Newspapers / The Asheville Times (Asheville, … / April 22, 1910, edition 1 / Page 1
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TH1 AMOGUTO PRIM DISPATCHH LAST EDITION 4:00 P. M. Weathw roreeut: VOL. XV. NO. 63. ASHEVILLE, N. O, FRIDAY AFTERNOON, AP RIL 22, 1910. le PIR COPY fil mm Mark Twain, the World-Famous Fighter Against Sham, Cele brated Humorist, Dies of Loneliness and Grief. HE FORESAW THE EVENT AND WAS READY TO DEPART Death of His Friend, H. H. Rogers, and His Daughter, Jean, Were Blows from Which He Never Recovered. Redding. Conn., April 22. Samuel 1 Clemen (Mark Twain) died pain lessly at 6:30 o'clock last night of angina pectoris. He lapsed Into coma at 3 o'clock yesterday afternoon and never regained consciousness. It was the end or a man outworn by grief and acute agony of body. Yesterday morning he woke refresh ed, even faintly cheerful, and In full possession of ull his faculties. He recognized his daughter, Clara, Mrs. Osslp Gabrllowltach, spoke a rational word or two and feeling himself stronger wrote In pencil "Give me my Classes. " They were his last words. Layini: tie m aside he sank first Into reverie and later fell Into (liuil uncon ciousness. There was no thought at the lime that the end was so near. At o'clock Dr. Hubert Halsey, who had been con stantly In attendance, said: "Mr. Clemens Is not us strong os he was it this hour yesterday. He has wonderful vitality and he may rally again. " Allien Hlgelow I'aine. .Mark Twain's biographer anil literary exec Itnr. said to a caller. "I do not think jou will have to call often again." Nevertheless Mr. and Mrs. K. K. Loonus. who had come up from New Turk I" give their love in person, left Storm Held. Mr. Clemen's house, without seeing him and only heard of his death just as they were taking the tisln to New York aguln. Mrs. I.oirus was Mr. Clemens' favorite nle. At the death bed were only Mrs CMMImsrh (Clara Oleftieusl, her husliai.il, lir. Hobert Halsey, Dr. Qulnlard, Mr Faine, and the . two trained nurses. Itcgrrt Ik Universal. New York. April 22. Kxprcsslons of regret upon uhe death of Mark Twain, voiced by men of letters, statesmen, si liolars, and business men of prominence from the Atlantic to the Pacific, are publlahed today. Tributes are more numerous than have been offered upon the death of any oilier man of prominence In years. simple Funeral Services. Simple funeral services over the body arm be held In this city tomor row afternoon. The body then will be takm to Klmlra for burial beside those of his wife and children. It Is the wish of the family that the ser vlees 1),. as brief as possible. Dr. Henry Van Dyke of Princeton unlver Itv will preach the funeral sermon at the Brlek Presbyterian church. To Ik- BM at Klmlra. Klmlra. X. Y.. Aorll 22. Mark Twain s body will tlnd a last resting Place In the family plot here, where are also buried his wife, his daugh ters. Susan and Jean, and hit Infant son, langhorne. REIM1IM.S IM IIMC MIIIIAIIY IS TO UK. TWAIN'S MONI'MEXT Hedding, Conn.. April 22. The free public library, which the literary col ony hen in building, will stand as a permant'iit monument to the town's noit distinguished eltisen, Mark Twain The building Is to be known the "Mark Twain Memorial li brary.' (Ine (lf Jlr cicmens' last eta was to draw a cheek for 16000 oward the building fund. Mark Twain died In the room In hirh h, did moat of his writing dur ing the laat three years. Here, prop ped In bed. Wth a volume of smoke ailing frr.m hla cigar or pipe, he s'.nbl ' or dictated his aiitoblogr- I'hy. and other works. A few hours before big death he conversed at some jength. with his literary executor, nvcrc ih a laige amount of unpub lished wrK Hesldes his autoblog raPhy, there are manv short stories, "xl all the odds and ends or a llfe ""'! or literary activity. Umt In Germany. nrlln. April 2!. An extended an L . , " nf M"rlt Twain appeared " today , journals. The I,kal An- -airr an "Not nnb ih. i.-.ii.i. "Vkln people, but th who)l wor,,, grieve that he Is gone.' : ,ntr Zeltung Am Mittag. In '"' eoiumn estimate of Clemen. Am , rw- the opinion that th 01 """"or was loved more In iZTT"' 'nan tne whole body of ... "lch "nd Bngllah humorlats. be ur,r rw" humor tUTn fundamentally tlWa ,,, nr. aA conc8U Tlie Mar In ia, Recalled. Rome of n. r " ' 1 April i The whole ureaa h. a.:;k"L. mu.cn,1w ody th. V nmr Twain, "ontha he spent In Italy "OOKKVKI.T TIMtK luxiaca TO THE AFRICAN JVNOUKH Reea.::!' "--rnrm. r President -" was greatly pained to hi of the death of Mark Twain. Mr. Hooscvelt said: "It is with the sin cere grief I learned of the death of this great American author. His posi tion, like that of Joel Chandler Har ris, was unique, not only in American letters, but in the literature of the world. He was not only n great humorist, but n great philosopher, and hig A-rltlngs form one of the assets In America's contributions to the world of achievement, of which we have a right as a nation to be genuinely proud." In Mr. Roosevelt's library, carried through the African jungles, were two of the author's books, "Huckle berry Finn" and "Tom Sawyer." Mr rtoosevelt ways he read botli with the greatest Interest. A Dweller In Imagination. The mere chronology of Murk Twain's lire Is soon told. Like most dwellers in the Imagination, his sig nificance to poaterltiy lies not. as with men of action. In how he wrought upon events but rather in how events wrought upon him; for from such re actions resulted his imaginative out put one of the most considerable of his time and, as it now seems, one of the securest. Hrlelly, then. Mark Twain was bom Samuel Iamghorne Clemens in Flori da, Mo., on November 30. 143.",. "My parents," he writes, in bis own .Bur lesque Autobiography, "were neither very poor nor conspicuously honeMU . . The earliest ancestor the Twain',! have any record of was a friend of the family by the name of Hlgglns." The county chronicles have it that the elder Clemens failed in business and died, leaving his son the ample world to make his fortune In. CHHOXOI.OfiY H' Ills UKE IS A STOKY QUICKLY TOM) Accordingly, Murk Twain's ac quaintance with literature began in putting words Into type, not ideas into words. Kduoatod only in the public schools, he was apprentl I lo a printer at 13 and worked at his trade in St. Louis, cinclnnal., Philadel phia and New ork until .it IK he could gratify u boyish ambition to become a cub to a Mississippi river pilot, lloth those disparate happen ings reacted profoundly on his later life. Varied and eventful as that life was, It might almost be said that only two tilings happened to Mark Twain he learned the river and he learned 0 Sot type, His knowledge of river life, acquir ed w hen he was a pilot, took form In "Tom Kawyor," "Huckleberry Finn, and "Ufe on the Mississippi." regard Contlr.ued on page two. WHISKEY SEIZED 11 1 WAREHOUSE Thirty Thousand Gallons Taken Yester day by Revenue Officers at Wil liams, in Yadkin County. Itevenue Agent II. II. Sains this morning made the announcement of the seizure of 30.000 galons of whis key yesterday in the warehouse of D. IS. Foster ut Wllllums. Yadkin coun ty, N. C. The reason of the leisure Is said to have been alleged In fgularl tles on the part of those Inning the produ t In charge. The revenue de partment estimates the value of the aelied properly at 121.000 exclusive of the tux of 1 .10 per gallon required to Imb paid by the government. There appcura to be some doubt a to the ownership of the whiskey seiz ed. A Wlnston-Sulem dispatch to this paper is to the effect that the whiskey Is the property of X. Glenn Wllllums. X. Glen Williams' Warehouse. Special to The Oasctte-.News. Winston-Salem, April 22. Revenue officers today seined the warehouse of Olenn 'Williams of Williams, Yad kin county, obtaining about 30.000 trillion of wblskev nnd brandy. It Is one of the largest selaures ever mude In North Carolina. Williams had alvnut ."0,000 gallons of Honor when prohibition went Into effect two years ago, but he has sold 20.000 gallons lnee thnt time. Deputy Marshal llarknider of Churlotte Is having the utoek rciniagcd. The nronertv will he kept under imrd until the Investigation for al lesed Iri.'gularltb s In the number of gallons allowed to a barrel is com pitted. BET INCREASED PHY Thirty-One and a Half Cents per Day Machinists Art Also to Set Mora Wags. v,.iinKton. April 32. An Increase nf 31 and one-half centa per day has been granted by the Bouthern railway to its 1200 carmei. The yearly sum of "Increased wages aggregates II 13,- ifln Negotiations have also been closed by which the company allows in ,ru.. in niv to machinist, substnn llally the une aa the men demanded The 1 Motherhood of Carmen in elude, oar builders, car repairers. tf cleaners and oro .lasses or snoi Woher Swears He Never Saw Girl Whom He's . JJVf (BOX W.-WnLTr.-B. jirr, ( tor W) TRANtt CLATi-TOMG.CLAjrrQM CHARLES h. JTSvrTK H UlLtlAM r - i . . iw i v m Mt s , ASS'T dist.XtttV; moss ExursiTiNa NeverrVrote to Her, Never Put Her Name Down in a Book Cool on Witness Stand. New York, April 22. Cent guid ed by counsel Albert W. Wolter, tak ing the wltncai; stand in his own de fense, told to the intently listening Jury his story of the fateful day on which youthful Itutli Wheeler came to his apartment in quest for work, and was found dead by strangulation and burning. Wolter, betrayed no emotion as he declared coolly that he never wrote to Ruth Wheeler; he had never seen her; he never wrote her name in a mem orandum book. Widter is IK years old. lie said, and came from Cerinuny two veins ago. Wolter bad met Katie Mueller and tiny lived together since December. Kurly on the morning of March 24, Wolter said, he left his room, and bought paint and a brush. After loaliig all day in Central park In: returned home in Hie evening and painted his fireplace. Sometime duttng the hours Wolter said lie sin nt lo the park. Ruth Wheeler mi l In r death in his room. mm BODIES E Twenty-Six Victims of Mulga Mine Ex plosion Have Been Brought to the Surface. Birmingham, April 22. The work of removing the bodies of 43 victims of the Ilulga mine disaster was push- d with vigor today. Twentv-slx odles have been recovered. Inspec tor llillhouse declared that never in Alabama's mining history had such damage been wrought by a mine ex plosion. The exact cause of the ex plosion hss not yet been determined. The llrst body was brought to the urfuce at f.:30 o'clock yesterday af ternoon. All hope has been abandoned of rescuing any one alive since the scc- nd rescuing party which went down at 8:30 In the morning were brought the surface unconscious from the effects of the lire damp, which has penetrated every crack and cranny of the mines since the explosion. At 0 o'clock last night live bodies were recovereu irom tne mine, inree negroes and two whites. One of the while men was Identified as M. Illsh up: the others being burned and man gled beyond recognition. Milliliter 1'luoeil al I". bulletin Issued at midnight from the scene of the mine accident placed the knon dead at live, with 42 min ers still In the workings, all of whom it was practically certain were dead. TatlM-lic Scone. I'athetlc scenes wore witnessed about the mouth or snail iso. i an duv as tin rescuing parC-s were low ered time after tlmo only to be brought hack to the surface uncon scious from the lire damp. The mountain about the mine anil hill across the valley were crowded with spectators unxlous to see the most grin some sight witnessed in Alabama for many years. Close about the ropes which held thne.rond I k stoml mothers, ulsters, daughters, sweethearts, fathers nnd sons of the dead men neiow. i 1 o'clock In the nftornoon It was esti mated that at least 7000 souls crowo , ,l Die hills with all faces turned to ward the one spot of Intense Interest -hi little black hole In the ground which marked the month of shaft No. X, TO KILL ALL FOREIGNERS IS THREATENED IN HUNAN Kankow. China. April The sit uation In Hnnsn province Is reported as critical. Women and children are rleelng for their lives from Chnng-ta-v A number of villages near that olty have been reduced to ashes by native mobs. The country Is placarded with threats to kill all fnrcl.iers. FROM THE MIN Accused of TOM -SVCTV) UN VKUlX CHA.3 K HAT-1B9 :TJVlNCTS IIVIEB. OSJBttf ;r.suTixar .vtjixtam c campbeu; 0Cm vmr. vck; McrrMEitrov. -I ... j IDE SPARTAN II Large Hostelry and Stores Are Burned With an Estimated Loss of $100,000. Special to The iasette-Kews. Spartanburg, S. C April 22. The Spartan Inn, thu largest hostelry In this city, was burned to the ground this morning between S and 7 o'clock. All the stores under the same were razed. The gross loss is mated ut $100.0110. The origin 1 roof sti- the lire Is unknown. The t.ncstsi Escape. Ry Assoc iated i'ress. Spartanburg. April 22. The Spar tan Inn hotel waa totally destroyed by fire this inorutng. When the lire broke out ;) gui :ts were asleep In the building. All were aroused in lime to escape. There were no casualties. Man guests had narrow escapes from death, In some rases almost miracu lous. The Excelsior Paint and Paper company of Auhevtto about .1 month ago opened hranch store In the Spartan Inn building. A message re ceived here from Norman II. Johnson, the manager, announces that practi cally ull the stock, which was brand new and valued at $5000, was de stroyed. No insurance was carried on the stock. THK WKATTIKR. For Asheville and 'vicinity- Fair weal r tonight and Saturday: warm er tonight. For North Carolina Fair, warmer tonight; Hatiirday fair, warmer in east portion: light to modcrntc northeast to southeast bids. Shipper's b 'recast Temperatures continue to moderate, excepting over the extreme w, stern portion of the country, where colder weather Is again noted. Hi Cotton Traders Shocked; Bills of Lading Forged London. Apnl 2 2. A micro shock was experlein ed today In Liverpool cotton market, according to today's shipping Cassette, In the discovery of forged bills of ladkig for cotton, pnr portlng to have len shipped from the United Slates. The Quantity Involved,' is said to be between fifteen and iwen t thousand balea, According to the Uasetle, It is no difficult to asi ertaln which ol the hills of lading are bona tide, and which are frinlnlent. This point will be determined Iln the arr'val of the vessels and the disch.it of their cargoes. The Caiette states thst IS local cotton lirma may lie Involved. No Dills I 'omul Mobile. Ala.. April It. E. J. Iluck. president of the city H nk and Trust company, one of the creditors of the bankrupt firm of Knight. Yancey Murdering LOST LIVES IN A E Nineteen Men, It Is Reported, Are Dead as the Result of an Explosion Near Amsterdam. Slculsmvllli 1 .. April 22. Nlne belicved to be dead ns teen men are the result of a mine explosion in one of the Youngbloghony and Ohio mines .near Amsterdam today. One j body has been recovered. Four men were rescued. UNWRITTEN LAW PLEAD; NULL IS ACQUITTED Jury Deliberated Only Ten Minutes in Case of Dentist Charged With Murder. Kooky Mount, Va.. April 22. After ten minutes deliberation this morn ing, the Jury returned a verdict of not guilty In the case of Dr. J. S. Ca hill. a wealthy dentist, charged with murdering Robert Hmlthers, During the trial counsel for Cahlll used the unwritten law as an argu ment for Juutlflcatlnn of the murder, it being alleged that Smlthors broke up ahill s home Smilhers as shot to death by Cahlll in a pistol duel. '.inpcror In Itecelvo Airship I b'el. Cologne. April 2:. Tile government airship neet startisl for Hamburg to day. The s'piadron consists of three aerial cruisers. The Kmperor will review the Heel at Hamburg l .-CCiC - ---.-Jim.- 5 Co., Is authority for the statement thai the alleged irregular transac tions In connictlon with the llrm were din to forged bills of lading. It is rumored there were forged warehouse receipts In this oily, but the banks that were nolllled two days before the failure was announced had a most sweeping search mnde nnd round none. Thirls I'lniM liiiolird. The discovery of forged bills of lading for cotton purporting to have been shipped from the 1'nlted Btstes involves probably 30 local nrms In the cotton market. A number of con tinental houses are slso affected. Cotton worth $2. 508,00 is said to he Involved In alleged fraudulent deal" The affair affected the market only slightly. M DISASTER ADDITIONAL PLANS Committee Met Last Night and Arrang ed a Number of Reception Details, etc. SOME NOTED LECTURERS TO BE HERE NEXT MONTH riM ceds of Lectures to Help Defray i:pcnsc A List of the Dele gates ami Bishops . The arrangements for earing for the General conference of the South ern Methodist church the lir.st ses- sum i a re ,er held on North Carolina soil going steadily forward and ev ery precaution is lining taken to see that not a ingle comfort for the del j egates is ladling. A meeting of the central committee 01? arrangements was held in the board of trade rooms last night when R. C. Chambers, 8 IP. Ilurton, J. P. Kerr and Dr. O. H. 1 Dctwller were appointed as a central I reception committee with pow er to select as many additional members ns are necessary to meet tho trains, botli I morning, evening and night and see that the delegates are properly dl J reeled. Members of the committee will go to Hot Springs, old Kurt and Hendersonvlllfl ami board the incom ing trains, so as to give nil possible Information to the people before their arrival here. I'shers and Pages. .1. .0 . ' ,IIIIM' 11 Him n. u. 11,111 v,,-io j appointed n committee to employ ! pages to servo during the sessions, ' while I' Stikeleather was selected as chief usher, and 10. L. Hrown, Jr., 11. A. Dunham, M. f.. Ownbey, D. Har ris, J. W. Grimes and A. Nichols were selected us head ushers. These gentlemen will be divided into pairs, eaeii pair having charge of superin tendence ot the corps ol ushers each week of the conference 10 arrange for a trip over the Hilt n,r. islate for the delegates and visitors. K. C. chambers, 1". Stike leather and T. c. Smith, jr., were ap pointed. The ladies or the various Methodist churches ol the city will lender lo the representatives or the various mls- jsionaiy societies and all ladies upon attend. nice upon the conference or I here ns vtsltora A redeplfni al some time during the stay of the confer ence, ill the Manor. H the weather permits, this will be an outdoor af- i lair. .11111 no more piciure.s'iuc npui , , 11 he found anywhere Some Fine Lectures. I In addition to Hie many sermons by idle bishops, and lectures and sermons ! by other prominent men nf the church arrangements have been made to have throe lectures by men of national rep utation, other than members of the conference. Lectures will be dellvred by Snntor (lore of Oklahoma, ex Governor Frank F. Dudley of Indiana ami Dr. Cadman or Brooklyn. The proceeds from these lectures will be ! used to defray a part of the expenses of the conference. The date und sub jects will be announced later. One of the most valuable little ' booklets is a directory of the General conference which has just been issued I by the local Methodists. This booklet I is printed on paper made' from pulp manufactured at the Champion Kibre company's plant at Canton, while it Is bound in stiff white pulp paper, the product of Western North Carolina chestnut trees. Beside containing much valuable conference Informa- Jtlon, the name:; of all the bishnp.s and I names and addresses of the delegates 1 to Ihe conference are given; it Is also a handsome souvenir of the "Iind of j the Sky." containing a de"s riptlon of this country: the early history of the eounl ; the coining of llishop Asburv to this section in 17XK; and the growth of Methodism In this soctlon. Asho vllle's attractions are well set forth by a nice arrangement of half-tone cuts; the booklet Is well worth preserving I'crMinnel of Hie Conference. following me the members of the conference: Bishops: Alpheus W Wilson, Hal- 1 tiniore. Mil Kugeuo It Hendricks. Mo ; Joseph K. Key, Kansas Cit Sherman, Ten ; Oxenr I". KitXRcrahl. Nashville, Tcnn.; Warren A. Candler. Cootlnu'.d on pg three. THREE TRAINMEN KILLED; EIGHT SERIOUSLY INJURED ( 0111 ruction Cri-w'H Car Hun Into b i;prcs Train A Dele-Hie KktA Was the Cause. Terre Halite. Ind.. April 22. Three trainmen were killed and eight prob ably fatally woiiiuhil when a train of empty express cars at! the Cleveland, Cincinnati. Chicago , St. lamls tail load struck a defective switch and smashed the car of an interlocking switch construction crew on a siding al Hanrord, lnd., today. Most of the crew were asleep when the ear was crushed hy the express train. TWO OK THK KSCAPKU OONVHTR STII1I1 l.M DIN'tJ PIKMUKH Tweuti-Ilie fiiiartls and 200 larin it Hunting I bcoi Near IjoavcmvurUi. Leavenworth. Kans.. April tl. Frank ling ware e:.J Theodore Mur dock, two of the six convict who es caped from the federal prison yester day, vers still at large today. Twen-ty-nve guards and 100 farmers are searching for Ce fugitives. FOR CONFERENC CHRISMAN SWOPE'S DEATH Hyde Is Indicted on Charge of Murder ing Him but not Now on Trial for That. THIS TESTIMONY IS TO SHOW HIS "INTENTS AND PURPOSES" Convulsion Suffered by (lirisnian Sim llnr lo That Suffered by the Col onel, Before Death. Kansas City. April 22 Describing her story with vivid Illustrations of the action of her patient. Miss Anna liotilchan, a nurse, today told at the Hyde murder trial of the death of Chrismnn Swope. Dr. Hyde Is in dicted on the charge ot murdering; him. The description of tho convul sion suffered by Chrlsman Swope, fol lowing the administration of a capsule by Hyde, was similar to that which Miss Keller gave the previous day of the attack of Col. Swope, under sim ilar circumstances. Attorney Heed. In his opening statement, had said, among other things: "There Is a druggist in Kansas City named lireckleln whose store was near the ofllce of Or Hyde and at which the physic ian obtained some of the medical supplies. After Col. and Chrlsman Swope had died, and after the rebellion of the nurses and tho out outcry of suspicion this drug Store was burned. How or why we do not know. nor. perhaps will it be ncees sary to investigate, but while it burn ed, the books of account of Breckleln were not burned and these books dis closed that on December 4 and 12. Hyde purchased cyanide of potassium iln oupsuies at the sloru." 1 In closing his address Mr Heed ex plained that Dr. Hyde was being tried only for the murder of Col. Swope. He saifl: "The evidence of ull these other crimes that will be introduced, will be so Introduced, not for the purpose of proving the defendant guilty of other crimes, but for the purpose of show ing the intents and purposes and mo live that controlled him in his con duct to, yard Col. Swope." S Son of First "Real Daughter" Enrolled The Congress Gets into Parlia mentary Tangle. Washington. April 22. Judge Hugh V. Washington of Georgia, a son of Mary Humilton Washington, the llrst "real daughter'' to Join the society, was presented to the nineteenth con tinental congress of the Daughters of the American Revolution today, and In an ebsiuent address paid tribute to the organisation und its achievement. A bust of Judge Washington's moth cr will ho placed In Continental hull in honor of the "real daughter." Parliamentary Tangle. Pactional atrlfc broke out at yes terday afternoon's session. When amendments to the secretary's resolu tion relating to the discipline of offi cers and members and the question of "state's rights" of the state author ities were presented to the congress thu delegates aligned In their respec tive "party" camps found themselves I enmeshed in u parliamentary entan- glcrm nt. Mrs. J. Morgan Smith, vice presl-gent-general of Alabama, was In the chulr nnd after 11 motion defeating one of the articles had been passed Miss Mary Desha of Kentucky claim ed the tloor on u question of personal privilege, she claimed she had been unable to secure recognition whllo In io;(tiiin of the usual purllamentary ptofeeilure another menilier had been permuted to speak twit 11 the (iie- tlon al issue. Hhe dramatically declar ed she w:u ono of tho founders nf the society, and as an accredited delegate demanded the courtesy of the Hoor. "Because I have different opin ions " she began, but hor voice waa drowned hy cries of "out of order," and sin was not aliened to continue. The llrst amendment proposed to lodg hi the congress the power to discipline officers, members and chap ters of the aaclaty. The amendment was tabled by a viva voce vote, hut Inlet- when II was toiiuil thai, accord ing 10 Hie constitution an amendment could be tabled only by a two-lrilril vote, it was switched off the table and a motion then to accept the amendment was overwhelmingly de feated. Another amendment providing Tor tho elections to bo held In their re spective states and territories, instead of by the delegates to the congress after they have reached Washington. us Is now the case, was also defeated. HIGHWAYMEN LIFT $5000 FROM A GAMBLING GAME Park City, Utah. April II. Two highwaymen entered the Oak saloon this morning, lined the 0 occupants up In a back room, tapped the faro bank and roulette game and procur ed nl. DAUGHTER HEAR JUDGE WASHINGTON V men
The Asheville Times (Asheville, N.C.)
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April 22, 1910, edition 1
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