Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, April 16, 1913, Image 17

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THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN A NO NEWS. W S Hi RealJ2state For Sale. ARP & gOYLSTON POULTRY FARM. WE HAVE in one of the nicest suburbs of the city an ideal home of ten rooms with all city improvements, that has been op erated as a poultry farm for some time. The Hock has out grown owner’s lot. which is 125 feet by 375. He is anxious to move to his farm, and wants to sell this place at once. This is mly two and a half blocks from •nr line, and equipped with mod ern poultry runs, duck runs and big barn. We have a very at tractive price on this property, and can make some terms. STREET CAR FRONT AGE FOR SALE. JUST OUTSIDE of the city lim its we have 1200 feet of street car frontage that is ideal for subdivision. There is a bunch of money to be made on this piece of property. Come in and let us talk to you about this. LIVE STOCK MARKET. CHICAGO, April 16.—Hogs—Receipts 28,000. Market 6c and 10c lower. Mixed and butchers $8.65@9.10, good heavy $8.80@9.06, rough heavy $8.55@8.70, light $8.76@9.10, pigs $6.90@8.50, bulk $8.90# 9.05. Cattle—Receipts 17,000. Market 10c lower. Beeves $7.50@9.10, cows and heifers $3.50@8.70, stockers and feeders $6.50@8.25, Texans $6.90@8.40, calves $6.50#8.25. Sheep—Receipts 15,000. Market steady. Native and Western $5.75@7.30, lambs $6.75@9.25. Freight Fates inU.S. Cheapest in World Interesting Comparison by Legal Ex pert of the Pennsylvania Railway System. $275.1."6 144,683 112,427 62,657 NEW YORK. April 16.—The United States has the most efficient railway system of any country in the world, according to George Stuart Patter son, General Solicitor of the Penn sylvania Railroad Company. "It carries freight cheaper and pro vides a more satisfactory service to the public than any country in th.? world,” he says. "Wo do our work upon less capital. The railroad capitalization per mile of road of the principal nations of the world is as follows United Kingdom (1911) France (1910) Prussia-Hesse (1910) .. United States (1910) .. "We do more work upon our capi tal. This is shown in these figures giving tons hauled per mile of line by the leading companies. (Eng land not being given because suen figures are not compiled there): France 496,930 Germany 827,400 United States 1,071,086 “We pay our railway labor better than any country In the world. The following table shows the average daily compensation of railway em ployees: United States $2.23 United Kingdom 1.35 Austria 89 Prussia-Hesse SI "The English Board of Trade s of ficial reports show our cost of living (based on the cost of the standard consumption of a, typical workman’s family) as being 38 per cent higher than in the United Kingdom, yet in pay our railway labor receives 60 per cent better wages. "The cost of living in the United States is 17.8 per cent higher than in Germany, yet we pay our railway labor nearly three times as much as is paid in Germany, under govern ment ownership.” If you Have anything to sell adver tise in The Sunday American. Lar gest circulation of any Sunday news paper in the South. Real Estate For Sale. Real Estate For Sale. Fourteenth Street Home Strictly modern 9-room residence, absolutely up to the minute. Beautiful Hardwood floors, Mahogany man tels, Artistic Electric Fixtures, furnace heat, servant’s room, cement driveway and garage. In fact, everything and a large lot thrown in. Am forced to sell, therefore offer my home $2,000 under market. Will make easy terms. Phone Owner, Ivy 5522. MONEY WE HAVE ample connections whereby we can make loans on desirable real estate in the city. Anyone wishing to have a loan made quickly will please see us. We can place the ap plication without any unnecessary delay. Ralph O. Cochran Company 74-76 Peachtree Street. ON ADAIR AVENUE, facing the magnifi cent and palatial estate of Colonel Green B. Adair, we offer a thoroughly modern, well- constructed and attractive home, on a splen did lot, for $6,750. A few hundred dollars cash, with $2,000 in purchase money notes on other property, and the balance easy. In the Druid Hills section this property has a cer tain future, and is an ideal home. IN ANSLEY PARK, corner Avery Drive and Park Lane, a very attractive and mod ern home. Two-story, eight rooms, every con venience. Right at the car line. Large lot. We will sell this on the same terms as the above, at a figure that is sure to turn it quick. Price $8,000. Edwin P. Ansley Ivy 1600. Realty Trust Bldg. DECATUR BUY A HOME IN BEAUTIFUL WINNONA PARK 60 SPLENDID building lots, with water, sewer and sidewalks, will be put on the market in a short time. Ask us for plat and prices. EDWIN P. ANSLEY ivy 1600, teallie tefiaBiasia, Atlmts. 2IS Task Well Done Is That Done With Enthusiasm and a Will Says Business Expert BY B. c. FORBES. Arc you good friends with your work? • * * Since we spend most of our wak ing hours at our daily tasks, is it not very important that we should be happy in the doing of them? The man or woman who has no heart for his or her employment cannot real ize the full joy of living. • * * There is only one thing worse than having disagreeable work, and that is having no work at all. The per son who has no work can have no recreation, no relaxation. The vil lage blacksmith is more to be en vied than the idler who may have millions. The squire who walked to get a stomach for his meat was less happy than the sturdy son of the soil who rejoined: “And I walk to get meat for my stomach.” * * . * The man who brings a right atti tude to his job is rich all day long, for, as a sage remarked, "Money never made any man rich, but his mind.” * * * Some people spend more energy in grumbling than in trying to get INEBBAY. APRIL 16,133 c 0 COTTON GOSSIP Foreign Spinners Absorb Spot Houses’ Offerings—Close Was Somewhat Easier. NEW YORK. April 16. Liberal soiling of May contracts was the feature of the cotton market at the opening to-day. The first prices were 1 to I points low er. 'Hie brokers who sold May wore supposed to represent spot houses. New crops wore sold on fine weather. After the call the bears wore again aggressive. In addition to the liquidation "f May a few brokers inclined to sell duly, which was thought to bo profit-taking. This encouraged scattered soiling of re mote months and prices fell some 3 to 5 points from the opening range. Con tinued favorable weather conditions over the bfclt, also good river news, coupled with bearish sentiment, was appealing to the boars, but offerings were so read ily absorbed that offerings were abated to some extent and price movement dur ing the late forenoon was unchanged to a shade up from the Initial level. Weekly interior movement: A sudden buying movement developed at noon, sending May and July to 11.88 and holding other positions relatively firm. The rally started <»n buying by Liverpool and some local operators bid ding aggressively for May under the market. The ring crowd seemed to have gone short and there was very little cot ton for sale. The advance was helped along by Lester, who purchased 10,000 bales of October and Wenman buying 5,000 bales of July. It is said that the English market is buying May here with the view of ab sorbing 30.000 to 50,000 bales of the lo cal st< r*k, which is approximately 106,- 0 bales. However, sentiment is in favor of the bears; also weather developments, and the average trader anticipated lower prices. Advices from the Western belt and Georgia are optimistic. In many sec tions cotton is up. Georgia reports about To be done well, a task must be done with a will, with relish, with enthusiasm. The best workers arc those whose hearts are in their work. Those who are wisely ambi tious seldom grumble. A motto which has been framed and hung on many walls reads: “All things come to those who hustle while they wait.” The malcontent usually waits without hustling. He wants the moon without having to soar to get it. He sits with folded hands instead of speeding forrh with busy feet and nimble fingers. * * * Contentment can be cultivated. And it’s a plant worth cultivating. It can at least be said of Christian Science that it has turned many sour people sweet. The harder a man’s toil the greater his need for bringing cheerfulness to it—the merry heart goes all the day. * * * Employers will promote a cheerful worker sooner than a discontented one. The foreman who believes in his work, who takes pride in it, who goes at it wholeheartedly infuses something of his own spirit into thoee serving under him. Why should a servant who is constantly complaining, who is eternally railing against his boss, who finds his em ployment a bore, be placed in com mand of other servants? His ex ample would bring on a strike rather than promote success. * * • Of course, many jobs are near relatives of drudgery. It is hard to sing at them. But, if nothing else can be reached, what’s the use of making the worst of it? Why not make the best of it? “What cannot be cured must be endured.” Most men toil and slave not solely for their own sakes; they sow that others—wife, mother, family—may reap. When tackled in this spirit, when performed from unselfish mo tives, few tasks cannot be made at least tolerable. No man liveth to himself—unless he be a fool, for to try it invites inward failure even though it may bring outward “suc cess.” • • • Some of these platitudes are prompted by an incident that oc curred on the Brooklyn Bridge ele vated platform in the early hours of Saturday morning, when newspaper men were waiting for their trains On this platform is a veteran whose duty it is to hoist the proper signals, call out the destination of trains and answer the countless questions of passengers. Of late there has been a second man on the platform. He does not yet know what the public have a right to expect of him. On this particular morning he was guilty of such incivility that the veteran began to give him some homely sound advice. Instead of ac- ceptinq it in aood part, he replied jauntily that there were plenty of jobs in New York. • • • “Don’t throw away dirty water until you get clean,” chided the vet eran. “There are ten thousand peo ple in New York this night looking for work—I see some of them hang- round a gate I pass ©very morning,” 0*0 The trouble with the uncivil plat form man, it struck me, was that he brought a wrong attitude, a wrong state of mind to his work. The Brooklyn Rapid Transit Company pays him to give its patrons civil answers, but apparently he felt too big for his job. And he sought to vent his spleen upon the company’s customers. Be a little more patient, a little more cheerful, my friend. You will get farther and the way will be all the smoother for yourself and for others. PORT RECEIPTS, The following table shows receipts at the ports to-day compared with the same day last year: 40 to 50 per cent’of the planting finished. enre about a NEW YORK. April 16. Advices from orgla ;;rr that 40 per cent t<* 60 per • ent of the i rop has bem planted and ! in the uplands some of it is up. i Some of ihe most radical bears are ; talking 10 %c cott« n and spinners and i mills an cautious In buying. They fear ; 'the tariff. * * * I Ati? tin. Texas, wires: "Good weather during the latter part of March and first few days of this month has enabled the farmers all over the State to make good headway preparing the land for planting." * * * Got ton is being planted In the lower part of Centra I Texas. 0 * • If reports received from Western Tex as arc true there will be an enormous Increase in acreage in that legion this season. * * * The cotton acreage in Texas last year was 10,972,000 acres, as compared with 11.150.000 acres the preceding year. A 5.000,000-bale crop Is the prevailing es timate. * * * Mr. F. Tate says: "My views are about the same as for last few days, but with the narrowness of the market and the general pessimistic feeling, it is difficult to get any advance, and equally difficult to get decline. "The local crowd would be glad to drive the market down with the idea of making a better buying basis, honing to stimulate a general increase in public bu.cness. but oven with the assistance < f the claimed threatening destruction of business on account of tariff changes they fail to produce the expected deedine. With New Orleans market higher than New York and Liverpool about .130 points higher than New' York, with every indication that the foreign markets must have more cotton, I fail U* see when* the encouragement for a decline is coming from short of very strong evidence of a crop in excess of 6,000 bales from this year. “The low on July was reached on Oc tober 10, when July sold at 10.66, be tween then and December 16, during the most active period of the harvesting, July advanced about 230 points to 12.95. Since that time it has declined 121 points under the high of last December and 108 points over the low level of last October. "The pendulum in its swing has grad ually narrowed to an average in differ- of about a little more than 100 Today's New York Stock Market l’lu> following host, lowest Little Trading in Wall Street and j ' Vlth ll "' Stock quotations: Public Has No Hand table shows the and elose. to- previous close: in Recent excessive rains are regarded as propitious to the plant. Heavy rains of this character furnish enough subsoil moisture for the plant without forcing the tap root to grow far into the ground in case of a hot July or August. During the afternoon session the mar ket was steady with prices 3 to 7 points above the opening. Trading, however, was light. At the close the market was steady with prices showing irregularity, being 4 points higher to 5 points decline from the final quotations of Tuesday. 1913. L912 1911 .. .I 20,840! 12.089i 12,892 . ..! 30.4211 37,644 24,874 . . . 394,810 287,744 307,377 Receipts . . Shipments Stocks ..... RANGElN NEW YORK FUTURES- c 0) Cu 0 d t£ t o ►J ts. 3-3 Close. Prev. Close. Ap. 11.84-87 11.85 My i i si i i .88 ii.vo 11.85 1 1.84-85 1 1.80-81 Jne 111.85-87 11.84-86 Jly 11.81 11.88 1 i .78 IT. 85 11.85-86 11.82-88 AS. 11.71 11.76 11.68 11.75 11.73-74 11.71-73 Spt 111.47-49 11.52-53 Oc. 11.44 11.47 11.39 11.42111.41 -42 11.46-47 Dc. 11.46 11.51 11.43|11.46(11. 45-46 11.50-51 Jan 11.41 11.46 11.40 11.40 11.40-41 11.41.47 Mch.| .... 11.45-47 Closed steady. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET. LIVERPOOL, April 16.—This market was due to open 3 to 4% points higher, but opened quiet 2 to 3 points higher than the previous close. At 12:15 p. m., the market was steady, at «- net ad vance of 3% to 4% points. Spot cotton steady at 1 point ad vance: middling 6.89d; sales, $41,000 bales, including 9,000 American bajfc£ Port receipts are to-day estSL.ated at 19,000 bales, compared with 20.384 bales last w r eek and 12,896 bales for th“ corre sponding week last year, agaiCrf 8,968 bales for the same week the year before. At the close the market was quiet, with prices at a net advance of 1% to 2(4 points from the final quotations of Tuesday. LIVERPOOL. COTTON MA^*ET. Opening Prev. Range. Close. Close. April .6.61 -6.62% 6.60% 6.59 April-May . . .6.57(4-6.59 6.57 6.55% May-June . . . 6.57%-6.55 1 2 6.56% 6.55 .Tune-July . . .6.55 -6.57 6.54% 6.53 July-Aug. . . .6.50%-6.52 6.50 6.48% Aug.-Sept. . . .6.40 -6.42 6.39% 6.37% Sept.-Oct. . . .6.67(4-6.67% 6.27 6.25 Oct.-Nov. . . .6.19 6.19 6.16% Nov.-Dec. . . .6.16%-6.18 6.16 6.13% Dec.-Jan. . . . 6.15%-6.16% 6.15 6.12% Jan.-Feb. . . ,6.14%-6.16 6.14 6.11 % Feb.-Mch. . . 6 15 6.12% Closed quiet HAYWARD & CLARK’S DAILY COTTON LETTER NEW ORLEANS. April 16. Political news is less favorable. Peace in the Balkans still seems far off. the latest news reporting relations between Bul garia and Servia much strained. Liverpool came in rather easier than expected, but spot sales arc large. The feature of our opening was the pur chase of about 5,000 hales of May cred ited to the Liverpool house which bought most of the spots here yester day. This, of course, intimidated sell ers and the market was easily held. There Is much uncertainty and confusion of views as to what will be the next move in the summer positions. New York says May will go to a larger discount under July, whereas the buying here of May by Liverpool and news of strong bull combination in Liver pool suggest bullish operations. The spot market is dull to-day. The demand seems to depend altogether on the Liverpool house which bought yes terday and was a heavy buyer of May here this morning, others not seeming interested in spots. The contract mar ket is quiet, hut very steady around 12.26 for July. Sellers are scarce, show ing that the weight of opinion is in fa vor of bullish moves. RANGE NEW ORLEANS FUTURES. That Little. New Orleans. Galveston. . . Mobile Savannah. . . Charleston. . . Wilmington . . Norfolk. . . . Boston. . . . Pacific coast . Various. 1913 1912. 4.312 3,310 3.157 3,232 268 456 3,927 3,066 315 156 971 504 1.209 1,057 4 8,778 188 * 630 485 Total ' 23.129 12.696 points, and all things considered and being some distant from that assurance of a big crop I beg to favor working to the long side, buying on all declines Yather than selling." After the call Schill, Hentz, Wellman, Royce, Beardsley, Norden, Flinn and Waters were leading buyers. Rosen berg, Watkins, Parrott, Hartcorn and Schley were principal sellers. Cone was a heavy seller of May. which was said to be for spot people. S ’hentz was buy irig May and selling July. Outside of May the trading was light: weather and river news favorable. Sentiment bearish and lower prices predicted. The Journal of Commerce says: "Many of the crop reports received were of very cheerful tenor, speaking of good stands and a favorable outlook. Fertil izers are being used extensively; inten sive farming is, to all appearances, be coming more general, and with cotton on the eve of the planting season at 12%c a pound, very many people think it as certain as the law of cause and effect that a big acreage will be plant ed. "Reports current of price concessions lo be made on staple prints appear to be without foundation. Business in bleached cottons has been of fair volume this month thus far and jobbers admit that they are not supplied save for Im mediate necessities." Following arc H » m. bids: May 11.78, July 11.80, October 11.41, January 11.40. * * * NEW ORLEANS. April 16.—Hayward & Clark: The weather map Is very fa vorable. It shows fair weather over the entire bolt, except cloudy in North Car olina. There was no rain, except in North Carolina. It is w armer all around, ich warmer in the West and Central States. Indications are for continued fair to warmer weather over the Central and Eastern belt, probably with in creasing cloudiness in West Texas and Oklahoma. Spots neglected so far to-day. but de mand may come later in the day. The Liverpool house that bought yesterday is about the only chance. Following are 10 a. m. bids: May 12.29, July 12.17, October 11.45, January 11.49. Estimated receipts for Thursday: 1913. 1912. New Orleans . . . .4,500 to 5,500 1,687 Galveston 2,500 to 3,500 4,228 * * * Liverpool cables: "American middling fair 7.45d, good middling 7.lid, middling 6.89d, low' middling 6.73d, good ordinary 6.39d, ordinary 6.05d." 0 0 0 The New Orleans Times-Democrat says: “Because cool weather is un doubtedly delaying the average new' crop start, and because when merchants are forced to buy old crop cotton, they find they must pay very full prices for the supplies they need, the cotton market talent exhibits less than a keen desire to .sell contracts further below a parity with spots. Nobody attempts to deny the obvious fact that clear, dry weather over most of the belt during some days past has promoted farm work, nor that, the land is now in a good state of preparation. But low temperatures re tard germination, therefore farmers are delaying actual planting operations in some sections. For this reason the New Orleans talent seems to prefer straddle sales of the new crop and. purchases of the old under the belief that prospective delay in the availability of new crop sup plies will boost the value of the rem nant of the crop. On the other hand, some interests in New York have been advising the sale of July and the pur chase of October: just why is not quite clear, since the difference between New York May and Liverpool Mav-June was as much as 136 points yesterday, and there is some reason to believe that Liv erpool merchants intend taking up cot ton on New York contracts next month." By CHARLES W. STORM. NEW YORK. April 16. A heavy tone issues showed fractional losses. There was an absence of demand which af fected nearly the entire list Amalgamated Copper declined 7 « to 75 7 m and declines weie also noted In the following: American Gan %. Atchison Atlantic Coast Line Erie V*. Rend ing Vi, United States Steel common 1*. Union Pacific -V Canadian Pacific was in good demand and advanced %. Frac tional advances also were made by Penn sylvania. Western Maryland, St. Paul, Great Northern preferred and a few others. Northern Pacific was unchanged on the first sale, but gained fractionally afterward. The curb market was dull. Dealings in Americans in London were professional. They were above New York parity. There was covering in Canadian Pacific in London. A firm tone prevailed during the Late forenoon with practically all the leading issues showing fractional gains. Cana dian Pacific was up 1 % to 243(4. Read ing advanced •%. Northern Pacific, Great Northern and Pennsylvania were up V Call money is loaning at 2%. Trading was almost at a standstill In the Iasi hour. Steel. Reading. Amal gamated Copper. Atchison and Canadian Pacific sold around their mid-day range Union Pacific* receded fractionally, as did American Gan. Thetone was list less The market closed firm. Government bonds unchanged; others dull. MONEY AND EXCHANGE. NEW YORK April 16. Money on call, 2%®3 per rent. Time money, dull; six ty clays, 4(4 per cent; 90 days. 4V*@4%; six months. 4(4@4%. Posted rates: Sterling exchanges. 4.84 @4.87% with actual business in bankers' bills at 4.86(6 for demand and 4.8310 for 60-day bills. Prime mercantile paper unchanged. RAILROAD EARNINGS. Earnings of Southern railroads for the first week In April follow’: Central of Georgia, $267,100, a decrease of $37,900 from the same week, 1912. Since July 1, 1912, the road has earned $11,148,700. an increase of $48,300 over the same period of the preceding year. Louisville and Nashville, first week of April, $989,195; decrease, $112,180. Since July 1. $45,793,502; increase, $2,207,069. Mobile and Ohio, flrsl week In April, $182,912; increase, $41,017; from July 1, $9,386,136; increase, $594,289. Southern Railway, first week in April, $1,272,837; decrease. $86,396. From July 1, $53,279,424; Increase, $3,996,958. SNOW REPORTS ON HESSIAN FLY. CHICAGO, April 16—R W. Snow says: "My advices show a little evidence of the presence ol Hessian fly in s few counties in eastern and southeastern Kansas and indications of its presence in scattered localities in southern Illinois and Indiana. The pest is present every year in a scattered way whenever win ter wheat Is grown and this year is no exception. Reports of fly discovery may be expected at intervals during the sea son. There is nothing in sight, how ever, to indicate anything other than a normal situation so far. MINING STOCKS. BOSTON, April 16.—Op ican OSTON, April 16.—Opening: Amer- i Woolen preferred 78(4, Mayflower 9. BAR SILVER. NEW YORK, April 16.—Commercial bar silver 59(4c; Mexican dollnrs 48c. LONDON, April 16.—Bar silver quiet at 27(4d. Cloj. Prev. STOCK— High. Low. Bid. Close. Amal, Copper. 76% 75% 76' % 76% Am. Ice Sec.. 26 26 26% 36% Am. Sun. Ref. 113 113 Am. Smelting. 69 69% Am. Locomo... 36' 4 36' , 36' 4 36 Am. Car Fdy... 50' 4 50% Am. Cot. Oil... 47' % 46% Am. Woolen... 13% 18'/, Anaconda . .. 38' * 37% 38' 4 38'/, Atchison 102'a 1013.4 101% 101'/, A. C. L 122% 122'„ 122 122 American Can 34% 3S'/ 2 33% 33% do, pref. . 95% 95'% 95 95' 4* Am. Beet Su(j. 32% 323 4 32% 323, Am. T.-T 131 131 131 131% Am. Agricul... 52' 2 52 B. R. T. 90% 90 B. and O. . 993 4 99 Can. Pacific... 243' ? 242' % Corn Products 10% 10% 10% 10% C. and O. . 67% 663 4 66% 664% Consol. Gas., 132 132 131' . 130(4 Cen. Leather.. £5 25 25 25 Colo. F. and 1. 33% 33% 33' 4 33(4 Colo. Southern 31'/ a 31 D. and H. . . 159 160 Den. and R. G. 21 21 21 21 Distil. Secur... 16 16' , Erie 29% 29' M 30 28% do, pref. . . 45' 4 45'% 46 45 Gen. Electric. 139' 4 139 139' , 140 Goldfield Cons. 2'/. 2'/% G. Western . 14% 14% 14' % 14' 2 G. l$lor.. pfd.. 127 126% 122% G. North. Ore. 35 35 34 34',% Int. Harvester 105 104' 4 III. Central. . 119(4 119 Interboro .... 17 17 do, pref. . . 58' s 573 4 5734 57(4 Iowa Central 8 8 K. C. Southern 25 25 25 24% K. and T. ... 25% 25% 26'/, 25% do. pref. . . 62'/, 63 L. Valley. . 159% 159',, 159% 159% L. and N. . . 133' 4 133 133'-% 1331/4 Mo. Pacific . 37% 375, 37(4 37'/, N. Y. Central 102% 102(4 102% 102 Northwest. . 132(4 132' ' 2 Nat. Lead . 49' 2 49 N. and W. . 106 105',.., No. Pacific . 116 115'/ 4 11534 115(4 O. and W. . 30% 30% Penn 114(4 114'/, 114'/, 114 Pacific Mail . 25(4 25% P. Gas Co. . 111% 111% P. Steel Car. 26 26 Reading. . . 164% 163% 1643 4 1533 4 Rock Island 22'-, 22'/% do. pfd. . . 37 36% 32', 2 37i/ a R. 1. & S. . . 25% 25' 4 25(4 24% do. pfd. . . 84 84% S.-Sheffield . 35 35 So. Pacific . 101'/, 1003 4 100% 100% So. Railway. 26(2 26 do. pfd. . . 78% 78' , St. Paul . . 109(4 108% 109' „ 108% Tenn. Copper 35(4 35% Texas Pacific 18 18 Third Ave. . 36 353 4 Union Pacific 153% 152' * 153' , 153 U. S. Rubber 63'/, 63'/, 64% 63% Utah Copper 53' 4 53'% 53' , 53'/, U. S. Steel . 62' 4 61(4 62' , 61% do. pfd. 108 107% 107% V.-C. Chem.. 35 34 W. Union . . 6734 673 4 66% 67' 2 Wabash . . 3'/, 3 do. pfd. . . 10% 10% W. Electric. 63'/, 63' 4 63',% 63(4 W. Central . 61'/, 52 W. Maryland 40' , 40% Liverpool and Chicago Shorts Cover Big Lines—Offerings Were Liberal. ,/ ST. LOUIS CASH QUOTATIONS. Wheat No. 2 red 107@108 Corn—No. 2 red 59 Oats—No. 2 red 25 NEW YORK COFFEE MARKET. Coffee quotations: Opening. | Closing. January . . . February, . . March. . . April . . . . May .... Juno .... July .... August . . . . September. . October. . . . November. . , December. . . 11.23 11.23@11.25 11.24 10.72 10.85@10.90 11.00 11.13 11.23 11.23 11.22@11.24 11.22 11.35@11.36 n.36@l1.37 11.39 @11.40 10.65@ 10.70 10.84@10.85 10.94 @10.95 11.08 @11.09 ll.22@11.23 11.32® 11.3.1 11.32® 11.33 ll.32@ll.34 11.34@11.35 g. “ o s C-U M V 12.27 12.38112.26! 12.33112.33 - 34| 12.30-31 fly 12.20 12.27I12.16I12.21 T2.20-21 12.21-22 Ag 11.89! 11.95|11.89111.95 11.90-92 11.91-92 Oc 11.46111.51111.45! 11.45 11.45 -46111.49-50 Dc 11-48 11.52111.47 11.48 11.48-49)11.51-52 J’n 11.51|11.5lln.50lll.50 11.50-51 11.53-55 Closed steady. INTERIOR MOVEMENT. ‘I 1913. Houston 3,923 Augusta 189 Memphis 1,642 Ft. i/ouis 3,699 Cincinnati 202 IJttle Rock . . . . 1912. 2,695 658 475 4.692 1,717 50 Total. 9,655 I 10,177 Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads The Sunday American. YOUR ad- vti aisement in the next issue will sell aoods* Try it 1 SPOT COTTON MARKET. Atlanta, quiet; middling 12c. Athens, steady; middling 12(4 Macon, steady; middling 12c, New Orleans, steady; middling 12(4. New York, quiet; middling 12.40. Philadelphia, quiet; middling 12.65. Boston, easy; middling 12.40 Liverpool, steady; middling 0.89d. Savannah, quiet; middling 12(4. Norfolk, quiet; middling 12(4. Augusta, sieady; middling 12(6. Mobile, quiet; middling 12 3-16. Galveston, easy; middling 12 9-16. Charleston, quiet; middling 12%. Wilmington, nominal. Little Rock, steady; middling 12%. Baltimore, nominal: middling 12%. Memphis, steady; middling 12%. St. J»uis, quiet; middling 12% Houston, quiet; middling 12 9-16, Louisville, firm; midfiling 12%. Greenville, quiet; middling 12c Charlotte, steady; middling 12(6- ATLANTA MULE AND HORSE MARKET (Corrected by the National Stock Yards Commission Company; C. G. Tur ner, President.) Mules. Mules and horses In the last week have declined from $5 to $10 per head, bur for the past few days there, has been a good demand for them. The railroads have begun to receive shipments, so there will be no scarci ty of stock on account of the h ! gh water. It looks as if prices will remain the same for awhile. Draft horses and large road mules are in active demand, and we believe this will bL so for some time to come. 14 to 14 % hands, rough, good ages, $115 to $130. 14 to 12%, finish with quality, $155 to $180 14% to 15 hands, rough, $130 to $170. 15 to 15% hands, finish, $180 to $205. 16 hands, with quality and finish, $205 to $230. 16 hands, heavy chunk, weighing form 1,250 to 1,400 pounds, $255 to $330. Horses. Southern chunk horses, from $75 to $110. Southern chunk, finish, $110 to $135. Good driving horses, quality and finish, ranging in price from $160 to $210. Heavy draught horses, rough, $160 to $210. , Heavy draught horses, finish, $210 to $300. COTTON SEED OIL. Cotton seed oil quotations: I Opening. I Closing [“... .“. I 6.9*2@7.05 ! 6.38®7.00 6.95@7.00 I 6.81 @6.90 6.94® 6.95 , 6.93@6.96 6.97@6.99 6.97 @ 6.98 7.00® 7.01 7.01 ®7.03 ! 7.03@7.05 7.01 @7.04 ; 7.04®7.05 6.69®6.81 I 6.73®6.84 | 6.61 @6.73 1 6.63@6,64 -vasv fitAadv: 17.000 bhlau Spot . . . April . . . May . . . June . . . July . . • August . . September . October . . November . COTTON MARKET OPINIONS. Norman, Mayer &. Co.: Advise selling on any advance. Thompson, Towle & Co.: The favora ble weather which Is predicted to con tinue encouraged further short selling particularly in the old crop positions, and it seems quit© possible that the old and new crop positions will come still closer together. Logan & Bryan: it looks probable that a recovery from present levels will ensue as a consequence more of techni cal conditions than of crop news. Sternberger, Sinn & Co.: Values should cLa better for the time being. Closed steady. Sales, 85,250 bags. 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, 1,00 to 1,200, $6.00® 6.50; good steers, 800 to 1,000, 5.60 @ 6.00; medium to good steers, TOO to 850, 5.25® 5.75; medium to good cows. 700 to 800, 4.50@5.00; good to choice beef cows, 800 to 900. 5.00@6.50; medium to good heifers. 6.50@7.50; good to choice helf ers, 750 to 850. 6.00@5.60; medium to good heifers, 650 to 750, 4.25®4.75. The above represent ruling prices of good quality of beef cat’le. Inferior grades and dairy type selling lower. Mixed to common steers, if fat, 800 to 900. 5.00@5.50: medium to common cows, if fat, 700 to 800, 4.25@4,75; mixed com mon. 600 to 800 3.25@4.25; good butcher bulls, 3.50®4.50 Prime hogs. 160 to 200 average. 8.90® 9.15; good butcher hogs. 140 to 160, 8.75 4*9.00; good butcher pigs, 100 to 140, 8.26@8.75; light pigs. 80 to 100. 8.00® 8.50; heavy rough hogs, 200 to 250, 8.25 @8.75. Above quotations apply to corn-fed hogs, mash and peanut-fattened hogs, 1 to l%c under. THE WEATHER. Conditions. WASHINGTON. April 16.—The indi cations are that the storm now off the Virginia coast will move northeastward and cause rains to-night on the imme diate Atlantic coast from New Jersey northward. Storm warnings are dis played on the Atlantic coast from Del aware breakwater to Boston. General Forecast. Following is the general forecast until 7 p. m. Thursday: Georgia Fair to-night and Thursday. Virginia Fair to-night and Thursday North Carolina—Fair to-night and Thursday; slowly rising temperature Thursday. South Carolina—Fair to-night and Thursday. Florida Fair to-night and Thursday Alabama and Mississippi—Fair to night and Thursday. PATTEN COVERS WHILE THE ARMOUR CLIQUE LIQUIDATES CHICAGO, April 16.—The domestic wheat situation is looked upon as bear ish. One of the bull houses said there seemed to he nothing but foreign strength and export business to turn the market in the race of the glowing crop reports and the export business is slow in developing. It was the gossip of the trade in corn and oats yesterday that Patten had covered 500,000 bushels of corn and oats, and some placed the fig ures higher. The principal selling was •v the Armour interests. The latter has been heavily long of corn and oats and has been selling steadily for several days. Sales of 1,000.000 bushels of July corn in the Iasi half hour by Harris Winthron was considered as long stuff and credited to the Armour interests. Bulls figure that with navigation on the lakes to open either to-day or to morrow there will be a heavy reduction in atouka CHICAGO, April 16. News from abroad on wheat this morning was the signal for general buying and early ad vances of •%<• to %<•, but on the upturn there were free offerings and the mar ket failed to stand tip under them. The Continental demand for - ash wheat in all positions, and the buying of that country late yesterday as cabled by -the European News Agency, were the prin cipal bull helps. Northwestern receipts, while small, exceeded those of a > ear ago. Winnipeg receipts were larger than a year ago. Corn was better at the start, but it sold off to ruling rates of last night Liverpool reported the weakness there was based on the increased offerings by America and better weather for harvest ing in the Argentine Republic. Oats were a small fraction better. Hog products sympathized with the decline In the price of hogs at the yards, as the demand in the pit was smaller than the offerings. The many misleading messages re ceived from Baltimore to-day as to the amount of export trade in wheat, thcra caused the average speculator to load up with wheat early, and when it be came known that the messages were misleading and that the export business I w'as confined to six boat loads instead i of 180 loads, as reported at the outset, ; many of the early buyers turned sellers There were re-sale* by exporters of ! 100,000 bushels and 80,000 bushels <two lots) whfceh caused the mistake--if it was a mistake. There was another change in sentiment before the closing of the day’s session when shorts entered the market and absorbed the offerings in a hurry. Resting spots for wheat were % to %c higher and the market w'as pretty well sustained up to the close. Cash sales of wheat at Chicago amounted to 52.000 bushels: corn 200,000 bushels, and oats 95,000 bushels. Corn closed % to (4c higher and oats were up (4 to (4c. Hog products were unsettled. CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Grain quotations: July.... Sept.... Previous May. July. Sept. May.... July.... Sept.... PORK May. July. Sept... i RIBS 1 May... July... Sept... High. AT— Low. Close. Close. 90% 89 (4 »0% 89% 88% 89% 88% 88% 87: 8 88*4 8S 56% r.r.% 55 55 . 55 Vi ■'4% 65% 36 M . 56% 55% 56% 56 34% 34% 34% 34% 34% 33% :*4% 33% _. 54% 33% 33% 33V-, 19.55 19.40 19.52% 19.57% 19.67% 19.47(2 19.65 19.75 ^9.57% 19.45 19.52% 19.62% 10.95 10.80 10.95 10.82% 10.90 10.80 10.90 10.82% 10.92% 10.80 10.92% 10.85 11.30 11.10 11.30 11.15 11.05 10.95 11.02% 11.00 . 10.82 % 10.77% 10.82% 10.83% Europe a Big Fake, Says Rich American NEW YORK, April 16.—Here In a nutshell is the condensation of the views on Europe held by Frederick H. Miller, a wealthy manufacturer of Evanston, Ill., who arrived in port to-day on the liner Kaiser Wilhelm Der Grosse: ‘Europe in general Is a grand bunk. Paris is nothing more than a side show; Venice is a place where the sanitary board should get to work at once; London is the most dismal place in the world and Monte Carlo Is a gambling den that ought to bo raided. T wouldn’t go back to Europe if they gave me a free ticket. "Why, I saw women wearing clothes in Paris that were certainly the freakish products of disturbed minds. If a woman in Bvanston wore such thing she would be ridden on a 1 i 1 •* PRIMARY MOVEMENT. WHEAT— 1 1913. 1912. Receipts .... Shipments .... .! 359.000 .1 468,000 236,000 271,000 CORN— | 1 Shipments .... . 1 306,000 .1 378.000 340.000 371,000 ^ CHICAGO CAR LOTS. Following are the receipts for Wed nesday and estimated for Thursday: I Wedn’day.iThursrtay. Wheat . . . ... 32 18 Corn . . . < tats . . . . . . 114 102 Hogs . . . ... 28,000 19,000 LIVERPOOL GRAIN MARKET. LIVERPOOL, April 16. -Wheat opened %d lower; at 1:30 p. m. the market was (id to %d higher. Closed (4d to *%d higher. Corn opened %d lower; at 1:30 p- m. the market war. (4d lower. Closed un changed to (4d lower. CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS. CHICAGO, April 16.—Wheat. No. 2 red, 1.05@1.08: No. 3 red, 98@1.02: No. 2 hard winter, 91@94; No. 3 hard winter. 90@93; No. 1 northern spring. 92%@93; No. 2 northern spring. 91 @92; No. 3 spring. 88@89. Corn No. 2, 55(4@56; No. 2 w’hite, 57@ 57%: No. 2 yellow, 66@56%; No. 3, 54% @65%; No. 3 white, 55%@56; No. 3 yel low, 54%@55%: No. 4. 52%@54(4; No. 4 white, 54@55; No. 4 yellow. 52%@54. Oats. No. 2 white, 36@36%; No. 3, 33® 35; No. 3 white. 34; No. 4 white, 33@34; Standard, 35%@36. Nearly everybody in Atlanta reads The Sunday American. YOUR ad vertisement in the next issue will sell goods. Try it! Vigilance- " Hiiiiwntiiiiaiiii i //„(,, success! terprise there are certain principles that, like the red thread running through all the cordage of the Brit ish Navy, pervade every trasaction. They make short work of doubt ful proposition*, and like the spirit level, point out that which is im perfect or fallacious. The protection of its depositors is the first consideration, the "red thread and the ruling law of this Institution. Your account is invited. 4 Per Cent on Savings ank & Imjst (Uotpotatiott Capital $1,000,000 Resources Over $5,000,000 CANDLER BUILDING BRANCH Corner Mitchell and Forsyth Street* Cetittal