Newspapers / The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.) / March 29, 1912, edition 1 / Page 3
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T i i y ASTER Is a decidedly lm- II portant occatlon la offl- . claldom at our national II capital meaning by offl- I claldom that mora or Imi charmed circle made up of all offlctali, from tbe President down, together with the membera of their famlllea and Includ ing, of course, the foreign dignitaries who reside at our seat of government as Vncle Sam's official guests. It Is not only Easter Sunday that Is an event In the calendar of officialdom, but likewise Easter Mon day (which Is a great day In Wash r log-ton) and the whole Easter week. However, this whole Interval may, In effect, be considered as Easter. ' Prom the standpoint of officialdom . the first significance of Easter Is the - religious one. For, be It known, most, of our officials that Is, our national officials a re very conscientious church goers. Whether tbey are offi cials because tbey are church goers, or wheth er they are church goers because they are. Federal official may be a mooted question, but the fact remains that the average public servant during his Incumbency of office In ' the city on the Potomao Is faithful In attend ance at divine worship. And even the excep tions who an "backsliders'? at other seasons , of the year strain a point to be "among those present" on the Joyous Easter morn. The second significance of Easter In official dom la as a day of family reunions, second .," only to Christmas In the eagerness with which -It Is anticipated. ' The opportunity ,for such reunions arises from the fact that a large pro portion of the children of our public men at- '. tend public or private schools elsewhere than In Washington, even though their parents may ' maintain a home at the capital. Sometimes It Is a matter of sentiment that makes an official desirous of having his children educated In lils old home town, and In the -case of the young men and young women there are the college magnets Vassar and . Wellesley and the rest for the girls, and Tale, Harvard. 'Cor nell and others for the boys. '.-.'. t.; It thus happens that there Is a small army ' of sons and daughters to come home to the habitations of officialdom for the "Easter vaca tion," and uaually tbey bring with them as many school chums as parents can arrange to entertain, for (Washington at ' Easter Is proverbially one of the most fascinating places In America and offers no end of opportunities for good times for young people. During the Taft administration the White House has taken espe cial cognisance of this Easter home-coming cus tom, for the Junior Tafta have been among those exiles who have made the Easter pilgrimage, bringing with them school friends. . Accordingly Mrs. Taft has always made It a point to arrange round of social festivities. Including an Easter week dance for not only the "house party" at the Presidential Mansion, but the whole body of Eas ter reunloners In officialdom. A third significance that attaches to Easter In, officialdom lsjts function as the Inaugural of the spring social season. In 'the old days "the sea son" In Washington, meant from the first day of . January to the beginning of Lent . Then as Uncle 8am became more of a world power and his capital reflected his new Importance there was added each year the "little season" which ex tended from the convening of Congress In Decem ber until the New Year, Latterly there has been yet another development and we have the spring season .(In many respects the most enjoyable of all) which opens on Easter and extends until warm weather sets in. During Lent, social activ ity Is virtually suspended, for even the hostesses ' who are not so devout as to have heed for the religious significance of the forty days welcome ; the Interval as a "rest period." Easter, therefore,' 'finds the leaders of officialdom restored In spirit and ready for a new round of activity. , But, as has been said,' on Easter morning all officialdom goes to church and for the going finds plenty of spectators. Inasmuch as Washington is , always thronged with tourists at Easter, and such ' of them as are disappointed In the effort to gain admission to the crowded churches throng the approaches to view the passing show. . The larg est throngs are usually to be found in the neigh borhood of the Unitarian church, of which Presl- : dent Taft Is a member, although In simple truth It must be admitted that President Taft Is the only attraction here, for not many other public men of prominence happen to worship at the same church as the President But it is the President that the Easter throng wants to see and they block the sidewalks about the church until after his big motor , car has whirled up to the curb ' and the President has disappeared Into the church. After the service tbr Is somewhat of -a repetition of the scene, but the crowd Is not so large, because it la etiquette for the President to : be allowed to make his exit ere the rest of the congregation leave their teat and he Is well on his way to the White House ere most of the peo ple emerge from the church. ; Many spectators who 'are more Interested in observing how officials as a class observe Esster than they are In the personality of the President ... mm-mi i jTf " l ' t shlpers at St. John's, members of the -f 1 President's cabinet, Admiral Dewey vxsf nd ho,t of other celeDlt'e, yci Another excellent vantage point 'f.t m ! 'rom whlcn to see how officialdom ob- , , . 4 serves Easter Is In fte vicinity of the . 'j SSfc. " Church of the Covenant on fashlon- tw!i D Connecticut avenue the main V artery of the Easter parade at the t vlk capital. The Church of the Covenant. I V v(i wnlcn rendered conspicuous by Its ' "Wi massive and lofty tower. Is the church " ' ; : i - I' home of Vice-President Sherman and 1 ,l ; , V 41 his family, but many of their fellow- I ' members are almost as prominent In ' 1 ' I Jfj the affairs of the nation as is the pre- t f ' siding officer of the United States ' 'SlWa 8nate. A short distance away Is St. f . ,: Ls TM Matthew's Roman Catholic church, - - ' t s w ill which Is the great rendezvous of the fS r I diplomats on Easter morning, for, be , .v V ' ' 'Jill It known, most of the members of our ' V ''II official "foreign colony" particularly fk M those from southern Europe and the " ' I South and Central American coun take as tbelr objective old St John's church op posite the White House. This century-old church : is commonly known as the "Court church" or "Church of the Presidents." and it merits the title for, though President Taft is not a member, he occasionally worships there with bis wife, as did . every President from Madison to Lincoln. " It Is almost useless for strangers to hope to gain ad mission to St John's on Easter for the church Is a tiny one and so Inadequate, Indeed, for the ac commodation of those who are ambitious to be long, that the pews when transferred are put up at auction and bring a premium of thousands of dollars each. However, the congregation on1 the outside can watch the arrival of Mrs. Taft and' her daughter, who are - members of the church and' who. If the day be fine, may walk across the park from the White House with their Easter guests. And the onlookers can also see, among the wor- ; Easter in Jerusalem ... The Immense throng of pilgrims of every hue - who crowd the Church of the Holy Sepulchre in Holy Week and who . wander . amid the sacred . . places throughout March and April Is a spectacle unique of Its kind and to be compared only with "the Moslem pilgrimages to Mecca and Medina that - are beyond reach of the ordinary tourist Here, fair-beared Russians trom Moscow herd with yel low Copts from the Nile valley and pale Rouman ians mingle on the banks of Jordan with bushy beaded Abyssinian blacks. . From ' the moment the visitor lands at Jaffa, where the only convenient hotels are kept by Ger mans and situated In the German colony,-h Is' . made to realize the weight of German Influence In Palestine. It dates, in fact, from the. visit of the German emperor, for whom, lest he should fulfill an old prophecy, a special gate was built Into the Holy City. The tradition was that any - ruling monarch who should enter Jerusalem by one of the ordinary gates on horseback would 'stay as Its king. : . : v: .:i:-;:t..,c A month in the Holy Land, with Holy week In Jerusalem, offers no difficulty. On landing at Jaffa, wither, he ii carried In a night from Alexan- - drla or. Port Said, he may proceed by next morn ing's train to Jerusalem. - It Is hot an attractive Journey, but it lasts only three or four hours and . runs through the stony vale In which David slew ' Goliath. In the Golden City Itself, where the Church of the Holy Sepulchre Is the center of at traction, everything lies within easy reach of the hotels; the street of David, with Mount Zlon; the Garden of Gethsemane, the walling place of the Jews beside the walls and the Mosque of Omar, the last a majestic mosque, held of great sanctity throughout Islam, patterned with a splendor of tries are adherents of the Catholic faith. Officialdom does not change its regular routine on Easter, and consequently has Easter dinner In the evening Instead of at noon, as do so many folks In other American communities. The after noon Is devoted to calling and to driving or motor ingalways a great afternoon diversion In Wash logton. Some of the foreigners and other cos mopolitan hostesses In Washington have of late years manifested an Inclination to devote all Sun day afternoons and evenings and Easter In par ticularto regulation social functions such ' as teas, receptions, etc. However, the more devout church members In official circles, beaded by Mrs. Taft, have set their faces resolutely against this attempt to Introduce at Washington anything savoring of the "Continental Sunday." Evening church services on Easter at the cap ital are as well attended as are the corresponding services in other cities, but one sees compara tively few prominent officials at such evening serv ices. Whether It is that they feel that their devo tions of the morning should suffice, or that the late dinner hour 7:30 o'clock at the White House and In most fashionable official homes Interferes, It is difficult to say. Or, perhaps It may be that officialdom considers that It had best early . to bed In preparation for the strenuous program of Easter Monday whlcha Is a not less busy day for the grown-ups of officialdom than, for the thou sands of excited children who roll eggs In the President's big back yard. mosaic and occupying the site of Solomn's tem ple. ''I'-:-.'' . ' ' ' There are two horseback or carriage excursions to be made from Jerusalem, the one to Bethlehem, - the other embracing the Jordan, Jericho and the Dead Sea. The first of these, which takes only an afternoon, lies along a well-laid road past the fields associated with the story of Ruth. ' The Church of the Nativity, which has a very bumble exterior and Is entered by a low doorway that must often have saved it from the attack of ' fanatical Mohammedans, is built over the grotto la t which Jesus was born, and at Eastertide it Is ss crowded as that of the Sepulchre, with the same curious and somewhat ' distressing conflicts be tween Greeks, Armenians and half a dosen other sects, only kept In order by stolid Turkish guards. The excursion to the Dead Sea occupies three days out and back and may be done on horseback or, more expensively and leas comfortably, in a cab. -"I's'lki' , '.','. iV-:';-''' As for Jericho, the ancient City of that name Is still the heap of ruins that Joshua left It though a German archaelogolcal society Is bringing its hid den treasures to light, and the modern town of ' Jericho Is merely a gingerbread little tourist 're sort a mile from the older site and of no Interest whatever. From the London Outlook. Choosing the Lesser. "Here comes a militant suffragette.' Shall we stop and throw down the gage of battle?" ' "An thou lovest me, lead me to a buss saw." NEVER MORE THE SOFT HAT Experience of New York Politician Has Led Him to Pin His Faith to the Derby. "For some time," said Sergeant-at-Arms Harry W. Haines of the state legislature, "I have been wearing a soft hat and scouh-ir? the. habit of clutching It at xli lop to tip when r t:rg a lady I h ; bJ to know." "Weil .remarked As -t.b!yman Frank L. Young of Osslning, "I guess we ell have to do that" .-j "Ever wear a soft hatf ' ? . i. "Not I, especially those fuxxy.'brUtr ly t' : i that look as If tbey needed a slmve and a hair-cut." r "Weil, '"i I've mSnsed a new sen sation. Try v :' a soft hat of any kind for a ! p .1 suddenly change It for a ; mtor down any street y rt t t ! l."et a lady of your acquaintance and you'll grab the top of your hard-ebeL hat from sheer force of habit Of course, you will lose your hold and experience a shock. Suddenly you will shift your hand to the brim and give the bat the approved tilt, only to discover that It la too late, for. the lady has passed without noticing your recognition of her bow and smile, or, worse yet, she Is laughing quietly at your awkward work. Me for hard hata A man In public life can't afford to take any chances, especially as ladles are about the most ; influential ' constituents ' a sometimes candidate' for re-election can have on his list of friends." New York Press. 'J ',. ' a Coats snd Muffs for Beauty. Lady Ashburton, the former New Tork beauty, caused five thousand moles to be trapped on her EngllsD estate and tbelr skins made Into coats and muffs for her three American sis ters. The coats contain eight hundred skins each and the muffs each be tween eighty and ninety skina. MnMnoNAL SlIIMSaiOOL s . Lesson Qr K. O. SELLERS. Tlrx-tor of Kvn Ins Department, Tlie Moody Bible In- atltut of Chicago.) LESSON FOR MARCH 31. REVIEW LESSON FIRST QUARTER. Suggestions for Busy Teachers. A good way In wblcb to present a review of the lessons for the first quarter of tbe year 1912 would be to select the best person possible to act as leader and then to have - either twelve classes, or that many selected groups (Individuals may be utilised) and have each present the , mala thought of each of te twelve lessons somewhat as follows: : Let tbe leader make a statement of the purpose be ing followed In this year's work, vis. a presentation of the life of Christ calling attention to the golden text for the day: , "And the people that sat In darkness saw a great light and to tbem that sat In tha region and shadow of death, to them did light spring up." Matt. 4:1. Take the first lesson let some el derly man spea? for the character of Zacharlas the priest let blm tell of the faithful discharge jf bis temple duties and while thus occupied of meeting the angel Cabriel v.lth his startling message which was a chal lenge to Zacharlas' faith. Then for the second lesson let some mother tell of the Incidents of the bltth of John the Baptist, of the rejoicing of friends and neighbors and the hymn of Zach arias who received his speech as soon as he had testified to God's will and showed his belief. As for lesson three, let some child briefly state the facts only, or the birth of Jesus, 1. e., read Luke 2:8-15, and this to be followed by some musle suggestive of tbe angelic hosts. In lesson four we revert to the emple service again at the dedication of Jesus. It would be very appropri ate to have the superintendent of the Cradle. Roll at this Juncture to go through the service of receiving baby for tbe Crade Roll such as Is fre quently performed, keeping In mind tbe main fact of tbe lesson. Now let three men enter the room, dressed In costume if desired, and re cite either tbe necessary scripture verses or some poetry that will con vey to all- the Idea of tbe visit of the wise men to Jerusalem In search of the child Jesus and that they found him not In Herod's palace, but In low ly Bethlehem and there presented their gifts and worshiped him. For the sixth lesson, let a twelve-year-old boy having a good presence and strong speaking voice recite Luke 2:41-60. Avoid Involved Questions. Let the pastor of the church or some other clergyman tell of the prophecy of Isaiah and of John's fulfilling the same as he preached out In the coun try warning the people to avoid the wrath of God and to show by their righteous living the fruit of the lives that had repented of their evil ways. Emphasize, however, that John's great est work (and our's as well) was to point men to Jesus the Lamb of the world. '.-., " ' w In a review such as we are now con ducting we must avoid the Involved questions and only present the great facts of the baptism of Jesus; the wit ness of John, tbe presence of the Holy Spirit and God's audible approval of those silent years in Nazareth. Tbla is .the eighth lesson. The ninth lesson has to do with tbe call of the first disciples. For this Ave boys might be selected. Let the leader recite Mark. 1:14, IS, "Andrew" verses 17 and 18. Now let "James" take verse 19 then one (Simon Peter) recite verse 16 and "John his brother" verse 20. The leader can recite verses 21 to 26 and all together verses 27 and 28. : - - - A physician would be an appropriate person to present lesson ten. Let him sketch the picture briefly of "all the city" gathered about Peter's door at the end of the day, the sick fclng healed; of Jesus getting up early the next day to "go apart and pray," bow he proceeded on bis Journey and min istry of healing and teaching. How he met the leper who, after being healed Is commanded to thank God through the channels of worship, tes timony, and of service. Emphasize, He went about doing good." Some busy business man ought to depict the story of "Jesus teaching In Capernaum," lesson eleven, the great throng In and about tbe house, the anxiety of the friends, their earn estness as shown by their tearing up tbe roof of the house. How , Jesus made answer to "their faith" and of his command to the paralytic to take up his bed and walk thereby showing the completeness of the cure and that there was to be no relapse. - ' Emphasize team play and Illustrate by a modern miracle if there be suffi cient time. ; Jesus the dally friend and his interest In home life Is the heart of the twelfth lesson. Show how he was constantly teaching on the road. by the sea, la synagogue, etc., etc, also in the home, yes even at meals. Limit this lesson to Mark 1:13-17, tell whose house It was and what should be our attitude towards (hose not of our own social circle or standing. . Must Drill Carefully.. Of course care must be taken not to let any one lesson consume too much time else the whole will be much too long. ' This means careful drill and presentation before review Sunday. t a written review is desired so frame the questions that the least f flclent scholar may have an answer. L e. let your question suggest the answer as far as possible! The suc cess of a written review will depend upon the previous work of the teach ers. . If this suggested program is In terspersed with singing, avoid singing all the verses and unnecessary Instru mental preludes and Interludes. At rice let the leader drill tbe school ..w!ve subjects. : j COLDS AND CHILLS BRING KIDNEY-ILLS, Colds, chills and grip strain the kidneys and stait backache, urinary llsorders and urto acid troubles. Doan's Kidney Pills are very useful In the raw spring months. They stop backache and urinary disorders, keep the kidneys well and pre vent colds from set tling on the kidneys. Mrs. E. Bates, 86 Jay St, Poughkeepsle, N. Y ssys: "A cold started my kidney trouble and for five long weeks I was afraid to lie down on account of the terrible pain in my back. I took the doctor's medicine regularly but became no better. Then I began with Doan's Kidney Pills and was entirely cured. I have had no trouble with my kidneys since." "When Tour Back la Lame, Remember the Name DOAN'S," 50c, all stores. Foster-MUburn Co, Buffalo, N. Y. ' AT POKER. 'urn lk HCIWf I A Horan Is O'Brien a good bluffer? Doran No; whenever be gets a sphade he spits on his hands. Boy Had Noticed Things. The dear little office-boy bad been detected In a lie. It was .not one of the ordinary prevarications of the everyday world, and, moreover, to make the crime more grievous, be had persisted In adhering to bis original mendacious statement. "Do you know, my lad." asked a grizzled clerk, in a kindly fashion, "what becomes of young lads who trifle with the truth T" "Aye," was the assured reply; "the boss often sends them out as travel ers when they grow up!" PAR BRTTER THAN ttCIWIB. Kllxlr Bakwk cures malaria where quinine fails, and It can be taken with impunity by old and young. ''Having- suffered from Malarious Fe ver for several months, srettinir no re lief from quinine and being completely nroKen down in neaitn, -Kimr HaneK' effected a permanent cure." W. F. Marr. Kltxlr Babk. 50 cents, all drua-aMets, or Klocsewskl ft Co.. Washington, D. C Perpetual Worth. ''Why was . It you never married again, Aunt Sallie?" inquired Mrs McClane of an old colored woman, la West Virginia. " 'Deed, Miss Elite," replied the old woman earnestly, "dat dald nigger's wuth moah to me dan a live one. 1 gits a pension." Lipplncott's. ImDortant to Mothers Examine carefully every bottle of C ASTORIA, a safe and sure remedy for infants and children, and see that It Signature of CzLwtffl&fife In Use For Over 30 Years. Children Cry for Fletcher's Caatoria Also With Gloves. Assistant Editor Here's a farmer writes to us asking how to treat sick bees. Editor Tell blm he'd better treat them with respect A Household Remedy Which works from outside. Chestol (Chest Ointment). Will relieve quickly croup, coughs, colds, pneumonia and all affections of chest and throat. 25c. everywhere. The Result. Mrs. Howard Did you give Johnny an unbreakable toy? - Mrs. Barker Yes, but tbe trouble Is that he has broken everything else with It Harper's Bazar. NICE, BUT NOT IN HIS LINE Exhibition of "Mantles" Most Pleas urable, Only Toung Man Had Oth- , , er Businsi ta Attend To. "I've come to see about tbe mantles miss." 1 J, yes, I'm g'ad you have come so soon: will you step Into the drawing room?" . , . Ihe young man stepped; he was pleased with his pleasant reception.. After a while madame In and said: "How do?' So sorry to trouble him, but would be mind If they tried the mantles on? Her daughter's was a trills too full, and her own a trifle too long, she thought. Perhaps be would be good enough to see. Tbe young man said be would be only too delighted. " The two elegant mantles In the lat est style whlqb were lying across the bsck of the sofa were then donned, and tbe young man said be tbougbt they looked charming. Yes, perhaps a little alteration was required, but If they would excuse blm be would be glad If tbey would let him get on with his work and show him tbe gas-burners that were requiring fresh mantles. Why! Wasn't be from Jlgglns rt-n-i..a . O, no) He was the young man that attended to tbe mantles from the gas company! Rehoboth Sunday Herald. ' : Financial Cripples." They were taking the visitor from up-state around Manhattan, showing him tbe sights. The big automobile rolled past many wonderful buildings, all of which the host pointed out with some feelings of civic pride. At last they chanced to pdss by the Municipal Lodging house. x ' ' . "What's that place?" asked the ru ral visitor. f . "Oh, that's one of New York's home for cripples," was the reply. "What kind of cripples?" was asked. "Financial," was the reply, as the car sped on. New York Herald. ,f V" n Use Allen' Foot-Ease " Tha antisentic Dowder to be shaken Into the shoes or tired, tenner, smarting aen ing, swollen feet. It makes your feet feel easy and makes walking a Delight. Sold everywhere, 26c. For free trial package, address Allen fc. Olmsted, Le Roy, N. X. Gossip. Polly Miss Yellowleaf says she al ways tries to get ber beauty sleep. Dolly Well, all I can say Is she must suffer frightfully from insomnia. Woman's Home Companion. Instead of liquid antiseptics, tablets and peroxide, for toilet and medicinal uses, many people ' prefer Paxtlne, which is cheaper and better. At drug gists, 25c a box or sent postpaid on re ceipt of price by The Paxton Toilet Co., Boston, Mass. He 8hut the Shutter. "Willie, didn't I tell you to shut that shutter?" said Mrs. Boggs. ' "The shutter's shut,' replied Willie, and I can't shut It any shutter." TO DRIVX OFT M AVAKI A AKU OUILV Ur THE SltlTKl CHILL TONIC too know wbat yon are taklox. Toe formula Is plainly prlnuta on erery butue, snowing l Is simply Uwiaine and Iron In a tasteless form, snd tbe aiost effectual furs, for alowa fsopla and aaildran, M seats. All of That "Who Is Nat Goodwin?" He's the center of the All-America marriage team." . Dr. Pierce's Pleasant Pell eta nwiilata and invigorate stomach, liver and bowels. Sugar-coated, tiny granules. Easy to take a candy. It doesn't renulra mm-h (nvatiHv genius for a man to make a fool of himself. , , - There is BO excuse for the dvsnentlo. with Garuald Tea aooeuibl at (very drug-store. Poverty does not destroy virtue, nor dose wealth bestow it Yr'arte. CRITICAL TIME OFWOfslAN'SLlFE From 40 to 50 Yean of Age. How It May Be Passed ' in Safety; Odd, Va.: "I am enjoying- better health than I have for 20 years, and I believe I can safely say now that I am a well woman. I waa reared on a farm and had all kindsof heavy work to do which caused the troubles that came on me la ter. For 'five years iiiirlnotia fthana-A a? Life I was not able to lift a pall of wa ter. I bad hemor rhages which would last for weeks and I was not able to sit up In bed. I suffered a great deal with my back and was so nervous I could scarcely sleep at night, and I did not do any housework for three years. "' : . "Now I cm do aa much work as anv wnman tit mv aire in the ennntv' thanks to the benefit I have received from Lydia E. Pinkharo's Vegetable Compound. I recommend your remedies to all suffering-women. "Mrs. MARTHA L. Hollow ay. Odd, Va. Mo other medicine for woman's His has received such wide-spread and unquali fied endorsement We know of no other medicine which nas such a record of success as has Lydia E. Pinkham'a Vegetable Compound. For more than 80 years it baa been the standard remedy tor woman 'a ills. . Tf yon have the slightest doubt that Lydia E. Pfnkham's Vegeta ble Compound will help you, write to Lydia JB.PInkham Medicine Co. (confidential) Lynn, Mass for ad vice. . Your letter will be opened, read and answered by a woman and held In strict confidence. Relieves Backache Instantly Sloan's Liniment is a great . remedy for backache. It penetrates and relieves : the pain instantly no rub bing necessary just lay it on lightly. Here's Proof. "I hd my bsck hurt in tin Bosr War and in Ssa Francisco two yens ago I was Mt by a street car In tbs asms placs. I tried sll kinds ol oops without suc cess. Tero wesks ago I saw your lml aaent in a drug stein and got a bottle to try. Tbs fiistapplicstioncsaiedinsunt relief, and now except for a littls suff aess, I am almost well - FLETCHER NORM AH, Waittisr.CaUt SIMM'S ' is the best remedy for , rheumatism, v neuralgia, sore throat and sprains. ' ' Mttt E. ftist of Brooklyn, N Y, writes : "Sloan's Liniment Is the best for rheumatism. I hay used sis bo-, ties ot It and. It Is grand-" - ' Sold by all Dealers. Price, iUfc, SOcand $1.00. ,. f Slose', 1 book I Jf e-n l j ; ) . " 1 Autli Km v Marts r - 1 ' I -.'
The News-Record (Marshall, N.C.)
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March 29, 1912, edition 1
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