Newspaper Page Text
6E
H ,
Bargaln prices will prevall at the Cri
terion all next week when ““The Birth of
a Natlon,'y, D. W, Griffith's mammoth
film production of Dixpn's “The Clans
man,” is presented. This wiil be the
first time in the history of thils great
plcture that 1t has been offered at these
prices and ‘#isc the first time it has
ever been presented In a regular motion
picture theater,
““The Birth of a Nation” is generally
regarded as one of the greatest tri
umphs of the screen. It was through
this picture that Henry B. Walthall and
other noted film stars became famous.
It has been a sensation everywhere it
has been shown. While at the Criterion
the picture will be presented with a spe.
¢lal orchestra, because muslc I 8 neces
sary to its completeness,
“Four performances of ‘““The Birth of.
n_ Nation” will be glven dally-—10:456
&/ m., 2 p m, 616 p. m. and 8:30
P. m. The sale of seats will open
* Thursday, five days before the opening.
This is something new for a motion pic.
tures house In Atlants. Beats will be
sold for each performance, but there
will be no reserved seats. The idea of
offering tickets in advance 18 to re-
Heve as many patrons as possible of
having to stand In line to procure ad
mdssion.
A special box office for the sale of
tickets Is being built. There will ba
900 seaty to each performance at 25
oents. An orchestra of twenty pleces
will play for each show, so that, no
matter what performances you nnv-nd,‘
you will have the advantage of a spe-~
clally prepared musical program.
Margarita Fischer
The bill at the Vaudette this week is
An unusually ettractive one. From
Monday morning until Saturday night,
there will be a pleture of real Mterest
on the screen. Margarita Fischer, the
delightful young Mutual star, leads off
on Monday and Tuesday with her new
“@Bt release, “Molly Go Get 'Em.”’ She
is followed by the still &reater favorite
Marguerite Clark, on ‘ednesday and
Thursday, in “Bab's Burglar,” one of
the sub-deb stories of Mrs. Rinehart.
“And the week is bmutfh( to a close with
Rex Beach's tremendous drama of so
clal life, “The Auction Block."
~ _Miss Margarita Fischer, best looking
of the light comedy stars who have
n:do names for themselves in photo
drama. has been fitted with » Jmauhtnl
,lood“put in her new American-Mutua
comedy, "Molly, Go Get 'Em.”
. The play I 8 a take-off on the trou
bles of a young bud of soclety who re
sents havln{ her elder sister invited to
all the Yur ies and dances while she,
belng only seventeen, s doomed to re
‘tirement at the very hour when real
fletr is beflnnlng below stairs.
Mo Ir'l big sister, a leverelr plain
damsel whose chances of marrlage are
mo:mln{ more nebulous as time flies,
to keep the attractive Molly in the
background, and thereby courts plenty
iq! trouble. Miss Molly steals the men
who come calling, goes motoring with
them in her sister’s best togs, and other
wise endears herself to an already ador
ing populace.
—————————————
: ELSIE FERGUSON.
In the role of Lily Kardos, the star
mfl in “The Bonguof Birds,' 'to be
; in motion picture form $y Art
craft shortly, Kisie Ferguson has a
gruzter similar to n?‘.,gge .she ,Qor
trayed in “The Outeast, er igrea est
Buccess on the speaking stage. In'many
respect« th- striking resemblance of
- + roles have been noticéable
siss Ferguson in amu-tlngeher part
“The Song of Songs" fore the
ALAMO THEATER NO. 2
The Home,of Selected Photoplays
MONDAY and TUESDAY
"’ 5 Dainty, Bewitchig, Versatil
€ voir iui
g ‘:‘@3 ; A Five-Act Su:elrr-‘l;l;tro Production
“THE WINDING TRAIL”
FIRST RUN IN THE CITY.
ALPHA THEATER
MONDAY:
“The Lonesome
.
With CHET RYAN,
An O. Henry West
ern Story.
Fourle:r:—{h_i_;;é;ode
“THE RED ACE.”
THURSDAVV or;L;r: R i |
THE SENSATION OF THE SCREEN DURING 1917,
EMILY STEVENS,in
The Greatest Patriotic Play Ever Screened.
Viewed by Millions at the Qutbreak of the War, When It Was
Widely Praised by Army Men.
FIRST TIME SHOWN AT FIVE CENTS.
AT T e —
LOUISE LOVELY, in
“The Wolf and His Mate”
A FIVE-REEL BUTTERFLY FEATURE.
A Comedy Every Day. Admission Always 5¢
Great Griffith Spectacle Comes Next Week
Marguerite Clark and Other Stars Appear
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Top, left to right, Lillian Gish, in ‘‘The Fall of a Nation,’’’ at the Criterion next week; Mar
guerite Clark, at the Vaudette; Tom Mix, at the Grand. Bottom, left to right, Robert Warwiek, at
the Savoy; Mollie King, Pathe star; Emily Stevens, at the Alpha and Savoy, in ‘‘The Slacker.”
ALMA REUBENS.
At last, Alma Reubens, Triangle fa
vorite, hag been revenged for the loss
g‘("her French poodle. The vallant lit
[ beast fell, mortally wounded, in com
‘bat with superior forces, namely a brin
dle bulldog, and Alma has .-Ju».;
§75 damages by the Los Angeles courts
r the losa of her pet Trixie. Miss
‘Reubens’ father was bitten i a futile
attempt to rescue Trixie and the Judfin
awarded him S3O for his lnfuries. mak
llr;g.tll&s total loss to the bulldog’'s owner
0 s ~
TUESDAY:
Billie West
| —
‘The Candy Kid’
A King Bee Comedy.
Third Episode of
“The Hidden Hand.”
WEDNESDAY:
Wm. S. Hart
- —
“Every Inch a
Man”
© Ninth Episode of
“The Mystery Ship”
HEARST'S SUNDAY AMERICAN — A Newspaper for People Who Think — SUNDAY, JANUARY 13, 1918.
]
\
Gen. Petain Awards Coveted Dec
oration to Ambulance Drivers
Who Served at Verdun,
:
PARIS, Jan. 12.—General Petain,
commander-in-chief of the French
army in the field, has awarded the
fourragere of the Croix de Guerre to
Section INo. 5 of the Norton-Harjes
Field Ambulance Service. This dec
oration is the result of two official
army citations won by the unit when
it was attached to 't&e Chasseurs Al
pines—the “little b devils” of the
French army, |
A fourragere looks exactly like one
of the lengths of green silk cuvered.‘
insulated teclephone wires with which‘
operators make connections at
switchboards. At each end of the‘
fourragere is a bronze lozenge, shaped
like the copper plug at the end of the
bit of connecting telephone wire. The
fourragere is looped under the left
shoulder, one end being passed across|
the left breast to the third button
hole of the tunic.
The fourragere of the Croix de
Guerre is a green and red cord, the
colors of the ribbon to which the War
Cross is supended; the fourragere of
the Medaille Militaire is yellow and,
green, being the identical colors of |
the ribbon to which the Military Med
al hangs; and the fourragere of the
Legion of Honor is blood-red, the
same shade as the ribbon of the Le
gion of Honor.
Two army citations in the Order of
the Day entitle a unit, be it a regi
ment of infantry, a troop of cavalry, a
battery or artillery or an escadrille of
aeroplanes, to carry the fourragere.
Five army citations entitle the unit to
wear the yellow and green fourragere,
and seven army citations carry the
red fourragere of the Legion of Honor.‘
The First Marching Regiment of the
Foreign Legion is the only unit whlch{
has won the Legion of Honor fourra
gere 8o far. A
Earned Citation at Verdun.
Norton-Harjes Section No. b, made
up of American youths who had vol-l
unteered three or six months' service
with the French army to carry back
wounded, earned its first official cita
tion in the Army Order of the Day
during the ‘French counter offensive
north of Verdun, when General Man
gin tore from the Crown Prince the
positions he had won on the east bank
of the Meuse almost within sight of
the citadel.
The ambulance section won its sec
ond citation in Army Orders of the
Day when the French drove the Ger
mans back from the line of ridges
along the Chemin des Dames and de
prived them of their Vailly bridge
head across the Aisne, always a possi
ble debouching point for a drive on
Paris,
In both attacks the drivers of Sec
‘tien No. 5 worked night and day evac
uating French wouanded and shell-torn
German prisoners of war side by side.
Drivirg under the terrible bombard
ment which the Germans were main
taining to try to break up the French
attatk; passing through veritable cur
tains of bursting shells which marked
the enemy barrage fire to keep rein
forcements and supplies from reach
ing the starming columns of poilus,
and amid bursting bombs and aerial
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torpedoes dropped by German aero
planes, the volunteer American driv
ers never flinched and carried back
thousands of wounded.
Although the section received the
latter of it§ two army citations some
time ago, none of the drivers ever
wore a fourvagere. They had thought
this distinction was reserved for ac
tual combatants only. They felt it
might be construed presumptuous if
they availed themselves of their right
to wear ‘the red and green shoulder
cord, 1
Petain Gives Permission. |
Now, howeve:r, General Petain has
issued an army order officially con
ferring the right to wear the tour-‘
ragere of the Croix de Guerre on
every member nf the original Section
No. 5. Inasmuch as the fourragere is
practically an official citation for
every man in the unit thus honored, it
permits every driver in Section No. §
who has been awarded the Croix de
Guerreé—and there are a number of
men so decorated—to affix a gold star
to the red and green ribbon from
which his war cross is suspended.
Section No. 5 no longer exists, Last
September the American Red Cross,
‘with which the Norton-Harjes Serv
ice was affiliated, was taken over by
the United States army, and Major
Grayvson M. P. Murphy, of New York,
a member of General Pershing’s staff,
was placed in charge of all Red Cross
work in France.
Ambulance drivers were notifled]
they could either enlist with thel
United States army for the duration
of the war and remain in ambulance'
work attached to the French army, or]
they must leave the service, Many
stayved in ambulance work; others
took aviation, some joined the French
artillery, a few went to England and
joined the British army, and the re
mainder went back to the Unitde
States.
Those who were Section No. 5 men
are K. Hill, W. H. Hillditeh, S. Mat-|
thews, H. H. Parsons and L. B. Stod
dart, Jr., New York City; K. T. Phil
lips, Lawrence: W. E. B. Lyon, Hemp
stead; B. W. Hills and 8. W, Metcalt.!
Auburn; L. and S. Van Pechten, South I‘
Orange; S. D. Bailey, Summit, N. J.;
C. M. Chapin, Jr., Bernardsville, N. J.; 1
W. A. McCarthy, Auburn; L. Frost, |
Nyack: G. H. Kitchen, Montclair; F.
C. Payne, Bronxville; A. M. Rees, Port
Chester; A. P, Skinner, Madison, N. J. |
QOthers are R. Rossiter, St. Louis;
H. B. Ragsdale, Des Moines; L. Frey
er, Buffalo; L. E. Davignon, Knowl
ton, Quebec; J. O. Herrick, Chicago;
G. P. Toms, St. Louis; K. G. Smith,
Chicago: J. A. Chamberlin, Worcester,
Mass.; M. S. King., Rochester, Ind.;
P. H. Moore, %r;arleston. Mo.; H. M.
Wilkie, Mankalo, Minn.: 8. Flagg,
Paris; J. M. Willard, J. W. Carscalien
and E. T. Drake, chef of the section,
of Franklin, N. H.
.
Held as Prisoner
In German City
(By International News Service.)
McKEESPORT. PA., Jan. 12 —Post
master Frank McFadden has received a
letter from Robert Snyder, of this place,
now a prisoner in an internment camp
in Mecklenburg, Germany, in which he
asks the postmaster to notify his rel
atives that he is well
Snyder says he was employed on a
horse trlnsgort that was taken by the
Germans while on a return trip from
En(fland in 1918, The ship was sunk
and the crew made prisoners and taken
to Germany. Snyder assumed the name
of O’Connor when he shipped on the ves
sel. he says, which accounts for the
failure of the State Department to find
Ml e e den
etter evidently passed
th h the hands of the German -
!um‘lr?thou‘t investigation. —
‘ ]
Lyric and Grand Offer Attractive
Vaudeville Bills for the
g Week,
Did it ever occur to you that man,
no matter how attached to one wom
:an or how strenuously he strives to
| walk the stralght and narrow path,
i will invariably turn, stall and stumble
' when tempted by a smile from a stun
!ningly handsome girl possessing the
jmapnetism. charm and grace of
| Jackie Sampson, the leading feminine
Ehole of “Oh, Boy,” that smart nndl
brilliant New York Princess Theater
musical comedy success which F, Ray i
Comstock and William Eiliott an<
nounce as the attraction at the At
lanta Theater for three days, start
ing tomorrow, Monday, January 14
There will be a special matinee Wed
nesday,
The book and lyrics of “Oh, Boy,”
are by Guy Bolton and P. G. Wode
house and the music is by Jerorge
Kern. The narrative of “Oh, Boy” re
volves around one George Budd, an
easy-going young man wnho has mar
ried Lou Ellen Carter without telling
her parents of the ceremony.
Unknown to George, his friend, Jim
Marvin, gathers around him some gay
girls to celebrate a polo victory, and
they enter Budd's apartment % the
]flre escape, and hide in an adjoin
ing room as Budd enters the same
way with his bride.
A telegram arrives for Budd from
his Quaker aunt, who is his guardian,
and as such is opposed to his mar
riage. Reading the telegram thg
bride decides to go to her parents
home for the night, just as Jim Mar
vin and the girls rush on the scene.
George prevails on Jim and his guests
to go to another room while he sees
his bride home. |
Jackie Sampson, who plays “Mod
esty” in “Experience,” dashes in the
open window. Here she meets Jim
Marvin and tells him she was with
a .party in a restaurant and during
some trouble hit an officer in the eye
Jim Marvin suggests that she stay in
Budd’s apartment and even intro
duces her to the battered officer as
Mrs. Budd. The arrival of the hride’s
father and mother and Budd's Quaker
aunt complicate matters, which ieads
to no end of trouble for the newly
married couple, but with the timely
assistance of Jim Marvin, George
smooths out the difficulties and al
ends well,
As a delightful combination of clev
er comedy, with sparkling tunes and
trippling melodies, “Oh, Boy” is su
preme,
“Oh, Boy” is now running on its
second year at the Princess Theater,
New York.
At the Lyric.
The policy of the Lyric to secure
for Atlanta the best and biggest Keith
vaudeville acts available this week
brings two pretentiovs and varied
bills that are certain to make this
commodious and beautiful theater
even more popular than ever.
The record audiences will find acts
that are direct from big theaters of
the East, and in all particulars fea
tures that are in keeping with the
well-known and universally approved
policy of the Lyric.
Porter J. White, artist of widely
recognized abilities, will be the big
' letter feature of Monday, Tuesday and
!Wednesday. heading a capable com
pany in the splendid new dramatic
sketch, “The Visitor,” an offering that
comes here heralded as a sure win.
ner.
“The Chesterfield of Minstrelsy,”
Lew Hawkins, famed far ana wide as
an end man of the greatest ability,
will appear with his own collection
of “guaranteed to make you laugh”
songs and stories. : ‘
George P. Murphy will appear at
the head of a big girl show, *“The
Food Inspector,” a clever satire of
striking settings, a beauty chorus and
songs and comedy of the first water.
Willing and Jordan will star in ex
| elusive songs, and the Three Nelson‘
Comiques will present a novelty turn
Thursday, Friday and Saturday a
big comedy novelty, “The Headlin
ers,” will be top attraction. Vera
Burt and the Six Virginia Steppers
will be seen in a big dance offering.
Other acts will be Jack Morley, “nut
comedian:” the Joe De Kos troupe
of daring and skilled human jugglers;
also Gertrude Long and Spencet
Ward, vocalists.
! Events of world-wide interest'wm
,be shown in the Hearst-Pathe News
pictures, and in addition the latest in
IBurtnn Holmes travelogues will be
offered.
l At the Grand. .
Topping a vaudeville bill of wide
! variety and unusual entertainment at
To the People of Atlanta
Who Are Without Fuel
—FREE—
The Criterion Theater will be open to
day to the people of Atlanta and soldiers
who are without fuel. You are welcome!
—KEEP WARM—
Come in, stay as long as you like.
The Criterion is steam-heated.
W. C. PATTERSON, Manager.
\
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—_— |
. . .
New Standardization of Clothing
. Planned to Help Win
the War,
WASHINGTON, Jan. 12—-To re
lease ¢ labor and materials for war
work, reduce the cost of living and
free large sums for investment in war
bonds and thrift stamps, the commit
tee on commercial economics of the
War Industries Board is mapping out
a radical scheme for standardizing
|clothlng and the fabrics that enter
I therein. .
If the present plan becomes effec-
Itlve. there will be in the near future:
But three colors in shoes—black and
two shades of tan. 4
No more high shoes of the style
prevailing the last few seasons.’ In
stead, the standard summer shoe wil.
be the oxford, or low cut, and the
winter shoe for men and women will
.be of medium cut, extending just
above the ahkle.
But three colors in men'’s fabrics—
black, a gray and an indigo blue.
But one grade of silk—a fabric to
sell at about 60 cents a yard in stand
ard colors yet to be decided upon.
The committee has found that a wear
able silk of good quality can be man
ufactured at this price. England is
using a similar plan.
Standard neckwear for men, styles
and colors to be limited. Now there
are scores of styles and thousands of
colors and styles of fabric.
No more fancy shirts for men, In
stead, standard weaves, limited in
number.
Standard, cuts and styles of clothes
for men.
Standard candies, instead of the in
numerable assortments now made and
sold in limited number.
The investigations of the commigtee
show that, by standardizing these and
other products of common use, the la
bor supply of the country will be in
creased not less than 10 per cent
while the saving in materials will run
into the tens of millions, and at the
same time greatly relieve pressure on
industries needed at full capacity on
war work.
The making of colored shirts, for
example, ißsaid to require an im-
Loew's Grand Theater for Monday,
Tuesday and Wednesday will be Hans
Hanke, a famous Russian pianist.
This is an unusually high-class at
traction. Hanke has created much
favorable comment in his New York
concerts. In addition to his interpre
tations of great masters at Loew’s
Grand Theater he will render several
popular numbers,
Another fine attraction of the bill
will be the Douglas Family, noted en
tertainers, late stars of Sunday night
concerts at the New York Winter
Garden. There are five people in the
act, offering a series of Scotch and
Irish songs and dances, with a spicing
of clean comcdy.
The smallest blackface comedians
on the vaudeville stage, Lex Arm
strong and Willle James, neither of
them over five feet tall nor weighing
over 100 pounds, will offer a comedy
skit. Other features are Hinkel and
May, in songs and dances, and the
Three Aitkens, presenting a routine
of acrobatics, contortionistic feats
and roller skating. .
The photoplay for the first half of
the week is the newest picture of June
Elridge, beautiful World Film star,
entitled “The Strong Way,” being a
story of New York life. Loew's Uni
versal Weekly and Sunshine comedies
will also be shown.
FFor Thursday, Friday and Satur
day the principal attraction of the
vaudeville bill will be *“A Midnight
Appeal,” which is the title of an ab
sorbing' comedy playlet, presented by
Richard Milloy, William Keough and
company. It is the story of how a
clever young girl outwitted a political
“boss” and is very ably acted.
Other features will be Chong and
Moy, two Americanized Chinese en
tertainers, in a melange of songs
dances and comedy; Frank Farron
the comedian who dares his audience
not to laugh; the Moriarty Sisters,
three Irish beauties, late of the fa
mous Shanley’s Revue of New York,
now in a song and gown revue of
their own, and Adonis, “the perfect
man,” in an equilibristic offering with
his wonderful posing dog.
There will be another great photo
play for the last half of the week
This is “Cupid’'s Round-Up,” a thrill-}
ing Western picture, Fox produced.
starring Tom Mix. Loew’s Universal
Current Events and comedy reels will
complete the picture program.
mense amount of dyestuffs and other
chemicals needed in war. The same
is true of colored shoes.
The standardizing of styles and fab
rics, the committee believes, will be
a material contribution toward reduc
ing the high cost of living, first by
reducing the cost of manufacture,
and, secondly, by forcing the elimina
tion of substitues and adulterations.
which cost the consuming public un
counted millions. Thus, in the matter
of shoes, a great many of the fancy
articles now sold at prices undreamed
Asicatea zisie Jan. 14-19-16
) ED
THEAT ER Matinugivne‘dY " 5 .
: THE COMSTOCK= ELLIOTT CO. Presents
THE SMARTEST avo BRIGHTEST
OF ALL MUSICAL COMEDIES
£ el
i b '
O@ , &R O
L 7 e T §
Surßaronne 4B
Jerome KEK%% &
i e,
S aeer &
THE 47+ PRINCESS %! T, OLYTUN
THEATRE (NEWYORK) ~ EEER perTy
MUSICALCOMEDY SUCCESS FSB GIRLS
GCONTINuous 170 11_"5\9"@
- 'VAUDEVILLE 'AND FEATURE PICTURES
OUR PRICES.. INCLUDE . WAR S
T L T T T LI T O PP
sy
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CONTINUOUSE .. . k. o sassre it »
WAUDBVILEEL ..\ ik ot vvnvs sos g o T3fVSO ¥ pleaT SO 5
SATURDAY ... onliiivath s T n b v 4,7AND9€. M.
PHOTOPTAY "o, i diviiissaisnsossesbiivdons, . PROMPTLY Aird oF
1 THIS WEEK! .
| 2——GREAT VAUDEVILLE BILLS—-2 v
; 2———SUPERB NEW PHOTOPLAYS 2
10——HIGH-CLASS VAUDEVILLE ACTS——IO
20—REELS FIRST-RUN PICTURES——2O 7
NEW SHOWS MONDAY AND THURSDAY
MON. TUES. WED.
HANS HANKE,
Eminent Russian Pianist
DOUGLAS FAMILY,
“Bit o’ Scotch and Irish”
HINKEL & MAE,
in Skit, “Catching a Car”
ARMSTRONG & JAMES,
Little Chaps With a Big Laugh
THREE AITKENS,
In Acrobatic Skating Turn
JUNE ELVIDGE,
In Her Newest Picture
‘“THE STRONG WAY.”
NANANAANAA A
LOEW’S UNIVERSAL NEWS FILMS SUNSHINE COMEDIES
"———'“'—l
I ° ATLANTA'S MOST BEAUTIFUL -AND POPULAR THEATER o
FRETIA
bR
10 P 20
CENTS
YW.B . F. KEITHI gy |
Y F2IQ."
QOBT ATTTEN Dy A
10 BIG, STUNNING FEATURES WEEK OF JAN. 14
MONDAY—TUESDAY—WEDNESDAY:
PORTER J. WHITE and COMPANY
IN THE GREAT PLAY, ‘ THE VISITOR’
GEORGE P. MURPHY CO.
Up-to-Date Musical Comedy
3 NELSON COMIQUES
Whirlwind Comedy Gympasts
HEARST-PATHE NEWS WEEKLY
l BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE ’
THURSDAY—FRIDAY—SATURDAY:
“THE HEADLINERS”
A VAUDEVILLE NOVELTY OF UNUSUAL INTEREST
VERA BURT
And
Six Virginia Steppers
I LONG AND WARD
in an Original Novelty
HEARST-PATHE NEWS WEEKLY
‘ BURTON HOLMES TRAVELOGUE I
COMING_VAUDEVILLE'S BEST HITS
of a few years ago, contain less real
leather than one would ngd‘- in o
child’s shoe of a few years ago.
The plan to standardize candy mar.
ufacture is considered an answer tg
those who would stop candy manufac.
ture altogether because of the sugar
shortage. The committee believes the
people need sweets—hat has been the
ekperience of all of the countries at
war. But the committee sees no rea
son for forty kinds of chocolates, or »
dozen kinds of lemon drops.
THURS. FRI. SAT:
‘MIDNIGHT APEAL’
By Milloy-Keough Co.
MORIARTY SISTERS,
“Three Irish Darlings”
FRANK FERRON,
Dares You Not to Laugh
CHONG & MOY,
Clever Oriental Entertainers
| ADONTS,
’, And His Posing Dog
)
; g ke
| TOM MIX,
& In Thrilling New Picture
‘“CUPID’S ROUND-UP.”
LEW HAWKINS
The Chestefield of Minstrelsy
WILLING & JORDON
In a Few Pleasant Moments
e e
JOE DE KOE
And
His Human Jugglers °
JACK MARLEY
Gab} Glide of Vaudeville
g
ot e 8 bot
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(IR
10,20 &30
CENTS.