eT ea =. MY RELIGION by Helen Keller “ry I Copyright by Doubleday, Doran & Co. e I sew ean enjoy the sun and | }| Bowers and music where there is nothing except darkness and sil:nce you have proved the Mystic Sense—Helen Keller - WNU Service (Continued from last week.) i - ‘According to all Swedenborg’s testimony, after death we are like travelers going from place to place, making the acquaintance of all kinds of interesting objects, meeting all sorts of people and receiving some- thing from each individual on the wa sepye, judge, criti: cize, aid i, ue Td of wisdom or folly. We drop an opinion, take “Sp another, sift it and tést it in our mental ‘crucible. From each new. experience we extract finér kinds of Adfiowledge a. d those truer intellec- ‘tual concepts which are the property lof all. On earth man lives apart, though not alone, and the most won- derful thoughts that he has known, through lack of listeners, have never been said. But in the other life it is (different. All live together and learn ‘together. All spirit beings, good and bad, are minds, and they communi- cate to each other instantly volumes of ideas which would require long periods to apprehend upon earth! So we shall journey onward, choosing the comrades best suited to us, and grow increasingly interested, wiser, saner, nobler, and happier through all eternity. What a prospect this opens up to those whose spirit wings are fretted by the uninspired facts of mortality! What an inexpressible comfort to those who hunger for | lofty friendship and living inter- course! I believe that in heaven - friendships may endure, as indeed they do on earth, by changing as well as by their steadfastness. For it is their nature to vitalize and diversify the ideas and emotions which enter the field of consciousness. Here below we are inclined to lay stress on like- ness and ignore difference; but in heaven, and sometimes here among us, too, friends similar in spirit are so different they offset or comple- ment each other like varied and beau- tiful colors in the sunrise. They dis- cover each other, and give and re- ceive the best that is in them. They do for each other's souls what our | acquaintances do when they feed and clothe our bodies. A feeling of amazement comes over me as I rea- lize how fully I know this from ex- perience. I am the happy object of a rare friendship which makes my teacher a seer of the capabilities folded away in me that darkness and silence would hide from most people. There are moments in our lives 80 lovely, they transcend earth, and an- ticipate heaven for us. This fore- taste of eternity has made clear to me the perpetual and all-embracing gervice that friendship should ever Ye. "The Bible says that in heaven we “pest from our labors”; but that only means when we have worked out our salvation through sorrow, failure, and temptation, we reach the Sab- bath of peace and innocence. The “lgbors” we rest from are the ob- stacles of the flesh, the struggle for bread, clothing and shelter, war, and sordid schemes to outdo each other for gain or power. But immense fields of glorious work and emulation and endless interest await all of us who are faithful over a few tasks here. The employments in the Kingdom of Uses, as heaven is called, cannot here be enumerated or de- scribed specifically; for they are in- finitely varied. Those with unselfish parental love adopt and take care of little ones from earth. Some educate boys and girls, others give instruc- tion to the simple and earnest who desire it. Again, all the gentile na- tions are taught new truths to en- large and refine their limited beliefs. There are special societies to attend everyone who rises through death into Life, to defend such newcomers into the arena of the middle world . against the unfriendliness of evil spirits, to keep guard over those who inhabit the hell and prevent them from tormenting each other beyond endurance, and thus to lessen their sense of misery as far as may be possible. Since all human beings live both in this natural world and in the spiritual realm at the same time, angels from every society are chosen to guard men, take away little by little their lusts and wrong habits of thought, and tenderly turn their love of dark deeds into the joy of deeds of light, Only unwillingness in a man ever restrain their loving ministries and, even then, they keep returning with steadfast faith and patience, for they are, are they not, images and messengers of the Divine Fidelity? They scarcely see and still less dwell upon anyone's faults, but instead they study all his beauties of disposition and mind, and interpret the opposites into good. By following their genius closely, men and women who are be- coming angels rise continually to nobler tasks, and each new state brings them an influx of new powers, which is meant by the Lord’s promise of “full measure, shaken down, ee eee. pressed together, and running over.” The golden harps and the singing of endless praises, which have called forth so much adverse comment, and given such an unfavorable impression of lazy saints, are only pictorial ap- pearances—the heart playing softly on its lyre of joy and singing as the task grows ever more beautiful and satisfying. So, in the light of Swedenborg’s teachings, heavenly life is a truly human life, and there are all kinds of service, domestice, civil, social, and inspirational, to be performed and enjoyed. : We are also informed that there are three kinds of angels — those whose chief interest is knowledge and the practical work that protects the outposts of heaven against intru- sions of hell, those who philosophize and originate new ideas, and, finally, those who do not need to reason things out because they can feel with another, put themselves in his place by powers of perception and act di- rectly and quickly, The character of | these last might be compared with the fig tree, which does not stop to blossom, but brings forth its leaves and fruit at the same time. No one is quite like another, and thus there "%¥2 Innumerable groupings or socie- ties; but there is only one heaven— or heaven is one, just as the human od. is one, though composed of oUhtless organs, members, blood- vessels, nerves and fibres. All lesser ends are subordinated to the common good. In a word, every glory, every, ideal, every high desire—all that the dreams of noblest minds have evet whispered, and infinitely more un: thought-of possibilities, become sub- stantial realities in the eternal sun shine of immortality. In heaven, too, we shall find the oeauty of woman and the strength of man, self-less love between the sexes, the frolic of children, the joys of companionship, and the vital power of touch exquisitely soothing and elo- quent. If it is true that Swedenborg bring: a clear, authoritative revelation of heavenly life as it can be best un- derstood—free from all material limitations, we should have a definite idea of the purpose of education there. Now, that heavenly world is a vast realm of souls clothed with spiritual bodies, all interrelated and bound to- gether in one magnificent system of uses. There is not a single indivi- dual in all that multitude who has not capabilities, interests, and knowledge of a special kind that make possible his own higher development and thereby the greater good of all. While they depend one upon an- other, each being grows more per- fect in his own way, and becomes more responsive to the happiness which is increasingly bestowed upon him. If we examine the life of earth in celligently, we shall find it also gov- erned by the same Law of Use. Science teaches us that the body exists each part for the benefit of every other part. God breathes a similar purpose into Nature. The mineral kingdom is united, and serves as a support for the vegetable. The vege- table gives life to man, and both min- ister to humanity. This law of bene- fit from each to all and all to each is meant to rule in human life. Many have perverted it, and live on the labor and the brains of others; but sooner or later retribution overtakes them, and they must lay their offer- ing of service on the altar of the common good, or drop out of the ranks of worthy humanity. This serv- ice may be rendered in any of three ways, with the hand, the intellect, and our emotional and =sthetic capacities. Of course, if we view man sub- Jectively, the case may be different. A person may mar his use by sel- fishness; but the fact remains that, objectively, our whole life and its en- vironment teach the Law of Use, and are the best possible means for us to realize our proper ideals. It is for us to learn how to use that Law as our guide. We should seek ways to render it possible for each one to select the special activity that shall bring him interest and satisfaction and also harmonize with the good of all the rest. Then each one would find his place in the eternal Life of Use; this is the only right method of living in this or any other world. The type of education we need, and che one which thoughtful people now urge, is that which will help us to appreciate this Law of Use, adapt it to ourselves, and choose the work in which we can best fulfill it. We need a system of education which may teach us about all the varieties of use that surround us and show the dif- ference between the practical, the mental, and the spiritual services we can render, and which may impel each one to choose the task to which his interest and fitness draw him most strongly. The reason why Swedenborg keeps nolding up the heaven life as a pat- tern is that it serves as an object- lesson. The old thought tells us we are given earth to prepare for heaven, but there is truth in the other way round. We are given a knowledge of heaven to fit us better for earth. The Vision of Beauty must come into the workshop of Nazareth. So 1do not hesitate to point to what Swe- denborg says about the education of children in heaven as a suggestion for our earthly schools. There they are taught largely by “representations”— that is, by pictures, instructive plays, and scenes which they visit, that is by illustration and example. They are led to choose the uses they like best and are educated for them. This seems ‘to be the goal toward which modern pedagogy is advancing. Inci- dentally, I remember happily how I ——— was led to the blessings of knowledge and accomplishment by a similar method, and 1 am confident that with wise modifications it can be of great use in our general educational sys tem. I can easily believe that, as Sweden- borg often tries to show us, the visible and tangible phenomena of the other world are the direct embodiments of the mental states of its inhabitants. It is of little use to know about even the most wonderful splendors of heaven unless we understand some- what of their origin and their essen- tial meaning, and naturally this is difficult for others who do not sense the separateness between their earthly bodies and their inner selves. It is the combination of familiar ob- jects in an immediate way with un- familiar subjects that makes it all so strange. It is like learning a new language, and many of the fundamen- tal facts which the language ex- presses, | : “i ~ What is so sweet as to awake from a troubled dieam and behold a be- loved face smiling upon you? I love to believe that such ehall be our awakening fro earth to heaven. My faith never wavers that each dear friend I have “lost” is a new link be- tween this world and the happier land beyond the morn. My soul is for the moment bowed down with grief when I cease to feel the touch of their hands or hear a tender word from them; but the light of faith never fades from my sky, and I take heart again, glad that they are free. 1 cannot understand why anyone should fear death. Life here is more cruel than death — life divides and es- tranges, while death, which at heart is life eternal, reunites and reconciles. i believe that when the eyes within my physical eyes shall open upon the world to come, I shall simply be con- sciously living in the country of my heart. My steadfast thought rises above the treason of my eyes to fol- low sight beyond all temporal seeing! Suppose there are a million chances against that one that my loved ones who have gone are alive. What of it? I will take that one chance and risk mistake, rather than let my doubts sadden their souls, and find out after- ward. Since there is that one chance of immortality, I will endeavor not to cast a shadow upon the joy of the departed. I sometimes wonder who needs cheer most, the one that gropes on here below or the one that is per- haps just learning truly to see in God’s light. How real is the dark- ness to one who only guesses in the shadows of earth at an unseen sun! But how well worth the effort it is to keep spiritually in touch with those who have loved us to their last mo- ment upon earth! Certainly, it is one of our sweetest experiences that when we are touched by some noble affection or pure joy, we remember the dead most tenderly, and feel powerfully drawn to them. And always the con- sciousness of such a faith has the power to change the face of mortality. make adversity a winning fight, and set up a beacon of encouragement for those whose last support of joy seems taken from them. There is no such thing as “other worldliness” when we are convinced that heaven is not beyond us, but within us. We are only urged so much the more to act, to love, to hope against hope and reso- lutely to tinge the darkness about us with the beautiful hues of our in- dwelling heaven, Here and Now. I read with emotion the words ot Sir Humphry Davy, in whom science and faith and unselfishness were combined to a remarkable degree: “I envy no quality of mind or intellect in others—not genius, power, wit, or fancy; but if I could choose what would be most delightful, and I be- lieve most useful to me, I should prefer a firm religious belief to any other blessing; for it makes life a discipline of goodness, creates new hopes when all earthly hopes vanish; and throws over the decay, the de- struction of existence, the most gor- geous of all lights; awakens life even in death, and from corruption and de- cay calls up beauty and divinity: makes an instrument of torture and shame the ladder of ascent to Para- dise; and far above all combinations of earthly hopes, calls up the most delightful visions of palms and amar- anths. the gardens of the blest, the security of everlasting joys, where the sensualist and the skeptic view only gloom, decay, annihilation, and de- gpair.” It is like a Pentecostal ex- perience thus to feel in my hand the strong hand of a calm scientific man and a lover of mankind, who had no veconciler to second his thought, who saw the countless contradictions of the old faiths, who toiled in poverty at the first and then gave his inven- ‘ion of the safety-lamp to the world ce, who knew the tortures of natural existence, but who kept unshaken his communion with his God. Truly I have looked into the very heart of darkness, and refused to yield to its paralyzing influence, but in spirit I amone of those who walk in the morning. What if all dark, discouraging moods of the human mind come across my way as thick as the dry leaves of autumn? Other feet have traveled that road before me, and I know the desert leads to God as surely as the green, refresh- ing fields and fruitful orchards. I, too, have been profoundly humiliated, and brought to realize my littleness amid the immensity of greation. The more I learn, the less I think I know, and the more I understand of my sense-experiénce, the more I perceive its shortcomings and its inadequacy as a basis of life. Sometimes the points of view of the optimist and the pessimist are placed before me sO skilfully balanced that only by sheer force of spirit can I keep my hold upon a practical, liveable philosophy ‘ of life. But life and reject its opposite, nothing- ness. Edwin Markham - has ex- quisitely wrought into his poem “Take Your Choice,” the opposing moods and different beliefs which contend for : supremacy today: On the bough of the rose-tree is the . prickling briar: The delicate lily must live in the mire; The hues of the butterfly go at a breath; At the end of the road is the house of death. Nay, nay! On the brair is the deli- cate rose; In the mire of the river the lily blows; The moth is as fair as the flower of the sod; At the end of the road is a door to God! (Continued next week.) WILL COUNT ALL WHO QUIT FARMS IN 1930 CENSUS. | The first comprehensive survey of migration from American farms to the industrial and business life of cities will be made in the taking of the 1930 census, if thé census bureau adopts a recommendation of its ad- visory committee of experts. The proposed examination would be confined to the simple question as to whether each person enumerated | in the population count of the coun- a -— — I use my will, choose FOR AND ABOUT WOMEN. Daily Thought. One hundred years from now our lives ' will be measured by the good we do ‘ others today. J C. White. —All evening frocks are not of the dipped variety. A new style | dance frock has just been introduced which is very, very different, for it dares to have a short, even hemline. It all began when some gentle- man complained to a style expert | that Louffant evening gowns were ! awkward for dancing and they | swished around his legs. The stylist set to work immediately and {launched a white satin dance frock. | It looks somewhat like a tennis frock, because of its low decolletage jin back. However, it is a charming | creation and although the very new- est of the new things on the style | calendar, this model may set the i pace for a return to short-skirted evening gowns, next season. —As a daytime piece de resist- ance comes the linen town suit in "black. This is to be worn with white or eggshell blouse of sheerest batiste. On second thought, a thin sweater is just as attractive. These linen suits sell for an inexpensive sum in the Fifth avenue stores, | Where they are priced at $19.50 and ‘going strong,” according to retail- ers. Afternoon frocks of black chiffon with uneven hemlines and the pop- try has left the farm within the past | War V-neckline, are being shown as year. This information is Spend by statistical experts not only to give an exact answer to the question of migration, but to pave the way for supplemental examination to deter- mine accurately the causes. And this information, it is declared, will provide opportunity for an answer to the tuestion “how are you going to keep ’em down on the farm?” Although census experts know that there has been a strong drift from the farm in the last decade, as revealed by the difference between rival and city population, estimates of the marked change in the life of the nation have varied greatly. { The census bureau also is consider- | ing many other questions designed to give an intimate picture of the changes in the social life of the na- tion. Some proposals have already been rejected. Among the suggestions advanced are questions concerning religious tongue of foreign-born. The latter family, rent paid, classification of affiliation, the number of rooms per or salary workers and the mother question, has been urged because the nationality of many people is not indicted by reporting of country birth. Information concerning the living conditions of the people as a whole is eagerly sought by large life in-° surance companies and students of social conditions. Practical difficulties are confront- ing the census officials in their ef- forts along this line. An expert for a life insurance company, which had attempted to make a surevy of liv- ing conditions, reported that they had gotten 40 different definitions for a room. A proposal to limit this in- vestigation to the congested areas of gems large cities is being consider- ed. MARRIAGE LICENSES. George Gallo, of Philipsburg, and Margaret Roland Marcincin, of Houtzdale. Clinton T. Brion, of Williamsport, and Mary E. Hoy, of State College. Charles Mills Alexander, of Julian, and Marie Artz, of Port Matilda. George Cadwallader, and Amanda Jane Immel, both of Bellefonte. Steve Bartko, of Philipsburg, and Agnes B. Verost, of Hawk Run. Ralph E. Faust and Grace E. Kis- er, both of Altoona. William R. Pattison and Barbara Harkleroad, both of Indiana, Pa. Earl D. Bierly, of State College, and Ruth Lonebarger, of Bellefonte. Geovge W. Jodon, of Belleofnte, and Beatrice May Blair, of Port Matlida. Herbert E. Allshouse, of Brook- ville, and Dorothy M. McFadden, of Richardsville. Donald K. Passell, of State Col- lege, and Ethel M. Schade, of La- mar. Norman E. Bastian, of Mifflinburg, and Minnie Viola Walker, of Belle- fonte. C. Melvin Barto, Furnace, Boalsburg. John Henry Raymond Bower, and Elizabeth Marcorn, both of Lock Haven. , Joseph E. Shuey, and Mary A. Arendash, both of Pittsburgh. Robert E. Spong, of Avis, Florence Agatha Miller, of Haven. Clayton F. Neidigh, of State Col- lege, and Carrie M. Smith, of Belle- fonte. of Pennsylvania and Ella M. Graham, of and Lock ANCIENT VILLAGES UNCOVERED BY WIND. The wind from the sea, which is now gradually shifting a dune on the Baltic coast in East Prussia and uncovering an ancient village, is also doing the same thing on the North Sea island of Sylt. On the northern top of the island it has laid bare part of a settlement dating from the ninth or tenth cen- tury. The finds already disclosed in- cude pottery of a kind manufac- tured by Rhenish potters in the peri- od between 800 and 1000, and also articles dating from the 14th cen- tury, showing that the settlement must have existed at least 500 years before being covered by the shifting sands of the dunes. It is probable that the settlement was the medieval Lystum or List. part of the early Fall ‘A stunning dinner gown of black chiffon is made Princess effect and has two long, drooping tiers at each side. The model who wore this gown wore a black satin turban, although the dressis sleeveless. This is the most recent of style fads—the wearing of a beret or caphat with evening gowns. Accompanying the black chiffon frock aforementioned its wearer had pinned white carnations at the front V-decolletage which ended slantwise. on the left side of the gown. She also had donned black suede slip-on gloves, very, very new . for evening. | —Usually a married woman uses for her monogram the initial of her first name, the initial of the last { name of her maiden name and the initial of her husband's surname. For linstance, if Mary Smith marries i Frank Gould. she uses as her mono- {gram M. S. G. | This is the correct form for the . monogram that she uses on the sil- | ver that she has engraved after her ! marriage, and the one that she uses ! when she embroiders the linens that | she buys after she is married and | for her personal monogram for her | letter paper. | __It is customary to take a pres lent when we go to a party that celebrates a wedding anniversary But except for the especially signif- icant milestones—such as the tenth. twenty-fifth, thirtieth, and fiftieth— the gifts are usually not pretentious, and indeed, for the first few anni- versaries, are usuallyinthe form of a jocular gift, unassuming and merry. The symbol of the first anniver- sary is usually considered to be pa- per. although some authorities insist . that it is cotton. Tin is the symbol for the tenth anniversary. You might take a box of writing | paper for the wife and one for the { husband. Or you might take some ‘rolls of lovely shelf paper, a group | of magazines, or the card register- ling a subscription for the year to a ' good magazine. Or a group of love- ly paper napkins, which are appear- ing in such a wealth of charming designs and colors lately, would be ! a pleasant thought. __To recondition a waxed floor, it should occasionally be given a very thin coat of wax, put on with a woolen cloth, and polished, if pos- sible, with a weighted brush. This is a good job for which to call in one of the boys in the family or the neighborhood. Pushing one of these weighted polishers around is fairly heavy work, but it requires just the sort of muscular effort a boy likes to use. Needless to say, the room should be prepared for a wax- ing of this kind by having the furni- ture moved out, and the walls, woodwork, and floor completely cleaned and dusted. Waxed floors, says the United States Department of Agriculture, should be swept with a soft brush or mop entirely free from oil.” Oil softens wax and should never be used on it in any way. About once a week a waxed floor should be given a more thorough cleaning with a a cloth wrung out of warm, soapy water, or moistened with turpentine or gasoline. Applying too much wax is a common mistake. Rub white spots with a woolen cloth or weighted brush, applying a little wax if necessary. Keep a slip-on cover on the weighted brush when it is not in use. Never allow it to come into contact with oil. Varnished floors may be swept with a soft brush, a mop, or a broom covered with a cotton-flannel bag, and then rubbed with a cloth or mop slightly moistened with floor oil or kerosene. The oil gradually dries out of varnish acter it has stored by an occasional rubbing with an oiled cloth the varnish becomes exceedingly hard and brittle. Use only enough oil to moisten slightly the cloth or mop. The stewed chicken baked in bread case is different from chicken in any other form. Cut the top from a small stale loaf of bread. Re- move the soft crumbs and save them for other uses. Brush the inside of the bread case and the top with melted butter. Place in a warm oven to become crisp and hot. Now put the case on a large, deep plat- ter and fill with hot stewed chicken thickened as for chicken pie, put on the cover and garnish with other vegetables, hard-boiled eggs or pars- ley. wardrobe. ' been applied to wood, and unless re- LSC A RA EERE, FARM NOTES. —Spade up the yard frequently. ' y 1 i —Fowls dampness. stand cold better than —Provide a nest for each four or five hens. —Market eggs at least twice a week in summer. —Build the self-feeder so that it protects feed from rain. —Select the best growing and most vigorous cockerels for breeders. —Old hens are the most common spreaders of poultry tuberculosis. —Make the house dry and free from drafts, but ailow for ventila- on. —Send your big fluffy boarder hens to market. This is one way to relieve i your farm of loss. | _Get the hens out in the sunshine and feed plenty of oyster shell to get good strong eggshells. —A flock of 50 ducks can be kept on many farms without materially increasing the labor needed in caring for the poultry. | —Ducks do not require a large in- vestment for houses or equipment. A tight shelter that will protect them. from the weather is satisfactory. Opinion among hog breeders is pret- ty evenly divided between the A-type: and the gable roof type of individual hoghouse, while still others favor the: small shed-roof type. —Paner shavings give very satis- factory results when used for litter in poultry houses. Cut alfalfa, cut clover, or cut straw also give good results when used as litter. —Most of the freezing comes from the top rather than through the wall. If more care is taken to keep windows, doors and ventilators closed, on all types of si- los, there will be less trouble from freezing. in silos —Government reports indicate that there is a decided shortage in the number of cattle on farms, and with the steadily decreasing number of horses to eat surplus feeds, dis- posal of large crops of grain to the best advantage becomes a problem. Selling the grain off the farm has been condemned as poor economy by leading farm thinkers for many years and farmers who have been able tc market most of their feed througk live stock have prospered most. —The sure way to make mone} raising pigs is to save them. Ever; little pig that is Jost increases th cost of those saved. Very common ly one-third to one-half the pigs far rowed die before weaning time. / pig at farrowing time is worth o has cost approximately three dollars and it pays well to keep as many o them alive as possible. Aim to be o hand when the sow farrows to se that everything goes well and tha the little pigs get their first meal a soon as possible. Then be sure the have a place to keep warm. Have guard rail around the pen or a prc tected corner with most of the bec ding in this protected place. —TIt is surprising: how importar some poultry keepers are when er deavoring to secure eggs from tk ! pullet flocks. Unless the yield goe | up by leaps and bounds, they imagit that there must be something wron | with the feeding, and forthwith be ! gin to change the rations. | This happens at irregular interva (and in consequence the birds newt ; have an opportunity of getting a: | customed to any particular ration : There is nothing more detrimental * egg production than these frequei changes. Of course, it would be uw | wise to persist im feeding a ratic i which had proved to be unsuitabl | but until such unsuitability has bet definitely established changes shou be avoided. —Hogs thrive on alfalfa pastu and cause less injury to the sta than heavier livestock. The carryii capacity of an acre of alfalfa depen on the stand and the locality, but ¢ dinarily an acre of good alfalfa in a: part of the country will carry frc eight to ten hogs weighing 100 poun each with little danger of injury the stand. In the East, where stand is more easily injured by ove grazing, it is not advisable to car as many hogs to the acre as in t irrigated parts of the West. To § hogs into condition for market, it necessary to feed a small quantity grain with alfalfa pasture. Wi this combination, hogs can be ms ready for market cheaper than any other feed. A grain ration of pounds for every 100 pounds of I weight has been found the mu. economical, although with a larg grain ration the gains are more ra and the returns per acre somew!l higher. : —To get the most and the best st from the sweet clover crop, harve ing should be done when about h of the pods are black, as the seed r tures unevenly. The self-rake rea is a good machine for cutting. mower will cause heavy loss of se Self-binders and even corn bind are sometimes used. Self-binders « be equipped with pans for sav shattered seed. On some farms 1 chines have been devised that b the seed off and leave the sts standing. These machines are m hy installing a heavy reel with f to six bars on an old binder. The: chines are so geared that each pl is struck several times as the 1 chines move forward and the see thrown back into a box. On sc machines a coarse wire screer placed back of the reel so as tok leaves and coarse sticks from gc into the seed box. The seed nt be removed from the box and Spr out ‘to dry, and if the weathe damp or the pile of seed deep, seed must be stirred frequently.