The Bismarck Tribune Newspaper, October 25, 1922, Page 4

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THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE p WEDNESDAY, OCTOBER 25, 1922 pace FOUR ‘THE BISMARCK TRIBUNE Bismarck, N. D., as Second Class || = = == Keak Comments reproduced in’ this Matter. column may or may not express the opinion of The Tribune, They EDITORIAE/ REVIEW intered at the Postoffice, 4 * EORGED.MANN - es - - - Editor || are presented here ir order that i - || our readers inay:have both sides Foreign Representatives || Being Wiiscussed In the press of {Ree G. LOGAN PAYNE COMPANY |] the day. CHICAGO - - - - - -DETROIT ‘ Marquette Bldg. Kresge Bldg. | NEWSPAPERS URGED TO DIS- Aa ee fF CONTINUE MISUSE OF jul TERM “DRUG” | MW . MEMBER OF THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ‘ 2 addresses this appeal to 500 news- | ‘epiblication of all news dispatches credited to it or not other- tthe chely Suppor tein eu Reiner FRG ¢ Adlvichts of republication of special dispatches herein are | illegal use of narcotics, | maceutical business is being in-| = 7 7 SUBSCRIPTION RATES PAYABLE IN ADVANCE eerislied ani. auch ateeaastae ‘Daily by mail, per year (in state outside Bismarck) .... 5.00 connevtion with such stories, i and mineral substances (Established 1873) on of disease. Narcotic drugs The soft coal situation begins to look better for the faimly | Prescribed every day by physicians | 3 3 their legitt “THeimines are turning out about 10,000,000 tons of} use ana ‘Federal Harrison | iand if the mines had the orders. and physicians are extremely care- “country’s production of bituminious (soft) coal totaled | scribing of these important drugs ‘iving up to the letter nad the spirit mined during the corresponding period of last year. They ch as “Drug Peddlers Held } nF 1". FIRST: |dlers,” or “nircotic drug peddlers.” “Gn 1920. “drug,” which covers a legitimate | etomary 30,000,000 tons of soft coal normally carried over |triment of the legitimate portion of| has been turned toward these men ¢ terests in this country are just a9; that bankers who squander funds 4. The hard coal mines so far this year have produced only | the country and have spent consid- | which they belong.— Minot Daily ‘ . * manifestly unfair to stigmatize this -———® ‘The real danger of a soft coal shortage lies in the fact et *o associate any kind of drug: with | «However, with exports low and corporations buying hand- in the drug business. ‘ 1 When, Nancy ‘and Nick found. $hat , Winter without any acute shortage in the average com- newspapers of the country,.in fair-|t° be found i} coal in the future but none too much in the bin. | PAYNE, BURNS AND SMITH c “ e - Fifth Ave. Bldg. (NEW. YORK & The Drug Trade Board of Public Information in its June Bulletin it pee ee & Sa ae 2 t 0 ‘The Associated Press is exclusively entitled to the use or papers in various parts. of the soul for the purpose of of en-/ nvise.credited in this paper and also the local news published | iy'suse of the word “drug” in con-| alerein? > 3 | ion w ° involving the 14198 -Peserv {commonly k “dope.” t uso reserved. fone The legitimate drug and phar-| ‘is EMBER AUDIT BUREAU OF CIRCULATION Sere ney mes eS aEnel| narcotic peddlers and dope fiends y by carrier, per year... sss esse eres sees eee e ees $7.20 vGrug peddlers,” “drug addicts” aity. by mail, per year (in Bismarck)................ 7.20/antl “drug fiends” are used in, Daify~ i tei North Dakota............... 6.00; AS @ matter of fact, the term 2aily-by mail, outside of uae 6.00 |. ae” includes all chemical, veg- | THE STATE’S OLDEST NEWSPAPER j etable 1 ce “hare used in the cfire or miti- | i | congiitute only a very small por-! COAL OUTLOOK ition of the vast mumber of drugs | vith pee ‘ dispensed by pharmacists. | ith an empty coal bin. Narotic drugs ha: imate | ee 7 S pensing on pre-! rags The figure would be 12,000,000 tons if the railroads ringently reg- | ‘wererable to furnish enough gondola and hopper coal cars, ye ae anal yaiiogs om: * * . * ‘state laws. Reputable’ pharmacists x Thezactual shortage in production is not as big as most! people imagine. From the first of the year to Oct. 16, the! ful about the dispensing and pre-, about 290,000,000 tons. | na ‘the records show that they are| e _ Roughly, this was only 24,000,000 tons less than was of these laws, practically to a man, | Wien a newspaper headline ap- Two things are helping counteract this shortage. 2 ¢ 4 I ‘are: ii at is sreally umcent Hi * narcotic ers “do, ed- : Exports of soft coal so far this year compared | See o ee eet ee Or engin with the corresponding period of previous years, are about We believe that you can readily un- ¢7,000,000 tons less than in 1921 and 14,000,090 tons less than | derstand that the use of the word | H - - * . field of activity, in describing some- {, S£COND: The country will enter 1923 without the cus- ing illegitimate, reacts to the de-| had is gone. The finger of shame into the new year as a surplus or reserve in bins. « the industry. jwho violated the trust, that had 1 The drug and pharmaceutical in-j.once been granted them. ‘It is time hyraeci y 3} 7 q Anthracite (hard) coal is bound to be scarce nearly every-| uch opposed to the peddling of| thet belong to other people were }, where this winter. narcotics and dope as anybody in/ relegated to the criminal class in mabout 31,000,000 tons, against 73,400,000 tons in the cor-|¢t#ble time and money in assisting | Néws. P responding period of 1921 lin its eradication. It: is therefore oo f ; I industry by the misuse ofthe word | | ADVENTURE OF }that many who customarily ‘burn hard coal will have to use| “drug.” The public at once ‘begins | | . h soft coal. : THE TWINS -> dope Or narcotics and naturally as- | @——. to-mouth instead of building up big reserve stocks, the out- sociates dope peddlers with people’ By Olive Barton Roberts } look is that the country will be able to pull through the| Inasmuch ag this’entire situation | .c2n be remedied by the proper use| Mother Goose’s broomstick was. dt munity. of the term “drug,” we feel that the’ and’ that’ Humpty 8 §3=r In a rough way, it looks as if America will have enough ¢ = The winter market is developing as ‘a matter of buying in small quantities when needed, same as ‘sugar.and flour. legitimate, time-honored, responsi-! looked at the list Mother Goose hi ble profession, will give eid in this|siven them. war A a matter by advising their reporters | ‘The (next, name. on it was Hey and editofial writers to substitute| Blue. : a the words “narcotics” or ‘narcotic! “Where does he ‘live,” asked Nan- iq The northwest, which is always the danger spot. when aj drugs” for th word “drug” when ey. ‘ coal shortage threatens, so far this season has received by handling stories dealing: with Bar| ieee sor ay penaered Great Lakes route about 8,000,000 tons of soft coal below) ©tes oF “dope. ; | s A d M ni rte in|you'll find him fast asleep, He's normal. It is too late to catch up with this shortage, so the thee mic Ae port at SO cons ay en eae Mra oa rao eRT arr OTe] | chOkiN em with stifling fumes. | SOMEHOW HE JUST CAN’T GET THE THRILL | TA sk manne on Stor: « - - = — mont, forcing him back into the ness to the representatives of a| Dumpty knew ‘nothing about it, they 4 FOLEY’S - ESTABLISHED.1@75 ~* ‘pushed Eve after him, slammed the | pantry door and bolted it. Through the iron bars of the pan- try window, Stormont siw a man, wearing a red bandanna tied under his eyes, run up and untie his horse and fling himself astride under a _ Shower of bullets. As he wheeled the horse and swung him into the clearing toward the foot of Star Pond, his seat and ‘horsemanship were not to be mis- ; ~ | Pantry at pistol-point. Another maa a ‘ taken. = He vas gone, now, the gutep || StopYourCough | stretching into a dead run; an Foley’s Honey and Tar stood Quintana’s men __ still following. the test of time sc! shooting, hallooing in the starlight} thzee generations iyi a pack of leaping shapes from No OpiaterIesrecients printed en wrapper hell. th Mecligin (Spit Quintana had not followed far.|.| 2"#* S4h'sh Wert o? | When he had emptied his automati he halted. Something about the transaction | suddenly checked his fury, stilled | it, summoned his brain into action. | For a full minute he stood un- stirring, every atom of intelligence in terrible concentration. Presently he put his left hand into his pocket, fitted another clip. to his stol, turned on-his heel and walked straight back to the house. Between the two locked in the | pantry not a word had passed. Stor- mont ~still peered out between the! iron bars, striving to catch a glimpse of what was going on. Eve crouched | at the pantry doors, her face in her | hands, listening. Suddenly she heard Quintana’s step in the kitchen. Cautiously she \turned the pantry key from inside. | Stormont heard her, and instantly came to her. At the same moment Quintana unbolted the door from the Then, slowly she turned her head to Stormont. “These are what Quintana came for,” she said. “Could you put them into your pocket?” (Continued in Our Next Issue) Of the great leaders in the World War, Lloyd George was the last to !go, Fini la, guerre. a olitside and tried to open it. | “Come out,” he said coldly, “or it will not go\well with you.when my men return.” “You’ve got what you say is your property,” replied Stormont. “Whst | Our advice to Thanksgiving tur- | | | do‘ you want now?” i keys is, “Call a hunger strike.” Beveridge says he is outspoken. We can’t imagine who did it. “I tell yqu what I want ver’ damn quick Who was he, thees man who| Melancholy days have come, the saddest of the year,.and all of us rides with my property on your horse away? Eh? Because. it. was| are sad because of heavy underwear. | not Nick Salzar! No! Salzar can —_ j not ride thees way. No! Alors?” The head of many a house is less “I can't tell you who he was,” re-|than 10 years old. | plied Stormont. “That’s your affair, eee \ not ours.” You often see) two men calling | “No? Ah! Ver’ well, then. 1 }each other liars and both of them {shall tell you, Senor Flic! He was|tell the truth. ‘ |one of yours. I understan’. It is a | trap, a cheat—what you call a plant! (| Thees man who rode your horse. he f | is disguise! Yes! He also is a gen- idarme! Yes! You think I let a $i gendarme rob me? I got you where |T want you now. You shall write | your gendarme frien’ that he return |to me my property, one day’s time, jor I send him by pareel post two nice, fresh-out right-hands—your In Bristow, Okla. a hotel was dynamited. Rumor says several [hotels steak were badly bent. We! can’t imagine where the ex- kaiser will go for his honeymoon. DORAN COMDANY ©1022 GEORGE R Fall is when hunters remember that rabbits hurt crops. “Now, senorita,” For the third time that day, beau- s ‘gaily, “my. packet, if tiful = ; oe EVA STRAYER faccd death as an/and we leave you to the pousetheases andyoek Owe! “How will men look in the fu- Sinnogent victim in the battle for! your faithful — gendarme—who, , Stormont drew Eve's head close ture?” asks the writer. It all de- | poss n of the gem,| should thank God that he still pos-! ahi aisle Bice UGA f pends on how the women dress, { the:Mlaming Jewel. sesses two good hands to fondle) 5. This jman ie:blood ;madsor out) ot.) — ; t stolen from the refugee you! Alons! Come then! My pac-| his mind! I'd better go out and take) The frost is on the pumpkin and a chance at him before the others ;come back.” =» ft | ereatyinternational thie?, One of the masked men said: (ctsad (thee glelahGok harcherd viet lently, caught him by the arm and fon FANA, and thea stolen from] Take her downstairs aad lock her uintana by up somewhere or she'll shoot (us A 5 oa MIKE: CLINCH, who hoarded it in| fem her window” =e "S| drew him toward the mouth of the Vhis;:digreputable: hunting camp in| ‘ tile -down ‘which — Clinch always bis, ‘ emptied his hootch when the Damp |was raided, the arm. | the Adirondacks as the sole meats of giving his beloved Eve the i ae [mae eee 1s apescon tae th ca own the stairs tramped the men.| which protruded from the ‘cement forcing their prisoners with them. lady,” the jowel In. the “bigs kitchen tha: glare froi'|: oor war cremovable: the fodder’s in the shock and the TESS OF ESTHONIA by the| ket!” corn is in the jug. A little loving now and then is gelished by the best of men. “Lead out that gendarine, too! added Quintana, grasping Eve . by Colds come and colds go‘ and all that we can do is blow. Way down south jn the land of cotton, the crop is good but the now in Eve's poss: Quintan and his 2 st| likely not to know a thing about deficit will have to be shipped by railroads. oe PRR one e Mother Goose’s lost broom.” f Statistically the general coal situation does not look alarm- ing, unless the market is manipulated from the inside or the buyers stampede. \ GEISHA ties to fraud. THEY BETRAYED A TRUST Standing before the bar of jus- ‘tice three Mohall bankers this wee! admitted that they ‘had been par- With a vast array) The Twins thanked him and de- parted. Pretty soon they ‘ock, and sure enough, they saw a air. of fect and snoring. came to a ‘hay- heard someone 3 x with her was STATE TROOPER STORMONT, the} man she loved. In the ‘surrounding forest, Clinch and hig men were man-hunting, savagely intent on kiliing Quintana the burning» out-house fell dimly; the place was full of shadows. “Now,” said Quintana, “I take property and my leave. Where the packet hidden?” She stood for is a moment with In silence she: began to. unscrew it, and he, seeing what she was trying to do, helped her. Together they lifted the heavy tile and laid it on the floor. “You open thecs door!” shouted Quintana in a paroxysm of fury. “1 price is rotten, Grasshopper glands might be a great help to football players. Our objection to seeing woman | “It’s too bad to waken him,” said ‘of government witnesses and eX") Nancy “bit: we: inuste! Vou twiteh The notorious geisha girl system of Japan is destroyed nen A ie ce ; by the Japanese courts. Hereafter it will be unlawful for | pressed determination by the gov. | Ris Rose, Nick. and I'l pull his ear, parents to sell their daughters into geisha girl slavery against | ernment that these cases were to and athere! That's the way! Se) Ww f | Sure enough, Little Boy Blue sat their will. be pushed to the limit, the men! ‘ 7 : Z ; was D' up and rubbed his eyes. The immediate effect of this decision by the judges is to) >roke down. They entered plews | ““upjetto, there!” he said. “Who are | free possibly half a million Japanese girls from bondage. It | % Suilty and accepted sentences t0 yoy, and wath's wrong?” = cs the federal penitentiary. “We're looki fe Moth. shatters a system thousands of years old. Too frequently the people of the OE dO etn aeony other: Democracy is rising on the other side of the Pacific when i r ; the | Goose’s magic broomstick,” explain- United, Statees are inclined to PASS ied Ni “Do you happen’ to know Japan makes a contribution this important to the world-wide jlightl¥ over‘the matter of a bank | anything about it? It's lost!” emancipation of women. looting. It is noted that bank doors | “No,” answered Boy Blue, shak- close, some one is later arrested, ing his head and yawning. “I don't. perhaps he is freed on a technical- Why, where are the cows and the CONTAGIOUS ity, perhapg he is sent to the pent-|sicopeyT-don’t sce them ahywhere.” e In Montreal the telephone girls are instructed to say, | tentiary. Then the, whole thing isang he picked up his horn and blew Thank you!” instead of repeating the number called by the , fovsctten. News stories of these’ a tong, loud blast. phone user. ' things get to be rather routine af-|" The first thing the Twins knew ah a fairs. 5 i gi i Some efficiency expert figured that this would save a} But what does the looting of a te aie manning tare ey us e fraction of a section on each call, the whole totaling a big/bank, such as the one at Mohall,|goodby, saving. joubiol it is charged was drained of |” «There are fine manners for you,” .__More important will be the effect on phone users. Hear-|""rirt gf elt ee the hots eee IG aM ore outta sted <n ing{Thank you!” will make them polite. Courtesy is more tion of a trust—and men, who will ae Bait seMoat ceretybady contagious than smallpox. Try it. | violate a trust are worthy of noth-/ is, jt scems,” she said. “Come on. on [ing but scorn. ins pubes tony We'll never find the broom if we ; places an especial trust in bank} don’t hurry.” , Chicag: oeen F DANGER officials. They are expected to y Ghicago man is kidnaped by strangers who throw'a bur-| guard the funds of depositors more lap bag over his thead and toss him into an auto. This hap-| carefully than money that belongs pens after midnight. He faints. ast eeerees ABanne plike other When he comes to, next morning, he staggers home. Dr. | psiness institutions are built up| Let me have another chance a * * ee Y fe 5 Z ‘| through confidence and when that! , iceberg wulde: Sampolinski, called in, reports that one of the man’s endoe-| cénficence is betrayed - isa me St iathenidt comin sees rine glands had been removed by a skilled surgeon. It is|ter of public concern that there ; : , the‘first case of gland larceny. But it will not be the last. | S8o¥ld be an accounting. Watch out, yor 7 i | It was only a few years ago that i , you curfew defiers, or the medics may get YOU. | the three Mohall bankers were men respected in their own community. ANOTHER CHANCE Give me a chance, that's” all I ask, When my honest resolutions, Seem inclined to hold their own, Can't you drop a word of courage, In a cheerful, friendly. tone. : : BEAUTY | They were prominent business men. . Lorado Taft, Chicago sculptor, laments that the only ob-| Among cther things they possessed | When liberty it meets me, jects of beauty in the aveftage American small town are its) “®s, their own self-respect. Then)‘On the rocky road of time rnc} bs worthless loans were dumped into] It whispers of a future. j ¢ s i" " | . a girls ane its trees. ee [the bank. It wag found easy to) That has naught to do with crime, What more does he want? dump hundreds of dollars of this ! Y No. artist ever produced anything as beautiful as girls paper into the bank and take out| When the odds are all against me, andtrees. Art, at its best, is only a poor counterfeit of na- in fts place the hard earned money: And the goal is just in sight, ! ture. Ask any artist who has ever tried to paint the aurora) wore atl to call eee gals | When you see me struggling upward, alis |Trying hard to win the fight. ° | borealis. F | at twice cr three times its real val- 1 Py i fue, and then flozt all the paper in’ Let me put the past behind me, Pant TURKEYS \the bank, it is not difficult to see, Don’t’ discourage me with cants, i ay ] i who profitted. The notes were! I,am not beyond redemption, Turkeys soon will be drawn on schoolroom blackboards. | wortnless and the money was Let me have another chance NojThanksgiving or Christmas complete without them. _So genuine regret will be felt nationally at the govern- mént report that in 10 years the number of turkeys on Amer- ican farms decreased from 6,595,000 to about 3,627,000. : As the turkey in danger of extinction? Important issue. To children the fate of turkey is more important than the fate of Turkey. Pa instances the guaranty fund will, If you give me another chance, 2 PUNISHMENT . |not operate for the protection of —Harry Smith, Inmate, North _ Teeth should be put in laws making parents responsible depositors, for funds that were so- | Dakota Penitentiary for-wrong conduct of ther children. So urges District At- lcited or that drew over six per “ TD et . . * » cert interest cannot come under ~ Des Moines, Ia.—Edward Gillespie, ee a ‘Br inet addressing the Jewish Big Brother Associa- | ‘he provisions of the statute. negro, was acquitted of the murder 1on of boston. In the meantime the three then of William Johnson, former western As emphasized previously, something eventually wi ve; take their place in “bankers row” and major league baseball pl : evio ly ave; to ‘be done along this line. American youth these days is, ®t cavenworth. The loot that was PRE ' f zs a drained from the bank will never Forward,. speed forward, O Time eee of are) bot Peer The trouble generally is with bring back their reputation. The! in your flight, and give us a man | Pi » NOU WI eir olfspring. | Confidence and respect they once! that Dempsey can fight. eA gone. Hundreds and hundreds of hon- I have, labored long and faithful, est people who had faith in these! Where a pay day never came, ;men are the direct losers. If they; And I think I've seen my finish, | live long enough some of them may’ In an everlasting shame. be repaid through the depositors ey guaranty fund. However, unless’ But reason will turn its scarchlight, ‘the present law is amended it On despair’s dark, grim advance, | Might take a century and in many And I’m sure I'll prove a winner, HAL |SMITH, had e: SALZAR, one of Quinta Hal grass to the kitchen door and slip- ped inside, and his gang, Under the window] drooping head, amid the somber give: ya "Oke isutel Then; by kiss a dog is we like dogs. was shadows, then, slowly, she drew the | BU? P21 Jou both!” iy: Nenu a preety JAMES DARRAGH, who under the] embalzoned morocco case from her! “b\e titted a sereen of wood |,,S¢a7ting fires with care is a good name of breast pocket. theory, but it-takes coal. What followed occurred in the | twinkling of an eye; for, as Quin- ‘through which the tile has been set. | Under it a black hole yawned. It ‘was a tunnel made of three-foot tana extended ‘his arm to grasp the| Yt aice tiles: and it led straight casc, a hand snatched it, a masked | S4UCCgeE MOS: ane Med Strain iticare “sprang through the doorway,| ito Star Pond, two hundred feet | away. and van toward the barn, | / Somebody recognized the hatiand| , Nowsias"she straightened up: and Saleh looked’ silently at Stormont, they Sara heard the trample of boots in the i sara Ne | kitchen, voices, the bang of gun- ; F. si ee “A traitor, by God!” shouted Quin- | Stocks. tana, Even’ before hé: Had: reached ned Clineh's secret, Girls who wear what they choose seldom choose enough. friendship, but whos tent was to restore the gem to the Smith beggared countess. had just killed A year on Mercury is only 88 days long, making Hollowe’en come a fight and now, d every three months. zar’s clothes, ited an oppor- tunity to aid E «| Stormont, CHAPTER | if tlie rag-weed rose, stole across In Maine, a bride of three weeks wants a divorce.. She claims , she had been hugging a delusion. “Nick Sal- yelled. Outside Smith patch, the hat drain lead into the lake t*whispered Stormont. Shesnodded. “Will you follow me, Eve?” She pushed him aside, indicating | that he was to follow her. [As ‘she stripped the hunting jacket from her, a hot color swept ; her face. But she dropped on both \‘knees, crept straight’ into the tile | and slipped out of sight. Chorus girls get $50,000 for brok- en hearts and an Ohio man only got $500 for a broken leg. the door his pistol “flashed. twice, deafening all in the ‘semi-darkness, Your luck may be bad; but in Alabama, a policeman has been shot in the neck—again. EVERETT TRUE BY COND Horseshoe pitching. is returning because it is cheap. All you need | As she disappeared, Quintana]; }shouted:something jin Portugese. | ** *W shoes and a, few, chews, and fired at the lock. : . ane ‘aes Leading a double life gets you ; With the smash of splintering through just twice as quick. | wood in his ears, Stormont slid into | the smooth tunnel. "|| In an instant. he was shooting |), 4. erouch a doy. Mul “Heep good | down a polished toboggan silde, and} ““ af |in another moment was under the! 74. much money makes you un- icy water of Star Pond. Shocked, blinded, fighting his way to the surface, ha felt his spurred | boots dragging at him like a ton of iron, Then to him came her helping _ hand. | “I can make it,” he gasped. | But his clothing and his boots and | ‘the icy water began to tell on him j in mid-lake, | _ Swimming .without effort bedside ‘him, watching his every stroke, presently she sank a little and glided under him and a little ahead, so | that his hands fell upon her shou!- ders. He let them rest, so, aware now that it was no burden’ to such a swimmer. Supple and silent as a swimming otter, the . girl slipped lithely through the chilled water, | | which washed his body to the. nos-! trils and. numbed his legs till he, ‘could scarcely move them. H And now, of a sudden, his feet! touched gravel. He stumbled for-| _ward, a dripping, silvery shape on! the shoal. Then, as he staggered up to her, breathless, where she was standing | on the pebbled shore, he saw her , on ooth hands, cup-shape, and lift | them to her lips. if And out of her mouth poured dia-| mond, sapphire, and emerald in , 2! dazzling stream—and, among them. one great, flashing gem ‘blazing: in’ a the starlight—the Fisting seeele | congestion is broken vp. sete Like a naiad of the lake she stood, | | white, slim, silent, the heaped gems} {TRSOR sore brutscdmarcios, eke glittéring in her snowy hands, her | aches and neuralgia, face framed by the curling masses | of her wet hair, pe happy—if a neighbor has it. Talk is cheap because ‘it"is made out of nothing. big This year we beat England at golf, polo, rowing and rowing if you pro- nounce the fourth one right. West, Virgin’a street car conductor has become a preacher. He is ac- customed to getting nickles. % GET GOOD GRYB IN HERES AND 3 DON'T WANT- (T RUINGD WITH BUM You uick relief, from a cold by. psi Sloan's. By quick- ening circulation of blood the Sloan's Liniment-hills pain! ed 3 mie

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