Newspaper Page Text
TTEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, OA., SUNDAY, AUGUST 3, 1013.
3 H
Guest at House Party;
Miss Jennilu Lindsey, attractive Atlanta girl
„ who is attending a large house party near
Toxaway. Miss Lindsey is a eharming member of the younger set, and has figured in the social
gayeties of that set this summer. (Photograph by Hirshburg & Phillips.)
mA.©Kiiri§iiE
Have more authority than Madame
Rumor for the statement that w«
are to see many interesting and
charming brides this winter. I am
not at liberty to “name names,” of
course, any more than are the society
editors who are on the qui vive for
engagement announcements and who,
you may be sure, know lots more than
they print just at the present time.
It is interesting to reflect, however,
in the days of social sameness that
our autumn brides, supplemented bv
a bevy of autumn debutantes, will
make things gay after a little while.
ou all know, for instance, that the
coming season will see as a bride a
girl, famed far and wide for her ex
treme beauty, and also a girl who
has been conceded to be the most
all-round popular erirl of her set since
she made her debut. Still another
handsome girl, popular and generally
liked, will be married in the autumn,
and these are in addition to several
who have already made public the
news of their approaching weddings.
And they tell me that one pretty
member of the coming season’s deb
utante set has been wooed and won
before she gave the social world a
glimpse of herself as a debutante.
Now, I think that is unfair to the
many beaux who have been waiting
for this pretty eirl to get through
with study and travel and all that.
It was “stealing a march on them.”
However, I am not surprised that
she is claimed before she even start®
out on her social career, for she >a
certainly everything that is sweet and
charming. There is cause for con
gratulation in the fact that most of
the girls who are to marry soon have
chosen Atlantans and will still be
art of Atlanta society. We are jo
ave several out-of-town girH com
ing here as young matrons, too, be
cause of the autumn wedding season.
h.
•"T* HE latest engagement which, I
j understand, is just announced
to-day, is that of Miss Adeline
Thomas and James Leech Wells. I
have been hearing lots of things about
those bachelors of “Paradise Hall.”
You remember, I told you some tim*
ago of this model establishment run
by a number of young men who keep
house in an Ansley Park bungalow
and have great times. They are rais
ing their own vegetables and flowers
and learning how to be good hus
bands when the time comes.
Well, the latest recruit to the ranks
of groomsmen-elect is a resident of
“Paradise Hall.” I had feared that
the comfort and pleasure of the
bachelor establishment might Inter
fere with the early marriages of these
young men. but it seems my fears
were groundless. For on the heels of
the announcement of James Wells’
approaching marriage, I hear that an
other of this group of happy bach
elors is going around with that pre
occupied look that denotes nothing
less important than tempting matri
mony.
Adeline Thomas is one of the very
popular young woipen of Atlanta, and
her engagement will interest many
friends. I know there will be as many
parties for this pretty bride-to-be. and
society for the winter will be bright
ened by reason of this announce
ment.
* • •
W ITH the coming of August many
bits of news concerning the
autumn weddings drift by on
the wave of small talk. I have heard
this week that the wedding of Mary
Brewster, of Indianapolis, to William
Bacon Gresham, of New York, is to
be a brilliant society event in the
city of the bride.
Miss Brewster is a former College
Park girl. She 4s the daughter of
G. S. Brewster, and is beautiful and
talented, a recent Vassar graduate.
The groom-to-be is also a former
resident of Atlanta, and neither of
the young folk has been away long
enough for their friends here to lose
Interest in their approaching mar
riage.
Mr. Gresham has a fine position
with the United States Steel Corpora
tion in New York and prospects for
the' young couple's future life seem
rosy to their friends here.
A picturesque wedding of the fall,
in which an Atlantan will be the
bridegroom, is that of Miss Elizabeth
Herndon, of Virginia, to Henry
Winn Sadler, of Atlanta. The wed
ding will be one of those typical
Southern ceremonies, taking place
at the beautiful old Virginia home of
the bride, Careby Hall, at Fort Un
ion, in October. The bride-elect is
the daughter of Mrs. William Hatch
er, and her father, the late Dr.
Hatcher, was head of the Fort Mili
tary Acedemv. Miss Hatcher has
been abroad much of late years. Mr.
Sadler is a also Virginian.
The recently announced engage
ment in New York of Miss Pauline
Peters, daughter of Mr. and Mrs.
Ralph Peters, of Gordon City, to
George V. Pierpont, of New York,
"Was of interest here, where the bride-
elect is well known through frequent
visits to her ktrrsf*eople in Atlanta.
Miss Peters has a sister. Dorothy,
and a brother, Ralph Peters. Jr. The
family are spending the summer at
their beautiful home. “Wyndomeede.”
one of the many spacious and costly
homes on Long Tsland. Their father
is president of the Long Island Rail
road. Mr. Pierpont, I hear, is a “com
ing man” in the professional circles
of New York. He now lives at the
Harvard Club, and is popular in so
cial and club life. He is a son of
Henry V. Pierpont. of Chicago.
* * •
•Tp HE informal social life of the
season has been considerably
enlivened this year by the pres
ence of well-known people from va
rious Georgia cities here during the
bession of the General Assembly. The
fact that Mrs. Slaton, the wife of
the Governor, is so prominently and
SPECIAL SALES OF LINENS, LACES AND READY-TO WEAR. y^T
. RICH & BROS. CO. 4
actively identified with Atlanta so
ciety has in itself imparted a certain
and unusual interest . in the legisla
tive body, socially speaking.
The delightful reception which the
Slatons gave soon after their occu
pancy of the Executive Mansion
served to introduce members of the
lawmaking body to members of the
social world 1 , and since then a num
ber of affairs of the kind have helped
along this social intercourse.
Mr. and Mrs. William B. Burwell,
the former Speaker of the House, have
contributed largely to social pleasures
with dinners and other affairs at
tlieir temporary home, the town resi
dence of Mr. and Mrs. Clark Howell,
on Peachtree, which they have ^aken
for the sumrter. Mrs. Burwell is a
charming woman, pretty and clever,
and she has made many friends in
Atlanta. The Burwells are usually
guests at the regular club affairs of
the week, and give many small par
ties themselves.
The family of Representative Du-
Bose, from Clarke,- are spending the
summer here, having apartments at
the Majestic, as they did last year.
Miss DuBose is making a series of
visits to various friends, however, and
as the guest of Mrs. Hughes Spald
ing was the honor guest at most of
last week’s parties. The absence of
her younger sister. Jennie DuBose.
who was much admired by Atlanta
society last summer, and v who figured
in a romantic marriage soon after she
went home, Is generally regretted
The DuBoses are identified with Ath
ens’ social life, and as a matter of
course are already well known here.
Then there is Mrs. Samuel Garling-
ton, of Augusta, who is here for the
summer, her husband being one of the
very active members of the Legisla
ture. As Mary Cozart, of Washing
ton, Gh., this charming young ma
tron was accounted almost of Atlan
ta before her marriage. She is very
popular in Atlanta, as in Augusta,
and both she and her husband are al-
wayg at the club dinner dances and
other affairs of the season while they
live in Atlanta. They also have a party
ments at the Majestic.
* * •
a IT GUST A has been very kind of
late, for several of the very
charming matrons of that city
have been lending keen interest to
Atlanta’s social life with their pres
ence. Mrs. B. S. Dunbar, one of the
handsomest women of the State, Is
here for a month or so, with Mrs
George Boynton, on an annual visit
which always delights her friends.
Mrs. Hinton J. Baker. who was Miss
Emma Robinson, of Atlanta. Is here
for quite a while, accompanied by
her handsome young son. They are
with Mrs. Baker’s parents on Pied
mont avenue, and she has been much
entertained at the many affairs where
Augusta visitors have been honor
guest*
Maity of the lawmakers are genial
fellows, in a social sense, and after
the strife and work of the day they
become very welcome members of the
social club colony, and some of them
can turkey trot with the best.
Shelby Myrlck, of Savannah, who
is a leading "beau” of his home city,
is accounted a very able member of
the House, and, I suDnose, has a very
dignified presence there. Later on in
the evening he has a fine time, and
bids fair to become as popular with
Atlanta's young women fs he is with
Savannah’s fair contingent. Shelby
i$ not an Adonis, but he has a win
ning way with him. and he knows
how to talk to. the girls, as well as
to the General Assembly of Georgia.
Colonel Min ter Wimberly, of Ma
con, is a general favorite, and the only
thing Atlanta has against him is that
he is not accompanied on this stay by
his lovely wife, who is one of Geor
gia's weli-known society women. Hon.
John T. Boifeuillet is one of the most
popular men in Georgia and has hosts
of friends here as well as everywhere
he goes. He is one of the few men I
ever saw’ who is a favorite with the
fair sex and with the men as well.
I don’t know* how he manages it, but
everybody who knows him will vouch
Cpr this unusual and noteworthy
achievement in the Clerk of the House
of Representatives
• • •
KNOW a number of charming wom
en in this city who court the god
dess Nicotine. They do not smoke
in public, of course, but in the pri
vacy of their boudoir they are not
averse to puffing at a fragrant cig
arette.
Smoking by women, I do not think,
can be justified in any way. It is
true that they have as much moral
right to smoke as a man, but I be
lieve that if I found that my best
wmman friend was addicted to the
w eed I would lose a great deal of my
regard for her.
In the large cities and in Europe
smoking among women has become
rather an established practice, and I
am told It is now being carried to the
ultra modern extreme of smoking
cigars and even pipes. Of coy roe the
cigars are not the regular huge affairs
that men like so well, nor the pipes
the hideous things that we see on the
i streets. The pipe made especially for
1 women by a noted tobacconist is a
little light w’ooden pipe called the
i "Belgique.”
It does not seem to me that this
copying of man’s prerogatives marks
an era of advance for women. It
does not even have the excuse of
originality that is advanced for the
daring split skirts.
Another thing I don’t understand is
why men encourage women to smokt.
They certainly do not do it out of
chivalry and reverence. I read the
other day of' a young lady w r ho em
barked on a railway Journey and de
manded the privileges of the smok
ing compartment. A vote of the meii
on the car was taken on the ques
tion of whether or not she should be
allowed to smoke. Nineteen men
voted and eighteen of them decided
in favor of allowing the young wom
an to have her way. Blit it is the
nineteenth of the assemblage that ha«
mv respect and admiration.
• • •
BELIEVE I have seen more men
wearing light clothes this sum
mer than ever before. And 1
think for this climate the custom is
a good and sensible one. I have
often wondered how a man could
wear the usual woolen suit, even of
the thinnest variety, in the warm
weather when it was all I could do
to stand a peek-a-boo waist.
I read of a club, formed in New
York, the other day. with 150 charter
members, of men who pledged them
selves to wear thin white or linen
colored suits in summer. You know
it takes a lot of courage for a man to
take up a novelty. Of course, novelty
in style is the breath of life to wom
en. but men risk being called dudes
or snobs or something worse, w'hen
they put on anything unusual, no
matter how appropriate it may be.
And men attach much importance
to being “dressed right,” believe me.
If a woman happens to find herself
overdressed or wearing a plain suit
when she should be wearing fluffy
ruffles at some function, she will
just ignore the fact, and try to carry
off the inappropriate costume in a
way to make the others feel that they
are in the wrong. But a man is far
too self-conscious for this—he grows
mor© and more despondent as he
looks down at his v^st, or his coat,
or his tie. and compares them ner
vously and aginatively with those of
the men around him. He would cut
and run if he dared. As he doesn’t
dare, he remains sunk in gloom and
despair.
The fashion of wearing light suits
in this part of the country has been
popular for some time, although
some of our best dressed men are
faithful to the old style of dark coat
—usually blue, with rream or white
woolen trousers. Among these ad
herents to conservatism are James
H. Nunnally, Madison Bell and oth
ers of the well-dressed men of At
lanta. Robert F. Maddox wears a
'“t v handsome suit of white with 9
tiny blue stripe at the Capital City
Country Club affairs. Joe Gatins
wears white suits nearly all the
time in the summer. Gene Haynes
wears all white—generally a serge
suit, however. Colonel Peel wears
white linen—at werrk or play. John
W. Grant affects pale gray with white
shoes. Frank Callaway wears a pale
gray suit, which is a favorite also
with the younger men. But the
white tuxedos introduced by Morris
Brandon and J. L. Dickey, Jr., are
the most daring innovation I’ve heard
of, in the tonsorlal novelties of At
lanta's well dressed men.
• • •
W ELL, our good friend Pleasant
» A. Stovall sailed last Tuesday
on the Saxunia for his new
home in Berne, Switzerland. It is
thus we cast our bread upon the wa
ters and it returns after many days.
The reason for annointment of ths
Georgia editor to the Consulate of
Switzerland, I am supposing. dat*s
from the days when President Wilson
was a “pTomislne young lawyer,” and
the editor of The Savannah Press
was “on his side.”
The debutante daughter of Mr. and
Mrs. Stovall, who bears the unusual
and attractive name of her father.
“Pleasant.” is already in Switzer
land, and will be at Berne to greet
her parents when they arrive.
I hear that the Stovalls carried
with them, as one of their valued pos
sessions. the massive silver punch
bowl and the silver cups, surmounted
by the Swiss and American flags,
w’hlch Colonel Stovall’s friends in Sa
vannah presented to him a few day®
before they left the city.
The Berne establishment of this
well-known couple will be a favorite
place to visit by Georgians now on
their foreign tours. Won't it be fine
to come across this Georgia home 'n
the midst of a long European tourZ
\ 1 R. AND MRS. J. P. B. ALLAN
I complimented their gueita.
Misses Dorothy Robbins, of
Birmingham, and Margaret Brans-
ford, of Nashville, and Dr. an i
Mrs. Charles Dowman with dinner •:
the Capital City Country Club Thurs
day evening.
The table, which was set out on th.
terrace, was adorned with red and
yellow^ zinnias and the place cards
w ere hand pal .ted in gay colors.
Mrs. Allan wore a lovely gown of
soft blue crepe, wii.i a leghorn hit
draped in tulle and weighted wU.n
pink roses.
Miss Bransford was becomingly
gowned in oink ‘harmeuse with dra
peries of lace, and her picture hat
was adorned with ^lnk and blue roses.
Miss Robbing w’ore a Drecoll model
of rose chiffon and princess lace with
French nosegays as its only finish.
Her rose-colored hat was exceeding
becoming witn it* facing of light blue
chiffon.
Assembled for dinner were Mr. and
Mrs. Julian Prade, Dr. and Mrs. Dow
man, Mr. and Mrs. W. W. Rushton.
Misses Nellie iliser Stewart. Clifford
West, Lillian Logan. Margaret Brans
ford. Dorothy Robbins, Messrs.
Charles Montgomery, Ben Daniel,
Winter Alfriend, James B. Worthy
and Dr. C. P. Pierson.
• • •
M ISS HELEN DICKEY, of Cleve
land and Philadelphia, who will
be pleasantly remembered as
the attractive guest of Miss Corrie
Hoyt Brown last spring, is spending
the summer with her parents in
Paris, and is having a very interest
ing season there.
• • •
M RS. JAMES W. AUSTIN gave a
pretty luncheon Thursday at her
home on East Third street. Her
sister, Mrs. W. B. Fender, of Val
dosta, who is visiting her; Miss Mat-
tie Wilson DuBose and Mrs. Edge-
worth Lampkin, of Athens, the guests
of Mrs. Hughes Spalding, were the
honor guests of the ocrasion, the par
ty being completed by Mrs. Hinton
Baker, of Augusta, and Mrs. Clarence
Blosser.
Many old-fashioned garden flowers
adorned the mantels in the room
where the guests were received, and
the table in the dining room held
three quaint baskets of marigold and
yellow zinnias. The handles of the
baskets were tied with yellow tulle
bows and placecards were hand-
painted little baskets of gay flowers.
Mrs. Austin was becomingly gown
ed in a hand-embroidered gown of
white crepe, and Mrs. Fender wore a
stunning luncheon toilet of tan crepe
with touches of blue.
• • •
M ISS MILDRED PIKE, of Thom-
asrvllle, who is visiting Mrs. Hal
Morrison, Jr., on Boulevard
Circle, has been the recipient of sev
eral informal little affairs during the
past week.
Tuesday afternoon Mr®. J. ,W. Nix
entertained her bridge club In honor
of Miss Pike. The house was elabo
rately decorated with old-fashioned
garden flowers. The prizes were gold
and white hand-painted china, and
were won by Miss Louise Gibson,
Miss Mildred Pike and Mrs. Richard
son. Mrs. Nix’s guests included
Misses Mildred Pika, Louise Gibson.
Edith Cole. Corinne Cunyus, Miss
Harris, Mrs. Harry Baker. Mrs. J. H.
Nunnally, Mrs. Jack Porter, Mrs. John
Reese. Mrs. Rlchadson. Mrs. Fred Je
ter. Mrs. Lincoln Uorrison and Mrs.
Hal Morrison. Jr,
Mr. and Mrs. Hal Morrison, Jr.
gave a “danseuse” Tuesday evening
at their home for Miss Pike.
The interior of the house where
dancing was enjoyed was decorated in
white and green, vases of white roses
and asters adorning the mantels. On
the porch punch was served from a
bowl about which were banked smllax
and tiny white roses.
Tuesday evening Mr. and Mrs. O.
B. Massengale will give an informal
bridge party for Miss Pike, and Mrs.
Warren Powell will give an afte.-
noon bridge this week for her.
Hotel Ansley
Atlanta, Ga.
The South’s finest and
most modern hotel.
Table de’Hote dinner served
to-day from 6 to 8:30 p. m.,
price $1.00 per person.
MENU
Gumbo of Chicken Creole
Feuilles of Lettuce Cuedoise
Mouseline of Sole Nantua
Potato Duchesse
Boiled Spring Chicken on
Toast
Potatoes GnuiTette
Petit Pois Francais
Ftuit Salad
Sorbet au Maraschino
Chocolate Ice Cream—Petit
Fours
Demi Tasse
Special concert by Hotel
Ansley Orchestra from 6 to
10 p. m., on mezzanine floor.
1
Prices that Prove the Economy of Buying Yourj
Furniture Now. Note these Unusual Values in
The August Furniture Sale
The August Furniture Sale has been broadly planned. It is not a sale !
of a few odd pieces that we want to sell, but a wide merchandising movement i
embracing
1st—Every stick of our regular furniture in our warerooms and on our floors.
2d—Special purchases from manufacturers who supply us regularly.
The reductions throughout range from 10 per cent to 50 per cent;
the average savings are about $20 in every $100 spent.
—•—The furniture that bears the least reductions—10 to 20 per cent—is
the staple lines and complete stocks which we carry all the time.
The furniture that bears the biggest reductions—25 per cent, 30 per
cent, 40 per cent, and even 50 per cent—is the broken suits, odd pieces,
discontinued patterns of our own and those we have acquired by special
purchase from the manufacturers. Though necessarily abbreviated, the
appended lists are typical of the reductions throughout:
Bedroom Furniture
Folds easily and compactly.
30x30 Inches.
Now.
.$50.00
. 27.50
. 27.50
95.00
. 110.00
. 160.00
. 58.50
wm
£
r*
$25 Sewing Table, $18
Martha Washington Sewing Ta
ble, as shown. Solid mahogany, 3-
ply veneer top. Top drawer fitted
with partitlonal sliding tray. Deep
pockets on sides.
Was.
Veneer Mahogany Oval Mirror Chif
fonier
Birdseye Maple Dresser
Birdseye Maple Chiffonier
Crotch Mahogany Chiffonier
Solid Mahogany Colonial Chiffonier..
Ladies’ Crotch Mahogany Chifforobe.
Gentleman’s Golden Oak Chifforobe. .
Gentleman’s Mahogany Mirror Door
Chifforobe 68.50
60-inch 'Solid Mahogany Colonial Dresser.$115.00
Solid Mahogany Chiffonier to match 75.00
Solid Mahogany Napoleon Bed to match.. 68.50
Solid Mahogany Cheval Glass to match...
Solid Mahogany Colonial Dresser
Solid Mahogany Chiffonier to match
Mahogany Colonial Toilet Table to match..
54-inch Circassian Walnut Dresser
Circassian Walnut Chiffonier to match ....
Circassian Walnut Triplicate Mirror Toilet
Table to match 65.00
Circassian Walnut Napoleon Bed to match.
1 Solid Mahogany Dresser
1 Solid Mahogany Chiffonier to match....
Triplicate Mirror Toilet Table to match ..
2 Solid Mahogany Twin Beds (the pair) to
match
1 Solid Mahogany Oval Mirror Chiffonier.
Oval Mirror Toilet Table to match
Every article of bedroom furniture on
duced in price—Golden Oak, Fumed Oak, Early English
Oak, Circassian Walnut, Birdseye Maple, Natural Curly
Gum, Mahogany—both solid and veneered.
60.00
45.00
45.00
30. (N)
90.00
75.00
85.00
65.00
45.00
65.00
$38.50 -
20.00;
20.00;
48.00 ;
55.00;
75.00 J
50.00;
■
60.00 i
$100.00;
67.50:
60.001
5o.oo:
39.00 '
39.00 :
27.00!
78.00 :
67.50;
68.50«
75.00!
50.00 '
33.00]
50.00:
80.00
92.00
58.00
65.00 J
75.00;
50.00;
our floors re-;
inglish |
Curly |
Dining Room Furniture
Was. Now.
6-foot Colonial Solid Mahogany Sideboard.$100.00 $ 75.00
48-inch Colonial Solid Mahogany China
Cabinet to match 60.00 42.00 j
Solid Mahogany Serving Table to match.. 27.50 22.00
54-inch Mahogany Dining Table to match.. 57.50 45.00 i
5-foot Colonial Veneered Mahogany Side
board .... -
414-foot Colonial Veneered Mahogany
6 Side Chairs, Solid Mahogany]
2 Arm Chairs, Solid Mahogany [
8 Chairs
1
Square Sheraton Dark Mahogany China
Cabinet
Sheraton Dark Mahogany Scrvirfg Table
Mahogany 54-inch Dining Table
Mahogany Scroll-foot China Cabinet ....
7-foot Solid Mahogany Sideboard
Full Mirror-back China Cabinet to match
Solid Mahogany Serving Table to match
60-inch Mahogany Dining Table to match
Solid Mahogany Side Chairs and 2 Solid
Mahogany Ann Chairs (8 chairs), to
match
4-piece Massive Crotch Mahogany Din
ing Room Suit, consisting of 6-foot
Sideboard, square China Cabinet, Serv
ing Table and 60-inch Dining Table to
match—complete
75.00
40.00
65.00
35.00
i 116.00
85.00
120.00
75.00
65.00
50.00
22.50
20.00
72.00
60.00
103.00
85.00
200.00
165.00
125.00
110.00
65.00
58.50
142.00
117.00
158.00
125.00
705.00 575.00
$37.50 Rocker
$27.50 f
Solid mahogany hand-carved £,
Rocker, as shown. Upholstered In £
antique tapestry. $37.50 chair to 2
match at $27.50. t
Same rocker and chair as above J£
In plain (not hand-carved) posts,*,
for $25 instead of $30. ^
Other chairs and rockers In
denim and tapestry, at $16 to $75 t
Instead of former prices of $25 to
$85. SJ
Parlor & Living Room Furnitureg
Was.
Now.
$60 Cabinet $42
Solid Mahogany China Cabinet. 6.'!j
Inches high, 48 Inches wide. 17 Inches
deep. Just as shown. August Sale
price $42.
Customers desiring more than
the usual 30 days credit can ar
range terms to suit through our
office.
i Mahogany Genuine Leather Davenport ... .!|
Mahogany Genuine Leather Davenport ....
j Quartered Golden Oak FYame, Genuine
Leather Davenport
| 5-piece Genuine' Leather, Mahogany Frame,
Parlor Suit
I 3-piece Tapestry Covered, Mahogany Frame,
Parlor Suit
I 1 Imitation Mahogany Frame Tapestry
Rocker
1 Solid Mahogany Panne Plush Rocker ...
I 1 3-piece Solid Mahogany Hepplewhite
Parlor Suit
I 1 Solid Mahogany Green Denim Chair ....
1 Rocker to match
1 1 hand-carved Empire Sofa
| 1 Brown- Spanish Leather Arm Chair
I 1 Tan Spanish Leather Rocker
| 1 Brown Spanish Leather Rocker
1 very massive Turkish Tapestry Daven
port
Genuine Leather Rocker, Mahogany
frame, as is
Solid Mahogany Leather Arm Chair....
Old English Hall Table and Mirror
Old English Settee
Old English Arm Chairs, each
5-foot Solid Mahogany Library Table ..
Solid Mahogany Arm Chair to match.
M. RICH & BROS. CO. JMMMM M. RICH & BROS. CO.
; 50.00
$ 26.00
65.00
26.00
55.00
25.00
110.00
75.00
92.00
50.00
27.00
18.50
25.00
18.50
95.00
60.00
28.50
20.00
28.50
20.00
85.00
50.00
39.00
20.00
35.00
25.00
46.00
25.00
135.00
100.00
30.00
15.00
37.50
25.00
45.00
33.00
55.00
25.00
18.50
10.00
85.00
70.00
25.00
20.00
25.00
20.00
MM