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VOL. 111.
Advertising Kates.
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newspaper decisions.
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Jarly from the post office—whether directed
to his name or another’s, or whether he ha*
subscribed or not—is responsible for the
payment.
2 If a person orders his paptT discontin
ued, he most pay all arrearages, or the pub
lisher may continue to send it until payment
it made, and collect the whole amount,
vhetber the paper Is taken from the office or
not.
S. The courts have decided that refusing
to take newspapers and periodicals from the
postoffice, or removing and leaving them un
called for, is prima facie evidence of inten
tional fraud.
TOWN DIRECTORY.
Mayor —Thomas G. Barnett.
Commissioners —W. W. Tnrnipseed, J. &.
Wyatt, K G. Harris, E. R. James.
Ci,erk—E. <}. Harris.
Treasurer —W. S. Shell.
Marsbalb—S. A. BeMine, Marshal.
J. W . Johnson,Deputy.
JUDICIARY.
A. M. Speer, - - ■ - - J udge.
F. D. Dismckr, - - Solicitor General.
Butts—Second Mondays in Murch and
September.
Henry—Thisf- Mondays in April and Oc
tober.
Monroe—Fourth Mondays in February,
and August.
Newton—Third Mondays in March and
September.
Pike—Second Mondays in April and Octo
bar.
Rockdale—Mondnv after fourth Mondays in
March and September
Spalding—First Mondays in February
and Aagust.
Upson First Mondays in May and No
vtmber.
CHURCH DIRECTORY.
M ktmodtgt Episcopal Church, (South,)
Rev. Wcslev F. Smith, Pastor. Fourth
Sabbath in each month. Sunday-school 3
T. w. Prayer meeting Wednesday evening
Methodist Protestakt Church. First
Sabbath in Aach mouth. Sunday-school 9
A. X.
Christian Church, W. S. Fears, Pastor,
ffiecond Sabbath iD each month.
Baptist Church, Rev. J. P. Lyon, Pas
tor. Third Sabbath in each month.
CIVIC SOCIETIES.
Pine Grove Lodge, No. 1 77. F. A. M
Stated communications, fourth Saturday in
each month.
DOCTORS.
»R. J. C. TURNIPSEED will attend to
all calls day or night. Office i resi
dence, Hampton, Ga.
TVR. W. LL PEEBLES treats all dis
•* * eases, and will attend to all qplls day
and night. Office at the Drug Store,
Broad Street, Hampton, Ga.
TvR. N. T. BARNETT tenders bis profes-
MJ sional services to the citizens of Henry
and adjoining counties, and will answer cali«
day or night. Treats all discuses, of what
ever natore. Office at Nipper’s Drug Store,
Hampton, Ga. Night calls can be made at
my residence, opposite Berea chorch. apr2fi
JF PONDER, Dentist, has located in
• Hampton, Ga., and invites the public to
eall at his room, upstairs in the Bivins
House, where he will be found at ail hours.
Warrants all work for twelve moDths.
LAWYERS.
JNO. G. COLDWELL, Attorney at I,aw,
Brooks Station, Ga. Will practice in
the counties composing the Coweta and Flint
River Circuits. Prompt attention given to
commercial and other collections.
TC. NOLAN, Attorney at Law. Mc
• Donongh, Georgia: Will practice in
the counties composing the Flint Circuit ;
the Supreme Court of Georgia, and the
Uuited States District Court.
WM. T. DICKEN, Attorney at Law, Lo
cust Grove, Georgia, (Henry county.)
Will practice in the counties composing the
Flint Judicial Circuit, the Supreme Court of
Georgia, and the United States District
Court. apr27-ly
GEO. M NOLAN, Attorney at Law.
McDonough,Ga. (Officein Court bouse)
Will practice in Henry aud adjoining coun
ties, and iD the Supreme and District Courts
of Georgia. Prompt attention giv°n to col
lections. mch23-6m
JF. WALL, Attorney at Law, f/amp
. ton,Ga Will practice in the connties
composing the Flint Judicial Circuit, and
the Supreme and District Courts of Georgia.
Prompt attention given to collections. ocs
EDWARD J. REAGAN, Attorney at
law. Office on Broad Street, opposite
the Railroad depot, Hampton, Georgia.
Special attention given to commercial and
other collections, and cases in Bankruptcy.
BF. McCOLLUM Attorney and Coun
• Bellor at L-iw, Hampton. Ga. Will
practice in Henry, Clayton, Fayette, Coweta,
Pike, Meriwether, Spalding and Butt* Snpe
rior Coarts, and in the Supreme and United
States Courts. Collecting claims a specialty.
Office ao stairs in the Mclntosh Building.
7 WO.
To one he brought the rarest flowers
That gold could buy ;
And gave them with the courteous smile
That masked a sigh.
Upon the other he bestowed,
W ith scarce a look,
A few wild violets, gathered by
A wayside brook.
When from the skies that golden day
Went out the sun,
Of all the flowers the first received
Remained not one 1
Some Inred her swans, some gayly graced
The fawn she petted ;
Home decked her starling's cage ; all died,
Not once regretted.
The other, shyly from fhs world
Turned her apart,
And hid her wayside violets
Upon her heart.
And he who gave to each that day
Such different share,
By one was scorned ; the other, breathed
His name in prayer!
Years afterward, a woman died—
A lonely creature,
Whose sorrows were not written out
On form oi feature,
But they who shrouded her do say
Dead on her breast,
Close, close onto her cold, dumb heart,
Were.violetß pressed !
—Mary Atldey Tovmund.
Genius and Perseverance.
AN AI.i.BQORT.
Great gifts are many times abused, be
cause they are not appreciated ; just as the
inheritor of wealth is many times a spend
thrift, because he knows nothing of the
value ef labor and time and how wealth is
made.
The gift of genius is the rich gift of
thought without much labor ; it is that pre
science, that intuitive knowledge, that in
stinctive grasp of things, principles and facts
which come without effort.
Perseverance is that gift of determination
resolution, labor and painstaking. One wins
fame with ease, the other commands recog
nition through laborious study.
But we will illustrate our meaning better
in an allegory :
When Jupiter called the gods together to
consult upon the fate of man, and allowed
each one to endow him with certain charac
teristics, each gave what bethought best,
Jove reserving to himself the power to give
him immortality. Thus, among the gilts
given, Genius and Perseverance were seen.
Being peculiar in their address and in
tastes and associations, and being rivals
withal, the eyes of the world were turned
upon them. The one was bright, brilliant,
attractive and winning in his conversation ;
quick to compreliend and ready to execute;
a despieer of toil and a lover of pleasure—a
rapid and erratic worker aud thinker ; what
seemed difficult for others to accomplish,
was bnt pleasing pastime to him.
The other was dull, heavy and uninviting
in appearance or form ; with sober look and
steady step he labored up the Hill of Fame
to the Tempi* of Glory. He was laughed
at by Genius for his slow comprehension,
and still slower execution ; but indifferent to
all jests or jeers from bis brilliant and at
tractive rival, he plodded on. Genius would
dash past him with a loud hurrah and bid
him overtake bim. “I am coming," says
Perseverance, “and will yet meet you at the
Temple.”
Slowly Perseverance toiled along, remov
ing evety obstacle that presented itself, in
vestigating every object worthy of thought;
mastering difficult subjects by continued in
vestigation and antiring application ; deaf
to all the allurements that presented them
selves, and which would call him from bis
course ; unmindful ef the sweet and charm
ing voice of Plea*ure, still onward he bent
his slow steps, his eyes fixed upon the glit
tering Temple.
Often did he see Genius, dallying and
sportiiig with pleasure, and many times,
alas! the victim to her wiles, reeling and
staggering from the Temple of Bacchus,
with mind beclouded or raving like a mad
man ; or, perchance, he was in the loving
and enervating embraces of Venus, or wagte
ing golden hours in the Halls of Chance,
where dice rattled or aces woo.
Peneveranee, still plodding on, reaches
the goal of his ambition ; but finds Genius
there too, with garments bright, though
soiled ; moral character blasted, and life cat
short. Though great, he is an object of pity
and at the same time admiration ; the pood
deplore his frailties bat admire bis beauty,
while Perseverance receives the homage of
all.
HAMPTON, GEORGIA, FRIDAY, MAY 16, 1879.
The Novel of the Future.
“If T had only known it would have come
to this!” said Augustus de Boots, with a
sigh. And then the ex-hussar sat down in
an easy chair and wept bitterly.
No wonder the poor fellow was listless
and low spirited.. Years ago he had been
the pride of every garrison in which the
regiment was quartered. His long mustache
and curly locks had been the toast of every
5 o’clock tea within a ladius of five miles
round each military center. Finding that
his expenditure was considerably larger than
bis income, he bad married. In one liny
hour the dashing Major Augustus de Boots
—the ppt of the garden party and the loung
iest lounger of the clubs—bod given up
single blessedness to beeome the neglected
husband of a professional lady in large prac
tice in the TTest End. And the result ? A
miserable home. Too gentle to run away to
his bachelor haunts, too heart-broken to
face bis tailor, Augustus moped awny his
days, awaiting the return of his more indus
trious, if not better half. Nine struck, a.id
the well-known turn in the lock told the
neglected hnsbund that his wife wap letting
herself in with her latch-key. Mrs. de Boots
entered the dining-room with a frown upon
her atern and deeply furrowed brow.
“Dinner 1" she exclaimed, roughly, throw
ing herself into a chair.
"It has been waiting since 7 o’clock, dar
ling,” said the poor husband, timidly.
“Wbat of that?” replied the churlish wife.
“You can’t expect a professional female to
be tied to time. Now, then, I have only a
quarter of an hour or so. Look sharp I”
The trembling servant brought in the
luke-warm soup, the cold fish, the burned
meat. Mrs. De Boots gulped down her food
hastily but moodily. Augustus with diffi
culty kept down his tears. Poor Angustusl
At last, when the cloth had been with
drawn, and wile and husband were once
more alone, Augustus ventured to ask what
was the matter.
“Don’t bother !” replied Mrs. De Boots.
And Mien she added, as she noticed the tears
welling over in Augustus’ mild blue eyes,
“Now don’t he absurd, if yon can help it. 1
you must know, everything has gone wrong
to-day. I have lost three patients by allow
ing my hand to slip in three difficult surgi
cal operations; and the great case in which
I was specially retained bus been decided
against me.”
“Of course the judge was a man, dear,”
said Augustus, with just a little spite.
‘ No, a woman,” returned his wife, an
grily. “But let us ehange the subject.
Have the workmen left the house yet ?”
“Oh, deor.no,” replied Augustus, stroking
his beautiful mustache. “And f have no
idea when they will be finished.”
“They get on very slowly,” growled Mrs.
De Boots.
“Yes, dear,” said Augustas. “The fact
is, the plasterers are hiod and the carpenters
women, and they waste all their time in flir
tations. lam sure the carpenters should he
ashamed of themselves I” And the ex-hussar
tossed bis curly bead with pretty indigna
tion.
At that moment Mrs. De Boots, with all
her strength of mind, coaid not help admir
ing her ornamental bnt useless husband.
But sternly repressing all sentimental weak
ness, she produced a scientific review, and
had been for some time buried in its pages
when a loud knock was heard at the street
door, followed at once by the entrance of the
servant with a note.
“Another serious case!” cried Mrs De
Boots. "I mu«t be off at ones. Jane, pack
op my portmanteau."
“When will you return, darling?” asked
the husband, timidly.
“Perhaps to-morrow—perhaps in a week.”
replied the wife, impatiently. “If my opera
tion isn’t successful, I suppose I shall have
to wait for the inquest.’’ And with a hur
ried good-bye, half-swallowed in her caehc
nez, the wife took her departure.
“Oh, how I wish there had been a higher
education for the light cavalry !” murmured
the ej-hussar, as he sank hack iD bis chaise
lounge, while the fast-flowing tears trickled
down his cigar and turned its glow to ashes.
A woman in a Kansas Pacific railroad car
sat facing a man who, with one eye at least,
seemed to be staring fixedly at her. She
became indignant, and said : “Why do you
look at me so, sir ?” He said he was not
aware of having done so, but she insisted.
“I beg your pardon, madam, but it’s this
eye, is it not ?" lifting his finger to his left
optic “Yes, sir, it’s that eye,” “Well,
madam, that eye won’t do you any harm.
It’s a glass eye, madam—only a glass eye
1 hope you’ll excuse it. But, upon my soul,
I’m not snrprised that even a glass eye
should feel interested in so pretty a woman.”
The explanation and the compliment com
bined to put tbe woman into a good humor.
L«vc and Marriage.
A popular writer says: "A young man
meets a pretty face in a ball-room, falls in
love with it, courts it, marries it, goes to
house-keeping with it, and boasts of having
a home and a wife to grace it. The chances
are, nine to ten, that he has nei'h r. He ha*
been ‘taken iD and done for!' Her pretty
face gets to be an old story, or becomes
faded, or freckled, or fretted; and as the
fare was all he wanted, all he paid attention
to, all he sat up with, all he bargained for,
all be swore to honor and protect, he get*
«ick of his trade, knows of a dozen faces he
likes better, gives up staying at home even
ings, consoles himself with cigars, oysters
aud polities, and lo«ks opon his home as a
very indifferent boarding-house.
“A family of children grows up about
him; but neither he nor his ‘face’knows
anything about training them, so they come
ud helter-skelter ; made toys of when babies,
dolls when boys and girls, dmdges when men
and women ; and so passes yenr after year,
and not one quiet, ha’py, homely hour
known throughout the whole household
“Another young man heroines enamored
of ai ‘fortune ’ He waits upon it to parties,
dances the polka with it, exehsnges billet
doux with it, pop* the qnestion to it, get ac
cepted by it, calls it -wife,’ carries it home,
sets up an establishment with ' it, introduces
it to his friends, and says he, too, is married
and tins got a home. It is false. He is not
married ; he has no home. And he soon
finds it out. He is in the wrong box ; but
it is too late to get out of jt; he might as
well hopo to get out of his coffin, llis
friends congratulate him, and he has to grin
and bear it. They praise the house, the
furniture, the cradle, the new Bible, and bid
the ‘fortune,’ and he who husbands it, good
morning—as if he had known a good
morning since ho and that gilded fortune
were declared to be one!
“Take another case. A young woman is
smitten with a pnir of whiskers. Curled
hair nevet before hud such charms. She sets
her cap for him ; they take. The delighted
whiskers make an offer, proffering themselves
both in exchange for one heart. My dear
miss is overcome with magnanimity, closes
the bargain, carries home the pries, show* i*
to pa and ma, calls hcreell engaged to it,
thinks there never was such a pair of whis
kers before, and in a few weeks they are
married. Married ? Yes, the world calls it
*o, and so we will. What is the resnlt ? A
short honeymoon, and then the discovery
that they are as unlike as chalk and cheese.”
Too Good.
A very good and pious-looking young
'man applied for a position in a well-known
store last week. After he had introduced
himself and made known his wants, the pro
prietor informed him that he would like to
have a clerk if he could get one that would
suit him.
“I suppose you go to church, eh ?” he
commented.
“Yes, sir.”
“Do you drink ?” continued the merchant,
eyeing him sharply.
“Never!”
“Do you use tobacco in any form?”
Here the yonng man pushed the quid into
the roof of his mon'h, and replied with n
smile that was child-like and bland : “I
never use the weed, and never did. I con
sider it the lowest and most shocking habit
that a man can be addicted to.”
“Do yon freqnent the policy shops?”
“No, sir ; never!”
"Do you go to the theatre, dog fights or
boxing exhibitions?”
“Never was at one in my life,” wa3 the
emphatic reply.
"Can you tell me the ace of diamonds
from the king of clubs?”
“1 know nothing whatever of cards!”
“Do you ever bet ?”
“No, air, I don’t.”
“Suppose.” said the merchant, “a maD
should offer to bet a thousand dollars to ten
dollars that a three-legged goat could out
run a g-ay hound, would yon take him
“No, sir 1”
“Then you won’t do for this estabfish
ment; we don't waQt you—we never hire
fools!”
That youth won’t be so good next time.
“Amanda, I wish you to put the large
Bible in a prominent place on the center
table, and place three or four hymn books
carelessly round on tbe sofas. I have ad
vertised for a young maD to board in a
cheerful Christian family, aod I tell you
what, il you girls don’t manage, either one
of yon, to rake him in, why I’ll never try
anything again, for I’m tired out."
Courage and common sense do more for
a man than money or hair parted in tbe
middle.
“Baby Mine.”
The baby carriage made its nppearni’ce
yesterday for the Reason. It was occupied
by the usual baby, and it was propelled by
the woman who looks into all the stoi«*win
dowg as she goes along. A reporter who
followed the entringe for an hour found that
it collided with five women, ten men, six
curb-blocks, four boxes and a street cur,
and every collision only made the woman
more determined to occupy two thirds of the
sidewalk, if it took all summer.
She succeeded. They all succeed. A
wonian pushing a baby cairi"ge in front f '
her on the sidewalk is as dnngeions as sev
en roller skaters and four velocipede riders
combined. She can’t kill a full-grown man
quite ns promptly as a runaway team, but
she can knock his shins to pieces, tumble
him over, upset all his good resolution* and
leave him flint-hparted and evil-minded.
You can’t dodge a baby cab. Your only
safe way is to make a jump from the curb
stone or climb a ladder. They go on wheels.
They are supposed to be a convenience which
no respectable bnby can do without. No
matter who first got the idea that jolting a
baby nround town, bobbing him over cross
walks, would sweeten his disposition—the
idea is correct. I’ut a man in « vehicle of
the sort and his back would De broken in an
hour, bnt babies have no bucks They are
simply greot hunks of sweetness. The only
reason why all the regiments in the lute war
were not armed with baby carriages was
because the factories could not supply them.
They would have ended the war in one year.
The woman with the baby carriage nerds tio
advice. She knows enough to head the
vehicle toward every crowd she can see. The
thicker the crowd the more business she has
there. It is her duty to run to all fires with
it, to select the busiest crosswalks, and to
get in front of all runaway teams, and site
perfectly understands it. If there is any
country on earth where these vehicle* are
not in u°e, it is no country to live in.—
Detroit Free Pros.
Women Eyeing Women.
The eyeing of women by women is one of
the most offensive manifestations of super
cilinnsne-s now to be met with in society.
Few observant persons cannot have failed to
have noticed the manner in which one wo
man, who is not perfectly well-bred or per
fectly kind-hearted, will eye another woman
whom she thinks w not in such good society,
and, above all, not at the time in so costly a
dress as she herself is in. It is done every
where ; at parlies, at chart'll, in the street.
It is done by women in all conditions of life
The very seivant girls learn it of their
mistresses. It is done in an instant. VV ho
cannot recall hundreds of instances of that
sweep of the eye which tnkes in at a glance
the whole woman, and what she has on, from
top-knot to shoe-ti«? Men are never gnihy
of it, or, wilh such extreme rarity, and then
in such a feeble and imnll-souled specimen
of the ; r sex that it may be set down as a sin
not masculino, or at least epicene. But
women of sense, of some breeding, and even
of some kindliness of nature, will thin en
deavor to assert a superiority upon the mean
est of all pretenses and inflict a wound in a
mannei the most cowardly, because it cannot
be resented, and admits of no retort. If they
but only knew how unlovely, how positively
offensive they make themselves in so doing,
not only to their silent victims, but to every
generous-hearted man who observes their
maneuvers, they would give up a triumph at
once so mean and fo cruel which is obtained
at such a sacrifice on their part. No other
evidence than this eyeiug i* Deeded that a
woman, whatever be her birth or breeding,
haa a small and vulgar soul.— Ex.
Burdette on Pnn.ADEi.pniA. —Burdette
writes as follows : Do you know, the only
annoying thing ahnut Philadelphia is ita
appalling cleanliness. You can stand on a
residence street and see thirty-five miles of
red brick houses and snow-white blinds, and
tbe “big brass koobs” are so carefully pol
ished that yon would think every bouse bar
bored a miniature Sir Joseph Porter, K. C.
B. The cleanliness is appalling. It makes
you think of a heaven of house cleaning, and
an eternity of mops and brushes. Hornetimea
I was irresistibly impelled to go out into the
street and scrape up a handful of mud and
throw it against a snowy while blind. Aud
1 did go out into tbe street with that inten
tion.
But when I got out there I couldn’t find
| any mod.
If you want to throw rood at anything in
! Philadelphia, you will have to take your
mud with you.— Hawlceye.
Blessed b the man who lovetb bis wife’s
rclatious ; aud not only blessed, but also
scarce.
How to Pay a Compliment.
To pay a compliment ia to tell the truth,
and to tell it a* though you meant it. And
the only way to do that i* to mean it. If a
girl is pretty or accomplished ; if she plays
well, or sings well, or dances well, er talks
well; if, in a word, she pleases, why, in the
name *f common sense, should she not be
told of it ? Don’t blurt it out before every
body. That will only serve to make her'
feel nncomfortable, and make you appear
ridiculous. Say it quietly when opportunity
offers, but say it strongly. Convey the idea
distinctly and fully.so that there may be no
mistake about it Bnt do not say it "offi
cially.” Formality is about the coldest
thing known. More than one maidfen has
been made happy—say for half on hour—by
a man’s tuking the trouble to say a pleasant
thing about a toilet that he liked, and many
of fashion’s follies have been given up by
girls when they noticed a discreet silence
concerning them on the part of their gentle
men friends. A bewitching black-eyed
beauty once said to a gentleman, “I like to
have yon say sweet things tome, it seems
to come se easy and natural.” In general
terms, it may be said that it ia always better
to say on agreeable thing than a disagreea
ble one, better for all purties. The gallant
who, when a young lady stepped on his foot
while dancing and asked pardon, said, “Don’t
mention it ; a dainty little foot like that
wouldn’t hurt a daisy,” not only told the
truth, hut doubtless felt more comfortable'
than the boor who, when his foot was stepped*
on, roared ont, “Thai’s right; climb all
over me with your great clumsy hoofs.”—
Bouton 7ranteript. • t
Tns Science of Tickling —That on*
must laugh when one is tickled seems now
to be not only a well-settled law of cause
and consequence, but a well-settled law of
health The learned Dr Flecker says that
it is dangerous not to laugh under such cir
cumstances, and when the Germanic Scien
tific Association had this subject up at a
meeting in Leipsic, a while since, be gave
the reasons for his theory.
Tickling (“a variable, intermittent excite
ment of the nerves of the skin,” as the doctor
aalls it) ooptraets the blood vessels and
draws blood away from the brain. Too
much lessening of the pressure on the brain
in this wav is dangerous, and had nature
provided no remedy one could easily be
“tkkled to death." Laughter is the remedy.
It is the safe'y explosion (like thunder when
there is too much electricity in the air)
which equalizes matters in the nervous sys
tem, and restores the balance of pressure all
around. When we are mentally “tickled,’'
or. in other words, feel a sense ef the ludi
crous, the same set of sympathetic nerves is
set agoing, Dr. Decker say®, and here, too,
laughter cornea in for a relief. We make
the same “intermittent, forced movement of
expirution” —and feel better. In short, what
should we do if the cheerful excitement of
being tickled could not explode in its natural
“ha. ha, ha!” Certainly we are quite ready
to believe Hr. Meeker and the German
Scientific Association at Leipsic when they
tell us we should—burst.
Njw Throkt About Mummuw —Flaving
beard (hat Egyptian mummies could be di
vided into two classes, one embracing those
bodies which have been embalmed intact,
and the other including those bodies which
have been eviscerated, Dr. Gaulselbach, a
Swedish chemist of repute and professor in
the University of Upsal, has formed the
opinion that the mommies of the first class
are not really dead, but are only in a condi
tion of suspended animation ; though, un
fortunately for historians, the secret of bring
ing them again to lifa has been lost. In
support of this theory he adduces the results
of his own researches and experiments, one
of which consists in submitting a snake to a
process, the details of which are of course
kept secret, which petrifies it. Id this con
dition it has been laid aside for a year or
two at u lime, and is then restored to life by
some tqnally myvterions vivifying process.
This has now been gsing on about 15 years,
and the snake does not seem to dislike it.
Dr. Ganlselbach is said to have applied to
the Swedish government for leave toexperi
ment on a condemned criminal, the under
standing being if the experiment be success
ful the criminal shall receive pardon, because
of the service thus rendered to science, and,
possibly, to humanity.— Journal of Ckemii
try- _
Tbby begged him to play a little. He
seemed to feel bashful at first, but after a
while began to paw the ivory vigorously.
“ tVhat power I” said a listener to the owner
of the piano. ‘ Yes!” exclaimed the latter
in alarm, “be seems to have considerable
muscle, bat he ought to know this isn’t a
gymnasium.”
NO. 45