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VV Hftiaa THAT NEVEK DHL ; dies n motlior'a holy love , -ar ngllicus 4-ltb every ill that may bo- 0 tide; In every phase of life its water move Witli"tirreiit etronfr, nud fathoinloRn, and t Y' 'I Fp:rt,t1is heart's other flames nfiy rise, Ad while they seom as warm, and grand, ,ni higlu The incense ortmo lives to'reieh the skies A iflothor's teudor love can never die. They never die-tho s jns of other days, The unstrung burps nil covered o'er with dost, Art) in some rambling stor-honse laid away With ninny othor wrocks of love and trust, At eventide, when all around is still, Each harp throws oil the dust with gonllo it'll, And voices long since hushed our chambers fill With songs of othor days that never die. It never dies the memory of n wrong Done to an innocent and trusting heart; Though outwardly it eceinoth well and strong, A pain ii there whioh never can depart; t Time o'er the spot may woavo a fair now skin, And every trace be hidden from the eye, Cut all the ngony is cloned within, And wounds thus healed are never known 9 to die. dio the kindly dood and word V Given to the seedy without pomp and pride; Sooner or later they reap thoir reward Who pass not over to the other side; ,And cnunbs thus cast upon the sea if life May not return ns man is sailing o'er . But when he reti from agony and strifo, He'll find thq loavos nion the other shore. It never dies the bow of promise set In every landscape, bo it bleak or fair, There's hopo for all upon life's billow yet, ForOod's own hand had placed the token there; Though overwhelming storms of wind and rain t Chase every sunboum from the pilgrim's sky, After much peril 'twill gleam forth again, For rainbows come and go but nevor die. They cover dio the moon, and tars, and mux sllave shono upon the wicked and the jast Since God's mast glorious handiwork ,was done, And men arose so mighty from the dust; For when we closo oa'r eyes upon this world, To open thorn in Hoavoa by-and-bye, , The samo bluo banner there will be un furled, With sun, and moon, and stars, that never , lira. E. O. Jewell. A CLOUDED MIND. Lu stood behind the little counter where sho passed so many hours of her life, her lingers resting upon tho glass "fTiti' which she tapped impatiSn'tly, whilo her eyes roved from Ned Snyder, behind tho opposite counter,, to the door through' which she hoped s mie customer would enter. Ned's attention was divided between leering at Lu with his shocking con tortions of f;ice, and volunteering va rioustclownlsh remarks, each of which eliejvd from their olj ,'ct only a move ment of Impatience, a sharper tapping of tho glass with her fingers, but no word of answer. Finally Ned left his place, sauntend around behind Lu's counter, and undo 1 the maneuver by thru iting his la o up before hers. " Oh, go away, NeJ," she exclaimed, turnii.g from him, "do go now !" " What'll I go away fury" he de manded, creeping up ayaiu in front of her face. " Go. because I am tired and you want to go," this 4n a tone of marked impatience, which Nd evidently un derstood that it would net do for him to disregard. " Go back behind vour own counter, or stay here and I'll go there. What do yoa suppose cust jiii ers would think to see you acting in tl.ls way?" Xed hustled over to his own side of the room before he answered, in a rnat-ter-of-faet way : " Suppose they'd think we ought to be married!" "JIarrie I you foolish fellow ! Why do you keep talking such nonsense?" " AVal, now I toll you there is lots of folks that talk in that way, whether you'd think it or not, and course they're right about it. Tell you one thing when we bo married you don't drive roe round this way; just make up your mind about that." The last part of Xed's information had been volunteered as the door opened to admit Homer Ilarkness; and Lu had scowled silence at the wagging tongue in vaiu. Hut if that young man who entered had heard anything of what was being vsaid he did not in dicate it by any change of expression. He greeted the twain with a friendly word to each, and passed through to the dining-room. When his footsteps died away, Lu turned her great brown eyes to Ned, and said, sorrowfully : 'Ned, why will you talk so, and be 'foro people most of all? Don't you Jinow that I don't want you to talk that way, and you mustn t! " Mustn 1 1 Lord, wliat words vou use! Hut you 11 get over it some day won t always feel as bashful. A voice from below called Ned, and be tumbled from sight, much to Lu's wucf. Any person seeing Lu Towner, day by day, would have understood how cheerless hor young life really was. An evil star had seemed to rulo at her birth. Her father, formerly engaged in a comfortable business, had taken to' drink, ruined his custom, squandered his little property, and Dually died, soon after Lu's birth. Her mother, broken-hearted, strug gled with adverse fortune for a few years, and then she, too, died, leaving her little daughter to the care of her only relative, a married aunt. The aunt was kind, In so far as her nature knew the meaning of the word; but she had made Mammon her God, and nature had given her great power for physical endurance two dangerous qualities for the same person to possess, espe cially if that person be a'woman. Lu's uncle was the proprietor of a bakery, and In connection was a sales room and a boarding-house. Mr. Towner superintended the former; his wife the latter; and so it was that when Lu Lad mastered the rudiments of the common school education, she was taken in as a sort of general help for her aunt. It was as though the sun light of her dawning life had gone be hind some great cloud. There was so much that she could do, and she was so willing to do whatever might be de manded of her. From peeling pota toes, chopping hash and washing dishes, her sphere of usefulness gradu ally extended through all the depart ments of the boarding-house and sales room, till now we find her, at the age of twenty, after eight years of inces sant toil, with no prospect of any change so long as life and health should remain. From very early in the morning till very late at night, through sjven long days in every week, with only nn hour or two of respite on Sunday, th ) was here, there, wherever her services were demanded, not conscious that she was doing more actual physical labor than two like her should perform, beside shutting out from her young life the joys of companionship, and ignoring nil those social privileges which are so d?ar to young life. Lu was not especially pretty. At first glance she seemed so her small, compact figure, oval features andgre.it brown eyes, so full of honest truth, were certainly tho elements of beauty but hor incessant toil had wrought its lines upon hand3 and face, insulli cient sleep, continued care and the ab sence of social joy, tinged and shaded her whole life with a hue of sadness. Ned Snyder was familiarly known as "the fool." In some respects the epithet was quite appropriate, for while ho had sulllcient intelligence to be of much service in the bakery, and even in tho salesroom, he was yet of such uneven mental balance as to puz zle the most acute philosopher as to his degree of soundness and accounta bility. Nod, too, had been adopted by Mr. Towner, just ai he would have taken a horse for its keeping. It would bo handy te have such a boy about the establishment, there was always some thing for him to do, and there were fragments enough left alEter the thirty or forty boarders had finished their mt a'.s to give the poor fool a royal repast. At first, life had not many pleasures for Ned, but as his sphere of useful ness began to develop and he some times talked about " packing up his duds" and going to sea for Ned had a way of talking whatever came into his mind he began to receive better clothes, and occasionally little pres ents, and spare half days, till his lot really in comparison became quite en viable. Lu had alway3 been kind to him, out of the kindness of her heart, and many a favor she had taken pains to bestow upon him because she pitied his forlorn condition. Generally at the table she would procure for him a nicer piece of meat or some little delicacv which had never been intended for him, and this she delighted to do, even though he soon came to look upon such favors as a matter of course, and to scold and growl if they were not batowed. let, alter all, Ned did not mean to be ungrateful, and as he could think f no other way of repaying Lu's kind ness, he had grown up into a convic tion that he must marry her at some time in tho unknown future. Dread ful as such a thought must have been to her, could she have brought herself for single moment to a realization, and annoying as was Ned's constant refer ence to the purpose of his heart, it had become his mental food and drink the inspiration of his life. No more he talked of the sea: no more of shoulder ing his "Turk." Even his naturo bowed to the sway of love, and in the presence of Lu only was he happy or contented. Naturally enough the belief soon gained ground that Ned did not speak unadvisedly, and that some arrange ments had been made by which Lu was actually to become his wife. The girl's uncle and aunt came in for more blame than they deserved. "It's just like them," said one boarder to another, standing at a little distance and looking upon Lu, busy behind the counter, while Ned, near by, was feasting his weird eyes upon her. "Lu's indispensable to them, and Ned is a treasure, in his way. Get tho two married, and they are bound to stay as long us they can render any service." " I hope you are wrong," thi other returned, "for I don't like to think. anybody can be that mean. It would bo a downright shame to marry such a good, faithful, kind-hearted girl as Lu to that born idiotl I'd kick the man who'd do such a thing, if there were no other way to punish him " It was Homer Ilarkness who said this and shortly afterward passed through the salesroom, whieji was de serted save by Ned. Mr. Ilarkness wa3 a young business nian of the Wty. very comfortably situated in lifflnnd having for several years1 taken- his meals there, he was on quite friendly terms witli the feeble-minded youth. . "Ned," he asked, bending over'. the counter, half-confklentially, "you) are-' going to invite me to the 'yeddinjj,' I suppose?" -t , ' "What mo and Lu?" ' ,.;;'' "Yes." "Yes, going to invite ajl tlu? brmrd crs," the fool said in a very business like manner. "When will it probably tako"' place, Ned?" ' " Blamed if I know Lu won't say. Say Lu," the door bad opened to ad mit her at-that moment, "when bo we goin to get married ? This gentleman wants to know." Lu looked up at Mr. Ilarkness, for It was getting dusk in the s ilesroom, and the gas had not been lighted. A moment her lip quivered, and then tears sprang to her eyes. " Go downstairs, Ned," she replied, turning away. " Mr. Towner wants you." " No he don't either. You've got to tell me now, and the poor youth sprang forward with a sort of frenzy, but at that moment the sharp tones of his master sounded his name so em phatically that he at once turned and went blundering away down the stairs. Lu was so evidently pained by the occurrence that the young man, self accused, went near to her and stam mered out an apology. , " Indeed, you are not to blame," she said, quickly, smiling through her tears. "I am foolish to let this talk annoy me; but I I can't help it. I don't blame the poor fellow much, but I can't stand it; at least I feel as though I couldn't, though I don't know how I can help myself." ' " I will tell you how you can put a stop to his nonsense." " Will you ? Then tell me." " Marry me!" Lu's lip trembled as she cast a fur tive ghince up into the young man's face, and her whole soul thrilled a) she caught the magnetic love-beam of bis dark eyes. "What do you mean?" she de manded. "Just what I say, Lu. I admire you; love you. I have long wanted to tell you so, and to ask you this. Surely you prefer me to Ned. Now what say you will you bo mine?" What could she say ? She knew Mr. Ilarkness too well to suppose for a moment that he was trilling with her ; but it seemed impossible to realize that tho man she most revered of all in her limited circla of acquaintances had really asked her to become his wife. Why did his request touch so deed a chord in her soul ? AVas it be cause it was an answer of an nspira tion she had not dared acknowledge, much less to cherish?, Before she could command herself to frame an answer a dull foot-fall sounded upon the stairs. "Let me go; uncle is coming." And she tried to withdraw her hand. "Quick, then ; yes or no?" "I guess so," and with a tkip she bounded into the dining-room to hide the joy-flush which would mantle her cheeks with a strange glow. Homer Ilarkness did not allow the matter to rest long in that state. Satis factory terms were arranged with tho uncle and aunt, and it was decided that the marriage should take place in a month. Early in tho evening the ceremony was very quietly performed, and the happy husband started with his bride for a Hying visit to the home of his parents in a neighboriag town. Ned had been given a holiday for twenty four hours, which he was passing with a relative in another portion of the city ; so that an unusual sense of quiet, almost amounting to desertion, settled over the usually bustling establishment of the Towners. ' But at midnight the quiet was rudely broken and the neighborhood rang with tho sharp cries of " Fire !" A defective fluo in tho bakerv had caused the misfortune; the llames leaped rapidly from room to room of the old wooden building, so that when the fire department reached the s'ene they found the Are bursting out from basement to attic. Just as the iiremen commenced oper ations Ned dashed upon tho scene, breathless and excited. He saw the dense smoke pouring from the broken window of Lu s room and wildly in quired for the occupant. But no ono answered his question, for none under stood his meaning. Calling her name wildly, lie rushtd vp the stairway. What transpirel afterward only the eye of the Inlinite sa. A daring fireman atteinptel to follow him a few moment afterward, but the hall at the head of the stairs was a sea of llames, through which nore could pass and live. Hours later, when the fire was ex tinguished, from out the ruins was takea something which, tbyugU bear ing little rosemblance to the human form, could still be identified as all that remained on earth of Ned Snyder. Lu, re ailed from the strange dream of her new-found happiness stood bo side tho coffined remains, and heard the story of Ids death. The memory of the disagreeable days and years was all gono now; she remembered only his man-Mi uncouth nets of devotion and tho heroic mannr of his death, in a sup posed effort to save her from the flames. . " Who would have though that he .cared so much for me?" she said. "Poor fellow! poorfellowl" V Yes, dear Lu," her husband re spon.ired, ''you see that even such as he I roay, love so that life is disregarded in rtXing to render service to the object of that love. Poor fellow, indeed; but his death slin'l not be in vain, for I will barn from his example to devote my life to you, as long as life shall last, and it would indeed lie to my shame should my love; prove less unselfish than the love of a fool." . Ktrcit SccH3i In Oberammergan. In the Century, Mrs. Jackson has a sketch of travel, entitled " The Village of Oberammergau," where tho "Passion Flay" annually attracts thousands of visitois. We quota tl.e following picture of Oberammergau life : The open square in front of tho house is a perpetual stage of tableaux. The people come and go, and linger there around the great water-tanks as at a sort of Bethesda, sunk to profaner uses of every-day cleansing. The com monest labors become picturesque per formed in open air, with a background of mountains, by men and women with baro heads and bare lgs and feet. Whenever I looked out of my windows I saw a picture worth painting. For instance, a woman washing her windows in the tanks, holding each window under tho running stream, tipping it and turning it so quickly in the sunshine that the waters gliding off it took millions of prismatic hues,., till ha seemed to be scrubbing with rain- dows. Another, with two tubs full of clothes, which she had brought there to wash, her petticoat tucked up to her knies, her arms bare to the shoulder, a bright red handkerchief knotted round her head, and her eyes flashing as Bhe beat and lifted, wring ing and tossing the clothes, and fling ing out a sharp or a laughing word to every passer. Another, coining home at night with a big bundle of green grass under one arm, her rake over her shoulder, a free, open glance, and a smile and a bow to a gay postilion watering his horses; another, who had brought, apparently, her whole stock of kitchen utensils there to be made clean jugs, and crocks, and brass pans. How they glittered as she splashed them in and out ! Sho did not wipe them, only set them down on the ground to dry, which seemed likely to leave them but half clean after all. Then there came a dashing young fellow from the Tyrol, with three kinds of feathers in his green hat, short brown breeches, bare knees, gray yarn stock ings with a pattern of green wreath knit in at the top, a happy-go-lucky look on his face, stopping iloivn to take a mouthful of the swift-running water from the spout, and getting well splashed by missing aim with liis mouth, to the uproarious delight of two women just coining in from their hay making in the meadows, one of them balancing a hay rake and pitchfork on her shoulder with one hand, and with the other holding her dark-blue petti coat carefully gathered up in front, full of hay; the others drawing behind her (not wheeling it) a low, scoop shaped wheelbarrow full of green grass and clover these are a few of amy day's pictures. , Horse-Breaking in Japan. Hokusai, Japan's greatest artist, was never weary of studyirg horses and their funny ways, and of all creatures Japanese horses are the most amusing. These nags, which wear laeed-up shoes of straw, drink out of a dipper, take hip-baths of hot water, and stand in tho stable with their mouths tied up higher than their ears, are broken in to the park or saddle in a very rough way. In Hokusai's days, horses were never harnessed to wagons, nor did they draw anything. The ponies were usually "broken in" in the large open yards attached to temples. Fires, also, are usually kindled, and the colts aro driven close to them, so that they may become accus tomed to such a common sight. The method of breaking them in was as follows: The young horse was duly harnessed, and a man on taeh side held a bridle to jerk him to the rijh'. or left, w hile another in the rear beat him with a bamboo stick, keeping well away from his hoofs. Twelve or more men and boys then took hold of the long ropes or "tracer, and a lively shouting began. The horse plunged and galloped olT, expecting to get rid of tho noisy crew, but soon l'ouudth.tt this was no easy tsk. It was a twelve man power that made him go here and there, fast or slow, occasionally stop ping him short and giving him a tum ble. When ut e ly exhausted, his tor mentors led l.im back to the st.ible. After a few such tri:ds the pony was comide! ed broken. Such erud i train ing, though line fun for the men, ruins the horses, making them hard-mouthed and vicioua vvth both heebi and teeth A REMABKABLE RECOVERY. HOW A MAN LIVED THREE TEAKS WITH A H ALP-BROKE IT ITECZ. Rcppllns Injnrle Which Kennlle.l In Tola' rrnlvinI nnhlr to More Ilnnd or Feat A (.'nc Which I'nzzlrd tho Doctors. The Hartford Times gives the de tails of the most remarkable recovery of Mr. Eddie Crowcll, now in Li i eighteenth year: In February, 1880, young Crowell, while practicing on a trapeze bar in a German gymnasium, lost his hold and went head first, with tremendous force, to the floor, striking upon a sawdust stuffed lag. His youtiy (he was in his sixteenth year) probably paved his i fe. It was found th it the blow bad I roktnthe atlas, the peculiar ringlike bone which articu lates with the occipital bone, and thus sustains the head, and makes practica ble its free movement. Partially stunned he arose, with a feeling, as he ex pressed it, "as if his head had been jammed down between his shoulders." He walked home alone, but soon found himself unable to move his h' .id with out moving his body with it. This state of things continued. It was d? cided, after due consultation with medical authorities, to let the boy fin ish his course at the high school, and he accordingly rejoined his class and engaged actively in his studies. His inability to turn or bow bis head con tinued, and, after awhile, other indica tions began gradually to point to the advisability of removing him from school. He was at length kept most in the house, though the torcldight parades of the presidential election drew him out ono evening, eager to march witli his companions. This did not prove to bo well for him; ho be came worse, and soon paralysis ensued. This speedily became total. He could not move hand or foot. His parents, distress! beyond measure, omitted no possible means of relief. Dr. Jarvis and other eminent surgeons were con sulted, but they, after carefully exam ining the case, could not give much, if any, hope of the boy s living. Dr. Jarvi3 was convinced, to use his own expression, that " the boy's neck was broken," meaning, of course, that one of the vertebral had been dislocated. The puzzle to tl:e surgeons wa3, how the boy could have lived as long as h had. They had no hope of his sur viving long. Of course he could not have lived had the spinal cord been actually separated. The fracture was so great, as it wits, as to render the fact of continued life remarkable; but it is even more remarkable that this could le, with the "atlas" actually split r splintered, and a piece of it broken olf. The paralysis was at tributed less to the dislocation of the vertebra) we have named (with its accompanying bend ing of tho spinal cord) than to a new growth of bone to make good the displacement of the pieco that was broken off. The n-nv growth, it is be lieved, pressed directly upon the now somewhat displace 1 nervous matter of the spinal cord, and the more the bone prew the greater the pressure; hence the paralysis. The only hope afforded by the doctors was that life might pos sibly last until the effort of nature to repair the broken bone had ceased, and that, if this improbable 'state of things should fortunately occur, the boy, being aided by his youth, might then possibly survive, and recover partially (or perhaps even wholly) from the paralysis. (The piece of bone broken off from the atlas is, we think, sup posed to be retained by tho ligaments, side by side with the injured vertebral). The chances being at least one hun dred to one against any other than a speedily fatal result, the surgeons were not a little surprised at the fact that the paralyzed boy continued to live; and now, after a long period of slowly increasing power first, the ability to move a little finger; later, the power to stand, to walk and to ride out. He now goes out daily to walk or ride, and his complete recovery is confidently ex pected. Tannin?. The appended recipe for tanning skins with the wool or fur on for use in sleighs or wagons, as house rugs or other purposes is given by City and Country, and will interest some: If the hides are not freshly taken oil soak them in water with a little salt until they are soft as when green. Then scrape, the fle.h off with a fleshing knife, or with a butcher's knife with a smooth round edge, and with sheep skins the wool should be washed clean with soft soap and water and the suds be thoroughly rinsed out. For each skin take four ounces of alum and one-half ounce of borax. Dissolve these in one quart of hot water, and when cool enough to bear the hand ttlr in sumcient rye meal to make a thick paste with half an ounce of Spanish whiting. This paste is to be thoroughly spread over every part of tho flesh side of tho skin, which should be folded together lengthwise, wool side out, and left two weeks in an airy place. Then remove the paste, wash and dry the kin; when not quite dry it must be vrorked and pulled and scraped with a knife made for tho purpose, shaped like a chopping knife, or with a piece of hard wood made with, a sharp edge, The more the skia is worked and wraped as it dries the ji more pliable it Will be. No person wants striw spelt back ward on tho end of his no'se. f ' BLANDER, Twnd bnt a breath ' . And yet the fair, pood nnme wn wilted ; And friend onoe fond grew cold and stilleX And life was worpo than death. Ono venomed word, That struck its coward, poisoned Mow, In craven whispers, hushed and low And yet the wide world heard. 'Twas bnt one whiaper-Kine That, mattered low, for very ghame, The thing the alnnderer dnre not name And yet its work was done. A hint, so slight, And yet so mighty in its power, A haman soul, in one short hoar, Lies crushed beneath its blijrht f IIU&OK OF THE DAT. The money lender never neglects Ms business, lie takes all the interest ho can in it. l'ivuyune. Fatent medicines are now made that will cure everything except hams. Philadelphia Chronic a, . ; " Ma, mny I go on the street?" ' , " Yi s, my dearest daughter, "','' Provided the youn j man will treat To cake and eodn water." A Detroit architect has calls from nine different cities. ' He estimated the cost of a certain building tor $14,000, and it was Unishi-d tor $11,000. Detroit Free Frists. "It you:fall off that balcony you'll get hurt," said cue iriend to another. "No, I shan't," raid No. 2; "there's nothing about mo to break; I'm broke already." The J ud ye.:' An after-dinner speaker who was called upon after many of the com pany, said many of his bright sayings fell dead because it was impossible to get a "smile" out of empty glasses. His excellency: "You have broth ers '" Captain "One, your excel lency." His excellency" It's curious. 1 was talking with your sister, and she said sho had two brothers. How is that'r" FUegtnde Blatter. A New York music teacher boasts that ha has taught 1,500 boys to play on the violin, which goes to "prove that sometimes men can become so depraved' that they will actually boost of and glory in their crimes. Slf'tings. A little boy of four year3 was sleep ing with his brother, when his mother said: ."Why, Moses, you are lying right in the niidillj of the bed; what will poor Harry do V" " Well, ma,'' ha replied, " Harry's got both sides." A family paper published a long article entitled, " Housekeeping Here after." "Oh, dear!" groaned a dis tracted mother of five children and keeper of one instead of two servants; " if I thought there was going to bo any housekeeping hereafter, I declare I'd never dio." Burlington llaivkeye. The Ithaca Journal tells of a littlo four-year-old, who, upon retiring, pro ceeded to say her pra3rers as usual. When she had repeated the line, "If i should die before I wake," a thought seemed to strike her, and after pausing a moment, she added: " What a rum pus there would be in this house I" bhe then repeated the concluding lino of the prayer and scrambled into bed. HEALTH BINTS. Apples before breakfast, well masti cated, are an aid to the digestive organs. It is reported, says Dr. Foote's Htalih Mo it'ily, that a dub of business men has been formed in New York, pledged to slow eating at lunch. A good movement. To relieve tho swollen joints of the feet, paint the joints with iodine morn ing und night; wear shoes big enough for the feet, even if they aro large; shoes lequire to be long as we!l os broad, and have low heels; new shoes will not hurt if they are large enough. In a paper read before tho Imperial German Congress of Surgery tho caso is described of a woman who, having lost the whole of the biceps with tho exception of a thin strip of llesh, was grafted with a pieco of muscle taken from a dog. Complete healing took place, and subsequent treatment with electricity rt stored motion to the limb. The Boastful Uonsr. A goose stood on the bank of a pond and said: "To what animal has Providence been so lavish of gifts as to mo ? I belong to the air, earth and water; I can walk, fly and swim." The astute serpent, hearing this self adulation, said: "Don't be such a boaster. You can do nothing well; yon can neither run like a doe, nor fly like a dove, or swim like a perch." It is better to know how to do one thin well than many tilings awkwardly. W. A. Croffut, in one of his New York letters, av rs that " most of the famous editors tlds country has pro duced hae been largo men. llnracn Greeley weighed "00. Thurlow Weed weighed 210. Henry J. Raymond weighed ISO or more ; so did Samuel Howies. Hugh Hastings and General James Watson Webb turn the scales at 2o0. liohert Homier weighs nearly ?r0. George Jones weighs nmre than 200, so does Charles A. Dana, so do'-s General llawley, so does Murat Hub stead, godoes George Alfred Trnvnseiid, bo dots Mr. Hurlhert, so will Wiijto Jaw ltcid in five yeari more."