Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 05, 1912, HOME, Image 15

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Seal Estate For Sale. EAST LAKE ROAD AT THE southwest corner of East Lake road and Tupelo street we have a lot 200x372 for $3,250. It is a beautiful building site, just three blocks from en trance to Country club. The lot runs away baek into an oak zrove; sewers and water can be obtained. It would be the stroke of wisdom for someone to buy this for ,< home and have a house sitting back 10(1 feet off the road. FORREST & GEORGE ADAIR FOR SALE IN DECATUR, GA., we have a new six-room bunga low on a lot 50x206. Servant’s room, sleeping porch, bath, sewer, electric lights, stone front, hard wood floors in three rooms. Close to public school and in walking distance of Agnes Scott college. Price $4,000 on terms. Empire Trust and Safe Deposit Co. EMPIRE BUILDING. WILLIAMS-HARTSOCK CO REAL ESTATE AND BUILDERS. FOURTH NATIONAL BANK BUILDING. Phon* 3106 Maia. • BARGAIN THAT IS UNUSUAL—A good piece of white renting property, rented all the time. Will pay you 14 per cent on the price, which la $4,750; terms SBSO cash, balance $35 per month. Might consider exchange for good north side vacant lot. Can also shave price a bit on larger cash payment. BEAUTIFUL east front vacant lot, Druid Hills section; 50 by 175 feet; price $2,- 000. Will sell this on your own terms. NORTH AVENUE, eJose to Highland, a beautiful vacant lot, for only $2,000. Terms SSOO cash, balance $25 per month. Get busy on this. HAVE A GOOP north side lot to trade in on good piece of renting propertv. Ask for Mr. 'Williams. NOTICE—EAST LAKE LOT OWNERS. WE HAVE A CLIENT that will exchange a beautiful two-story house, all conveniences, in good section, for vacant East I-ake lot. See us quick. ATLANTA SUBURBAN AND REALTY CO. 31 INMAN BUILDING. MAIN 11053. New Six-Room Bungalow—s3,2so JUST completing a beautiful 6-room bungalow, with all conveniences; city water, electric lights, stone front and foundation; beautiful man tels; nice, large bath; sleeping room; on a nice, large lot. You can buy this for small cash payment, balance like rent, with loan or without loan. J. R. McADAMS Phones: M. 4245-J; Atlanta 6027-M. Ormewoo d Park. s9.ooo—West Peachtree home; nine rooms; brick veneer; hardwood floors; fur nace; cement driveway. This is one of the best built homes you ever'looked over. You will have to see it to appreciate what it is. Can arrange terms. $9,000 : —Ponce DeLeon avenue home: eight rooms, hardwood floors, birch doors, beam ceiling, furnace and sleeping porch. Large lot. Cement driveway, gar age and servant’s room. This Is a beauty. Can arrange terms. ' Call us Up. We will show you a real home. $5,500 —West End bungalow, on Gordon street; six large, pretty rooms, hardwood floors, beam ceiling and furnace. Something classy. On corner lot. SSOO cash: balance easy. ss,ooo—Bungalow; six rooms; modern and pretty new, with beam ceiling, tile bath, hardwood floors, stone Columns and foundation, on a beautiful lot; dose to Druid Hills, one-half block of car line. SSOO cash; balance to suit vou. MARTIN-OZBURN REALTY CO. Third National Bank Building. Phones: Ivy £276, Atlanta 208. 7-r House, Just off Highland Av., for $3,250. Will Rent for $25.00 month. All improvements. lot 50x200. A 2-room house in rear. $250 cash, balance $-2.00 per month. ATLANTA DEVELOPMENT CO. 609-13 THIRD NATIONAL BANK BLDG. PHONE 2181 IVY sioo Cash, Balance $12.50 Per Month ON WEST TENTH STREET we offer a four -1-00111 house for $1,250 on the above terms. HARPER REALTY COMPANY 717 Third National Hank Building. Bell Phone Ivy 4286. Atlanta Phone 672. DILLIN-MORRIS CO. 608-10 Atlanta National Bank Bldg. Both Phones 4234. SI,OOO WILL BUY a good little three-room house near Capitol , avenue ;on good size lot; rents for $8 per month. Terms: SSO cash and $lO per month. $2.000 —-CLOSE IN on Pulliam street, we have six-room cottage we are offering at a bargain. Don't fail to see this. Terms. Cofield Investment Co. 605 EMPIRE BUILDING. TELEPHONE MAIN 2224. FOR SALE—BEAUTIFUL ELEVATED. SHADED LOT SI,OOO. IN THE ADAIR SUBDIVSON, on Stewart avenue, on one of the cross streets just 450 feet from a ear line, we have a beautiful elevated, shaded lot. Size 50x200 feet. The sidewalks arc down; streets paved; water, sewer and gas are accessible. This lot is surrounded by beautiful homes, and is one of the most desirable in the subdivision. Can make terms. GEORGIAN WANT ADS BRING RESULTS Real Estate For Sale. THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. TUESDAY. NOVEMBER 5, 1912. PROPERTY TRANSFERS. Warranty Deed*. s3,ooo—Mrs. Lula S. Nisbet to J. T. Kim brough, lot 50 by 200 feet, west side Jack son street, 163 feet north of Highland avenue. To correct former deed. No vember 2. S9OO—M. L. Thrower to Carrie B. Pitt man, lot 30 by 100 feet, east side Ran dolph street. 40 feet north of Gospero street. November 4. SIO,OO0 —Wilkes M. Terry to Mrs. Mary G. Gardlen, 349 and 351 Edgew'ood ave nue. 42 by 142 feet. November 1. SBO0 —John C. Shannon to Phenix In vestment Company, lot 50 by 195 feet, north side Dill avenue, 100 feet east of Elm street. July 5. SI,OO0 —W. T. Dunn to Northeastern Se curities Company, lot 7 by 300 feet, east side Union avenue, 243 feet south of Chestnut street. November 1. $1.266—H. B. Longino et al. to City of College Park, lot 90 by 190 feet, north side Columbia avenue. 100 feet west of Atlanta boulevard. March 15, 1911. SI,OO0 —Atlanta Real Estate Company to Frank Adair, lot 50 by 174 feet, north east corner Elbert street and Maryland avenue. October 11. $4,750 —A. A. Pearson and J. C. Jones to Pearson-Jones Lumber Company, half Interest In lots 4 and 5 of Pearson-Jones sub-division; also two-thirds interest in lot in Kirkwood, on west side Fair street, 310 feet east of Douglas street, 300 by 229. August 3, 1911. SI,OO0 —H. A. Dennard to Fulton Finance Company, 157 Cameron street, 60 by 160 feet. November 4. $4,500 —Mrs. Elisabeth Nairn to E. F. Adams, lot 54 by 200 feet, northwest cor ner South Boulevard and Berne street. June 11, 1909. S3,OOO—A. D. Thompson and Carlos Lynes to Mrs. M. E. Marsh, lot 47 by 107 feet, north side East avenue, 200 feet west of Randolph street. May 21, 1910. S6OO—D. N. Williams to Columbus and Callie Johnson, lots 95 to 110 Inclusive, of Peachtree park; land lots 45 by 9, Sev enteenth district. March 4. 1911. s6oo—Mrs. Ida G. Little to Will S. Ea kin, lot 57 by 170 feet, east side Hill street, 57 feet north of Nolan street. No vember 1. SI,OO0 —Thomas A. Holbrook to J. A. Stamps, lot 50 by 85 feet, east side Cur ran street, 577 feet north of West Tenth street. November 4. $1.375 —Thomas J. Wesley to James R. Ellis, 50 Richmond street, 56 by 60 feet. November 2. $1,500 —David Monroe Mathews to Leon C. Mathews, lot 50 by 120 feet, east side Lucy street, 336 feet north of Deca tur street; also strip 50 by 11 feet, west side of an alley, being part of land deeded by M. R. Hopkins to H. H. Cary. September 24. $354 —C. G. Hannah and John S. Owens to F. J. Cooledge, Jr., and H. N. Cool edge. lot 27 by 101 feet, northwest side Marietta place, 90 feet northeast of Ma rietta street. October 28. $525 —Mrs. Eva B. Williams to Mrs. H. L. Farrington, 562 Martin street, 42 by 150 feet. October 23. Deeds to Secure Loan. ss4s—Mrs. Sallie McAdams to John H. Boston, Jr., lot 50 by 150 feet, west side county line road, 150 feet north of Dooley avenue. October 31. $1,350 —J. T. Stewart to John A. Bailey, lot 150 by 168 feet, north side Cambridge avenue, 75 feet west of Lee street. No vember 5. S9O0 —Daniel S. Walraven to N. C. Mc- Pherson. lot 37 by 91 feet, east side Plum street, 50 feet south of North avenue. November 1. x Loan Deeds. SI,OO0 —L. C, Mathews to Mrs. M. L. Stranahan, guardian, 25 Lucy street, 50 by 120 feet. October 31. SI,OO0 —C. C. Gillett to Seymour Sam uels. 223 Howell street, 61 by 106 feet. November 4. $1 000—Werner M. Jeffries to Mrs. M. L. Price, lot 130 by 380 feet, on old Ma rietta road, at M. M. Walker's land; also lot 130 front and running baek to right-of-way of Atlanta-Northern Railway Company, adjoining above tract. Novem ber 2. $1,200 —W. L. Harris to Mrs. Ruth Y. Starr, lot 43 by 130 feet, west side Hill street. 86 feet south of Glenn street. No vember 1. $635 —A. J. Brookins to Smith at Simp son Lumber Company, 7 acres on road running from Garrets Bridge road tn Sandtown road; land lots 204 and 181: Fourteenth district. October 21. sl,soo—Frank Adair to Amelia P. Stur geon, lot 50 by 176 feet, northeast corner Elbert street and Mayland avenue. No vember ;.. ' sl.7so—Miss Katie W. Jones and J. H. Pearce to Third National bank, lot 22:> by 254 feet, north side Fair street, 360 feet east of Douglas street; also lot 100 by 195 feet, east side Washington street, south of Oxford avenue; also lot 195 by 200 feet, west side Jefferson street. 160 feet from Oxford avenue: also lot 50 by 195 feet, west side Jefferson street, 410 feet south of Oxford avenue; also lot 50 by 155 feet, east side Jefferson street, 300 feet south of Oxford avenue. October 28. $2,200 —JoSeph H. Dyar to Dickinson Trust Company, 164 Crew street. No vember 4. $2,500 —Neal Meier to Charles C. Harri son. lot 50 by 125 feet, north side Fifth street, 357 feet west of North Jackson street. October 10. $1.500 —J. T. Kimbrough to Alvin May er, lot 50 by 200 feet, west side Jackson street, 163 feet north of Highland avenue. November 1. s4oo—Carrie B. Pittman to Mrs. Ray Hirsch, lot 30 by 100 feet, east side Ran dolph street. 40 feet north of Gospero street. November 4. $4,000 —J. P. and. W H. Peacock and George H. Seal to Mrs. Carrie Herzfeld, lot 50 by 150 feet, northeast corner North Boulevard and Seal place. October 28. $5,500 —Mrs. Mary G. .Gardien to Mrs. Carrie Mayer. 349 and 351 Edgewood ave nue, 42 by 142 feet. November 1. sll.ooo—William A Wlmblsh to Sarah- F. Grant, lot 123 by 322 feet, west side Peachtree street, 184 feet south of Four teenth street. November 1. $5,000—8. Clein and M. Ellman to B. L. Davidson, lot 35 by 120 feet, south side Ellis street. 221 feet east of Butler street; also lot 74 by 207, north side Houston street, 288 feet west of Fort street. No vember 1. S66O—H. S. Berry to East Point Lum ber Company, lot 45 by 125 feet, north side Georgia street, 390 feet east of Ran dall street: also lot 40 by 174 feet, west side 15 foot street running north from Calhoun street, between Humphries and North street, in East Point. October 15. Lien*. S4B' —W. L. Traynham vs. W. J. Sim mons ana Atlanta Banking and Savings Company, 180 Old Wheat street, 33x150. November 4, 1912. Quitclaim Deeds. sl—E. L Douglas to Realty Invest ments, 138 Edgewood avenue, 25x85 feet. October 31, 1912. $1 —T. P. Westmoreland to J. M. Craw ford. 83 Brotherton street, lot 70x143 feet. November 1, 1912. $5 —Samuel Barnett to Eva B. Williams, 562 Martin street, 42x150 feet. October 28, 1912. $5 —Security Investment Company to Leola B. DeGroat, same property. No vember 2, 1912. sl—J. T. Holleman to Mrs. Mary G. Gardlen, 349-351 Edgewood avenue, 42x142 feet. November 4, 1912. Bonds For Title. $6,000 Penal Sum—Mrs. Leola P. Reeves to J. E. F. Hicks, lot 50x200 feet, north east side St. Francis street, 475 feet northwest of Newnan avenue. September 25, 1012. $4,000 Penal Sum —Julius F. Dupree to M. D. Brown, 278 South Ashby street, 29x 140 feet November 1, 1912 $17,500 Penal Sum—Porter Langston to Real Estate For Bale. North Side Bungalow $3,500 —RIGHT in the heart of Druid Hills section, we offer you a brand-new, modern five-room house and bath, with tile side walks, sewer, jras. electricity, water; no Ioan: S3OO cash. $25 a month. H. S. WILLINGHAM SUCCESSOR TO GILMER & WILLINGHAM. REAL ESTATE AND RENTING. So. 0 WALTON STREET PHONES: MAIN’ 3915 ATL 2742 J M. WORSHAM, MGR , DECATUR DEPARTMENT REAL ESTATE H. R. Marriott, lot 25x50 feet, northwest . corner Ivy and East Harris streets. No vember 2, 1912. SB,OOO Penal Sum —E. H. Lake to Mrs. S. C. Wilburn, 49 Dargan street, 50x139 feet. September 7, 1912. $2,200 Penal Sum—Edward C. O’Don- I nell to L. H. Jacoby, lot 49x152 feet, south side Drewry street, 613 feet west of High land avenue. July 5, 1912. $4,000 Penal Sum—James F. Clarke to Lon Sockwell. lot 48x136 feet, northwest corner Fair street and Flat Shoals road. January 1, 191?. Transferred to R. A. Galant! October 31, 1912. $4,900 Penal Sum —T. 11.I 1 . Thornton to R. B. Smith, lot 70x190 feet, east side Howell’s Mill road, 45 feet north of line between land lots 151 and 152. October 26, 1912. Sheriff's Sales. Lot in Carter street, near Chestnut street, to H. T. Huff, for $2Bl. Lot in Formwait street, near the cor ner of. Gleftn street, to Mrs. T. J. O'Kel ley, for $1,700. Lot in Sunset avenue, to Atlanta Bank ing and Savings Company, plaintiff, for S9O. Lit on northwest corner of Fair and Powell streets, t* I. ('. Clark, for S3OO. Lot In Hill street, near Ormewood street, to Empirb"Trust Company, for $2,475. | ATLANTA MARKETS EGGS—Fresh country, candled, 25®36c. BUTTER—Jersey and creamery, in 1-lb. blocks, 25®27%c; fresh country, dull. 15® choice $1.25®1.50 per crate: beets. $1.50® 2 per barrel; cucumbers. 76c@$l per erate; Irish potatoes, sl®l.lo Egg plants, $2®2.50 per crate, pepper, $1®1.25 per crate; tomatoes, fancy, six basket crates, $1®1.25; choice tomatoes, $1.75® 2.25; pineapples. s2® 2.25 per crate; onions, 75c® $1 per bushel; sweet pota toes, pumpkin yam. 65®75e per bushel. PROVISION MARKET. (Corrected by White Provision Company.) s4® 4.50 per box; bananas, 3®3%c per pound; cabbage. $1.25®>1.60 pound; pea nuts, per pound, fancy Virginia 6%®7c. choice, 5%®6c; beans, round green. 25® 50c per crate; squash, yellow, six-basket crate, $1@1.25, lettuce, fancy, $1.26@1.60; 17%c. DRESSED POULTRY—Drawn, head and feet on, per pound: Hens, 18® 19c; fries. 25®27%c; roosters. 8®10c; turkevs, owing to fatness, 20Ca22%c. LIVE POULTRY -Hens, 45®50c; roost ers, 25®35c; fries, 25®35c; broilers. 20® 25c; puddle ducks. 25®30c; Pekin ducks, 35®40c: geese, 50®60c each; turkeys, ow ing to fatness, 15@18c FRUITS AND PRODUCE. FRUIT AND VEGETABLES—Lemons, fancy, $6.50®>7 per box; California oranges Cornfield hams, 10 to 12 pounds average. 17%c. Cornfield hams, 12 to 14 pounds average, 17 %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), 18%c. Cornfield fresh pork sausage (link or bulk) 25-pound buckets, 12%c. Cornfield frankfurters, 10-pound buck ets, average, 12c. Cornfield bologna sausage, 25-pound boxes. 11c. Cornfield luncheon bams. 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, 12 He. Compound lard (tierce basis), 914 c. D. 8. extra ribs, 12c. D. S. rib bellies, medium average, 12“*c. It. 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: Monbgrani, $6; Golden Grain, $5.50: Fa.ultless, finest, $6.25; Home Queen (highest patent), $5.85; Puritan (highest patent), $5.85; Paragon (highest patent). ’5.85; Sun Rise (half patent). $5.40; White Cloud (highest patent), $5.65; White Lily thigh patent), $5.65; White Daisy. $6.65; 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, 95c. MEAL —Plain 144-pound sacks, 87c; 96- pound sacks; 48-pound sacks, 90c; 24- pound sacks, 92c; 121 pound 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 per 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 hay, choice peagreen. $1.30; alfalfa No. 1 $1.30; wheat straw, 70c; Bermuda hay. 85c. FEEDSTUFF. SHORTS—White 100-lb. sacks. $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, $2.1.0; 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 sacks, $2.20; wheat, 2-bushel bags, per bushel, $1.40; oyster shell, 80c. GROUND FEED—Purina feed, 100-lb. sacks. $1.85; 175-lb. sacks, $1.85; Purina molasses feed. $1.80; Arab feed, $1.80; Allneeda fe“<i, $1.65; Sucrene dairy feed, $1.60; Universal horse meal. $1.30; velvet feed. $1.50; Monogram, 100-lb. sacks, $1.80; Victory horse feed. 100-lb. sacks, $1 70; Mflko dairy feed, $1.70; No. 2. $1.75; al falfa molasses meal, $1.75; alfalfa meal. $1.60. GROCERIES. SUGAR—Per pound, standard granu lated, 5'4; New York refined, sc; planta tion. 6c. C( iFFEE—Roasted (Arbuckle’s), $25; AAAA, $14.50 In bulk; in bags and bar rels, s2l; green, 20c. RlCE—Head, fancy- head, 5% @6s4c. according to grade. LARD—Sliver leaf, 1314 c per pound; Scoco, 9c per pound; Flake White, 9c 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, 714 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 Real Estate For Sale RUDENESS COSTS: RAILROAD $4,8D0 Woman Given Damages for Failure of Flagman to Assist Her From Train. Lack of gallantry on tile part of a Georgia railroad flagman a year ago cost that company $4,800 today. Mrs. Katie Thomas, of Hardage Crossing, left first division of superior court this morning with a check for the sum forced on her by the company’s attor neys because a flagman failed to as sist her from the rear platform of a train in the Union station. Because the flagman failed to give her a hand when she came down the steps of the rear coach of the “Buck head accommodation” on Septetnber 21, 1911, Mrs. Thomas fell and was se verely injured. She brought suit for $30,000 damages, and the company's at torneys, fearful of the judgment of a jury, settled the case out of court. According to a peculiar construction of Georgia law, railroad employees are, required to assist passengers from trains if assistance is needed, and the courts have held time and time again that recovery can be made for failure to observe this, rule. Mrs. Thomas maintained that the flagman was very attentive to the wom en who preceded her in alighting from the coach, and even went out of his way to swing a little girl off the plat form just ahead of her. As she came down the steps, she asserted, he delib erately turned his baek and "ruthlessly left her without assistance." She told the court that she was re covering from a severe illness when the incident occurred, and she was unable to support herself. MARKETS CLOSE FOR BALLOTING National Election Causes Sus pension of All Exchanges in United States. This being national election day. the New York and New Orleans cotton ex changes, New York stock exchange, Chi cago board of trade. New York coffee ex change, cotton seed oil market and all other American exchanges were closed’ to business today. All exchanges will reopen tomorrow. The LlverpooTcotton exchange remained open for the usual session. This market opened barely steady, with a narrow lange, on account of the American mar kets being elose.l. Cables from that mar ket n ere due to come 114 points higher today. Futures ranged at the opening 114 to 414 points above the final figures of Monday. At 12:15 p. m., the market was weak In absence of support, and prices receded 3% to 6 points from the initial iigurPH. \f 2 o’clock, near positions were point net higher and distant positions ranged from unchanged to 1 point lower than at 12:15 o’clock. At the close the market was quiet, with a net decline in prices of 3 to 4>4 points from the final quotations of Motirlav. Spot cotton easy at 7 points decline; middling 6 , Id; sales 10,000 bales none American; imports 32,400 bales. RANGE IN LIVERPOOL FUTURES. Futures opened barely steady. Range. 2 P. M. Close. Prev. Opening p rev Nov. . . . 6.54 -6.4814 6.49 6.47 V. 6.50 b, Nov.-Dec. 6.42 H-6.3714 638 6.36 "6 39 Dec.-Jan. 6.43 -6.3.7 6.36>y6.34 6 38L, Jan.-Feb. 6.41 -6.37 6.36 6.34 U 6.38 U Feb.-Meh. 6.41 -6.37’4 637 6.35’4 6.39 U Meh.-Apr. 6.4.'; -6.37’4 6.364 6.35 " 6.39 " Apr.-May 6.434-6.37 6.38 6.35 U 6 39U May-June 6.44 -6.384 6.384 636 "6 40 June-July 6.44 -6.38 6.374 6.35’4 6 39% July-Aug 6.42 -6.36’4 6.36% 6.34 " 6.38 " Aug.-Sept 6.32 -6.28 6.35 6.39 Closed quiet. oats, $3.20 per case; grits (bags), $2.40; pink salmon, $3.75 per case; pepper, 18c per pound; R. E. Lee salmon, $7.00; cocoa, 38c; roast beef, $3.80; syrup. 30c per gal lon; Sterling ball potash, $3.30 per case; soap, $1.50®4.00 per ease; Rumford bak ing powder, $2.50 per case. SALT -One hundred pounds, 52c; salt brick 1 plain), pet ease, $2.25; salt brick (medicated), per case, $4.85; salt, red rock, per cwt., $1.00; salt, white, per cwt 90r; Granacrystal, casd. 25-!l>. sa<ik“, 7‘>e; salt ozone, per case, 30 packages, 90c; 50- lb. sacks, 30e; 25-lb. sacks. 18c FISH. FISH Bream and perch, 6c per pound; snapper, 9c per pound; trout, 10c per pound; bluefish, 7c per pound; pompano, „0c per pound; mackerel, 12%c per pound; mixed fish, 6c per pound; black bass, 10c per pound; mullet, $lO per barrel. OYSTERS —Per gallon: Plants, $1.60; extra selects, $1.50; selects, $1 40' straights, $1.20: standard $1: relfers 90e’ HARDWARE. PLoWSTOC'KS Halman, 95c; Fergu son, $1.05 AXLES $7.00® 8.00 per dozen, base. SHOT $2.25 per sack SHOES Horse. $4.5071*4.75 per keg. LEAD Bar, 7%c per pound NAILS--Wire, $2.65 base. IRON Per pound, 3c, l*ase; Swede, 4c. ATLANTA LIVE STOCK MARKET. (By W. H. White, Jr., of the White Pro vision Company.) Quotations based on actual purchases during the current week: Choice to good steers, 1,000 to 1,300, 5.00 7(6.00; good steers. 800 to 1.000, 4.7571 5 25; medium to good steers, 700 to 850, 4.25® 4.75; good to choice beef cows, 800 to 900. 3.75'0 4.50; medium to good beef cows 700 tn 800, 3.50® 4.00: good to choice heifers 750 to 850. 3.75® 4.50; medium to good heifers, 650 to 750, 3.50® 4.00. The above represent ruling prices on go,«l quality of beef cattle. Inferior grades and dairy types selling lower. Medium to good steers, If fat, 700 to 800, 3.757/4.25. Medium to common cows, if fat, >OO to 800, 3 257/4.00: mixed common to fair. 600 to 800, 2.50713.25; good butch er bulls, 3.007(3.75. Good to choice Tennessee lambs, 60 to 80. 4.504(5.50; common lambs and year lings, 2%®3; sheep, range, 27(3%. Prime hogs, 160 to 200 average. 7.507/ 7.75; good butcher hogs, 140 to 160, 7,00 b 7.40; good butcher pigs, 100 to 140, 6.50® 7.40: light ]>igs. 80 to 100, 6.007(6,50; heavy rough hogs. 200 to 250, $6,504(7.50. Above quotations apply to corn-fed hogs Mash and peanut fattened hogs 14/ l%c lower. • Cattle receipts about the same as usual. Market steady on good grades of beef cattle; medium and common cattle lower. Hogs hate suffered a considerable de cline for 11... last week. Receipts holding up Market weak and prices generally INOODINARD’S AND CHAMBERS' MEN IN OPEN W Council Is Rent by Factional Politics—No Secret Made of Bitter Fight. Members of council freely admitted today a long drawn tight between the Woodward and Chambers factions is Inevitable. From offering olive branches and denying that any fight was Intend ed, the members of council now are playing factional politics in the open. The Chambers faction is the aggres sor, while the Woodward faction is. as yet, on the defensive. The Chambers faction all but suc ceeded in working a neat trick at the meeting of council yesterday. They wanted to take from the mayor the right to appoint the custodian of the building, because Joseph Shearer, the present custodian, was active for Cham bers in the mayoralty contest, and it Is generally expected Woodward will drop him from the city pay roll when he goes into office. Goes Through by One Vote. The buildings and grounds commit tee, headed by Aiderman James W. Maddox, and made up of Chambers men, offered an ordinance making the custo dian elective by council instead of by the buildings and grounds committee. The mayor appoints the committee, and therefore controls the election of the custodian. The ordinance passed without any one of the opposition knowing what had happened. The custodian was to be elected the first Monday in December, for a term of two years, at a salary of $1,500 a year. Then Mayor Pro Tern. Candler ruled that the ordinance would have to be voted on separately by council and the aldermantc board, because it looked to the appropriation of money. A new vote was taken. Council adopted the measure by the slight ma jority of 12 to 11. It is said the Woodward faction has a majority against the measure in the al dermanic board. No “aye and nay” vote was taken, and it was impossible to get an accu rate list of the line-up of council. Locker Club Fight Resumed. The charges that the fight over locker club permits was inspired by politics were reiterated at the meeting of coun- I ell yesterday. > Aiderman John E. McClelland de- 1 nounced the club of Aiderman J. B. Everett, the Metropolitan, as an open ' barroom and a place for questionable women to gather. He declared that if council would re refer the permit to tvte police commit ■ tee, he would prove his charges. Aiderman Everett arose and declared the charges to be false. “Don’t slap me in the face, gentle men,” he said. “Grant me the per mit.” “This man has no right to get up as an aiderman and make a personal re quest,” cried Alderman McClelland. “He has sat here and voted against clubs that are better than his.” The Moose club permit was refused. The Metropolitan, the Georgia Ath letic, the Theatrical and the Terrace clubs were referred back to the com mittee for further investigation. On its own initiative the committee decided to investigate further the Press, the Bees and the Centra! clubs. Council voted $l5O for a complete audit of all the clubs. Urge Three Clubs Be Closed. Permits were granted to the Atlanta Athletic, the Transportation, the Pied mont Driving. Capital City, Eagles, Elks, University, Standard, M. & M„ Atlanta, T. M. A., Turn Verein, the Owls and the Beavers. The police committee recommended that the Bees, the Georgia Athletic, the Central and the Moose clubs be dosed. The Bees and the Georgia Athletic clubs supported Councilman Aldine Chambers for mayor. Fighting to saves these clubs, the Chambers faction has complicated the whole situation. Whether Mayor Winn Is back in his office when the action of council grant ing permits comes up for approval has an important bearing on the situation. It is expected that Mayor Winn would approve the permits granted, but that Alderman John S. Candler would veto them for the same reason he vetoed them before. The same charge that none of them is complying with the law was made by Aidermen Warren and McClelland. WEATHER 1 I Condition*. WASHINGTON. Nov. 5. -There will be local rains tonight or Wednesday in the n glon of the Great Lakes and Ohio and lower Mississippi valley. In the Atlant! • states fair tonight and followed by unset tled weather We.lnes.lay, The tempera ture will rise tonight in the Atlantic states and Tennessee and will change lit h’.. ''/a ?‘ e MIBS|BB IPPI valley during the next 36 hours. Storm warnings are displayed on the north Pacific coast. , General Forecast. I'ollowing is the general forecast uni 1 . p tn. Wednesday: Georgia—Cloudy tonight and Wednes day. Virginia Fair tonight; warmer in east ern and southern portions. Wednesday increasing cloudiness, probably followed by rain in extreme western portion. North Carolina Fair and warmer to night; Wednesday increasing cloudiness. South Carolina Fair tonight; warmer 111 northern portion; Wednesday unset tled. Florida- Cloudy tonight and Wednes day. Alabama and Mississippi -Cloudy weather, probably local rains late tonight or Wednesday; warmer lu the Interior to- BMSTICKSTI) STAND DN STRIKE Governor Declines to Temper Statement at Request of Chiefs of Railroad Men. Governor Brown today formally an swered the communication of T. A. Gregg, of the Order of Railway Con ductors, and James Murdock, of the Brotherhood of Railway Trainmen, in which these gentlemen took the gov ernor to task for his recent interview on law and order in Georgia, and par ticularly in connection with the recent Georgia railroad strike. In reply to their request for a fur ther statement in the matter, possibly explaining or qualifying his interview, the governor said he could see no good to come of that, as his first statement was complete and there was nothing either to add to it or take from it. The go ernor said: “The 1 ws are intended for equal application to all citizens of what ever rank within this state; and the legal process which the state prescribes for her citizens must be the same in Its application to every citizen. No person or class shall adopt any proocess for redressing grievances which the state herself does not apply to all others.” Presumably, this will close the inci dent. M,DGIFOOTFOfI PEACHTREE LOT Property Occupied by Daniel Bros. Purchased by E. W. Alfriend for $167,000. Property at 45 Peachtree street, oc cupied by Daniel Brothers, brought $167,000 at a commissioner’s sale at noon today before the court house door, which is at the rate of $5,061 a front foot. Forrest Adair, commissioner, sold it. and E. W. Alfriend bought it. Mr. Alfriend declares that he has made no plans sot the property. The lot has a two-story building on it, and fronts 33 feet on Peachtree and runs back 142 feet on one side and 128 feet on the other. The store rents for $450 a month for the next two years, and SSOO the third year, when the pres ent lease expires. Active in the early bidding were Edward Inman and John W. Grant. Mr. Adair knocked down the property at 336-338-340 Marietta street to S. S. Selig, Jr., for $13,900. Mr. Selig ex pects eventually to erect a three-story building on this, but has not made def inite plans. W. A. Fuller, acting as trustee for the estate of E. S. Sims, sold property in bulk at Brookwood, Buckhead and Armour station to W. M. McKenzie for $15,000. Others making sales at small er figures were R. O. Cochran, A. J. & H. F. West and James L. Logan, for the E. Rivers Realty Company. The acquisition of 45 Peachtree makes Mr. Alfriend one of the largest central property owners. Among hfs other holdings are the Hunnicutt property, at Baker and Peachtree; the Hugh T. In man place, at Harris and Peachtree, and a strip running through from Peachtree to Ivy in the block between Harris and Baker. The property brought $3,139 less per foot than the southeast corner of Au burn avenue and Peachtree, which Bryan M. Grant purchased some time ngo. The Grant property brought SB,- 200. Many Have Eye on Postmaster’s Job Postmaster Hugh L McKee, of the At lanta postoffice, who is an old-line Re publican, has been busy the past few /lays—exceedingly busy—closing the main door leading from the outer corridors into his office. That door, according to an unbiased by stander, has been opened no less than 3,712 times In five days. The procedure is the same In each instance. The knob will turn slowly and cautiously, then the door will swing ajar just an inch or two Slowly the aperture widens and a head peers around the corner—unless it sees Postmaster McKee, enthroned behind hfs high desk, directly facing the door. Then the head disappears, while Postmaster McKee wearily rises and closes the door after the last man who has looked In to see how he likes the postmaster's office. "All of them are figuring on it,” Mr. McKee said today, as a smile wanly lighted his features. "Every howling Buil Moose and rampant Democrat in Atlanta has taken a peek in at that door dur ing the past few days. And every one of them. In his mind’s eye, has seen him self sitting here directing the destinies of the postofffee “It's funny how these people are fooled. Why, Taft is sure to win!” He winced sharply, though, when at that instant a well known negro Bull Moose put his head inside the door and took a long look at everything, directed a broad grin at the postmaster, and disap peared. The thing is somewhat getting on Mr. McKee’s nerves LIVE STOCK MARKET. CHICAGO. Nov. s.—Hors—Receipts. 14,000. Market slow, shade lower; mixed and butchers, 7.604/8.15, good heavy. 7.45 7/8.15; rough heavy, 7.45® 7.65; light, 7.50 ®8.05; pigs, 5.25®/.25; bulk. 7.75®8.05. Cattle -Receipts, 1,500 Market slow and steady: beeves, 5.35;//1.1.00; cows ano heifers, 2.75® 7.50; Stockers and feeder*. 4.3'14/ 7.50: Texans, 4.407( 5.70: calves, i. 05 ® 10.00. Sheep Receipts, 18,000. Market strong 10c higher; native and Western, 3.60® I. lambs, 3.50® 7 40.