Richmond Palladium (Daily), Volume 93, Number 6, 6 January 1923 — Page 6
PAGE SIX
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM, RICHMOND, IND,. SATURDAY, JAN. 6, 1923.
THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM AND SUN-TELEGRAM
Published Every Evening Except Sunday by ... Palladium Printing Company. Palladium Building, North Ninth and Sailor Streets. Entered at the Post Office at RichmoiW, Indiana, as Second-Class Mail Matter
MEMBER. OK THE ASSOCIATED PRESS The Associated Press ts exclusively entitled to the use for republication Bf ajl news dispatches credited to It or not otherwise credited In- this paper, and also the local rews published herein. All rights of republication of special dispatches herein are also ressrved.
' Are Our Courts Controlled by the . -Invisible Empire? Control of courts, juries, judges, prosecuting attorneys, sheriffs, city police officers and legislative bodies by the Ku KIux Klan, also known as the Invisible Empire, is absolutely inimical to the common welfare and antagonistic to the American ideal. ' ' If the prosecutor, sheriff and judge of a county are .members . of : the Invisible Empire and have taken, an oath that binds them unconditionally to a super-government, "it is fit and proper thaUthey announce the fact to the community, so that every litigant may know before what kind of tribunal he is standing trial.
Our courts, of justice are free, and the judges
who preside over them should be above reproach and taint, and free from invisible bonds and influences. One may well wonder how a'prosecuting attorney can do his duty impartially if his hands are tied by the invisible bonds' of an empire to which he has sworn allegiance. ; And by the same token, how can a judge, under oath to an empire which falsely, usurps the province of our government, mete out justice impartially and without fear or favor? ' So also withv- the sheriff and the others in whose hands has been placed police authority. But more important still, what must be the mental attitude of a litigant, belonging to a race or religion banned by the klan, when he appears before a tribunal whose judge is known to be a klansman, whose prosecuting attorney is a mem
ber of the Invisible Empire, whose sheriff 1
is a member of the same secret organization and whose jury i? composed of nen who wear the hood. and gown? Will he not be justified in doubting the fairness and honesty of the court before which his case is to be tried ? Can he be censured for believing that justice will be biased and perverted? The very fact that officers of the government, sworn to be fair, honorable an,d just, are members of an organization that wars on a particular class of the community, is cause enough to create unrest and dissatisfaction among those who are made to feel the sting of the klan's malice and hatred. Until the invasion of the Man into the governmental machinery, our courts generally were above reproach. Men of all races and creeds had an equal opportunity to obtain justice. The malicious spirit of bigotry and race antagonism had not besmirched the bench.; Judges were men of honor, holding high above everything else respect for their calling, and dealing impartially and fairly with every litigant on the broad principles of law and justice. Judges who today are under the baneful influence of the klan are tending to destroy the respect and confidence which men of all classes, all creeds and all races have in their integrity. The tribunal which is under the sway of the klan has ceased to be an American cgurt of justice and has become a bench dominated by klan influences and subservient to the dictates of its officials instead of being dominated by the spirit of pure justice. Every public official who is a klansman should stand up and announce his membership. Every American citizen has a right to know whether he is to be arrested by an American, prosecuted by an American, tried before a jury
of Americans in a court- presided over by an
American judge who believes in the visible government of the United' States and the principles
of justice and righteousness upon which the re
public is founded.
LIKE A BEAUTIFUL GARDEN By George Matthew Adams
After Dinner Trick
I walked into a beautiful garden. I was alone. But I was not lonely. Gentle winds lifted the fragrance of the flowers as though they were melted thoughts children of generations of noble folk. I looked at the floating clouds above. In the far end of the place a gardner worked. I envied him his job for he worked as though he put love into what he did. And then I listened to chatter of the birds and wondered what they were talking about. Then I took a .seat on one of the benches. "What a beautiful place in which to be alone! And yet I didn't want to be alone; I wanted some one else many to enjoy what I enjoyed. . How like a garden is the human heart. That is the thought that tame to me. What is a friend or a pal if not to cheer, to comfort, to rest one .in the Same Avay as the garden does? . ... I have friends that just the minute I meet them, I feel as though I had walked into a beautiful garden and I know that you have friends like that, too. I have been thinking a great deal about this garden of mine as the old year has aged. And I have been thinking that a great deal of new landscape gardening needed to be done so that during the new year many, many more might be attracted into this garden heart of mine. Some of the thoughts that I have been permitted to pick from other garden hearts, . I have transplanted in mine and have in turn picked and handed to you who have read these brief Talks from day to day. I hope that your garden heart is very beautiful and that its beauty grows with the years as .they unfold.
Answers to Questions CAnv reader can pet. the answer to sav qiipstion bv writinr The Palladium Information Bureau, Frederick J. Ha.skfn, director. Washington, D. C. This offer applies strictlv to information. The bureau does not give advice on legal, medical and financial matters. It does not attempt to fettle domestic troubles. xtcrr tn 'Undertake exhuuftive, research on any subiect. Write your question plainlv and briefly. Give full nam.; and a-tcUess and enclose two cents In -stamps for return postage. AU replies aro stnt direct to tha inquirer. Q."Has Harold Lloyd, the movie actor, an artificial hand? E. Q. -
WT' Harold L.10JU lost nis tnumo anu forefinger and part of his haad While he was posing for some new comic pictures. He had a real bomb in his hand which the property man had given him through error, and it exploded. Q.' How did the continents get their names? V. C. A. The origin of the name Asia is obcure. It is believed to have originated among the Greeks, or to have been borrowed by them from eoiuc Asiatic people. Modern scholars associate the name' with the Sanskrit word fshas, meaning dawn. The word Europe is f'r6m the Assyrian Irib or Kreb meaning sunset, or west. Australia, is derived from the Latin Aus'tmlis, meaning southern. The name was suggested in the middle of the nineteenth century by Matthew Flin
ders in- his book "Voyage of Terra Australis." The derivation of the word Africa U uncertain. It is believed to be of Phoenician Origin, being first applied to the -neighborhood of Carthage. The name America is derived from the name of the Italian explorer, Amerigo Vespucci. It was first proposed by Waldseeinuller, a teacher of geography in the College or St. Die, in the treatise called ' Cosmographia," 'published in 1507.; - Q. What Is meant by the statement that railroad Tates are fixed on a basis of "what the traffic will bear?" A. Z. A. Fixing railroad rates at what the traffic will bear means the establishment of tariffs at the point which will
yield the largest revenues in the long 'run and tend to encourage the greatest possible development ot traffic in the future. Q. Host big Is Alsace-Lorraine? W. J. W. A. Alsace-Lorraine from north to south is 123 miles. Its breadth varres from 22 to 105 miles; its area is 5,580 miles. . Q. Is the -moon brighter in the first quarter or third quarter? J. B. A. The casual observer would probably notice no difference in brightness
between tne iirsi anu miru quarter, ' but measures by StebWns and Brown with a selenium cell indicates that the moon is brighter at the first quarter. A glance at the full moon shows that there are more dark areas on the eastern than on the western half. CI T THIS OI T IT IS "WORTH MOEY Cut out this slip. .enclose with oi: and mail it to Folev &. Co., 2S35 Sheffield Ave., Chicago, 111., writing your name nd address clearly. You will receive In return a trial .rackaere containing Foley's Honey and Tar Compound for ,iehs. colds and Croup; Foley Kidney
P
m
Rippling Rhymes By WALT MASON
SIGNBOARDS. I love the ocean, it's a sight that stirs the jaded spirit; I fain would watch it through the night, and spend the daytime near it; but all along the misty shore are painting signboards
reading, "Use Dandruff Pills they
will restore the whiskers now reced
ing." I cannot see the swordfish play,
or watch the walrus gambol, because
of blantant siens that say. "Use Smith
Shoes When You Ramble." The rnoun
tains are sublime and grand, and often snow caps crown them; in solemn
majesty they stand, with signboards
up and dawn them. The great Creator
built these hills, but 'twas not.
EGG SPINNING
MOVE PL AXE J .IN OPPOSITE DIRECTION
No. S70 The Spinning Egg An egg Is spun on a plate. The performer keeps the plate moving and the eeg lieeps on spinning a. Jong as desired. This appears to ba a uifiicult pleco of jugglery. A little practice Is necessary to do this trick, but the real secret depends upon using a hard-boiled egg. Such an egg can be kept spinning by movinjt the plate In Bmall circles opposite tiv the direction in which the egg ;s spinning. If the hard-boiled egg is ;schanged for a raw one anyone may try the trick but no one will be abia to do it. apjriaht. J5J, by Public Ledger Company
YOUNGSTER OF 92 TELLS HOW TO LIVE.
' H ' , "Wi I II
I f ' v-.i. ,Vl ,rVl. Jill
t!L: - ' ,- , ...-, .:, v.,v.v,v,.v, ,, , , ,i, stll
Musings for the Evening Government advises1 people to raise
peanuts, but it seems there is more
money In hot chestnuts. They now sell on street corners six for a quarter.
New Jersey street sweeper refuses
to abandon his career, although he has fallea heir to a million dollars. Most
people would even abandon the de
lights of street sweeping for that amount of money.
Who's Who in the Day's News
Amusements in London certainly
will be hit an awful wallop while Am
bassador Harvey Is visiting In America.
MORE RULES Don't have hose in your fire depart
ment that Is not long enough to reach
the fire.
Don't wear your silk-lined hat when
fighting fires.
Don't depend on one Individual to
operate fire hydrant.
Don t forget to always wear your
rubber boots.
Don't go to a fire without a rowboat. The above don't3 were listed in a
pamphlet distributed by the Mineola
fire department.
Ezra Meeker, alert nonagenarian, finds the world a fine place to live In even for an old, old man, and is going to be at a dinner where admission tickets will be birth certificates each affirming that the holder Is ninety years old or more. Ezra was born in Hamilton, Ohio. During the Roosevelt administration he undertook the trip over the Oregon trail tor the purpose of arousing interest In a bill then pending before Congress to have the Government take active Interest in this historic road, and while In the national capital spoke with President Roosevelt. Walk much, eat little and don't smoke, advises this spr htly Westerner.
Relics of Amateur Journalism Many Famous Men Edited and Published Tabloid Newspapers in Their Boyhood Days.
Memories of Old Days In This Paper Ten Years Ago Today
.v,.-r;.'t"-
Dr. Robert Watson of New York City has heard a call from the reformers of the country and will serve three months as acting superintendent of the
International Reform Bureau at Wash
ington, succeeding tHe late r. Wilbur Y Crafts. He has been president and special lecturer of the reform bureau since 1920. Dr. Watson was born In Aberdeen, Scotland, in 1S65. He came to Canada In 1873, and took nls college training at the Univ e r s i t y of New
Brunswick, obtain-
A.
The three national banks of this city announced annual meetings of stockholders for January 14. It was stated by officials of the Union National, First National and Second National banks of Richmond that as yet no changes had been announced In any of the officers of the bank.
defaced them with signs that say, "Try Piebald Pills," 'twas man who thus disgraced them. When to the forest I repair, to hear the ta.ll pines sighing, a massive signboard greets me there, "Use Axle Grease for Frying." I have a book with pale blue lines, in which, with ink of chimson. I make a note of all nuch signs that I may cast my glims on. And when on shopping trips I wend, I shun ths pill and potion whose signboards sticking up on end, defaced the hil! and ocean. I say to merchant princes,
"Cease! You hit me where I'm sorest! I will not buy the axle grease that's blazoned in the forest." fcsay to druggists . in their stores, "bell me some Volstead toddy, whose name's not on our mounts or shores in letters largo and gaudy.
came through, and he could see nothing because of the dense moke clouds the enemy was floating v across the line. At last, the staff, having exhausted itself with efforts to calm their chief, there suddenly appeared a carrier pigeon. It circled a few times and then alighted. The. general cried: "Thank God! News of the brigade. Lieutenant Smith, aide to the general, rushed over to the pigeon, unfastened the message and hasitly brought it to the general who opened ?t with trembling fingers. This is
He i what he read: "I am tired of carrying
After Dinner Stories During the late war a brigadier gen
eral reecived orders stating that his brigade would jump off at zero hour and that such and such would be its objective. Accordingly at the zero hour the brigade advanced and was immediately cut off from the brigade post of command. For hours the general paced up and down waiting for word from his troops. But no message
this blinking bird around." Jude.
Lessons in Correct Enslish
DON'T SAY: I wish that he would try AND DO BETTER. I hope that you will try AND SEE HER. Shall you TRY AND GO? He has a RECEIPT for every ill. The doctor left a RECEIPT for the druggist to fill. SAY: I wish that he would try TO DO BETTER. I hope that you will try TO SEE HER. Shall you TRY TO GO? He has a RECIPE for every ill. The doctor left a RECIPE for the druggist to fill..
YOU CANNOT HIDE YOUR FAT
It is estimated that 75,000,000-horse
power is Demg useu tor tne worm s
factories, electric lighting and street railways.
By FREPERlCK J. HASKIX WASHINGTON. D. C, Jan. 6. The
little red schoolhouse and the old swimming hole have been eulogized exhaustively by poets, after-dinner speakers, and political aspirants. But it has remained for a single group of men, the Fossils, to keep green the
traditions of the boy's printing press
and. the silver-penned boy editors of
50 years ago. According to the dictionary, a fossil is a person or thing antiquated or out of date. The Fossils is . a club composed of men who were once, in their boyhood days, amateur journalists. Amateur journalism, as known to the boys of from 30 to 50 years ago, is certainly' antiquated and out of date. So some years back the ex-amateurs banded themselves together and humorously dubbed themselves the Fossils. So far as amateur journalism is concerned, they may be fossils, but the name does not seem to describe them otherwise. Thomas A. Edison is a Fossil. So are Governor Sproul of Penn
sylvania, Senator Moses of New Hamp
shire, Cyrus K. Curtis, Charles Scribner, Josephus Daniels, and some 200
other men who are still marching
along with the times. One and all, however, they are proud o fbeing the fossils of amateur journalism. They like nothing better than
to gossip about the days when each
was an editor and helped to mold pub
lic opinion. One Fossil says that when Edison was invited to join the club the inventor went upstairs and came back with faded copies of his paper that he had kept since boyhood among
his most valued possessions. There are almost no amateur papers of this sort printed today. But between 1870 and 1890 there were at least 600. Almost all of them were the projects of boys in their teens. The boy's printing press was comparatively new, and to own a press was the great ambition of many a boy in those days. The happy owner at once went into the printing business, generally combining the printing with a literary career in order to have something to print. Most often one boy would be the entire staff of a publication, from
editor, business manager, and reporter to printer's devil and newsboby. The little sheets, some of them containing eight, and even 16 pages, were almost always published monthly. . A paper of this type enjoyed onlv a
small and select circulation except when some unusual feature caused a
run on an issue. A story of one record sale is told by George M. Huss, who is now assistant director general
of the railroad administration, and who
is also known as the man who survev-
ed the Syria-Ottoman railway from
Haifa to Damascus and built a bridge across the River Jordan. The Tale cf a
Doctor's Dog.
Mr. Huss says that one memorable
month his paper, the Buckeye Boy, sold to a most gratifying extent. While newsboy Huss was busily filling orders, editor Huss was proudly reflect
ing mat nis home town had at last recognized his literary genius. But a friend explained the sudden demand
ills for pains in sines anu i.tin. . . latism. backache, .ktney and hlaMer
llments: and i-oiey Laimruu-aauic, wholesome and thoroughly cleansms
cathartic lor constipation. Miiousnes. headaches, and sluKKlath bowels A. T.uken Drui? Co., 626-628 Mam fet. Advertisement.
Overfatnftss is the one misfortune you cannot hide from yourself or from those around you. If too thin, your dressmaker or tailor can supply the deficiencies, but the overfat carry a burden they can not conceal. There is one sure
way to reduce your weight surely and
quickly. The harmless .Marmola Prescription, which chansres the fatty tis-
sucs and fat-producina- foods to solid
flesh and enerey. helps - the general
health and digestion, permits you to eat
substantial tood. and leaves the sktn clear and smooth. This famous prescription is now condensed into tablet form. Each tablet contains an exact dose of the same harmless Ingredients that made the original prescription capable of reducing the overfat body steadily and .easily without the slightest ill effects. Take but one tablet after each meal and at bedtime until the normal weight Is reached and the bodily health enmptetely restored. Ask your druggist for Marmola Prescription Tablets or send one dollar to the Marmola Company, 4612 Woodward Ave., Detroit, Mich., the price the world over, and you will receive enough to start you well on the road to slimness and happiness. Advertisement.
CURED HIS RHEUMATISM "I am eighty-three years old and I doctored for rheumatism ever since I
came out or tne army, over 50 years ago. Like manV others, I spent money freely for so-called 'cures' and I have read about 'Uric Acid' until I could
almost taste It. " I could not sleep nights or walk without pain; rny hands were so sore and stiff I could not hold a pen. But now I am again in active business and can walk with ease or
write all day with comfort. Friends are surprised at the change." You might just as well attempt to put out a fire with oil as try to get rid of your rheumatism, neuritis and like complaints bv taking treatment supposed to drive Uric Acid out of your blood and body. It took Mr. Ashelman fiftv years to find
out the truth. He learned how to get
rid of the true cause of his rheumatism, other disorders. and recover his strength from "The Inner Hysterics," now being distributed free bv an authority who devoted over twentv years to the scientific study of this trouble. If any reader of "The Palladium" wishes "The Inner Mysteries of Rheumatims" containing facts overlooked by doctors and scientists for centuries past, simply send a post card or letter to H. P. Clearwater. No. 384-E Street. Hallowell. Maine. Send now, lest you forget! If not a sufferer, cut out this notice and hand this good news and opportunity to some afflicted friend. All
Lwho send will receive it by return mail
witnout any cnarge wnatever. Advertisement.
for the Buckeye Boy, and the young editor's faith in a discriminatinsr mib-
lic dwindled.
One item the paper had read: "It is a curious phenomenon of an instinct that every" morning Dr. Parson's dog runs around the schoolhouse." The reason for this phenomenon, as the entire town well knew, was that the doctor had been courting the school mistress, and for a time he had made a practice of visiting the schoolhouse each morning and walking around it. The doctor had discontinued these pilgrimages, but the dog still visited the school at the accustomed time. The tale of the doctor's dog, so innocently printed by the boy editor, was one which more mature editors of the community lacked the nerve to print.
That was the Buckeye Boy's high'
water marK. tor the most part the editors of the amateur papers had to depend on other youthful editors of the country for appreciation, criticism and interest. In those days, Mr. Huss says, there was a postoffice ruling by which news
papers could be weighed and postage paid per pound at second class rat
Under this ruling a great manv naners
could be sent to the four corners of
me country for a lew cents and the
coy editors used to exchange their
publications. There wa3 no profit in this, but the amateurs were not in
the game for profit anvwav. and ex
changing papers was one of the most
absorbing interests of the business.
bince money was scarce with the boy editors they did not buy many contributions. Generally an editor
could easily write enough copy, in
cluding editorials, poems, local items,
seriais ana jokes, to till his own
sheet. But the amateur journalists
watched one another's publications closely, and if a boy seemed weak on his rhymes or his plots, he was apt to receive numerous offers of copy submitted at the usual rates by more versatile writers. Twenty-five or 50 cents was the usual price lor a contribution. Most of the struggling editors were more anxious to dispose of their own surplus copy than to purchase material from their fellow journalists. Thus, Mr. Huss has In a scrap-book a post card from Josephus Daniels offering to sell him a story for SO cents. Mr. Huss ran .across this piece of unanswered correspondence not long ago and decided to writo to Mr. Daniels about it. He wrote that he regretted his delay in replying, but that he would be plad to accept the story at the price quoted by the author. Mr. Daniels replied in equal ser
iousness that he believed, according to the statute of limitations, he could no longer be held to his offer and
that he would be obliged to withdraw it. 'Mr. Daniels is one of the few amateur journalists who have become professionals. One of the Fossils es
timates that about one-third of the boys who were so eager for literary fame are now connected with literary
work of some sort, but not many of
them are journalists.
Twice a year the Fossils publish a
Fossil magazine for their own enjoyment, and they gather for occasional
meetings and for the annual jban-
quet.
One of the topics of conversation
when Fossils get together 13 as to why the amateur journalist has become extinct. The change in post office rulings which prevented the papers being mailed in large lots
cheaply was a fatal blow to the ama
teur publications. Yet other less ob
vious causes have had something to
do with the decline of amateurdom.
The chief explanation offered is
that the boy of today has more money, more pleasures, and more inter
ests than the boy of the seventies, or
even of the nineties. If a boy has
literary' leanings he writes for his
school paper.
The high school or college paper Is
not the same type of publication as the old amateur sheet3, the Fossils say. The school paper is governed strictly by school policies and it contains chiefly school news. The ama
teur papers, on the other hand, were written entirely according to the taste
of the editor or group of editors. Some of the boy journalists were impressed by the fact that the press has a serious mission. They printed
weighty editorials and called their j
VK-KQffrftATSoN ing his degree in v 1893. He went to Princeton and received his M. A, in 1895 and the following year was graduated from the Princeton theological seminary. He was ordained in the Presbyterian ministry in 1896 and was given a church in Oxford, Pa. He has been pas
tor or tne second church, Cincinnati, the Church of the Covenant, Cincinnati Scotch Presbyterian church. New York City. Dr. Watson Is well known as trustee of Beveral colleges and as director of the Presbyterian hospital, Federation of Churches, and Evangelistic committee, all of New York City. He has several times been delegate to large gatherings of churchmen, once to the Pan Presbyterian Council in Aberdeen, Scotland, and once to the Presbyterian Synod of Ohio, and to the World's Christian Citizenship Confer-, ence. He joined the New York Scottish wi
regiment in 1917 with the rank of major and has been special preacher andeducational lecturer for the Y. M. C. A. Dr. Watson Is a Republican.
papers by such impressive names as the Censor, the Oracle, and the Reformer. Other editors whose minds ran more to the popular and humorour, called their sheets such names as tho Imp or the Young Joker. At the height of the amateur journalistic period almost every town possessed at least. one proud boy editor and some places had half a dozen. Then, after the nineties the new generations of boys had new interests. The Fossils say that the old styla of amateur journalism cannot return, and that the Fossils will die out gradually. They limit their membershA to the amateur editors and printers of the real amateur journalistic period and they are satisfied to see their
membership diminish rather than inciase. They are a cheerful, chuckling group. Even when they think of the far future, they look forward philosophically to what one of them calls "a said but beautiful time when the last of the tribe will sit in a solitary silence at a Fossil dinner, and drain a glass of old wine (vintage of 1920) to those who in the course of nature no longer live except in the happy memory of that single survivor."
DK. BELL'S
Eine-mrHDnev
tliiisl
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' A. ', - , "H
WOMAN
THREE MONTHS Pains in Back and Nervousness. Made Well by Lydia E. PiukWs Vegetable Compound
Montevideo, Minn. "I suffered for three months with pain in my back and
sides, and was awful
nervousso that I was
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Alter 1 began taking
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from the Vegetable
Compound andrecommend it very highly to my friends. I give you permission to publish my testimonial.' ' Mrs. OLE Bergstrom, 210 8th St. So., Montevideo, Minnesota. Another Nervous Woman Find's Relief Port Huron, Mich. "I suffered for two years with pains in my side, and if I worked very much I was nervou3 and just as tired in the morning as when I went to bed. I was sleepy all the day and didn't feel like doing anything, and was so nervous I would bite my finger nails. One of my friends told me about Lydii E. Pinkham's Vegetable Compound, and it helped me so much that I soon felt fine." Mrs. Charles Beeler, 1910 Elk Street, Port Huron, Mich. Advertisement
Pill
827 Main St.
Thick Lustrous Hair Kept So By Cuticura
At night touch spots of dandruff
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liiiillllilllllllllllHI
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THE RICHMOND PALLADIUM
New Universities
Dictionary
1 ."v.. 'itftifv?tom&
How to Get It
For the Mere Nominal Cost of Manufacture and Distribution
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iction&ry, bound
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22 DICTIONARIES IN ONE AD Dictionaries published previous to this one aro out of date
41
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