:" oats, No. 3
white. 39%@40%<".
Flax, No. 1, $2.44fe2.47.
GRAIN
BY GEORGE C. SCHNACKEL
(Leased Wire Service to The Journal.)
(Copyright, 1923.)
CHICAGO, Nov. 26.—Wheat acted stub
born again today. December was a little
draggy, and it hxiked as if the longs were
disheartened because of the remarks o-
President Coolidge on the wheat situation.
It was evident by the steadiness of the de
ferred futures that the liquidated lines were
being replaced in the May and July, priri -i
--pal.ly the latter. The news was mixed. The
decline in Liverpool was due 10 the advance
in sterling and the heavy world's shipment ■.
The heavy clearances were due- to 13,000.004
bushels from North America, of which si
good sized total was domestic wheat. There
was little evidence of any export business,
and the domestic demand for wheat was
quiet. The visible supply increased 1.321.-
000 bushels and is now an even 75.000,000
bushels. Cash interests believe elevators
will carry wheat, and they do not look for
any heavy deliveries on December contracts
Saturday.
Wheat closed %c lower to %c higher.
December, 5,1.02 i--. (a 1.02%; May, sl.oß®
1.08%fe l.OS: July. $1,00%.
In corn December was weak ami dropped
to 1 cent under May. There was hedging
pressure in evidence and further liquidation
was caused by the decline of le to 2c in
cash corn. No. 4 grades of corn are selling
practically at a delivery basis based on De
cember price. There vas covering by shoe, s
in the deferred futures for profits, while
(many of the locals sold December anil
bought May on the theory that the spread
would widen. Visible supply increased 597.
000 bushels. Primary receipts are heavy.
Duluth is supplying No. 2 corn east via the
lakes.
Corn closed %c lower to %c higher. De
cember. 71%®71%c; May, 72%@ ,72%c;
July. 73%c.
Oats held steady. There was pressure 0:1
the market, but prices held well, December
showing a little heaviness about midses
sion. Visible supply decreased 852,000
bushels.
Oats were %c lower to %c higher. De
cember, 42%®42%c; May, 44%@44%c;
July. 43%e.
The slump in hogs bad a depressing effect
on provisions.
Lard closed 7%@15c lower; ribs, un
changed to 2%c lower.
CHICAGO QUOTATIONS
The following were the ruling prices tn
the exchange today:
Ifrev.
Open. High. Low. Close. Close.
WHEAT—
Dee. . .1.02% 1.03% 1.02% 1.02% 1.03
May , . .1.08% 1.08% I.oß' 1.08 ‘ 1.08%
July . . .1.06% 1.07 1.06 1.06% 1.06%
CORN—
Dec. . . .72% 72% 71% 71% 72%
May . • .72% 73% 72% 72% 72%
July . . .73 74 72% 73% 73
OATS—
Dec. .• . .43 43 42% 42% 42%
May 41% 45 44% 44% 44%
July 43% 43% 411% 43% 34%
LARD—
Nov -. ... 12.95 13.15
Jan. . . .T 1.77 11.77 11.72 11.72 11.87
May. . . .11.60 11.62 11.62 11.62 11.70
RIBS—
Jan 9.47, 9.50
May 9.60 9.60
RECEIPTS IN CHICAGO
Today.
Wheat 8 ears
Corn 262 cars
Oats '4O ears
Hogs 85.000 head
VISIBLE SUPPLY
The visible supply of American grain shows
the following changes.
Wheat, increased 1.455,000 bushels.
Corn, increased 556,090 bushels.
Oats, decreased 852.000 bushels.
Rye. increased 570,01X1 bushels.
Parley, decreased 59,000 bushels.
ST. LOUIS”QUOTATIONS
ST. LOUIS, Mo., Nov. 26.—Wheat: Cash
No. 2 red. $1 13%; No. 3 red, $1.14.
Corn—No. 3 white, new, 74 %e; No. 2
yellow, new, 58.
Oats—No. 2 white, 44%@45c; No. 3
white, 44@44%c.
Close—Wheat: December, $1.04%: May,
$1.09%. Corn: December, 72%c; May, 73%
®73%e. Oats: December. 44%c; May, 47c.
KANSAS CITY - QUOTATIONS
KANSAS CITY. NoV. 26. —Wheat: No. 2
hard, $1 OSfel.lO; No. 2 red. $1.08@l.09:
December, 99%c bid; May, $1.04% asked;
July, $1.01% split asked.
Corn—No. 3 white, 66@67c: No. 2 yellow',
74@75c; No. 3 yellow, 71@72c; No. 2
mixed, 69fe70e; December, 66%c asked;
May, 67%c bid; July, 68%c split bid.
Oats—No. 2 white. 44%@45e; No. J
white, 43%(@i44c; No. 2 mixed, 44@44%e.
TOLEDO QUOTATIONS
TOLEDO, Nov. 26.—Wheat: Cash No. 2
'red, $1.Q8@1.09; clover seed, prime cash,
old, $13.30; new, $13.45: November, $13.45;
December. $13.50; January, $13.70; Feb
ruary, $13.80; March. $13.66.
Alsike—Prime cash, $9.25; November,
$9.25; December, $9.30; January, $9.45; Feb
ruary, $9.55; March. $9.65.
Timothy Seed —Prime cash, old, $3.55,
new, $3.75; November, $3.75; December.
$3.80; March, $3.90.
CHICAGO CASH - QUOTATIONS
CHICAGO. Nov. 26.—Wheat, No. 2 red,
$1.05@1.05%; No. 2 hard, $1.07%. 'Corn.
No. 3 mixed, 69%71c; No. 2 yellow, 92@
87c. Oats, No. 2 white, 44%fe>46c: No. 3
white. 43%@44fee. Rye, No. 2. 73e. Bar
ley, 61@65c. Timothy seed. $6.50@8.00.
Clover seed, $15.00@23.75. Lard, $13.50.
Ribs, $9.25@10.25.
duluteTquotations
DULUTH, Nov. 26.—Close, flax. Novem
ber. $2.44%; December, $2.43%; January,
$2.45%; May. $2.43%.
GRAIN MARKET OPINIONS
Stein, Alstein & Co.: We expect firmness
in wheat but look for corn to work lower.
Clement. Curtis & Co.: Washington news
will quickly have influence on the market.
Bartlett, Frazer & Co.: Lower prices are
suggested.
Thomson, McKinnon & Co.: No decided
action either way.
Hulburd, Warren & Co.: Look for corn
to increase in values.
NEW YORK PRODUCE MARKET
NEW YORK, Nov. 26.—-FlouU: Dull and
unchanged.
Pork—Dull: mess, $25.50@26.50.
Lard —Quiet; middle west spot, $14.15@
Sugar—Raw-, firmer; centrifugal, 96-tesl,
7.73 c; refined, firm; granulated. 9.10®
9.15 c.
Coffee—Rio No. 7, on spot, 10%@llc; No.
4 Santos, 14%@15%c.
Tallow—Dull; specials, 7%@Bc.
Hay—Quiet: No. 1, $1.5(1; No. 2, $1.20@
1.25; clover, $1.15@1.40.
Dressed Poultry—lrregular: turkeys. 25®
5.3 c; chickens, 18fe|42c; fowls, 15@30:-;
ducks, 20® 28c.
Live Poultry.—lrregular: geese. 20@24e:
ducks, 14@30c; fowls. 15@26c; turkeys, 4t
@4sc; roosters, 14c; cliiczens, 21@23c; broil
ers, 27@30c; capons, 35c. •
Cheese—Quiet; state milk, common to spe
cials, 22@28c; skims, common to specials
16fe 19c;, full skims, s@lse.
Butter, quiet; receipts, 3,270; creamery,
extra, 52c; do. special market. 52%fe53e;
state dairy, tubs. 49@51e; Danish. 50feolc;
Argentine, 40fe43c; Canadian, -19@50%c.
Eggs, weak; receipts, 15,215; near-by
white fancy( BO@S2c; near-by state white,
48fe;82e; fresh firsts. 48@63c: Pacific coast,
extras. 34fe73c; western whites? 48fe82e!
near-by browns, 64@75c.
Naval Stores
SAVANNAH, Ga.. Nov. 26.—Turpentine,
firm, 87: sales, 297: receipts, 193; ship
ments, 346; stock, 13.529.
Rosin, firm: no offering: receipts. 755;
shipments, 633; stock, 128.739. Quotations
unchanged.
CHICAGO PRODUCE MARKET
CHICAGO, Nov. 26.—Butler, receipts.
8.831; creamery, extras? 51c; creamery
standards,e 48c; firsts, 44@46c; seconds
41fe42c.
Eggs, receipts. 3,852: ordinaries. 35fe.42c;
firsts. 48@52c.
Cheese, twins. 24c; Young Americas, 25' .c.
Live poultry, 21 ears: fowls, 13fe2<ii-;
ducks, 18c; geese, 18c; springs, 19c; tur
keys. 28c; roosters, |l2%e.
Potatoes. 237 cars: Wisconsin Round
Whites, 85cfe$1.20; Minnesota and North
Dakota U. No. 1. 85c@$I.OO; Red River
Chios, 90cfe$140O; Idaho Russets, $2.00,
Liberty Bonds
NEW YORK, Nov. 2C».—United States gov
ernment bonds dosing:
Liberty 3V»s .$ 99.25
First 4,s bid .1 95.2
Second 4s. bid 9$
First 4y«s 95.5
Second -Pjs os’s
Third 4 1 4« 99.1
Fourth 4 Vi’ 95.4
Treasury 4’ss 99.18
NEW YORK RAW SUGAR MARKET
Open. Close.
January 5.45 5.35@5.39
March 4.88 4.65@4.69
April 4.73
May ‘ 5.0 s 4.77@4.78
July 5.17 4.SS
December 0.07 5.83@5.84
NEW YORK COFFEE MARKET
open. Close.
March 5.90 8.97 @8.98
May 5.42 8.45@8.46
July 8.25 8.30@5,31
September 8.01 B.oßfeß.fi9
October 8.05 8.05
December 9.88 10'09® 1011
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WAYS WITH YOU.’
DAUGHTERS ME
WOOOfiOW WILSON
WASHINGTON, Nov. 23—For
mer President Wilson was assured
that the Daughters of the Confed
eracy stand with you.”
during an enthusiastic exchange o£
greetings late yesterday at the S
Street home.
Mr. Wilson confined his remarks
to an expression of “warm gratitude
for the kindly interest” shown for
him by the daughters, who are meet
ing here in annual convention, and
pride inj the honor accorded him by
his election, with Chief Justice
Taft, to honorary membership in
the organization.
Several automobiles bearing dele
gates arrived after the former presi
dent had retired from the window
and in response to their request he
returned for a few moments to greet
them.
Mr. Wilson was assisted to the
window In’ Mrs. Wilson. Removing
his hat with his right hand, ana
responding to the cheers of those
gathered in the street below, he
said:
“Allow rie to express my warm
gratitude for the kindly interest
shown by you. I appreciate it very
deeply.”
“We’re glad to see you,” broke in
a woman’s voice.
“Stand With You—Always”
“The daughters always stand with
you—always,” said another, adding
that the convention had paid him a
personal honor in the day's session.
“I (Un very proud of the honor.”
Mr. Wilson responded, bowing and
smiling. The former president, him
self a son of the south, remained by
the open window several moments,
talking with Mrs. Wilson and occa
sionally responding, with smiles or
a wave of a hand, to the group
below.
After Mr. Wilson had retired from
view. Mrs. BHa Moss Hussey, chair
man of the Nashville, Tenn., chap
ter of the organization —chapter
No. 1, the first ever organized —
called upon Mrs. Wilson and re
sented a large bouquet for Mr. Wil
son, which he carried on his after
noon automobile drive. Mr. Wilson
also wore the colors of the daugn
ters in his button hole. .
Jefferson Davis
Dr. Freeman, in his address 0.1
Jefferson Davis at last night’s ses
sion, declared that characteristics
of the leader of the Confederacy
were supreme conviction of purpose
and exceptionable political visior.
He spoke of the personality of Davis
ana reminded the audience of the
many services to the United States
he performed as the real founde
of the interior department and bui.u
er of the United States capitol. In
the days of Davis, the speaker said,
great men were politicians.
“In this day,” he said, “I am in
clined to think that men are es
teemed great because they are p°L
ticians ” .
Mr. Freeman quoted from a let
ter written by Mr. Davis in regard
to prohibition, in which he said that
the world is governed too much a.nJ
that he disapproved anything which
would interfere with individual lib
erty, “If drunkenness," the lettn
stated, “is a cause of disorder and
crime, then make drunkenness itseh
a crime.”
Mrs. J. A. Lawton, historian gen
era!, presided at the meeting. Mrs
W. E. Massey, third vice president
spoke on the Children of the Con
federacy.
Prizes and Awards
The prizes and awards for essay.i
and records relating to the history
of the Confederacy, and heroes
the World war were given to Miss
Marion Salley, of Orangeburg, S. 0.,
for an essay on “Behind the Lines,”
Mrs. Bennet D. Bell, of Nashville,
Tenn., for the best essay on Jeffer
son Davis as secretary of war; Mrs.
Bell Allen Ross, of Montgomery.
Ala., for the best essay on Robert
Lee Bullard, man and soldier; Mrs.
W. Grey Williams, of Rocky Mount
N. C., for the best essay on General
J. E. B. Stuart; Mrs. Temple White
head Holt for the best essay on
three private soldiers of the Con
federate army; Julian S. Carr, John
Allen and William Cox.
Prizes were also given to Hugh
Thompson Hunt, of Cape Charles,
Va., aged 12 years; Elizabeth La it,
aged 17. of Edgefield, S. C.; Jennie
Elizabeth Jones, aged 13 years, of
Townsend, Va., for the best an
swers to a list of questions on the
history of the United States.
Mrs. Charles B. Bryan, of Tennes
see. unveiled a portrait of her
father, Admiral Semmes, who W’on
fame on the Alabama in the Civil
wai\ donated by Mrs. Darrington
Semple, of New York and Alabama,
to be placed in the peace room at
Geneva.
Grain Exports
WASHINGTON, Nov. 26.—Grain exports’
from the United States last week amounted
to 4.087.000 bushels compared witli 2.417.-
000 bushels tiie week before.
Figures made public today hy the com
merce department gave the following com
parisons between exports last week and those
vs the week before:
Barley, 419.(KX) busheys. against 115,000.
Uoin, 215.090. against 150.000.
Oats, S3.(MM. against 7<».00b.
Rye, 653,000 against 141.00.
Wheat. 2.717.000 against 1.9-“.5,O00.
Flour, 461,100 barrels, against 157,7 10 bar
rels.
Canadian grain exported from United
States ports amounted to 1,538.0(H) bushels,
against 1,583,000. __
Silk Quotations
NEW YORK. Nov. 26.—Raw silk,
steady. Prices per pound: Kansni double
extra cracks. $8.30®8.40: Kansai best No.
1. 07.b0w5.00; Sliinshn. No. 1, S7.SOfe7.9J;
Canton extras A 11-16. $7.95@5.05; Shang
hai-China steam fil, gold double deer, $9.40
@9.50.
GEORGIA IS EASY
FDR ALABAMIANS;
FLORIDA IN A TIE
Playing with great speed and pow
er, University of Alabama football
team swamped Georgia Saturday af
ternoon at Montgomery, winning 35
to 0. Georgia never had a look-in,
while Alabamians took advantage
of every mistake made by their foes.
University of Florida could do no
better than tie Mississippi A. & M.
at Jacksonville, the score being 13
to 13.
Mercer fell down badly, losing to
Carson-Newman 12 to 0; Tulane
soundly walloped jJouisiana State,
20 to 0; Tennessee beat University
of Mississippi 10 to 0. and Centre
toyed with Washington and Lee to
the tune of 29 to 0.
Other scores:
SOITHEKX
Hampden Sidney, 26; Randolph-
Macon, 6.
Tulsa university, 0; Georgetown,
26.
Wake Forest, 14; North Caro
lina State, 0.
Trinity. 20; Newberry, 14.
South Carolina Freshman, 19; Fur
man Freshmen, 0.
Furman, 63; Erskine, 0.
Fort Benning, 14; Marines, 0.
Vanderbilt freshmen, 13; Sewanee
freshmen, 0.
Howard college, 6; Birmingham-
Southern, 6.
Emory and Henry, 6; Milligan col
lege, 7.
EASTERN
Penn Military college, 7; Juanita
I college, 0. <
Western Maryland, 14; Drexel. 0.
Holy Cross, 37; University of Buf
falo, 0.
Boston College 0; Vermont 0,.
Dickinson 7: Delaware 0.
New York university, 7; Boston
, university, 0.
Swarthmore, 17; Haverford. 0.
Brown, 6; New Hampshire, 0.
Allegheny, 10; Bucknell, 7.
Rutgers, 42; Fordham, 0!
Gettysburg, 14; Gallaudet, 0.
Syracuse, 7; Nebraska, 0.
1 University |of Maryland, 40; Catho
lic university, 6.
Lafayette .13; Lehigh 3. ;
Lebanon Valley, 22; Susquehanna.
14.
Capisius, 3; St. Bonaventure, 0.
Bowling Green, 0; Baldwin Wal
lace, 25.
Washington College, 3; St. John’s
Annapolis, 3.
Susquehanna, 14; Lebanon VaL
J ley. 12.
I Yale. 13: Harvard, 0.
I Army, 0; Navy, 0.
.MID-WEST
; Michigan, 10; Minnesota, 0.
j Indiana, 3: Purdue, 0.
I lowa 17; Northwestern 14.
i Wisconsin 6; Chicago 13.
I Notre Dame 26; Carnegie 0.
Butler. 19; Haskell Indians, 13.
| lowa State, 13; Grinnell, 6.
Johns Hopkins, 62; George Wash
i ingtpn university, 6.
Wabash, 17; DePaUw, 0.
Knox 19; Lake Forest 0.
HAMBONE’S MEDITATIONS
By J. P. Alley
| REAMS LAK DE DIFfUNCE
Twix' a de-bate en a
ARGUMINT, You DE-BATES
VVID Yo' MIN’ EN You,
argues wip Yo’ naouf!
i ~
i t
■!
IrWfe? 1
UsS
j {Copyright. IfrCS. by The Bell tfyndlrMte. Ine
Wggß
f ’U-
Winter
SEND SM-2O
NO MONEY/* 13 *' *-’=
"'"?r mad ll ' - J^V'* ll d f ’ rl ” <1 Moit’rliAriiJ 1 «ff? r
-in t>e , d h ' lDP i3TTo d u “.n b “ dU Ew,n
ON APPROVAL AT OUR RISK
; Ea< ;h bundle ffusranteed 14 yds. or mors Rneh » A rw4«*r M i
ms:.- fr& G
*
BERNARD-HEWITT & CO.
P«P«. RB 010613 CHICAGO, ill.
Franklin 44; Earlham 0.
Ames 13; Grinnell 6.
Beloit 40; Ripon 6.
Lawrence, 0; Carroll, 3.
Ohio State. 0; Illinois, 9.
Creighton university, 13; Oklahoma
A. & M., 2.
WESTERN
University of Washington, 24;
Washington State college. 7.
University of Oregon, 0; Oregon
Agricultural college, ft.
U. S. C., 9; Idaho, 0.
University of Colorado, 20; Uni
versity of Wyoming, 3.
California, 9; Stanford. 0
Dallas Votes Bonds
For Waterworks
And Sewer System
DAjLLAS, Ga., Nov. 24. —An elec
tion held here for the authorization
of a bond issue to install a system
of waterworks and sewerage for
the city resulted in an overwhelming
victory for the bonds, the vote be
ing 175 to 18.
Florida Fruit Shipments
TAMPA, Fla., Nov. 23. —For, the
first time this season, shipments of
oranges today exceeded shipments
of grapefruit, according to George
A. Scott, general sales Vnanager of a
co-operative marketing organization.
Orange shipments for the year from
F.'nrida now total 4,446 ears while
grapefruit shipments total 4,325
ears.
Clhissiifedl
BUY OB SELL
Classified advertisements In The Tri-Weekly Journal can be used by our
readers to sell anything useful to others and to buy many things they uted.
Oftentimes things tire offered foi ;ess than market price.
The rate for this advertising is 60 cents a line for a week —three lstue.% re- i
ginning Tuesday. Six usual words are counted as a line. Two lines is the |
smallest ad used.
Send your ad with payment to rtach us by Saturday.
THE TRH-WEESKLY JOURNAL
ATLANTA. GA.
WANTED!
RAILWAY POSTAL CLERKS
SI 600 to $2300 Year . /»" a " k k
“■ WV Sirs: Send me without charge. (1) Sample
MEN—BOYS 18 OR OVER Z Railway Postal Clerk Examination questions; <2)
WRITE IMMEDIATELY List of government jobs now obtainable; (3) Tell
Steady work. No. layoffs. Paid Vacations © me how f can get a position.
TRAVEL—SEE THE COUNTRY ON C
GOVERNMENT TIME / Name
Common Education Sufficient /
Send Coupon today—SUßE Address ....J
WAN ALIC
MEN-BOYS, 18 tip, wanted for U. S. gov
ernment life jobs. Commence $133 niontli.
Raise to $lO2 month. Vacation; every sec- !
ond week off, full pay. Common educa- *
tion sufficient. Pull unnecessary. Write
' today for free list positions. Franklin In- 1
stitute. Dept. E, 78, Rochester, N. Y.
I ALL man. women, boys, girls. 17 to (15, ■■-■.II-
I Ing to accept government positions, sll7-
$250, traveling or stationary, write Mr.
Ozmcnt, 164 St. Louis, Mo., immediately.
POSITIONS guaranteed permanent and pay
ing. We teach you the barber trade in
few weeks. Income while learning. We own
shops. Jacksonville Barber College, Jackson
vilhyia. ' _____
BE a detective. Excellent opportunity;
good pay; travel. Write C. T. Ludwig, i
lib, Westover Bldg., Kansas City, Mo.
a'- detective, sst)-SIOO weekly; travel over
world: experience unnecessary. American
■tcetive Agency, 1013 Columbia. Si. Louis.
WANTED HELP—FEMALE _ ,
EARN’ money at home during spare time paint- ,
iug lamp shades, pillow tops for us;) no can
vassing. easy mid interesting work: experience un-
: necessary. Nilcart Company, 2258, Fort Wayne, .
fnd. |
i WANTED—Women to do fancy work at
i home. Spare hours. Material tun..shed.
i Good pay. Stamped envelope brings par
! uculars Underwood Art Goods Company.
I Portsmouth. Ohio. i
) $35 WEEK. Women-girls wanted. Learn <
! gown making at home. Sample lessons .
i free. Franklin Institute, Dept. E. 510.
) Rochester. N. Y.
HELP WANTED—MALE, FEMALE
COLORED men and women, you can earn
big money during spare time in your own
neighborhood selling Sta-Strate, wonderful
new liquid discovery. Absolutely straight
ens stubborn hair without hot combs. All
who use it praise it. Try it and convince
yourself. Send SI.OO for bottle or pay post
man when he brings it. Order your bottle
now. Sta-Strate Corporation. 231 Houston
i st., Atlanta, Ga.
' CLERKS, 18 up, $l2O-$133 mo. For govern
ment positions; experience unnecessary.
For free list positions, write 11. Terry (fbr
i mer civil service examiner). I'J'j Barrister
. bldg.. Washington. D. C.
_ 'V AN TE D—AG E NTS
NEGRO’S PROGRESS AND ACHIEVEMENTS,
book of many pictures of colored persons, just
off the press; big hit. all buy; agents making
sls daily; write quick for terms. JENKINS
’.IBLE CO.. Washington. D. C.
GENTS —Make a dollar an hour. Sell
Mendets, a patent patch for instantly
.lending leaks in all utensils. Sample
package free. COLLETTE MFG. CO.,
Dept. 728-A. Amsterdam. N. Y.
, BIBLES and maps always sell well. We |
I have best made. Also Hurlburt’s Bible I
. tories. All late books. Best terms. Huscj
I tales Co.. Atlanta. Ga.
| UMMAGE sales make $50.00 dally. We start i
i you. Representatives wanted everywhere |
i WHOLESALE DISTRIBUTORS,” Dept. 98, 60!>
! Division Street. Chicago.
_ wanted—
FRUIT TREE S A LE S M E N —Profitable |
pleasant, permanent work. Good side line '
' for farmers, teachers and others. Coneort
j Nurseries. Dept. 20, Concord. Gs.
| FRUIT TREES for sale. Agents wanted.
Concord Nurseries. Dept. 20. Concord. Ga
FOR SALE—FARMS
FREE—U. S. land. 200,000 acres in Ark.,
for homesteading. Send 85c for guide :
book and map. Farm-Home, Little Rock,
Arkansas. |(
Still Is Discovered
Mounted on Wagon
In Alabama Forests
ANNISTON, Ala., Nov. 24.—A still
on wheels is being operated in this
section, officers reported today.
Deputy Sheriffs J. D. KiVnmons
and Henry W. Bryant found a still
rigged up on a wagon ready for op
eration in the timber near here
Thursday night. They watched the
still all dav yesterday, but the moon
shiner? failed to appear. They fell
asleep last night. When they awoke
this morning the moonshiners had
come, completed their run and de
parted with the liquor and still.
Train Crossing Crash
Is Fatal to Woman
In Montezuma, Ga.
MONTEZUMA, Ga., Nov. 25
Mrs. J. B. Easterlin, Sr., one of
Montezuma's most prominent wom
en, was killed instantly last night
when a sedan in which she was rid
ing with her husband and a negro
nurse, stalled on the Central of
Georgia railroad track and was
struck by a passenger train.
Easterlin jumped out as the train
came in sight but was unable to
: push the car off the track.
I The. nurse was seriously hurt.
PERSONAL
M’.MIl LAN'S GRINGOE cures all forms of
ITCH. Guaranteed. Not greasy. ONE
application (occasionally two. rarely three)
only. Postpaid, $1.05. Carefully tested.
McMillan Drug Co., 1300 Main ave., Colum
bia. S’. C.
~ WANTED—FARMS
WANTED—To hear from owner having farm
or unimproved land for sale. John J.
Black. Chippewa Falls. Win.
FARM WANTED- Immediately. Send par
ticulars. Mrs. Roberts. Box ill. Roodhouse. 111.
FOR SALE—SEED
(n-a EARLY Jersey, Wakefield
atl( ] succession, large, well-
Pl'inft; rooted; true to name, frost
lldlllJ proof; 75c $1,000; can ship
C. O. D., parcel post or express.
W. W. WILLIAMS.
QUITMAN, GA. 1
_ . j
POULTRy. . ... . . i
ORDER KUDZU NOW
KUDZU is the ideal legume hay and forage
plant, a soil builder: will thrive on laud
too poor to make peas. Requires no lim
ing. Equals alfalfa in quality. A field well
set to Kudzu will he worth SI,OOO per
acre in few years’ time, this figure being I
based on your yearly income from it. Wr\.»
for special prices now. The Kudzu Farms
inc.. Barnesville. Ga.
M’MILLAN’S NOMOPPIN (guaranteed),
prevents - cures chicken SOREHEAD.
Given simply in drinking water. Saves
time. chickens. Postpaid, $4.30, $2.75,
$1.25, 05c. McMillan Drug Co.. 1300 Main
aw.. Columbia, S. C. (Dealers cheaper.)
WE PAY SSO A WEEK AND EXPENSE
and give Ford auto for men to intro
duce poultry and stock compounds. Im
perial Co., D-56, Parsons, Kansas.
FOR SALE—Genuine McClellan Army Sad
dles, brand-new, with fenders and luggage ;
carriers. $5.95: reclaims, $4.05: army bridles. ■
$2.45, f.o.b. Moultrie; will ship c.o.d. and I
allow inspection. Ask for special Bargain 1
Bulletin. Friedlander Bros., Moultrie, Ga.
MAGICAL GOODS Noveltie*. Lodestone
Herbs, Cards, Dice. Books. Catalog Free
G Smythe Co.. Newark. Mo.
RUMMAGE sales make SSO daily. We start you
Representatives wanted everywhere. "WHOLE
SALE DISTRIBUTORS." Dept. 114. 600 Divi
sion street, Chicago.
BRAND-NEW U? T TTI’T. $5.85: used
$4.85. Cooper-Devane Co., the Under-Sei
ing Store. Pavo, Ga. ’
PATENTS
INVENTORS Should write for out gtu>!<
hc.ok. "How to Get Your Patent.'' Tell
r-rms and methods. Send sketch fore:
■ pinion of patentable nature. Randolph e.
Co . Dept. 60. Washington. D. <’-
MEDICAL
t DROPSY TRtAf MEN!
t gives quick relief. Dis- '
I tressing symptoms rapidly
disappear. Swelling a u <
short breath soon gone. Often I
entire relief tn 10 days. Never
beard of anything its equal
t for dropsy. A trial treatment
I sent by mail absolutely FREE
DR. THOMAS E. GREEN
Box 18. CHATSWORTH, GA
LEG SORES
Healed by ANTI-FLAMMA— a soothing 1
antiseptic Poultice. Draws out poisons, ,
stops itching around sores and heals while
you work. Write today, describing case,
and get FREE SAMPLE. Bayles Dis
tributing Co., 1820 Grand Ave., Kansas
City, Mo, _ i
Coast Line Fined $l,lOO ’
RALEIGH, N. C., Nov. 24.—The j
Atlantic Coast Line railroad was I
fined $l,lOO in federal court here to- I
day for eleven allegeci violations of i
the national safety appliance act. |
The ease grew out of a strike of cm- I
ployes of the road, it is said.
Try This on Your
Let your mirror
Hi rli prove the results
Write Today for Free Trial Offer
Your hair need not thin out, nor peed you be bald, for a I
wayhaF.been foundtodestroythemicrobethatdestroyF I
the hair. This new and different method will prevent
thinning: out of the hair, dandruff, lifeless hair, bald
ness, gray hair, by strengthening and prolonging life
of the hair for men and women. Send now before it is
too late for the 15-days’ free trial offer.
AYMES CO., 3932 N. Robey St., M-320 Chicago
MEN WANTED
« Prepare as Firemen. Brakemen, Elec
tric Motormen. and colored Train Por
ters. Hundreds put to work. No ex
perience necessary. SOO more Wanted.
Name position you want.
Railway Institute. Dept. 33. Indian- I
apolls. Ind.
Our New Subscription Offers
in connection with
Atlanta Tri-Weekly Journal
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25 cenis for three months
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Read carefully the entire list and see if they can be matched
or surpassed anywhere.
Atlanta Tri-Weekly Journal, for nr
eighteen months, 234 issues... <Pl*£iO
Tri-Weekly Journal one year and
Three-in-One Shopping Bag, the
most satisfactory premium we (bl or
have ever used
Tri-Weekly Journal one year and
our wonderful Fruit Garden col
lection described elsewhere in (hl UA
this issue
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I nnAAMI TREATED ONE
uKOroi WEEK FREE
■ R a 'ar I ■ Short breathing rellev.d In .
tew hours: swelling reduced In a lew days, regulates
the liver, kidneys, stomach and heart,purifies the blood.
I strengthens the entire system. Write tor free trial treat
> ment. COLLUM DROPSY REMEDY CO.. Dept. R.H
ATLANTA, GEORGIA. (Ettablithed 1895 °
28 year* of aucceaa in treating Dropsy.) ~
PEACH&APPLE
T O ET CCI BEFORE BUYING
I VCELIZOget our prices
It wilt pay yea. Direct to Ptancere la Large or Small
Lota by Kxpreaa. Freight or Parcel Post. FBBB <8 Page
Catalog. Peer, Plom. Cherry Bentes, Grapes. Nats
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