The San Francisco Call. Newspaper, October 27, 1904, Page 8

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FRANCISCO €ALL, THURSDAY, OCTOBER 27, 1904 THE SAN & i THE SAN FRANCISCOCALL - : - -~ e —_ - ° o 77777 i i § s e - > | g e mein? The new generation hangs another portrait in the gallery of American statesmen. ALLY S P o BY SALLY SHARP. Spaie L AR e tee | & v . e it % e One of the most charming weddings | Miss Payne is m"s‘h“"“l:‘; % Rer T L TR &2, of the season took place yesterday, | beauty um‘\s;xaA.ht‘hmrx“gm;:rn‘x{X t .\Fhwl SEND A SOLID DELEGATION. when Miss Charlotte Moulder and | pheritance, for her s M _—_ Chatlis’ Carter Nidhalls were sairried| "0y 18 “one of society’s hante HE present outlook is that California will give President Roose- | " i : atiibe home of Mre Andrew-d. Mauld-| WO okl It a majority in excess of 50,000, and will send a solid Re-| 7 { ~ er, Clay and Gough streets. The house| g pay)’s Eplscopal Church on Cali- lican delegation to the House. i1 0 { Z had been elaborately prepared for the| go nia street was the seene of a wed- The 1 2 % g S Ribons b n ! § occaslon, the color scheme being Pink,| ging jast everning when Miss Eva Wes- _The two tricts in which San Francisco is in erested were i : 2 with the arrangement of flowers unusu- | 1% 050 OO O e Captain at the begi g of the campaign regarded as debatable ground, but | ; { ,/// ally artistic. Hydrangeas, chrysanthe-| jomeg” 4" Doyle, U. S. N. plighted is believed that they are so no longer. The neglect of the inter-| ,,/,' mums and great ferns were banked “"' her troth to Lieutenant Ira Austin ests of this city by Mr. Livernash and Mr. Wynn is not forgotten ! y the reception-room, where the ceremony | grjyp, Nineteenth Infantry. The i G A g 5 ¢ = was performed. The shades deepened | . ... o prettily decorated with people. Mr. Livernash is talking to the stars and the moon | | 1o the dining-rom - @l cluiidg sna] " ‘l"t “d“fl - m’ B e poe- ttering Utopian reveries about ideal conditions of society to | foliage of autumn hue were lavishly gz,::;:;,nng g P s gowned in v act of Congress, and Mr. Wynn, lacking Fhe imagination | .dlf\trlli\:l:gdA‘ W 2 - | White messaiine sillc and carried llies of Mr. Livernash, is using a sort of chromo of the Livernash picture | | | At 2:30 o'clock the wedding marchi .o, vajey. There were no attend- % 2 « { announced the approach of the bridal | v Willi Reill erformed to advance his own interest: | procession, led by Miss Grace Nicholls, | oo Re." b xz'x‘m ;‘] Y‘[:,;an[ ,"1 One part of Mr. Livernash’s campaign crannot be usedhm replica | Miss Allyce Wilkins, Miss Evelyn Nor- ;‘:!";;‘;n:‘fl;efi:,::’t ey ar- by Mr. Wynn. Mr. Livernash is fruitful of dreams that are to| wood and Miss Edna Hamilton. Follow- | . gz o AR 5577 B - | racks. be concreted by legislation, and of necessity is compelled to avoid | j:::':;:;‘:::_:’;;:;et;:"l‘)‘:“’;:d“f::h’“}:‘;; - P' 1. s IR S == ' 3 thi a i ' Miss Margaret Postlethwaite enter- ment of what he did in Congress, for he did nothing and | | brother, Bayard Moulder, and the ma- | tained at & laree tea yestorday after- hed nothing. Under these circumstances he pub]xshcs; tron of honor, Mrs. J. H. Covode. These | 1501 at her home on Pacific avenue. florid letters written to him hy parties in the East, who represent | jwere met by the groom and his best|rpe two maids who received the es- the socialistic ideas for which he stands, highly commending the | ;";:“" ::’:}’;:;’ :‘?";-“::hg:;:: Rx::;_“ pecial attention of their hostess were length of the speeches he made to the House in advocacy of certain | posellig oo oSl s > Miss Rogers and Miss O'Brien. Many . : o3 fio ke : W | i 5 SORETApO- ENIEN: others were present and those who things in which his distant supporters are interested. We beg to| | The wedding gown of the bride was| i o,k active part in the delightful af- say in behalf of San Francisco that Mr. Livernash’s constituency is| | of chiffon satin, duchesse and point| g,;. were Miss O'Brien, Miss Cecil here and not in the District of Columbia or New Jersey. The in-| e oth 2 yell of tulle. Her sister,| Rogers, Miss Ruth Allen, Miss Eliza- terests he was elected to represent are the commercial and industrial | oot white tha Pbfld“muds e :fxm A“exm )}tlhu ‘Marsar‘e;’ W;F(‘md interests of San Francisco, not the communistic and other re\'o]ution-j !gowned alike in white. About seventy- ni:s]id:;;mMi:’m;::oné‘{m:: ;“: ary schemes of Eastern circles and seancgs of pseudo reformers. | five guests were bldden to the wedding. | yapel Dodge, Miss Alys Chapman and San Francisco is not interested in the mental rainbows of Mr.| zz::‘m‘:h‘;nd“;“d N“h‘;‘ l‘:"d;: "‘é’"’ Miss Jessie Wright. Livernash. When he rises before an audience and exclaims “Ah S 4 st onores Fommssc Shoue odighe ks - 4 3 S | | vode, Miss Gertrude Buckley, Miss| Mrg Mattie Griffith and Major Sam« Sirs,” as the introduction of a rhapsody, the people of this city fil‘,'d Evelyn Norwood, Miss Grace Nicholls, | ye] W. Dunning have set their wed- in what follows nothing that will promote enterprise, care for busi-| | | Miss Laura Hamilton, Miss Edna Ham- | ging day for November 16. The af- ness, furnish employment and pay wages. If they want dreams they | | ‘ivl‘!ron. M:;! Wlllakim.dgufz Wé‘kl:“- fair will be very quiet. The place of can find them elsewhere. Some will choose those in Andrew Jack- | iliam Wood, Bayard Moulder, Robert | ceremony has not been decided upon, « v 2o e N . A | | Porter, James Towne, Wilberforce Wil- | ¢ there are whispers of the Sweden- son Davis’ “Penetralia” in preference to the article furnished by Mr. | liams and Mr. Tucker. After a wedding | porgian church, which is so beautiful Livernash, and others will hunt for those figments (_)f the mind ‘in | | trip through Southern California Mr.|zng romantic for amall weddings. the works of better dreamers than he; but Congress is not a dream | anad Mrs. Nicholls will reside on Wash- .. factory. It is not a place for exploiting those creations of disturbed fngton stiget, Tear. Fretiolo Sveing. Miss Meta Houghtox;] will 1“:;' for digestion or uneasy sleep. It is an exceedingly practical body, in | Captain Nelson of Washington, D. |y i“?optea‘(':n;‘):fnx :me_ :‘::‘ur_n“r‘"_‘::" \x_hichbthol R;presc—x;(tazi\ es of the people do something for their dis-; - e s j (55 lpro;notfr"gt :ht J‘:asn:etle rtesglue: the Orient and her friends are regret- tricts by hard work. | R R iR TTATTIT T | party, is visiting at the home of Mr.| (jng another departure to follow so Ve iR Bt e il “itspens b b ol s et 3 A A g rs. Theodore Hittell. Another | spon. " Miss Houghton is an inteligent . r -4 uest under S charming roo £ T. Vi v in Washington at the last session of Congress to note the occu- | g Lt e Knn ¢ o | traveler and derives advantage as well 5 1 Eanats o i Calif s Every e 1 | 1 g D! as pleasure from her sight-seeing. pation of the Representatives of California. Every morning, long | Indian basketry and dean of the bio- e i before the noon hour for the meeting of the Ho;rse. they would have | | copyRIGHT, 190+, BY SPECIAL ARRANGEMENT OF THE SAN FRANCISCO CALL WITH THE NBEW N ORE MVERING Meaas :logical department at Washington. Mrs. Clarence Martin Mann, al- found Mr. Metcalf of Oakland hard at work in the Committee of S S though not fully recovered, is conva- Ways and Means; Mr. Gillett with his coat off, digging away in the | Committee on the Judiciary; Mr. Needham in the Committee on| Public Lands; Mr. McLachlan busy with naval affairs and rivers nd harbors, and Mr. Daniels in the room of his leading committee, | doing the public business of the people who sent them there, | while Mr. Livernash and Mr. Wynn were not found among the | workers of the House. We know that they may plead that Speaker Cannon did not put them on leading committees. The truth is ihat Speaker Cannon put them on such committees as were se- | lected for them by John Sharp Williams, the Democratic leader of | the House. Cannon placed the Republican members and William Democratic members. If Livernash and Wynn were put on subordinate commit- tees it was becanse Mr. Williams took their measure and placed | them where they seemed to fit. One of the strong reasons for leav- | ing them both at home now is the indifferent estimate put upon | them by the leader of their own side of the House. They had no| strength, no popularity and no standing with the Democrats. If Mr. | Williams had thought Mr. Livernash deserving he could have put| him on the Committee of Ways and Means, giving California two | members of the leading committee of the House. But he did not ! do it. Mr. Williams will be the leader of the minority in the next House, and there is no evidence that his opinion of Livernash and | Wynn will improve any meantime. Then this great commercial city, the American metropolis of the Pacific, with the greatest interest in the commerce of that ocean and the greatest stake in its developmnt, will be left with no voice in any committee that can influence its destiny if it choose to return its two vacancies to the House! The Call cares but little for the partisan aspect of this issue, nor | does that consideration figure influentially with Democrats, for I | ernash and Wynn have nothing in common with real Democracy, and | both repudiated the Democratic party in classifying themselves in | the Congressional Directory. If there were in the House from San Francisco a Democrat of the force, common sense and influence of | Stephen M. White, there would be good sense in keeping him there. | But what a vast distance is between Stephen M. White and Liver- | riash and Wynn! | We cannot think that these two seats are any longer debatable. We believe that Kahn and Hayes are sure of election and that San| Francisco will again go on the map. A the coming election is that of Associate Justice of the State Supreme Court, 2 vacancy left by the expired term of Judge William G. Lorigan. To succeed himself on the Supreme Bench the incumbent is a candidate on the Republican ticket. The office of Justice of the Supreme Court is one entirely di- vorced from politics and partisan issues, more so, even, than those of the Superior judiciary. As such it should be considered by voters. In the selection of a Supreme Court Justice there are no questions of political policy to be subserved, no calls of partisan nature to be heeded ; the office is one apart from the interests and aims of the rest of the elective machinery of State government. It rests with this highest bar of justice in the commonwealth to interpret the constitution, determine the validity of legislative action and sit on | appeals from the lower tribunals, and consequently efficiency is the only test to be applied in the selection of its members. To this gauge Justice Lorigan answers with his record. With many years of experience on the Superior Bench of Santa Clara County behind him, the Judge was appointed by the Governor to fill the place left vacant in the Supreme Court by the death of Jus- tice Jackson Temple in January, 1903. Lorigan has had, therefore, competent experience in the office to which he now stands for elec- tion. The Judge’s opponent in the election, excellent man though he may be, has had no experience in the duties he seeks to assume. The weight of Judge Lorigan’s demonstrated worth, already proven in the discharge of his duties on the Supreme Bench, should serve to elect him by a large majority. the THE SUPREME COURT VACANCY. MONG the ‘offices to be filled by the suffrage of the people at individuals who cultivate the dollar grabbing sense alone.—New York World. The doubtful States seem to be saw- ing wood and saying nothing for pub- lication.—Memphis Commercial-Ap- pesl. What is a Populist, father? A Populist, my son, is 2 man who shoots at the Democrats and votes with the Republicans.—New York World. In Nebraska Mr. Bryan is for more greenbacks as the currency of the country. But when he comes to Mis- souri he joins the Bourbons for strict regularity.—St. Louis Globe-Demo- crat. ¥ They anointed King Peter of Servia | with ofl recently. The wonder is that they @id not sprinkle him with chloride of lime.—Boston Transcript. ™ Out in the State of Kansas they are ol:jecting to the importation of spell- binders. A great State like that is expected to furnish all the necessities that her people need.—New York World. The question “Does housework make women ugly?” is answered by the dally incressing list of men in troublq e a result of kissing pretty servants.— New Tork Herald. 4 The latest cult contemplates the cul- tivation of ail the senses. Of course it cennot interest those narrow minded Kuropatkin has at last assumed the offensive, and has forced Kuroki to re- treat in the first engagement. Perhaps Kurokl is only endeavoring to coax him back into the borders of civiiiza- 'in New | ingor gave her process away to a pack | Woman the Inventor of Condensed Milk It was a woman who invented “con- densed milk,” which, while nobody | wants it who can get the original arti- cle, is nevertheless of great value on journeys, on shipboard and for emer- gencies. It was such an emergency, ays the Springfield Republican, that led to the first condensed milk, for Mrs. Albert Cashingor of New Orleans fifty vears ago had a sick baby and must get expert ‘medical attention if it were to live. That could not be had nearer than New York City, and it was a long sed voyage away. How to keep the lit. tle baby alive through that voyage she did not know. But she had put up many preserves and many jellles in her time, and she began to experiment on milk, and succeeded, and put up a lot of jars of original condensed milk, which fed her child through the voy- age. The fact interested several people York, and finally Mrs. Cash- of sharp fellows, who made fortunes out of condensed milk and never gave her a cent. A Spinster’s Reflections. All the world’'s a stage, and, to hear most men talk, you would think they ‘were stage managers. It’s only the people who have never been married or who are satisfied with their choice who don't believe in di- vorce. Somehow a really intoxicated man | that one can see for nothing hasn't the humor about him that comes with the stage drunk that one can see for so much an opera chair. ‘When some man tells a girl the story of his life it might be described a lit- tle more graphically, if not by a more lady-like term.—Baltimore American. The “Safeguard” Lock. Many a storekeeper has been robbed systematically and extensively by the return to the store after hours of the person to whom was intrusted the key of the establishment. A means of over- coming this has been devised by F. M. Thompson of Danbury, Vt., who has invented a lock which is opened with a key entirely different from the one which locked it. The employe carrying the closing-up key could not return and make his way into the store for the reason that the lock would not respond to his key and should the other party try this trick with His opening-up key he would not be able to close up the establishment after his plundering visit. Any possible complication of this lock may be solved by the employer, who carries the master key, which will operate on the lock at all times. She—Ts there any money in poker? it 1 week I've dreamed that — | ABALLADE OF WONDER 4 = My ma’s been working very hard of late And doing it so sly and quietly That no one knows about it but Aunt Kate. They try to keep it all from me, And when I ask about it properly They look and smile, and ma, she says: “Oh, Lor'! I Qidn’t’ know ‘that you were here to s So T jui 88" st wonder who the things are for. The bureau drawer below the one that's mine Is shut both night and day with lock and key, And when ma opens it that is a sign It's ‘flmd for me to go and climb a ree; For ma and Aunt Kate both agree Just then that I must go on an errand or | Split kindling wood. They never leave me free; So I just wonder who the things are for. | One afternoon I stole a little peep ‘When I found out the place they kept the key, And ma was out and Aunt Kate asleep, And what I saw was a surprise to me. The cutest little clothes all carefully Laid out, too small for me or brother or; They wouldn’t reach half way down to my knee; 8o I just wonder who the things are for. was 1 guess a doll could wear 'em, but you! see I'm much too old for dolls; there’'d be a war If they should try to force one on to me, So fjust wonder who the tiings are ; or. —Cincinnati Commercial Tribune. Elephants Dying From Plague. Human beings are not alone in suf- fering from plague In India. The disease has been bad of late in the Mysore state, where it is reported, writes our Simla correspondent, that one of the palace elephants has suc- cumbed after developing what seem- ed to be typical plague swellings. A Mysore correspondent writes to a Bombay paper that elephants and deer are also dying in the Heggadde- vankot forests of what is believed, lo- cally, to be nothing else than the plague, which has been prevalent among the human inhabitants of some of the villages in the neighborhood.— London Daily Mail. Visited His Own Tombstone. The dead body of a man, which was identified by a lady named Deschamps as that of her husband, was found ly- ing on the high road near Landerneau on August 16 last, says a Paris special in the London Express. The remains were duly interred and a memorial stone was erected over the grave. Recently, to the consternation of his family, M. Deschamps walked into his house in the best of health, and it was discovered that a stranger had been buried by mistake. M. Des- champs afterward visited the monu- ment erected to his memory. : A HOT ONE. Mr. Cutting Hintz—Every night this L I died. ‘Mrs. Cutting Hij guess that ac- -3 Shop Girls of La Belle France Becoming Fencers Parisian shop girls are studying fenc- {ing. ¢ Milliners, seamstresses, flower- makers and artists in feathers and em- broidery congregate two or three times a week in a hall, where they don masks, gloves, etc., and are initiated into the | | mysteries of They pin up thelr skirts to allow free- | fencing by a mistress. dom of motion, and look very business- like as they lunge, thrust and parry. | They say they enjoy the lessons im- mensely. Challenges are already in the | air and there is talk of sending ‘“car- tels” to the chief when he has been in an especially bad humor, and deadly duels with a tyrannical mistress are darkly hinted at. No Lack of Pin Money There In the City of Dreams, as Lassa has been called by the imaginative people, you seldom see an unmarried woman over 20. But then the statistics—or what stands for them—are all in favor of the fair sex, for there is an aver- age of about fifteen men to each wom- an. Hence it is not at all uncommon, says a veracious traveler, to meet a Tibetan woman out walking with a dozen or so of her husbands. Indeed, it was currently reported that one at- tractive matron had no fewer than thirty-three husbands and contemplat- ed an early addition to the collection. ‘With such a liberal allowance of hus- bands there should be no lack of pin- money. One might expect that such a system would lead to domestic diffi- culties, but these apparently are miti- gated by the woman as a rule marry- | ing a whole family at a time. Woman in Japan. In Japan a well-bred woman does not go to the theater until she is old and ugly. It is not thought proper for her to understand music. If she is religious she is termed “flighty.” She spends most of her time at home tending to her children and servants and performing all sorts of menial service for her husband and his family. Southern Moss Udlazd. The sweeping gray moss of the Southern forests is linked with com- merce. It fills mattresses for beds and cushions for buggies. It is use- ful for packing and it is gathered as any other crop is gathered by people who are paid by the day. Moss is ginned as cotton is ginned; the outer cuticle of the fiber is removed and leaves it much like horse hair. It is then good for anything that needs stuffing. In Louisiana, instead of merely a detail of swamp scenery, it is the basis of an industry. A GREAT D CE. He—I was bound and gagged by bandits. < comic opera? She—Were they like the bandits in Miss Pearl Seeley of Los Angeles is visiting Miss Jessie Fillmore. e Miss Maude Payne will make her | debut at a tea to be given by her| | mother, Mrs. J. Eugene Freeman, on | November 9. The home on Broadway | will be the scene of entertainment and | the affair will be brightened by the | presence of many pretty debutantes. lescing rapidly and will give her din- ner some time in November. It was to have been this month, but Miss Mann's illness indefinitely deferred the affair. »iy Mrs. Charles O. Alexander will en- tertain at an informal tea in honor of Miss Brewer, who is a bud of this | season. | —_— Fall Gowns Are Copied From Old French Styles | | — One of the incongruities of to-day's | fashions, if one study {llustrations of | costumes of the periods being copled now, is the wide dissimilarity that one | finds in the feminine figures of the old | day and the new, says the New York B — Recipes in Variety; Give Them a Trial —_— BAKED BANANAS. Peel six bananas and slice length- wise. Sprinkle with a little salt and dredge lightly with flour. Put a few drops of lemon juice on each slice, lay in a baking dish and put in two table- | Sun. )Athletics, mental and physical, ! do not tend to make sylphlike figures. | Hence the costumes worn by the wasp- | waisted beauties of the court of Louis | XVI are plainly unsuited to the girl who has won Juno proportions by out- door good times and indoor gymnas- tice. The tall, well-developed girl, who is In the majority now, is not at her best in outstanding sleeve tops and skirt hems, and her waist is seldom suited to girdles that accentuate the robust development of walst.and hips. Fancy, for instance, a gown shown recently on the sturdy college girl who won fame on the golf links this sum- mer. The gown was copled by a French dressmaker from an old picture in the Louvre in Paris. It depicted all the | airy frivolity of Versailles in its gay- est period. The deep point of the bodice fell over an overdress of rich parchment colored silk, flowered with old world brocade designs which were mingled with tiny wrought silver ones. On the hips, the overdress puffed into decided paniers opening over a petti- coat of {ivory colored net applique, with lace leaves. The chiffon petticoat was buit over a reseda green velvet skirt, which was bordered at the foot by the, leaves of lace. The bertha draping the bodice was of folded silk deeply frilled with the net and lace ornaments. A wee bit of sable glim- mered here and there in the lace folds. Of the same period was a pale pea green taffeta gown with skirt full and plain like that of an old riding habit. Its only ornamentations were sparse applications of velvet flower sprays of the same tone as the silk. The coat was a true Louls XVI of embossed velvet in the pea green tone. The only relief in color were the touches of cloudy old lace and the vest of faintly tinted embroidery. A restaurant gown of the same order was of the softest old rose taffeta mousseline. It was trimmed with nar- | row puffs of chiffon velvet of the same shade manipulated into true lover's knots. Deep ivory toned Mimosa lace fashioned the petticoat front and the bertha. 4 Fall walKing' costumes harmonize uncommonly, well, this season of pie- ture effects, with the dying leaf. Even the short run-around morning frock of mixed cheviot is reminiscent of French court days with its tightly fitting coat, brave with vivid velvet collar or revers and cuffs—a suggestion of the riding dress of the eighteenth century. Pretty house gowns half negligee are the most convenient of frocks for many occasions. They are the acme of com- fort, yet in them one may see a caller or appear at luncheon or even dinner when the family is dining alone. For inexpensive gowns of this order there are the loveliest cashmeres, challis and bargains in silks and thin wools. Plays on the princesse robe are in order for such dresses- Furbishings of velvet and satin ribbons, laces and remnants of silk embroideries abound on mark- down tables. . The Japanese will now have an op- portunity of playing the “luring on” game, though they may not carry it so far as Kuropatkin did. Their forte seems to be in following instead of during.—New York Tribunegy t spoons of water- Bake In a moderate oven. CRANBERRY PIE. Chop one cup of cranberries and add one cup of sugar. Puttwo level table- spoons of cornstarch into a small saucepan, pour on one cup of boiling water and pour over the cranberries, add a pinch of salt and a level table- spoon of butter. OLD FASHIONED OYSTER PIE. Line a plate with paste rolled thin. Fill with oysters, prepared as for scal- loped oysters, put bits of butter, a dust of flour and a speck of pepper over the layers. When the dish is full cover with paste rolled thin and set in & quick oven for about twenty minutes. OYSTERS ON TOAST. Put half a cup of boiling water inte a small saucepan; add a rounding tablespoon of butter, a saltspoon of~ salt, and a dash of red pepper. Mix a rounding teaspoon of flour smooth with a little cold water, turn into the bolling mixture and cook six minutes. Add a pint of drained oysters and cook until their edges curl, then pour on buttered toast. POPOVERS WITH SAUCE. Popovers make a very good quick dessert. Put one cup of milk, two eggs and seven-eighths cup of sifted flour into a bowl and beat a long time with an egg beater, them pour Into hot greased iron popover pans and bake. For the sauce, cream a rounding table- spoon of butter and three-quarters cup of sugar; add a level tablespoon of cornstarch, one-third of a nutmeg srated, or any other flavoring. Add the white of one egg beaten stiff, then pour on two cups of boiling water and simmer flve minutes. APPLE COMPOTE. Make a syrup of four cups of water, one and a half cups of sugar, the juice and grated rind of one lemon. After it has boiled five minutes put in red apples that have been pared, cut in halves and the cores taken out. Took until tender, but not to break. Lift carefully with a skimmer into a glass dish and reduce the syrup by boiling until not over a cup is left in the saucepan. Add a speck of color paste to make it a deep pink tint and pour round the apples. Cool and serve with plain thin cream. Answers to Queries. = PRESENT—Subseriber, City. What a young man should give a lady friend as a birthday présent” depends upon the degree of friendship. Again, a young man who wants to give a lady friend a birthday present.ought to have no difficulty in ascertaining what the lady’s tastes are, and govern himself accordingly. —_——— Townsend's California Glace fruits in ;:mu- fire-etched boxes. 715 Market st. November 1, 1904, will be advanced 10c per 1b. Holiday orders receiv. that date at m’our’xt price. e o —— Special informatica supplied da L business and A e

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