Page 2
THE KINGS MOUNTAIN HERALD. KINGSyOUNTAIN, N. C.
Thursday. January 6. 1^72
Established 1889
The Kings Mountain Herald
20S South Piedmont Ave. Kings Mountain. N. C. 230!%
A weekly newsps.per devoted to the promotion ol the general welfare and publi^ed
for the .enlightenmerit, entertainmnt and benefit cf the citizens of Kings Mountain
and its vicinity, published every Thursday by the Herald Publisllit^ House.
Entered as second class matter at the post trfflee at Kings Mountain, N. C., 28086
under Act of Congress of March 3, 1873.
EDITORIAL DEPARTMENT
Martin Harmon Editor-Publisher
Miss Elizabeth Stewart Circulation Manager and Society Editor
Gary Stewart Sports Editor, News
Miss Debbie Thornburg Clerk, Bookkeeper
Ray Parker
Rockv Marlin
MECHANICAL DEPARTMENT
Allen Myers
Roger Brcjwn
Paul Jackson
Herbert M. Hunter
' On Leave With The United States Army
MATI. SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE
In North Carolina and South Corolina
One year 51, six months ,$2.25; three months $1.50; school year $3.
(Ssbscrlptlon in North Carolina subject to three percent sales tax.)
In All Other States
One year $5; six months $3; three months $1.75: school year $3.75.
, PLUS NORTH CARCS-INA SALES TAX
TELEPHONE NUMCER — 739-5441
TODAYS BIBLE VERSE
Keep Viy heart u’ith aV diUgenre; f<,r oat of it are the Visues pf life.
Proverbs Ji'.ld.
*No Faull" Gains Favor
“It’s been one year since Massachu
setts pioneered auto-insuranco reform
by instituting a limited form of the con
troversial “no-fault” system. State offic
ials marked the anniversary by;
* Ordering a 27.6 per cent reduction
in 1972 premium costs for compulsory
bodily-injury and loss-of-earnings cov
erage. The rates already had been cut
15 per cent when the plan was begun in
January 1971.
* Proposing that in-surors make
jfyrther 27.6 per cent cut in 1972.
* Announcing that the number of
Dodily-injury claims has dropped 30 per
|cent and the average payment is 60 per
pent in the volume of small “nuisance”
claims that insurers often pay without
firgument to avoid litigation.
* Indicating that collision and prop-
rty-damage insurance will I)e put on a
ao-fault basis in 1972.
So reported Harris Smith (from
pston) in the current issue of The
tional .Observer.
rho-Mnsurance carriers, those com-
anies which pay the claims bills, are
Jning the forces in support of “not
uTt”. The Herald has commented prev-
“^ly on the American Fore group's ap-
, to 'North Carolinians to urge their
Jlators to make North Carolina a
I'ault” state. (Five other states went
some form of "no-fault” on Jan-
U-
lother big caiTier is promoting
kilt”.
Wednesday morning’s mail, the
received a brochure entitled
lase for No-Fault” from big Aetna
VCasualty.
Nursing Home
I will disagree with Mayor John
iToss on his contention that
buntain’s Number 1 community
T»ed is a nursing and convales-
Ip.
fccrtainly almost all, know of
fizens patients at nursing homes
Icities.
[a Kings Mountain doctor told
: well over a year ago, “I alone
patients candidates for admis
facility of this type today, and
the other physicians can tell
^story.”
of Kings Mountain’s Nurs-
avalescent are taking steps to
She Kings Mountain facility off the
drawii^ beards and to translate the
plans into brick, steel and mortar, and,
more important, staff and tr1;atment.
Gentleman Retires
Lindsay W. Dail has been selling ad
vertising for the Shelby Daily Star for
42 years and has officially retired.
Happily, he’ll still be about in an
advisory capacity.
Mr. Dail, through the years, has
been an advertising man’s advertising
man and an advertiseFs advertising
man, in the latter uole disdaining high
pressure sales methods and conscien
tiously seeking to aid his customers in
getting the absolute most return from
fctheir advertising dollar. He has been
''^tly successful.
V Vo his confrpres in the trade, wheth-
W the Star shop or abroad, he has
'Continually the soul of helpfulness.
Missing mat?” “Sure,” was his quick
answer, “you can use ours. Shall I send
want ^o pick it up?” ThiR
ine Herakl knows from direct experi
ence. '
or semi-retiro-
I.. case may be, the Herald
be ‘f of friends in hearty good
happiness.
8 s time to list taxes and buy auto
With a pair of dice in the snake-
eyes, crapped out position for graphic
illustration, Aetna states, “Every time
a driver gets behind the wheel, he is
gambling that if he has an accident, it
will not be his fault. He is gambling he
can prove the other driver was at fault
and that the other driver has insurance
or can otherwise be made re.sponsihle
for the accident.”
Under the sub-title “No-Fault and
You”, Aetna concludes;
The present automobile insui’ance
.system, by selecting “winners” and “los-
ers” among accident victims falls far
short of the universal protection requir
ed for users of a mass carrier, which is
what the auto has become.
No-fault insurance meets society’s
obligation to accident victims and theii’
families. By automatically paying medi
cal, hospital and rehabilitation costs and
compensating lost income, no-fault in
surance provides universal protection
for those using a universal means of
transportation.
Instead of paying premiums to pro
tect yourself against a claim on a law-
•suit, you pay premiums to cover ex
penses incurred by you and others in
your car should you have an accident.
No-fault works. It is working in
Massachusetts. It can work in your
state, too.
If you agree, let your state legisla
tors or other government officials know
that you want an auto insurance sys
tem that protects everyone—No-Fault
auto insurance.
Amen.
A Big Year
It’s been well-known all along that
1972 is a BIG election year.
Those who may have been doubters
can take a look at events of the past
week and realize that 1972, a BIG elec
tion year, has arrived.
In recent days:
Senators Ed Muskie, George McGov
ern, and Vance Hartke made it official,
as d'd Mayor John Lindsay, that they
Wci.Tt to be the Democratic standard-
bearer of ’72.
President Richard Nixon all but
made it official that he likes the White
House, wants to release for another four
years, and rather likes his sometime ma
ligned Number 2, Vice-President Spiro
Agnew.
A presidential election year is al
ways a big political year in North Caro
lina for the added reason that North
Carolina elects, at the same time, its
governor, lieutenant - governor, and
members of the council of state.
Adding more zest in Tar Heel coun
try this year is: 1) a United States Sen
ator is to be elected apd 2) North Caro
lina will hold presidential primaries for
the first time.
C the Tar Heel scene, a couple
more Democratic candidates for govern
or would equal the modem day record
of 1940 when seven Democrats vied for
the Democratic flag, and, whatta-ya-
know, It appears the GOP 'Tar Heels will
have a primary race for governor for the
second consecutive quadrennium.
And there’s the ninth congressional
district business. State Representative
Jim Beatty has made it official. He is a
Democratic candidate in the Mecklen-
burg-Iredell-Lincoln district. In three
election.s in Mecklenburg Genial Jim
Vt f' C eVt/MVm nen a
Beatty has shown he is as adept at run
ning for public office as at running the
mile on the United States Olympic team.
The likelihood is that Mr. Beatty will re
turn this district to the Democrats after
a 20-year drought, retiring Representa
tive Charles R. Jonas being the .fellow
who cut off the Democratic water sup
ply.
Interesting spring upcoming, yes?
MARTIN'S
MEDICINE
Viewpoints of Other Editors
AS THE CROW CALLS
LIGHTS OFfCiVILIZATION
By MARTIN HARMON
Post Npw Year’s Day pick-ups. .
Twx) press Jieins—one from
The New Yoim Times and the
other from tji Augi.sla, Geor
gia. Clircnicli^ lerald, graphic
ally portray |i'e difference be
tween a natib with little elec
tric energy a 4 nation w icre
eleclrtc powe^ s taken for giant-
ed
The Now -a ork Times piece
reports what eems to be a Wr-
tual collapse of thV state-iun
At Edwin Moore'.s tax listing
de.sk, a little boy wa.s awaiting
his mother who was listing her
taxes with Betty Ballard. I teas
ed the little boy, asking if he
W'ere old enough to list. Ho al- electric povv-e industry of Cu la.
lowed he had a cat. C. P. Barry, “■Programmed blackouts” are ihe
who wa.^ nearby ventling city current desr:nation for Ihe lis-
auto tag-i for the
heard 'the talk. It reminded
of a call he made at a farm home equivalent of a dark closet. I3y
on an insurance matter and the contrast, Chr.micleiHerald i ol-
young fellow there proudly in- umnist Louis Z Harris wriies
formed he was the owner of a of the •'mii..vle' tiinl may be
Scientist, we read, have i-
dentified 330 crow calls more
than the total vocabulary of one
small South Amerir-an tri'.re of
humans.
Japanese farmers have rrp :rt-
etl being “dursed” by. l ot .-i.
-And not long ago, a fl...k of
the birds atacked a Swiss moun
tain guide who went to tiie aid
ot a beseiged w'oodehuck, lea
ving him- -the man, vve mean—
lacerated and bleeding.
There must be a lesson in all
this. If we can just find il. Some
ethnoll.gists have predicted that
KINGS MOUNTAIN
Hospital Log
VISmNG HOURS
Dally 10:30 to 11:30 AM.
3 to 4 P.M. and 7 to 8 PJW.
Lions Club, ing power failures that threaieii inhorit
it to waste that he can no long
er live in it.
Perhaps the wily crows have
sent spies to peruse Daphne du
Maurior’s short sotory “The
l"irds’' or see the Alfred Hitcli-
.">ck movie based on it tor, if
there are classicists among
I'lem, have studied the Aristo-
calf and a pig. C. P. congratulated seen from almost any elev.!ited
the lad. posiiijii in pia. tltally any me-
jjj jjj troipolitan city in tlie IJn.tetl
States. He says, ‘Tl the time is
Then Uie j-outh turned to C. P. after dark, you can sAe the Mira-
and asked, “Y’ou gotta calf?” No cle of America . . . l\. is rellect-
"You gotta pi;
pony?” No. "You gotta lamb?” lions of tiny, glowing oVbs, each
No. "You gotta dog?” No. "You a syrnibol of American' genius
gotta cat?” No. and American affluence.”
iHe refers specifically '.o the
panorama of brilliance he vvit-
Then the youth addres-sed C. P. nessed from a rotating hotel
with sadne.ss ;uid pay in his lovnge high above the business , roaHv
voice, saying, ”Mi.stei~ you ain’l district of Atlanta, Georgia. He ^
No. "You gotta ed in the lights Of th^dty. mil-
rtta lamb?” imno .^r tinv orimiino. fiOhs each cotwludcd that they
are man s
proper heirs.
Indeed, it may be that they
have defeided in caw-vus that
they need not await atomic de
vastation or the last stages of
got notliin’.”
m-m
Dan Wei.-is and I were talking
about tile big liei-st if?Tiie vintage
(300-room hotel in New York,
where highly professional tliieves,
posing as guests arriving in the
ea.-ly hours of morning shortly
after 4 a.m. literally made them
selves at home. According to
news reports, the “guests’ meth-
was doubly impressed since f'.e
had just attended a roundtable
meeting of utility rep.rosentatives
from all over the U. S. which
made him realize how far tlie
United States i.s ahead of other
countries in the world in
'Let’s watch it.
THE URGENCY OF
COMMITTEES
The Boston Herald Traveler
Old committees never expire,
. vvory jyst misplaced. The
phase of living. “In lighting imiksion, for e.xample, created to
alone, ho writes, “there is no ftfalsonai Screw Thread Corn-
comparison. A hundred - watt (jeaP with a “tmporary” problem
bulb, in most otlier countries of in lais, abolished in 1934 and
the world, is as unobtainable as reactivated in 1989, is still a-
odically punched 47 safety de a whale sandwich in the Sahara round spmewhere alon-’ vdth the
posit boxes where guests had put . . . Where electric appliances Tasters’ Board and a mlnd-
valuaoles for safe-keeping. The are concerned, there can scaix«- iboa^lin? assortment of advisory,
list was scanned for those of ly be a comparison from the regollatory and ad hoc gro'.-us
adyfolk Mlicre It was presumed standpoint of beauty or effi- ,^bose urgerjey is open to ques-
the jewelry would be. dency. Nor can any country’
ni-m ■ compare with the U. S. on the ^ congressional report "esti-
- cost of electricity or the avail- rnates”—apparfently Congress
The presumption was correct ability of it.” pan’t even lOca^te tliem ail - that
apparently, as the Va.st press re Those who like to find fault years ago there were l.SOO
port on loss estimate was a cool with the U. S. system at least advisory conuniiions and com-
$2,000,000 in cash and jewelry. have plenty of light on their mittees which manage to spend
siArject. Both symibolically and $-^4 mimon a yeah doing what-
literally, the lights Of civilization pypj- they were conimissioned to
The Hotel Pierre is an old one, have a way of going out in coun- Some of the pi\esidential-le-
Mrs. Mallie Davis
Perry Ellis
Hobie Gann
Mrs. V. Jerome Garrett
>L. P. Gordon,
'Mrs. Mary Harlow,
Geo. Helms,
'Henry Ray Henderson,
iMrs. Della Huffslickler,
'Clyde Kerns,
Chas. Lackey,
iRlchaid Little,
iFaxton Loftis,
A. J. Mack,
Jas. Mayes,
B. J. -Meeks,
.Mrs. Jewel Moss,
Tliurman, Moss
Mrs. Jack M'Gurry,
Wm. MoMackin,
Mrs. Pearl McNeely,
Cliarlie Nicholson,
Mrs. Marie Ramsey.
Mrs, Pearl .Styeis,
Mrs. Edgle Treadway,
A. K. Walker,
Bratton Walker,
'Mrs. Lillie Ware.
Bobby Gore
Wm. H. Hager
Mrs. Bertha Hullendor
Mrs. Dorothy Ixiwery
Mrs. Johnny Sisk
Mrs. Geo. M. Strouoe
ADMITTED ’raURSDAY
Clarence Grayson, Jr.,
Box 221, Bess. City
Bariiis Lamar R 'ss Rt
Grover
P. n.
1,
Myers St., City
ADMITTED SUNDAY M
iPaiHda Broetk .5<>k N. Can.sleM
.-il.. t-oy I
■Mrs. l'’red Calrle Rt. 2, City
E. S. Clemmer P. O. Box 81
City
'.Mrs. Bill J. Ellis 6(M N. High
land St., Gastonia
Grier Hoffman Rt. 2, Bess. City
Mrs. Grace Phulbeck ■''09 E.
King St., City
Wray Plonk Rt. 3, City
Earl .Spearman Rt. 2, City
ADMITTED MONDAY
Mr.s. Bennie Seiglof, 4414 U-
nion Rd., Gastonia
Jas. Edward Mintz Rt. 1. City
Cecil P. William.'-. "o,5 Dilliiig
51.. City ^
Edward Montgomery P. O.
Box 126, Sliaron
.Mrs. Cleveland Mackey, 420
Belvedere Cr., City
Mrs. Wm. S. Hudson. Rt. 1
Yur!:. .S. C.
.Gregory S^’ott fjuo’i’r, 110 E.
Texas Ave. Bess., City
.Mrs. Bbbby Gene Martin Rt.
2, 'diy
.Mrs. Freddie Warren, Rt. 1,
City
ADMITTED TUESDAY
Jerry la-e Paysour, ft35 Chureli
Street, City
.Mr.-. Roirerta -S. Patterson, 301
W. Mountain St., City
Lillie Mae Miller, 204 Walker
51., City
Freida .Mae Adams, 548 Bnlji-
more Dr., Cramerlon
.Mrs. .\nnie C. Hipp, 208 KiseJ
•St., City ■ ^
Norwood .Milt.HI Farr, 608 t..
Ridge .SI.. City
.Mr-. E lwanl G. Campbell, 30,1
Allison Ct., City
.■Vlrs. John Paul Jordon, Route
3. City
.Mi-;. Florenr-e R. -Shopparil,
Thurst
ADMITTED FRIDAY
Mrs. John Caveny Rt. 1. City
Charlie Flowers 2(11 Fairview 717 Gantt .St.. City
St. City
T. J. McAbee Rt. 1, Clover
Davis Winstead .aO.s E. 6th .St
Gastonia
ADMITTED SATURDAY
Wm. O. Hudson Rt. 1. York
'Mrs. Minnie McClain Rt.
City
Leonard Addison Smitti Jr. 99 Tl-year irerkjd.
During the past nine years,
S.S72.922 lias Ireon given to the
University of North Carolina al
Greenslxrro through the Alumni
Annual Giving Program. This
3. year, the goal Ls to push the total
past the $1 million mark for thi
vel adrtsory commissions hadn’t
has many guests the trade refert tries where freedom has been ^ ^
to as. “regulars” and many of crushed—and the state has tak- three years aAd, judging
whom WMe away on holiday va- en over baste enterprises such some of the repoirts ad hoc
cations. as electric power.—Transylvania comntissions
Times.
m-m
have published.
Presidents might just as soon
they hadn’t met at all.
Be that as It may, the W’hite
time of entry was when the audi
tor had shut off the burglar alarm
system to, of all things, audit the
vault. At any rate, the thieves
casually entered the limou-slne in
which they had arrived and
zoomed away.
dairts or an Ad Her- Commitltee
on the Rutabaga Crisis
I
m-m
FAITH LN THE INDriHIH
Ex-New Y’orker Weiss recalls
the Hotel Pierre well. HLs bro', ti
er’s wedding party was at thi.-,
hotel in 1947.
'AIV
m-m
Federal food stanmp user*
now can get their change im
'casli, up to a maxim.i.im of 49
cents. This is a convenience fjij
everyone, since the smallest-de-J
A person who deals wi.h
public, as almost everyone dne.s,
and be he doctor,
dion chief, meets Interesting peo
• pie and interesting situations.
50!
Evidence of the thorough ca.s- DEJARINiG UP TO REALTY
ing the Pie^ had received by -pi-e Raleigh news & Observer House and Congt^is should win
■the thieves was the fact that ’ notv the accumulation of com-
The Duke University telephone mittees every now and then on
directory man not be so enthral- fit® assumption that they 'ynay
ling as the old mail-order cala- discover and discard a CommLs-
logues, but it has creative floit r- *1011 Biplane Span
ishes absent from most direc
tories .
Under “C” is found w'th in
struction to “see appropriate de
partment, ’’ and under “Parking
is the subhead, “See Impossible
Missions Force.” "Kong,” first
name “Kim;,” comes under ‘’Fa
culty Listing.’ His address is
“Primate Facility.” His chief oc
cupation is “curator,” but his nomination food stamp is 51
Si -sidiary job title is "Special cents; if supermarket clerks'
Consultant, Athletic Depart- couldn't make change in cashj
lawyer or In- ment.” The address of “Freud, they would have to hold upj
.‘I'igmund,” is “Stldent Mental checkout lines while they wrote"
Health Center.” ciedit slips for a few cents.
This undergraduate horsing a- Beginniriig next March 1, how-,
round may reflect, in part, T. S. ever, that’s c.xactly what the\
Eliot's dictum, from “Burnt .Nor- clerks will be doing. In passing \
ton:” “Human kind cannot bear new food stamp legislation last i
very much reality.” Whether or summer. Congress urged climina-
not we admit it, many c.f us es- tion of the cash-change proce- '
WM looking for a dress for his cape reality occasionally by try- dure. Otherwise, the lawmakers V
wife. The young saleslady s^wed ing to make the habilually in- saici, stamp users might blow the
conceivable sort ■jf conceivable, change on beer, cigarettes and
As an undergraduate, Thomas other forbidden forms of high
Wolfe liked to sign hotel regisl- living.
Chattor'on or pjv’en though the Agriculture
Ben J.honson. 'The same adult Department has found that sltlmp
who wase to play like (or are more responsible than
placlt, as It used to come out in legislators appear to think, it
NOTICE
The annual Sharpholciers meeting of Home Sav
ings & Loan Association will be held in the home
office at 106 East Mountain Street on Tuesday, Jan
uary 25, 1972 at 5 P.M.
Thomas A. Tate
Executive Vice President
12:30-] :19
m-m
So it was last weekend a young
holiday season clerk in a Kings
Mountain store found it when
her would-be customer said ho
him every dress in the racjts
the size asked.
m-m
The man Objected, "Naw,
they’re all too long.” Tihe sales
lady guesed they could be hemm
^sPEcmui
m
0R@)8irainEuinn
36’OA/
supply
when you buy the
ablet r ■ ■
144-taE
; bottlel
REG.VALUE <11.38
YDUSiWE '
Y0UPAir<8A9
SUPER nENAMINS...USED BY ALL 28 TEAM
OF THE NATIONAL FOOTBAIILEA60EI
llWlatfMlyalysiirt^^DnwaiM ^
ed.“Could they be hemmed that Eastern Carolina 1 he is David derided to implement the con
much?”, the customeo’ asked, Balfo.r really turns on beinz .
really turns on being
igrcssional suggestion. Not many
gowns,” said the saleslady.
“Don’t want no gow’ns,’ replied
the naan. “She don’t sleep in
Birth
Announcements
Mr. and Mrs. Leonard A. Smith,
slapping his hand on his leg a- fireman, engineer, conductor and governmental programs, after
bout half-way from th? knee. She crew of hts own elector train, gi, founded on faith in the
guessed they could, then suggest The grept Thomas Haidy ask- individual — The Wall Street
ed he might want to switch to ed Rtbert Graves, a World War jonj-nal
lingerie. “We have some lovely I captain, why he didn't continue
to call himself “Captain
Graves.” Graves dismissed the
suggestion, but Hardy with tre
mendous longing in his eyes and
vo'ce, replied, "Well, I should
^ love to call myself 'Captain Har-
nothln’.” The young lady’s mouth
drtnjped open and her complex- And there is the old story of 99 Myers St., announce the birth
ion crlmsonetl. But it didn’t stop ex-gov’crnor .Rcbert Glenn’s com- of a son, Wednesday, December
her, and the man bought a dress haent when some leading citizens
to be hemmed to the stratos- in Winston-salem met to select
phere. She confided after he left, a caj/tain tor, a newly-formed
“I know I’m young, but I just military company. Glenn sug-
young gested that he be made captain.
The chairaran, aghast, stammer
ed: ‘'Well, frankly, governor,
'considering all of your great
honors, we just didn’t think ot
too terms of captain of a mil
itary company.”
■'Maybe not,” Glenn answered,
“but you see, I have never been
KINGS MOUNTAIN
SrORB DRUG COMPANY
THE CITY’S MODERn''STORE
don’t understand
folk.”
these
Frances McGill broke a
during the holidays while gam
boUng bare-footed in the kitchen
w’ith her brother. Alas, a cob
bler’s children goes without
shoes. Dr. John C., Prances relat
ed, had a couple of births im
29, Kings Mountain hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Floyd Eugene Phil-
beck, P. O. Sox 28t, Grover, N. C.,
announce the birth of a daugh
ter, Wednesday, Dck;ember 29,
Kings Mountain hospital.
Mr. and Mrs, Jas. Midrael Mar
lowe, Dudley Trailer Park, Besse
mer City, N. C., announce tlie
birth of a son, Tliursday, Decem
ber 30, Kings Mountain hospital.
Mr. and Mrs. Kenneth Taylor,
318 Web'o 3t., Gastonia, N. C., an
the captain of a military com- J'
>’ Friday, December 31, Kings .Moun-
pany.
One of the best aliases oocur-
pending and some oTRer must-do days when a weal
patches to do and
vrrite. Sometime l-'n-
.shank r' ‘'■
hi': ' ; ... ..viien digit.
'scri'-’ts to thy but illiterate Tar Heel went
m-m
tain hospital.
Mr. and A'Irs. Fred Adams, 103
N. Carpenter St., announce the
„ . . _ . . , , birth of a daughter, Saturday,
l. Kings Mountain hos
pital.
Mr. and Mrs. Freddie Warren,
Rt. 1 Box 413, announce the birth
of a son, .M:nday, January .3,
Walter Mitty is Kings Mountain 'ho.spifal.
giiiia water-hole. When he
put his X on the register, he
made a circle around it so that
he would be incegnito.
In a word.
Undaunted, Frances left Wed- very much alive, not lust amoirg Mr. and .Mrs Bennie L Seigler
nesday for a European cultural the college students, but in any 4414 Union Rd., Gastonia, N C.’
tour with other students. The crowd of adults, whether they announce the birth of a daugh-
palHaU've tor the wounded toe: are buying or selling or blowing ter, Monday, January 3, Kings
a pair of over-sized walking shoes, horns and flinging confetti. Mountain hospital.
Keep Your Radio Dial Set At
1220
WKMT
KINGS MOUNTAIN, N. C.
News & Weather every hour on the hour.
V/eather every hour on the half hour.
Fine entertainment in between
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