Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, May 10, 1913, Image 16

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—wyr X ...XX'. 10 TflE ATLANTA GhUKtilAX AMJ NhAViS. COTTON COES UP COTTON GOSSIP Reports of Rain in Georgia and Oklahoma Cause Rapid Decline From Early Level. IfFTW YORK. May 9.—In the absence of rains, especially in the eastern belt. Tbs eotton market opened steady, with pr'.ree at a net Rain of 2 to fi points from Thursday’s final Spot people were good buyers There was also a short covering movement by the local crowd • nd there was some outside buying Tbe selling was attributed mostly to brokers with Routhem connection The market quickly developed additional strength, and prices advanced 2 to 8 points from the opening level July displayed considerable strength. This option was under heavy buying by shorts and held steady at 10 points advance over the previous close throughout the morning session Should there be no ra;na In the eastern belt, much higher prices are antici pated Weather Indications overnight are pre dicted fair in the eastern belt, but other leading cotton Statee are predicted to have unsettled showers, except Louis iana and East Texas, where the weath er will be fair. The course the market took this morning made it more and more obvious that this Is entirely a weather mar ket 1'nfavorable advices were received from Manchester, saying that buyers nave very bad reports from the other side It seems like conditions there are becoming bad again. The trade is much quieter It Is *aid that It Is impossi ble to Induce mills to buy cotton During the late forenoon the market was quiet but steady, with prices a shade lower than the early high point Reports of rains in Oklahoma and Georgia caused a general selling move ment during the afternoon session, which was said to be profit-taking of fering? from Wall Street became freer and the Indications that the crop is In danger were ignored Experts in New Orleans stated that we might expect good rains the first of tbe week Thla brought selling from the Jecals who were early buyers, result ing in prices making a rapid decline and dropping 2 to 8 points from the open ing figures At the close the market was steady with prices at a net decline of 1 to 4 points from the final quotations of Thursday. Following are Ham bids In New York. May 1148, July 11,58. August 1136. October 1102, January 11.01. Following are 10 a m. bids In New Orleans: May 12.18, July 12.01. August 11 58. October 11.16. January 11.18 Estimated cotton receipts Saturday 1912 New Orleans . 2.600 to 2.000 2,196 Galveston 1,200 to 2,000 1,761 RANGE IN NEW YORK FUTURES. NEW YoltK. May 9 Joe Gatins is : credited with covering a large line of ; July shorts, but he put them out aguin • in new crop positions above II cents. * * * , I A wire from Savannah, <»a . yestciday i said that unless 1t rains in a few days the crop will be damaged considerably. Troy. Ain . wired that the crop eond!- j lions were going backward, owing to the . absence of rains, and lhat very little, cotton Is up in that section of the state cotton chopping Is generally finished about May 15 STOCKS INACTIVE ENTIRE SESSION Market Is Waiting for Announce ment Regarding U. P. and S. P. Dissolution Plan. Today's New York Stock Market Below arc given the highest, lowest and last priced of stocks to-day, together with the pre vious close: 111.45 11.^0111. .11.54 11.62 11. ill.35111.40111. It1.08jl1.10 11. 11.0011.06 10 11.04,11.08 10 ■M.03'■11.05 10. tl1.0i;il.03ill 44MU 5o;n 30111 08*11. 93U0 95 10 ftllO. 01111 io 11.40 52 11.61 31111.30 03:11.01- 95 10.96 98(10.97 93110.93 03|11.02 -42i11.42-43 ■52111.58-63 •81)11.>0-81 03(11.04-06 96 10.97-98 ■ •94-10.97-’»8 03:11.05-06 Glosed steady. LIVERPOOL COTTON MARKET LIVERPOOL. May 9 — Due* 2 to 2% points higher on near positions, and 1 point lower on late months, this mar ket opened quiet at net unchanged to % jxvht lower At 12:16 p. m . the mar ket was dull but steady; prices un changed to % point lower. Spot cotton 2 points higher; middling 6 68d: sales 6,000, Including 5,000 Amerl can At the close the market was steady, with price* showing Irregularity, be ing unchanged to 2 points higher on near positions and *4 point lower on distant months from the final figures of Thurs day RANGE IN LIVERPOOL COTTON. Futures opened quiet. Opening T May . . . May-June June July July-Aug Aug -Sent Sept.-Oct. Oct.-Nov. Nov.-Dec. Dec.-Jan. Jan.-Feb. Feb.-Mob tan_ 6 43 -6.4114 .6.42 -6.41 6 39 -6.89*4 6.36*4-6.37 6 26 -6.25 6.13 6.12 .6.06 -6.04 V* .6 03*4-6.04 6.02 **. *6.01 Vi 6 02 "^>.01 6.03 Mth.-Apr 6 03 -6.04 Closed steady. Close. 6.44% 6.44 6.41*4 6.58 6.28 6.14 6.06** 6.03*4 6.02% 6 02 6.03 Prev. Close. 6.42*4 6.42 6.39% 6.36*4 6.26*4 6.13*4 6.06*4 6.04 6.03 6.02*4 6.03*4 6.04 % Nlel estimated the consumption ,of cotton for tbe current year at 14.760.000 bale- He said a crop under 16.000,000 bales would warrant higher prices. • • • Conditions of the crop In Georgia must be pretty bad If the replies re ceived by a New York firm from cor respondents in the State are true. Fol lowing i« the condition of the crop in some of the large producing counties: Richland Crop 90 per cent planted, condition poor, no stand. Zebulon Crop 96 per cent plat.ted; condition bad. too dry Chlple -Crop 76 per cent planted; condition, very little up. Mad ison Crop 90 per cent planted; condi tion good; dry. Covington Crop 60 per cent planted; condition fair. Lawrence- vllle- Crop 80 per cent planted; condi tion 76 per cent Jackson Crop 76 per cent planted: condition fair. Danville—- Crop 100 per cent planted; condition, dry weather has prevented Its coming up; considerable complaint of the plant al ready from cool weather. Madison— Crop 76 per cent planted, condition one week backward. Winder -Crop 90 per cent planted; condition 80 per cent; ground very dry and cloudy and look for very poor stand Bartow-Crop 80 per cent planted; condition very little up; very dry. Uhauncsy—Crop 75 per cent planted; condition scarcely any cotton lip In Georgia at this date Orantvllle - Crop 95 per cent planted; condition, none up and will not come until it rains. McRae—Crop 50 per cent planted; con dition, very poor siand, much to be planted; seed scarce. Lyons -Crop 60 per cent planted, condition very bad; awfully dry; 60 per cent of seed planted Is lost, getting seed to replant all is im possible here Rochelle -Crop 98 per cent planted; condition good. • * • Absence of rains gave rise to good buying on the opening, spot houses being among the best buyers, also shorts, who apparently centered their attention on July option. Mitchell and McGhee were heavy bid ders for July • • * Liverpool cables “American middling fair 7.22d, good middling 6.88d. middling 6.68d, low middling 6.54d, good ordinary 6.20d. ordinary 6 86d.“ Dallas wires: “Some rains In the Pan handle: clear and pleasant elsewhere Oklahoma clear and cool.” NEW ORLEANS. May 9 llavward A Clark: The weather map is favorable. It shows partly cloudy# in the northern half of the belt and In the Atlantic#: generally fair elsewhere. There was no rain except at Amarillo, In Northwest Texas. Temperatures are above normal. Indications are for increasing cloudiness generally, probably unsettled weather, with scattered showers In the northern half of the belt and cooler MILL TAKINGS 120,000 BALES LESS THAN PREVIOUS YEAR The visible supply of American cot ton during the past week shows a de crease of 97,482 bales, as compared with a decrease of 233,274 bales for the cor responding week last year and a de crease of 158.480 hales for the same week the year before. Other kinds show an Increase of 30.000 bales, agalnat a decrease of 28,000 bales for the same week last year, compared with an in crease of 9,000 bales for the same week in 1911. The total visible supply of American cotton for the week shows a decrease of 67.432 bales, a gainst a decrease of 261,274 bales last year and a decrease of 217,000 bales for the corresponding week of year before World’s visible supply; By CHARLES W. STORM., NEW YORK, May & Selling pres sure was exerted upon tbe list at the opening of the stock market to-day and most of the issues sustained declines Some of tbe stocks which opened higher eitn«*r lost all their advance or part of if Canadian Pacific, which opened % lower, had increased its decline to 1*4 within a half hour Traders held that the passage of the Underwood tariff bill by the House last night 4a« a depressing factor. Among 1 he other declines were Amal gamated Copper «*, United States Steel common %. Lehigh Valley %, Atchison *4. Pennsylvania %, Chesapeake and Ohio *4. Erie %. California Petroleum >4 The speclaltiaa were the only gioup ahowlng strength American Beet Sugar advanced %. Chino Copper was up *4, while Consolidated Gas rose *4. Union Pacific opened * 4 higher, but soon lost its gam and declined *4. Southern Pacific was -4 higher at first, but add off. Reading negan % higher, but lost its gain and declined. The curb market was dull. Americans In Ix>ndon were barely steady. The market during the forenoon wm generally higher Amalgamated Copper at 86*4 war* up %. Southern Pacific gained % at 96 Lehigh Valley, United Uopner and Steel were up *4. Canadian Pacific and Gas were tip. The tone in the late forenoon was firm. Call money loaned at 2% The market closed steady Govern ments unchanged; other bonds firm. STOCK— High. Low. Last Sale. Prev Close. Amal. Copper. 76A 4 744, 75 75' e ! Am. Ice Sec 26>4 26 26 Ant Suq. R«f.. 111 111 110% 111 Am. Smelting. 677* «7V, 67% «7'/, Am. Locomo 33 Am. Car Fdy.. 49% 4»H 4**ii 48' 2 Am. Cot. OIL. 44 44 44 42'/, Am. Woolen.. 17' , Anaconda . . 38 4 88</ t S*/4 38 4 Atchison ... 99’* 99/2 99/2 A. C. L 121 121 121 120/2 American Can 33*4 32% 33i* 32% do. pref. . 92' 2 Am. Beet Sug. 3H 4 31'/, 31'/, 303/4 Am. T.-T 12i*/ 4 127% 127% 128 Am. Agricul 49 Beth. Steel 33> 7 33' 2 33*/* B. R. T 90% 8»*„ 90/, 88% B. and O. 98% »8'/. 98 « 98'/, LIGHT OFFERINGS ADVANCE Mill Traders Ignore Bearish Census Report and Refuse to Curtail Long Lines. ST. LOUIS CASH QUOTATIONS. W heat—No. Com—No. 2 Oats—No. 2 red .100 #107 . 57*4 6 57% . 35*4 MONEY AND EXCHANGE. NEW YORK. May 9 —Money on call a Time money unchanged; 60 days, 4fa 4 per cent; 90 days, 4 per cent; six months. 4*4 per cent. Posted rates: Sterling exchange, 4.84 •.*7. with actual business In bankers 11s at 4.8605 for demand and 4.82% for 60 day bills. Prime mercantile paper unchanged. METALS. NEW YORK. May 9. - The metal mar ket was firm to-day. Copper, spot to •My. 15*4^16%; lead, 4.30 bid: spelter. 5.50@>6 55; tin, 50.00#50.37*4; zinc. 6.45 . d 55. BAR 8ILVER. LONDON, May 9 — Bar sliver steady at 27 13-I6d NEW YORK. May 9. -Commercial bar silver. 60*4; Mexican dollars. 48c. MINING STOCKS. BOSTON, May 9.—Opening: Shoe, 48; New Haven, 104; Greene-Cananea. 6%; Smelting preferred. 47; Arizona Com mercial, 3%; Wolverine, 61. UNDERWOOD EARNINGS. NEW YORK, May 9.—Net earnings of the Underwood Typewriter for the first quarter is estimated at $600,000. against $501,000 for the same quarter last year NEW YORK COFFEE MARKET. Coffee quotations: 1913. 1911. American .... 13,067*370 3,600,723 2.17~8.JM4 Other kinds... 1.4R3,000 1,167.000 1,194,000 Total ;t,550.370 4,667,723'3,272,244 ■World 1 ! spinners’ takings: 1912. I 1913. For week.. 1 191,0001 317.000 Since Spt 1,11,312,000. 1911 217.000 HAYWARD <t CLARK S DAILY COTTON LETTER NEW ORLBANS. May 9.- Liverpool came in rather poor, but rallied in the last hour. Liverpool will be closed to morrow' and Monday. Spots 2 points higher, sales. 6.000 bales. The feature on our side was the strength of July in New York, causing a corresponding ad vance in that position here and giving strength to the whole list Absence of further rains in tbe Eastern States brought some covering demand from shorts New York gossip nays lhat about 50.000 bales will be shipped out and the loss in stock is causing short covering of July, t Manchester reports to agents here ahow a radical change and now are dis- tinctly bad They say it is Impossible to interest mills in any offers of cotton, trade declining and strike danger immi nent. T/ondon reports that the first peace meeting dissolved without accomplish ing definite results, that tbe next meet ing will not take place until May 20, after the holidays, that tbe powers may occupy Scutari with a joint force as a precautionary measure The market eased after the close of Liverpool and trading was of no pro nouneed character The talk of dry weather in the East is looked upon as a means to promote a short scare, on which idea there has been professional buying lately than as a real danger to production. NEW ORLEANS COTTON Quotations in cotton futures Movement into sight for week 1913. I _ 1912 |_ fVland. w’kT 11,749! 21,7701 Since Spt. l| 912.907 1.160.3291 n s’ght, wk! 93,616 90.579 Since Spt. 1113.0*7.022116,165.077 11, So. cons’p..j 30.000| 37.000 ! Weekly inter*- « m n 1913 1912. 34.574 42,611 57.574 65,423; 415.912 280.926' January. . . . February. . . . March A pril May .i une July August. . . . September . . October. . . . November. . . December. . . Closed steady I Opening. | Closing. . 11.37fa1l.39jll.44®tOS ll.S8eil.45lll.4401l.45 . i 11.41 (fill.45(11.49(011.60 11.40OU.45 11.49011.60 .11.05(0)11.20 11.lOfall.20 • 11.10 11.17 fall.20 ;U.17©11.20111.25®11.26 11.27 11.37 11.376 11.266 11.37 ! 11.35® 11.40 11.44(0 11.45 ►11.40(11.43® 11.45 ► ll.40lll.48wl1.44 11.43(0)11.44 Sales, 30,250 bags Price of Cotton Now Is 11,6 Cents Can. Pacific... 242 Corn Products 10% C. and 0 64 Consol. Gas.. . 139 Cen. Leather Colo. F. and I. 32 Colo. Southern D. and H 136 Den. and R. G Distil. Secur... 15% Erie 29' t do, pref. . 43'/2 Gen. Electric.. 138'* Goldfield Cone G. Western G. North, pfd. 126'/, G. North. Ore Int. Harv. (old) .... III. Central. . . 113% Interboro .... 14% do, pref. . 50' * Iowa Central K. C. Southern M. , K. and T. 24 do, pref L. Valley. . 155% L. and N. . . 132 Mo. Pacific. . 35' N. Y. Central 100 Northweet.. 128 1 * Nat. Lead . 47% N. and W No. Pacific. . 114% O. and W. . 29 Penna ... 112 Pacific Mall P. Gas Co. P. Steel C«r . Reading. Rock Island . do. pfd. R. I. and Steel do. pfd.. . . S. -Sheffield So. Pacific. . So. Railway . do. pfd. . St. Paul. . . Tenn. Copper Texae Pacific .... Third Avenue . Union Pacific 149% U. S. Rubber. Utah Copper U. 8. Steel do. pfd.. V-k-C. Chem. W. Union . Wabs h. . do. pfd.. W. Electric . W. Central W. Maryland .... CHICAGO. May 9.—Wheat was strong er this morning on small offerings In the j pit, coupled with some fair buying by the larger commission concerns. Cables were lower cm the construc tion placed upon the Government May report, which was made public in the Old World late yesterday. Northwestern receipts were larger than a year ago. while the Argentine shipments were smaller, as was also the Argentine vis ible. Liverpool was lower on corn, but prices at Chicago were %c to %c bet ter. Oats acted in sympathy with the other grains and ruled strong. There was o. better feeling in hog prod ucts, with prices fractionally higher CHICAGO GRAIN MARKET. Grain quotations: High. WHEAT Previous 90% 89 \ 89*4 126 1 2 1261/2 55 '4 56 '4 May July- Sent CORN— May July Sept OATS— May 35% July 36*4 Sept 35*4 PORK— May.... 19.47*4 July.... 19.35 Sept. . . . 19.17Vi LARD— May... . 10.97'4 July... 10.80 Sept. . . . 10.82*4 RIBS May... July... Sept... 11.60 11.02 Vi ‘ ‘.87*5 10, IaOW. Close. Close 88% 89% 88% 88% 88 89% 89% 89 88% 55% 65% 55% 55% 56 66% 56% 56% 56% 35% 35% 35% 84% 34% 36 34% 35 - 34% 19.35 19.35 19.35 19.25 19.25 19.30 19.07% 19.07% 19.12% TO.92% 10.92% 10.90 10.75 10.76 10.77% 10.80 10.80 10.80 11.42% 10.97% 11.46 11.60 10.97% 10.97% 10.86 10.85 19.85 CHICAGO CASH QUOTATIONS. CHICAGO. May 9. -Wheat—No. 2 red 99%fal.02. No. 3 red 95(098, No. 2 hare winter 91(093, No. 3 hard winter 90@92. No. 1 Northern spring 90%fa92%, No. 2 Northern spring 89(091 *4, No. 3 spring 88 fa 90. Corn—No. 2 56(057%, No. 2 white 68*4 fa 58%, No. 2 yellow 56*4(066*4. No. 3 55*4 fa57, No. S white 58, No. 3 yellow 56fa 56*4, No. 4 54*4fa65*4, No. 4 white 57*4, No. 4 yellow 56(055*4 Oats-—No. 2 white 37*4, No. 3 white S5* 4 fa86*i, No. 4 32*4, No. 4 white 35fa 36*4, standard 36% fa 37%. \ PRIMARY MOVEMENT. WHEAT- 108 1073/4 148' 4 149'/ 4 Receipts . Shipment* CORN— Receipts . Shipments 1913. 611,000 882,000 507.000 404,000 l»ll 458.000 434,000 688.000 485,000 » 3 a 94, Receipts Shipments Corn Weekly exports For week .... Since Sept. 1 . I 1913. . | ,1 130.918 7,787,733 9 1911 '11,311 873.269 63.352 300.198 35.000 • O' - 27,326 66.394 256,431 19127“ 87,215 842.513 WASHINGTON. May 9. —A alight in crease over a year ago, but a consid erable decrease when compared with ' 1910 and 1911, Is reported In the price of cotton, according to figures given out to-day by the Bureau of Statistics of the Department of Agriculture The prices received by the producers as reported by the Department's agents were as follows: Mav 1, 1913, 11.6c: April 1, 1913, 11.8c. May 1. 1912. 10.9c; May 1. 1911. 14.2c; May 1, 1910, 14c. The general average of prices received for staple crops increased 2.3 per cent from April 1 to May 1. The increase in the same period of last year was 8.4 per cent On May 1 the prices of staple crops averaged about 30.1 per cent lower than on like date of 1912 LIVE STOCK MARKET. CHICAGO, May 9.—Hogs—Receipts, 12,000. Market strong to 10c higher. Mixed and butchers, 8.20fa>8.55; good heavy, 8.16(08.50; rough heavy, 7.95(g) 8.15; light. 8.26(08.50; pigs, 6.50(&8.35; bulk. 8.40fa 8.60. Cattle—Receipts 600. Marked weak. Beeves, 7.20fa9.00; cows and heifers, 3.90 (08.16; stockers and feeders. 3.60(0)7.90; Texans, 6.7ofa7.75; calves, 6.50(§>9.25. Sheep - Receipts 5,000. Market steady to 10c higher. Native and Western, 5.75 <06.90; lambs. 6.85(07.00. CHICAGO CAR LOTS. Following are the receipts for Friday and estimated for Saturday: Wheat Corn . Oats . Hogs . “Friday. I Saturday. 32" 149 134 9,000 47 133 151 10,000 LIVERPOOL GRAIN MARKET. LIVERPOOL, May 9.—Wheat opened %d to %d lower; at 1:30 p. m. the market was %d to %d lower. Closed %d to %d lower. Corn opened unchanged; at 1:30 p. m. the market was **<1 lower. Closed %d lower. COTTON SEED OIL. Cotton seed oil quotations: Opening, j Closing. 00“ Closed very steady; sales 88,000 barrels. PORT RECEIPTS. Tbe following table shows receipts at tbe ports Saturday compared with the same day Inst year: 1913 1912. ft 111 5 il * t U > r tl {.y 112.11 12.03 111.62 11.18 ,11.17 11.18 11.23 12.12 11.91 11.51 11.06 11.06 11.08 11 18 12.14 12.13-14 11.94 11.93-94 11.64 11.56-57 11 08 11 08-09 11 08 11.07-08 11.18111.11-13 11.18111.16 12.15-16 11.95-97 11.55-57 11.11-12 11.10-11 11.14-16 11.20 X< w Orleans 1.053 1 2.673 Galveston. . 2.265 3.612 Mobile . . . .! 1.351 1 136 Savannah . . .1 2.071 7.090 Charleston . . 180 16 Wilmington . . 40 89 Norfolk. 1 .064 S.-.7 Baltimore. 699 1.359 Various. 90 Poston 34 Philadelphia 1ST Brunswick. . 1.004 1.679 Total iS7i"4 13.044 INTERIOR MOVEMENT l 1913. ? 1912. Houston . . . 251 1.028 Augusta 1 272 1 647 Memphis. . . 1 816 1.275 St. Louis .* 1.764 883 Cincinnati . . . 375 793 Little Rock. . . 145 Total 3.479 4.771 SPOT COTTON MARKET. Atlanta, quiet middling 11 \ Athens, steady ; middling 11» 4 THE WEATHER. WASHINGTON. May 8 -The weather will be warm, with showers to-night or Saturday in the Ohio Valley, the lower Laike region and the Middle Atlantic fitates. Elsewhere east of the Missis sippi River the weather will be general- ly fair. It will continue cool In the Lake region and will be cooler from the Ohio Valley eastward and northeastward. General forecast until 7 p. m. Satur day: Georgia -Fair to-night and Saturday Macon, steady: middling 11V* New Orleans, steady: middling 12 3-16 New York, quiet: middling 12c Phlbidelp’ ia. quiet; middling 12.10. Boston, quiet: middling 12c. Liverpool, easier; middling 6.6Sd. Savannah, steady: middling 12c Norfolk, firm, mldddilng 12c. Augusta, steady: middling 12c. Mobile steady: middling 11%. Galveston steady: middling 12 3-16. Charleston, quiet; middling 11%. Wilmington, nominal Little Rock, quiet; middling UN Baltimore, nominal: middling 12c. Memphis, quiet; middling 12*. St. Louis, quiet: middling 12*4. Houston steady; middling 12< Louisville, firm; middling 12% Greenville, quiet: middling IV* Charlotte, steady; middling 11% -THE VICTOR” DR. WOOLLEY’S SANITARIUM 4, . ■ nil • I «nd all Inabrlatr ,b4 Opium and Whisky ssn r * years - experience shows these diseases ara curable. Patients also treated at their homes. Consultation confidential. A book or* the auk- Jact free. DB B B WOfiLLET * EON.. No. 3-A VI* ; let EtoLtArfaun. AUanta* 0*. * " ARE YOU A FLY? Read The Georgian’s great editorial to-day, then study Winsor McCay’s cartoon: The Fly paper of Debt. To-morrow morning or on the next payday start a Savings Account with this strong bank. A SAVINGS ACCOUNT will keep you out of debt, for it will inculcate habits of thrift and economy. Human progress has been based on that far-sightedness that contemplates future needs and prepares for them, and a savings ac count is the most secure kind of insurance on the future. AMERICAN NATIONAL BANK ALABAMA AND BROAD STREETS ATLANTA, GA. Under Government Supervision. Assets Over $5,000,000 Oldest Savings Department in the City Get College Pennants Old Geld and White. From Your News Dealer For the convenience of our readers we have arranged with the following news dealers to redeem Hearst’s Sunday American Pennant Coupons: JACKSON-WESSEIj DRUG CO., Marietta and Broad Streets. MARSHALL PHARMACY, Peachtree and Ivy Streets. PALMER BRANCH. 389 Peachtree Street. CRUICKSHANK CIGAR CO., Peachtree and Prvor Streets. CRUICKSHANK CIGAR CO.. Mitchell and Whitehall Streets. HARBOl T R’S SMOKE HOUSE. 41 N. Prvor Street. WEINBERGER BROS. CIGAR STORE, Alabama and Pryor Streets. BROWN & ALLEN, Alabama and Whitehall Street*. STAR NEWS CO., Marietta and Broad Streets. STAR NEWS CO., Peachtree and Walton Streets. WORLD NEWS CO., Peachtree and Marietta Streets. HAMES DRUG CO.. 380 Whitehall Street. ARAGON HOTEL NEWS STAND. ATLANTA SODA CO., Broad and Marietta Streets. ATLANTA SODA CO., Mitchell and Whitehall Streets. MEDLOCK PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets. WEST END PHARMACY, Lee and Gordon Streets. JOHNSON SODA CO., 441 Whitehall Street. WHITEHALL ICE CREAM CO., 284 Whitehall Street. T. J. STEWART, Cooper and Whitehall Streets. GREATER ATLANTA SODA CO.. 209 Peachtree Street. ADAMS & WISE DRUG STORE, Peachtree and Linden Streets. TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO.. Peachtree and Tenth Streets. TAYLOR BROS. DRUG CO., West Peachtree and Howard Streets. CRYSTAL SODA CO., Luckie and Broad Streets. ELKIN DRUG CO., Peachtree and Marietta Streets. ELKIN DRUG CO., Grand Theater Building. JACOBS’PHARMACY, Alabama and Whitehall Streets. Out-of-Town Dealers: BENNETT BROS., 1409 Newcastle Street, Brunswick, Ga. JOE X. BURNETT, 413-A King Street, Charleston, S. C. THE GEORGIAN CAFE. East Clavton Street, Athens, Ga. M. & W. CIGAR COMPANY. East Clayton Street, Athens, Ga. ? COLLEGE CAFE, Broad and College Streets, Athens. Ga. *" ORR DRUG CO., East. Clayton Street, Athens, Ga. BOSTON CAFE. North College Avenue. Athens, Ga. SUNDAY AMERICAN BRANCH OFFICE, 165 East Clayton Street, Athens. Ga. The Hearst’s Sunday American Pennants are durably made in fast colors, with heavily em bossed, felted letters. Each of them will artistically reproduce the colors and the seal or mascot of some great university or college. Four Colors. i t t i. a, A Look for the Pennant Coupon in next Sunday’s issue of suffl