Atlanta Georgian. (Atlanta, Ga.) 1912-1939, December 14, 1913, Image 5

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10 D TTEARST’S SUNDAY AMERICAN, ATLANTA, GA., SUNDAY, DECEMBER 1 MPRESSIVELY rich and Fimpie are the fabrics used for the mak ing of the wraps and coata being worn at present. No matter if the wrap be of the most practical Intention, for stormy day wear or for motoring purposes, the materials used, especially the storm coat tweeds, chinchilla cloth and fur cloth fabrics are elusively rich and warm in their coloring and weaves. Fur cloths have never been more successfully produced, while many of the plushes offered for the inspection of the casual shopper are so furlike and beautiful in color one is some times at a loss to know which fabric is fur cloth and which Is plush. No other material lends itself more acceptably to the making of a wrap for afternoon and evening wear than fur cloth. For wear upon street car and train, when visiting the theater, the opera or for attendance at formal afternoon affairs, a substantial wrap, which shall protect the wearer sufficiently and yet not be ugly in appearance, is an absolute necessity. This season the answer to all such problems Is fur doth. Taupe-colored fabrics, resembling moleskins; lovely brown stuffs, imi tating beaver skins; black, close clipped pile fabrics, of sealskin like ness. and caracul imitations galore, are offered. Made in big. all-enveloping iooae roominess, untHnimed even, and de pending for elegance of appearance upon their cut and shape alone, these fur cloth wraps are a blessing, Indeed, for the woman of little income. In the storm coat and motoring coat classes there are the chinchilla and plush cloth fabrics, as well as the cravenetted cloths and the tweeds of well-known and popular favor. All such coats preserve strict ad herence to straight line fashion and big sleeve styles of the raglan or kimono types. These coats button high at the neck and have unusually large well-placed pockets attached to their protecting skirts. Where net-in sleeves are preferred, and many of the latest models are showing such sleeves, very wide arm holes are the rule. For dress coats, those smart little "GETS-IT” Gets Coins Sure as Fate If You’ve Had Corn* for Month* or Year*, “GETS-IT” Will Remove | Them All in a Fow Days. i "Whew! hurts way up to my j heart. I’ve tried almost every- < thing for corps!” Com sufferers, eomless joy is at < Kbaud. ‘‘GETS-IT” is the only real ( )'“I Don't Wonder People Go Crazy* * Happy Over ‘GETS-IT.’ It Gets Every Corn Sure and Quick!” enemv any com ever had. Put ! “GETS-IT” on in 2 eeconds. anrl ■ away they go, ehrivei. vanish. No I more cotton ring® to make the * com sharper and more bulgy', no ! more bandages to stop circulation J and stick to the stocking, no mor* salvos to turn the flesh raw ani make the corn “pull," no more knives or razors with danger of bleeding and blood oolsonlng ‘GETS-IT” is painless stops pain, and is absolutely harmless to healthy flesh. Warts and bun ions disappear "GETF IT” gives Immediate relief. "GETS-IT” is sold at druggists’ at 25 cents a bottle, or sent on receipt of price to E. Lawrence & Co., Chicago. affairs of taffeta, velvet or cloth, in tended for wear with handsome cloth or Bilk gowns for formal afternoon wear and matching the color of lie gown or frock perfectly, quite a num ber of the nice style distinctions are to be observed. First of all, the skirts to fitted coats and by this is meant the coat which sports a girdle or belt division flare broadly, and In some instances are wired to extend themselves even more bouffantly than they otherwise would. Such coats as these are to be worn with bustle or padded topped Skirts, or with dresses made with numerous ruffling* or with those designed with wired hip-length tunics. * • • There is a menace to the flat- chested woman in the styles of to day. When re vers, much drapery of the bodice, tucks, folds and gathers are in fashion the thin-chested wom an may go on her way rejoicing. Rut to-dfiy, In spite of the fact that loose, bagging bodices are worn, their plain ness makes them accentuate the thin ness of their wearers. A good deal may he done to cover up defects If the neckwear worn is carefully chosen. Wide frills and turnover collars do much to bring good lines to the thin woman’s figure. • • • Buttons and bows are to share the work of trimmings this winter. But tons are still much used for trim ming tailored suits. And bows are used as they have not been used for years. One French frock shows a long tunic of white chiffon with bows of blue ribbon extending from neck to knees. The satin underskirt has a double row of small white satin buttons down the front from knees to herns -so combining two smart meth ods of trimming. * • • The woman who makes a fetish of keeping up with the mode never al lows herself to lag behind the mo ment’s fancy in footwear, for no de tail of dress so speedily proves one’s conversance with current styles as up-to-the-minute boots. This autumn the patent leather boot with a buttoned top of kid is the correct thing for afternoon wear, with draped costumes covered with smart little wraps or with tailored suits of distinctive style. Buch boots have delicately tapering toes, with not the least suggestion of short-vamp stub- bishnes.s in fact, a rather long, ex ceedingly slim foot is Just now con sidered the acme of aristocracy. The heel of this correct boot Is moderate In height—a fact that ap peals to women of conservative taste -but the arch of the boot and its general lines are so exquisitely pro portioned that a much higher heeled effect is suggested. * • * Gold lace, gold embroideries, gold bead trimmings and laces of black or white, designed in gold, will be used extensively. Read trimming both by the yard and In embroidered designs upon chiffon, is displayed. • • • By way of I’arls there comes to us a most costly fashion the use of precious stones ua glove buttons. These little jeweled Rots are composed of single gems set into claw mounts, which can readily be attached to the long evening gloves in colors de manded by the gown. Topaz buttons on champagne-colored gloves, aqua marines on light green, sapphires shimmering against black suede (with a royal blue gown) and endless other striking combinations caused the fad to instantly become a fashion. • * 9 Among the novelties for spring Is a lovely new organdy that has a dis tinctive Japanese floral pattern in black shadow' embroidery. It is dainty in its fine uncertain lines of leaf and motif interspersing flowers of a poin- settia character. * • • Lovely, dainty, frilly, gauzy neck wear is one of the great features of smart dressing. Broadly speaking, this feminine sort of neck fixing is of two sorts, that meant to wear with a guimpe and that intended for the more or less low V-shape so much in favor. Of course the mannish neckgear to wear with the most severely tailored shirts does not come under this head at all. and is therefore ignored. So, to continue with the etherealities, one finds one type consisting of frills and even little lapel effects, the frills go ing around the neck and coming down at the front in pointed effect. The other sort is mostly a matter of bows, bow being a broad term w hich takes in almost everything. • • * The use of fur as a trimming on day and evening gowns is becoming more ami more marked. The flounced skirt is now appearing—an adapta tion of the tunic two or three deep flounces falling one below the other, from waistline to knee, and in most cases these are edged with narrow bands of fur—sable, skunk, mus quash or tailless ermine, the latter in particular being much favored for the sole trimming on chiffon, velvets or charmeuse. IF LIKEH IS TORPID You men and women who can’t get feeling right—who have headache, coated tongue, foul taste and foul breath, dizzi ness, can’t sleep, are nervous ami upset, bothered with a sick, gassy stomach. Are you keeping your bowels clean with Cascarets—or merely dosing your self every few days with salts, pills, cas tor oil and other harsh irritants'* Cas carets immediate’*' cleanse and sweeten the stomach, remove the sour, undigest ed and fermenting food ard foul gases; take the. excess bile from the liver and carry off the constipated waste matter and poison from the bowels. A Cascaret to-night straightens you out by morning a 10-cent box keeps your head clear, stomach sweet, liver and bowels regular, and you feel bully for months. Don't forget the children. CATHARTIC V, '»*’*•* If BLACK AND WHITE COSTUME SETS NEW VOGUE IN LONDON Crepe de Chine and Jet Used for Gowns in Chinese Play, “Mr. Wu.’’ Special Cable to The American. LONDON, Dec. 13.—So gorgeous are the Chinese dresses in the new Chi nese play, “Mr. Wu,” that the Euro pean gowns worn on the same stage had to be chosen with great tact. Miss Lillian Bralthwaite in the first act wears all white, so the costume in no way clashes with the gay colors of the Eastern silks, and embroideries. The skirt of this *oft white crepe de chine is draped in long folds. The corsage, which is & little pouched at the back, is drawn in at the waist beneath a belt of silk to match. The waist, however, is relieved by a motif set at the back and worked in tiny beads and bugles of black jet. This not*> of black is repeated again on top of the sleeves and in a panel which falls from the waist in front of the skirt. It is extremely effective. The bodice is slightly decollete in front and finished at the neck with a narrow Medici collar of lace. The short sleeves open over an und€*rpair Who Is Jane Addams? Actress, One Answer OSHKOSH. AVIS.. Dec. 13.—What students entering Normal School do or do not knoAv in the way of gen eral information was brought out during an examination by the board recently. Following are some of the ques tions and answers; What and where is Manila ’ A Manila is a rope found in a hard ware store. Q. Who is Jane Addam? A. Jane Addams .is a famous actress. Q. What causes a change of sea son? A. The sun and moon and sometimes both. Q. What was the era of good feel ing? A The whisky rebellion. Q. Who was Captain Scott? A. He was th< digger of tlie Panama Canal. GIRL, 15. WEDS MAN. 30. VANCOUVER, WASH., pec. 13 — Though but 15, Miss A Lull a Allen, daughter of M. S. Allen. of Amboy. Wash., to-day was married to Walter J. Duudles, 30 years old. HAS ALL HER TEETH AT 72. BATTLE CREEK. MICH.. Dec. 13. A woman 72 years old with all her own teeth is the discovery made at an in stitution her*. The woman is Miss Helen Simons, a Lansing school teacher. of white, which are edged with a nar row row of black. Miss Braithwaite wears with this costume a frill of black lace, while a soft fold of white lace i» laid around the crown and a white aigrette stands erect at the side. She appears at the home of “Mr. Wu” in a dress of mole- colored satin, which is hidden by a lovely cloak of rose silk, bordered with ermine. g When the cloak is removed it is seen that the dress is draped on the right side in long, graceful folds, while on the other it is slightly caught up and finished with a scarf of mole- colored tulle embroidery at the end. This very dainty effect results from an arrangement of sleeveless corsage, which is cut low and fastened with small braided buttons over a blouse of mousrseline in the same shade oi satin. The^leeves of the blouse are full and Ion® and gathered into a lit tle band at the wrists, while on the shoulders they atye finely embroidered in silks. Wants Babies’ Finger Prints on Certificates i l OW many of you have thought I how readily Atlanta woman rally to the cause of charity? Seldom does there come a call that there are not sufficient replies. Dur ing the past few weeks when every one is busy going to weddings, buffet luncheons, buying their own Christ mas gifts and cheering hubby into enjoying his breakfast, it has bee^i i •'•markable that madame has accom plished so much for the poor, friend less and incurables. Atlanta women have lent their presence to the tango teas, matinees end bazaars, as well as luncheons for the benefit of the Christmas fund. Five good women took the pains to dress with their own fingers—yes, all the garments were handmade—the beautiful dolis auctioneed Friday for the now quite large fund. Every lit tle child shall see Santa Glaus this year and eadh one will have the ! toper clothes for the oncoming win ter season, and nearly all this be- • ause of our good mothers and mar ried sisters. I suspect the husbands tiiink they played a big part in this w/ien they paid the bills, but that is what they expect to do and accept as tl eir share in this great movement toward happiness for all. Of course, the bachelors will be expected to do something, too, and that is why there uas a dansant after the theater Mon day; to give them a chance to come with their girl friends and have a good time, as well as aiding a splen- dio work. Those who didn't go be cause it was so cold and/ who had said several times that, they believed in contributing to such things mailed in their checks for nice little sums (I mean many!of them did, or that is what someone told me.) I guess a great many more will between novf and Christmas. * * * I WANT to confess that I am a dense person. All season I have been watching the different style of tango and hesitation, and I was beginning to pride myself on being able to tell who taught every dancer. It was really beginning to be an obsession with me to pick out the different methods on a. ballroom floor and that was one of the reasons why I was so struck with the Veazy Rain waters at the tanga tea last week—I couldn’t for the life of me decide, who had taught them, and 1 said so last Sunday. All week it worried me, and l decided to work out the little mystery all alone, but a note to me Thursday morning signed “Admirer” —thanks—upset my plans. It explain ed very briefly that no other than Gene Haynes had been responsible for the Rainwaters’ efficiency in the tango. Perish ' the thought that I don’t know the Gene Haynes style! I have seen it a thousand times over, so I guess the thought will have to perish. 1 must be getting so old that my eyesight is failing. The next thing I know 1 won’t be able to pick out the Gene Kelly tango type. • * * B LACK draperies or wallpaper showing a black background are the latest style in the bou doir of milady who cares for her looks enough to have the decorations changed. For you know, or possibly you hadn’t thought about it. that Lack is considered the most restful to the nerves of any color. The “crow’s feet” can not come if only a dark room is employed during the resting hours of the day. Many At lanta women realize the elegance of such mural adornment and for that reason have adopted the fad, if it is such. I understand that Mrs. Beaumont Davison was the first in the city to plan a rest chamber \yhose walls are hung with the English chintz in black with a design of leaves and paradise birds in blue. The draperies are in the old blue shade and the dark ma hogany furniture of an ancient period makes this apartment most complete. Mrs. Rainwater Is another w'ho has established In her new home one of these ideal places. How I long some times for some place where not a ray of light can be reflected “when 1 lay me down to sleep.” and only the mel lowest shadows can gather about me to keep me company instead of the flighty, frolicsome rays of sunlight by day or the horrid stream from the electric street lamp that at night worries you so that you become gray haired before your proper time. What could be of better taste than Mrs, Rainwater’s lovely room, where the walls are black and mulberry-hued and the floor coverings are the shade of the little crushed berries that you tread upon when you go in search of cocoons who weave their silk upon the branches of the stately old mul berry trees? The same tone is seen in the draperies at the windows and the shade is of such subdued effect that there is no crying out between gay and the sober elements, but the utmost harmony reigns supreme. * V * \ r OU all know well the story of the Y Pied Piper of Hamlin. Did you realize that we have one in our rtiicst, and who do you think is tak ing this extraordinary part in things so domestic? Why, of course, it is a young girl that you never would sus pect, for she is always very busy with her social duties. When her mother left for a little trip several weeks ago, Our Girl made up her mind that she would overhaul the kitchen and pan try. The carpenters came; the plas ter was knocked down and a new gas range was installed. The thought suddenly' struck her that probably It would be a good idea to set a mouse trap or two for the fina> lest of a sanitary cuisine. Hardly had she left one to set another little steel con traption than the first one snapped. This happened again and again, until she became so fascinated that she did rot realize the time was rapidly pass ing. She had spent the entire day on the warpath and when she came to count she found out she had brought down twenty of the enemy. She spends part of each day now in this same way, vowing she will not evac uate until the last foe is exterminated and by her own hands. * * * I AM so sorry that I was born stub born, for it makes it that much harder for me to take back w’hat 1 have once said very emphatically. It always embarrasses me to own that I was so positive about something that turns out to be the other way around altogether. If the reputation of a certain nice young woman in town were not at stake, I would be tempted to let this matter pass by, keeping so silent that maybe no one would real ize that I had mad6 a gross error. But so long as she is a good friend of mine and I so publicly made the state ment last week that she was to play the leading role in “How He Lied to Her Husband.” I must defend her by telling you that is not the play that the Strait-laced Husband w’ould not allow' his attractive young wife to star in. The play, if you would like to read it, as some of my curious friends may. is called “The Man in the Stalls,” by Sutro. The Players’ Club decided if even one husband objected to it that there must be something really against it, and if he didn t choose for his wife to be the star certainly they could with no self-re spect do anything but choose another play, which is very interesting, but is similar in its plot to the little skit at the Forsyth several weeks ago entitled “Circumstantial Evidence.” Of course, there is nothing objectionable in any thing like that, although it is quite fas< mating to the audience to see how they will get out of the evidence against them. It Is too bad that we can’t all be at Mrs. Ellis’ to see the little piece de theatre. Really I am very mu h grieved that the Players’ Club has begun the parlor plays. They are so tantalizing. I am almost inclined to do what I hear is becoming very com mon in the drawing receptions in London—slip in without an invitation and avoid the hostess altogether However, I’m always afraid that someone 1» going to find me out, any. way, and I can’t afford to let any* body catch up with me like that. • * * AM still hearing echoes of the Ed Inman ball, which everyone ad mits stands by itself as THE big affair of the season. The 2 a. m. breakfast, which was the most popu lar part of it, was intended by the In mans to be the finale of the evening, hut those of us who suspected it— and I didn’t—were having such a good time we just decided to stay on. When your guests are having a fine time it is a hard matter to get them to go home. The best method I have heard was employed by a smart ma tron who had a double party this year. The older people came first to a reception and they were supposed to get themselves out of the way for the young ones, who were invited to dance. They didn’t do it, so this bright hostess brought into service a big gong, which was supposed to be ornamental. At the last moment the butler banged on it twice. “Don’t be alarmed,” said the hostess sweetly to one of the late-stayers, “that’s only a signal to the servants that several vehicles are coming in the gate.” In less than two minutes the house was cleared and ready to receive the second installment of guests. * • * T certainly is pleasant to know that there will be so many eggnog par ties on Christmas morning. I do not know t/f a more delightful way to truly express the Christmas spirit than to open one’s home on this day to give one’s friends an opportunity to express their holiday greetings in person ard to share in the glad spirit of the gala day. • I hear that Dr. and Mrs. Floyd Mc Rae will observe their annual custom of being at home Informally on Christmas morning. Mrs. McRae has just returned from Buffalo, N. Y, where she spent several days with her son, Kenneth, who is in business there. Floyd McRae, Jr., will coma down from Baltimore to spend the holidays with his parents, and will, of course, be present at the eggnog par ty. I certainly have missed Mrs. Mc Rae at the various parties of the past ten days. She is a most gracious and graceful woman, and her gowns are always w orks of art. I not only enjoy her cordiality, but enjoy looking at her costumes, each one of which seems lovelier than the last. Of course, the Christmas party will bo very informal, as Dr. and Mrs. McRae ask their friends informally to drop in, but it is sure to be marked by the exquisite -taste which character- Mrs. McRae’s parties. ( Money Saved by Making Your Cough Syrup at Home Takes But a Few Moments, and Stops a Hard Cough in a Hurry. Cough medicines, as a rule, con- < tain a large quantity of plain syrup. If you take one pint of granulated ) sugar, add V 2 pint of warm water and stir about 2 minutes, you have > as good syrup as money could buy. > If you will then put 2V a ounces c* v Pinex (rifty cents worth) in a pint bottle, and fill It up with the Sugar Syrup, you will have as much cough syrup as you could buy ready made for $2.50. Take a teaspoonful every one. two or three hours. It keeps perfectly. You w'ill find it one of the best cough syrups you ever used—even in whooping cough. You can feel It take hold- usually conquers an ordi nary cough In 24 hours. It is just laxative enough, hap a good tonic effect, and the taste is pleasant. It is a splendid remedy, too. for whooping cough, spasmodic croup, hoarseness and bronchial asthma. Pinex is a most valuable concen trated compound of Norway white pine extract, rich In guaiacol and other healing pine elements. No ofher preparation will work in this formula. This p’an for making cough rem edy with Pinex and Sugar Syrup is now r used In more homes than any other cough remedy. The plan has often been Imitated but never suc cessfully. A guaranty of absolute satisfac tion. or money promptly refunded, goes with this preparation. Your druggist has Pinex. or will get it for you. If not, send to The Pinex Co., Ft. Wayne. Ind. S *tDottvlij. F^IConoqtam C±)fcalionctt ENGRAVED TO ORDER IN A DISTINCTIVE MANNER IS A MOST APPROPRIATE CHRISTMAS GIFT FOR A LADY OUR NAME ON THE BOX IS A GUARANTEE OF QUALITY ORDER NOW J. P. Stevens Engraving Co. 47 WHITEHALL ST.. ATLANTA Dreaming of Days When Appetite ' Was King Bring Back Those Joyous Health Laden Days By Using a Stu art’s Dyspepsia Tablet After Meals. One of the sad memories of the atom- Ich sufferer are the days when he could pat the meals that others ate. He re calls this Joy and the relish of many special dishes, but to attempt the same thing now would be followed by dis tress. if not painful suffering Just a single Stuart’s Dyspepsia Tab- 1 let eaten like candy after a meal will [ assist In qulcklv and harmlessly digest- i ing such a meal. In a brief time the faulty digestion will become normal and man may eat as he desires. SPOKANE, Dec. 13.—To require the finger prints of every child to be taken soon after birth is the object of a movement started by W. Hoyt Turner, Chief of the Bureau of Iden tification of the Spokane Police De partment. A bill covering the proposal will be introduced at the next session of the \\ ashington Legislature, but Turner favors also a Federal provision re quiring the child’s linger prints on the birth certificate. Boy Reads at Three, And He Never Cries LOS ANGELES. Dec. 13—Marshall Gretinore is 3 years old and can reid. j On his second birthday his mother : bought him a set of blocks with raised I I letters. The child reads these cards fluent- I I ly and with interest. His education is ! being carried out along the line of d£- I ! veloping personality and self-control. As a result of the latter object, he I is never allowed to cry, and will even * receive chastisement without tears, t "And Now I Can Only Eat Soft. Mushy Diet.” Then the occasional use of Stuart's Dyspepsia Tablets will bring to any j one a more enjoyable and comfortable I feeling alter a large meals than one can [ possibly Imagine. The entire secret of Stuart’s Dyspep- ; s!a Tablets from m successful digestion standpoint lies in Ybe fact that they are composed of those elements which the system reeds most and would sup ply if it could Don’t delay, Do to y< :r druggist and ob’-'n a box this vwy u). Ur.ce, 5t “ l BUY DIRECT When you buy Liquors, or anything else DIRECT from the original source you get top quality at a lower price than if you buy through paid agents such as Postmasters, Express Agents, R. F. D. Carriers or others. Agents don’t work for nothing. Somebody has to pay them. This pay MUST come out of your pocket in the shape of quality. Our DIRECT-TO-YOU prices are bed-rock—our qualities top-notch. o whisker OUR NO. 1 BOURBON Aged in wood, 100-proof old; mellow, and as smooth a whiskey as you ever tasted. j; J? ?? | EXPRESS PREPAID j 4 Q,s ' 5315 1 Gal. S3.00 2 Gal 12 Qts. S9.C Head This Interesting Price List All goods quoted below delivered to any point on Southern Express Company’s lines pre paid. Our quick-service shipping station is located at Gerard, Ala. Mail your order direct to P. 0. Box 965, Columbus, Ga. CORN. 1 Gal. 2G«I. 5 Gal. 4 Qts. 6 Qts. 8 Qts. 1 2 Qts. 24 Pts.48 VsPte. Sweet Mash, AA, 100 proof... $3.00 $ 5.75 $12.50 y~37Fsr~ $ 4.65 $ 6.10 $ 9.00 $ 9.50 $1000 OLD TIMES, the Best ...... 3.50 6.50 15.00 3.80 5.35 7.50 10.00 10.50 11.00 RYE. REID'S Select Stock 2.50 4.75 10.00 2.65 3.60 5.10 7.00 730 LOO 3.00 5.75 12.50 3.15 4.65 6.10 9.00 9.50 104X3 BRANDIES. No. 7 Apple . • • 3.75 7.25 1625 4.00 5.50 7.80 10. CO 10.50 11.00 No. 7 Peach 3.75 725 16.25 4.00 5.50 7.80 10.00 10.50 11.00 WINES. California Port 3.00 5.75 1230 3.15 4.65 8.10 9.00 9.50 10.00 California Port 2.50 4.75 10.00 2.65 3.60 6.10 7.00 7.50 8.00 3.50 6.50 15.00 3.80 5.35 7.50 10.00 10.50 11.00 4.75 9.25 20.00 5.00 6.50 9.75 12.00 12.50 13.00 California Sherry 3.00 5.75 12.50 3.15 4.65 6.10 9.00 930 10.00 California Sherry 2.50 4.75 10.00 2.65 3.60 5.10 7.00 7.50 84)0 Imported Sherry 3.50 6.50 15.00 3.80 6.35 7.50 10.00 10.50 11.00 Imported Sherry, Fancy 4.75 925 20.00 5.00 6.50 9.75 12.00 12.50 13.00 Scuppernong Wine .... ..... 2.50 3.50 4.50 6.00 . . ... • ••*« Virginia Dar® . . . 3.00 425 5.50 7.00 CASE GOODS. OLD JORDAN, bottled in Bond, 8 year* old # . 5.00 6.50 9.75 12.00 . Shaw's Malt 4.00 5.69 5.50 7.80 7.80 10.00. 10.03 Our Private Stock, in bond 4.00 10.50 114)0 OLD GORDON, in bond . 5.00 6.50 9.75 12.00 12.50 134)0 1. W. Harper, Blend 5.00 6.50 9.75 12.00 1230 13.00 Murray Hill Club Blend 5.00 6.50 9.75 12.00 1230 13.00 Lewis' 66 ... 5.00 6.50 9.75 12.00 12.50 13.00 Upper Ten, Blend 5.50 7.00 10.C0 13.00 14.00 15.00 Black Label 5.50 8.00 10.50 15.00 Three Feathers. Blend. 7.00 9.50 13.50 18.C0 19.00 20.00 F. & K. Soecial 92 15-00 c*se; 4 qu«rts $6.001 6 quarts. .$8.50 We prepay express on everything to be had in a first four Ouarts, one gallon or •olas* liquor store. more. In addition to the above goods, w# carry Include 10 cents extra for,sxchanps when 6endina your pergonal check. REBD-GORDON LIQUOR CO., Inc. “The Best for the Least Money, Not the Cheapest” P. O. BOX 965 COLUMBUS, GA.