The Seattle Star Newspaper, June 1, 1923, Page 6

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PAGE 6 EONCERT HALL + 1S FUND. PLAN omen Will Put Seattle on the Musical Map A great phestra forium, asic ba tates, w oped by Foun ted v4 Bmen are su The ned to ¢ nt of the mt in ever ut civic A program, unique wm has been evolved whereby $50.0 And 50,000 we of the fu ne 10. LINE PLANS TO ST NEW MEMBERS The pian decic Mrs, Pagar the fou ome mem ation by <4 upon, according i get 50 friends eac A @ach year {or the thousand wome to get five of the same. The AM secure wor Tesulting 25,000 ind each, with the result th bership of 50,000 will have bt iInéd and a fund of $50,000 cre | DThis money will be used In ettling| Gebts of the Cornish school and Tcorporating it into a ¢ aft and music developr » according to Mrs. Ames, OWS LACK OF | TURAL DEVELOPMENT iyor Edwin J. Brown and Pro-! or Clarke Bissett, of the Univer ©f Washington, emphasized the | that a city is known by its cul-/ development and pointed out} it the children of Seattle were be- P@enied cultural and artistic edu simply because the clty has ® facilities to care for them. Oth- gyeakers wete Mrs. A. S. Kerry. mt; W. A. Irwin, Mrs. M. A Bttstein and Mrs. Ames. five FOUR ARE HURT IN 40 CRASHES R. Hampson Jailed After - Striking Down Gir! men and two Women were in-| Bnd one man was jafled as a @river Thursday as the re- Of more than 49 auto acciden R. Hampson, 7344 12th ave he had struck Mrs. Helen $732 15th ave. N. W.,at Wesat- Save. and Highland drive, ad. to the police that he had been Previous to the accident, to the traffic bureau and d with reckless driving. Teleased on $25 bail. Young was severely bruised Was taken to her home. Sarah Moore, 18, of 1308 pwell st., was knocked down and Over at Eighth ave. and Howell ‘by an auto driven by Fred 8. fown, of Lake Forest Park. she brought to the city hospital, hurt. E. Joiner, 147 22nd ave. N., Aman, was getting off his street at Broadway and Pine st. Thurs- Right, when an unknown auto struck him and ran over his “The autoist had previously col- With another auto and was so he drove away without giv- his name, according to the police. As Bert Johnson, 1620 Belmont alighted from a street car at st. and Belmont ave. he was down by Motorcycle Patrolman Belles and thrown violently to pavement. Jotinson received a ble fractute of the wrist. Belles ig a speeder when the acces ppened. ay Is Mrs. Brown at home? #t—She is, but she isn’t In a fate to wee anybody—she's just ‘Bivin® me notice.—Boston Tran- 54 RS. V. P. Ve have invited ourselves to be ng present at wedding. Aside from the ct that we are particularly fond f Mendelsohn’s Wedding March hd Wagner's Bridal Chorus, we accept every invitation be we want to send a bit of mem: advice as a present However much you may so now, you can't live on Back from the Honey- and in your own home will find that to be suc- ful, well and happy, mere must have three square a day. Many a divorce has been traced to the frying- in—to the quarrel that Inde estion starts. In your first _ orc ‘om your grocer, get a pound of NUCOA, E HEALTHFUL SPREAD OR BREAD. It is the ut- ost in good taste, yet offers saving in cost that will MW you many extra table delicacies you could not afford your incomeis limited. And ‘Nucoa is so easily digested | thereisn’t a chance of amorn- ig grouch, however gener- ly you may use it. Yours for an, Everlastingly g honeymoon, x 1 GLARA EXPECTS TO GLEAR SELF Says Authorities Should Give Her a Chance LIM f her} Hon an off ad und played the ext ow when I get I find my which I » my own country they ng to take away only ba: came and I DOCUMENT VANITY CAS | In her van mpor Clara carried in writing,” impres I waived would come I played level with all my Now they want extr back and face the music on the on the © game y today the train passed ru Ariz, where the Woman” was first arrested, She called the circumstances with a bit ter smile. “I could have escaped then, if I had wanted to," she said. “But| what was the use? I had nothing fear from going to Low Angeles, I have nothing to fear now, I could have escaped at Tegucigalpa, too. But I didn't want to. I wanted to come back to my own country and exonerate myself. I hated Honduras. But now it} seems I am to be denied a chance by my own peopie to face my ac again and prove my inno to back TRAIN CONDUCTOR SES HER AGAIN By coincidence H. W. McBreen, Pullman conductor of Los Angeles, who identified her on his train when} she was fleeing to the border after) the murder of Mrs. Alberta Mead. ows, is in charge of the train that rning her from her long-| er and more spectacular flight, He visited her in her compartment to- day and reminded her how she had denied her identity until the sheriff at Tuscon boarded the train and placed her under arrest. Mrs, Phil- lips received him coldiy. At El Paso police officials boarded the train and identified Cla the woman they had seen im Juarez,} | Mexico, last February. It was the| | belief of officials that she came }from Mexico City to the border on some mysterious mission after her flight from Los Angeles. Clara denied she was ever near the bor- der after she sailed with Jesse Car- son from New Orleans January 19. Mrs. Phillips is closely guarded. She and her sister, Etta Mae Jack- son, Occupy the middle of three com- Partments with connecting doors. The officers in adjoining rooms maintain a steadfast watch, Both womén take particular pains with thelr personal appearance. Clara wi a brown silk dress with a blue net neatly coiffed over her hair, Etta Mae wears a black trav- eling frock. Both use rouge freely and blacken their eyebrows and cye- lashes. iy now r CHARGES LAND HELD FCR JAP Prosecutor Starts Suit in Alien Land Law Violation Suit to confiscate 60 acres of land near Christopher were filed by Dep- uty Prosecutor Ewing D. Colvin Thursday. The land ts held {n the name of Pierce Lonergan, Seattle itorney, and 8, Osawa, a Japanese, n violation of the state antl.alien law, Colvin charges, * | According to Colvin, the land tn et belongs to Mr. and Mrs. Chuski Kosai, who are farming the prop- erty, both of whom are subjects of Japan. Lonergan declares that the land being held in trust for Frank Kowal, the minor son of the two Japanese, who was bern in the Unit- ed States and will become a cltizen en he reaches the age of 21, Deputy Prosecutor Colvin alleges hat the part played in the affair uy Frank, the son, is a subterfuge. The land was deeded to Lonergan ind Osawa shortly before the allen snd law went into effect. If the suit Ja successful, the land, vatd to be worth avproximately $20,- 600, will revert to the «chool fund. fa VETS GATHER .AT ABERDEEN | ABERDE June 1—Veterans ot foreign wars from 19 posts in Washington gathered here today at the opening of the Gepartment’s third annual encampment. Business sessions will be held today and to. morrow, with Sunday given over to pleasures, with an extensive amuse- ment program arranged. Sessions are being held in the state armory, with Department Com. mander Arthur F. Mullins, Tacoma, presiding, 'Morris Brothers * : to Quit Business PORTLAND, Ore, June 1.~The firm of Morris Brothers, Ine., promt. nent local investment brokers, is clowed here today following decision of the company to liquidate {tw debts and quit business, |have prevented |tended to stimulate the development | Assets are estimated at trom $150,- 000 to $200,000, Officiain of the company claimed that local opposition was instru mental in thelp failure to secure wut. HERE'S MORE ABOUT LAWMAKERS TARTS ON PAGE 1 the ald of tion to of th company car Sno-} Lumber men expect « sympa maintain of the LOGGERS TO ENTERTAIN } VISITING DELEGATES of the iT Northwest woods ha obt visitt and their ab ne 4 to thri rn eve | 1 h we some gore of the ined amen are « and da was served at the camp the in the scento| h Seattle is the day spent 1 to whi ferla | | j | CAMP LEWIS | Congress will keep faith with the Washington, who taxed o8 $2,000,000 to present the government 70,000 acres comprising Members od the ite for gateway with Camp of the party Lewls jay as uld be the | »pment program main. | a permanent divistona’ ur w veterans’ hospital, now le partly uestion of what intends to do at with Camp Franels E. uirman of commit Warren declared Ser of Wyomir ate appropriations Friday morning > he assured Col. J tee. D. Lelteh staff, at Camp Lewis uld expect placement the ne the cantonment proper consideration I can mise nothing definite, he sald fact, I make a point of ing leas than I intend to do, in order that there will be no poasl- | bility of a broken pledge on my part, and so that when the promise does materialize, it brings a pleas. ant surprise thru greater fulfillment than I bad promised.” Representative Harry Wurabach, & member of the house military af- fairs committee, sald he favored Camp Lewis as the big mobilization base of the Pacific coast Thursday evening the congres- sional party returned (to Seattle after a day spent in Tacoma and at Camp Lewis, At a dinner in the} Arctic club they Mstened closely at-| tentive for three hours while they | were told in frank manner what} ails Alaska and what should be done to correct it | Federal officials in Aloaka “strut a the territory like little lords marching thru a@ conquered prov Ince,” declared Falcon Jostin, firat | president of the Arctic club and one | of those who mushed over the frozen trails of the Yukon in the days when men’s blood burned with the gold fever. Self-government was his plea, in- stead of the present system of oper- ating Alaska aa tho it was.a sub- ject territory to levy tribute to an alien government. ‘The czar might just as weil be aul! ruling Alaska by imperial ukake, sich is the action of the 25 bureaus having to do with (tu udministration, Joslin said, adding} that they change laws at will to! satisfy their personal ideas and the administration | of the territory under the laws tn-| from } pro! of territories. WEST'S PROBLEMS NATION'S BUSINESS Alaska needs men and tuoney, but ft can not gét one without the other, and it will get neither as long as the bureaus hold their autocratic sway, said Clyde L. Morris and Charles D. Garfield, both Alaskans. Senator Wesley L. Jones planned to accompany the party to Snoqual- mie, He said Friday morning that the great problems of the West were those of the natio# and that he be- Heved congressmen wero realizing this, Irrigation, forestry and conserva- tion he gave as the three big prob- lems. Says Suit hind Klan Is Worthless WASHINGTON, June 1—The re- celvership suit filed against the Ku Klux Klan “doesn't amount to a hill of beans,” H. W. Evans, imp--al wizard, said here today. Evans said he had never heard of David M. Rittenhouse, of Philadel- phia, in whose name the sult was brought yesterday in Atlanta and to whom a temporary restraining order against the officers of the Klan was granted. “This suit ja just a yell for the losers,” Evans aaid. “Wo have things like this all the time. They cannot prevent our use of klan funds. We are not worried about it, Our affairs will go on as usual.” Evans and W. D. Simmons, em- peror of the invisible empire, are here to attend o meeting of the imperial kloneilium of the klan. Both denied reporta that headquar- ters of the klan would be moved to Washington, Prunes Cave In, Break Man’s Arm ROSEBURG, Ore, June 1.~ Charles Caldwell may have liked prunes at one time, but he’s not so fond of them today. Caldwell‘ recovering from & broken arm and a fractured clavicle, sustained when he was buried be. neath a pile of tho frult so vivid in the memory of every ex-service man, While shoveling prunes out of a large bin in @ local packing house, the top of the pile caved in on Caldwell, completely burying him, and inflicting the above-mentioned injuries, —_—_——— $$. ficlent business to operate at a profit. The firm failed a few years ago, but was later reorganized, and hag since made a hard struggle for exiut- ence, it is claimed, Three-fourths of the United States nickel 1s copper and the rest is nickel, OTTAWA, Ont,, June 1—Pulp and paper Industry of Canada is operat. ing 100 mills, | ernment THE ATT LE STAR HARDING WANTS Mrs. Stillman Willing NEW ARMS MEET craft of World Powers BY LAWRENCE MARTIN ted Pres June 1 dent nd onferenc limitat with dim At to deal naval aireratt Harding has tion of 1 more firmly fiaed H ever before, He not dint by the opposition to hin wagid nd in due plan a time wilh show } that plan is in fot part.of the general plan to put the United States, without entanglement, into with the prevention of war EUROPRBAN DELAY HOLDS UP PROGKAM European y rathe American opposition holding the pending world peace program, Removal of this obstacle is one of the chief t taske of Amer n diplomacy, The F gov is being pe em phatically urged to ratify the naval rmament treaty which the lef work of tho, first association other nations for ts ip rene: it was arms cc Hy word } that ¥ is trea pollt governmen ‘ tually will ratify t Domest) it up. WILL DEFEND WORLD COURT Reservations a ed by France, bu not make the If France would would be in a position to go t the country In the coming camy announcing his intention to do twe thi These are 1—Call a second arma limitation conference to take further steps to warl reduction of competition in wor measures. Propose a world court entirely independent of the league of nations 3-—-The second step would be an answer to the present opposition to the world court proposal, which now ia centering its fire on the fact that the court isa creation of the league, and that American membership would therefore constitute a tie be tween the United States and the league. BUSINESS IS AS USUAL IN RUHR s there Iding these p! treaty ratify, wu Industry Moves in Spite of| Trouble, Says Allen BY LLOYD ALLEN LONDON, June 1.—Business as | ueual” ia the order of the day in | the Ruhr tn spite of the strike, com- muniste uprisings and executions, former Gov, Henry J. Allen of Kan mag said today in an interview, Having just returned from a visit to the occupied area, Allen gave his eye and car impreasions as follows 1, There are few outward indica- tions of the military occupation, The Germans are well dressed and don't look hungry. 3. Germans in the Rubr don't at tempt to conceal the fact that the policy of passive resistance is doomed to failure. It is realized that & reasonable reparation must be made. 3, The atmosphere of calm may be due in part to the fact that the French have deported 120,000 German railroad employes who might have caused trouble. Collapse of the mark is no indica tion whatever of the economic situa tion in Germany, Allen said. “Industrial development is amaz ing,’’ he said. @ revival of building as the Ruhr has witneased since the war. “This has convinced me that Ger: many is in far better condition than the value of the mark would indi. cate. “One cannot visit the Rulir and see that most impressive industrial | district of the world without believ- ing that Germany has tho capacity to produce an honest endeavor to pay her reparations." Allen described the French occu- pation as ‘‘an apparently normal condition of affairs,’* “I went into the Ruhr,” he sald, “prepared to seo a sullen, hostile people in the midst of disorder, dom- Inated by great bodies of haughty soldiers “T didn’t see more than a thousand | soldiers during my heart of the Ruhr.” Allen said he was in Gelsenkirchen just after the communists gained thelr first coup, and in Dusseldorf when the French executed a German for sabotage, “In both places people were fol- lowing their business ag if nothing had happened, and the general ap pearance of the towns gave the same impression,” he added. “Feelings of the French in the matter may be well appreciated when, after survey- Ing their own devastated districts, they see the evidences of prosperity in Germany.” trip thru the Here and There Elijah Mason, dies at his home Thursday, after havmg lived in Seattle since 1877, Huntley, ploneer Seattle Officera of Seattle Aerie No, 1 Fraternal Order of Bagles, will be in- stalled Friday night. Tee A squadron of six submarines and thelr “mother” ship will viait Seattle during July. The boats are now at San Pedro, University of Washington students will have old clothes drive starting June 1, for Eastern relief work, one Ex-Governor Cox of Ohio buys his fourth newspaper, the Canton Daily Nows, Restaurant in Green Perk, Camp Lewla, burns at a loan of $45,000, owe Lester Norris, husband of milk Honalre helroas, acquitted of speeding charge tn Higin courts, likely to be adopt “In no district of the | United States haa there been such | to Take i Says She Would Adc Complete Separatio BY DALE VAN BVEMY , bre i inter Grand Anse “DUTY OF FAMILY TO CARE FOR BOY If Mr. Bt dut man fam If the him iy t n | with | M had to fight mothers ever th have fe at given ha the right pl for in with his m can take BEARS NO ILL, WILL FOR “OTHER WOMAN “However, if it shou ‘ork that he should come t ng, it could uot be an: Ho would have to atay home. 1 could not dility for him if he wer time with me and part with his mother Mra & mother’s pl « out to me for up alf-and rt of the the time iliman expressed her sym. BY SAN FRANK A FRANCISCO, affected CLARVOE June 1 Ace you An Is wut subject to tuberculosia Drop a nickel in the slot and find out This is the promine held out Dr Alt Abrams, of San Fran ciseo, pioneered the use of radioactivity and the radio tn the diagnosis of dinease, Hin methods have been a storm center which has rent the medical world. Dr Abrams hgs developed a super-radio set, attached to what he calls a reflexophonc, which he jclaima catches from the air the yi |Drations of dinense and records them |for what they are by means of dell jeate tuning methods } In Dr, Abrams’ clinls the writer saw the machine demonstrated. Its |performance was bewilderingly ac curate. MACHINE RECORDED LOCATION OF CANCER |} It not only apparentiy located « cancer, but it recorded the pain | which Dr. Abrams believes a Slower fecls when it is torn; it regregated ja trwe from a false anawer to a la s, and it recorded psycholog: teal reactions. On a table were arranged the neat |boxes of the reflexophons with their dialed cov Wires connected tho réflexophone to tiny Instruments ar. jranged on a board whereon three lighted bulba glowed warmly and | trom. Which Tose the magnavox horn familiar to the radio fan, This with an antenna nocent-looking rod jset by a black cord. Dr. Abrams produced a small sur- geon's storage bottle containing a cancer in alcohol. Hoe set his dials to record the vibrations of cancer. The moment the antenna rod approached | the bottle “B-zzz-urk!" gurgled the horn, which had been humming quietly to itself. The bottle was removed from the spot where it had stood and the rod waved over the spot. Again the horn squawked, Dr, Abrams waveda horseshoe magnet over the spot and again waved the rod. No sound came from the mouth of the horn, HORN RECORDS PAIN OF PLANT “Tho radio recorded the message broadcast. by the eancer,” Dr. Abrams explained. “The cancer communi- cated a portion of its energy to the spot where the bottle had stood, hence the same reaction. The magnet sterilized the spot, hence no reac- tion “Planta broadcast waves of radio activity,” Dr, Abrams continued. “Look. Setting the rod upright, he tore a nasturtium leaf. The horn squawked He cut the leaf. No sound from,the horn, “Tearing hurt the leaf; cutting is painless, Dr. Abrams explained, “Surg s should use sharp knit Always cut flowers when you gather them, Don't break them. It's too painful to them.” Another leaf was held over mouth of a chloroform bottle. “Now, the plant is asleep,” the doc. tor observed, and then tore the leat as he had done before, “The horn by wh super-radio wan equipped @ delicate and in- attached to the the no pain.” “Have you ever lied?" Dr. Abrams suddenly demanded, turning to a physician student and at the same time holding his antenna rod near the forehead (the truth center of the brain). “'No,"’ came the prompt response, and the horn squawked derisively. “Ah, hah,'’ laughed Dr. Abrams, “This machine says you fibbed then Don't try to fool the radio,"* MUSICAL THOUGHTS ALSO REGISTERED Phink of something musical,’ Dp, Abrams told another student, at the samo time holding the rod just baek of the man'y left ear=the musical center of the brain. ‘The horn emit: tod a squawk, Assume responsl: | “GURB EXCHANGE made no sound—for the leaf had felt | n Jay Leed ypt Child on Basis of n From His Mother summer home here, is a ramt farm } looking Maurice river, ‘This “bush’ stretch be and La Tuque eclusion Mra, Bt ba tween Grand Anse nd recuperat © operation ng from a # a long cony emonstrated the keenest inter 1 recent developments MRS, STILLMAN 15 IN GOOD SPIRITS I am com te York the B h lea 1 return nd the immedi miled and laughed ng the inte health and spl nee before the bandana wound i hair was figured in ptian fashion, its o tr awyers tried to ¢ 4 bandana said It the put nas and I'll he recalled, laugh made a bad img but I th band: | wear wh 1 TU al ft. L never pose.” hourebold at/ Grand aside from servants and farm h ts of Mrs. Stillman, baby Guy yearold Alexander, Guy's nurse ‘Mins Ida ’ and one guest, "Fowler McCormick. ways » bel} lke. The Anse Sick? Drop a Nickel in | the Slot and Find Out Machine Locates Your Pains or Tells When -You Hurt . a Flower “Now think of everything else but somet the doctor com. the horn. ’ Dr. Abramea sald, ad. writer. ‘Will some-| | dren the ‘9 sound came from the horn un- the writer commanded mentally: awer your hand, doctor.’ | ‘‘Baurk,’* honked the horn. |, No one in the roome could have| known the moment when the writer | | imeued the mental command, yet the} | horn instantly recorded it the mo. | ment It was given, This ts the machine which Dr.} Abrams declaren some day° will be| perfected to a point where it will stand on the streets and in stores | and rattroad stations #o that those! who care to do so may drop in a coin and ascertain what ails them, _ FIRM BANKRUPT i Investigate Crash of Stock Brokers a | NEW YORK, June 1—Investiga- | jtion into the crash of Jones &| |Baker, the largest stock brokers on | the curb here and one of the largest firms ever to go into involuntary |bankruptey, was launched here to- day, while authorities in Chicago were determining whether the Ill. nois “blue sky” law had been vio. jlated by the firm. | “Long” accounts of customers jWwere reported to amount te $10,000,- 000, with short accounts running possibly to $2,000,000 and bank loans totaling $2,500,000. | Steps were taken by authorities to |insure that there would be no ob- stacles to surmount a& 'n previous inquiries when other brokerage |firms failed, | Assistant District Attorneys Win- jter and Unger have demanded of the receiver that all books be held intact for the prosecuting authorit {es and the curb market association has been requested to preserve records of its investigation of the concern, Jones and Baker jsolvent. Recetver for the firm sald he believed the payment per| dollar would be higher than in any other brokerage failure, ‘The firm was put Into the hands of a hank. ruptey receiver yesterday on the pe- {itfon of three creditors whose claims totaled $3,400, Automatic suspension from the curb market followed tho receiver. ship, Announcement of the crash left traders stunned and an excited burst of selling began immediately. insist they are Indict Two for Sheriff Killing ALBANY, Ore. June 1.—George Gilmore, alias George Parker, and Rulle Johnson, alias Art Beckoy, jare under indictment hare today on jcharges of first degres murder in connection with the recent slaying Jof Sheriff Wilt Dunlap. In connection with the murder charge, additional warrante setting forth that the men stole a Harris. burg automobile, haye also been filed against them, Authorities claim and Johnson wero riding in_ the stolen car when the fatal shoot: Ing with the local officer occurred, that Gilmore RERLIN, June 1.—fwo persons were Killed and six wounded in an overnight clash between workmen ‘ind police at Bautzen, near Dresden, Workers charged police ranks, and the casualties occurred when FRIDAY JUNE EXACTING CARE Brings Customers Back THE SCOTCH TAILORS are forging to the very front rank of Seattle tailors because of the hun- dreds of satisfied customers who are boosting and advertising our business. and expand even faster. you if we get a chance But we want to grow We know we can please to make you one suit. Therefore we are going to make a big ONE-DAY RIFICE in order to get the first chance to please you and add you to our list of pleased cus- tomers. ONE-DAY SPECIAL OFFERED FOR 5. ATURDAY ONLY UITS Made to Order 50 Great Woolen Assemblage Look over our splendid big display of serges, tweeds, silk and wool mixtures, smart worsteds and novelty mixtures, and you can’t help but find some patterns that will suit you. = OF THE LARGEST AND FINEST STOCKS IN THE WEST TO SELECT FROM +E Cat 8) Ae) hee a if eet te Se = Rgalea (engl elie Deane Ferm om, eR eke me HIRDIA ENUE Pk eae yi x & WwW: ries Be sure to find the right store—Cor. Seneca Street, Opposite New Telephone Bldg. AT THE WEDDING | the days of thy life to buy her food ‘Dost thou take this woman to be/and clothing, amusemenc and com- they wedded wife?” asked the old minister, “Dost, thou promise to keep her in adversity or prosperity? Wilt thou care for her, protect, cher- ish and love her? Wilt thou slave all fort?" “I wilt,” resp@nded the groom faint- ly, as he toppléd over into the arms of the best man.—American Legion Weekly. the latter fired a volley into the crowd, ¢ @ % oOmpounded Semi-Annually is the least we have ever paid ON SAVINGS A Satisfactory Life The essence of a satisfactory life is a proper sense of values. This is as true with respect to money as it is with respect to other things. The “Saving Habit” will soon bring one to a proper sense of “Money Value.” If you want to Succeed, Save, Accounts received in amounts from $1 to $5,000. Husband and wife may each have the limit of $5,000. SAVINGS LEFT HERE ON JUNE 5TH WILL EAR DENDS FROM JUNE 18ST Open Saturdays 9 a.m. to 1 p.m., 6 p.m. R BEFORE DIVI- to8 p.m. MUTUAL SAVINGS & LOAN ASSOCIATION \ 815. Second Avenue

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