Newspaper Page Text
12
THE WEATHER ’
■—
Condition*.
WASHINGTON. July s—Unsettled.
Showery weather will continue tonight
and prevail over the East and South, with
somewhat lower temperatures over the
lower lake region. New England and the
middle Atlantic states
General Forecast.
Georgia—Showers tonight or Saturday.
North and South Carolina. Alabama
and Florida—Showers tonight or Satur
day
Mississippi—Local showers tonight or
Saturday
Louisiana, West Texas and East Texas
—Showers
UGG! ...D —IJ 'J..JI
Real Estate For Sale. Real Estate For Sale.
Whitehall street and
RAILROAD FRONTAGE
RIGHT at the street car underpass we have 75 feet on White
hall street with 82 feet on Central of Georgia railway, at (
just about one-half its value, ot $175.00 foot, on good terms.
Adjoining frontage held at $350.00 foot.
B. M. GRANT & CO
i
Second Floor. Grant Building.
gTr. MOORE & CO.
REAL ESTATE, BUILDING ANT) LOANS.
1409 CANDLER BUILDING. PHONE IVY 4978
120.000- WEST PEACHTREE STREET It's a close-in proposition You can not
duplicate this piece anywhere within two blocks This s paying a nice rental
now and what will it do when the street is graded? Call Mr. Moore
512,50 n -CENTRAL CORNER, within a stone's throw of the Candler building
This is a bargain and we have got to sell it at once. See Mr. Reid.
DECATUR STREET property; very near in, 38x75. Two stores renting for *l5O
per month-only '32.000. Terms eas’ Call Mr Hambley.
BEAT'TUT I six-r-'on. bungalow on Eorrest avenue, all modern conveniences.
Price .4 I'9o. en.-j terms. See Mr. Hamilton.
FOR EXCHANGE.
AVE have good 5-room house in good renting section, valued at $2,500, for ex
change for small Improved farm near Atlanta. s
HAVE two other houses (price $5,000) to exchange for good farm near Atlanta.
ALSO a good 6-room house, all conveniences, close in. south side, near Capitol ave
nue (price $3,5001 for sale or exchange for north side vacant or improved prop
erty at same value.
GEORGIA HOME AND FARM COMPANY,
114 CANDLER BUILDING. PHONE IVY 5787.
WE OFFER ”
STOCKS
100 ATLANTA & WEST POINT R. R. CO.
500 SOUTHERN SECURITIES COMPANY
200 ATLANTIC ICE & COAL COMMON
100 ATLANTIC ICE & COAL PREFERRED
300 SOUTHERN ICE COMPANY COMMON
200 SOUTHERN ICE COMPANY PREFERRED
100 THIRD NATIONAL BANK OF ATLANTA
200 MACON RY. & LIGHT 6 PER CENT PREFERRED
100 GEORGIA RY. & EL. 8 PER CENT GUARANTEED
200 GEORGIA RY. & EL. 5 PER CENT GUARANTEED
200 GEORGIA RY & POWER 4 PER CENT 2D PFD
100 EXPOSITION COTTON MILLS
100 SOUTHWESTERN R. R. COMPANY
J. H. HILSMAN &CO.
ATLANTA
Etale Your Children in Music
Money Invested in Children's Education Can Not Be Lost
Oppor n’y fen|
|pf Week ®l|
> Hi L ft / ‘ Jp*
-■"' * ll f■ t" *” n ~ Ml ' R ' o*4a Means more to prospective piano
— ll ftifi- “buyers than ordinary sales. ’
We quote herewith a few of the J 650
_. , 5400 manv bargains we are offering in Player riano »se<i for demon-
Blightly used, almost new Haines F*iano ‘ . ‘ j • stration purposes
sirs new’ and slightly used pianos. $395
Made By Regular Price Today
Chase Bros S3OO $ 89
Haines Bros $375 $l6B
Laffargue & Co $375 $217
Haines $450... .... $2lO
Conover $475 $228
Terms: New Pianos
$2.00 Down $1.50 Weekly
Terms: Used Pianos.
Dollar Down—Dollar Week
Stools and Scarfs extra
Story & Clark Piano Co.
b 61 Forsyth Street, Atlanta, Ga.
COTTON SEED OIL.
XEW YORK. July s.—Carpenter. Bag
got * Co : The cotton seed oil market
was firm with early prices up 4 to 7 points.
Offerings were small, and there was Im
proved outside demand as well as cover
ing The buying movement appeared to
have been prompted by the firmness in
coten. some Improvement in domestic
consuming demand, and the belief that the
' market had been oversold.
Cotton seed oil quotations:
t Opening, i Closing
Spot ; 6 836 700
July '6 88® '6.90 5 86©6.90
August 6.9667 00 6.9366 94
September .... 5 ~3'al 15 ' 7 08417.09
October ...... 6.97@6 99 6.93@6.95
November 6 40® 644 6.4686.47
December 6 38(5,6.40 6 3566.37
Ja n uar y 6 37® 6.40 6 35® 6 37
Closed weak; sales 18,600 barrels.
«
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. SATURDAY, JULY 6. 1912.
DAILY WEATHER REPORT.
t Lowest temperature 69
Highest temperature 84
. Mean temperature. 76
Normal temperature 77
> Rainfall in past 24 hours, inches 0.00
[ Excess since Ist of month, inches ... 27
, Excess since January 1, inches 16.87
REPORTS FROM VARIOUS STATIONS.
F (Temperature R'fall
Stations— 1 Weath. ; 7 i Max. I 24
Augusta ... Cloudy ) 74 .. ....
Atlanta Raining 70 84 ....
Atlantic City. Clear 72 I 76 ....
Anniston .... Cloudy ! 72 I 86 .26
Boston Clear 74 94 ....
Buffalo Pt. cldy. ( 74 80 ....
Charleston Cldy. 78 82 ....
Chicago . . .. Cloudy 76 1 88 ....
' Denver ....... ;Pt. cldy.i 48 I 66 ( .10
Des Moines ... Pt. cldv 74 I 96 ....
Duluth Cloudy 62 I 78 .06
Eastport Clear 56 j 74 ....
Galveston ...Clear 80 74 ...
Helena
Houston .....-Clear 78 ....
Huron Pt. rldy 66 88 .58
Jacksonville . Clear 80 82 ....
Kansas city. Clear 72 88 • ....
Knoxville . . Cloudy 70 82 .02
Louisville . . Cloudy 72 78 .08
Macon Cloudy 74 '
Memphis Cloudy 78 88 ....
Meridian . ..Cloudy 74 ....
I Mobile Pt cldv 74 84 .10
Miami Pt. cldv. 80 • 88 ....
Montgomery . Cloudy 74 86 ....
Moorhead ... Clear 68 86 .12
New Orleans. Pt. cldv. 78 88 .18
New York . . . Clear 70 84 ...
North Platte . Pt cldv. 58 82 .20
Oklahoma . .. Cloudy 74 88 ....
.Palestine ... Clear 74 90
i Pittsburg ... Pt. cldy. 72 86
P'tland. Oreg-ICloudy 56 72 .02
San Francisco Cloudy 50 60 ....
St. Louis Clear ! 78 j 90 I ....
St. Pau1...... Clear 74 : 84 .60
S. Lake City.. Clear 52 72 .04
Savannah Pt. cldy.i 76 .01
Washington .. Pt. cldy. ■
C. F. VoN HERRMANN, Section Director.
M "Madam, we save you
:-g| 10 to 50 per cent.”
I SEWELL'S!
I 113115 Whitehall |
We areWholcsale Com
mission Merchants, and
in our retail Store sell you
everything at wholesale
prices. We buy in im
mense quantities.
JUST ARRIVED ANO ON SALE
TODAY AND SATURDAY
i SOLID CARLOAD extra fine
Georgia Peaches,' large nip
baskets at
; SOLID CARLOAD extra fancy Mes
sina Lemons, i
per dozen • «
SNOWDRIFT LARD, QQ p
10-ib. buckets al «««
FRESH COUNTRY 1 Q p
BUTTER, per lb I Ju
Big lot Poultry and Eggs and
fine fresh Dressed Poultry at
positively lowest prices in
Atlanta.
GREAT FRIDAY AND SATURDAY BAR-
GAINS IN OUR DELICATESSEN DEPT.
I Sewell Commission Go. H
113-115 WHITEHALL ST.
COTTON GOES OP
ON BAD WEATHER
Spot Hbuses Buy Near Posi
tions on New Crop, Featur
ing Market Trade.
NEV. YORK, July s.—The cotton mar
ket opened this morning steady, showing
a net gain in prices of 4 to 9 points over
the final of Wednesday. The buying
seemed to be of those who favor the bull
side. However, there was very little cot
ton for sale.
Heavy showers oin the eastern belt and
around the Atlantic coast caused a firm
tgne to develop in prices around the open
ing
At noon the market still maintained a
steady tone, snowing October the strong
est option. Spot people continued there
demand for new crop's near position,
trading chiefly in July and October. There
was some doubt in mind of many as to,
the correctness of the Government figures
as the average of the first report have
run higher. No break of consequence is
looked for at present, as long as the spots
continue in good demand.
At the close the market was steady,
showing a net gain of 2 to 4 points over
the final figures of Wednesday.
RANGE IN NEW YORK FUTURE«.
C JZ ' • • h. •
a- * 35 s -a
o x u 5
{” 1 >' JI 61 11.61'11 54:11.55 11.55-56 11.52-53
Aug 11.65 11.67 11.62(11.63 11.62-63 11.58-60
Sept. !11-73|11.75111.70'11.72:11.70-72111.67-68
Oct. ill.85111.89(11.81 11.82|11r81-82|ll. 77-79
£ ov ' , ■ . .. 11 85-87 11 82-84
Dec. 11.93'11.97'11.90 1 1.90 11.90-91 11.87-88
Jan .11.88 11.94 11.86 11.87 1 1.86-87 11.84-85
■ ■ <■•( I 111.90-92(11.87-88
Meh. '11.98 12*01(ll.96'11.98111 95-97'11 92-94
May 112.02:12.04'12.00'12.00! 11.99-12'11.96-97
Closed steady.
The world's visible supply of American
c J”on the week snows a decrease
bales, against a decrease of
L0,93.> hales for the same week last vear,
compared with a decrease of 165,735 for
the same week the year before.
Other kinds show a decrease during
the week of 73,000 bales, against a de
crease of 40.000 bales for the same week
u ' compared with a decrease of
-i.OOO bales for the same week year ze
fore last. The total visible supply shows
a decrease of 238,388 bales for the week,
against a decrease of 165,935 bales for
the same week last year, compared with a
decrease of 192,737 bales the year before.
World’s visible supply:
American !2.194.32911,209,399(1,220,808
Other kinds .... 9'tx.i 00 ; l,0 •.<> 1.0:-l ()• o
Total, all kinds. 3,187,329 2,232,399 2.251.000
World’s spinners’ takings:
I 1912 | 1911 j 1910
For week' ..( 199,000’i 155.0001 179,000
Since Sept. 1.113,840,000111.232.000110,394 000
Movement into sight: ~
I 1912 | 1911 ~|~ 1910
Overl’d week. *4,5721 4.3381 16.102
Since Sept. 1. 970,822! 923.596' 801.422
Insight week 32,5021 20.373! 13 343
Since Sept. 1|15,341(483111,658.831:10.142.806
So. consump. 20.000 ■ 19,000 21.000
Weekly interior movement:
I 1912. I 1911. | 1910.
Receipts i 1 1.0691 4,0811 12,829
Shipments ' 23,585| 15,195 34.803
Stocks 1158,354(1 14,758(136.394
Monthly crop movement:
I 1912. | 1911. j’~ 1910~
To June 30 . 170.4251 138,1711 203.750
Since Siq it 1.. 15,217,700 11,64 L 271 10J 42.04 4
Liverpool cables due V z higher on Oc
tober and 1 to 2% higher on others:
opened steady 2 to 3 off from Thursday;
12:15 p. m. the market was barely steady
6 to 8 points higher from Wednesday’s
close, spot in good demand, 3 higher;
middling, 6 86; sales, 10,000 hales, includ
ing 8.000 American; imports, 7,000, none
American.
Estimated port receipts today 2.000.
against 12,190 last week, compared
against 381 last year and 5.176 in 1910.
At the close the market was steady
with a net loss of 2 to 4>4 points below
the previous close.
RANGE IN LIVERPOOL FUTURES.
Futures opened quiet.
Opening. Pr*x
Range 2 P M. Close. Clos*
July . . .
July-Aug. 1.62 -6.6214 6.62 6.62 6.65
Aug-Sept 6.61 -6.6012 6,60% 6.59 6.63%
Sept.-Oct. 6.53 -6.52% 6.52% 6.52% 6.55
Oct -Nov. 6,47 -6.47% 6.47% 6.47 6.50%
Nov.-Dec. 6.44 -6.45 6.45 6.44 647
Dec,-Jan. 6.40 -6.43% 6.43 6.43 6.46
Jan.-Feb. 6.43 -6.43% 6.43% 6.43 6.46
Feb.-Meh. 6.45 -6.45% 6 43% 6.46%
Meh.-Apr. 6.44 -6.45 645 6.44 " 6.47
Apr.-May 6.46% 6.45% 6.45 6.47%
May-June 6.46 6.48
Closed steady.
RANGE IN NEW ORLEANS FUTURES.
a " q <1 a r. £ =
0 X -iUac o
Juiv" 12 60112.61T2.59 12.60(12.60 H 2.46-50
Aug 12.35 12.36'12.35 12.35'1 2.35-36 12.22-24
Sept. 12.15 12.22'12,35'12.35:12.35-36112.22-24
Oct. 11.97 12 08 11.97!12.02'12.01-02'11.94-95
Nov. 1 ' : 112.00 111.95-96
Dec. 1 1.98 12.08 11.98-12.02112.01 -02! 11.93-96
Jan. 12.04 12.11 12.02 12.0 4 : 12.04-06 11.98-99
Feb 1 ! | (12.08 '12.02-03
Meh __ 1 2.10 12.14 12.10 12.14 12.11-12 12 06-07
Closed steady.
SPOT COTTON MARKET.
Atlanta, steady; middling 11%.
Nev York, steady; middling 12c.
New Orleans, firm; middling 12%.
Liverpool, steady, middling 6 86d*
Savannah, quiet; middling 12c.
Augusta, quiet, middling 12%.
Mobile, steady; middling 11%.
Galveston, firm; middling 12%.1
Norfolk, steady; middling 12%.
Wilmington, nominal.
Little Kock, quiet; middling 11%.
Charleston, nominal; middling 11%
Philadelphia, steady; middling 12.25.
Boston, steady; middling 12c.
Baltimore, nominal; middling 12c.
Memphis, steady: middling 12%.
St. Louis, quiet; middling 12%.
Houston, steady; middling 12 1-16.
Louisville, firm; middling 12c.
PORT RECEIPTS.
The following table shows receipts at
the ports today compared with the same
day last year:
I 1912. I 1
New Orleans. ... 600 ( 211
I Galveston i 812 I 5
| Mobile I 3 1 ....
I Savannah 86 106
Charleston 11 3
I Norfolk 522 22
i Baltimore | 174 ....
Boston u 4
Pensacola ' 600 1 ....
| Various .... 863
_ Total ' 2.818 2.144~~
INTERIOR MOVEMENT.
I 1912. 1911
Houston. .... 12
Augusta 128 3
Memphis 458 48
St. Louis 168 301
Cincinnati 47 44
Total I 799 “I Toss-
cotton MARKET OPINIONS.
Thompson. Towle & Co.: We think the
I June report of government was too high
i We believe the crop under cultivation
had only a fighting chance for a normal
yield.
Bailey * Montgomery: It looks as if
further crop improvement will be required
I to remove confidence in prevailing val-
I ues
Miller & Co.: We stiH tee! the long
side is the best, prefer buying Decem
ber.
Hayden. Stone * Co.: It looks as if
prices will work higher.
LEADING STOCKS
REACT AJ CLOSE
Small But Active Trade, With
Firm Undertone, Until Final
Hour of Session.
By CHARLES W. STORM.
NEW YORK. July s.—Buoyancy of
Canadian Pacific in London was reflected
in a l--point rise in that issue in the New
Y’ork market at the opening-today. Out
side of Canadian Pacific the list was ir
regular with prices representing gains
and losses in about equal fractions.
United States Steel common, Amalga
mated Copper and Baltimore and Ohio ■
each declined %. Union Pacific was sup- !
plied for a recession of %• Erie common I
gained %, while the preferred was up %.
Lehigh Valley and Reading each gained
%. There was a good deal of speculative
Interest attached to dealings in the Hill
stocks. Great Northern preferred. North
ern Pacific and Great Nortern*Ore all
made fractional gains, selling at the high
est level they have reached in a number
of months.
The curb was easy.
Americans in London were narrow.
Canadian Pacific was strong In London.
In the late forenoon a number of buying
orders appeared, and many stocks which
had shown weakness in the early trading
rallied slightly and a steadier tone pre
vailed.
Business was exceedingly dull in the
afternoon, the professionals being' about
the only traders in the market. From
this source a number of the leading rail
roads and industrials were offered for
sale at slight concessions. Selling of
Union Pacific by professionals was ac
companied by a good deal of talk about
prospective tariff legislation and board
room sentiment on this stock was decid
edly bearish. There was also some pres
sure exerted against Lehigh Valley, which
yielded 1 point.
The market closed irregular; govern
ments unchanged; other bonds steady.
Stock quotations: •
J (Last I Clos Pr*v
STOCKS— (High Low.lsaie.l Bid. Cl'»*
Amal. Copper.; 84% 85 I 83%l 82%' 85 "
Am. Ice Sec...' 27 27 127 1 26% 27%
Am. Smelting ( 86 84% 84% 83% 85%
xAm. Locomo. 44% 43%: 43%1 43% 43%
Am. Car Fdy.., 58% 58% 58% 58 58%
Am. Cot. 0i1..: 54%1 54%: 64% 53 53%
Am. Woolen . .. .... ...J 27%l 27%
xAnaconda ... 42% 42 42 41 , 43%
Atchison 'lO9 108%' 108 % 1108% 'IOB%
A. C. L 1140% 140%(140%(139%|140%
Am. Can 35% 34%l 35 I 34 I 34%
do, pref. ..(117 117 :117 (111% 117 .
Am. Beet Sug. 74% 73%( 73% 73%( 74%
Am. T. and T. 145% 145%i 145% (145’4 1 145%
Am. Agrlcul. .. ...J ....I ... . I-60 ' ....
Beth. Steel ...( 37% 37% 37% 37%' 38
B. R. T I 93%i 92% 92% 93% 93%
B. and O 'IOB% 1083 s, 108% 108% 108%
Can. Pacific ..(267% 260%‘266% 267 266%
Corn Products 15% 15%: 15% 15% 15%
C. and O ’ 81% 80%( 80% 80% 80%
Consol. Gas .. 145% 143% ! 143% 143% 144%
Cen. Leather . 27% 27 i 27 26% 26%
Colo. F. and I. 31% 31% 31% 30 31%
Colo. South I ....I .... 38% 38%
D. and H i ....... . 167% 167%
Den. and R. G I ....( .... 19 19%
Distil. Secur. . 33%' 33%; 33% 32% 33%
Erie 35% 35 ( 35 35 35
do. pref. .. 53%; 53%l 53% 52% 53
Gen. Electric .. 181 180 480 178% 179%
Goldfield Cons 4 4
G. Western .... 17U
G. North., pfd. 138% 137 137%;i36% 137%
G. North. Ore.. 45% 43%' 43% 41% 43%
Int. Harvester 120% 119%
111. Central .. 129% 129 129% 128% 128%
Interboro 21% 21% 21% 21% 21%
do, pref ' 59%: 60%
lowa Central 11 i 10
K. C. South... 25% 25 : 25 25 : 26
K. and T. ... 27% 27% 27% 27%: 27%
do. pref . . . . ( 57%; 60
L. Valley. . . 170 (168%(168% 168%(170%
L. and N.. . .1.61% 160%'1.60% 160 160%
Mo. Pacific . . 37%. 37 37 86%| 37
N. Y. Central .117 (117 117 |116%|117%
Northwest, t .137% 137% 137% 136% ; 137%
Nat. Lead. . .'59 58% 58%1 58% 59%
N. and W.. . .(115% 115 (115 1114%' 115%
No. Pacific . .1123% 122%1123%|122 (122%
O. and W.l ..( I .. . 33%| 34
Penn J’24% 124 1124 124 ' 124%
Pacific Mail . .1 31%: 32’6
P. Gas Co.. . .'114% 113%|114% 114% 113%
P.'Steel Car. J ...J 35% 36%
Reading . . . (166% 165% 165%'165% 166%
Rock Island .( 25 , 25 ( 25, | 24%( 25%
do. pfd.. . .I ...J ....; ....! 50%( 50%
R. I. and Steel; 28 I 28 (28 ( .27%; 28%
do. pfd.. . . 86 'BS (85 84 86%
S. -Sheffield. . | | 55 I 56
So. Pacific. . .|109%|109% 109%|109% 110%
So. Railway. ~ 29 : 28%: 29 I 280, 29
do. pfd.. . .' 75%| 75% 75%) 75%| 75
St. Paul. . . .(105% 105%|105%(104%(105%
Tenn. Copper 44 430, 43% 42 44
Texas Pacific ....( ....I ....I 23% ....
Third Avenue 40% 39%' 39%' 38% 39%
U. S Rubberxx 55 55 55 54 67
Utah Copper . I 63 62%' 62% 62% 63
U. S. steel . . 71%: 70%' 70%| 69%; 71%
do. pfd.. . .|U2%(112% 112%jlll%!l 12%
V. (’hem... 49% 49% 49% 49% 19
West. Union . 82 82%
Wabash . . . 4%( 4%; 4%' 4% 4%
do. pfd.. . .1 13%( 13%' 13%| 13%: 13%
West. Electric' 77% 77% 77% 76% 77’,
Wis. Central ....! .... 51%: 51%
W. MarvlanrL I .... | ... ■ | .... 1 57 56%
Total sales. 312,100 shares. x-Ex-divL
dend, % of 1 per cent, xx-Ex-dividend,
11 per-cent and ex-rights, 1 per cent.
MINING STOCKS.
BOSTON, July s.—Opening: Smelter.
47%; Giroux, 5 1-16; Smelting preferred,
49%. ■”
METAL MARKET.
NEW YORK. July s.—The metal mar
ket was steady today. Copper spot,
16.87%® 17.25: July, 16.97%@17.20: August,
16.95® 17.12%; September, 17.05® 17.15;
lead. 4.65® 4.70: September. 7.20@7.30; tin.
45.40@45.75.
local STOCKS AND BONOS.
Bld Aske*.
Atlanta * West Point R R 14* ns
American National Bank. ... 215 220
Atlantic Coal & Ice, common. 104 105
Atlantic Coal & Ice pref 91 H |
Atlanta Brewing A: Ire C 0... 17$
Atlanta National Bank 320 330
Central Bank & Trust Corp
Exposition Cotton Mills l»a jgj
Fourth National Bank 260 265
Fulton National Bank 125 130
Ga Ry & Elec stamped. .. 134 ]2«
Ga Ry. & Pow. Co., common 27 30
do. Ist PM 80 85
do 2d pfd-..- 46 471a
Hillver Trust Company 125 ...
Lowrv National Rank 248 259
Realty Trust Company 188 no
Sixth Ward Bank »»% joi
Southern Ice common 68 70
Third National Bank. new.. 220 225
Trust Co of Georgia 225 235
Travelers Bank A Trust Co 135 124
BONOS.
Atlanta Gas Light Ist 55.... 101% 105
Georgia State 4%s 19,5 .... 101 m
Georgia Midland Ist 3s «a 44
Ga. Rv * Elee- Co 5s 101
Ga Ry. *• Elec. ref. 5s 99 39%
Atlanta Cu,.solidated 55..... 102% ...
Atlanta City 3%5. 1931 91 92%
Atlanta City 4%5. 1921 102 103
Southern Bell 5» •»%
NEW YORK COFFEE MARKET. ‘
Coffee quotations:
* | Opening. | Closing
January ”13760® 13.70’13 74® 13 76
February (13.60 13.63C13.64
March 13 79 13.78®13 79
April 1866 13.804413.81
Mav 13.75 13 82® 13.83
June 13 73®13.75 13 37® 13.38
July 13.50 13 43ei3 45
August ...... 13.25®13.50 13 52® 13.53
September .... 13.40 13.58®13 59
October 15.45C13.60 13 72® 13.73
November 13.60® 13.65 13.74® 13.76
De.-ember 13.65 13 63® 13,64
Closed steady. Sales, 9..900 bags.
American Telephone & Telegraph Co.
A Dividend of Two Dollars per share
will be paid on Monday. July 15. 1912. to
stockholders of record at the close of bus
iness on Saturday. June 29. 1912
WILLLUX R. DRIVER, Treasurer.
TODAY'S
MARKETS
COTTON.
NEW YORK. July 6.—The opening of
the cotton market today was firm with
prices ranging unchanged on August and
2 to 6 points higher on other positions.
After the call shorts made a rush to
cover, causing a rally of 4 to 11 points,
with October leading the advance.'
Weather conditions reported favorable
over the larger portion of the belt.
NEW YORK.
. Quotations in cotton futures:
I I I 111:00' Prev7
I Open | High (Low (A M. ’ Close.
Ju'Y 11.61 i 11.65 11 if: 11765 1”1'.'55”56
Aug. . . .11.62'11.71 11.82'11.7111.62-63
?«Pt- . 11.70-72
Oct '11.83 11.94 11.82 11.94 11.81-82
Nov ; | 11.85-86
Dec. . 111.94 12.05 11.93112.04111.90-91
Jan (11.92 12.00 11.92112.00i1l .86-87
'■eh- ■ • . ■ 11.90-92
Mar. . . . .12. 01 12.05 12.01'12.05'11.95-97
May 112.04 12,13 12,0 4:12.1'3:11.99-12
NEW ORLEANS.
Quotations in cotton futures:
I J I 11 I Prev.
;OpeniHigh|Low.|A.M.| Close.
July ... .1 ....I .’..1 ...,| ...,|1|.160
August . .112.38:12.46'12.38(12.46 12.35-36
September .... ...J ....; .... 112. L 6-18
October . . 12.06 12.11 1 12.05112.11112 .>l-02
November . ....I .... . ....(12.00
December ~'12.07112.12 12.05 12.12(12 01-02
January . . (12.12'12. 12!12.12112.12(12.04-06
February. . .... . ....I .. 112.08
March . , . (12.18'12.20(12.18(12.20(12.11-12
STOCKS. ~ •
By C. W. STORM.
NEW YORK. July 6.—Although some
fractional losses were sustained at the
opening of the stock market a better de
mand was in evidence, and after the first
few minutes prices generally moved to
higher levels.
Reading and Southern Pacific sustained
the greatest losses, each being % lower.
Reading rallied soon afterward and with
in half an hour had recovered all its de
cline. United States Steel common was
unchanged at the outset, but later gained
%. Pennsylvania, Amalgamated Copper
and American Smelting each gained %.
Erie common and Union Pacific lost %.
Interborough-Metropolitan made a frac
tional gain, but Brooklyn Rapid Transit
was offered at recessions.
The curb was easy. Americans in Lon
don were quiet above New York parity.
Canadian Pacific In London sagged on
continental selling.
Stock quotations:
j j j I 11 IPrer
STOCKS— (Op'n (High(Low. l A M.-(d'se
Amal. Copper. 82%| 83%! 82%i 83%l 82%
Am. Beet Sug.' 73%' 74 : 73%' 74 73%
Am. Smelting 83%' 83% 83% 83% 83%
AniK Locomo... 43% 43%! 43%l 43% 43%
Am. Can 34%i 34%i 34%| 34% 34
do. pref. ..!117%i117% 117% '117% ;117%
Anaconda 41% 41%: 41% 41% 41
B. R. T 92% 92% 92%l 92% 93%
B. and 0 108%(108%(108%il08%T08%
Can. Pacific .. >266% 266%'266%'266%'267
Colo. F. and I.( 31 ’( 31 | 31 ' 31 ! 30
Erie 34%: 343 4 - 34% 34.3, 35
Gen. Electric .T 79 % (179179% 179% 178%
G. North., pfd. 1.367( 5 1137%1136%1137%(136%
Interboro 1 21%' 21%' 21%] 21%' 21%
do, pref. ..( 60 60 160 !60 ' 59%
'K. C. South..,. 25% 25%' 25% 25% 25
Lehigh Valley.'l6B '168% 168 1«8%'168%
Mo Pacific .. 36%i 36%! 36%j 36%l 36%
N. and W. . . . 114% 114% 114%(114% ! 114%
North. Pacific 122%'122% 122% 122% 122
Pennsylvania 124%,124% 124% 124%'124
Reading ’ 164% ' 165% 164% 165% 165%
So. Railway .. 28%: 28%; 28%' 28% 28%
do, pref. . . 76 (76 (76 i 76 : 75%
St. Paul 105 'lO5 105 HOS (104%
Tenn. Copper 43 (43 43 i 43 :42
Union Pacific . 167% 168% 167%168%i
Utah Copper .( 62%: 62%| 62%: 62%: 62%
U. S. Steel ... 69%' 70% 69%! 70%' 69%
V. Chem. 49%i 49%; 49%| 49%l 49%
Wabash 4%: 4%( 4%! 4% 4%
West. Electric 76 76 75% i 75% 76%
W. Maryland . 57 %| 57%' 57%! 57% 57
CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET.
Grain quotations:
Open. High. Low. 11 a. n
WHEAT—
July 1.05% 1.05% 1.05% 1.05% 1.05%
Sep. . 1.00% 1.01. 1.00% 1.01 1.01
Dec. 1.01% 1.01% 1.01% 1.01% 102
CORN—
July 70 70% 70 70% 70%
Sep 67% 67% 66% 67% 67%
Dec. 58%
OATS—
July 42% 42% 42% 42% 4214
Sep 36%
Dec .... 37%
PORK—
July 18.32%
Sep .* 18.77%
Oct 18.70
LARD—
July 10.70
Sep. 10.92% 10.92% 10.92% 10.92% 10.90
Oct 10.97%
RIBS—
July 10.37%
Sep. 10.57% 10.57% 10.57% 10.57% 10.55
Oct. 10.37%
Blast cut
on Prices of
SCREEN DOORS
Our best Oak Door,
with grill work and
copper wire, was
SIO.OO, now $7.50.
Oak Door, .with gal
vanized wire, was
$7.50, now $5.00
«RWI II I I a . m-'i. ■ KWTtnn-
PORCH
SWINGS
all at greatly
REDUCED
PRICES
COME AND SEE THEM
They Won’t Last Long
King Hardware Co.
53 Peachtree St. 87 Whitehall St. I
PRICES OF GRAINS
TAKE BIG SLUMP
Improved Argentine Reports,
Weak Cables and Favorable
Weather Cause Decline.
ST. LOUIS CASH QUOTATIONS.
Wheat—No. 2 red ln .
Oats 47 ‘ 3 14
CHICAGO, July s.—There were 1,
of I%C to I%C in wheat this morr-ng™
the weakness in cables and general
throughout the Northwest save in \
Soment W A e ’lllium we".
WaS B ° me 4 —e la t
Corn was to l%c lower on the
t u’ eathe f’ yh ,ch caused heavy ’se!M r ;
on the part of longs. r
re a °r s tS Were 10Wer With the oth " <*-
Provisions were fractionally bettrr t»
sjmpathy with the strength In hog-.
The wheat market was heavy today th.
close showing net declines ranging
1% on July to 2% to 2% on Sent.Jll™
th? 1 u lces ™ ing ab . out 10w
the day. The main bearish influx
c^tr^^ouX 3 Swetts
shorTsS 313 - There WaS
clfsT Favo^ble 0 2^oX°ng% conditional*
frightened gr the ,n i^j B°nf‘,,? 8 ° n f‘ ,, ?- I ’’!
•2 a ’ s w P r s tn I%C lower. Heav. li n .
e^ n t£Se by BOOW ’-S:
shS 31 &
The market lacked support. *
CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS.
. CHICAGO, July s.—Wheat No •>
1.66%® 1.08%; N«. 3 red, 1.03® 107 \-L
bard winter. 1.065Y.08' No 3 bars „i 2
~ No ' i northed r
? J" 0 ' 2 northern spring I 11®
I.U; No. 3 "spring, 1.04@1.U ®
Corn. No. 2, 70%; No.'2 white 7V.
No. 3 yellow. 72® 72%: No 3 6<l® 71 c
3 whtie, 74%®75%/no 3 vellow -v S'
71%: No. 4, 66® 70; No. 4 white 70 3
No. 4 yellow. 65%@70 ' n ' 1 ’
Oats, No. 2. 48®49; No. 3 whit- i:,' <;
@4BV 9 ' Wh te ’ 46 @ Standard.' 47%
CHICAGO CAR LOTS.
Following are receipts for Fridav
estimated receipts for Saturday Y nd
I Friday. ;~Satiirdav
Wheat i g ' tx—
Corn 176 i
Oats ; 1 90 | p 4
Hn S s I 15,000 | 13,000
BUTTER, POULTRY AND EGGS.
NEW YORK. July s.—Dressed poultry
steady; turkeys chickens 10® 14,
fowls 11%®16%, ducks 18%@19. Live
poultry irregular; chickens 24® 26, fowls
15 asked, turkeys 13 asked, roosters 10%.
ducks 14 asked, geese 10 asked
Butter firmer; creamery specials 25%®
26%, -creamery extras 27®37%. state
dairy (tubs) 22®26%, process specials 25
bid. Eggs firmer; nearby white fanev ’6
@27. nearby brown fancy 23®23', extra
firsts 22%@23%, firsts 20%@21%
Cheese quiet; whole milk specials 15
hid, whole milk fancy 14% bid skima
specials 11%@12%. skims fine 10',@11%,
full skims 6%@8%.
LIVERPOOL GRAIN MARKET.
Wheal opened %'d to l%d lower, at 1 30
p. m. was %d to 2d off. December %d
lower. Closed %d to 2d lower
Corn o(>ened %ri to %d lower, at 130
p. m. was %d lower on July to %d lower
on September. Closed %d lower.
LIVERPOOL.
Futures closed quiet and steady.
Opening Prevlou*
Range. Close Close,
July 6.60 -6.58 6.61 6.63
July-Aug. . .6.61 -6.58 6.60 6.62
Aug.-Sep. . . .6.58 -6.56 6.57 J 6-59
Sep.-Oct 6.50%-6.49 6.50'- 2 6.52 U
Oct.-Nov 6.45 -6.43% 6 41% 6.47 ’
Nov.-Dec. .. . .6.42 -6.41 ’ 6.41‘i 614
Dec.-Jan. . . .6.41 -6.39% 6.40’- 6.43
Jan.-Feb. . . .6.41 -6.39% 6.41 ’ 6.43
Feb.-Mar. . . .6.42 6.41 6.43%
Mar. April. . .6.42 -6.41 6.41% 6.44
April-May. . .6.43 6.42% 6.45
May-June. . . .6.44 -6,42% 6.42% 6.46
Closed steady and quiet.