Newspaper Page Text
THE ATLANTA GEORGIAN AND NEWS. THURSDAY. APRIL 17. fain.
Real Estate For Sale.
Real Estate For Sale.
EAST PINE STREET
There are plenty ol' high-priced homes on the
North Side, but there are not many you eun 1
buy for $3,500.
We offer an unencumbered place, No. 182
East Pine, near Ripley street, for $3,500 cash; it
is a two-story house showing its value to any
observer.
Forrest & George Adair
Rea! Estate For Sale.
FOR SALK.
\\ !•) HAVE in Inman Park on good
street three brand-new 5-room bun
galows just one-half block from ear
line; they have gas and electric lights,
tile bath; in fact, every modern con
venience.
.J l ST the little home you are looking
fnr, price. $2.75; $250 cash and $20
per month: Just like tent. s« e Mr. Hub-
bins.
ON ONE of the best streets on the
North Side we have two brand-new
bungalows; they are up-to-date in everj
particular; they have hardwood floors,
furnace and. In fact, there Is nothing
left out that goes to make an up-to-
date home. The price is right; terms
are all you can ask You can buy these
with a small cash payment and the
balance like rent. See Mr. Stallworth.
Real Estate For Sole.
FOR RENT.
9 rooms, 423 (Jordon St v'-Tny
8 rooms, 4SO \V. Peachtree t’O.fcO
8 rooms, 385 Ponce DeLeon 50.00
8 rooms, 7311 N. Boulevard 4 5,00
8 rooms, t09 Spring St 35.00
7 rooms, 63 K. 10th St 40.00
6 rooms, 280 Iv L5th St 32.50
6 rooms, 34 Seals Place 30.00
5 rooms, 25 Halo St 20.00
5 looms, 16 Arizona 20.00
APARTMENTS.
WE HAVE a beautiful apartment on
Washington Street just vacated, has 7
rooms, every convenience. The price is
right, (’all us up.
HOME BARGAINS.
$5,500 BUNGALOW In West End, and on Gordon Street. It has six pretty
rooms, stone front. Take a look at it. Terms.
$6,500 BUNGALOW, six rooms, close to Ponce DeLeon. Remember, it has tile
front porch and bath room, cement driveway. This is the prettiest little
home on the North Side by far. Terms. $7,500—another handsome, two-
story, seven room bungalow. Both of these places have servant room and
furnace.
$7,750, NORTH JACKSON, right at ponce DeLeon, a dandy nine-room home;
modern; on easy terms. Let us show it to you.
$9,000, WEST PEACHTREE, a handsome nine-room house, has everything
your heart could wish; on easy terms and never occupied.
$2,800. EAST GEORGIA AVENUE, six-room house; $200 cash, balance $25 per
month.
MARTIN-OZBURN REALTY CO.
I THIRD NATIONAL BANK BLDG.
PHONES: IVY 1276. ATL. 208.
T. J. BUCHANAN
405 Peters Building. Phone Main 5258-J.
MARIETTA STREET
100 FEET SQUARE on Marietta street, near Pon
ders avenue, at $150 per front foot. Will sell
as a whole or will divide it. You can’t make a
mistake in buying this at the price named.
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
4 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.
J. W. DOBBINS & CO.
312 PETERS BLDG. BELL PHONE M. 2126.
,4 ooo TWO-STORY EIGHT-ROOM HOUSE, WITH ALL CON
VENIENCES PRETTIEST PART OF SOUTH BOULEVARD.
WILL EXCHANGE FOR COTTAGE IN SOUTH KIRKWOOD.
«•; 730 TWO-STORY, SEVEN ROOMS. ELECTRIC LIGHTS, ETC.,
ON CORNER LOT, RIGHT AT CHEROKEE AVE. AND GRANT
P\RK FASY TERMS
$1 250—CLOSE TO PONCE DE LEON AVE. LOT 50x200. ENHANCE-
MFNT CERTAIN.
100 JUST OFF PONCE DE LEON AVE. ELEVATED SHADED
T (IT
«500—-VACANT LOT IN BEAUTIFUL OAKHURST. HAS SEWER
AND WATER. SURROUNDED BY BEAUTIFUL HOMES. $50
CASH, $5 PER MONTH.
TO BUY
A RAILROAD FRONTAGE, 100x200 FEET,
IN BELLWOOD SECTION.
W. H. WITHERS
213 TEMPLE COURT, PHONE M. 4569.
MARBUT & MINOR
$4,200—EIGHT-ROOM^ TWO-STORY HOUSE; LOT 100 BY 200; SOUTH
liM-TWO^EW fTvE-ROOM COTTAGES; MAY AVENUE.
$2!V50— SEVEN- ROOM COTTAOE; FLAT SHOALS AVENUE.
to'mOO—THIRTY BEAUTIFUL LOTS, NEAR EAST ATLANTA BANK.
$3^00—EIGHT ACRES WELL IMPROVED; 2 MILES OUT.
$750.00—Two large lots on McPherson Avenue.
$1,600—Five-room house, lot 60x160, Flat Shoals Avenue.
MARBUT & MINOR
Aj.MAYFIELD
REAL ESTATE AND RENTING.
49 S. Pryor .St.
Brown, Strauss & Ward Compan
KKAL ESTATE, DOANS, RENTING.
112 Candler Building.
112 North Pryor Street.
HOMES BUILT ON EASY TERMS.
Phones Ivy 3231-3235.
J. R.
J. H.
SMITH & EWING
IVY 1513.
REAL ESTATE. RENTING, LOANS.
130 PEACHTREE STREET.
ATLANTA 2865
WE ANNOUNCE the sale of the m
the entire road. Point Peachtree
of W. S. Witham and J. K. Ottley.
advantage of every convenience th
tion to insure the safety of purchas
placed in the deed. Street cars are
way for motor traffic in the countr
Atlanta. These lots combine the ad
the comforts of city life with all th
ost beautiful residence subdivision on
is just beyond the beautiful estates
It has the prestige of position and the
e city affords. Every proper restric-
ers from undesirable surroundings is
in front of every lot. The best road-
y gives readiest access* to the heart of
vantages of exclusive location, and
e freedom of the country.
30 BEAUTIFUL LOTS
$450 TO $650 EACH, while they last; $25 cash and $10 to $15 per month,
without interest. They are located on one of the highest points in
the city and the neighborhood is splendid and strictly white. Street cars,
electric lights, gas and water within one to three blocks. It takes but a
few minutes to show these lots. Go out with us at once and get choice.
You can not equal them at the price, and they will not last long.
j. e. McCullough & co.
MAIN 3903.
614 EMPIRE BLDG.
Turman, Black & Calhoun
MAYSON AVENUE.
JUST OFF PEACHTREE ROAD on this new thoroughfare we
have beautiful little home on a lot 100x330 with three street
fronts. A nine-room house, servants’ houses, fruit trees, etc. It
is the first house off Peachtree on Maysou Avenue on the right.
A sacrifice for $4,500 on reasonable terms.
Turman, Black & Calhoun
203-208 EMPIRE BUILDING.
PEACHTREE ROAD
AUCTION
I WILL SELL thirty lots April 19th at 3 p. m., at the Seaboard
Railroad and Peachtree Road. Terms, $25 cash, $10 a month,
6 per cent interest. J. W. Ferguson & Son, Auctioneers; plat
at my office, 415 Atlanta National Bank. Both phones. John
H. James.
OIG SPOT HOUSES
Crop Advices From Western Belt
Not So Favorable — Easier
Money Another Factor.
NEW YORK, April 17.--There was
only moderately active trading on the
-otton market to-day at the opening,
prices being I point up to 8 points lower
than last night’s close. After the call
prices were only a shade lower than the
previous close.
Relatively firm cables ami unfavorable
advice from the Western belt to the ef
fect that cotton was dying for the want
of rain and replanting was necessar>
on a large acreage.. Phis inspired an
active demand from shorts, resulting in
a rapid advance of 3 to 6 points in most
active months from the opening range
However, sentiment was bearish among
the locals, but the market continued in
flexible throughout the early trading.
The ring crowd was Inclined to sell'
also commission houses, while the larger
spot interests were aggressive bidders
between intervals. Later offerings were
abated to some extent and prices held
steady at the early best.
Heavy bidding for July contracts dur-
”g the afternoon session by conserva
tive spot houses, such as McFadden and
Thompson. Toole & Co., sent shorts on
a hot run for May. as well as July. May
increased its gain until It totaled 12
points over the previous close; July. 7;
October 6. and December 5. Very little
cotton was for sale and what little was
offered was quickly absorbed.
There was no special news regarding
the spot situation to-day.
Until further crop developments a nar
row market is predicted. Those inclined
to the bear element believe that traders
would sell with very Ititle encourage
ment.
The reduction in the Bank of Eng
land exchange rate will encourage spin
ners and mills abroad as well as here to
come back Into the market, with the re-
*lt of a more active market and a
harder task for low-price men.
At the close the market was steady
with April ami May at a not advance of
10 points, while other positions showed
a gain of 2 to 5 points from the final
quotations of Wednesday.
RANGE IN NEW YORK FUTURES.
LIVERPOOL COTTON.
LIVERPOOL, April 17 This market
was due to open 2la t«» 3 points higher
i n old months and uncharged on new
crops, but opened quiet at a net advance
of 1% to :: points At 12:15 p. m. the
market was quiet but steady, 1 to 2
points higher.
Spot cotton quiet at 1 point decline;
middling 6.88d; sales. 8.000 bales, Includ
ing 7,000 American bales; imports. 2,000
bales. Including 1.000 American hales.
Port receipts are estimated at. 16,000
bales, compared with 17,600 last week
and 16,214 bales last year, against 7,796
for the same week In 1911.
At the close the market was steady,
w ith prices at a net advance of„ 2 m
8v.. points from the final quotations of
Wednesday.
Futures opened quiet.
April . . .
April-May .
May-June .
June-July .
July-Aug .
Aug.-Sept.
Sept.-Oct. .
Oct.-Nov. .
Nov.-Dec. .
Idee.-Jan.
.Tan.-Keb. .
Feb.-Mch. .
Closed steady
Opening
Range.
Close
6.63
. .6.58%-6.59%
6.59%
. .6.58 -6.57%
6.59
. .6.56
6.57 %
6.53%
. .6.40 -6.41
6.43
6.29
. .6.19%-6.20%
6.21
6.18
6.17
. .6.15 -6.14%
6.16
6.17
Prev.
(Mose
6.60%
6.37> •
6.561*
6.391b
6.27
6.19
6.16
6.15
6.14
6.15
Apr
My
Jne
Jiy
A g.
Spt
< ><•.
Dc
J’n
Mch
«a -
-J sc | V
2°
11.98111.98 11.
ll.84ill.96 11
11.82 11.92 11.
11.71 11 7 K LI,
ll.R0lll.60ln.
11.39U1.47jll.
11.42 11.40 11.
11.41! 11.43111.
I I I • ■
98111.98 11.94
81 11.94111.94
. ..1 11.90-
82111.90 11.89
69111.77 11.76
50111.50111.50
39ill.45jll.44
42111.48 11.47
40 11.42ill.42
...'.. . .11.47
-99 11.84-87
11.84- 85
11.85- 87
11.86- 87
11.73-74
11.47-49
11.41-42
11.45- 46
11.40-41
11.45- 47
Closed steady.
RANGE NEW ORLEANS FUTURES.
Open
High
*
0
J
Last
sale. |
Close
to
Ap.
12.27
My
12.31 12.42
12.31
i.2.39
12.39-40
U. 33-34
Jne
12.29-31
i Jly
12.18
12.28
12.17
12.25
12.25-26
12.20-21
I Ag
11.90
11.90
11.90
11.90
11.95-96
11.90-92
Spt
11.60
11.60
11 60
11.60
11.60-62
Oc
! Nv
Dc.
11.45
11.53
11.45
11.50
11.50- 51
11.50- 52
11.45-46
11.46
11.54
11.46
11 53
11.52-5,
11.48-49
j J’n
11.53
11.55
11.51
11.55
11.54-56
11 50-51
F’b
11.52-54
SPOT COTTON MARKET.
Atlanta, quiet; middling 12V,
Athens, steady; middling 12L
Macon, steady: middling 12c.
Now Orleans, steady; middling 12%.
New York, quiet: middling 12.40.
Philadelphia, quiet; middling 12.65
Boston, easy; middling 12.40
Liverpool, steady; middling 6.88d.
Savannah, firm; middling 12%.
Norfolk, quiet; middling 12*4 -
Augusta, steady; middling 12%.
Mobile, quiet; middling 12 3-16.
Galveston, quiet; middling 12 9-16.
Charleston, quiet; middling 12*w.
Wilmington, quiet; middling 12.
Little Rock, setady; middling 12.
Baltimore, nominal; middling 12%.
Memphis, steady; middling 12V
St. Louis, quiet; middling 12V*.
Houston, steady; middling 12 9-16.
Louisville, firm; middling 12V
Greenville, steady; middling 11 7-16.
Charlotte, steady; middling 12V
Easier Money in London Reflected
at Once in Course of Wall
Street Prices,
BETTERS PRICES
Shorts Big Buyers in Face of
Crop News of the Most
Favorable Character, *|
By C. W. STORM. ST. LOUIS CASH QUOTATIONS.
NEW YORK, April 17. Europe was Wheal No. 2 red 107%@1Q*%
the chief factor at the opening of the Corn No. 2 red
stock market to-day and most issues i Oats—No. 2 red u.»
made gains.
The reduction of the minimum rate
of discount by the Bank of England
from 5 to 4lb per cent and the grow
ing possibility of early peace in the
Balkans were the most important ele
ments.
Amalgamated Copper was one of the
most ac tive stocks, opening at 77% for
gain of V Soon Its advance was
CHICAGO. April 17.— Wheat closed
around the best prices of the day and
showed net gains of %@%c. Those who
are still long on May were on the sell
ing side <>n the hard spots while shorts
were again the principal buyers. The
strength in wheat was abnormal, be
cause of the advices from Duluth which
told of the clearing there of boats which
over a point. Among the other advances are loaded with wheat, part of which is
were Southern Railway, % ; Reading. V to go to Buffalo and part to Chicago.
Pennsylvania, 14; American Can, •*; One of the larger houses in the Chicago
Missouri Pacific, %; Louisville ami trade reported 500,000 bushels wheat as
Nashville, V FL Paul, \ju Chesapeake loaded at Duluth by them and that it
TO-DAY’S PORT RECE
The following table shows
at the ports to-day compared
same day last year:
| 1913. |
PTS.
receipts
with the
1912.
New Orleans. . .
4.994
1.670
(Jalveston
3.309
4,228
Mobile
1.509
1,079
Savannah
1.422
3.394
Charleston
383
213
Wilmington ...
746
703
Norfolk
822
1.816
Boston
25
103
Pacific coast . . .
2.864
Various
102
144
Total
13,292
16.214
INTERIOR
MOVEMENT.
1913.
1912.
Houston
2.381
1,938
Augusta
104
519
Memphis
689
1,380
St. Louis
801
1,717
Cincinnati
291
562
Little Rock . . . .
299
Total
4,266
6,395
and Ohio. 14; Canadian Pacific. 3 »
Union Pacific was under pressure,
yielding V Reading lost Its gain after
hair an hour and declined fractionally.
A decline of % was also sustained by
United Slates Steel common.
The curb market was irregular.
Americans in London w f ere steady.
Trade was almost at a standstill in
the last hour, the disposition being to
wait for news regarding the St. Haul
bond subscription before taking a pro
nounced position on either the bull or
hear side. Amalgamated Copper sold at
77V the same as at noon. Steel ranged
will come this way as rapidly as possi
ble. probably arriving here Monday.
Corn was % @%c higher and it held
well in price.
Oats were a shade better and strong.
Cash sales of wheat were 75,000 bush
els. corn 265,000 bushels, oats 125,000.
Hog products were a shade better all
around.
CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET.
WHEAT-
High. Low.
Prev.
Close. Close.
around 62*4. for a slight fractional loss May ..
Canadian Pacific made a slight fraction- July
al gain, while American Can ranged , Sept
about >4 under the mid-day level, sell- CORN—
Reading sold at 165% May
July
ing around 34*4.
for a small loss. Union Pacific was un
changed from the noon level
The market closed firm.
OAT§ —
Government bonds unchanged ; other j May ..
bonds firm.
July
The market showed general strength Sept. . . .
all through the late forenoon. St. Paul PORK—
rose % to 109*4 At 7714 Amalgamated May
Copper was up V Louisville ami Nash-
ville w f ent up 54. and Reading, Pennsyl
vania. Mexican Petroleum and Canadian
Pacific were up *4. Call money was
loaning at 2 V
01%
90%
91
90%
89%
89 * 4
88%
84%
88%
88%
89%
88%
55%
54%
55%
55
55%,
55%
55 Vi
55%
56%
56%
56%
56 %
35
34%
34%
81 %
34%
34
34%
3H»
34*8
33%
34
33 ’«•
NEW YORK STOCKS.
Clo«,
STOCK—
Am. Cop. .
Am. Ice. Se.
Am. A. R.
Am. Smelt.
Am. Loco. .
Am. C. Fd.
Am. C. Oil
Am. Wool. .
Anaconda
Atchison . .
High.
. 773 8
27
.114
69' 2
33-4
. 102' 4
Low.
77*i s
263 8
114
635-8
38-4
10218
Prev.
Bid. Close.
77' 8
253 4
1131/2
9
36
50' 2
47
21
38' 2
102
76' 2
263 *
113
69
36'4
504
47/*
1® 7 8
38'/.
101V
May . .
. 19.62%
19.55
19.60
19.52%
July . .
.19.77%
19.67%
19.75
19.65
Sept. . .
LARD-
.19.65
19.52%
19.62%
19.52%
May . .
.11.02%
10.95
10.97% 10.95
July . .
.10.95
10.87%
10.95
10.90
Sept. . .
.10.97%
10.92%
10.97%
10.92%
RIBS—
May . .
.11.25
11.30
11.35
11.30
July . .
.11.07%
.10.92%
11.30
11.35
11.02%
Sept. . .
10.85
10.90
10.82%
LIVERPOOL GRAIN MARKET.
LIVERPOOL, April 17.—Wheat opened
unchanged to %d higher. At 1:30 p. m.
the market was unchanged to %d high
er: closed *4d higher.
Corn opened unchanged At 1:30 p.
m. the market was unchanged. Closed
unchanged to '/id lower.
PRIMARY MOVEMENT.
COTTON SEED OIL.
Cotton seed oil quotations:
| Opening. | Closing.
7.03tfi7.09
Closed strong; sales 26,400 barrels.
Closed steady.
BAR SILVER.
I LONDON, April 17 —Bar silver steady
at 27%d
NEW YORK. April 17.—Commercial
' bar silver, 58%c; Mexican dollars, 48c.
MONEY AND EXCHANGE.
NEW YORK, April 17.—Money on call.
244@2V Time money, unchanged; 60
days. 414; 90 days, 4%@4%; six months,
4%@4% per cent.
Posted rates: Sterling exchange, 4.84
@4.87. with actual business in bankers’
bills at 4.8645 for demand and 4.8310®
4.8315 for 60-day bills.
Prime mercantile paper firm at 5% per
cent.
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. Decatur Dep artment. Atlanta 363.
CENTRAL BUSINESS LOT
ON THE EAST SIDE of Cone Street, 75 feet north of Luckie
Street, lot 25x50.9 feet. Price $550 per fool. Half cash,
balance one, two and three years, with 6 per cent.
J. R.
J. H.
SMITH & EWING
Ivy 1513.
REAL ESTATE, RENTING, LOANS.
130 Peachtree St. Atlanta 2865.
North Side Bungalows
WE have six new bungalows Just co mpleted. all modern conveniences,
good section, 20 minutes to cente r of city, 5-minute car service. Your
TWcTsperlal' baTgaTns //Ponce DeLeon Avenue, the best residence sec
tion of Atlanta. These homes ha ve all the attractive qualities. Values
on this popular avenue increasing d ally. Price and terms easy.
R. C. Woodbery & Co.
REAL ESTATE AND RENTING.
803 EMPIRE BUILDING. PHONE IVY 4726.
LOOK! WEST END PARK.
$3,250—Her© w© offer you an up to-date 5 room bungalow, all Improvements,
Here Is a place that is going to sell. You see this at once Easy terms
arranged.
SOUTH SIDE BARGAIN.
WE HAVE th© biggest bargain on the South Side in a 6-room cottage, lot
57x150, in one-half block of two car lines What we want is an offer.
$50 CASH and $25 per month buys a new and modern 6-room bungalow, all
improvements. Why pay rent?
HARPER REALTY COMPANY
717 THIRD NATIONAL BANK BUILDING.
Bell Phone Ivy 4286. Atlanta Phone 672.
12 PER CENT NET
IS THE NET INCOME we offer you on a
$40,000 Cain street investment, JUST
OFF IVY STREET.
A $10,000 CASIj payment, with the balance
on easy terms, will buy it to-day. In 90
days the regrading of Ivy street will be com
plete and the price will jump.
NOW IS THE ACCEPTED TIME!
W. L. & JOHN O. DuPREE
REAL ESTATE
Fifth Floor Empire Building.
Bell Phone, Main 3457, Atlanta 930.
EAST DECATUR BARGAINS.
WE HAVE three special bargains rang
ing from *1,500 to $5,500. These are
on the new car line to Stone Mountain.
There is money in these for some one.
Will make terms to suit.
NORTH SIDE
SUBDIVISION
WE OFFER a beautifully lying 20-acre tract on a prominent
cherted road just off Peachtree, that can be cut up into 76
beautiful lots and sold for thirty-five thousand dollars. Large
road frontage, and not a foot of waste land. All of these lots can
be sold within sixty days. The price for the entire tract is thir
teen thousand dollars, on terms of six thousand cash, balance, one,
two and three years at seven per cent.
Edwin P. Ansley
Ivy 1600. j .. ,.ft ■- j , Realty Trust Building.
A House,
A Home,
A Horse,
A Cow—
These
“Want Ads”
Will Tell You How
*.<■*? . ■
Read for Profit;
Use for Results,
A. C. L. . .
121/*
122
WHEAT—
| 1913. T 1912. '
Am. Can . .
. 35
34',,
34
33%
Receipts
'434.000:195.0011
do. pfd. . .
95',8
93'/.
94-,
95
Shipments
I501.000|411.000
Am. B. S. .
32' i
32»*
CORN—
1913. | 1912.
A. T. and T.
.131
130 7 a
12»tfc
131
Receipts
1258.000 285,000
Am. Agrl. .
58
52' *
Shipments
899,000 516.000
Beth. Steel .
. . 34' 2
34/*
B. R. T. . .
. 903 4
»0'/,
90' 4
90'.
CHICAGO
CAR LOTS.
B. and O. .
.100
997s
993 4
99%
Following are the receipts for Thurs-
Can. Pac. . .
.2453*
243%
245' 4
243' 2
day and estimated
for Friday
Corn Prod. .
. 11
10%
103 4
ioh
IThursday.
Friday.
C. and O. .
87',,
T /k
6634
Wheat
18
44
Con. aGs. .
.133%
133
132'/,
131/*
Corn
r,2
41
Cen. Lth. .
C. F. and 1.
.. 25'/*
25'/,
24» 4
333.
25
Oats
Hogs
103
18,000
129
23,000
.140
.128
17'/<
68' ;
Col. So
D. and H
D. and R. G
Dls. Sec
Erie 30! 4
do. pfd
Elec. . .
G. Con. . . .
W. . . .
N. pfd. .
G. N. Oreg.
Int. H. old .
III. Cen. . .
Interboro . .
do. Jfd. * .
Cen. . .
K. C. So. .
K. and T. .
do. pfd. . ,
L. Valley .
L. and N. «
Mo. Pacific.
N. Y. Central f03%
Northwest
Nat. Lead
N. and W
No. Pacific . . 118*4
O. and W
Penn 1143-4
Pacific Mall
P. Gas Co
P. Steel Car
Reading . . . 166'/4
Rock Island . 22/*
do. pfd. . 38
R. I. and Steel 25%
do. pfd..
S. -Sheffield.
So. Pacific .
So. Railway
do. pfd. .
2614
1«1'/a
134
38
128
17
5814
160*/ 4
133%
3 7*/ a
103
St. Paul
Tenn. Copper
Texas Pacific
101%
26'/*
78*2
110*4
3544
164%
21%
37»/ 4
25%
101'/a
26%
78'/*
109%
35%
31
159
20%
20*4
30
45'/*
139'/*
»/•
16
127%
34
105
119'/*
16%
57%
9
25
26
62' %
169%
133'/ 2
37%
103'/ 4
132%
49%
1061/4
116
31
114%
25
112
26
165' 4
21%
36%
25'/*
84%
30
100%
26%
78%
109'/2
35%
18
31'/*
159
21
21
30
46
136',*
2'/*
14'/,
122%
34
105
119'/*
17
5734
8
25
26'/,
62'/ 4
159'/*
133%
37'/ 2
102%
13 2'/ 2
49'/*
106
115%
30%
114'/ 2
25/4
110%
26
164%
22/*
37%
25%
84
35
100%
26/,
78%
109'/,
35'/,
18
WHEAT CROP TO EMULATE LAST
YEAR.
MINNEAPOLIS. April 17.-The Cham
ber of Commerce of this city predicts
a spring wheat acreage equal of the
previous season and another full harvest.
President Schaff, of the Missouri. Kan
sas and Texas Railroad, says Kansas
expects a crop of 100,000,000 bushels of
wheat this year.
NEW YORK COFFEE MARKET.
Coffee quotations:
! Opening, j Closing.
Third Avenue
36
36
Union Pacific
154ii
152%
153%
633,4
153'/,
U. S. Rubber.
84'/,
Utah Copper .
537,
53'/*
53'/2
53'/,
U. S. Steel . .
627,
62
62' /4
62'/.
do. pfd. . .
1084,
108'/,
108
107/,
V.-C. Chem. .
34
35
W. Union . .
8714
10/S
67'/«
66*/*
664 4
Wabash . . .
3
3
3</p
do. pfd.
10'/*
10
10/.
W. Electric .
64
877„
63/*
63'/4
W. Central . .
52
51'/ 2
W. Maryland.
Total sales,
242,800 shares.
40/4
40'/.
Jan
11.39 @ 11.40
11.22011.1:3
Feb
ll.3»@11.42
11.22@11.22
Mch
11.44
11.23@ll. 24
April
10.75
10.62 @10.64
May
10.90 @10.95
10.72@10.64
June
11.000 11.10
10.82010.82
J uly
11.17
10.!*8@11,0C
August
11.25@11.30
11.10 @11.12
Sept
11.40
11.2l@Il.22
Oct
1! 38
11.220U.2S
Nov
11.40
ll.23@ll.23
Dec
11.40
11.22@11.23
Closed steady; sales, 141,000 bags.
DAMAGE TO WHEAT 7 PER CENT
CHICAGO, April 17.—The Ohio Agri
cultural Bureau makes damage to wheal
only 7 per cent, according to the Stat#
report just forwarded by King. It says
improved growing conditions and in
creased acreage will probably offset this
completely. Full report later in th«
week.
CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS.
CHICAGO. April 17.—Wheat, No. I
red, 1.05@1.08; No. 3 red, 98@1.02; No
2 hard winter. 91; No. 3 hard winter, 9<
@93; No. 1 Northern spring. 92*4 @93
No. 2 Northern spring. 91 @92; No. i
spring. 88@89.
Corn, No. 2, 56@66%; No. 2 white, 57*J
@58; No. 3 yellow, 56*4@57: No. 3. 55@
55%; No. 3 white, 56%(ft57%: No. 3 yel
low, 55%@66; No. 4. 53%@54%; No, 4
white, 55@56%: No. 4 yellow. 58%@54%
Oats No. 2 white, 36%@36%; No. 3
33%; No. 3 white. 34%@35%: No. <
white, 33%@34%: standard, 34%@36.
MINING STOCKS.
BOSTON, April 17.—Opening. Bostoi
Elevated 98%, North Butte 29%. Butt!
Superior 30%, Smelting preferred 48%
Shoe Machine 48%.
DIVIDEND Dt-*-ONTINUED.
NEW YORK, April 17.—It became ap
parent to-day that the directors of th!
Prairie Oil and Gas Co. have decided t(
discontinue for time unmentioned th(
payment of dividends.
SECURITY IN TRUSTS
Is even more important than security in
investments. An investor can watch the
situation, but a testator must rely on
those he leaves behind to carry oik his
wishes. The testator can leave his will
with us in absolute assurance that, if le
gally drawn, his every wish will be car
ried out to the letter. .
TRUST COMPANY OF GEORGIA
Capital and Surplus $1,800,000
Equitable Building - - Pryor Street