Newspaper Page Text
Real Estate For Sale.
On next Tuesday, legal sale day, at 12 o’clock
sbai’p- we are sell before the court house
door. at commissioner’s sale, under an order of the
superior court,
NO. 45 PEACHTREE STREET,
fronting 321-2 feet, and now occupied by Daniel
Brothers’ clothing store.
At the same time, we will sell a splendid lot on
Marietta street, extending to the W. & A. Railroad;
and a lot fronting 82 feet on Bell street, immediately
south of Edgewood avenue.
FORREST & GEORGE ADAIR
259 East North Avenue
5-Room Modern Home
AT AUCTION
-
Tuesday, November 5,
AttheCourthouse, io:3o A. M.
Guardian’s Sale
If you want to buy a sweet little home at a bar
gain, be sure to attend the sale. It will certainly pay
to investigate if you want to buy a home at a bargain.
Purchaser will have right to examine title.
Terms: One-half cash, balance 1 and 2 years, 7
per cent interest.
E. RIVERS REALTY CO.
WILLIAMS-HARTSOCK CO.
UAL ESTATE AND BUILDERS. FOURTH NATIONAL BANK BUILDINO.
Phone 2106 Main.
BARGAIN—Here is a seven-room story-and-half bungalow, on the north side;
stone front; eastern exposure; the best of plumbing. It is located on splen
did cherted street, in one of the best north side resident sections, surrounded
by $7,000 homes; drains to the rear. The price is only $4,650; S4OO cash, balance
ISS month. It will rent for more than monthly payments.
>S,SOT FOR AN eight-room two-story home, with quarter sawed oak floors. It
is on north side. Has been reduced in price to actual cost, account owner
leaving the city. Terms easy'. Make small cash payment, balance in semi
ennual installments.
NEGRO INVESTMENT —Here is a five-room negro house renting for sl2 per
month. Can sell this property for $1,200. No loan on it.
NORTH SIDE VACANT LOT—Close to Ponce DeLeon avenue, on Highland, for
only $2,000. This is the cheapest lot on the north side. Adjoining lots will
cost you $2,500.
Cofield Investment Co.
605 Empire Building. Telephone, Main 2224.
For Quick Sale, Court land Street Lot
TWO BLOCKS from the Aragon hotel we have a lot on Courtland St. that must
be sold. It has a size of 50x127% feet with alleys on side and rear, making
it a splendid location for an apartment house. Property in this neighborhood has
been selling from $200.00 to $300.00 per front foot, but we are open for a reason
able offer on this, as it must be disposed of at once.
J. M. BEASLEY, Sales Manager.
~ G. T. R. FRASER
19 AUBURN AVE., Y. M. C. A. BLDG. BELL 1817 IVY.
WASHINGTON ST. VIADUCT.
CAN'T YOU appreciate the value of a gold dollar and the wonderful advantages
of a business lot 50x150 with entrance on two streets, and right near the
heart of the city? Values all around this lot are steadily climbing and the Hurt
building when completed will add many thousands to the selling price. Only 151
f rom corner of Gilmer street and near the Auditorium. Superior location for
a light basement warehouse on Courtland street and fine store or factory facing
'he viaduct. Just about 300 feet from Decatur street, where values are over SI,OOO
per foot, and only two blocks from railroad tracks and mammoth freight depot of
L. and N. R. R. Price $20,000, on terms of $4,000 cash and balance In five annual
payments at 6 per cent. Cottage on It rents steadily for S2O per month and helps
out while you’re waiting for a sure profit.
DILLIN-MORRIS CO.
’O9 Atlanta National Bank Building. Both Phones 4234.
on the south side, we offer a good 6-room cottage on lot 50x140, to
tvi y ' or $2,000; one-third cash and balance one, two and three years at 7%.
in's is a cheap piece of property. No loan to assume; let us show It to you.
$5750 for a beautiful 6-room bungalow on lot 70x165, near Ponce DeLeon avenue,
oe recommend this as one of the best buys on north side. Can arrange terms.
$1,250 will buy- a vacant lot in a growing section on the north side. Has all Im
provements and will be worth your while to Investigate it. Can make terms.
HERE IS A SNAP
Sf 'VEN-ROOM HOUSE and basement, also two rooms in rear of lot. Lot
50x200 to alley, on GREENWOOD AVENUE, within 100 YARDS OF
HIGHLAND AVENUE CAR LINE. CITY IMPROVEMENTS. PRICE $3,250.
*250 cash, $22 per month. (This place should rent for $25.) Call at once on
ATLANTA DEVELOPMENT CO.
MS-13 THIRD NATIONAL BANK BLDG. PHONE 2181 IVY
6-ROOM BUNGALOW, nearly one-half acre lot; in one
°f the prettiest suburbs around Atlanta. All conveniences,
‘tune front; city water; beautiful mantels and fixtures; electric
‘‘-’iits; large bath. If you want something nice, call 31 INMAN
!I IEDING, or phone M. 2053.
GEORGIAN WANT ADS BRING RESULTS
Real Estate For Sale
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 5, 1912:
Real Estate For Sale.
Forcasting Elections
Is a HARD BET
But—Being a “SEER” On
ATLANTA REALTY is
Not So Difficult a Task
STOP, LOOK, LISTEN
SPECULATION—Lot on a main street at the Terminal Station and
surrounded by railroads and is property the railroad is bound
to acquire in the near future. This lot will cost you S6OO per foot,
and will rent for about 6 per cent as it stands. No information
given over the phone.
LOT on Bellwood avenue, near Chestnut street, 52x120. Price
$1,200. Another one on Bellwood avenue, corner of English
avenue, SI,OOO.
LOT block and a half from corner Marietta and Bellwood. 140x180,
corner Tumlin and Fourth streets, $4,250. This will cut into
8 lots. Terms.
CENTRAL PROPERTY. «u
SPRING STREET—SOx2OO, close in; $50,000. ‘
FAIRLIE STREET, to alley, 20x40.
65x100, CAN he leased for 99 years, in the very center of the best
part of Forsyth development, within 200 feet of the Candler build
ing.
$130,000 —SKYSCRAPER, now paying 17 per cent gross; $38,000
cash, and it can be bought to finish paying for itself. The prop
erty in five years will be worth $200,000.
A DOUBLE opportunity, between the Peachtrees, paying 8 per cent
net, with $5,000 expenditure, will pay 10 per cent.
TWO STORES on Decatur street, at S9OO per foot. Property along
side sold for $l,lOO last year at auction.
A DANDY HOME on Euclid avenue. Inman Park, just nearing com
pletion. Two-story, 8-roomhome, hardwood floors, furnace,
bath, stucco finish. Ladies’ Home Journal cottage plan. This cot
tage is built on good lot and for quick sale will take $5,750. This
place is well worth $6,500, and there is nothing near it so reasonable.
FOR INVESTORS.
WE HAVE a splendid tract of 16 acres of land in the best and fast
est-growing part of the West Side, for subdivision; also five
houses. This office is equipped to subdivide, manage and sell for
you this tract. This land is on a good car line, with all modern im
provements, and is easily worth $20,000, and is enough to make you
a small fortune.
A TRACT of 6 acres of land, partly subdivided, in a good part of
the city. This is worthy of your attention for $14,000. This
can be handled quickly with a good profit.
ANSLEY PARK.
WE WANT the public to know that this office has been very busy
showing lots in Ansley Park during this week. The conserva
tive home builder has realized that nowhere in the United States is
there such exclusiveness and such protection in a hundred ways as
here. This place is a standard not only throughout Atlanta, but the
entire South for home sites. It is picturesque, beyond comparison.
The winding roads and well-planned subdivision of the land makes
possible any type of building, from the California stucco Hacienda
to the Italian Villa, and they are here, too. We also have a few
more well-appointed plats. Call to see us and we can easily con
vince you that you can not afford to build elsewhere.
$3,250.00 —THREE of them. Terms too easy to talk about. West
End, in the very best section. Good neighbors, close to schools,
churches. These prices do not prevail in other old established
neighborhoods.
S3,7OO.OO—JUST off of Moreland avenue, not far from Druid Hills.
This is a new section where probably 3,000 people have moved
into within the last twelve months. It must be good.
$1,300 —FIVE vacant lots on Forrest avenue, close to Highland ave
nue. Some good builder can double his money on these. Our
client has commissioned us to sell quick and when the street car ser
vice, water, sewer, chert and other conveniences are considered, we
know they are cheap. We will build on them for you, and let you
plan your own home!
RIDGEWOOD avenue is a great thoroughfare. In its best residence
section we have six or eight houses within a radius of 300 yards,
ranging in price from $5,500 to $12,000. Any one paying rent can
afford to buy. One of these can be had if taken quick at $2,000 less
than cost. . Car service, social life and all conveniences equal to
Atlanta’s best sections.
WE HAVE CUSTOMERS FOR THE FOLLOWING PROPERTY
IN WEST END:
8-ROOM HOUSE (must be modern) large lot and good shade, on or
near car line.
6-ROOM bungalow on car line for $4,250.
6 ROOMS and sleeping porch, $3,800 to $4,500.
A GOOD building lot wanted, 50 to 70 feet front, 160 to 200 feet
deep, for not more than $2,350, in best section.
WANTED FOR CUSTOMER.
IN GRANT PARK section, or near the park, 2 good bouses on Geor
gia avenue; will consider any good proposition; 6 to 8 rooms;
must be reasonable.
PONCE DE LEON AVENUE.
$8,500 TO $19,000 —The best residences abviously can not be adver
tised by name while the owners live in them. This is Atlanta ’s
favorite avenue. We have covered it thoroughly and can offer you
one of the best paying apartments in Atlanta for something close to
$15,000, and a residence with 10 rooms, new and with every conve
nience, for SIB,BOO. Will trade or sell on any reasonable terms.
BEYOND the Baseball Park we have lots and lots and lots, to say
nothing of those stylish residences ranging from $8,500 to $12,-
000, and anything we are offering will bear the closest investigation.
TENTH STREET.
BETWEEN SPRING street and Williams, for $6,000; six rooms,
tile porch, drop beam ceiling and every little attractive feature
that you could expect. We have the keys and will be glad to show
you this place.
EXCHANGE OR SALE—29 1-2 acres, just 1 1-2 miles south of East
Lake. This is a fine little farm for trucking, dairy or chickens;
$l5O per acre; terms.
EXCHANGE OR SALE—SS acres near Peachtree road, entrance at
Brookhaven club; S3OO per acre.
2-STORY, modern house in the center of Exist Atlanta; all street
improvements down; price $3,500.
HAVE a good piece of income property on Woodward avenue,
worth $1,700, that we can swap for vacant lots, negro property,
and if pressed our client would accept cash.
Edwin P. Ansley
REALTY TRUST BUILDING.
PHONE 1600 M. SECOND FLOOR.
Real Estate For Sale.
j AMERICAN MARKETS
CLOSED FOR TODAY’S
NATIONAL ELECTION
I This being presidential election day, the 1
New York and New Orleans cotton ex
changes, New York stock exchange. Chi
cago board of trade, New York coffee
I exchange and cotton seed oil exchange.
I and all other American markets, were
. closed to business. All American ex
• changes will reopen tomorrow.
The Liverpool cotton exchange remained
open for the usual business.
ATLANTA MARKETS]
—J i
EGGS—Fresh country, candled, 25@26c. :
BUTTER Jersey and creamery, in J-Ib. ;
blocks, 25(ii27%c; fresn country, dull. 15<&> |
choice $1.2501.50 per crate: beets, $1.50© j
I 2 per barrel; cucumbers, 75c®$l per crate; !
Irish potatoes, slOl.lO
Egg plants, $203.50 per crate, pepper, I
$lO 1.25 per crate; tomatoes, fancy, six-!
basket crates. $101.25; choice tomatoes,
$1 7544 2,2 ft; pineapples. 824(2.25 per crate;
onions, 75c4(5l per bushel; sweet pota
toes, pumpkin yam, 650 75c per bushel.
PROVISION MARKET.
(Corrected by White Provision Company.)
$44( 4.50 per box; bananas, 30 3%c per
pound; cabbage. $1,260'1-50 pound; pea
nuts, per pound, fancy Virginia 6%07c,
choice, 5% 06c; beans, round green," 250)
50c per crate; squash, yellow, six-basket
crate. $lO 1.25, lettuce, fancy, $1.2501.50;
17%c.
DRESSED POULTRY—Drawn, head
and feet on. per pound: Hens. 180 19c;
fries, 25027%c; roosters, 8010 c; turkeys,
owing to fatness, 20®22%c.
LIVE POULTRY—Hens, 45050 c; roost
ers, 25035 c; fries, 250 35c; broilers. 20 0)
25c; puddle ducks, 25030 c; Pekin ducks,
35040 c; geese, 50060 c each; turkevs. ow
ing to fatness. 15018 c
fruits And produce.
FRUIT AND VEGETABLES -Lemons,
fancy, $6.500 7 per box; California orange ,
Cornfield hams, 10 to 12 pounds average,
17He.
Cornfield hams, 12 to 14 pounds average, '
1714 c.
Cornfield skinned hams, 16 to 18 pounds !
average. 18c.
Cornfield pickled pig's feet, 15 pound
kits. $1.25.
Cornfield jellied meat In 10-pound dinner
pail, 12%c.
Cornfield picnic hams, 6 to 8 pounds av
erage, 13%c.
Cornfield breakfast bacon, 24c.
Grocer style bacon (wide or narrow),
184 c.
Cornfield fresh pork sausage (link or
bulk) 25-pound buckets, 12lie.
Cornfield frankfurters, 10-pound buck
ets, average, 1.2 c.
Cornfield bologna sausage, 25-pound
boxes. 11c.
Cornfield luncheon hams. 25-pound
boxes. 14c.
Cornfield smoked link sausage, 25-
pound boxes. 10c.
Cornfield smoked link sausage in pickle,
50-pound cans. $5.
Cornfield frankfurters in pickle. 15-
pound kits, $1.75.
Cornfield pure lard, tierce basis, 12%c.
Country style pure lard, 50-pound tins,
1214 c.
Compound lard (tierce basis), 9%c.
D. S. extra ribs, 12c.
D. S. rib bellies, medium average, 12%c.
D. S. bellies, light average. 13c.
FLOUR AND GRAIN.
FLOUR--Postell's Elegant, $7.50; Ome
ga. $7.50; Gloria (self-rising), $6.40; Vic
tory (finest patent). $6.50: Diamond (pat
ent), $6.75: Monogram, $6; Golden Grain,
$5.50; Faultless, finest. $6.25; Home Queen
(highest patent), $5.85; Puritan (highest
patent). $5.85; Paragon (highest patent).
$5.85; Sun Rise (half fiatent). $5.40: White
Cloud (highest patent). $5.65; White Lily
(high patent). $5.65; White Daisy, $5.65;
Sunbeam, $5.35; Southern Star (patent),
$540; Ocean Spray (patent). $5.40; Tulip
(straight), $4.25; King Cotton (half pat
ent), $; low grade, 98-lb sacks, $4.00.
CORN—White, new crop, 85c; cracked,
90c; yellow, old crop, '.toe.
MEAL —Plain 144-pound sacks. 87c; 96-
pound sacks; 48-pound sacks. 90c: 24-
pound sacks. 92c; I2lpwund sacks, 94c.
OATS—Fancy clipped, 52c: No. 2 clipped
51c; fancy white, 50c; No 2 white, 49c;
No. 2 mixed 48c; Texas rust proof, 65c;
Oklahoma rust proof, 60c; Appier, 75c;
winter grazing. 75c.
COTTON SEED MEAL—Harper, $27;
prime. $27.00.
COTTON SEED HULLS—Square sacks,
$9 |>er ton.
SEEDS —(Sacked): Wheat. Tennessee
blue stem, $1.60; German millet. $1.65; am
ber cane seed, $1.65; cane seed, orange,
$1.50; rye (Tennessee), $1.25; red top cane
seed. $1.35; rye (Georgia), $1.35; red rust
proof oats, 72c; Bert oats, 75c; blue seed
oats, 50c; barley, $1.25.
HAY —Per hundredweight: Timothy,
choice, large bales, $1.40: No. 1 small.
$1.25; No. 2 small. $1.20; alfalfa bay. choice
peagreen. $1.30; alfalfa No. 1 $1.30; wheat
straw, 70c; Bermuda hay. 85c.
FEEDSTUFF.
SHORTS—White lOQ-lb. sucks. $2; Hol
liday white. 100-lb. sacks. $1.95; dandy
middling. 100-lb. sacks. $1.95; fancy 75-lb.
sack, $1.90; P. W.. 75-lb. sacks, $1.75;
brown, 100-lb. sacks, $1.70; Georgia feed,
75-lb. sacks, $1.75; bran. 75-lb. sacks
$1.40; 100-lb. sacks. *1.40: Homecloine,
$1.70: Germ meal. $1.70; sugar beet pulp,
100-lb. sacks, $1.50; 75-lb. sacks. $1.50
CHICKEN FEED—Beef scraps, 50-lb.
sacks, $3.50; 100-lb. sacks, $3.25; Victory
pigeon feed. $2.35; Purina scratch, 100-lb
sacks. $2.10; Victory baby chick. $2.30;
Purina chowder, dozen pound packages
$2.45; Purina chowder. 100-lb. sacks. $2.25;
Eggo, $2.10; Victory scratch. 100-lb. sacks,
$2.10: Victory Scratch, 50-lb. saqks, $2.20;
wheat, 2-bushel bags, per bushel, $1.40;
oyster shell, 80c.
GROUND FEED—Purina feed. 100-lb.
sacks, $1.85; 175-!b. sacks, $1.85: Purina
molasses feed, $1.80; Arab feed. $1.80;
Allneeda feed, $1.65; Sucrene dairy feed,
$1.60; I’niversal horse meal. $1.30; velvet
feed. $1.50; Monogram, 100-lb. sacks, $1.80;
Victory horse feed, 100-lb. sacks, *1.70;
Mllko dairy feed, $1.70; No. 2, $1.75; al
falfa molasses meal, $1.75; alfalfa meal.
$1.50.
GROCERIES.
SUGAR—Per pound, standard granu
late'!, 614; New York refined, sc; planta
tion, 6c.
COFFEE-Roasted (Arbuckle's). $25;
AAAA, $14.50 in bulk; in bags and bar
rels, s2l; green, 20c.
RlCE—Head, 4%0’5%c: fancy head, 5%
0 6%c. according to grade.
LARD—Silver leaf, 13%c per pound; |
Scoco, 9c per pound; Flake White, lie per
pound: Cottolene, $7.20 per case; Snow
drift. $6 per case.
CHEESE— Fancy full cream, 21c.
SARDINES—Mustard, *3 per case; one
quarter oil. $3
MISCELLANEOUS Georgia cane syr
up, 38c; axle grease. $1.75; soda crackers,
7%c per pound; lemon crackers, 8c; oys
ter. 7c; tomatoes (2 pounds), $1.65 case;
(3 pounds), $2.25; navy beans, $3.25; Lima
beans, 714 c; shredded biscuit, $3.60; rolled
oats, $3.90 per case; grits (bags), $2.40: I
pink salmon, $3.75 per case; |>epper. 18c I
per pound; R. E. Lee salmon, $7.50; cocoa, '
38c; roast beef, $3.80; syrup. 30c per gal
lon; Sterling ball potash. $3.30 per case;
soap. $1.50w4.00 per case; Rumford bak
ing powder. $2.50 per case.
SALT—One hundred pounds, 52c: salt
brick (plain), per case. $2.25; salt brick
(medicated), per case, $4.85: salt, red
rock, per cwt., *1.00; salt, white, per cwt ,
90c; Granacrystal, case, 25-lb. sacks. 75c;
salt ozone, per case, 30 packages, 90c; 50-
lb. sacks. 30c; 25-lb. sacks. 18c.
N. Y. COMMERCIAL SAYS
14,038,000 BALES COTTON
WILL BEYIELD 0F1912-13;
NEW YORK, Nov. 4.—ln a special re- 1
port issued this morning The New York I
Commercial estimates the crop of 1912-1
13 at 14,038,000 bales, exclusive of linters I
and re-packs. The following table shows ;
th report by states and the amount pre
dicted:
Estimate
STATES— crop '
I 1912-13. 1
Georgia i,BOO,O<M)'
Alabama ' 1,200.000 |
Arkansas 1 (80,000
Florida 68,000
South Carolina l,200.0()0
North Carolina 870.000
Mississippi ! 1,500,000
Louisiana j 4 30,000
Tennessee 420.000
Texas 4,76< , .<:i (j
All others 60,00
Total crop estimate 14.038.(>()-.
FOREIGN REPORT
BOOSTS GOHON
NEW YORK, Nov. 4. There was an ex
cited opening of the cotton market todav
when a sharp upturn carried prices 5 to
23 points above Friday’s dosing. Sensa
tional cables which at one time were fully
20 points higher than due. and killing
frosts in the eastern belt were the factors
which resulted in the rise. It was re
ported by crop experts here that the ris
ing tmperatures scheduled to follow pres
ent cold snap would add to the injury to
the crop.
The substantial upturn at the outset
today was met with some resistance from
many different sources by the many
cables which were sent to Liverpool re
porting freezing weather. Os course this
combined with optimistic war news had
a very stimulating effect, which encour
aged the scattered longs to realize, and
the selling became rather heavy, result
ing in a net loss of about 9 to 10 points
generally from the opening. There was
no market evidence of the larger spot
houses taking profit; instead, they read
ily absorbed most of the offerings. How
ever. a few of their brokers were sellers
at the opening.
During the afternoon trading there was
a good buying wave with the larger ring
speculators and spot brokers leading the
aggressive movement and prices regained
the early decline and throughout the late
trading continued to sag about the initial
figures. This support was chiefly influ
enced by the holiday tomorrow' on account
of election day.
At the close the market was firm with
a net gain in prices of 20 to 27 points
from the final quotations of Friday.
RANGE. OF NF'ZV YORK FtlTUrtgS.
c w S w® E J?
** ~ O (4 Au. 2
OX U J(J 5 u (L U
Nov. 11 1 ! ‘FI ..30-3211L07~2
Dee. 11.50 1.1.55 11.11 11.52 11.52-53 11.32-34
Jan. 11.61.11.63’11.50,11.60 11.59-60(11.38-10
Fob. 11.6 C 11.66 11.66 11.66 1 1.68-70'11.47-49
Meh. Tl.fi" 11.8041.61 11.80 11.78-79 11.57-58
May 11.65,11.81 11.65‘11.82! 11.82-84 11.58-60
June | | 111.84-86111.60-62
July 111.77 11.89)11.75111.87111.87-89(11.63-64
Aug. 1 1.72 11 83 11.72 11.82 1 1.82-84 1 1.55-57
Sept. I • 11.50-55 11.30-35
Oct. 111.4141.4! 11.384 1.38 11.47-50(11.25-30
Closed firm.
RANGE IN NEW ORLEANS FUTURES.
CX.' ® < ®
4 I to « »2 i % ®'2
r 7— L F
* •-< ’Ji I C.-' •—• L'
Nov. I 1 11.80-82 11.4 l-.|(;
Dec. (11.73 11.87 11.69111.82(1 1.82-83 11.45-46
Jan. 41.74(11.86T 1.69(11.84 11.84-85: J 1.17-48
Feb 11.86-88(11.49-51
Meh ;i.2.03 12.0111.88 12.04 12.03-04 1 1.65-66
April ■ 12.05-07(11.67-69
May (12.03'12.15 12.00 12.14 12.14-15 11.76-77
•lune 1 ' 1 (12.16-19111.78-79
July 12.17 1 2.23 12.10 I 2.23 12.23-24 11.86-87
dosed firm.
RANGE IN LIVERPOOL FUTURES.
Futures opened firm.
Range. 2 P SJ. Close. Prev
Opening Prev.
Nov. . . . 6.55 -6.56 6.57 6.5014 6.35
Nov.-Dec. 6.45 -('>.46 6.45 6.39 6.33*4
Dee.-Jan. 6.41 -6.44'4 6.45 6.38',4 6.3214
• lan.-Feb. 6.40 -6.45 6.42 6.38'4 6.33
Feb.-Meh. 6.42 -6.45'4 6.44 6.39’4 6,33'..'.
Meh.-Apr. 6.42 -6.45 6.43 6.39 " 6.34
Apr.-May 6.4114-6.46 6.3914 6.34'4
May-.lune 6.43 -6.45'4 6.4 1 6.40 6.35 "
June-July 6.45 -6.4514 6.44 6.39'A 635
July-Aug. 6.41 -6.43 6.11'4 6.386.33'.,
Aug.-Sept 6.34 -6.33 6.34'4 6.29 6.2514
Sept.-Oct. 6.22 -6.23
Closed feverish.
SPOT COTTON MARKET.
Atlanta, steady; middling ll"».
Athens, steady; middling 12’ H
Macon, steady: middling 11
New Orleans, firm; middling 11'j 8 .
New York, quiet; middling 11.1'0.
Boston, quiet: middling 11.1)0.
Philadelphia, quiet: middling 12.10.
Liverpool, firm; middling 6.63 d.
Augusta, steady; middling I2e.
Savannah, quiet: middling 11 11-16.
Mobile, quiet; middling 11 1-16.
Norfolk, firm; middling 11 3 ,.
Calveston, firm: middling 11
Charleston, steady’ middling 117-16.
Wilmington, steady; middling 11 .
Little Rock, steady: middling H-“ K .
Baltimore, nominal; middlingll l .,
Memphis, steady; middling 11'4.
St. Louis, steady; middling lUj.
Houston, steady: middling 11 11-16.
Louisville, firm; middling 1014.
NEW YORK GROCERIES.
NEW YORK. Nov. 4. Coffee dull: No.
7 Rio spot 15. Rice steady; domestic
ordinary to prime 4L,®s\<. Molasses
steady; New Orleans open kettle 364(50.
Sugar raw quiet; centrifugal 4.05. musco
vado 3.55. molasses sugar 3.30. refined
quiet: standard granulated 4.95, cut loaf
5.70, crushed 5.60, mold A 5.25, cubes 5.15.
powdered 5.00, diamond A 4.90. confec
tioners A 4.75. No. 1 4.65, No. 2 4.60. .No.
3 4.55, No. 4 4.50
Real Estate For Sale.
$1,600, $2,250,, $2,750 Homes
$1,600 —A four-room house, in the city; convenient to car line: no loan. Lot 5J by
160. Would take 10 to 15 acres not more than two miles from car line, in
part payment.
$2,250 —Five rooms and bath, right where things are humming This is bargain.
$2,750 —-Five rooms, barn and shed; ’arg e enough for livery; fine garden; new cy
press roof. No loan. A real home.
MERCER W. GILMER
NO. 8 AUBURN AVENUE.
|j • —i r» i l < i ! * |
ESTABLISHED 1861
Lowry National Bank
OF ATLANTA
Capital and Surplus . . . $2,000,000.00
Undivided Profits .... 224,000.00
1 here are many wavs in whieh yon can profit
by associating yourself with a bank of such great
strength and up-to-date facilities. There are a
■ DOZEN ways whieh you, perhaps, have never
thought of, that we can be of great benefit Io
you.
Your account, however small, will be greatly
welcome.
Safe Deposit Boxes, $2.50 a Year and Up.
ROBERT J. LOWRY, HENRY W DAVIS,
“ President. Cashier. I—
THOMAS D. MEADOR, E. A. BANCKER, JR., ["
Vice President. Asst. Cashier.
JOSEPH T. ORME, H. WARMER MARTIN,
Vice President. Asst. Cashier.
DIRECTORS:
Thos. J. Avery. Jonn E. Murphy, Frederic J. Paxon,
Thomas Egleston, Thos. D. Meador, William G. Rauil,
Samuel M. Inman, J. H. Nunnally. Mell R. Wilkinson,
Robert J. Lowry, Joseph T. Orme. Ernest Woodruff. f—
i-—1 === r-Jl^^F===J— ir==o
LIGHT TRADING
DN ELECTION EVE
By CHARLES W. STORM.
NEW YORK, Nov. 4. —There was little
speculative interest in trading at the
opening of the stock market today and the
tone was heavy. Many stocks were off,
Canadian Pacific making the biggest de
cline with a drop of U 4 from Friday's
closing. Among the other declines were
United States Steel common 's, to *s,
Amalgamated Copper ■'(„. Baltimore and
Ohio ', R . Reading ', 4 , Union Pacific Vs to
14- Southern Pacific 14-
Erie common was up 14 while Atchison
gained L. Missouri Pacific unchanged.
T he three chief factors were uncertainty
over the election tomorrow, the possibility
that the United States supreme court
would hand down decisions in the hard
coal trust cases and the Union Pacific
merger case and the Balkan situation.
European markets were nervous over the
Balkan outlook.
A waiting tendency was displayed this
forenoon, possible decisions by the United
States supreme court in the Union Pa
cific merger and anthracite coal cases
was the topic of discussion among room
traders. Price movements in most, cases
were in the shape of declines. Canadian
Pacific was under pressure, declining
more than a point, and a similar loss
was noted in American Beet Sugar.
Fractional losses were recorded in the
1 opper shares. Southern Pacific. Read
ing ami Union Pacific. There was evi
dence of quiet accumulation in Chesa
peake and Ohio, which moved up %. in
terboro Metropolitan was strong, advanc
ing •%.
Stock quotations:
I I |Last | Clos.|Prev
STOCKS— iHighiLow.iSate.i BidoCl
Amal. Copper. 83 ■„
Am. ice bee.. I ...., | 2t)
Am Sug. Kef.(l22 118',
Am. Smelting 1 82' s , 81-, 82‘ 2 8214 iB3
Am. Lo.'otno. .| 44'41 44
Am. (Jar 9dy..| 59%| 59 , 59-. 2 ; 5: % sb -r
Am. Cot. Oil ,j 5( , 564*. 5, bt>- 4 : ab'4
Am. \\ oolen ~| ~..., 26 | 27
Anaconua .... -'b's: 42t 43‘a,.1174 i2 7 4i 4
Atchison 16, h 10t,:,, 10. -s ft;, : b; C'u'.i,
A. C. L 14u jl3t'' 2 ,140 (139 [lbbt-fc
American Can | 39 7 s ; 38f 2 . 39%i a; '4 •>»
do, peel. .. i .... L_ / 2 ,Ut»”»
Am. Beet Sug. 61 62' s ; 63U. 63
Am. T. and r.|143 14_, 4 .14;i tl.'/ 2 ;11254
Am. Agrlcul. .( ....| ....j .... 5,-/j sis<>
Beth. Steel 15'4, 44 , 44*4 44'j 4a- t
B- R. 1 89'4. 89s*i 89‘/<| 89t*
H. and O. ~,.111 ilis: 106 .05141'106
('an. t'acilic . 2 -iv-;* -•>- -ol •■J.i.oSU
Corn Broducts 1 1< o* 16‘41 11'1 . ...| 17
C. and 0 81 '/ s i 81‘nj 81si «1%1 81'»
Consol, ((as . . 11'1 4 144‘i in , I ■(» •, It.;-*
Cen. Leather . Jl'/s 31 | 31 31 '-r. 31‘4
( oio, I*. and 1. ',2 ■ at) 1 2 1 35141 36 36
Com. Southern j ....; 39 | 38
D. and It .lob-* 108', 2 ,8>8' /2 iltt' /2 1081".
Den. and R. G.| 21141 31 | 21 , 21 , 20v*
Distil. Secur. . .1 26'4 2< 2'l I 2o‘ 2
Erie | 34161 ‘<6'4 3414 34%i
do, pref. 1 r 521a ■ ■ r •> I*4 ( 5< ,2
Gen. Electric ..181 , 18. IS 1.180 is 180
Goldfield Cons. 2-J 2’, 2 241 21s| 2'4
G. Western . . 19 1 19 18 4! 19
G. North., pfd.|l39 1304.139 138'4|13i1 2
G. North, ore. 17 1 47 | 47 ( 46)4, 4614
mt. Harvester ...,l . ...1 .... I2()“t,. 120 ‘.. t
HI. Central . 129 121' (129 128141128)4
Interboro ~..| 20'ri 19%. 2014 i 20'4'1 19%
do, pref. .. 65' + . 64 .2 o.i'r 64%! 64'%
K. (’. Southern; 28% 28% 2’S j 28
K. and T j 28%, 28% 28’41 27%' 27%
do. pref. ....! ....; ..... 62‘*i 62%
L. Valley. . . 173% 172% 1 74' 2 174 * 2 i l'i3%
L. and N. . .:158 156-4 ,158 158 1157%
Mo. Pacific . . 12%: 42*,t| 12% 14'41 42%
N. Y. Centrapl 14-:, 114% 11.41 IO*,;114
Northwest. . | ....| ..." 139 |l3B
Nat. Lead . . 63 62%| 63 63 I 63%
N. and W. . . 115' 8 :114%; 115% 115 (114%
No. Pacific . . 125% 124 .125',; 125 |124
O. and W | .... 34%| 35*4
I'enn. . x. 122% 122% 122 %! 122%|124
I'aeillc Mall . 33 33 | 33 | 32%| 32%
P. Steel Car ,[ ... ,| ... ,| ... .1 38 138
Reading. . . .(171 169% 170% 170%‘1',0%
Rock island . 26 26 26 | 25%l 25%
do. pfd.. . . 50 1 50 ,50 j 49%i 49%
R. I. and Steel, 31 31 | 31. 31 | 31%
do. pfd.. . . 92% 92% 92% 92%l 92%
S. -Sheffield. .. 54 54 54 | 54 . 54
So. Pacific. ,]UO% 109'i 110% 110 110
So. Runway . . 29 :J9%| 29%' 29% 29%
do. pfd . . . 81% 81 , 81% 81'41 81%
St. Paul. . . . 11l 109%111l 111 109%
Tenn Copper . ... 40%; 40%
Texas Pacific . 25 25 |25 i 24%, 24%
Third Avenue 37%i 37%
Union Pacific . 170% 169% IW% 170 169%
U. s. Rubber .! 51 51 ; 51 : 51% : 51%
Utah Copper . 62% 62%l 62'41 62 ; 62%
U. S. Steel . . 76% <4%' 76 I 75%. 75%
do. pf.l. . XX 1 12% 112% 112% 112% 11 i%
V. ('hem. . 47%‘ 47'); 47'4! 46%; 4>%
West. Union .78 78 78 77% 78
Wabash I 4%; 4%
do. pfd.. . . 15 I 15 I 15 14%: 14%
W. Electric .. 82 81% 81%: 81 %| 81%
W. Maryland .... ....; ....I 54%l 54%
Total sales. 335,700 shares, x Ex-divi
dend, 1% per cent, xx—Ex-dividend,
1% per cent.
Every desirable room, apartment, house,
looms for light housekeeping, business
locations, garages, stores that are for
rent in Atlanta and surroundings can be
found in "The Georgian’s Rent Bulletin”
on the Want Ad pages.
Real Estate For Sale
15