Newspaper Page Text
Iwenty-Eighth Year.}
SNAPPY.
When we told you that Our Young Men’s Clothes
for spring 1906 would be the smartest and snappiest
styled line ever designed exclusively for young men,
it wasn’t brag. It was just our frank, plain-spoken
opinion aroused by the striking swaggerness of the
clothes themselves,
W hen we tell you now that our words of praise
couldn’t have done full justice to the betterment
of these, our Young Hen’s Clothes, over other so
called young men’s lines, it isn’t HEPE CLAIM, but
the circumstantial evidence in the case.
That our Young Men’s Clothes are really the
right garb for the knowing young men’s trade, is
evident by the heavy sales we have had on them
this season. If we havent heard from you, we figure
that you have not heard from us, at any rate if you
want immediate action, come to us
% D. BAILEY
Arrow Brand Collars in Quarter Sizes
Forsyth St. and Cotton Ave. Americus, Qa.
“There’s No Chance
of Missing It.”
Satisfaction is a cer
tainty when you buy
colognes, toilet powders,
drugs or medicines here.
We aim at all times to
have the best quality in
stock and hit the mark of
quality.
REM BERT’S
DRUG STORE,
Next P. O.
WARE & LELAND
Americus, Georgia.
New York, New Orleans. .Chicago.
—
MEMBERS
New York Cotton Exchange,
New Orleans Cotton Exchange,
Liverpool Cotton Association.
Chicago Board of Trade.
Chicago Stock Exchange,
New York Coffee Exchange,
St. Louis Merchants Exchange.
Milwaukee Chamber of Commerce,
Private wires to principal points.
Local office 104 Forsyth street, next door to
Cotton Avenue, Phone 21,
W. C. WIMBISH, Mgr.
Spring Tonic
Carefully Seh cted for That
Tired Feeling.
enable you to enjoyObetter health.
We can supply, your need?.
eloridge drug: company
. J PHONES:—Jackson Street 33. Lamar Street 70.
THE AMERICUS TIMES-RECORDER.
TROOPS AND STRIKERS
CLASH IN SARDINA
Several People Were Killed
And Wounded.
WORKMEN FORCED TO STRIKE
All the Shops Are Closed, No Newspa
pers Have Appeared, and the Sus
pension of Work Is General—Asked
Mayor of City to Resign.
New York, May 16. —A cable from
Caglari, Sardinia, to the Herald says:
Several persons were killed and
many wounded in a collision between
troops and strikers here Tuesday and
turther trouble is expected. Reinforce
ments of the small garrison have been
urgently demanded, and warships with
troops have left Genoa and Leghorn.
trouble began Monday as the cul
ruination oi a great in the
price of food and an anarchistic agi
tator led the workmen to strike.
Thousands of men marched to the
state tobacco manufactory and to the
other establishments, forcing the work,
men to strike, smashing windows of
shops and upsetting streets cars and
cabs.
1 here was another and more seri
ous demonstration yesterday. Preced
ed by a woman bearing a red flag with
a large loaf of bread on top of the
staff, a parade of strikers was form
ed and passed in front of the mayor’s
house, demanding his resignation.
Next they went to the railway sta
tion, which was guarded by troops,
whom they proceeded to stone. The
soldiers stood their ground without
firing until the colonel, Count San
Martino, and Captain Gandini had been
Injured by missiles, and 25 of the
troops and police agents seriously
wounded.
Then there was a scattering fusil
ade from the soldiers and the crowd
tied in panic, leaving 42 of its nunfber
lying wounded in the street. Os these
two died before reaching the hospital,
four are dying and eleven are in a
dangerous condition.
All the shops are closed, no news
paper has appeared and the suspen
sion of work is general.
SPEED OF INSECTS.
A Common House Fly Travels a Mile
In Thirty-three Seconds.
It is the popular belief that the flight
of the birds is much swifter than that
of the insects, but a number of natural
ists who have been making a study of
the matter think that such is not the
case.
A common house fly, for example, is
not very rapid in its flight, hut its
wings make 800 beats a second and
send it through the air twenty-five feet,
under ordinary circumstances, in that
space of time. When the insect is
alarmed, however, it has been found
that it can increase its rate of speed by
over 100 feet per second. If it could
continue such rapid flight for a mile in
a straight line, it would cover that dis
tance iu exactly thirty-three seconds.
It is not an uncommon thing when
traveling by rail in the summer time to
see a bee or wasp keeping up with the
train and trying to get in at one of the
windows. A swallow Is considered one
of the swiftest of flying birds, and it
was formerly thought that no insect
could escape it.
A naturalist, however, told of an ex
citing chase he saw between a swallow
and a dragon fly, which is among the
swiftest of Insects. The insect flew
with incredible speed and wheeled and
dodged with such ease that the swal
low, despite its utmost efforts, com
pletely failed to overtake It.
The WAier Pitcher.
The following simple method of keep
ing ice water in a common pitcher is
worth knowing: Put a layer of cotton
batting between two sheets of wrap
ping paper three Inches higher than
the pitcher. Fasten the ends of the
paper and hatting together, forming a
circle. Paste a cover over one end of
the batting and paper. This cover,
when over a pitcher, must come close
to the stand and so exclude the air,
and ice will keep a long time. This
paper cover will be found of great
service in a sickroom for both milk
and water pitchers.
William Grows Satirical.
Washington, May 16. —A satirical
amendment by Leader Williams, oi
the minority, amused the house Wed
nesday. It provides for naming the
rival of the British ship Dreadnaught,
"Sheered o’ Nothing,” with a propo
sal for a contest between the two with
the president and cabinet as chiel
guests. The large battleship was vig
orously opposed by Messrs. Tawnej
and Burton.
Three Condemned to Death.
Tripoli, May- 16. —All Shamyl Pasha,
former military governor of Scutari,
and two hoys were condemned to
death Wednesday for the murder of
Redvan Pasha, prefect of police of Con
stantinople, March 24. Three others
accused of participation in the crime
were condemned to life imprisonment
and others to various sentences of
from ten to fifteen years’ imprison
ment.
No Circus on Memorial Day.
Chicago, May 16. —A dispatch to the
Tribune from Topeka says that the
city council has decided that a circus
performance on Memorial day would
be nothing short of a sacrilege and
has unanimously ordered the city clerk
to refuse to grant a license to a show .
that has keen advertised.
long Speeches.
Much merriment has been caused by
the discovery that in the Egyptian
"Book of the Dead” an ancient declared ’
he had “not Inflicted long lectures” on
his hearers, hut this is curiously match- •
ed by a plea for his soul uttered by*
Hugh Grove (Loyalist) at his execution •
May 16, 1665 (Vol. 3, Tburloe’s Colt
lections): “Good pepple, I was never I
guilty of much rhetoriek, nor ever loved I
long speeches in my life, tberfore you >
cannot expect either of them at my
death. All I desire Is your hearty
prayers for my soul,” etc.
In view of the Egyptian discovery
this seems a very close second for Eng
land.-London Notes and Queries.
AMERICUS, UA., THURSDAY MORNING. MAY 17. 1906.
40 HOUSES SWEPT
AWAY BY FLAMES
Fire Destroys Blocks In Atlanta
Negro District.
400 NEGROES ARE HOMELESS
Those Burned Out Lost Practically
Everything, Many Having Their Ef
fects Burned After Being Taken
from the Houses.
Atlanta, May 16. —As the result of a
fire which originated Tuesday after
noon at the corner of Martin street
and the Jonesboro road, forty houses,
with, all their contents, were reduced
to a pile of ashes, about ten acres
were bare by the resistless fire
driven by a strong wind, between three
and four hundred people were made
homeless and destitute of clothing, and
where was a few hours before a pop
ulous negro neighborhood, is now only
a forest of chimneys and ashes.
The loss is estimated at $40,000,
with only a few thousand dollars’ in
surance.
Mont Eagle, Tenn., Visited by Fire.
Chattanooga, Tenn., May 1C. —A fire
Wednesday morning on the assembly
grounds at Mont Eagle, Tenn., on the
Cumberland plateau, where is located
a great national chitauqua, entailed
a $25,000 loss. Among the buildings
burned was Warner Hall. The im
mense auditorium, the largest in the
south, modelled after that at Lake
Monona, near Madison, Wis., was
saved, although it was in imminent
danger. The village adjoining the
grounds has no system of fire protec
tion. The fire will not delay the open
ing of the assembly scheduled for
July Ist. Thousands of southern peo
ple have their summer homes on the
assembly grounds, which are filled
with beautiful cottages. The assem
bly was a hobby of the late Major
Thomas, president of the Nashville,
Chattanooga and St. Louis railroad,
who did much to promote the growth
tor twenty yearn
NEWS TERSELY TOLD.
Mose Williams, convicted in the
spring of 1905, In Conecur county, Ala
bama, and given a sentence of ten
years for carnal knowledge, has been
given his liberty. Judge Terry Rich
ardson, who acted in place of the solic
itor, agreed that after a short ser
vice a pardon wag to be asked.
James Walsh and James Smith, of
Goshen, Ind., captured after a hard
fight in a country church and charged
with robbing country stores and the
Millershurg postoffice, have been turn
ed over to the federal authorities and
were taken to Indianapolis under bond
of SI,OOO each.
James Laugherty and Chas. Bridge
water, of Youngsown, 0., the latter a
negro, have been sentenced to ten
years in the Ohio penitentiary for
criminal assault on Mrs. Sabit Wasif,
an aged Assyrian woman. They plead
ed guilty.
The sheriff of Clark county, Illinois,
is searching for Mrs. Harry Casteel,
wife of a merchant in Marshall, who
the sheriff says, eloped with a farm
hand. The sheriff says Casteel only
wants the child which she took with
her.
The two-and-a-half-year-old son of
Ross Fryer, Deer Creek, Ind., found a
box of tablets intended as a powerful
heart stimulant. He ate 24 of them
and died a few hours later.
B. B. Crew, of Atlanta, Ga., has been
elected vice president of the National
Association of Plano Dealers at the
annual convention held at Washing
ton, D. C.
Telegraph Operator Suicides.
Atlanta, May 16. —J. H. Clark, the
telegraph operator at Chamblee, Ga.,
who ran amuck Monday night, who,
with torch, shotgun and pistol terror
ized the citizens of two towns, killing
one man and wounding four others,
was on Tuesday afternoon surrounded
by a sheriff’s posse. After exchanging
several shots with the posse, he cried:
“Do not shoot any more; I am shot.”
The posse ceased firing. A minute la
ter a shot was heard In the hushes
where hq was concealed. The fosse,
coming closer, ascertained that Clark
was dead. He had sent a bullet In
his heart, causing instant death.
Meteorite Crushed His Skull.
South Norwalk, Conn., May 16. —A
celestial visitant flashed from the
heavens and struck Andrew Giso, of
Rotan Hill, near this city, so terrible
a blow that he was found senseless
with a crushed and fractured skull.
The meteorite which laid Giso insen
sible in the roadway near his home is
tbs size of an orange, strangely cor
rugated and marked with peculiar
crystalline figures. Local mineral
ogists declare, after a careful examina
tion of the curious mass of metal,
that it is unquestionably of meteoric
origin.
Negroes and Italians In Riot.
Albany, N. Y., May 16. —A riot be
tween Italians and negroes broke out
in the brick yards at Coeymans, 12
miles south of here, Wednesday. Sher
iff Pitts and deputies and Lieutenant
Colonel Davis, of the Tenth regiment,
went to the scene anchthe commanding
officers of the local military compar
nies have been instructed to be In
readiness for orders. One negro has
been brought to Albany hospital with
a bullet in his side. The trouble
grew out of the Importation of south
ern negroes to take the places,of the
striking Italians.
Armitage’B Head Bk>wn Off.
Greenville, Tenn., May 16* —Charles
H. Armitftge, a prominent citizen of
Greene county, met a tragic death on
Tuesday on his farm 6 miles from the
town of Greenville. Mr. Armitage
had loaded his shotgun, intending to
ghoot Into a flock of crows. The gun :
however, failed to fire. Subsequently
In attempting to remove the load from
the gun, it suddenly discharged and
Mr, Armitage’s head jyas blown pff,
CHILD SEIZED BY NEGRO BRUTE
Armed Posse at Rome Seeks Negro
Assailant of Little Girl.
Rome, Ga., May 16. —An unknown
negro, about 18 years old, atempted
to criminally assault Janie McElha
ney, the 13-year-old daughter of Ben
McElhaney, Tuesday evening about 6
o’clock.
The little girl had been to Lytle
Spring to get some water. She was
accompanied by a child named Grace
Landreth, aged 10 years. As they
were leaving the spring they were ac
costed by the negro, who told them if
they would go with him to a place
nearby and pick strawberries for him
he would give them 10 cents a quart
for all they could pick.
The children started with the negro
and when they reached a secluded
spot, he seized little Janie McElhaney
by the back of the neck and began
choking her.
She immediately began to scream
loudly, and jerking away from the ne
gro she ran to a nearby house and told
of the occurrence.
The negro in the meantime escaped.
The news of the affair spread like
wildfire, and soon an armed posse was
in search of the negro. Two negroes
were arrested soon after the alleged
assault and taken before the child, but
neither proved to be the guilty party.
Cotton Spinners In Convention.
Asheville, N. C., May 16.—1 t is esti
mated that 300 delegates, representing
750,000 spindles, have already arrived
here to attend the tenth annual con
vention of the American Cotton Manu
facturers’ association, which opened at
Kenliworth Inn Wednesday morning
at 10 o’clock. This convention is re
garded as the most important in the
history of the association by reason of
the fact that it will deal with ques
tions which have attracted national at
tention during the past 12 months. An
unusual feature of this convention is
the announcement that the public will
be admitted to all sessions. This ac
tion is taken, it is said, in order that
the people generally may know exact
ly how the cotton manufacturers stand
on matters wherein their attitude has
been questioned.
Headless Body of Man Found.
Granite City, 111., May 16. —The head
less body of a man was found in a
cess pool in the rear of a Madison sa
loon, not far from where John Hickey,
an overland traveler to Oklahoma, was
sandbagged and killed last week. The
absence of the head, it is believed, in
dicates that the man was murdered,
and that the head was removed to
prevent identification. The body had
evidently lain in the cess pool for sev
eral months. .
Russian Parliament Meets.
St. Petersburg, May 16. —The upper
house of parliament met Wednesday.
Two ministers and Count Witte were
scheduled to speak. It was decided
to appoint a committee of eighteen to
draft an address in reply to the speech
from the throne. The committee was
given entire freedom of action, and no
instructions of any kind. A second
conference of the re-actionary iourt
faction has been held at the palace.
Will Prosecute Standard Oil Company.
St. Louis, Mo., May 16. —Attorney
General Davidson, of Texas, and Spe
cial Assistant Lightfoot, passed
through St. Louis Wednesday enroute
to Jefferson City, where they will con
fer with Attorney General Hadley re
garding the Standard Oil prosecutions
which they intend to bring, showing
relations between the WaterS-Pierce
Oil company and the Standard Oil
company in Texas.
Two Killed In Wreck.
Peru, Ind., May 16.—1 n a wreck at
Fowlertown on the Chicago, Cincinnati
and Louisville railroad Wednesday En
gineer Wesley Wolf and Brakeman
OUie Bowman were crushed to death.
.The cause of the accident is unknown.
Father Gapon’s Funeral.
Ozerki, Finland, May 16. —The funer
al of Father Gapon, who was found
hanged May 13th in a cottage in this
town, and who is believed to have
been executed by revolutionists for
treason, was held here Wednesday.
Greene-Gaynor Case To Be Tried.
Macon, Ga., May 16. —The federal
court will go into session here on May
Slst, and will take up the Green and
Gaynor appeal case. The court will
continue in session until all business
How on the calendar is cleared.
Freight Claim Agents’ Convention.
St. Louis, May 16. —The fifteenth an
nual convention of the Freight Claim
Agents’ association of the United
States, Canada and Mexico, began here
Wednesday and will be in session for
three days.
’Frisco Banks Will Reopen.
San Francisco, May 16.—A1l the sav
ings banks of the city will reopen for
business on May 28th. All the offi
cials of the various institutions declar
ed their banks to be in excellent condi
tion financially.
Bishop of Exeter Dead.
London, May 16.—The Rt. Rev. fHen
ry Bickersteth, D.D., bishop of Exe
ter, died here Wednesday. He was
born in 1825.
Such a Waste! '
“I wonder,” said the maniof a statis
tical turn, “I wonder howtmuch pow
der is destroyed daily lntuseless sa
lutes?”
“There must be a lot,” safid' the friv
olous girl, “but I suppose wipmen will
go on kissing each other# Just the
eame.”—Stray Stories. \
Slow.
Bill Collector—They say 'they’ll send
a«check when they get around to it.
Employer—When they get around to
It? They must be traveMng In the
wrong direction.—New York-i Press.
Good blood, good health; bad
J ¥¥w ¥ blood, bad health; there you have
/l/oor/ not heJ P naiure just a
VyV/V *’ Httle and change the bad to the
good? Bad blood to good blood; poor blood to rich blood! Ask your doctor
how this applies to Ayer’s Sarsaparilla, and how it applies to you! Could
anything be more fair s we h*v# no «emtßl we publish j.c.Ayerco.,
mg uc IIIUIC Idir. the formu i aß of aU our mo ji o ineß! Lowall, «...
INSURANCE COMPANIES
WILL SETTLE LOSSES
Each Company Will Settle In
Own Fashion.
Will not be on uniform basis
Fire Underwriters’ Bureau Will Make
No Attempt to Dictate or Lay Down
Rules for Companies to Observe in
the Settlement of Claims.
San Francisco, May 16. —The insur
ance companies will settle their losses
in their own way, each company act
ing for itself, according to the con
tracts embodied in the policies and the
fire underwriters adjusting bureau will
make no attempt to dictatte a general
policy or lay down uniform rules for
the companies to observe in the settle
ment of claims, according to a state
ment made by Attorney T. C. Coogan,
who is legal adviser to the adjusting
bureau.
The adjusting bureau is merely to
act as a board of appraisers in deal
ing with claims, and only report on
losses sustained, leaving the settle
ment entirely to the respective compa
nies. Mr. Coogan said:
"The settlement of claims will not
be on any uniform basis. Each com
pany will settle its own losses in
its own fashion. It has its own con
tracts embodied in its own policies,
and its own attorneys to advise it.
The adjusting bureau has no power to
lay down any uniform course or policy
for observation by the companies, no
power to compel them to waive condi
tions and legal rights.
"No proposition looking toward uni
formity of action has been suggested,
nor is there any truth in the report
that it Is contemplated to cut losses
all clown the line and settle upon a
percentage basis.
“The companies will pay what they
legally owe. Moreover, they will be
perfectly fair, but they will obey no
rules laid down for them by any bu
reau.”
Attorney Coogan’s statement was |
corroborated by H. F. Wood, chairman I
of the committee of fifteen, which
transacts all the executive bus’t'.ess of
the general adjusting bureau. On
and after Monday next the underwrit
ers’ bureau, which at present meets
in Oakland, proposes to hold meetings
in San Francisco.
1 he special committee of the Mer
chants’ association of San Francisco,
ou insurance, composed of Andrew M.
Davis, Byron Mausey and Alle nG.
Wright, sent a letter to insurance com
missioner Wolf on May 10tli, asking
him to compel the insurance compa
nies to furnish needed information
in cases where policies were destroy
ed by lire.
Laborer Kailec! in Rict.
Bristol, Va., May 16.—As the result
of a riot which was incited by seventy
five Italian laborers employed on the
South and West railroad, near Spruce
Pine, N. C., one was killed and two se
riously injured. For some unknown
reason the men quit work and demand
ed immediate pay. The superinten
dent was unable to comply with this
der.mad, and threats were made to
blow up the office and commissary
buildings. A posse was organized to
quell the mob, and when it approached
the house where the ring leaders were
assembled, they were met with a vol
ley from within. The fire was re
turned with the above result.
One Killed; Two Injured.
Buffalo, N. Y., May 16. —A Wabash
passenger train, running over the
tracks of the New York Central within
the city limits, ran off an open switch
Wednesday, The engine and three of
the coaches were wrecked. James
Howe, englnee of the train, was kill
ed and two other trainmen were pain
fully injured.
Found Date Seed in Apendix.
Lawrenceburg, Ind., May 16. —Chas.
C. Howard Is dead here after suffering
for a week with acute appendicitis. An
operation was performed last week
and a date seed was found in his ap
pendix. The seed had sprouted, and
was the cause of his trouble that end
ed fatally. Howard was well known
here and at Cincinnati as a sporting
man. ,
Named for Congress.
Jacksonville, Fla., May 16. —In Tues
day’s Democratic primaries Frank
Clark and W. B. Lamar and Steve
Sparkman were nominated for con
gress by big majorities. Governor
Broward’s drainage scheme also -re
ceived an unmistakable rebuff in the
personnel of the men nominated to the
legislature.
Charged with Embezzlement.
Chicago, May 16. —Charles T. Wen
ham, formerly agent for the Canadian
Pacific railroad in this city, has been
indicted on a charge of embezzling
$51,000 belonging to the company. He
is at present in New York and an of
ficer left here Wednesday to bring him
back for trial.
Named by the President.
Washington, May 16. —The president
has sent the following nominations to
the senate: Postmasters: Indian Ter
ritory—H. P. Warfield, of Tishomingo.
Louisiana —R. E. Rosenberger, of Gary
ville. Tennessee —Reuben Hurtt, of
Hardiman, Texas —Theodore Ray,
Midland.
Freight Steamer Stranded.
Chicago, May 16. —The freight
steamer Lewiston, bound from Buffalo
to Chicago, which stranded Tuesday
night on the reef about ten miles
north of the Chicago harbor, Is still in
a perilous position. The boat waa
1 loaded with hard coal.
“If you want to know what smartly dressed men will wear
. this season, ask to see Fechheimer-Fishel Smart Clothes.”
The Young Men Os Today
Are much more difficu’t to| with thnr clothes
than are their fathers. Perhaps it’s because the
young- fellows that go to school or college, or those
who have just entered business--we r<fer to the youths
ct from I 4 to _0 years of age--have more time to pa/
attention to tbe.tr clothes, or a greater object in view
than their elders He that as it ma r , the fact remains
that
That Youthsare pancular
and we are particular to
please the youth
With this result in view, we h ive prepared a moit
carefully selected stock of Subs and Trousers, from
which we can please the m«>ft “finicky” young fel
lows in town. The coats all hive the athletic broad
shoulders —they hmg gracefully, giving p l enty of
room for the expansion of the ‘ marly” chests of the
wearers. The trousers are full at the thighs and
‘‘peg-top” at the bottom and can be ptessed ‘ turn
ed up,” if they p’ease to have them that way.
MEN’S PANAMA HATS.
We just rcce'ved a few days ago our delayed
shipment of PANAMA HATS. We think
we can give you better values for SS.CO and
$7.50 than any house in Americus.
CRAWFORD'S FAIOIS $4.01 M'S SHOES
We are Sole Agents here and invite
your inspection of our Patent Colt Ox
lords and Bal>\ For style and snap
tley are unsurpassed,
SEE AD ON FOURTH PAG-E
GHAS. L. ANSLEY,
. Succes&ar to Wheatley & Ansley.
A
Motor-Car Divorce
By LOUISE CLOSSER HALE
A BREEZY and deliciously humorous motor-car romance —the
fact that the hero and heroine are man and wife makes it
no less a romance.
Mrs. Ward, a believer ir. the theory of the ten-year marriage I
contracts advanced by George Meredith, goes with her indulgent ■
husband on an automobile tour through France and Italy for the I
purpose of securing a divorce on the grounds of “ incompatibility
of temper,” which, in reality, do not exist. It takes another woman,
several accidents and the automobile to bring Mrs. Ward to her
proper senses.
With 36 Illustrations, 10 of which are in Color, by Walter Halo
12mo, Cloth, $1.50
If your bookseller hasn't it , the publishers will send the book , postage paid,
upon receipt of price.
DODD, MEAD & COMPANY
Publishers 372 Fifth Avenue New York
a mmmammmmmammmmmmmm ,
■ .11-- ' .1- .
IN THE SPRING
the thoughts of a house-owner naturally turn to
ward pointing. If >ou are going to paint your
house, use
MOORE’S HOUSE COLORS
because it is astrictly pure linseed oil paint, and,there*
fore, can be relied npon to give the best satisfaction.
When used according to directions, it will cover more
stuface,and coter it better,with less labor,than other
paints. These a r e facts that have been demonstra
ted Tight in your own locality, and it will pay you,
as it has others,to buy MOORE’S HOUSE COLORS
thi« spring from our representative SHEFFIELD
HUNTINGTON CO, Amencus.
BENJAMIN MOORE & CO.
Pore Paints, Colors and Muresco.
New York * . • Chicago.
'IST BS GOOD” IS “HOT HE BEST
j Buy Only the Genuine SHAW’S PURE MALT, sold by
El, J. McGreh.ee.
No. II