Newspaper Page Text
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IIKARST'S srxnAY AMERICAN. ATLANTA. OA.. SUNDAY. MAY 2~>. 1013.
Monster Demonstration Planned
for Wednesday, June 4th.
Smoker Week Earlier.
All Atlanta in Egog over the mer
chants’ parade to be held Wednesday,
June 4, the first Wednesday half-
holiday of the summer season.
Jobbers, commission merchants,
meat packers, retail grocers and mar
ket men. with their clerks and sales
men. are making: plans for this big
event.
The parade will mark the inau
guration of Wednesday ha If-holidays
for retail merchants during the
months of June. July and August. It
will be the flrst half-holiday, and the
beneficiaries intend to make It a gala
occasion.
Grand marshals for the day will be
Harry L. Schlesinger and Nym Mc-
OuTTough. Their assistants are Wil
liam Queries, W. P. Price and Carl
Wolehelmer.
Route of Parade.
The parade will form at 1:30
o clock at the State Capitol, on the
Mitchell Street side. The line of
march wltl extend down Mitchell
Street to Whitehall, out Whitehall
and Peachtree Streets to North Ave
nue, down North Avenue to West
Peachtree Street, back up West
Peachtree to Peachtree and down
Peachtree to Five Points, where the
marchers will disperse.
Conservative estimates indicate the
parade will be not less than two miles
In length. More than 10 000 mer
chants. salespeople and their families
are directly interested.
Festivities of the day will not con
clude with the parade. Merchants
will be entertained at various amuse
ments gotten up for their special en
joyment by the entertainment com
mittee. The parks, amusements places
and recreation centers will be pop
ulated by people who hitherto have
remained at their offices or other
places of business six days out of
every week.
Smoker Week Before.
A week before, on Tuesday even-
%i& May 27. at T&ft Hall, a smoker
will be tendered the retail grocers
and fresh meat men, their clerks and
other employees; the jobbers, pack
ers, produce men and salesmen and
others interested in the Wednesday
closing movement. A Dutch lunch
will be served. Oratory will be pro- •
vided hv R. A. Broyles. E. L. Ad
ams. W. O. Stamps, John M. Mc
Cullough and Harry L. Schlesinger
Real Southern Shortcake Rare
*!••+ •!•••!• +•+ *!•••!• +•+ +•■
Atlanta Women Chronicle
Delicious Recipes Used by Prominent House
keepers That Are Promised to (live Per
fect Results and Please Any Epicure.
Gibson’s Hat Has
Feather Ornament
Society Playwright Introduces New
Style at Capital—Ambassador
Wears Pink Suit.
WASHINGTON. May 24.—Preston
Gibson, society playwright, wears a
real feather in the ribbon of his green
Alpine hat. Unlike the native of
Switserland. Mr. Gibson wears his
feather in the back of the hat. not on
the side.
Another masculine fad has as spon
sor the Russian Ambassador Bakh-
metefl, who pins his tie around his
neck by tiny gold pins placed at close
intervals.
The Ambassador recently wore a
gray flannel suit with pink stripes, a
pink silk shirt and champagne col
ored shoes and socks.
Golden Voice Wins
Gold to Develop It
Society Women Will Send Enrico
Aleasadro, Praised by Caruso,
Abroad to Study.
GREENWICH. CONN., May 24.—
Mrs. Percy Rockefeller. Mrs. W. W.
Heaton. Mrs George F. Dominick.
Mrs. Parmalee and other society
leaders here have discovered a musi
cal prodigy in a young Russian of 20
named Enrico Ales'sadro. and it has
been announced that a fund of sev
eral hundred dollars has been sub
scribed to start the young man on a
course of study in Rome.
He will sail from New .fork June 4
and will enter the College of Santa
<’ecllie to prepare himself for grand
opera. All expenses will be provided
here until he is launched on a career.
Caruso’s approval of Alessadro was
the influence that determined the
women to ‘■•Land as financial sponsor^
or him. The great tenor heard him i
-ing the tenor aria from 'Ixi Boheme” '
in March.
'confederate vet-
I ERANS — CHATTA-
I NOOGA.
and
+•+
Fast
Too,home AMTECH BIRTHDAY
+ •+ +•+ 4-«+ *••!•
Disappearing Art CELEBRATION
TO BE NOTABLE
RS. GEORGE FORRESTER hard at work making one of
her justly famous shortcakes. If you want one just as
pood follow her recipe and enjoy the result as you never have
any other dessert.
The N.. C. & St U. Rv. an A W A
A. R. R. will sell round-trip tickets
ac REDUCED RATES, ATLANTA
TO CHATTANOOGA AND RE
TURN, 13.00. tickets on sale May
24 to 28. inclusive, and for trains
scheduled to arrive Chattanooga
before noon of May 29, with re
turn limit June 5. with an exten
sion by deposi* at Chattanooga, to
June 26. 1913. Regular trains ieave
Union Passenger Station at 8 a
tn.. 8.35 a m. 4:60 p m. and 8:50
p. m. All these trains carry Pull
man par'or cars snd flrst-ciass
coaches. The S SO p. m. train car
ries !oe»i sleeper to Chattanooga.
SPECIAL TRAIN will leave At
lanta. carrying the Atlanta party,
at 2:tB p. nr. May 20. The West
ern and Atlantic Railroad Is the
Battlefield Route. Sherman's line
of march, everv foot of it being
historic. Tor further information
call upon any agent or
C E HARMAN
Genera! Pasaenger Agent.
By MIGNON HALL.
When you were a little girl and
wore red shoes with a black tassel,
your old negro mammy used to make
strawberry short-cake for you, didn't
she?
It was the delicious, pie-crusty sort
with the inside filled up with crushed
strawberries that would melt in your
mouth, wasn't It? It would have two
or three layers and plenty of juice,
and oceans of whipped cream all over
it? And your infant soul would ex
pand as you sat up on your higili stool
in the kitchen and watched the in
finitely slow process of its making
to the point when you were allowed
to use a spoon?
If you have tears to shed, prepare
to shed them now-.
The old-fashioned Rguthern short
cake is going by the hoard—and It
has almost got by.
That's the sad word that was
broken to me to-day by Mrs. George
Forrester and a number of other so
ciety matrons in Atlanta, as well as
ihe chefs of the Atlanta Athletic
Club and the Piedmont Hotel.
Old-Fashioned Kind Rare.
They said that occasionally you
see the old-fashioned short-cake, but
it’s as rare as the poet's June day.
It has ceased to be a prominent figure
at place 51 where parties are going on
Home dinners and luncheons or other
meals see it no more, and It has
bade adieux to the hotels.
The ancient pie crust variety has
ben supplanted by the kind of short
cake that is made w ith cake. In other
words, instead of spreading crushed
strawberries between layers of pie
crust, folks nowadays put it on cake
and eat it that way.
For strawberry connoisseurs here
are some recipes made out by several
Atlanta matrons and other folks fa
mous for their short-cake.
To get Mrs. George Forrester's reci
pe. 1 took the car to her home, on
Peachtree Road, and when 1 got there
I found Mrs. Forrester preparing to
make a short-cake.
"Come right in," laughed the host
ess. over a big kitchen apron, "you’re
just in time,
“The main thing to remember about
this cake is the sifting." smiled Mrs.
Forrester. “You sift both the flour
and the sugar separably nine times
each.
Mrs. Forrpster’s Cake.
“You need’l cup of flour, 1 1-2
cups of sugar, 14 eggs( whites only).
1 heaping teaspoon cream of tartar,
1-2 teaspoon vanilla and a pinch of
salt. After sifting the flour and sugar
you must beat the eggs very stiff—"
she turned thb platter upside down to
illustrate that she had followed the
advice she was giving—the eggs not
falling out—“and add your cream of
tartar—only add it as spon as 1 the
eggs begin to foam well, as I have
already done."
She poured the eggs into a mixing
pan.
“Now. you fold in very lightly the
sugar first, then the flour, vanilla
and salt, taking care to fold—not beat
—for it makes a difference In the
lightness of the cake—and bake In an
angel food pan in a gas oven with
the lights turned very low. It re
quires about 45 minutes to bake."
The servant put the cake in the
stove while Mrs 1 . Forrester got ready
lo make the custard to go with it.
She measured out a pint of sweet
milk, 3-4 cup of sugar and took the
yolks of 4 eggs
“First, scald the milk, then add tne
sugar and eggs,” she declared, mak
ing good, “and put the mixture in a
double boiler. Cook it until ra'her
thick and add a little corn starch, if
needed, stirring occasionally.
Berries Must Be Ready.
“Have your berries ready to go on
as soon as the cake is done. Prepare
them two hours before you make the
cake by splitting them and sweeten
ing them and allowing them to stand
till the sugar soaks into them."
In preparing the cake after It was
done Mrs. Forrester took a sharp
knife, split it in half, put on a layer
of the berries and covered it with
custard. Over this she laid the top
layer of cake, more berries and cus
tard. and covered the top with rich
whipped cream, ornamented here and
there with whole berries. (It was
at this juncture that I also came into
mv own. It was good, too.)
Hen's the much-talked-about old-
fashioned way of making short-cakes.
Mrs. Thornbury Stovall furnished me
the recipe. Mrs. Stovall’s fame has
gone abroad as a perfect specimen of
an ideal short-cake maker.
Cut a quart of strawberries and
sweeten with 3 tablespoons t f saga 1 ".
Make a pastry with 1 heaping table
spoonful of butter and 1 of lard. 1 -2
cup of ice water and 1-2 teaspoon
of salt. Roll tlie pastry thin and cut
in three pieces the size of a break
fast plate.
“Don’t forget to crimp that pastry
on the edge," Mrs. Stovall cautioned
here, laughing.
Baked a Light Brown.
Bake the dough a light brown and
when very hot. butter generously with
fresh butter. Put berries betw een the
layers and cover top with stiff whip
ped cream, slightly sweetened and
flavored with sherry. Garnish with
w hole berries.
Mrs, Carrie P.ob'nson Stewart, aiso
known for her short-cake, gave me
this recipe and hoped that r would
be as successful wfith it as she had
beer. (I've been told there are
mighty few folks In Atlanta can beat
her making short-cake.)
Half a cup of butter and 2 eggs;
1-2 cup sweet milk and 4 :evel tea
spoons baking powder 1 cup of sugar
and 1 cup of flour. Hake in two lay
ers in aluminum pans. Use 1 quart of
berries and whip I pint or 1 quart
of rich cream, which must be beaten
very stiff, to go on top of take. Put
split, sweetened berries between lay
ers.
Mrs. Luther Rosser was reluctant to
give her recipe as she said she wasn't
any cook to speak of. but somebody
liked her strawberry short-cake so
well they had askefl for it. But U
took persuasion to get it.
Take 1 egg, 1 1-2 cups of sugar,
cups of flour, 2 teaspoons of baking
powder, 1 cup of sweet milk and 1-2
teaspoon of vanilla extract and mix
Roll out dough, bake and cut into
two layers. Let crushed strawber
ries stand tn sugar for tw'o hours >r
more and put between layers. Also
spread whipped cream between, and
bank top layer with it.
Mrs. Floyd McRae gave these di
rections for the way she prepares
short-cake:
She makes a good rich sponge of
light proportions, and bakes it in 3
or 4 layers. She strikes a different
key-note In preparing her strawber
ries by stewing them in sugar until
they are soft. She pours the juice
over the short-cake, and covers with
whipped cream. Sometimes she
makes the old-fashioned kind, but
not frequently.
Here is Mrs. Philip Alston’s way
Secretary of State Bryan Chief
Orator for Twenty-fifth Anni
versary Festivities.
Auburn Home Coming
Draws 1,000 Alumni
William Jennings Bryan to Be One
of Principal Speakers for the
Ceremonies.
«
AUBURN, ALA . May 24.—An ap
peal is being: made to Auburn men
everywhere in the world to attend the
home coming of former students, that
will be held June 1 to June 4, simul
taneously with the college commence
ment. The home coming Is the first
general reunion ever to be held by a
Southern college. Preparations arc
being made for the entertainment of
at least 1,000 visitors to the little
town, as assurance? from hundreds
of former students have been re
ceived.
Elaborate plans have been laid for
the general commencement exercises.
William Jennings Bryan. Secretary of
State, will be one of the visitors, and
a speaker before the alumni. Dr.
Charles Alsworth Ross, of the Uni
versity of Wisconsin, will deliver the
baccalaureate address, and Bishop
Beverly Dandridge Tucker, of Vir
ginia, will preach the commencement
sermon
The last word in the home coming
calls is a proclamation, drafted and
signed by Dr. Charles C. Thach. pres
ident of the institution, Thomas
Bragg, president of the Alumni Asso
ciation. and Dr. Howard M. Hamlll,
of Nashville. Tenn . Auburn '67.
Used Tapestries for
Georgia Tech will celebrate Its
1 twenty-fifth anniversary in notable
fashion in connection with com*
i mencement exercises, from June 2 to
June 11. Former students and alumni
from all the States will return to At
lanta to make the occasion memor
able.
Many of America’s leading orators
will take part in the celebration, in
cluding William Jennings Bryan, Sec
retary of State; Dr. P. P. Claxton,
United States Commissioner of Edu
cation. .Dr. Herbert S. Bigelow, of
Cincinnati; Dr. C. Alphonso Smith,
of the University of Virginia,, and Dr.
Thomas E. Green, of Chicago.
Secretary of State Bryan will open
the celebration Monday night. June |
2. at the Grand Opera House. He
will deliver the quarter-centennial
address.
The full program for the week fol
lows :
Monday, June 2, S:16 p. m. Grand
Opera House, quarter-centennial ad
dress. William Jennings Bryan. Unit
ed States Secretary of State.
Friday. June 6. 8:15 p. m. Tech
Y. M. C. A. Auditorium. Henry W.
Grady Literary Society debate.
Saturday. June 7. 8:15 p. m.—Tech
Y. M. C. A. Auditorium, freshman
oratorical contest.
Sunday, June 8, 11 a. m.- Bacca
laureate sermon, “A Veiled Vision,”
Dr. Thomas E. Green, of Chicago.
Monday, June 9, 10 a. m.—Meeting
of the board of trustees; 3:30 p. m ,
Tech Y. M. C. A. Auditorium, literary
address. Dr. P. P. Claxton. United
States Commissioner of Education; 5
to 7 p. m., president's reception; 8
p. m., junior promenade on the cam
pus.
Tuesday, June 10. 9 a. m.—Tech Y.
M. C. A. Auditorium, meeting of the
alumni; 10:30 a. m.. Tech Y. M. C. A.
Auditorium, founders’ day exercises;
3:30 p. m.. class day exercises and
pageant on the campus; 8:15 p. m.,
founders' day oration, Grand Opera
House, by C. Alphonso Smith. Ph.D..
LL.D.. Edgar Allan Poe professor of
English, University of Virginia; 9:80
p. m.. reception by Governor and Mrs.
Joseph M. Brown at. the mansion.
Wednesday. June 11, 8:30 to 10 a. m.
Shop exhibit: 10:30 a. m.. graduating
exercises, Grand Opera House; com- I
mencement orator. Dr. Herbert H.
Bigelow, of Cincinnati—subject. I
“Old Institutions and New Ideas:" j
1:30 p. m.. Chamber of Commerce Former Macon Man Placed in Pad-
luncheon (delegates, trustees faculty, j ded CeM at Asheville—Going
alumni and graduating class). 1
Students of Tech and all the re
turning alumni will participate in a
burlesque pageant on the afternoon of
June 10. forming the parade on Tech
campus. It is predicted that 1,000
students and alumni will make this 1 asp ,u * rral ”‘' s ' 1 r *' alzZl ,or - I
j spectacular and unique event one of
the features of the quarter-centennial
celebration.
All the usual commencement week
festivities will take place, including
the cotillion, the bulldog dance and
the Pan-Hellenic dance.
The names of the graduates have
been printed in The Georgian.
DESIST DECREE
DF JUDGE SPEED
City of Macon and Others Hold
ing Claims Appeal From the
Bankruptcy Decision.
MACON. OA.. May 24.—Not only
has Colonel VV. A Huff appealed from
the final decree of Judge Emory Speer
in the fourteen-year-old bankruptcy
litigation, but three creditors, includ
ing the city of Macon, which has a
claim of $9,000 for taxes and paving
assessments, to-day filed appeals.
They object to that portion of the
decree which requires them to con
tribute to the payment of the attor
neys who filed the original creditors’
bill. This will delay the settlement of
the case for at least two more years.
Judge Speer leaves to-morrow for
St. Simons Island, where he will take
a week’s vacation. He stated in court
to-day that he had been laboring un
der a great strain recently, and need-’
ed a rest. While at St. Simons he
will hear the petition for a receiver
for the L. Carter Company, of Odom,
on Wednesday.
Lining His Trousers clerk lived in style
ON $20 A WEEK SALARY
Museum Ca-etaker Didn’t Know An
cient Gobelins Were Worth
Thousands of Dollars.
PARTS, May 24 The museum at
Pau Is lamenting the loss of some
precious Gobelin tapestries presented
to it fifty years ago A Government
Inspector who was checking the in
ventory of the museum remembered
these beautiful tapestries and asked
where they were After a long search
some of the largest pieces were found
in a cupboard, sewn up In a sack,
in which the caretaker of the mu
seum kept his cleaning materials.
The man explained that he had no '
idea that the tapestries were valua
ble. Where were tlie rest? he was
asked. He hesitated a moment, and j
then* replied: "1 am sorry, indeed,
but my wife used the rest to line
the trousers of mv little boy and my- '
self.” The trousers proved to con
tain embroideries worth several thou- (
sand dollars.
PHILADELPHIA. May 24.— Ac
cused of embezzling $45,000 from
Louis P. White, a wholesale jeweler,
by whom he was employed until re
cently as a bookkeeper, at a salary
said to have been $20 a week, John
J. Dallas was to-day arrested and
released In $7,500 bail for a hearing
to-morrow.
Dallas, who is treasurer of a church
at Ardmore, lived in style.
SHUN CALOMEL
PROLONG LIFE
Tuberculosis Victim
Broods Until Insane
to Asylum.
ASHEVILLE. N. C., May 24 Brood
ing over what is said to be an incurable
case of tuberculosis. C. F. Katzz. for
merly a. well-known tobacco salesman
of Macon, has become violently insane
and has been taken in charge by the
authorities.
Katzz was under suspicion for sev
eral days, and became so violent that
It was necessary to place him in the
padded cell pending transfer to the State
Asylum. He is said to be prominently
connected in Macon and Atlanta
The conservation of humanity
has been the sole object of mil
lions of brainy men through all
time. These men had become set
tled in their mind that nothing
but poison drugs could war against
? poison elements in the system that
s produced sickness, therefore poison
P mercury (Calomel) was relied on
j as the only agent that was com-
/ petent to war against the human
j bile acid.
/ Recent researches have discov-
s ered a combination of harmless
? vegetable drugs that will act on
s liver and bowels even better than
? calomel. It does not make you
’’ sick because it does not irritate the
? ailmentary tract; there is no sick
s or bad after effects because it
j does not Injure the organ? of elim-
S ination in any respect, you fee!
? better at once because you elim-
J inate your own systemic poison.
You car get ;his remedy at any
drug store Jor 50c per bottle, ful
ly guaranteed to more than satis
fy you or money refunded. Dr.
Verdier's Liver Ease is the name.
Put up in a pink package.
of making short-cake, whipped cream
being used on top.
To 1 egg. 1-2 cup of sugar, and 2
cups of fiour add 1 teaspoon of bak
ing powder and 1 tablespoon of nut
ter. Mix well and bake in two lay
ers or in one and cut it in half.
Spread crushed berries between.
Likes Old-Fashioned Variety.
Mrs. Alex Smith. Jr., is a patriotic
follower of the old-fashioned short
cake method: She said:
“I make a very crisp pie crust
dough, roll it very thin and bake.
When done, I add cut, sweet berries
which have soaked in sugar and put
between the layers, I also cover with
bits of butter. I leave the top bar*,
and bank the sides only with whipped
cream.”
Mrs. Nellie Peter? Black gave me
these short-cake —eciftcations:
Make a pie crust—three layers—
typical Southern style, and add the
crushed sweet berries, leaving top
white with whipped cream.
Mrs. Charles H. Sisson also liken
the old-fashioned short-cake. she
said. She seasons her pie crust
dough with butter and rolls it thin
enough to make three layers, adding
strawberries in the usual way.
John Gonder, pastry chef of the
Piedmont, was up to his eyes In work
when after being ushered through the
large underground kitchen by Edward
Fischel, the steward. I finally found
him. But he stopped long enough lo
give me the Southern wav of making
short-cake as he comprehended it, as
well as the Piedmont way. He said
he could vouch for both. Here they
are:
Southern Style.
THE PASSING OF
THE SHORTCAKE
E. L. Thornton, steward of the
Atlanta Athletic Club, recommends
a city bureau of strawberry short
cake and pie, with inspectors to
preserve these typical southern
institutions.
Mr. Thornton says, “Cooking is
fast becoming a lost art. It Is im
possible to find berry or cherry
pie that is not adulterated, and
strawberry shortcake worthy of
the name is as extinct as the buf
falo in Atlanta.
!^s statement inspired a youth
ful poet to the following effort:
The herds of romp inf/ buffalo.
Thai trampled o'er the plain.
Are (/one, before the railroad and
the town.
Xo more, the yelling red man,
Clinging to his mustang's mane.
With art arroiv brings his noble
quarry down.
The good old days are passing
last.
They sli/> air ay and die;
Rut some things they must never,
never take—
With our heart's blood we'll
defend them;
They must leave the good old
pie.
And ire'll never give up straw
berry shortcake!
■ set on and decorated with whipped
cream.
At the Athletic Club Leonard Brazel
chef and typical Southern darkey
<ame beamingly down in white
| linen.
He said he had looked upon the
1 faces of four Presidents and cooked
i for them—Cleveland. Roosevelt, Taf\
and McKinley.
For old Virginia short-cake he said,
j make pastry like pic crust—1 pound
! of lard and 1 pound of flour mixed
into a dough with water, a pinch of
stilt being added Roll thin and
bake, putting (rushed strawberrles on
top and between. Use 1 1-2 pounds
of sugar to 2 quarts of strawberries
(unstemmed.)
The way he makes short-cake at
the club is with sponge cake:
Take 6 cups of flour. 1 pound but
ter. 12 eggs. 1 1-2 cups of milk, 1-2
teaspoon vanilla. Mix with 1 1-2
tups sugar and a teaspoon of baking
powder. Prepare and put strawber
ries between layers in usual way, and
cut into squares for serving.
SHARPSHOOTER’S BULLET
SLAYS TARGET TENDER
RALEIGH. N. C , May 24. As ly>uis
White stuck his head above a rifle pit
this afternoon to give a signal to sharp
shooters of the Third North Carolina
Regiment, participating in n three-dav
•hoot, he dropped dead with a bullet
through his brain.
I White was nineteen years old and the
i r-rn f the matron of a leading hotel
j here \ T o one could tell which of the 150
! militiamen shooting fired the fatal shot.
11> 2 cups of soft wheat flour ad'* .fl re j n double boiler until warm am;
2 teaspoons baking powder, and sift Lx.
well. Rub in 4 1-2 teaspoons butter, i thoroughly mixed and continue to beat
the same as for pie dough and add 4 | when you take off until mixture is
tablespoons granulated sugar. Adi fagain cold. Then add 2 cups hard
wheat flour to beaten eggs. Add a
2 eggs stirred in with the sugar and
sufficient milk to make a firm dough
Roll out about 1-4 inch thick and
hake. Fill center with crushed and
sweetened strawberries.
This is the Piedmont style, which i«
very rich:
Take f> whole eggs and 6 yolk? and
add 1-4 teacup sugar. Beat over a
White City Park Now Open
fraction less than 1-2
ed butter, mixed in
•up warm melt- i
tghtly, and 1-2}
teaspoon vanilla. Bake in pan cov
ered with greased paper. Cut inf >
two layers. (’over first with whole
strawberries, sprinkled with enough
sugar to sweeten, the top layer being
25 cards with one line for 15c
50 cards with one line for 25c
100 cards with one line for 40c
business cards 50c a hundred and
$2.GO a thousand up.
THE FRANKLIN PRESS
41 1-2 Peachtree St.
Phone M. 4608-J.
You must own this Columbia Grafonola
—the one incomparable musical instrument that
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We are ready to deliver
for free trial to your home
—to be paid for at the rate
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first payment—this im
proved Columbia
“Regal,” price
If you had made up your
mind to wait until you could
get a complete, enclosed,
upright Grafonola at your
price—this message is for you. It is the
greatest value $50 can produce. Your
S purchase money refunded if you and
I the “Regal”not exactly as represented.
Trade Mark
catalog
In order to appreciate
what this instrument at this
price really signifies, you
•must realize that it is abso
lutely complete in itself, in
dependent of any separate
cabinet, with shelf space for
keeping a supply of records.
This Columbia “Regal”
Grafonola will play every
record in the great Columbia
(and will play every Victor
record also). Hear it here, or let us
send it to your home, with an outfit of
records, on approval.
* \
Columbia Graphophone Company
132 Peac tree Street.
Phones: Ivy 286; Atlanta 1789.