The evening world. Newspaper, November 11, 1905, Page 5

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t DIED FOR SAKE Gustav Fuchs a Suicte Rather | Little Marie Hall Began by! than Part with His ARTIST LIVED IN WANT. GENIUS WON SUCCESS. ‘Burrounded by Fortune in Rare} Works, Aged Man Bore ‘ABA those that were & * They shal And eplash With brushes And only And ‘And nobody shall work for money, And nobody shall work for fame But each 1 each, In hia diffe Bha aint the thing as he sees it, | Vor the God of things that are, wame wistful, dreamy eyes, no longe =RUDYARD KIPLING, | 01 paltry ooins, for, where pen 2, seater |ntes came into her outstretched ha { Gustay Fuchs, artist, designer, pa before, hundreds and thousands of h ef, sculptor and writer, New dead to-day his apartments, teenth street, the olf man havtg shot mself to death preferred death rather the art treasures he so loved. - GIRL VOLINST TELLS OF Cane ——. OF ART HOARD —— Playing for Pennies Treasures, in Street. — England's Ward, Thousands. Privations, H BY ALICE ROHE, . 4, shall be happy Jen chalr, | an ait at the master shall praise ua, master shail blame; Engiand, Sometimes pennies came the working, ut star, | for the love of sorrow for the child mustetan, To-day the eame Iittle girl, with ¢ No. £06 Eat Ehgh: are litern!ly poured out to her This 1s the etory of Mare Hal), t last evening because he an to part from apartments in the Westminster Hot In Irving place, I wondered how mu Now Under Official Chaperon, as Ten years ago a thinly clad little gir with big, wistful brown eyes was pla) ing for pennies in the streets of Bristol slowly and then there was hunger and lars—the best recognition of genius English violinist, and as 1 ordered her | FAMOUS VIOLINIST ONCE PLAYED IN STREET FOR PENNIES] A he ne THE WORLD: SATURDAY NING, NOVEMBER 11; 1905, rom ee AONE ON ELS PY rpuuce our / ——. County Detectives Have Se-} cured Evidence While | | Posing as Patrolmen. | | \ | | | Several times during the last campaign | Distr ot-Avuorne Jerome made alu sions to graft in the Police Depart: | Tho mysterious references lie | {t 1s said, he mow stands ready and tothatend en W } have a conferenci McAdoo. | na will tell wille he thought the depart- which } some 00 ment made to cloar up. day next he ¢ with Police on Ar the Commis: hings ment mishone his m M mer t all right tn 3 were gol were make ft appare: trusted by the Commissioner pulled the ver his on eyes 4 conclusive, so far as Mr. Jerome is concerned, will tw laid before the Commissioner of promire { promotkons for money. Mr. Jerome is in possession of im- portant Information furnished by of his county detectives, who posed as & policeman anxious for promotion, The county detective met a man who Is cons nected with the Commissioner's oMfce in a confidential capacity while the lat wool | one| . FOR WAIGESTION, GIRL RUN OVER TAKE ONE AUTO — | CHICAGO, Nov. ie-Automobiiing 18) Miss Metarui Knocked Under one of tho bast cures for the boully in- | pi 7 nities due to poor operation of “he: Wheels While Crossing Uigestive organs, acoording to Dr, G. | : . W. MoCeskey, of Fort Wayne, Ind Street with Friends, nddreased American Academy Modicine at a meeting here to-day, ae lity subject Was Lue PhyMolOBY OC) sfr—9 Motarit tweniyave Mental depre n can destroy en- Ye" », 99 Decatur street, tires 0 A adword woe |JBrOOKLyN, un down by an Multde « Gnas if the @ravout nk mobile at Quincy street and Patehem hana eiiatal affect ard tng (avenue early to-day and knocked Wie desire to Ko to & restaurant after wh nectous heasing @ pleasing performace at The automobile, driven by Rudolp® theatre is duo matnly t : 6 having one's mid relieves Buckert, of No. 606 ¢ street, apun Huencing the flow of digestive iy wround the corner n Miss Motar BOs Fecron tive Sharcient eh re 1a party of friend re crossing the Don and Rolnine ¢ ‘Tae young woman was not of automobiiing, the beneficta’ | qu in dodging the machine, ty Knew DY exper ind Is ran over her should be emphasized that the “ki ped. his, machine and state and activity of tha aide ig Miss Mocarui to tone ipal organs of the body are das) svi t attionded by a Tendent on tne controlling Iniluesves of, p ho found that her left hiewial conditions more than tpon any shoulder was broken and her nead body ober factor, even more serious thaniv ov She ret to make a coms upon all other fac combined, ‘The! y nat MGckert and he was uot effect psychical states on digestive arre [procestes te of tha greatest Impor-| ired woman was taken to her tan hot a ee te eee een NO MAN STRONGER THAN HIS STOMACH, The celobrated Dr Abernethy of) Medicine, Dr, Hobart A, Hare, ol tar wae riding around town tn an autos the Coney Island Precinct, and the silahdl on Was one of the best-known of hor Ute story that has been told and ‘ominisesjoner’s confidential man prom: ertists © country, Once ho had yetoig by ambithous press agents wou ed for $400 to promote him to the rank Millions, but his fortunes @brank, and of | a1) from her own lps. fa roundsman, He sald that $100 of aN vd found himself waore he MUR! ne young violinist, who had won ber | this sum was to go Into his own pocket either part with his art treasures to occ an audience ai Carnegie H nd that tie remaining $200 would have live , He pretersed death, and in |e tate Maisie Thlener ub. Hye jurt as she had won England, extende | to go “higher up Gying he willed the treasures to the 4 and of welcome in an almost childis | ‘The sounty detective arranged to pa persona he loved—persons he believed pacer In the eorner set the oftein the @mount demanded on the following Would care for them as he had vies the ehaperone provided by [day within ear-shot of the Commission Starved for His Treasures. the English Government, for, know you, er's private office. There was another Mr Fu irate) from his wife five this small dark-oyed genius 1s called man from Mr, Jerome's office prasent at years ng 1 sin © ad been the ward of the British nation, and th the time, Ma paver the envi: vi t wt rt ant Jovernment vided an offiels ton, and Mr, Jerome also has the name living w k a his Government has prov heal an ee of the chauffeur who drove the auto books, H te score, leompanton to Inok after her in he af the Commissioner's confidential mat bu ad the senss.t tem: | yiat ta the wilde of Amerie, I), lls sade Mr. Jerome has much ev eramment and }e kept secret from t) Jonce concerning police gratters. whieh ro he kept secret trom thom A Word of England. s heen accumulating for months and ey Was gone and that hie Typ cHOmksaIIReTaLaN OR: which he is now prepared to make us treasures must go of he would want, 2¢ wae the fe i ° ea ts lof. He i« ready to co-operate with Com fo 'y essities of lite. girl that 1 wanted to hear, free from missioner MeAdoo Jn bringing th The Dan» et anecdotes of the press guilty ones to jus It 1s expected that T id at Dewin gianning for| all anecdotes gp i |The present Inquiry will reveal th his a shortiy before noon yester-| the slight, nervous looking lion trken by the squad of detectives day, He placed his will where it could jeccretly organized by Deputy Commis t nd, drcured himeelt with great sioner McAvoy While McAdoo was. of and ith 1 faint ours a day and my {his vacation, McAvoy was the noting ee t ting by the winuow heen in my work, You) lead of the Police Department at the ! ’ waited until a ruggied aganat odds, for|t and the reports of lls seoret an rhe ante of being proud in at least three Im des My God, to 4 Ne question ind to keop me at home. 1 | portant he Sina rete Little Mise Hall wae all antmation, | yinet, rt of my family now, saennetien samen ne A sostrains of ‘il wowever, when she hemin to tell ¢ Yes. and when sho played r f me only with ee ow c ‘ hs Si wORdbcral” cares! re tis 1 I played for | ! Hierness because 1 would not @tay at ont a in brain store a Mitte unknow: , in ff SE ae er ain esti lovely. tein : nef x Fivellne to the w t and the wil igh her awn determinatior ‘ ey know how P 2: ta wAondemy for a year. Bhe Ie was found too s will wa an on. | OF waht her genius into recog, i B fans. 1 fir rplet, buy father 1s ne born in New 1 T went to \ if Hl I sup . from following In ony foot- bi , hy S WE oOR 0, Megan neerta with the Ph ‘t think “Sp leh wiley Masterpiece to Schiff, &biuaets I went back 0 1 " waa d * an uphill road to su LR t t ne, f anda girl with genius cannot re oy w 1 testament, Nov on Miss Hall's trumph in London !8 @)j was 1 is than ever Inn tal There is work, hard c | t 1} when we wer if : ‘ ways 7 A talking and Fs t k Rothschid, | jj Bristol 1 used to steal his Played for the Queen, A, arith N talking sn ‘ fi : 1 of the Waldorf-Astoria Cigar Ooms! violli from the case and play on It | ae aoe when 1 was commanded to TERA Geel oe |e one} Husband Surprises Pair on His as Me tater wae Te an oxecllent™ tne | play’ for, Queen Alexandra that I was | greatly exckted at the sted talk | to t little Miss Hall ; 0 fitie ‘ales wore dix ‘litters |atruster tenaes t hdppy. sald the. Br gir ward \ r things to tol Return Home from ret : ay falas ha 1 Fetlx Hall, and woman and WAS fo en- Yes, Th and for mucs) about wonderf career, ut the / ry Mr. Rottisehitd, and alg, His name te Havasd Feilx Hall, and) Sverything Was #o Informal cogs,” gontin little musioiar \p faring, an¢ Work ’ nole read: “Please read) it 18,0 it Aer ab at i a — i the ttere onf open the will years old I played the harp and by . seaeemenmimneaed Among the pletures ready for ehtp: the time I was eight 1 understoo meat w mastorpis ene | Music We , Anton Rollista, a baker, of No. 21 . My fad like many people with ¢ ¥ must pached Utled “The Moses Column." It is a! the aytiatie temperament, was a .iream: Meserole atroot, Willamaburg, reached Deantiful steel engraving, dedicated to, or and eyen worse, He ‘ame more Ide home eariler than usual to-day eufferers from Russian massacres, and. 9 iftless. He lost his position after a hard night at the bakery, Boft was willed |» Sulelde to Jacob 1, | 10) the ofehaains end Bnaly we becarne ly, #0 as not to disturb his pretty wife Berit, President of the Sootety for the fay ne to do but to go ou. Into the Antoinette, he sneaked Into the house Re let of Russian Sufterens. street with my violin and play and turned on the lights. er symbol naaterpleca ‘ainette was not alone, W her hic tia DM cles Ns veal aaa You don't think the American people , ae ‘Arwe euch be anaes ee and it is t to Wal handler, | wilt tiink any the less of me for this, | Hf W Not in it with (oF ruseeu Geneon Anton had won her tn Italy fifteen yours the lawyer of No, & Naseut street. |do your inquired the tittle vioinie, | Orse Were INO | —~——— go, The surprise was three-handed This pleture reprerote Chrlt and | with childlike naivette, "I don’t like t ; > Rellleta Grow bie knife and etaubed his Mores embraci Tor it ts ail eo. fa of Gardahipe. the Display in the | wite In the neck, head and back On a m stool &| “One night, when I was playing In the Stefano was stabbal In the a handeome bu Rooravalh | etree oe eu een ola, an Inte Boxes. | arm and side, and his left eye was No handiwork of Fuo ul siowing public houses ‘nnd on the ps t suis aa hata, Wan ners lo play—a gentle ——- almost cut out rea eae y tt : h \ WA) And listened to me for al ' | Pie Be ee ee th ba A alld V hy i) Gets nally he ¢ up to me =K1 3 a >i) of the woman and the curses of the tran, entitled “Row evel: tie Apoitie a lot of questions, He ia MEN ARE ALL “BLUE | men and entered the house: just {n time Peace,” drees and told me to ¢ > prevent a do ire 0st ne was Elgar, the @reat —- | to poevent a double) mur Rok ima The Porismouth Drama musician, and he boustat 1 | was arrested and held later In Hwen . “i n and gave me money f e 4 ersS— | Street Potloe Court to await the reault ' nd the ve ate wae the feHe one. Husbands and Fathe of the injuries he Inflic which ts stil t ver the genius ” , ollisto told the Court that after his Blix, “Phe Portemouth “Drank. Was | SERINE “Angels” of the Show— mariage, byaihno, Who 1s wealthy, pee also found eased ; ith Meuse 4 7 s > X Jtered his wife wiih attentions uth he 10's bo hens (Reo ett Ao a Pande eae dea Feel the Need of Cash. ‘ss a i Me tia, did not s : . ale T, N pprsaeld kne eft Italy, but editions of mus. ecos, works In ee pL necnie F ny aN A seh fine —— ig at during ‘4 De eesiyettieries d plished anything © were all to - ‘ ye ea he " Greek and Latin, German and English, | POs, ven live decently oe Te Ris “bnianine the sonlate. of Sire were bequeathed to Mr. Chandler, Al “T stayed fn Birmingham three years,| Well! Well! Well Rotlista While her husband was in tho mahogany box, securely loeled, was ine|and then Napier Miles took an interest] Why does every man wear such A eee Mar aolbet “A So Relique from |i" me and vent me wondon sorry face? Because he carries suck Goethe's Paim Garden.” The box, Met Kubelik There, an empty wallet “Oh, that was the real beginning’ | what's the trouble? The Horse Which was carved, WHS) orjeg little Miss Hall. Whereupon tre | ate | willed to Col t vMictal chaperon gave a sianificact | how, of cou r ionables neae'| Mr. Rot 1 known &t_me ard then at the door. For weeks all the fashiona a Mr. Fuchs for , “I st In Londen two years with | ¢taghfonable and would-be fashions , w years, and) Kruse i 1 t Kobellk, Tl} ais, wives and widows have been Mat of lato the artist wax in Anancial played for him, and, ooly tank) 1] smalds * ook of purple of purpl airadte, despiie the income he derived. played the same taing—the Wieniowski |layjue in @ stock of Pp ‘ the from his works of art £0 that ad played the day |and fine linen to razgle-dagzle at . iy . tefors, Wasn't that a bold thing forl opening of the Horse Show It is thou ¢ speculated heave me to do? But J really wer ‘# And the poor fathers, husbands and = Hy and Jost all he had, Although he eriticism, He praised me and was 80 | : War, ct Course, ‘ could have realized largo sums by sell- enthusiastic that he made arrangements | brothers have to suffer ‘m H, MoCarthy, of earn aterp! for me to study with his own instruotor | By Tuewtay there won't be a self-re bg a CI Be Hie mOaterpleces ind books. he in Prague, epecting woman In New York who will - Arka hut | WouK! No: part with them, and, Father know thore are six years In the | ot he ready to to the show In] No Redress for Charges Brough | Sii'° y mee ml | than sell the things tha were deare= course at the conservatory, and they ; : stunt $10,000 damiges fo him than life itself, he committed put me tn the sixth year at once, the gladdest possible togs, expectan by Hie Company Capen No sutelde | “After I was graduated | studied a) of the fire prize. Assistant F an Thomas F, byt Resides Mrs, Stuyvesan Square and) of pngine Co ¥ No. 101, Brooklyn is of | Mrs, August-Purple-Aster and thelr lty which he was transferred no hun- mart eet, on exhibition in creations of | Commissioner Hayes from Truck y wien o m | Worth, Redfem and Paquin, there Will Manhattan, after his acquittal 0. bringing be plainer Manhattan dames In 40°] oharges of neglect of duty and « Alon ges which | : ill mestle coples of the Paris models, The | unbecoming a member of th nat caro Lord Mane ‘of 1cers, or 1 ega . dretsmakers! #how won't be to It partment ‘Por Yalling ty Fe earored ing any , slaughter of rare binds and fur-| oiaging by firemen aw | } vis cone and the artlos busy for many movths — New Record. (From To-Day’s World.) JHE Evening World yesterday printed its first twenty-two-page paper, This 176-column issue was the largest regular edition ever pub- lished by a New York evening newspaper. It makes a new reccrj, Incidentally the pa- per carried 111'4 columns of advertising, an increase of 3134 columns over last year. No other Friday evening newspaper approached this showing in either growth or total. ugh fine feathers and Rus royal ermine and the array of the fair con geting © sian’ sables, other glories for testants. Watch out! The display this year | will be more bewllderingly lovely (1 r before Womanhood will be locked out In the t laces, fabrics and furs, designe! after fashions bere- tofore unheard of, executed with the naumunate skill of the world’s great est tailors avd modistes. Then there'll be the jewels, outshin- ing aay pawn shop Ih sparkle and valu and varying with the good taste of the wearer, It will be the greatest spectacle on earth! But think of the poor “Angela of thi show who are backing I agalna ithelr @ill, Consider the depleted bank ants of the pialn blacK-clad huss sand fathers looking thelr mos ant In the back of the box:a y git any pleasure from look ing at ir lovely womenfolk? Thelr fun {8 all in fooling at thelr pretty neighbors Wh yoks at the horas? Why, what a silly idea! No one doe, What's « horse Ft to do with @ hors; show, do u think? Miss Lindell. daughter of Rev | Lindell, of 5857 State st., Chicago, Ill, has gone to Las Vegas, New | Mexico, in the hope of getting cured of consumption, She fs at the new Fraternal City,” just outside of La Vegas, where it is expected that with- in a year 100,000 consumptives will be located, Hving in tents, This lady had derived great benefit |from the use of Father John's Medl- cine, but when her brother tried to purelase some of this old remedy for her in Las Vegas It was not possible to do so, Her brother knew how im portant it was that his sister should have Father John's Medicine every day, 89 he telegraphed to Chicago for “A DEBT TO HUMANITY |Rev, Mr. Lindell, of Chicago, Says of Father Jolin’s | Medicine: “You Owe It to Humanity to Make This Medicine Known,”’ Mr.;@ bottle, which cost as follows:— ‘make this medicine known,” following places: ‘Mr. Julius Henry Telegram $0.60 Express 15h Ee 1.00 Father John’s Medicine 1,00 Total 2.60 Mr, Lindell says that even at this ‘phone 390 Main. price he would not be without the medicine for his sister. Now the drug: gists in Las Vegas keep Father John's Medicine in stock for the benefit of the consumptive sufferers to whom Mr, Lindell has recommendei it, [He says: “Father John’s Medioine will) be the means of health to ‘housands as soon as it becomes really known here, You owe {it to humanity to possible, mobile, They drank several bottles of | wine together. ‘ne county detective said he was & poloeman attached to London was Gemly of thé opinion that| the University of Pa.; Prof, Laurence lisorders of the stomach were the most Johnson, M. D,, Medical Dewt,, Unie sroliie source of humaa ailments in| versity of N.Y.; Prof, Edwin M, Hale, {gene A recent medical writer says M. D., Professor of Materia Medica ‘every feeling, emotion and affection in the Hahnomann Medical College, reports at the stomach (through the Chicago, and many others, as remee syaterm of nerves) and the stomach is dies for indigestion and dyspepsia, alfectod secon HY, It is the vital, torpid liver as well as for bronehial, ; center of the » * # * © He! throat and lung affections, as will ba | continues, "ao we may be said to live| seen from reacing a litte booklet | by (and he might well have eaid through) | recently compiled by Dr, R. V. Pieree, | the stomach.” He goes on to show that | of Buffalo, N, ¥., who will send the | the stomach la the vital center of the! same on request, by postal card or body, He says “the function of di-| letter, to any address, free, This little | gestion in tte several stages is to pre-| bookles tells of what Dr, Pierce's cele | pare the food ia forms which are suita-| brated medicines are made, and gly able to be added to the structure,”| the properties and uses of each a meaning the structure of our bodies. | every ingredient entering into their He continues, "every physical action composition. Write Doctor Pierce, as | from simple ‘beeathing, thinking and | above and receive it by return post, circulating of the blood to the moat) Queen's root, or Stil ingia, is an ine active bodily exertiou wears out por-|gredient entering into the “Golden tions of the structure (of our bodies) And they become dead and eo require to be taken away spc dily. Much of the food which we t and especially wheg unwholesome or in excess, adds to the waste material, and when it has undergone chemical changes it is still more mischievous.” Then he goes on | to the effect that the nervous system prompts every part of the cironlating | system, He anys “it gives its message every moment to the infinate number of glands and follicles to unload them: | selves of waste material Bo that the current of blood may carry it away.” "Whon these two processes of nutri- tion and excretion are thus carried o1 with equal assiduity we are in health, but when this equilibrium does not exist there comes disorder and disease, The common form of such desange- ment is indigestion or ayepapate, ie function of nutrition Is interrupted and all the operations which depend upon it go wrong. Under these condi- Medical Discovery” highly recome mended by several of the above mene tioned authorties for the cure of chronio or lingering bronchial, throat and lung affections, public speaker's gore throat attended with hoarseness, dry, ra»ping i Not cough and rdred affeo only is Queen's root specific in its curas tive action Ing;| these affections, bus in "Golden M¥eical Discovery” it is greatly assisted by the combination wit it of Golden Seat root, Stone root, Blac Cherrybark and Bloodroot, with which it is blended im just the right propor+ tion, Pure, triple rehned glyoerine also great!, enhances the effectiveness of all theee agente in the oure of chronic and lingering coughs, being a valuable demulcent, Ars antiseptic, and a nutri tive of great value, especially useful in all wasting diseases, as in incipient con+ sumption and other scrofulous affecs tions) "Golden Medical Discovery” ig & sovereign remedy in all catarrhal affections, whether affecting the nasal tions it has a way of appearing in| passages, the stomach, bowels or pelvic | other types of diserder, Many of these | organs and the reason oy will be | often inislead physiei Other parts | learned by reading the little booklet noted above, Send for it now, In chronic catarrh of the nasal pas sages, it is important that while taking the "Golden Nedical Discovery" as the most effective constitutional treatment for this terribly distressing and moat obstinate affection that the nasal pe sages should be cleansed two or threo times a day by the free use of Dr, Sage’s Catarrh Remedy, used accord+ ing to the directions which accompany the same, Dr, Pierce's Pleasant Pellets cure biliousness, sick and bilious headache, dizziness, costiveness, or constipation of the bowels, loss of appetite, coated tongue, sour stomach, windy belche ings, “heartburn,” aln and distress after eating, and kindred derangements of the liver, stomach and bowels, Per+ sons subject to any of these troubles should never be without @ vial of the "Pleasant Pellets” at hand, Put up in glass viale, tightly corked, therefore always fresh and reliable, One little “Pellet” is a laxative, two are cathar+ tic. They regulate, invigorate and cleanse the liver, stomach and bowels. Dr. Pierce's Common Sense Medi Adviser, in plain English; or, Medici Simplified, foos pages, over 700 illus» trations, ‘paper-bound, sent for 21 one+ cent stampa, the cost of mailing only. Cloth-bound ten sane more, 31 in all, ‘Address Dr, R, V. Pierce, Buf falo- N.Y. s. [of the organism are likely to be in- | volved, and we may find consumption, kidney complaint, hepatic (liver) dis- ‘orders, hysteria and even mental alienation (derangement).” He says |" it may be observed that deranged persons have a woe-be-gone expres- tion, offensive breath, irregular action of the bowels, hallucinations and other like conditions of dyspepa' The foregoing is no doubt a rational view of the sad havoc worked in the human system by indigestion and dys- pepsia, torpid liver and kindred de- rangements, which are generally as ciated with or followed by many other diseases of diverse appearance, hut all depending upon the weak and dis ordered stomach, Cure the stomach weakness and you cure all these dis- eases and derangements. For weak stomachs and the conse- Vind indigest or dyspepsia, and the multitude of various diseases which result therefrom, no medicine can be | better suited as a curative agent than Dr, Plerce's Golden Medical Discoy- ery. The Golden Seal root, Stone root, | Mandrake root and Black Cherry- bark are all recommended by such eminent anthorities as Dr, Bartholow, of Jefferson Medical College; Prof, John King, author of the " AMERICAN | Disrensatory”; Prof, John M, Scud- der, late of Cincinnati; Dr, William (Paine, author of Paine’s Epitomy of CITIZENS INTERESTED IN AN HONEST COUNT. : All persons who are interested in an honest count ‘and who have knowledge of inaccuracies of the count, irregular or improper practices on the part of election voting, are requested to put them- selves in communication with Counsel at any of the Lord, Day & Lord; (Mr. Henry DeForest Baldwin, Cohen), 49 Wall Street, Manhattan, Telephone 408 Broad. Clarence J. Shearn, Room 710, 140 Nassau Street, Manhattan, Telephone 92 John Charles H. Hyde, 44 Court Street, Brooklyn, Tele- | Hearst Headquarters, Room 77 Hotfman House, ‘Manhattan, Telephone 3440 Madison. You are particularly requested to cali in person, if Hy AUTONOBLE —_

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