1 And they're afraid their new dresses won't show off behind booth counters.
2 I think I should go in the booth with Melly because--well, I think it would look better for us both to be there instead of just one.
3 She sank down on one of the little stools behind the counter of the booth and looked up and down the long hall which, until this afternoon, had been a bare and ugly drill room.
4 She busied herself arranging the articles in the booth in more attractive display, while Scarlett sat and looked glumly around the room.
5 It wasn't fair that she must keep her voice low and her eyes cast modestly down, when men, attractive ones, too, came to their booth.
6 Maybelle Merriwether went toward the next booth on the arm of the Zouave, in an apple- green tarlatan so wide that it reduced her waist to nothingness.
7 The old blades charged off toward the lemonade booth and others took their places at the counter.
8 Their booth did not have so many customers as did the other booths where the tootling laugh of Maybelle Merriwether sounded and Fanny Elsing's giggles and the Whiting girls' repartee made merriment.
9 Then she turned blindly, bent on flight into the refreshment rooms, but her skirt caught on a nail of the booth.
10 The grinning little man was coming to their booth now, his basket heavy on his arm, and as he passed Rhett Butler a handsome gold cigar case was thrown carelessly into the basket.
11 She disliked him heartily, lounging there against the booth.
12 She tossed her head and sped out of the booth, tapping her heels like castanets, snapping open her black silk fan to its widest.
13 The paymaster sat in a little booth, with a pile of envelopes before him, and two policemen standing by.
14 Therefore, they repaired, with fluttering hearts, to the well-remembered booth.
15 They went back into the booth, Sleary shutting the door to keep intruders out.