Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, November 12, 1912, EXTRA 1, Page 13, Image 13

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Real Estate For Sale. EAST LAKE ROAD at the southwest corner of East Lake road and Tupelo street ivc 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 back into an oak grove; sewers and water can be obtained. i It would be the stroke of wisdom for someone to buy this for a home and have a house sitting back 100 feet off the soad. FORREST & GEORGE ADAIR * A Few Choice Lots In Kirkwood One-Half Acre Each. SSO cash and sio monthly. On the car line. Artesian well water. ' Plenty / shade trees. Only S6OO to SBOO each. The only lots of this size to be had in this local ity at any price. THEY WILL MAKE YOU MONEY! LET US SHOW YOU TODAY! > Bailey & Rowland REAL ESTATE 1520 Fourth National Bank Building Bell Phone Main 3217 4 Semi-Central Bargains ON WEST CAIN, within 100 feet of Spring street, only three blocks from Can tiler building and opposite the governor’s mansion; property S4OO per foot. Lots 33x90 each to an alley. The improvements are sufficient to pay carrying charges. Terms, one-fourth cash, balance, 1,2, 3. 4 years, with 6 per cent. 41x120 on north side of Decatur street, about 100 feet west of Hilliard street; be longs to a non-resident who is anxious to sell, and has made a special price of $l5O per foot for immediate sale. J. H. EWING REAL ESTATE. 116 LOBBY, CANDLER BUILDING. Ivy 1839. • Atlanta 2865. BARGAINS $412 per front foot Ivy street $550 per front foot Peachtree street SI,OOO per front foot Peachtree street $325 per front foot James street $425 per front foot Luckie stree SIBO per front foot Houston street Will be $250 next spring. s4,ooo— a beauty of a lot, 100x400; shade and all improvements. sß.Boo—East Lake drive, lot 200x270; east front and shaded. HE 55 ANT to see you in person about the above and you need to see us. Let us do your renting, leasing, etc. G. R. MOORE & COMPANY 1409 CANDLER BLDG. PHONE IVY 4978 DILLIN-MORRIS CO. 609-10 Atlanta National Bank Bldg. Both Phones 4234. 60 LOOK at No. 161 Lee street. West End. This is a large two-story, eight-room, slate-roof house on big lot. Owner is )fry anxious to sell. We have a special price on this if sold _>n the next few days. Terms SSOO cash. s>,2,>o FOR a beautiful six-room bungalow on the north side. 0 you are looking for a high-class bungalow don’t fail to see this one. Good terms. VACANT LOT BARGAIN—SI,6OO—On Barnett St., between Ponce DeLeon and St. Charles avenues. It s a corner; elevated, level and 60 feet ehst front. Terms. THOMSON & LYNES and 20 Walton Street. Both Phones 458. Cofield Investment Co. ' EMPIRE BUILDING. TELEPHONE MAIN 2224. SEMI-CENTRAL INVESTM ENTS. I; I ,l' FOOT' lot on West Harris street, between Spring and 55’11- 8 u 40 by 125. Rents for S3O per month ' Foot. Courtland street; lot between Ellis and Caln. Size Side and rear alleys, »i«i,5(H. . ’ • H,, t, M r ''rner In the half inlle circle Lot 192 by 100, to alley, for sl,,sn per >r,/r . I '' ’’uii tlon of Forsyth and Whitehall Size 52 Io 170 to »n alle . ’ vcmenta uti property will pay currying charges. .1. M BEASLEY Sales Ma neg'. k Real Estate For Sale ITIE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS’.TUESDAY, NOVEMBER 12. 1912. HEBE IS I REUL OOTSIi CURE “Pape’s Diapepsin” Settles Sour, Upset Stonuchs in Five Minutes. Do some foods you eat hit back— taste good, but work badly; ferment into stubborn lumps and cause a sick, sour, gassy stomach? Now, Mr. or Mrs. Dyspeptic, jot this down: Pape's Diapepsin digests everything, leaving nothing to sour and upset you. There never was anything so safely quick, so certainly effective. No difference how badly your stomach is disordered, you will get happy relief in five minutes, but what pleases you most is that it strengthens and regulates your stom ach so you can eat your favorite foods without fear., Most remedies give you relief some times—they are slow, but not sure. Diapepsin is quick, positive and puts your stomach in a healthy condition so the misery won’t come back. You feel different as soon as Diapep sin comes in contact with the stomach —distress just vanishes —your stomach gets sweet, no gases, no belching, no eructations of undigested food, your head clears and you feel fine. Go now, make the best investment you ever made by getting a large fifty - cent case of Tape’s Diapepsin from any drug store. You re/ffize in five minutes how needless it is to suffer from in digestion, dyspepsia or any stomach disorder (Advt.) Itch! Itch! Itch! The very first drops of D. D. D. Pre scription for Eczema stop that awful itch instantly; yes. the very moment D. D. D. touches the burning skin the torture ceases. A 50c bottle proves it. D. D. D. has been known for years as the only absolutely reliable eczema rem edy, and all druggists keep It. Go to them if you can't come to us— but don’t accept some big profit substi tute. If you come to our store, we are so certain of what D. D. D. will xlo for you that we offer you a full size bottle on this guarantee: If you do not find that it takes away the itch AT ONCE, it costs you not a cent. Jacobs’ Pharmacy, 6-8 Marietta street. (Advt.) Don’t waste your money buying strengthening plasters. Chamberlain’s Liniment is cheaper and better. Damp en a piece of flannel with it and bind it over the affected parts and it will relieve the pain and soreness. For sale by all dealers. (Advt.) 1 . i . .i . t s. Real Estate For Sale. gHARP & gOYLSTON INVESTMENT. PRICE $20,000. ANNUAL INCOME $2,640. LIBERAL TERMS. THIS is not one of those “get rich quick’’ schemes, but a good, solid, safe, sane investment. We want a lib- I I oral cash payment and the balance can be put on a basis that will make it EASY for the property to take care of itself. SECTION. North side, and in a section that will insure a steady in come. BETTER LOOK INTO THIS. Real Estate For Sale. DANDY two-story house on beautiful sVest Third street, just one door off sVest Peachtree, $5,250. This is $ 1,000 less than actual value. FOUR-ROOM HOUSE on Humphries street, $1,550. Easy terms. 55’E HAVE a 6-room house, valued at $1,500, which we are authorized to exchange for a 5 or 6-acre tract on or near the Marietta car line. MERCER W. GILMER 8 Auburn Avenue. Phones: Bell 1804 Main: Atlanta 999. SIOO Cash, sls Per Month FOR a pretty 5-room bungalow on Howard street, Kirkwood. Tills is the best bargain in Kirkwood property ever offered and you will have to act quick to get It. ATLANTA SUBURBAN AND REALTY CO. 31 INMAN BUILDING. MAIN 2053 FOR SALE ELEOAXT BVXGALOW ' TOT-INI’ T (Ansley Park.) I 'AJ. A 1 I • a modern 5-room home. On large _ _ _ ——.- -r—■- » lot. Desirable terms. Price only $4,750. WOODS IDE TH " B . ! R A^;Yi'v. B „r ■"" REAL FARM BARGAINS. ONE OF THE BIGGEST BARGAINS EVER OFFERED. TO divide an estate which needs money, we are instructed to sacrifice this valuable 120-acre farm at $35 per acre. Two good houses, barns, pasture, springs and original timber enough to pay for place; 35 miles from Atlanta, 1 mile from good town an<! two railroad stations; at fork of two public roads. R. F. D. and tele phone service. WILSON BROS. M 44H-J. 701 EMPIRE BLDG. W REALIZING LOWERS COTTON * . NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—Lower cables than expected and the Balkan situation caused the cotton market to open barely steady, with first prices showing irregu larity, ranging from 4 points higher to 8 points lower than the final of Saturday. Heavy buying orders prevailed upon the market at the outset, which came from many different sources, with large spot Interests and Liverpool brokers absorb ing most of the cotton offered, and with in fifteen minutes prices were 5 to 9 points better than the ojiening. The selling was small and scattered. Continued buying by the larger spot In terests and certain Wall Street houses, combined with outside traders, forced shorts to covering early in the forenoon trading, causing a rapid advance with December being the heaviest pressed, ral lying to. 12.07 and January to 12.27. The entire list aggregated 14 to 22 points ad vance from the initial figures. Very little cotton was for sale. At times Liver pool sold cotton here freely, but offerings were quickly absorbed. During the afternoon trading the mar ket became weak on reports that the Balkan war was becoming more serious. This report caused a sudden realizing movement, resulting in prices losing most of the early advance. Opinions among the majority of traders that tlte market Is due a good reaction, but there is a good undercurrent which seems to prevent It and those who sell quickly buy back on advances. Some say that spot Interests have evidently bought, but the public rendering their support gives strength tc tlif- ar k at. Heavy realizing during the last hour of trading resulted in the market clos ing weak, with prices a net decline of 10 to 27 points from Saturday’s close. RANCE OF NF'Ar YORK rvruffxa 1 i I 3-s’ 1 Ji O E U O 6.0 Nov. I ] i | | nToo TT< <f7s Dec. 11.86 12.07111.69(11.70jt1 .70-71 11.93-94 Jan. 11.96(12.17 11.77 11.78(11.79-81 12.01-02 Feb I I (11.87-89112.10-12 Meh. 12.18 12.38 11.97 11.97(11.97-99112.20-22 May 12.27 12.42 12.00112.0142(00-01 12.27-29 June I 1 (12.02-04 12.26-27 July 12.30(12.44 12.03112.03(12.03-08(12.29-31 Aug. 12.18 12.35 12.00112.00111.95-97(12.20-21 Sept 1 ' ’ 41.70-7541.80-85 Oct. 111.64 41.70 11.50 11.50 41.50 41,60-61 Closed weak. Liverpool cables were due to come 10% to 13% points higher today from Satur day's close, but the market opened steady with prices 3 to 4 points higher. At 1245 p. m. the market was steady at an ad vance of 4 to 6 points. Later cables were 1% points higher than at 12:15 p. m. z\t the close the market was firm with prices a net advance of 9 to 13 points from the final figures of Saturday. Spot cotton steady and In good demand at 3 points advance; middling, 6.90 d; sales, 10.000 bushels, including 9,000 American bales; imports. 39,000, including 38.000 American; tenders new docket, 2,000 bales. RANGE IN LIVERPOOL FUTURES. Futures opened firm. Range. 2 P. M. Close. Prev. Opening Prev. Nov. . . . 6.67 -6.70 6.71% .6.77% 6.64% Nov.-Dec. 6.56 -6.58% 6.60 6.66% 6.52% Dec.-Jan. 6.57 -6.56 6.57% 6.63% 6.50% Jan.-Feb. 6.53 -6.55% 6.56% 6.62% 6.50 Feb.-Meh 6.54 -6.55 6.56 6.62 6.50 Meh.-Apr. 6.53 -6.55 6.56 662 6.50 Apr.-May 6.54 -6.54% 6.55% 6.61% 6.50 May-June 6.53 -6.54% 6.56 6.61% 6.50 June-July 6.53 -6.54 6.55% 6.61 6.49% July-Aug. 6.52 -6.53% 6.54 6.60 6.48% Aug.-Sept 6.45 -6.45% 6.45% 6.52% 6.41 Sept.-Oct 6.38 6.29 Closed firm. RANGE IN NEW ORLEANS FUTURES. Ci w ■ • < ® * * g r 8 £0 O I U J M ’ I f* <;; C- U Nov. I '... J li!oL08(12.26-28 Dec. 12.29(12.4942.05 12.10 D.06-08T12.28-29 Jan. 12.28(12.45|12.02(12.08(12.08-09(12.25-26 Feb 12.11-1242.28-30 Meh 12.42(12.58(12.13 12.21(12.20-21(12.39-40 Apr ( (12.23-25(12.42-44 May 12.55 12.6742.24(12.3142.31-324 2.49-50 June I | I 12.34-35(12.51-54 July 12.6042.7542.37'12.87112.40-4242.58-59 Closed barely steady. SPOT COTTON MARKET. Atlanta, steady; middling 12%. Athens, steady; middling 12'%. Macon, steady; middling 12c. New Orleans, firm: middling 12%. New York, quiet: middling 1.2.20. Boston, quiet; middling 12.20. Philadelphia, quiet; middling 11.45. Liverpool, steady; middling 6.90 d. Augusta, steady: middling 11%. Savannah, steady; middling 12%. Mobile, nominal. Norfolk, firm; middling 12%. Galveston, firm; middling 12%. Charleston, firm; middling 12 1-16 Wilmington, steady; middling 12c. Little Roek, steady; middling 12c. Baltimore, nominal; middling 11%. Memphis, steady: middling 12c. St. Louts, firm; middling 12%. Houston, steady; middling 12%. Louisville, firm; middling 11%. LIVE STOCK MARKET. CHICzXGO. Nov. 11.—Hogs—Receipts, 32.000. Market 10c lower; mixed and butchers, 7.35 ft 8.00: good heavy, 7.70 ft 8.00; rough heavy. 7.25 ft 7.65: light. 7.30 ft 7.95; pigs, 5.25® 7.40; bulk, 7.60® 7.90. Cattle —Receipts. 23.000. Market steady to 10c lower; beeves, 6.40® 10.75; cows and heifers, 2.70® 7.30; Stockers and feeders, 4.10ft7.10; Texans, 6.40418.50; calves, 6.50 41 10.50. Sheep—Receipts, 60,000. Market slow to 15c lower: native and Western, 3.404i4.50; lambs, 5.40®7.35. Real Estate For Sale STOCKS DECLINE ONBALKANNEWS By CHARLES W. STORM. NEW YORK, Nuv. It.—Under leader ship of the standard railroad stocks, rqost of which made material fractional gains, the stock market ruled strong at the opening today. The heavy sellirjf which marked trading during the greater part of last week had disappeared and com mission houses reported heavy buying by outsiders. Among the gains made in the first fif teen minutes were the following. United States Steel %. Amalgamated Copper American Smelting %, Atchison H, Read ing Lehigh Valley 1. Union Pacific 1, Missouri Pacific Canadian Pacific 1%. Southern Pacific %. The Hill stocks were strong, advancing from % to Great Northern preferred was exceptionally strong, advancing %. Trading was in fluenced to son.e extent after the first fifteen minutes by the expectation that some important decisions would be hand ed down by the United States supreme court. California Petroleum proved one of the strongest industrials advancing 1V 4 to 65. American Beet Sugar was weak, losing to 55%. The curb market was irregular. Americans in London unsteady. Cana dian Pacific there improved. The atti tude of London on the Balkan situation was expectant. Failure of the supreme court to hand down any important decisions today led to stocks being freely supplied and con cessions were general in the last hour. American Smelting ami Amalgamated Copper both yielded over a point and losses were sustained by Reading, Steel and St. Paul. Stocks closed heavy. Governments un changed; other bonds steady. Stock quotatlons: ______ I I I Last | Cl os. ] Prev STOCKS— IHighiLow.lSale.l BidJCl’M Amal Copper 84%| 83%| 84% 81%( 83%' Am. Ice Sec ....I 19% Am. Sug. Ref.. 121%(121% 121% 121 121% Am. Smelting. 82 | 80% 80% .... 81% Am. L»como.. 45% 45 ( 45% 44 45% Am. Car Fdy.. 69% 59% 59% 58% 59% Am. Cot. Oil . 55% 53% 55% 54 53% Am. Woolen ... ' 21 Anaconda 43%( 42% 43 42%l 43% Atchison 108 107% 107% 106%(107% A. C. I I 138 (138 American Can 41% 40% 41 39%’- 40% do. pref 121 122% Am. Beet Sug. 58 55% 57 55% 57 Am. T. and T. 143% 143% 143% 143 143 Am Agrfcul 1 57 57 Beth. Steel .. 44% 44 i 44 43 43% B- R- T 89% 89% 89'4 89 ... R and O 106% (106% [106% 105% 106 Can. Pacific .. 263 261 '261 261 261 Corn Products 17%' 17% 17% 16% 16% C. and 0 81 %| 81 (81 80 81 Consol. Gas ..141 (141 141 143% 144% Cen. Leather.. 31%l 31% 31% .... 31% Colo. F. and I.j 35% Colo. Southern; 38 38 D. and H ( 165% .... Den. and R. G 21% 21 Distil. Secur. .1 .... 27% 27 Erie 34% 34 34 33% 34% do pref. ..( 51% 51% 51% 51% 51% Gen. Electric .... 181 181% Goldfield Cons. .... 2% 2% G. Western .. .... 18% 18% G. North., pfd.;139% 138% 138% 137% 138% G. North. Ore. | .... 44 46 Int. Harvester ( .... ’l:;0% 120% 111. Central .. .... .... 128% Interboro 20%| 20%' 20%( 19% 26" do, pref. .. 65% 64%! 64%| 63% 64% lowa Central ( ...,( . ...| ...J 12 12% K. C. Southern 1 28 (28 | 28 | 27% (28 K. and T 28%( 28%| 28%| 27% 26% do. pref ... .( . ... 62 .... L. Valley. . . 174% 174 174% 172% 173% L and N . . 147% 146% 1 146% 146% 146 Mo. Pacific . . 45% 44% | 44% 43%' 44% N. A. Central. 115% 115% ;115%|113% 115% Northwest ( ...J .. 1139% 140 Nat. Lead . . 63 [63 (63 I 62 ( 63 N. and W. . .115 :114%115 114%(114% No. Pacific , .1125%1124% 124% 124%i1241i O. and W ( I 34% ( 34% I’acific Mail | I 32% 32% P. Gas Co. . . 117 117 lli' 1116 116% P. Steel Car . 38 38 38 137 37% Reading. . . . 172%!170% 171 (169% 171 Rock Island . 26%| 25% 26% 25 25% do. pfd.. . . 49%' 49% 49%, 49% 49 ~ R. I. and Steel 30% 30 30% 29% 30 S. -Sheffield. .(56 ‘56 56 156 54 So. Pacific . . 111 % 11<U H 110% 1 109% 110% bo. Railway . 29%: 29%] 29% 29% 29% do. pfd.. . . 81% 81%l 81%( 80 I 81% St. Paul. ... 11l 114%:114%'114% ( 115% Tenn. Copper 42 142 (42 41 %' 41% Texas I’acific I .... ....I 24% 24% Third Avenue .... .... ... 37%l 38 Union Pacific 173 V. S. Rubber . 51% 51 % 51%; 51%: 51% Utah Copper. . 64 63%: 64 (63 ( 63*4 U. S. Steel . . 76% 74%| 74%l 74 75% , do. pf<l ! .... 111% 112 A.-C. Chem.. .46 46 |46 45% 45% ■West. Union. . 78% 78%l 78% 78 I 78% Wabash | .... 4%[ 4 y 4 <lo. pfd 1 .. , . 14 14U W. Electric. .82 82 82 .... 82 WIH- Centra! .... 57%: 52% \A . Maryland | ~, . ~ 55*4 MINING STOCKS. BOSTON. Nov. 11.—Opening: Granby, 73; Superior Butte, 2%; American Pneu matic, 4%; East Butte, 15%. METAL MARKET. NEW YORK, Nov. 11.—At the metal ex change trailing was quiet. Quotations: Conppr, spot. 17.00(11 17.37%: November, 17.02%® 17.25; December. January. 17.00'1/ 17.25. Tin, 49.37%®49.87%. Lead, 4.70®> 4.80; spelter, 7.35®7.45. COTTON SEED OIL. _Cotton seed oil quotations: Spot I ( 5?804/5.90“ November . . , .( 5.89 ft 5.90 5.82 ft 5.87 December . . . . 6.04 ft 606 ] 5,96 ft 5.98 January ! 6.094/6.13 6.064/6.07 February 6.12ft6.20 6.104/6 12 March 6.214/6.23 ' 6.15ft6.17 April 6.254/6 30 6.17ft6 23 May ' 6,294/ 6.30 6.264/ 6.28 Closed qtllet; sales 24,100 barrels. PORT RECEIPTS. The following table shows receipts at the ports today, compared with the same day last year: I 1912. ' 1911. New Orleans. . . . 13.742 12,5131 Galveston 26,365 18,709 Mobile 2,494 3,263 Savannah 12,707 15,320 Charleston 3,385 3,179 Wilmington 2,348 3,334 Norfolk 6,054 7,590 New York 60 Boston 214 1,074 Pensacola 7,800 222 Port Arthur 9,387 Various 2,605 10,437 Total . I 77.775 ' 80,088 INTERIOR MOVEMENT. I 1912. I 1911. Houstdli j 317249 I 24.324 Augusta I 3.595 I 3,412 Memphis 10,402 ' 16.546 St. Louis 1 4,352 I 4,511 Cincinnati 924 1,388 Little Roek ' I 2,8.21 Total. , ,'7 . . '79,422 53,002 CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS. CHICAGO, Nov. It.—Wheat—No. 2 red 1.05® 107, No. 3 red 96ft 1.03, No. 2 hard winter 89%®92, No. 3 hard winter 87% 4/90%, No. 1 Northern spring 90ft 90%. iNo 2 Northern spring 86%®88%, No. 3 | spring 854/ 87. I Corn No. 2 58, No. 2 white 58%4/59, I No. 2 yellow 58%ft59. No. 3 564/ 57, No. I 3 white 57%4/ 58. No. 3 yellow 57% 4/58. No. 4 53® 56, No. 4 white old 544/56%, new 52. No. 4 yellow old 56% ft 57, new 51% ft 52%. Oats—No. 2 31%, No, 2 white 34*4®. 34%, No. 3 31. No. 3 white 31%4/32%, No. 4 white 30%41 31 %, standard 334/ 33%. VISIBLE SUPPLY. Following sluiWH tlie weekly visible sup ply changes In grain: Wheat, increase 3,654.000 bushels. Corn, decrease 473.000 bushels. Oats, increase-1,022,000 bushels. I'REAL estate I INDICATIONS POINT TO RECORD BUSINESS IN REALTY CIRCLES With a week of unusual activity just closed, indications today were that real estate circles would see a prosperous two months for the closing of the year. Sales last week totaled approximately $600,000. Among the transfers were the proper ty at 45 Peachtree street, which went to E. W. Alfriend for $167,000 cash; the Dobbs & Wey building, next to thr Equitable, sold by J. H, Ewing to J. H. Porter and Luther Rosser, for $75,000; the northwest corner of Peachtree and Linden streets, sold by Robert Zahner to Arnold Broyles, for $54,000; the southeast corner of Ivy and Ellis streets, sold by T. J. Sheppard and Mr. Eberhardt, of Estes, Moss & Eberhardt, to a client for $60,000; the Todd prop erty at 322 Peachtree street, sold by Porter Langston to V. H. Kriegshaber, Isaac Schoen and Louis Trounstin, for $78,750; the Peek homestead, at 449 Peachtree street, to Porter Langston, by V. H. Kriegshaber, for $50,400; the northeast corner of Fairlie and Poplar streets, to eight purchasers, by J. R. Smith, for SIIB,OOO. BIG PLANTATION DEALS. Two large plantations in south Geor gia, valued at $200,000, were ex changed last week for Atlanta and Knoxville properties by J. Frank Rhodes & Sons and A. B. Veeder Com pany, who have connecting offices in the Third National Bank building. They have several exchange deals on now of south Georgia farms for Western and Northern city properties. C. I. Jones, with offices in the Candler building, had a part in the two deals consummated last week. PROPERTY TRANSFERS. Warranty Deeds. SIO,OO0 —-Mrs. z\vle A. Bowen to L. B Morgan, lot 62 by 290 feet, on southeast side the Prado," near Peachtree circle. November 9. $9,000 George L. IVord to Josephine E. Jennings. 1086 Piedmont avenue, 60 by 198 feet. November 9. SI.OO0 —Josephine E. Jennings to George L. Word, lot 58 by 211 feet, east side Highland avenue extension, 57 feet south of Nellie Dean avenue. November 9. S4O0 —Mary A. Lambert to John Alexan der, lot 80 by 100 feet, south side West Fair street, 270 feet west of Ashby street. November 7. S6O0 —Cobbs Land Company to Union Lumber and Manufacturing Company, lot 59 by 157 feet, northeast side Elizabeth lane, 160 feet northwest of Main street. November 6. S6OO -Cobbs Land Company to B. E. IVoixidall, lot 31 by 89 feet, northeast side Elizabeth lane, 205 feet northwest of Main street November 6. $1,500 —Millard B. Brown to Mrs. Lena Swift Huntley, lot 409 by 218 feet, on Paces Ferry road, at east line of land lot 198, Seventeenth district. April 24, 1911. S7O0 —E. Rivers to Mrs. .1. R. Mere dith. lot 157 by 150 feet, east side Acorn avenue, 1,950 feet north of Maysons ave nue. October 31. $5 and to Correct Former Deed— J. R Seawrfght and T. O. Poole to Mrs, Mamie R. Neal, lot 61 by 70 feet, south side of an alley opening into northwest side Cooper street, between Whitehall street and Woodward avenue. $2,115 —Marion McHenry Hull to Mar vin R. McClatchey anil Edwin K. Large, lot 50 by 190 feet, on southeast corner West Peachtree and Third streets; also lot 34 by 190 feet, east side West Peach tree street, 200 feet north of Kimball street. Made to secure notes. 29. $10 —B. D. Watkins to George Ware and W. J. Harper, lot 56 by 132 feet, north side DeKalb avenue. 150 feet west of Waverly way. November 5. $2.500 —-Miss Anne K. Kelso to Mrs. C. Ji. Sasser, lot 50 by 150 feet, southwest corner East Point chert road and St. Mi chael street. November 9. S6O0 —Dr. Charles F. Benson to Mrs. C. B Sasser, strip 5 by 132 feet, on south side Ponce Dee Lon avenue, at northwest corner of Benson’s lot. October 30. Trustee’s Deed. $16.660 —William A. Fuller, trustee of E. S. Sims, bankrupt, to W. M. McKenzie, lot 66 by 190 feet, east side right-of-way Southern railroad, 602 feet south of Peachtree street; also 1 9-10 acres on the Boulevard and Center street, in land lot 57; also one-half Interest In lot 400 by 400 feet, on Decatur road and Emorys avenue, land lot 61; also lot 240 by 400 feet, south side Smith avenue at southeast corner of a 40 foot street, 20 feet east of west line of land lot 61; also lot 80 by 120 ieet, west side Howell Mill road, 58 feet south west of Holley street. November 6. Loan Deeds. SBO0 —Julian A. Schoen to Mrs. Mary S. l.acy, lot 50 by 200 feet, north side Mc- Donough road, 50 feet ekst of First ave nue. November 7. SBOO—J. T. Kimbrough and A. F. Gardi ner to Mrs. M. R. Murphy, lot 28 by 90 feet, northeast corner Aline and Bonnie Brae avenues. October 28. SBO0 —J. T. Kimbrough and A. F. Gar diner to Mrs. M. R. Murphy, lot 39 by 90 feet, east side Aline avenue, 28 feet norlh of Bonnie Brae avenue. October 28. s2.ooo—James McMahan to Mrs. Lula T. Thomas, lot of 80 acres in land lot j 250, Fourteenth district; also three-fourths [ of an acre in northeast corner of lot 7, ' In Fourteenth district: also one-fourth acre in southeast corner lot 8, in Four teenth district, making 81 acres formerly known as the William Holbrook place. November 8. $1.00(1 Dionis Foton to J. M. Griffin, 50 ! acres, being the southeast quarter of land Fully Protected STRINGENT GOVERNMENT LAWS, conservative-minded Directors, able and experienced Officers, and a capable clerical force assure positive protection for every dollar deposited here. In addition to this, the ATLANTA NATIONAL BANK offers its patrons the advantage of facilities and knowledge gained through nearly half a century of successful banking, and every courtesy that their accounts and business warrant. Under guarantee of these sound busi ness features, we respectfully solicit your account. Atlanta National Bank C. E. CURRIER. JAS. S. FLOYD, J. S. KENNEDY. President. Vice President. Asst. Cashier. F. E. BLOCK, GEO. R. DONOVAN, J. D. LEITNER. Vice President. Cashier. Asst. Cashier. GR JINS CLOSE AT ERRATICPRIGES CHICAGO, Nov. 11.—Wheat was sharp ly lower early, losses being shown of % f(i'lc on the bearish news from enarly ev ery section of the world. World’s ship ments were much larger than expected, with Russia and the Danube good con tributors, and there was a heavy increase in the amount of breadstuffs on ocean passage destined to importing countries. While the wheat market closed witli losses of % to %c for the day'there were reactions from the bottom prices reached of % to %c. Those in the trade having ’’privileges” were the buyers late, and the increased demand caused the offerings to become smaller. Cash sales here amount ed to only 25,000 bushels and the export bids were out of line. The visible supply of wheat increased 3,654.000 to a total of 45,366,000. against 63,578,000 a year ago. Corn closed % to *4c higher and at the best prices of the day on short covering. The visible supply decreased 473,000 bush els, to a total of 2.216,000. Oats closed unchanged to a small frac tion lower. Visible increased 1,023,000, to a total of 11.574,000. Provisions closed unchanged to 2% to 7%c higher. Cash sales of corn were 90,000 bushels. Oats 200.000, with 75,000 of the latter for ex port. LIVERPOOL GRAIN MARKET. Wheat opened %d lower; at l;30 p. m. the market was %d to %d lower. Closed l%d to l%d lower. Corn opened %d to %d lower; at 1:30 p. m. the market was %d lower. Closed %d lower. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Grain quotations: Previous _ rTT DP en - High. Low. Close. Close. WH EAT— Dec. 89% 89*4 88% 89% 89% May 95 95 94% 95 95% July 90% 91 90% 91 91% CORN— Dec. 49% 50% 49% 50% 50 May 49% 49% 49 49% 49% July 49% 50% 49% 50% 50 < )ATS—- P. ec May 32% 33 32% 33 33% July 32% 32% 32% 33 33 PORK—- N'v 16.45 16.45 16.45 16.45 16.45 Jan 18.40 18.40 18.35 18.40 18.35 M’y 18.00 18.05 17.95 18.05 18.02% LARD—■ N’v 10.70 10.70 10.70 10.70 10.72% Jan 10.40 10.42% 10.37% 10.42% 10.40 ' M’y 10.12% 10.15 10.12% 10.15 10.15 RIBS— N’v 10.40 10.40 10.40 10.40 10.40 Jan. 9.92% 9.95 9.92% 9.92% 9.92% May 9,70 9,70 9.70 9.70 9.72% lot 129, Fourteenth district. November 9. S4OO—W. F. Padgett to Mrs. Mary E. Buzbee, lot 256 by 408 feet, northeast side McDonough road, 256 feet northwest of Sherln avenue. November 9. $6,000 —Victor L. Smith to Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, lot 62 by 242 feet, north side Fourteenth street, 627 feet east of Peachtree street. Novembr 7. $1,500 —I. F. and W. D. Redwine to Penn Mutual Life Insurance Company, lot 50 by 172 feet, south side Dixie avenue. 141 feet aest of Waddell street. November. SI,OO0 —T. B. Hutchison to Mary C. Os born, lot 200 by 233 feet, southeast cor ner Battle Hill avefiue and Wellington street. November 9. SBO0 —A. H. Chapman to Mrs. S. W. Chauncey, lot 50 by 180 feet, south side 55 est avenue, 305 feet west of chert road, Oakland City; also one-half Interest In lot 100 by 160 feet, north side sVest ave nue, 180 feet west of chert road. Novem ber 9. Bonds For Title. $76,450 Penal Sum —E. A. McMillan and Charles B. Alverson to George 55'. Sciple, lot 28x101 feet, southeast side sVhlteha!l street, 79 feet northeast of Trinity avenue. November 9, 1912. $36,000 Penal Sum —Mrs. Eugene P Black to Mrs, Addie F. Hunt, lot 115x400 feet, west side Peachtree road at inter section us Southern railway right-of-wav. September 20. 1912. $2,000 Penal Sum —Mrs. Bertha L. Hirschberg to Mrs. May Zinn, lot 95x222 feet, north side Mercer avenue, 720 feet west of North Boulevard. October 31, 11'12. SIB,OOO Penal Sum—L. -S. Huntley Com pany to Dixie Realty Company, lot 50x50 feet, north side Pine street, 154 feet east of sVest Peachtree street. November 8. 1912. Commissioner’s Deeds. $22,662 —S. B. Turman, commissioner, in case of Isabel R. Hinman et al. vs. Maud R. Speer to E. O. McMillan and Charles B Alverson, lot 24x101 feet, on White hall street, being lot 8 of the Mitchell property. November 9, 1912 Administrator’s Deeds. $8,500 -S. B. Turman, administrator of estate of Catherine L. Benteen to F. W. Benteen, lot of land on Entrenchment creek, adjoining Day and Coker tracts and on South Boulevard, land lot 24. Four teenth district. Also lot 600x192x562 feet, nt Intersection of South Boulevard and McDonough road. Also lot on South Boulevard, land lot 23, adjoining Benteen end Robinson’s lands. October 22, 1912. Quitclaim Deeds. S2OO—J. M. Coker to SV. R. Crawford, lot 51x195 feet, south .‘■ide Line street, 152 fret east of Grand View avenue. Novem ber 5, 1912. $5 Mollie C. Bowen to Louis F. Bowen, lot 200x900 feet, southwest corner West Hunter street and Chickamauga avenue. October 2, 1912. $5 —SV. H. Bowen to same, lot 200x900 feet, southwest corner sVest Hunter street and Chickamauga avenue, one-eighth in terest. October 2, 1912. slo—Railway Postal Clerks’ Investment association to J. H. James, lot 49x146 feet, east side sValnut street, 149 feet north of Spencer street. November 8, 1912. Mortgages. ssßo—Mrs. Lilli T. Christensen to In vestors’ Savings Company, lot 45x156 feet, 5 Kennesaw avenue. November 4, 1912. 13