Newspaper Page Text
p THE WEATHER
ta——— --
Conditions.
.juixgTON. Aug. 2.—There will be
”.n 'be next 36 hours in the north
r '‘ ! ,’states and the lower lake region.
' “2' n‘the upper lake region, the Ohio
" Tennessee, the east gulf and South
Ular: states, the weather will be fair
' T R niwia7urU' e 'wU? be somewhat lower
T , e . J lake region and the Ohio valley,
in , i, will change little elsewhere east of
Mississippi river during the night and
Tuesday.
General Forecast.
Following is the forecast until 7 p. m.
Tl Ge‘> ! Igia 1 gia—Generally fair tonight and
1 Virginia Generally fair tonight and
Tuesda' . not much change in tempera
,u?„ rl h Carolina. South Carolina. Florida,
dabaina and Mississippi—Generally fair
ionight and Tuesday.
LIVE STOCK MARKET.
( Hit GIG. Sept. 2.—Hogs—Receipts.
... Market strong for lights; others
lower; mixed and butchers. $7.95©
LC g,-..d heavy. 57.90© 8.90: rough heavy.
-OJrT t«>: light. *8.25© 9.00; pigs, 85.00©
c' u h.Jk. $S.00?» 8.85.
, ~;tle- Receipts. 16.000. Market slow,
..jntrallv steady; beeves. 85.754*10.50;
"; ..nil heifers. $3.00© 8.00; Stockers and
nZiers. 54.254/7.25; Texans. 84.80© 6.60:
,nive a $8.50© 1150.
Sheep—Receipts. 18.000. Market steady
tl ,‘strong: native and Western, $3.40®4.60;
Idntbs. sl.oo© *.30.
Ar , you busy this evening? Even if
'arc take a few moments off and read
ire great list of bargains in every line on
the Want Ad Pages of this paper. You
will be repaid many times.
Real Estate For Sale. Real Estate For Sale
FOR RENT
PEACHTREE —Right at Merritts avenue. We will have ready
for occupancy in a short while, an excellent double building.
We have rented half of same to the Indian Motor Cycle Com
pany The other half you can get -25 by 125 feet. Get a price
now before some one gets it.
TURMAN. BLACK A CALHOUN.
()R MEWOOD BUNG A I .0W—53,250.
WE ARE SEI.LING these bungalow homes as fast
as we build them. This one is located right oppo
site Ormewood Court, the beautiful home of the Ho
rines. It has 5 large rooms and sleeping porch, is
well built and well arranged. Has water, sewer and
electric lights. Good lot. car line half a block. "Ferms
of S2OO cash and $25 per month. See us about this.
It will make von an ideal home.
THOMSON & LYNES
!8 and 20 Walton St. Both Phones 458.
- h 'c' SA c' BY xt GRANT PARK HOME.
1 (Six-Room Beauty. I
|\ IL /-X, L I "V ORMuND ST., newly painted: beautifully
elevated lot: six rooms, with all cen
x-. ■» w r a < -wt w r veniences; bargain price. $3,500. Terms,
ill |\/| I—* Z\ [X Y ®U Empire Bldg. Phones 1599.
>— a . * * w » Real Estate, Renting, Loans.
M. L. PETTY & E: L. HARLING
REAL. ESTATE. 32 EAST ALABAMA ST.
o.\ PEACHTREE CIRCLE, in Ansley Park, we have a new. eight-room, -two
stpry house, furnace heat, oak floors, two sleeping porches, lot 62T4 by 300.
'I we are offering for a quick sale, on easy terms, for SIO,OOO. Perhaps you
have a small cottage or i) good vacant lot that you would like to exchange for
such a home. If so, take it up with us at once.
• >.\ WAVERLY WAY. in Inman Park, we have one of the most complete, eight
room. two-story houses in this section for $5,250. This can be bought for
cash and S4O a month. Take it up with us at once.
"X GILMER STREET, close in, we have a lot 50 by 170, with two houses, that
ar.' ts nted for $35 per month. We are offering this piece of property for $3.-
” .’I.OOO cash and the. balance in one, two and three years.
"X oak STREET. IN KIRKWOOD, we have a new six-room bungalow, on a
10l 60 by 155. that xee offer for $2,750; $250 cash and S2O a month, with no
ar We will take a good lot or a smaller piece of property as part payment.
NORTH SIDE LOT
WE OFFER for quick sale a beautiful grove lot 53x170 feet,
just off Ponce DeLeon avenue. Al) street improvements
down and paid for. Price only $2,250.00. If interested see us
al once,
W. L. & JOHN O. DuPREE
Real Estate. 501-502 Empire Building.
Bell Phone Alain 3457. Atlanta 930.
Money To Loan. Money To Loan.
RALPH O. COCHRAN CO.
(Incorporated, >
REAL ESTATE. RENTING AND LOANS.
19 SOUTH BROAD STREET.
HERE IS A BARGAIN.
ON CENTRAL AVENUE. close in. we have a good eight-room fwo-siory house,
on a good sized lot for $3,750. on reasonable terms.' it is cheap
HARRIS G WHITE.
Sales Manager
Real Estate For Sale. Houses For Rent.
TURMAN. BLACK & CALHOUN
DETAIL STOKES AND Bt'ILDIXGS
'"KSYTH STREET—Three excellent
cores at S6O each; right at Mitchell
~ let ' 1 ' ln tite retail section.
MARIETTA STREET Between
Spring anti Bartow; tine; near in anti
'.a|i for SIOO. Winter bent furnished.
• XND 52 AEBERN AVEN’i’E- Fine
I'la.e for some factory branch Be
"een Ivy and Pryor streets. Each store
- 11 by 100; sioo per month.
SORTH BROAD SI'REET- -Four
.-tories. Will rent all or sub-divide,
'ire lease Ret ail dis trict
MADISON V VENI'E—-Five stories and
basement: fireproof, modern, concrete
' aiding. Every convenience. Will rent
f ll_a_whole or sub-divide to suit tenant.
' .BERN AVEN'EE - .lust off' Ivy street"
rive-story building Best in the city
r manufacturing. Very close In.
!V Y STREET- Big building. Mill ctffl
*iruction. Right at Edgewood avenue
•>ur stories.
H A S f ""ALABAMA -
lent retail store; 25 by 126 feet, and
■seinent same sice. Water, gas. ele<-
•city, and piped for heal Onlv *l5O
per <nont h
H V STREET -Right at the comer of
Auburn avenue. An excellent little
re ad place. 20 by 35 feet, for? 40
We Have Plenty of Mon
ATLANTA LIVE STOCK MARKET.
'By W. H. White. Jr., of the White Pro
vision Company.)
Quotaiions based on actual purchases i
during the current week:
Choice to good stee-s, 1,009 to 1,800. 5.5 fl I
©6.60; good steers. 800 to 1.000. 5.00© 3.00; !
medium to good steers. 700 to 850, 4.25© j
5.00: good to choice beef cows, 800 to 900 I
L yO e7n' 7 « ; -L’'?!. , l m ’« Bood beef cows 700 1
to 800, o.o0«i4ii); good to choice heifers. :
to 850. 4.00<0L < 5; medium to good I
heifers. 650 to 750.
The above represent ruling prices on i
goou quality of beef cattie. Inferior
grades and dairy types selling lower
Mixed common steers, if fat. 700 to SOO
l OO© 4..-10: mixed common cows, if fat. 600
to 800. 3 00© 4.00: mixed common bunches
to fair. 600 to 800. 2.75©3.25;g ood butch
er bulls. i'..BO© 2.75.
Good to choice Tennessee lambs, 60 Io
80. 5 1 s©6 1 ,2-. common lambs and vearl>ngs
2Qtii4: sheep, range. “©4.
Hog receipts nominal. Market contin
ues strong and higher.
ITime hogs. 160 to 200 average. 8.50©'
9.00: good butcher pigs, 140 Io 140. 7.25©
8.3 b; good butcher pigs. 100 to 140. 7.25©
8.00: light pigs. 80 to 100. 6.75© 7.00; heavy I
tough hog», 200 to 250. 7.000 8.00.
Above quotations apply tn corn-fed
nogs Mash and peanut fattened nogs
liit’jc lower.
Cattle receipts about normal: market
steady to a shade stronger on steer stuff
of quality. Cows are coming freely, most
ly light and common. Good cows have
held strong throughout the week, while ■
lights have sold off 15 to 25 cents per
hundred. Demands coptinue to favor bet
ter weight and quality in cows, as well as
in the better grades of butcher steers.
Sheep and lambs receipts moderate;
market strong on best lambs. Mutton
sheep and yearlings lambs unchanged.
Moderate receipts of hogs in yards this
week. Market continues strong and high
er. Top hogs reach 9 cents this week
Highest price since the fall of 1919. Still
higher prices are expected before the new
corn crop is available for feeding.
203-8 EMPIRE BL’ILDL'
ROOMS AND HORSES
45', 2 Auburn avenue; one loom 8 ! 7.50 -
527 East Fair street, furnished, two
rooms 12.50
6-r. flat 124 East Fair street . ... 20.60
6-r. apartment Eleventh street .... 80.00
4- li.. 171 Rockwell street 14 CO
5- h.. 27) <'unningbam place .... 22.60
or. h.. 174 Formwait street 17.50
6- h . 34 Killian street 20 00
5- h., 6" Garden street 15.00
6- h . 200 Tift a venue; big lot .... 17.50
6-r. b.. 30 i'unningbam place .... 25.60
8-r. h.. 66!' Highland avenue 40 00
8-r. h.. 272 Ashby street 20.00
8-r. I>., 365 Spring street 45.00 |
8-r. h . 242 Stewart avenue 40.00 |
S-r. 1;.. 58 East Merritts avenue
<furnished) 80 00
8- It., 248 Stewart avenue uiew i . 35.00;
9- h . 80 McLendon 60.00
10- li.. HO (’rest <-nt avenue . . . 57.50 >
12-r. li.. 640 Washington street. .. 50.00 I
IS-r. i>.. 510-South Pryor stretM 50.00
■ I 1 !!!!! !'"™ .2111 "J J! 1 '.1.. ..J
MiFTS.
127 VENTRAL A VEN 1 E—Second floor.
6.500 square feet. Very cheap
12 SOETH BROAD STREET—AiI or any
one of three floors; 1.500 square feet to
floor.
WEST MITCH ELI. STREET—Fine sec
ond story loft. 5,000 square feet.
jy to Loan on Real Estate.
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. MONDAY. SEPTEMBER 2. 1912.
ULI MARKETS IN
If RIGS CLOSED
Business Is Suspended Because
of Labor Holiday—Liver
pool Cotton Steady.
This being Labor day. the New York
and New Orleans cotton exchange-,
New York stock exchange, Chicago
Board of Trade, cotton seed oil market.
New York coffee market, produce <x
chqnge and all other American mar
kets were closed to business today to
celebrate the annual event.
Tomorrow all exchanges will reopen
to resume usual business transactions.
The Liverpool cotton exchange re
mained open for the usual session. This
market opened quiet and steady with a
narrow range on account of American
markets being closed. Futures tanged
1-2 to 3 points below the final figure of
Saturday. At 12:15 p. m. the market
was quiet with prides displaying irreg
ularity from tlie opening, quotations
being 1-2 point higher to 2 1-2 points
lower. The market at 2 p. m. was un
changed to 1 point lower than 12:15 p.
m. Spot cotton was 3 points lower,
middling 6.3” d, sales, 5,000 balds, of
which 4,900 was American; receipts.
7,000; Ameiican receipts, 6.000.
At the close the market was barely
steady, with prices ranging from 2 to
2 1-2 points lower than the final quota
tions of Saturday.
RANGE IN LIVERPOOL FUTURES.
Futures opened quiet.
Range 2 P. M. Close. Prev.
Opening Prev
Sept . . . 6.11 -6.08 - 6.08 6.08 5.12*,,
Sent.-Oct. 0.92 -5.92’4 5.92*. 5 92’7. 595
Oct.-Nov. 5.89 -5.88’4 5.88 ~ 5.88 * 5.91 u.
Nov.-Dec 5.84 -5.84’4 5.84 5.83’4 5.86’7
Dec.-Jan. 5.83’,-5.84 5.84 5.83’4 5.861*
■lan.-Feb. 5.84 -5.8414 5.84 5.84 5.87
Feb.-Meh. 5.86’4-5.87 5.86 5.85’;, 5.88’4
Meh.-Apr. 5.86’4-5.87 5.87’- 5.86’4 5.89’..
Apr.-May 5.89 -5.88 . . .". 5.88’.', 5.90’7
May-.lne. 5.90 -S.BKA-. 5.88’4 5.91’7
June-July 5.89’i 5.88 ~ 5.91
July-Aug. 5.89 ”-5.88 5.87’4
. Closed barely steady.
LOCAL STOCKS AND BONDS.
Bid Asked.
•Atlanta Trust Company. .. 117 120
Atlanta and West Point K. It 1.48 150
American Nat. Bank 220 225
Atlantic Coal & Ice common. 101 02
Atlantic Cogl & Ice pfd 91. 92’4
Atlanta Brewing &- Ice C 0.... 171. ...
Atlanta National Bank 325
Broad Riv. Gran. Corp 25 36
do. pfd 71 74
| Central Bank & Trust Corp 147
Exposition Cotton Mills 165
Fourth National Bank26s 270
Fulton National Bank 127 131
Ga. Ry. & Elec, stamped 126 127
Ga. Ry. & Power Co. common 28 30
do. first pfd 83 86
du. second pfd 44 46
Hillyer Trust Company (See
Atlanta Trust Co.»
Lowry National Bank 248 250
Realty Trust Company 100 105
Southern Ice common 68 70
The Security State Bank. .. 115 120
Third National Bank 230 235
Trust Company of Georgia . . 245 250
Travelers Bank & Trust Co.. 125 126
BONDS.
Atlanta Gas Light Is 102’4
Broad Riv. Gran. Corp. Ist 6s 90 95
Georgia State 4‘4s. 1915, 55.. 101 102
Ga. Ry. & Elec. Co. 5s 103> 104’4
Ga. Ry. & Elec. ref. 5s 100’4 103
Atlanta Consolidated os. ... 102’9
Atlanta City 3’4s, 1913... 90’4 M’i
Atlanta 4s. 1920 98’4 99*4
Atlanta City 4»45. 1921 102 103
• —Ex-dividend 10 per cent.
See Geo. Wilson, “Waltze
Me Again,” Forsyth this
week.
It s like getting money from Homo, for
it’s money easily made by reading, using
, and answering the Want Ads in The
Georgian. Few people realize the many
opportunities offered them among tie
small ads. It’s a good sign that if the peo
ple did not get results from the Want Ads
of The Georgian that there woula not be
iso many of them. If. for nothing else, sit
i down and check off the ads that appeal to
1 you. You will be astonished how many of
’ them mean money to you. The Want Ad
* pages arc bargain counters in every line.
I The ads are so conveniently arranged that
I they can be picked out very easy.
FUNERAL NOTICES.
BOWEN —The friend« and relatives of
Major and AArs. 'l'. S. Bowen, Misses
Etta and Nenie Bowen, Mr. ami Mrs.
Charles A. Bowen, Mr. and Mrs. B.
W. Bowen and Mr. Norman Bowen
are invited to attend the funeral of
Mrs. T. S. Bowen tomorrow (Tues
day), September 3, 1912. at 10:30
o'clock from her late residence. 208
Forrest ave. Interment will be in
Westview cemetery. The following
named gentlemen will please act as
pallbearers and meet at the office of
11. M. Patterson & Son at 10 o’clock:
«’oL John S. Prather, Mr. W. C. 1 Jud
son. Mr A. c. Woolley, Mr. Frank A.
Smyly, Mr. W. D. Brady and Mr.
I I teSaussure.
ATTENTION: Camp A. Wheeler’s Con
federate Cavalry—Comrades: Captain
John M Hill -noble and respected cit
izen, beloved and honored member of
our camp—has gone to the home of
the just to join comrades with whom
he struggled most valiantly for all
that is high and pure and right.
Funeral at * is late residence, >Bl Ivy
street, tomorrow morning (Tuesday,
September 3), at 1.0 o'clock. You
will be present.
B\ order of commander:
J. S. PR ATH EK
.I E. T 001.17. Adjutam.
HHJ. The friends of Mr. and Mrs .Fohn
M. Hill. Mr. and Mrs. Carroll Payne.
Mr. and Mrs. Claude Williams. Mrs.
Mary Ta;.lor. Mr. and Mrs. E. H. Car
roll. Mrs I). M. Cabaniss and Mrs.
Samuel Prioleau are invited to at
tend the funeral of Mr. John M. Hill,
at his lute residence. 181 Ivy street,
at 10 a. m. Tuesday, September 3.
Interment private.
H Fortify yomir boshiiess ||
H agaiost a facing off hi
Bl
H Eve ry day in the week
B it
|H WONDER WORKERS g
Atlanta markets) k
I 1 i
EGGS Fresh country candled,
BUTTER Jersey and creamery, in 1-io. ,
I blocks. i'resh country dull. )
12 r cC pound
DRESSED POULTRY—Drawn, head I
and teet on. per pound: Hen.< 17(jri18c.
| fries, 2«>(^-27 , mc: roosters,
owing to fatness. 18fa 30c.
| LiX E POULTRY Hens. 40££45c. roost? i .
I ers 255x35c; fries. IB<a2sc; broilers. 30® I ’
psc: puddle ducks. 25®30c; Pekir ducks. I
|4o(y4oc: geese 50®60c each; turkeys, ow- i
ing to fatness. 14(a l.»c
FRUITS AND PRODUCE.
I bRI l'i’ ANI? VEGETABLES Lemons, I
laney,_ 55.50®6c per Lox; Florida oranges.
S3® 3.50 per box. bananas, pe r
pound: cabbage, 75(a$l per pounu; pea- '
nuts, per pound, fancy Virginia I
choice. s r 2(d6c: beans, round green, 7T.c®
11 per crate; peaches, >1.50 per crate:
Florida, celery. per crate; i
squash, yellow, per six-basket crates. !
U.OOtfi 1.25; lettuce, fancy. $1,257/150.!
choice per crate; bee's, sl.sot® I
2 per barrel; ( ’.cumbers. 75cfu4>l per crate;
new Irish potatoes, per barrel. $2.50@2
E&g plants. s2(faJ.sO per crate; pepper,
•sl({/1.25 per crate: tomatoes, fanev, six- I
basket crates $ 1.00(a 1.25; chooe toma
toes 75c(iii $1.00; pineapples. per
crate; onions, $1 u 1.25 per bushel; sweet i
potatoes, pumpkin yam. $Hi/l 25 per bush- i
el. watermelons, per hundred; 1
cantaloupes, per crate, s!<// I 25
PROVISION MARKET.
(Corrected by White Provision Company.)
Cornfield hams, 10 to 12 pounds average
1 6"’4 c.
Cornfield hams. 12 to 14 pounds average, i
16’% c.
Cornfield skinned hams. 16 to IS pounds
average. ITEjc.
Cornfield picnic hams, g to S pounds
average. 13c.
Cornfield breakfast bacon. 23c.
Grocer style bacon (wide or narrow),
18c.
Cornfield fresh pork snusage (link or
bulk). 25-pound bucket.®, 12c.’
I Cornfield frankfurters, 10 poundl buck
ets. average 10c
Cornfield bologna sausage, 25-pound
boxes. 9c.
Cornfield luncheon hams, 25-pound
boxes. 12c.
Cornfield smoked link sausage. 25-
pound boxes. 9c.
Cornfield smdk >d link sausage in pickle,
50-pound cans, !4.50.
Cornfield frankfurters in pickle. 15-
pjund kits, $1.50
Cornfield pickled pig's feet. 15-po:md
kits. sl.
Cornfield pure lard (tierce basis). 12’ic
Country style pure lard. 50-pound tin#
only. 1134 c.
Compound lard (tierce basis), !)‘. 4 c.
D. S. extra r.bs, 11 -%c.
D. S. rib bellies, medium average,lll.2 C .
D. S. rib bellies, light average. 13' 4 c
FLOUR AND GRAIN.
I?LOl’R—Postell's Elegant. $7.25: ('me
ga. $7.50; Gloria (self rising). $6.40; Vic
tory (finest patent), 56.40; Diamond
(patent). $6.25; Monogram, $5.8..; Golden ’
(■’rain, $5.40; Faultless, finest. >»».25; Home i
Queen (highost patent), $5.75; Puritan
(highest patent). $5.75; Paragon (highest I
patent), $5.75; Sun Rise (half patent), I
<55.35; Whito Cloud (highest pat
ent), $6.60; White Daisy. $5.60: Sun Beam.!
$5.35; Southern Star (patent). ss.3s;Oc<an
Spray (patent). $5.35.
CORN—White, red cob $1.10; No. .: ’
white, $1.08: cracked. $1.05: yellow. $1.05.
MEAL—Plain 144-pound sacks. t‘7c; 93-
pound sacks. 98c; 48-pouiid sacks, $1.00;
24-pound sacks, $1.02; 12-pound sacks.
■ lo4 \, .
OATS—Fancy clipped. 52c; fancy white, I
51c; Texas rustproof. 58c.
COTTON SEED MEAL—Harper. $29.
COTTON SEED HI’LLS—Square sacks. <
SIO.OO per ton. Oat straw. 75c per bale !
SEEDS—(Sacked): German millet, $1.65; >
amber cane seed, $1.55; cane seed, orange, i
$1.50: rye (Tennessee). $1.25; red top cane
seed, $1.35; rye (Georgia). $1.35; Appier
oats, 85c; red rust proof oats. 72c: Bert
oats. 75c; Texas rust proof oats, 70c; win
der grazing, 70c; Oklahoma rust proof, 00c
blue seed oats, 50c.
HAY—Per hundredweight: Timothy,
choice large bales. $1.70: Timothy, choice
third bales. $1.60. Timothy No. 1, small
bales. $1.25; new alfalfa, choice. $1.65;
Timothy No. I. $1.40; No. 2. $1.20; clover
nav. $1.50: alfalfa hay. choice peagreem 1
$1.30: alfalfa No. 1. $1.25; alfalfa No.
41.50: Peavine hay. $1.20: shucks, 70c’
wheat straw. 80c; Bermuda, sl."u.
FEEDSTUFF.
SHORTS- White. $2; fancy 75-ib sacks,
41.90:P.W.. 75-lb. sks. $1.80; brown, 100-in
sacks, $1.75; Georgia feed, 75-lb. sacks,
51.75; bran, 75-lb. sacks. $1.40; 100-lb
sacks, $1.40; Homcloine, $1.10; Germ meal
Hemco. $1.70; ..sugar- beet pulp. 100-lb
sacks. $1.50: 75-1 J).
CHICKEN FEED Beef scraps, 50-lb.
sacks. $3.50; 100-lb. sacks. $3.25; Vidor}
pigeon feed. $2.35; 50-lh. sacks. ♦2.25: Pu
tina scratch, °WO-Ib‘. sacks, 20; Purina
pigeon feed. $2.45; - Purina- baby chick.
$2.30; Purina chowder, doz. lb. packages.
$2.20; Purina chowder, 100-lb. sa< ks, $2.15;
Success baby, chick. $2-10.; Eggo, $2.15:
Victory Daby chick., $3.3(1: Victory scratch
100-lb. sacks' $2.i5; Superior ?cratc)i.
$2.10; Chicken Success baby chick, $2.10;
wheat, 2-bushel bags, per bhshcl, $1 40;
Rooster chicken feed. 50-lb/ sacks, sl.lv.
oystershell. 80c.
GROUND FEED Purina feed, 100-lb
sacks, $1.85; 175-lb. sacks* $1.85; Purina
molasses feed. .f!.SS; Aiab feeo, $1.85;
.Allnee/la feed- 51.70; Sucrene dairy teed.
$1.60: Universal horse meal. $1.80: velvet
iced. $1.70: Monogram. 100-lb. sacks, SI.BO.
Victory horse feed. 100-lb. sacks, $1.75
MiJki dairy feed. $1.70; No. 2. $1.75 al
falfa ti'olasses meal. $1.75; alfalfa meal.
H .50.
GROCERIES.
SU(J.‘.R Per pound, standard granu
lated, $5.60 New York refined, 5’,; plan
tation, C’Ac
COFFEE -Roasted (Arbuckle's), >22.50.
AAA A, $14.50 in bulk; in bags and barrels. ■
121.00; green. 19c.
RICE —Head, 4 SL’c: fancy head, 5 •,
q 6' 2 c. according to grade.
LARD Silver leaf. per pound;
Scoco, 9’ 4 <' per pound; Flake Whit*.
per pound: Cottolene. $7.20 per case.
Snowdrift. $6.50 per case.
‘MIEESE Fancy full cream. 18' ? c
SARDINES Mustard, $3 per case, one
marter oil. $3.
MISCELLANEOUS Georgia cane syr
up. 38c: axle grease, $1.75: soda crackers
7He per pound; lemon crackers. 8c; oys
•er. 7c; tomatoes (‘ pounds), $2 <ase; (3
pounds). $2.75; navy beans, $3.25; Lima
beans. 7H:c; shre<l<led biscuit. $3.60; ro||»d
oats, $3.90 per case; grits (bags), $2 40
pink salmon. >4 75 per ease; popper, 18c
per pound; R. E. Lee salmon, *750; coeou..
38c: roast beef. $3.80; syrup. 30c per gal
lon; Sterling ball potash. $3.30 per case;
®oap. $1 .SO*?/ 4.<H» per case; Rumford bak
ing powder. $2.50 per case.
SALT —One hundred pounds. 52c; salt
brick (plain), per case. $2.25; salt brick
1 m»'4 lies ted), per •■'< . ; •( l . ..' ■ red
rock, oer cwt.. $1 00; .salt white, per cwt .
.'Oc; Granacrvstal. case. 25-lb. sacks. I t u
j 85; salt ozone, per case. 30 1 ackages,
50-lb sacks. 30c; 25-lb. sacks. 18c.
FISH.
FISH Bream and perch. 6c per pound,
snapper. 9c per nound; trout. 10c per
pound; bluefish, 7c per pound; pom'pano,
15c per pound; mackerel. 11c per pound;
mixed fish. 6c per pound; black bass. 10c
per pound; mullet, SB.OO per barrel
HARDWARE.
PLOWSTOCKS Ila Iman. 95c; l-rgi
sod. $1.05.
AXLES per <loz< n bus'’.
SHOT- $2.25 per sack.
SHOES- Horse. >4.504/4 75 p. r Li g.
LEAD Bar. 7' <- per pound
NA 11 S - Wire. >2.65 bax .
I IRON Per pound, 3c. base; Sw/de 3’«»c
GOOD ENOUGH FOR ANYBODY;
WHIN REACH OF EVERYBODY
Subscribe for
THEGEORGIAN
And Get This 45-Piece Set For a
Fraction of Its Value
——— - -4!
raw X ‘W ' y ' A
K 1 . ”ff ■li' T ■>" J 9
I™*-:- -Jr# 'w
Mi-- ii
See Sample Sets Displayed in Our Office Window
Every Piece Warranted To Be Perfectly
Shaped, High Grade American SemiTorcelain
The tliitroess of the ware, the rich Royal Blue and
Coin Gold Decoration, delicately shaded into the pure
white, make this set equal in appearance and utilitv to
I “ ' ...L'
the highest priced imported china.
» -
THE DECORATION CAN NOT WEAR OFF
It is applied by a new process that tires it into each
piece underneath the glaze. This insures a lasting
beauty, heretofore rare among newspaper premium
dishes.
AVE SEND COURTEOUS MEX AND WOMEN
TO PRESENT THE DETAILS OK THIS OFFER,
UPON REQUEST. These representatives will not an
noy you with the usual insistent ta<-tics of the average
solicitor. If you can resist this offer after it has been
explained to you. and you have seen the dishes, we will
not subject you to further importunity. But we would
like to t< 11 you about it.
THE GEORGIAN
(Circulation Department
20 E. Alabama St. : Both Phones 8000
15