Terre Haute Daily News, Terre Haute, Vigo County, 15 February 1890 — Page 5

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THE STORY OF AN EX-SLATE

m.A\ K(K WL BIKT.THE «REAT£IT OF ll,N RACK.

TUe ttt»ry Mis Ri«« ¥ro*» Mlaverjr t* lis* Ncaiilc-IalrMlarH by CttRklliii,

The appointment of Blanche K. Brace as R*r~"~*"r of Deeds of the the District of Col u'iibiii fo bviw m»an# popular with Bit people. ...Tiiv-vdhim that Brace in a resident of Mi»i ^ipp{, and that this office ought to sr» to one of the 00,000 or more colon hem. is one

the fattest* the District, and It pays $10,(XJO and room every yean It require*! a good basines* man, and it lias been held for a pn ruber of y«irs by negroes. Fred Doti}- ir* H«~h off ft* aad it was through It that, .he l*.'tight. his |§fi' fine hom« above Anac&^t ia, overlooking *. Washington. Trotter evidently saved a nice thing 'luring his font yean, and if a law is not pamed fixing the salary, Bruce will materially add his pile during the present administration.

AM

Brace is a very polite man. He is by odds the greatest diplomat of his race in the Unitea States, and bad he been sent to flayti instead of Douglass there would have been no trouble with Hyppolite. He does not push himself to the front. He is never loud-mouthed, and as Register of the Treasurer he made friends even among the aristocratic Southern clerks of both sexes in his employ, A story is told of how he got an appointment for the daughter of one of his master's neighbors while he was Senator.

The

alone,

family of this girl had been

wealthy before the, war, but they had lost all daring it. The young lady applied for a position in the Treasury Department She had little influence, however, and was not able to secure

it. As a last resort she went to Senator Bruce and he got her the position. His treatment of her is a fair index to his general character. He said: "Miss 1 have an appointment left at my disposal in the Treasury Depart

monk I well remember your family in Mississippi and you shall have the poeition at once. I know on account of oor difference in eolor that you would not like it if I were to offer to go in person

with ymt to the department,

and

tell

my

I

have

driver

-Y Treasury.

ray

carriau- aui«ila and I will we you

to

him.

The origin of tin ,r friendship was on the day that Bruce tn »t entered th© Senate Chamber. He u,^ very little acquainted, and when it was time f«»r him to go to the front to be .»m In he looked at Senator Alcorn, his colleague, expecting him to escort h»m,

as to

tlie custom.

A

Mr,

Voiort-d S«nMcMf was then

something of a curiosity in the bodv't ^nti tlte of all the

er

see that

nt %w

IVrmit

om-

oth­

w»i »rs wtiv on him, He arose and started up the aisle when Roseoe Oonkhng, ^ing his pmlirwmeat, stepped up f" him and said 4Kxca»e i»e, Air, Bruce I hot until

jest

now

without an escort

and l« thewupon gave

hi*

k- arm to linu-v «nd h« two tnarehed np to tlie front of

UJO

his

st-Hf

\m I'n^ident's desk

together. After the oatlv was administered Coi»^Hog t^ orted

itnd

aeketl Hn if

Itruce Iwk to

inter

thecouuniU

in the day when

werv tveittg

fixed up he

watch11i:t, 'f»r hi? iuteowti to the iHrnr1" Brmnft thai he ku i% twMit it and that he did not know what his rights were, Oonkling voinateeml to attond to the matter and the rewiit was that

hp

^t€o»l iMmaM iXwaa

liroce

put on 8oiiH oi she mo& and \m$ aft or got a aialrmamhip, Speaking nn^ney which 1hj#1I»SS out »i l»ce of

Recorder

and of ivis \Wh

Deeds, a* /calls the

romance Hw

111

H#» t« H.mmmgm 9Smm

ot

e/?"x

/f

Mr- Brace is one of the very rich colored men of the United H? if.-*. lie has a plantation or in Muwi««»i|»i and be has been making money for years out of the government. He had some fat offices in his own state before he earoe hew, and while he Senator be got $8,000 a year.

Itogi of the Treasury he re­

ceived $4,000 per annum, and he has made a great doal by lecturing, lie ta a highly cultured g»»nr nan, notwithstanding bis color, and he is an example of what a color man can do lor himself. He was a slave* and life with nothing. He was, I think, the customs of the tlim- iven to his master's son, who was oi uu^at the same age, and he received the first part of his education from his young master's tutor. He was just 19 years old when the war begun, and his master went into the Confederate army, Bruce left the plantation awl tau^ school in Missouri, and then drifted to QberHn, Ohio, and spent such money as he had saved on an education there. He has kept tip his studies since be left college, and he Is ^specially well up on matters relating to his tace.

ft

to leave yon at

I

will take

the

a

street car and be

4 at the department before you,

and I

think there Is no doubt that the Secretary will give you the place.'* The young lady took the carriage and Bruce took the

mr

and the lady got the position.^ When in the Senate Bruce*® great friend was Koscoe Oonkllng. Bruce conIsMered Conkltog th# gfeat^it man this country had proauctsd, and he has named •his boy lUmcm Omkling

Brueeafter

of

ngton home.

nurchase

property. Tt was jrtnaUv

of Shi*

owned

by a

dnegro-hati ftwc^wta people the N

*nd wivo, when

dieo, the «*f th* war« a Will pr^V'i.lnlgt'ii*?,®® o*!onvi tuan 8®"stli| ever ht- pot boose or lot in th# ne^.Wrhd^ *f h*»e«al^ man's name was Van Hook, and h** .owned a jss*t «*t'

?!i»

pertv

nvundiog yi: a 1\»wu. 11* palthb pnn vision in evt deesd of every house ana lot that hiv !*oM, and he did everything 4hai he ix^uld to the practice eoationel after lis „*»th. At

t«ieent

thr^~

fourths el bp ^wne-i bf wpF3** am! Ote^t mano^ we in which l» with t„« hiU on whidh iss »uuate«, i- now the p«H»rty of one 5 the most no -.? .f the exclave* «f to#

United tjf.-.tfw-rreileriek XHMjgUms. mHK Q, C**?mtWk.'"

Mi?"

r—3&:

InwtttMl w»*» INMHMC rwa. 'taveaiwaythaeit Mamma—Yo good boy at «Hvn4» day you wei*# bad

11 hear thai uiat. the

to*

fer^ to-day,

'emu* my new *feo« mm I coaiUatplay iflweatoot-

The difficult/ of germinating a fair percentage of many of the finer seeds is knows to tuaiir wlw Imvfl had occasion to start plan

of

Besronia, Calceolaria,

MimoliM, and e*m toi**so, from seeda. ^oeb wtiwf wrife th# finest rifted 41, often &*** d»t!Wltf in penetrating it by the tiro* U*r M» In coi*ditl©n to aprlng forth, «tp«ouili If watered from above, though tb«

mtvmring

thin as it

may be as

pomd bi*

Us give. Many each

seeds are spaeArily •eoaitive in tlwir earlier period* at growth, and of Mimes will fall if o«gt*ei«4 in the matter of moisture

for

mn an hour. From my

very first venture with three fifty-cent package

of

fWgoma, Primrose, and

Cineraria w*!*, have overcome these lifBculttCM very largely by using a flowerIot arranged »hown i» die illustration. Hie preparation is as follows, using an night-inch pot: The first three Inches midst of broken pots or potsherds, then next two inches of coarse soil, the eoarr

Ix-ing next to the potsherds, gradually fnaking it finer near the top, and the next inch of the finest sifted soil, the finer tlte better (1 sift it through a dour-

Tbb

leaves about two incite* from the top of thesoil^to

to

which is to be covered with a pane of window gl*s

Tlie finwt H*e:ls wsU receive no harm with (bis treatment if not c^jvered at all, providing the pot is kept in the dark until some root* have been formed. For bottom heat, we may place the pot on the bank of a stove, or a small lamp may be kept burning under it al I the time by a little ingenuity in arranging it. Tlie witter i» supplied in a peculiar way, tlie pot being set in a basin of hot water containing an amount which will bring it above the layer of broken crock when the pot placed in tlie basin. After a thorough wetting has been absorbed in this way, the pane of glass will hold the moisture for a considerable time. In oro%case* of quickly-germinating things it will not be necessary to give another supply of water nntll tlie growth has appeared, Air should be admitted frequently—at least once a day—until tlie seeding* have appeared, when a small piece of wood should be laid across tlie pot under the glass so that fresh air will be continually coming in. This will prevent, to a large extent, the danger of dampening off, which causes, sometimes in a day, the whole potfui to be ruined, if an insufficient supply of air is given.

Another pleading way is to make tlie seed-bed in one of the deeper cigar-boxes, planned in the same way—first having washed off all the paper which is insid*. started in boxes some Heeds which are somewhat larger than the above-named, and, instead of taking the trouble of preparing the box as above, I simply make iv few holes in the bottom and put in the broken pots, filling up with fine soil, and put apiece of porous paper over the top, which Would allow water to soak through, and pour the water directly on lite paper. The point of keeping such wl-boxes away from the light, and in a warm place to induce prompt germination, is an important one. When left where the sun's rays come directly on the seeds, they are often dried so much before one notices, that the germs which may have just started are destroyed, A *helf back of the kitchen stove is often the b&4 place to be had until the seed* lings uro a quarter of an inch high, but of course they should not long remain without strong light after sprouting, as they become drawn, and seldom make good specimens afterward.

As soon as tlie seedlings can be handled, they should be pricked out into similar lioxes or pots, and for most green hou kinds should retain the glass over them for a month or so—at lesst all the time they remain in the pot or box In which Uiey are pricked. After they have reached his stage, the glass should be raited up at both ends by using two pieces of wood on which it is laid, instead of only at one end. Tbi* arrangement will also be und useful in rooting some of the difficult subjects, especially evergreen plants, like Olea fragrans, Laurestinos, nd Axalea«i» dlsl

prog* an a Butinewk

Tlie American Agriculturist recently had an article ridiculing the notion that frogs wore or conld be profitably cultivated for tlie market. Now comes a m&n who says that they

em

be, and in-

11 mates that soniobody in this country is ioslng money by not going In to the bustnets. Th® man is Charles H. Dawson, of tiie Oanseroort Market, New York, and what he says is interwiting, if not rplmbl#: "Tiie Kan neks now control the frog »n i:rket and make big money, and I deift't see why Kew York State or New Jersey shonldn furnisli us. Then* are good many

w*bi

•old which are

«peared around in the swamps and marshea of New Jerny, hut th«y are not aa palatable its the cultivated product reared in Oinsdsu The Canadians pay oonsyend^e attention to frog culture, and have immense artificial po^b around St, Catharine'a Their frogs «ur« larger and hav« noee ot that gamy, fishy taste noticeable in every sw*mp frog. A few rears ago a Frenchman In Canada, who had been in the market bttsitKfle here for some time, attempted to atart a frog farsi on b% scale in f\Mre«4 county, pa. He fnm 8t Oslhsrine's. He took »dv«nteg« of 1% swamp 1# fcurm ia tha woods, and had his markets »s««»ed, aa^l everything looked promising. But he played to bad leek. A terrible drought dried np the bigger part of his "h* was nnable tosecurs prop«r feed foi his young stock, tad the naUws used to «e«^ »p his cre^bMs by tlie paflsful at night, and his fteig Indaatry to pfocea. He Is mm •n^ftged to wwktaf «»4 other dell* in aa sptowa reetaorant. But he tiiB Mm formdl to manning a frog tm 1A «w». mAtt *h« mmm to «trt right think he sa*M male* par, for the dewwwad for trogs has nearty in hwk |«t noetttar twl» feat Immi •Aw»la« «f te the artific^Uyc*ltiva»4 sotlfc*

SPAIN IN AMERICA.

9MB QVAMWT OZB TOWJf

OJP

JiVOVSTIKM, rLOB I HA.

111! PslsMn to rtoril* fniW(-A fit roll Around th* Old To*»-8«w «t U*SlfffaU thst b« S«4Hi Tfcmre aa«t thm Mtvrkm UmU ax* Told. (jBoeeial Oorreepoudeoce-l

This is the time of year to vlrft St. An«a»ttoe, if it is desired to escape from tfae worst part of northern winter, and the stay may well be orolotiged in the case a! invalids until the breeses of May begin to Mow.

It wss evening when I first srrlved In 8c. Angnstine a beautiful moot%ht nSf^bt, sucii a me as oso only be seen in Florida and iighting a cigar, 1 started out fora moonligbt ram We. My ctnnpanion wa* a lady who yearly, fcr the part thirty years, lias emme io 8t Augtatlne. Turning into Gerge street we found, at tlie uortliem end of the town, the old City Gaie, tlie most picturewjue ruin of this most picturesque piace. The two pillars «e momque, surntounted by a carved potiiegraoate, and attacbed are portions of the wall, which, together with an outer ditch, una extended fmm the castle of Sou Maroo, a short distance to the east, acro» the peninsula to the 8an 8ebs»tian river on the west, thus fortifying the town against all approJClie- land.

St, Augustine issu Anicrfcan town only in name in reality it looks more like some ancient city of the old world, dropped down in a ps»ri«lbeof flowers and greenery. Cons inning our walk, after inspecting the ga ej, landing like grim sentinel* keeping watch over ihe city, we pass between them and walk over tlie shell rtwul, the grand boulevard of the future. Tlie soft moonlight lay on the gmn wastes as we walked along beyond tlie ruined waits* lighting up tlie north Hver and its silver snnd hills. Old Fort Marion looms np in the mellow light, dark and frowning, but the ligbt stiines through its ruined tumts and only the birds of the

TTIK crrr osvas. WJt

night keep watch on its desolate battlements. The city lay behind us- It had never dared to sttvtcti itself much beyond tlie old gates, and the few people who did live outside were spoken of as very far off—sort of Bedouins of flowerlftiui, cumi'hig icmj orarUy on the green. As we went on the moon lighted up the white headstones of a little cemetery on tlie left side #f tlie road. It was the Protestant cemetery, remarkable only for its ugliness and the number of its inscriptions celling the same sad story of strangers in a strange land—persons brought here in quest of health, only to die far away from home. There are two other cemeteries. Tlie military cemetery ia a shady, grassy place, well tended, peaceful, aud even pleasant :A band«oroc monument to all the soldiers and officers who fell during tlie long, hard, harrsssing Seminole war stands on one side, and near it are three l«»w massive pyramids, covering the remains of Mitfor Dade and 107 soldier* massacred hy Osceola's band. There to also miothnr little graveyard— the Huguenot. It looks venerable, but only date hack about a hundred years. Where the o?d Dons of tWO or three centuries ago burled their dead Is a mystery. Per hajs they sent them back home, Chinese fashion. The little cemetery iserowdrtt with graves, mounds of saudover which tlie grass will not grow, t*d heavy coqulua tomb*, whose inscripti its have crumbled away* The namts on the low crosses, generally Spanish, American, Corsican, and Oreek, Itettr testimony to the foreign ancestry of the majority of the population. After Hngering awhiie to re.id in tlie moonlight the curious inscriptions we confined our walk. The shell road having come to an end we strolled on, now on little grass patches, now in tlie deep sand, passing a ruined stone wall, then leisurely by all that is left of a once pleasant home, destroyed,

sear w**ws, mmmwrnm twww. lit:* many other outiyit^t wastlemsss, dialog the civil war. Tfan we wander back, my companion now aod then breaking the stIonic by ««»«««in^raAing tea^obcencwol the old town in th* dsys gone by forever. As «*e«sM«t a uk*8ie**|a«' old mm&m, war toundo with myrtle tMdit and covered with cumbering, writog ^ways. with the old ^aodimt jeoodly tock aekq

the«H

la

l%ht, the lady sart:

^t%e townl» wtt^ elsmge« ftom whrt it In ante btllam days. iModero hemtt and hm 1^* «t*togS»g ap «t*ywbe»* haw aimed the whole mpmk ft the «fey. AmaiUver im fmm and pr^sabiy tlw iwii .V,| mm will he team down «nd with ». wooden tlie w^me th« towa w«s mSfsmm la 'ItsateliliKtom ^wB«werea'-: (Brf.lt.ofa^jpsSmi, srtth awidl armmd. at*! n*th*ie» s«rivaodlo« a court ywnl bchitMl. where were llowers. via** awl -.«»• feanta^sk. The«aSa,w^U» m» «t

«Bj K»id. Tboae went the proud days of St. A^nstine the old fimulies resigned with undisputed sway the slaves were well treated lwicpitality was boandhaa, sod the inienaixtore oC Spanish and Italian blood showed itaedf plainly to the dark eiyea that p«exed over the haleonies aa the ^raojpar passed bfr low. All this has vanished now to a great extent, and only the chinches, torts, and soars important booses have beam left ondish turbed. Tbe war effiKJed almost the last fading hneoftoeti^ditoMaidgrandesiraisd broke down the barrier between the haughty little city and the outside world. Many oftbe aid booses have been modernised, and not a few hav^gveuplacetonew andtomy, perbapa, jwrtal eyes, thoroughly commonplace dwellings. There area ft* like this one left, however whose old arches remain just as they were, and the old wall still surrounding the luxuriant garden."

But tlie o3d bcii, nearly two hundred years old. has struck toe midnight hoar and we each the hotel and retire. At break of day am up again, however. I walked over to the old fort before breakfast, and saw what has been called **a wreck in ruinous perfection. The site of Fort Marion was originally occupied by the Indian Council Home. The first fortification wss an octagonal stroctureof logs, built by the ypanianib to resist the Huguenots.

It was then called Man Juan and was taken by Sir Frauds Drake. In 1«G the fort was still an octagon, defended by round towers. Toward the dose of that century tlie present fort, or castle, as it was properly called, was commenced, and an inscription Over the entrance tells us tbst it was finished in 1736 during tlie reign of Ferdinand VI. But it dfcs not tell us what other history very well does, tbst it was bsdit by the forced labors ol Apalacliiaii Indians and convicts brought fruni .Mexico. The fort remains now as it was a century ago, with the exception of the water batteries, which were reconstructed by Uie United States in 1842. It was buiit upon the plan of Vauban, a quadrangle with ba»tioued angles, casemated aod bomb proof. The material Is ooquina, a crumbling stone that resistsacannonadingbet*erthan grange. It covers over an acre, the Interior court containing one thousand two hundred and forty-seven square yards, and the casemates having an average inside length of thirtythree feet. All of them have arched ceilings and open into tlie oourt, except those on the west or land side. The fort has never been taken, though it has been twice besieged, but time is doing what artillery could not do. Huge fissures in tlie masonry can be seen, particularly In the western side, and the piece has been declared by military authorities no longer fit for defensive service. In the open flat beyond is said to have occurred the massacre of the three hundred Huguenots, after their surrender.

Inside the fort one may peep into gloomy casemates, the antique chapel, the tower, the barbican, and perhaps some "oldest inhabitant" will tell of Osceola, of Oaecoochce, who were prisoners here and perhaps he may add something about the skeletons that were found chained to the walls of the very dungeon in whose cold blackness one is then and there shivering. He might also tell of a white prisoner who once dragged out a weary lire years in these dungeons, and who was a man remarkable for having probably taste the s«ee& of revenge in as full measure as ever fell to human lot He was a famous partisan scout in the early part of the first American revolution, bat buying been whipped for disrespect to a

THE Ot-t CATnB»B4t»

superior officer, escaped, joined toe enemy, and thereafter rained a series of bloody revenges upon his persecutors. He was aftert wards caught by the Spanish—it is thought because be had joined Bowles in his dreadful instigation of the Indians against the Spanish colonists—and incarcerated in this old for for five years. 1 almost sicken at Uie memorial thst duster about tlie old fort, and turn again to the town. Its general outline is a parallelogram, a mile long by a quarter of a mile Wide. Its •treeb intersect each other at right angles and run north and sottib and east and west, with slight variations. Tlie sea wall. Which extends a mile from the water batteries of the fort to the basin in front of the barracks, which last Is the extreme southern end of the town, is slightly concave to the sea. It Is built of coquina, quarried in tlieislandopposite, aoiLwf Hi»*i the houses are almost all built. Tlie top Is fitced with granite, brought firom the north at an Immense expenss to the government. This la, of course, no part of tlie ancient Spanish wall, which once surrounded toe city, bat was built by the United States government to defend the town from the Incursions of the sea. It was eight years In building, and was finished in IMS. The top of it fat about foor

test

forms a pleasant promenade for the citisens and visitors, and during the "ses8on,f it quite gay with number* enjoying the refieo* ikmof the gorgeous suraeti deepen«] and Intensified in tlie dimpling water. In the center ot the town and open to the water is theplasa, a half w*e of r» P1^ with a few trees* a stand for the band, and the plain monument in the center etoeted to commemorate the adoption of the Spanish liberal cottttitotton. AJwuml the |4*s* are the public buildings. The ancient government bouse oa the west side, whk& was o»e»«ar rounded by a handsome balustrade and tartela, bat now shorn of its ornaments, is aim-

convent of St, Umrf% a lately eswetedand rather imping building, with afilmsgeof tbe virgin hi front bkssfag tbe pawms-hy. ilafimefortBe to gn, thotn^ 1 fidn in ttoi iitti* "Ssada8w towt»" with Ks fort and ftfeway sad MmtMk briMoww*. narrow, cnxdued sirens a^d dark-browed peof4e wiib th«r great £t»n!sh oosd Hadk eyes. Best to tins besiffihtol weatfew one seems to Mi to ©dm enrreBd of Sfie towe ~^tei»ilo&eRt» drwsmy stillness that ^ia»ietsslees hfo to vM Sptia.

Vt*". ^CaL&tsra.

M* Sfcfofde wwi wffi as w*: wltb her of fowtoio mew.

SHOES,

1

THE WORLD'S BEST

sioiiim $2.50 #e

Hasnoemnlfra-RtrbL Wt ami w«» {^nj. sy- DO not b« deceived. Bee^amp on bottom ot er E^e no other.. Every pair warranted, snd equal to sny ss shoe In the market. i, M. PEEPLCS A CO., CHICAGO.

J. B. LUDOWICI, Sole Agent, 520 Main Street, Terra Haute.

TRUNKS.

1

CALL ON

V.G.DICKHOUT For Trunin, Valises and Traveling Ban. If you ate going sway this winter be wiu make trunk that will prove a victorious enemy to the baggage smsaher.

INSURANCE.

A Card!

vmmm

TKRKB HAOTK, IHD.,Oct. 28th 1889.—'We, the undersigned, return our thanks to B. F. Havens for his satisfactory settlement of our loeses by fire, aud we cordially recommend those wanting fire insurance and prompt and fair treatment when they meet with losses, to insure with Mr. Havens.

JOHN L. REDFORD. EDWARD P. KKOFORD. OHAS. D. FLAID. MISS MINNIE HARMS.

8KKI8.

MY 25th CATALOGUE OP

18 NOW READY. I CELEBRATE MY

QUARTER CENTENNIAL!

By a finer and fuller catalogue, a bigger and better stock, all the standard sorts and wmy novelties.

There is not room here to tell of the tenth part of the many hundred varieties for th* (arm, garden and flower bed. It is free to all seeds.

J. A. FOOTS, 416 Ohio St.

JOB PRINTER.

I

J. C. S. GFR0ERER

Job Printer,

M0 TR0USLE TO 6IVC ESTIMATES.

23 SOUTH FIFTH ST.

DAILY NEWS BUILDING

BSUNKIER'S BALSAM.

IS

THis

Wide,

FAIR?

W« *w»t BKVNKEBD CARMtSA' HVI BALSAM ta com Summw ttanptatat I»wrhaia.Fna»-P».w»tmj. &mt&pam, OsoHsrs

IttH I

mromtto fnr ii jwwcfS|NfiSi®ii w«

SMKiQ!CllM A

at ecmsli

and slansnnwi for ttw dteS&OO bwr

k«w"trtiown to nwaS tm OM, iHEm fii

«*nr aatftM^^Adarwy. ULOBM XEOtdJIK COwt^stwt wUtvn^ Basse Bslsiwsawi HeXMSS SBd lbs Tigs 0St»

NATRDRRSSIHD, ITC.

MISS ALICE MELICK,

la addttkm to bar JhessssaltlBg IBWsblMbmmt

MAKlCtJRIKO, CHIROPODIST and

ssi

SOTTTH

Firm

ARRAUBBT,

KTATIONCRT, *TC.

Mmrf, Ihifc Bwb. S«k*, Twai, St.,

J. E. DUNCAN & CO.,

DAILY NEWS.

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rw

9mm Am Ansa Mts

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:f§

tit the:

'•r*IW. nights

'igvf I in ex

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