The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 30, 1922, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE _Entered at the Postoffice, Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class | | i Matter. | (GEORGE D. MANN - - - - - Editor | ages? Foreign Representatives G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY | |. CHICAGO - - - - - -DETROIT | | Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | i PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH NEW YORK - - Fifth Ave. Bldg. MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or republication of all news dispatches credited to itor not other- wise credited in this paper and also the local news published ‘herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also reserved. MEMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE | Daily by carrier, per year..........se00% is $7.20) Daily by mail, per year (in Bismarck) aedewsice Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .. Daily by mail, outside of North Dakota............+ THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER (Established 1873) - 6.00; FOR A COUNTY AGENT Voters of Burleigh county will decide on November 7th) whether or not the county shall undertake Ccoperative Agri-| cultural Extension work, matter ought to be settled by the voters and having a peti-, tion before them requesting a vote on the matter, have placed ' it on the ballot. j It is proposed to make possible by this vote the employ- | ment of an all-time agricultural worker, whose services shall be offered to the farmers and farmers organizations of the | county. It is a business proposition. | It is particularly desirable that Burleigh county under- | take this work now, when one dairy circuit is pioneering in| the development of that industry in the county. The county | agent can, and would, be of great assistance in the promotion | of dairying. Potato raising is increasing in the county and | diversification in farming is developing rapidly. Agricul-) ture in this and other coi:1ties is in the process of readjust- ment. Farmers organization and individuals could be greatly eided in the solution of many perplexing problems by a well- trained county agent, through whom the entire facilities of the Agricultural College are made more accessible to the peo- i ple of the county. A county agent was employed last spring for 60 days. A; comparison with the previous year shows that with the | county agent on the job Burleigh county farmers received several thousand dollars more in loans than in 1921 when there was no agent to push the applications. This is an indi- cation that the expenditure of the modest sum required to support Cooperative Agricultural Extension work would be a good investment. . THE CHECK NUISANCE Do you, when you nonchaltantly walk into a store and| ask that your check be cashed, realize the favor you are ask- ing of the merchant? And have you ever broken the faith that he places in you when he performs this servcie for you? You may not have broken faith, but there are many who have. The check nuisance has become the check menace. To give a check on a bank without sufficient funds to meet it is a serious offense, yet there-are Bismarck merchants who have many checks for small amounts which have been given them and returned from the bank marked “no funds.” Bismarck merchants have continued to put faith in the people who cash checks, and have been loathe to take united | action to protect themselves. In many cities merchants. have organized for their protection, either a retail credit men’s | association or have had established a department in the Com-| | mercial club. By having a central clearing house. they are | able to receive the, advice from each other to be on guard against those who often presume upon many merchants by | presenting and cashing bad checks. It would be justifiable, and well, if Bismarck merchants should taken similar Action. HOUSEWIVES American housewives, if paid “market rates” for work | they do in the homes, would have a combined income of _ $10,000,000,000 a year. This is the estimate by Mrs. Thomas} & Winter, president of the General Federation of Women’s Clubs. ; Her estimate is too low: It should be multiplied by at least six, for work done in the home surely balances work outside, and the latter this year gives the nation an income} of $60,000,000,000. ~ ‘After all, it is rather futile to attempt to put a money value on services that cannot be measured in dollars. The) average mother undergoes privations and self-denial that | strangers would not shoulder for $10,000 a year: DRY { .-Mustapha Kemal sends to Thrace and Constantinople the sad word that he ‘will bring prohibition with him when he moves in. Mohammedan religion forbids the drinking of alcoholic beverages. .,Kemal’s punishment for drinkers will be a stiff fine, sev- erat months in jail and 49 lashes with the whip. Science long} has. sought a cure for alcoholic thirst. Kemal seems on ay fair way to finding it. Many probably have been interested in Kemal, under the delusion that he was related to kummel, the liqueur. BEER Germany is exporting only half as much of its famous beer as in the days before the war. The cause? Prohibition) | in:America. ‘any will see, in this, the most interesting “problem in| , foréign trade.” i However, at this season of the year, memory turns less \ to foaming steins of German beer than to the old-time bow]! ‘of “Tom and Jerry” that used to grace the center of the bar.| | Remember? | | | be SAFETY ‘ In India jungles the semi-savages dodge snakes and man- killing beats. In civilized cities we dodge autos and other | kinds of accidents. | ‘Man is unable to escape from danger. Nature is wise, | it’sall for the best. Presence of danger makes us cautious, | develops our resourcefulness. . Constant battle with danger | | keeps us alert. And without alertness, no progress. : | “The melodrama, life, is craftily stage-managed by nature. is DANGER British India reports that 19,396 of its residents were killed by snake bite last year. About 3400 others were eaten by-wild beasts. Disease-bearing jungle insects killed many times more than snakes and wild animals combined. This makes the simple life of the wilderness less attrac- tive. However, on a population basis, autos in America are more deadly than the snakes and beasts in India. More highly, civilized we become, the more dangerous life is. ‘he commissioners, believing the; jold churches, relics of early col-| | EDITORIAL REVIEW || Comments reproduced in this column may or may not express | Yea, Verily, Politics Does Make Strange Bedfellows, _ | the opinion of The Tribune. They are presented here Ir order that our readers may have both sides of important issues which aro being discussed in the press of the day, CHURCIE ARCHITECTURE There are many who claim that j with the culmination of the Gothic in the teenth century architec- ‘ture ceased to be a living art . For | 400 years development of architec- | tural styles has been on more than ithe modification or elaboration of ‘earlier styles. And much of it has | ;been very bad. For a considerable ‘time the deterioration was steady | and seemingly ‘hopeless. In Eng- land the Georgian architecture Was | abominable and the Victorian was | worse. American architecture ‘has | ‘not always imitated English styles, | | but the English influence hag been | strong | Bishops of the Episcopalian church recently assembled in con- ventiom have officially condemned | the ugliness of American churches. | {They have declared that the ‘churches of the Episcopalian de- inomination are the best to be found, but they are very unworthy | ipest. The bishops estimate that lonly 1 per cent of their own) churches are excellent, while 9 per | cent are passably good. Of .the; est 15 per cent are mediocre and | | 75 per cent either poor or dreadful. There is a harsh judgment, but; it is not too harsh A great many) | American ecclesiastical edifices are | | blighted by the touch of Victorian- | ism. More recent edifices are bet- ter, for the architects have sought, with varying success, to go back | to the inspiration of the men who! wrought of old, when architecture | was still alive. The very new) churches, which have been designed | along these lines, and. the very) onjal days when Christopher | Wren’s rejuvenated Romanesque! was the dominant style, include: practically all the buildings that! are admirable. It has been fortunate that church edifices have long lives. The mag-/ nificent Gothic structures of the| Middle Ages are the inspiration ito- | day.) But, unhappily, the unworthy} may be only a little less durable! than the worthy, and the hideous! Victorian churches which disfigure | out American cities will doubtless remain for a long time to amaze | and horrify. But they will pass! eventually, for they will not be pre- | served by the loving care which ig, bestowed on old churcses that are | worth preservngi. It should be the; care of our church ‘builders that; their work is not regarded by the/ next generation as the Victorian | churches of America are regarded by the men and women of today.— Cleveland Plain Dealer. (Continued From Our Last Issue) Episode Nine The Vorest and Mr. Sard CHAPTER I es | When at Ist vose Quintana ‘hid TWO PARISIAN HEROES eae Wu trobina, ently bean This thas been a great year for|” In his pocket he had iwo milli the negro in Paris. First the Gon- dollars worth ef gems, including the court academy of literature a8-} Flaming Jewel. tounded the,Parisian worldsof let-| “But he was in the }/middle of a ters by giving the Goncourt prize! wilderness: ringed in by hostile men, for the best novel of the year tOj and obliged to rely for aid on a “Batouala,” the work of Rene: handful of the most desperate crim Maran, a full-blooded negro. There j{nals in Europe. i wag little consolation for the Cau: Another matter © worried Jose easian race in this award. The! Quintana; he was not only short on father of’ Maran was a rittive Of; provisions, but what remained was Martinique, the mother of Guade-) cached in Drowned Valley; and Mike loupe, To be sure, he was born at Clinch and his men were guardiny Bordeaux, France, and had gained every outlet to that sinister region his African expirence upon which excepting only the rocky, and sub- his book was based while serving merged trail by which he had made in tthe French colonial offices in his exit. Central Arfica. But-hig book was! Now, how to keep his loot; how to an outspoken criticism of French: get back to Europe with it, was the officialdom and was in effect a' problem that confronted Quintana plea or! behalf of his dark and sub-| after robbing Darragh. And he de ject brethren. | termined to settle part of that ques- Now, on a different level of cul-| tion at once. ture but ont hardly less interesting} About five miles from Harrod to the white race, it would seem,| Place, within a hundred rods of and one for which the white race!which he had held up Hal Smith, has certainly laid down the rules of Quintana halted, seated himself on competition. Siki, the Senegalese, a rotting log, and waited until his pounds ‘his way to triumph. That men came up and gathered around large portion of Paris which was| him. present seems to have applauded] For a little while, in utter silence, the ‘result with complete impartail-; his keen eyes traveled from one ity, turning against ‘its hero of its; visage to the next, from Henri own color with that cheerful fick-'Picquet to Victor _Georgiades, to leness which seems to be the trait; Sanchez, to Sard. His intent scru- of most crowds without regard to tiny focused on Sard; lingered. nationality. If there were anybody he might Is there any moral, for the white, trust, a little way, it would be Sard. man or the black man in America Then a polite, untroubled smile The double achievement rather si-; smoothed the palc, dark features of lences those extreme advocate: of, Jose Quintana: white supremacy who assert that} “Bien, messieurs, the coup has the negro belongs inevitably in aj|been success. Yes? Ver’ well; in lowly walk of life. It supports | turn, then, en accord with our cus- those friends of the negro who ask|tom, I shall dispose myself to listen that he have a free chance to de-|to your good advice.” velop in those cases of unmistak-| He looked at Henri able talent of which, Rene Maran! smiled and nodded is a clear example—New York! speak. Tribune. Picquet shrugged: “For me, mon sew capitaine, eet ees ver’ simple: We are five. Therefore, divide into five AMERICA’S INSPIRATION ITS | ze gems, After zat.1each one for _ OWN HISTORY himself to make his way out. How is the spirit of a free peo-| “Nick Salzar and Harry Beck are ple to be formed and animated and! in the Drowned Valley,” interrupted cheered, but one of the store-' Quintana. house of its ‘historic recollections! | Picquet shrugged again; Sanchez Are we to be eternally ringing the laughed, saying: “If they are there changes upon Marathon and Ther- it is their misfortune. Also, we mopylae, and going back to read im “thers are,in a hurr; obscure texts of Greek and Latin, Picquet added: “Also five shares and of the exemplars of patriotic; are sufficient division.” virtue? I thank God that we can} “It is propose, then, that we find them nearer home, in our own’ abandon our comrades Beck and country, on our own soil—that Salzar to the rifle of Mike Clinch?” strains of the noblest sentiment| “Why not?” demanded Georgiades ‘hat ever swelled in the breast of sullenly——“we shall have worse to man are breathing ‘to us out of face before we see the Place, de every page of our country’s his- | l'Opera.” tory, in the native eloquence of “There remains, also, Eddie our mother tongue—that the colon-| rams,” remarked Quintana, ‘al and provisional councils of Crooks never betray their attor- America cxhibit to us models of ney. Everybody expressed a willing- the spirits and character that gave|ness to have the five shares of Greece and Rome their name and’ plunder properly’ assessed to satisfy their praise among nations. Here the fee due to Mr. Abrams, we ought to go for instruction— “Ver’ well,” nodded the lesson is plain, it is clear, it is “are you _ satisfy, Edward Everett. divide an’ disperse?” Sard said, heavily, that. they ought Picquet, invitation to Abe Quintana, messieurs, to | Seishin ava 'To the Voters of Burleigh to stick together until they arrived | County: in New York. ‘ sneered, accusing Sard | Sanchez iv of wanting a bodyguard to escor Tam now actively engaged 73°) his own home. “In this. ac- jin my candidacy for auditor cursed forest,” he insisted, “five of ‘of Burleigh County to which us would attract attention where T was nominated at the June one alone, with sufficient stealth, ‘Primaries. Your vote is °2”,Slip through into the open cour | ee’ try.” earnestly solicited. | “Two! by’ two | Harry Clough. | Piequet. | “You, said shall better,” Sanchez, is ©1022 GEORGE HDORAN COMDANY | travel alone if you desire—” “Divide the gems first,” growled Georgiades, “and then let each do what pleases him.” “That, nodded Quintana, “is also my cpinion. It is so settle, Atten- tion!” Two pistols were in his hands as by magic. With a slight smile "lhe laid) them on the moss_ beside him. ‘He then spread a large white handkerchief on the ground; and, from his pockets, he poured out the glittering cascade. Yet, like a feed~ ing panther, every sense remained alert to the slightest sound or move- ment elsewhere; and when Georgi- ads grunted from excess emotion, Quintana’s right hand held 2 pistci before the grunt had ceased. It was a serious business, this division of loot; every reckless visage reflected the strain of the situation. Quintana, both pistols in his hands, looked down at the scintillat- ing heap of jewels. “I estimate two and one quartaire million of dollaires,” he, said simply. “Jt has been agree that I accep’ for me the erosite gem kndwn as The Flaming Jewel. In addition, mes- sieurs; it has been agreed that, I accep’ for myse’f one part in five of the remainder.” A fierce silence reigned. Every wolfish eye was on the leader, He smiled, rested: his pair of pistols on either knee. “Js the¥e,” he asked softly, “any gentleman who shall objec’? “Who,” demanded Georgiades hoarsely, “is to divide for us?” “It is. for such purpose,” ex- plained Quintana. suavely, “that my frien’, Emanuel Sard, ha: arrive. Monsieur Sard is a diamon’s, as all know ver’ well, Therefore, it shall be our frien’ Sard ‘who will divide for us what we have gain today hy our—industry.” All in the Family Sisters, wives of brothers, George McCurdy (left) and. Mrs. with the “twin”, grrivals. 3 Both Hoboken, N. J. RRR A RA meets [be God’s will Done—aw revoir, les amis, et a la bonheur! Allons! Each ‘for himself and gar’ aux flics!” | Sard, terror, regarded Quintana with {enormous eyes. Torn between d may of being left alone in the wil-| derness, and a very natural fear of a single companion, he did not) know whet to‘say or do. En masse, the gang were too dis- trustful of one another to unite on robbing any individual. But any i j dividual might easily rob a compan: | | ion when alone with him. | “Why—why can't we all go to- | gether,” he stammered. “It, is safer, surer—” | “I go with Quintana and you,”} interrupted Georgiades, smilingly; his mind on the diamond in the! ‘muzzle of Quintana’s pistol. i | “1 do not invite you,” said Quin- | ‘tana, “Bat come if it pleases you.” | | “£ also prefer to come with you} lothers,” growled Sanchez. “To | | roim alone in this filthy forest does | ; not suit me.” | Piequet shrugged his "shoulders, | turned on his heel in silence. They | |watched him moving away all | jalone, eastward. When he had dis-| appeared among the trees, Quintana | ! looked inquiringly at the others. | | “Eh, bien non ‘alors! — snarled | Georgiades suddenly.- “There are | too many in your trupeau, mon! j eapitaine, Bonne, chance!” | He turned and started noisily in| |the direction taken by Picquet. i They watched him out of sight: | listened to his careless trample after | |he was lost to view. When at) length the last distant sound of his, |retreat had died away: in the still-| jness, Quintana touched Sard with | the point of his pistol. i i “Go first,” he said suavely. \ | “For God’s sake, be a little care- | ,ful of your gun—” | “I am, my dear frien’, It is sf) you I may become careless. Yow! i will mos’ kin'ly face south, and you | j will be kin’ sufficient to start im: mediate. Tha’s what I mean. . . «| I thank you. . .° Now, my frien Schanez! Tha’s correc! You shatij \follow my frien’ Sard’ ver’ close. Me, I march in the rear. So we} shall pass to the eas’ of thees Star ! Pon’, then between the cross-road pen | repose; an’ one of us, en vidette, | shall discover if the Constabulary The savage tension broke with “a, have patrol beyon’ . . . Allons! es erate laugh at the word chosen by Quin-| March!” f tana to express their efforts of the | (Continued in Our Next Issue) H i morning, : _————@ ADVENTURE OF | Sard has been standing with one | fat hand flat against the trunk of «| THE TWINS | ———_—__——————# | tree. Now, at a nod from Quintana, | } he squatted down, and, with the!’ same hand that had been resting @———— against the tree, he spread out the! By Olive Barton Roberts pile of jewels into a flat layer. | | er place. ‘As he began to dividé this into; Mars Was ® quelt Tee ie five parts, still using the flat of his There was heal an aaa Eoken | pudgy hand, something poked him', The Twins had seon one spelt lightly in the ribs. It was the muz-, t0 ® Square MAN meee nde of | ale of one of Quintana’s pistols. | ® queer, funny Sard, ghastly pale, looked up. His} And yee whatido\, you! suppose? | pala sane ee balsam, gun,’ THey saw a three-cornered boy. His | quivered in Quintana’s grasp. | | head was three-eornered and his hat ab ips, Suing te berate (O10 7 Hf | was. three eornored: and’ his lege, and ed. “The tree was sticky-—" i feet and hands) and arms). were ; “ : cornered all over. ‘Wash iyshefenid: dryly: | ocehat way?” asked the boy. He! Sard, sweating with fear, washed shrew away a three-cornered apple his right hand with whisky from his {nat he'd been eating and whistled Rorketeea and dried it for gen-/ 4 thee-eornered tune and smiled | inspection. es a “My God,” he protested tremu- | *ececornercd aoa Carne na lously, “it was accidental, gentle’ ‘edges and sharp places?” said Nick, Iecy with onyebloe Tike supe? o, DSSene tn See SOR Oe sy, {—m 00 politely, I’m afraid. Ouintana. coolly shoved him aside | ap doug ‘Enav.? anawered.” the | and withthe barrel of his pistol he three-cornered boy, turning a three- | pushed the flat pile of gems inte cornered somersnult. | “What, re) five separate heaps. ‘ cere Georgiades knew that a magnificent 7yie eee a NN ney in sur- | diamond had been lodged in the! prise, i re at =*¢ and white and different. e’ve go Tea Nae the) division ‘tots of people on Mars but none like sais ¢ should come to any con-' yoy Where do you live and what CstOR i are you doing here, and why did you Quintana coolly picked out The) come and how do you like it and heap which was to be his portion. |*yy°"Gh, my!” gasped Nancy. AS enariOs BE eed be-' wyou cah ask a lot of questions. But gan, Sanchez objecti and. demanding more emeralds, and were Naney and Nick, the Twins Piequet complaining vielen “the from the Earth, and we're hunting cern ne the Somatnete ° ° | for Mother Goose’s broom which diamonds allotted him. Me tasie Sard's trained eyes appraised| "ang she told him about it every allotment. Without weighing,| “pig you see it?” asked Nick. and, lacking time and parapher-| The three-cornered boy _ blinked nalia for expert examination, he) nis three-eornered eyes and shook was inclined to think the division pis head, “Never heard of it,” said Seer Para ee ithely: ihe, anoying away and breaking into CFor me? he said, “it ia finish. /° * ree-cornered ; run. With mv freind’ Sard I shall now dc: | MIXED LOVES BASIS ‘part. Messieurs, I embrace and | / OF OWEN MOORE FILM} i mY t salute you. A bientot in Paris—if it | “In the Spring, says the noet “a ; young man's fancy turns to thoughts ‘of love.” The trouble seems to he {thet every spring the young men's fancy turns to thoughts of love a! right, but each time it is a different | ‘girl. Such a ‘condition is the basis of that riotous farce, “Love Is An | Awful Thing,” a Selznick picture |which will be shown at the Capitol | theatre tonight. | Owen Moore is the young man in the case, and there are two | women rortraved by Marjorie Daw | ‘and Kathryn Perry. The former is ‘the girl the young man wants to ifor ever and ever to love, honor, | obey’ and all that sort of thing. Mar- jorie won’t have it. There are objec- | itions but the objector has veen | | traveling for some time and is not familiar with conditions Owen hits upon the plan: of getting rid of h- seized with a sort of still). Ghos’ Lake, an’ then we ‘shall | F rubies |r) answer as many of them as I can | j each other. MONDAY, OCTOBER 30, 1922 : ASPIRIN Say “Bayer” and Insist! ‘ J Unless you set the name “Bayer” on package or on tablets you are not getting the genuine Bayer product | prescribed by physicians over twen- ty-two years and proved safe by mil- lions for 3 Colds Headache Toothache Lumbago Earache Rheumatism Neuralgia Pain, Pain Accept “Bayer Pablets of Aspirin” only. Each unbroken package con- tains proper directions, Handy box- es of twelve tablets cost few. cents. Druggists algo sell bottles of 24 and 100, Aspirin. is the trade mark of Bayer Manufacture of Monoacetica- eidester of Salicyltcacid. presence in their household will tend to bring forth the better qua!- ities of her husband . | “Cold Feet,” the comedy being shown at the Eltinge for Monday and Tneday is a comedy, burlesque on the North woods stories and is con- sidered one of the best laugh pro- vokers of the year. If Columbus 1d ‘ Hunt the bright side. | hadn't discovered America we w all be foreigners a Isn’t this singer and minister mur- der some New Brunswick Stew. Long hair, they say, is coming in style fast. Then hairdressers are not asleep at the switch. There is no excuse for a bachelor being a good liar. Election day is is the time for alt good men to come to the aid of their party, ‘ The hard thing about saving a dol- lar is you must have it every day jyou have it. Honolula’s streak of bad luck has changed, “A fire down there de- | stroyed 4,000 ukeleles. . Too many people are kissing with out meaning it. Many a husband has to turn over a new leaf because inis wife can reaa him like a book. The root of all evil docs a man very little good when it comes from the family ‘tree, Among shaky movemetns on foot are fall dance steps. All the girls are seconding the motions. Rubber heels on the old man’s shoes are fine chaperone, Two Seattle men were robbed. Why do crooks get so far away from Chi- cago? Harvard professor says we! sing | too little, Just the same we try 19 | sing too much. | Eggs are higher and sugar is. up. | Naturally this comes from those higher up. Life will have its little jokes. The ex-kaiser says he is the happiest man ‘on earth, _Tennessee man got shot hecause “it wasn’t loaded.” It was not a gun. It was dice. China wants a constitution like ours in spite of the fact that ours is‘all run down, Prisoners in one pententiary wers brewing weeds. Just the same it bottled in bond. Ohio woman was fined $50 for pull- ing a neighbor’s hair, but it may have been worth more. More men are. going to theaters now. With skirts longer they have no show on the stree:, Many a sheik at the office helps wash the dishes at home . Bet ham and egg: get gired of i by making her believe he is marricd ! jand the father of six children. | j THE ELTINGE, | Jackie Coogan gave us tears ‘a| “The Kid’ He made us laugh with | joy at his funny capers in “Peck’s: Slayer of 14 Year | Old Girl Executed (By the Associated Press) Bellefonte, Pa., Oct. 30.—Thomas become mothers on the same day. Mrs William McCurdy (right) are shown families live on Washington street, Bad Boy,” and in his latest picture, / Vern Rhyall, convicted slayer of | “My Boy,” he again brought the | 14-year-old Clarabelle Lennox, New | search for the handdkerchief. | Castle high school girl, was electre- | Now comes his latest screen ef-/ cuted at the Rockview penitentiary i fort— “Trouble” — a picture that this morning. {gives Jackie unlimited opportunities} Curtis Sipple alias Robert E. for both dramatic and comedy emo-| Hicks, also was electrocuted for mar- tions This newest First National | der. : is the first production in which the | famous Tittle fellow is given a |chanee’ to both be funny and eeri-| LAE AD COLDS ‘ ous, and it will be seen at the El-! ‘Melt in snooty fhhale vapors; | tinge theater, Monday and Tuesday. | apply freely up nostrils. | Jackie portrays tie role of a little | | orphan who is. adopted ‘by a mean’ | fo} K | good for nothing brute through the | efforts of his wife, a frail but beau- | 1 VAPORUB , tiful young girl, who thinks Jackie’ eT Ove: 17 Million Jors Used Yearly x , . . ‘ ‘ & ’ x , é X * At m4 . 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