If. A THE ADVERTISER. . AV. I'AIKIlKOTHini.feCO., 'Mltr I'tvrrhttrt. TJlllEE FIMIERS. Three IMIirrfl went FtrtilHiiM' uwuy to tho M roil tu To tlio Inilililliut brook whom tlin Italics hwIiii; Uf Ficoklr-il lieniitlc they nil 1II ilri'iiin, Anil each fell cerlnlil they'd Mm for hltn. Porinoii will ttimip Irtiiii iiniriiliilr'tlll tilKht, And cuircr tho fierce iiiom.oh Mtu, And di Ink til tti tliulr khluiUik. Tin t- Italic m rolled Into the market plnco, "1'wnH hoiiio two lniure lifter tho huh went lloWII. , . , Anil ii look of H loom win on I'lieh mnir fnuo, I'or lit empty bunked they ouch Old rrown. I'or ini'ii may Itah Inn niuy nut no liltu, And 1 1 ri (I mid duly it home ut nlvlit, And Vent tholr wrutli In KroiiuliiK. Three ItahorK strolled Into the beer fiiloon, Whom the crowd wit 'round mid tho kub whs liriKht, And oiieh willy whtatlod n merry tuiio, And -Mowed his Itah with iix-uinied delight. Forineii will Itah. yen, nnd men will He, And bonxt oleiitrhliiK tho Itah thoy buy, While InwuMly they're ifioiinlinr. , Ilmuit lmt. T1IK SCI KNCK OK StilSMOMWY. The Ml ItfiiiiiiUiitilf Kiii'lhiiuuka a ICi-ciirit, Zadkiol in his Voice of tho Stars" for April did not make a precise pre-' diction of the earthquake reported this morning, lor though Asia Minor is one of the regions exposed to mclofio in fluences through the near conjunction of Saturn and Jupiter, tho seer located his earthquake at Cabul. Such a catas trophe was, however, conlidontly ex pected by bettor authorities than" Zad kiol, Tao Szo. Those who have not given the subject attention will be sur prised to learn how closely earthquakes are observed nowadays, ami how fre quently thoy occur. Prof. Hookwood noted 00 days betweon July 18, 1877, and November 28, 1878, on which one or more shocks were felt on tho Ameri can continent. Fuchs in 1878 recorded the unusually largo number of l'J vol canic eruptions at places far apart and mostly from little-known volcanoes, and 10!! earthquakes, though this enumera tion includes as units many complete periods. One earthquake at Tanna lasted four wooks; in Catania tho ground trembled almost continuously from Oc tober A to November 1!). Tho year 1871) was marked by a great number of earthquakes and volcanic eruptions, many shocks being reported almost at the same instant from places widely hoparatod. Thus on tho 8th of January severe shocks wore felt in tho Caucasus, in tho Tyrol and in Luxem burg; on tho 9th, the most violent earth tpiako since 1808 was experienced at Aroquipa, Peru; on tho 10th shocks wero folk at Cologno and throughout Southern Germany; on tho 11th, more at Vienna; on the 12tht another violent shaking at Arcquipa. In the middle of May eruptions began from Vesuvius; victim sympathized on tho 23th, pouring out ashes and lava for a fortnight; simultaneously a similar outburst was noted at Goisfugie, Iceland, and on tho day that yEtna broke into activ ity a violent eruption of tho Czobanoz mountain in Hungary, long regarded as eximci, was curomcieti. ah mo orup-1 :.... ..r .i.n... rii. .....! i. ' uuu ui ji.Liiiv yia luiiuwuu uy uuiikiuu- ous earthquakes in Sicily until tho end of Juno, so tho outbreak of tho Ozo banez Mountain was accompanied by severe convulsions in Hungary, Bosnia and Bessarabia, throwing down houses and trees and opening fissures from which water poured in Hoods, and cul minating in tho violent shocks al Agnim, Juno 21-22, while tremblings wero observed at Aix and Nassau, May 20-27, and at Hastings May 21. There after KuVopo had n comparative rest till about tho 1st of Novombor, when all tho south and east of Hungary, Servia, Rouniimia and Hossarabia felt incessant earthquakes of considerable intensity, some shocks oven lasting a miuulo. At tlto time of least activity of volcanic forces in Europo July 11 three strong shocks woro felt in Cairo ami near tho pyramids, something unknown in Egypt sinco 1857. in Porsia, March 22 Apnl 2, there wero twenty-one villages dostroyod and liftv-four' greatly dam aged; of tho 1,200 inhabitants of'Manun and Turk but fow escaped. Java was visited by several disastrous shocks be tween March 28 and Juno 5, its volca noes ooing also m China had its turn active eruption. Juno J9-July 11, with tutor-shocks ot sullicient violence, though not nearly so destructive in August and Soptombor. There wero very serious eruptions anil shocks ex- tending over a largo area in Central America soon after the new year, after which the great center of Volcanic ae- tivity was comparatively quiescent. In mo lauiuo more woro uisiurinuicos in lliwitll.k !....... ......... .1!... 1 .. . the oany part o; tho year, culminating in tho eruption of Kilauoa in June. Rut it was in 1880 that the series of soismio convulsions which had boon I taking placo in Europe since oarly in 1871) readied their climax. On tho :10th of December, 1871), several smart shocks woro folt throughout Switzerland. A month later similar manifestations took placo in Germany and Italy. 0 Vesuvius was in full aetioi February tion ami four days later Etna sympathized, as did tho mud orators at Patorno. Almost week ly eanio reports of convulsions in vari ous parts of Europe, Portugal, Spain and Franco, and, especially, Italy and Switzerland, the manifestations of seis mic force becoming more fromiout and forcible, and extending over a wider area as auiumu came on, uiuu a uiumi- nation was reached in tho terrible con vulsions of November 9-22, allocting all southeastern Europe from Venice to tho Rliielc, Sea, Bohemia to tho Kalkaus. At tho Croatian capital, Agram, watlio greatest damage done. ThouglHtliorp woro fow lives lost, hardly a building in tho town remained uuinjurpd, tho dntu ngo amounting to sovoral millions of lloriiiH. Hot springs' burst out of tlio unrtli, and two active mud volcanoes wore formed. It Is curious to note that while Vesuvius had been showing par- tieular activity during each of the earli- or periods, and so late as tho fortnight, October 20 November 10, during the Agratn manifestations it remained near ly quiescent. It may be added'that on tho lid of February, 1881, Agratn was again visltei1 bynn earthtpiako. Japan where, by tho way, a most valuable series of observation has been taken experienced two severe earthquakes ono at Tokio in December, 187'J; another in February, 1880 (Yoko hama. -'2d; Tokio. 25tli), Mio most vio lent felt since tho country had been opened to foreigners. On tho Alert, which was anchored in tho harbor, it was thought that tho vessel was drugging' her anchor in a squall. At the oeginnlng of May the earthquake season opened in Asia Minor, tho vil lage of Holoddi, near Sinope, being on gtufed by the sea so that not a trace of its buildings remained. Hut the con vulsions reached their height toward tho end of .Inly (.July 28-August -1) when Sm.M'na and the surrounding places suii'orod enormously. In ono town, Menomen, of 1,110 houses, 006 were demolished, and tho seven mos ques and churches were laid in ruins In tho six neighboring villages, of t)0( houses, barnly'half a dozen were loft standing. Tho earth oponod in 1G0 places to vomit for throe hours llooda of green water; tho Hermus sank threo feet below its usuM level; tho streams of tho Gipyla raugo lost four-fifths of their water, while at Rotirnabat tho long-dried fountains Hooded tho plain. Almost at the same time (July 18-21) the Philippine Islands became tho scone of notable convulsions. At Ma nila not a single public editice was spared; tho inhabitants wore forced to fly to the Holds outside, and )120 lives woro lost. Tho water in tho river rose .'U feet almost in a moment, and sank again as suddenly. The shocks, some lasting more than a minute, wero felt all over tho Island of Luzon; tho vol canoes started into activity; tho earth opened to emit hot ashes and jets of boiling water. In September violent shocks throw down pagodas and light houses near Rangoon and along the coast of Java. In America tho mani festations woro unusually numerous and violent, beginning at San Salvador January 1-10. Ilopango was destroyed and its lake, the crater of an extinet volcano, bolted up witli mud and sul phurous vapors, a crater being event ually formed in its center. On tho 4th the boiling lako in Dominica burst into fresh activity, and toward "the close of tho month nil western Cuba was visited severely " General Grant's earth quake." On tho 1st of February soveio shocks woro folt at Vuultti Abiijo and in Mexico; on tho Dili, a volcanic erup tion in Santo Domingo had an echo m ' the shape of a smart trcmblcmcnt in tho Ottawa valloy. On tho Mth of April San FranciBdo experienced tho heaviest Bhock known for years. Juno 29 tho eruption of tho volcano del Fuogo in Guatemala marked tho commencement of an era of terrible activity. A column of tlame shot up to tho height of 500 foot, throbbing with strong regular pulsations for nearly two hours, sit in tervals of fifty seconds; tho River Gua ealate rose suddenly and ran warm. July 28 much damage was done to Now Amsterdam and other parts df Guiana, and August 11 a terrible convulsion yisited Chili, though, happily, tho loss of life was not proportionate to its sovority. Tho shock was folt on the highest points of tho Andes, whoro the telegraph wires wero broken and thrown down, and at Mondoza, east of tho Cor dilleras, earthquakes occurred on tho 10th and 19th such as had not been known since 1801. It was about this time that an earthquake was folt in tho Azores, followed by tho emergence front tho sea of a now island of 18,000 square yards area. With tho horrors of tho earthquake at Casamicciola in tlto first week of March our readers aro" familiar. Tito most notablo and disastrous earthquakes on roeord, it may bo said, are those of Italy (520), when 120,000 persons perished, and of Sicily (1G8!5), when 00,000 lost their lives, According to Gibbon towards 612 each year was marked witli tho repetition of earth quakes of such duration Hint Con I stantiuoplc was shaken above forty days 'of such extent that the shock was communicated to tho whole surface of ' tho omp':o. At Autioch a quarter of a million persons aro said to havo perish- ed. This period of earthquake and , plaguo (.r 12-7) was tho poriod when tho j, superior planets wero in porilielion, as ' tliov aro now. Arabian and Persian chronicles record 111 oartlinimkns bn. I . . .. . . . . twotm tho seventh and eighteenth cen turies, some lasting from lorty to seven ty days, and nearly all accompanied by winds or Hoods, or terrible storms or lightning and thunder. Readers of tho "Relations des Jesuitos" will re member tho great earthquakos ot 1(50:1, which shook and tosod tho earth for six months from Gaspo to Montreal, tho rival of our own earthquake of 1811 in tiie Mississippi Valloy. Tho sovorest of the earthquakes felt in this region was that of Novombor, I7f.r). an echo of the convulsion that tumbled down Lisbon and saved tho PombaMinistrv. thromrh tho fact that tho Ministor's'liouso was almost tho only ono left uninjured and his family ono of tho fow not bereaved ot a member. Hem, in his interest in ! opuscule on earthquakes, estimates thai mi mi uvurugu two earthquakes a Hay occur on tho earth. In 1870. ilimnrh there was no sovoro slno-lo shook. J .'Al houses woro destroyed or greatly dam aged in Italy, ninety-eight persons killed and 22:) wounded. The same shook may last for years; instanco that of Viego, in tho Valais, which ondurod from July, 1855, to 1857.- At Cabul !)il fsovcro shocks havo boon felt in ono day; j at Honduras, in 1850, 108 wore counted in a week, and at Hawaii, in 1808, '2,000 shocks occurred In one month, lloltl, it may bo said in conclusion, opposes the theory of a connection between earthquakes and volcanic eruptions and considers that of their coiuciueneo with atmospheric phenomena as better sup ported by facts; for thoy are occasion ally preceded or accompanied by thick and widespread fogs at seasons when fogs are not frequent, by sudden falls of the barometer and equally sudden changes of temperature. Their occur rence, however, in the majority of oasos coincides with normal meteorological conditions. Earthquakes are more fro quent after sunset than in the daytime, in autumn and winter than in spring. Tho inlluonce of the irioon is insignia cant. A'. Y. World. A Tale of Two Coals. Tho other day when the blttobird chirped, and hired sang, tno robins girls began to clean out kitchen wood boxes, George Carrington Lane, nj'oung man with long hair and stately carriage went to u tailor and was measured for a coat. Tho cloth win lirond, And ho win tho price; Am ii hroiid cloth coat Tho lit whs to bo nice. But it wasn' t. That is, tho tailor said It was tho best lit ho ever saw, nd Georgo vowed that ho wouldn't bo found dead with such a garment on. They argued, reasoned, threatened and bluffed, and the customer finally took the tailor and stood him on ids head, threw Ids goose and shears out of tho window, and was about to make a pin cushion of tho poor apprentice, when the police interfeicd. "Is the tailor present as a witness?" asketl tho Court, after the case had been outlined. "I am dot tailor," answered a little man on the second row of chairs as he stood up. "Very well; come fdward antl toll your story." "Well, sir, my grandfather ho comes to America oafer lifty vears ago." "And was ho hung?'' "Oh, no." "Well, then, wo don't want to hear any more about him. This man ordered a coat of you. did hoi"' "Oxaetly." "What sort of a coat?" "Vhell, 1 doan' like to brag all dor time; but dot coat tit him shut like a vheol lits a wagon." "That is, it wobbled all round on him?" "Not much! It was dor best fit I efor I saw. If you look all day you couldn't find a wrinkle." ' "Judge, that coat seemed , to bo cut after tho pattern of a schooner's jib," protested the prisoner. "Tito sleeves wero too short, the tails too long, it was I looso in tho back and tigiit under tho arms, and a drayman could have dono as well with hisjack-kidfe." " Well, you should huvo walked out ' and left the garment on' his hands. When you picked him up and turned him end for end and stood him on his head among the scraps you transgressed the law." "I presume so, but I was mad." "So vhas I," put in tfio tailur. "If T could have got hold of him 1 make some mince-meat pooty quoek!" "I must now lit you with a second coat. This may not set any bettor than, the other, but it's the best I can do. I shall make it ten dollars lino or thirty days in tho block-house." "Dot's shplendid dot's bully!" chuckled the tailor. "You go homo!" was the stern re buke. " And remember," whispered tho prisoner, "when 1 como out of tho jug I'm going to mop you all over Dotroit!" "You couldn't mop two sides of mo!" hissed the tailor in reply; but ho was very pale and his chin had a livoly quiver. Detroit Free I'rcss. Russian Empresses. Tho Russian Einpro'scs havo al ways been strong conservatives and op posed to reform. Tho wife of tho Em peror Nicholas was almost tho solo ex ception. She studiously avoided any acquaintance with political allairs as i long as her husband lived. The late Enif.ro.ss Marie was in this way the ox- , act opposite to her predecessor. In her early thus she aspired to a recognized i inlluonce in Slate allairs. In 159 an ' agent of the French secret police wrote , from St. Petersburg to Napoleon III. that the Czar was inundated with letters i accusing him of being governed bv his wife; and that it was commonly said tho priest Bajanof ruled tho Empire, for that tho priest ruled tho Empress, and that the Empress ruled her hus band. Tho Empress and her mother-in-law wero strongly opposed to tho emancipation of the serfs. At an in terview with tho French Ambassador, tho Emperor, icferring to tho impend ing emancipation, said that, though tho nobles now opposed it, thoy would in tho end find that it was advantageous to tliomsolvos. The Czaroviteli, who ' died in 1807. and was at tho period in I question a boy of fourteen, declared (IUOSI that the emancipation woumi never bring anything but misfortune to all, whereupon tho Empororsent him out of the room. A young lady who wont out to India with matrimonial intent, and re turned single, said if she had been a hit tliero slio would not havo bisew a miss here. Small waists are no longor fashion able and tight lacing is froWncd down by sensible women. The undertakers will not like this. The Horse. It Is said that the horso inhabited America during tho post-pliocene pe riod, contemporaneously with tho mas todon and mogalonia. The truth of this statoriicnt can bo easily ascertained by consulting any well-informed mas todon or veracious mogalonia you may chanco to moot. The horse, however, Is believed to bo ft native of Asia. Therefore, gontlo reader, you can aiso your mind on that matter. It is said there aro no real wild horses; but don't you put too much de pendence on 1 his assertion, or Mid'dlo bo the consequences. Ho rears up his young in tho way they should go; ho rears up himself in a way that his vhlor doesn't want to gt).' Horses are subject to colds, and tho pony is always a little horse. King Richard exclaimed: " A horso, a horse! nly kingddhi for a horse!" At that timo his crown was in danger. Had he found a horse, his crown might havo boon broken. A young horso is called a colt. Colts aro revolvers. They dischargo their load witli a snap. When a driver wants a horso to get dowu to his work ho tells him to get up. Tho horso is not afraid ot bad 1 weather. Ho is guided by the rein. Ho is a great cater, and generally has a bit in his mouth. His bridle trip usually lasts through life. Ho is always to bo depended on, como wheel or whoa. Tho horso is covered with hair, but it is on his neck in the mane. This is his mauo deck. The tail is tho horso's after-deck, Horses can still bo sold at wholesale after that appendago is gone, but it is impossible to re-tail them. Tho horso has no toes. You will no toes it if lie steps on your foot. Horses como from tho steppes. Horses aro always kind and sound. That is, tho kind that aro advertised lor sale. Thoro is a pleasant sound about tho expression. A horse won't go right unless you pull him from tho straight course. Thoy will eat corn. They leave tho cob, but a cob will not leave tho corn. Their Hesh is somctiiUos eaten. Tho filly of beef is reckoned a dainty. A horso is sometimes called n ehargor. Stablo keepers aro chargers also. Tho horse is not very strong. He has to lay down his ears Svhon ho lifts his heels. And when ho lifts his heols look out for horso scars. Horso cars aro quite common in our crowded stroots. When a horso feels his oats you would best make an oat of it. A horse has four foot, and wo often hear of ono of fifteen hands. You can't stillo his ambition. He is a kingly beast, and always wears a cor onet. Ho cares nothing for tho thrown. You can tell a.horso's agaby his teeth that is, if you know what his ago is boforo you look at his teeth. There aro many races of ' horses, in cluding tho raco horse. The chestnut horso and tho reddish horso must not bo confounded with tho horso chestnut and horso radish. These latter aro horses of another color. Horses aro caught by tho lasso. Alas! so it is. Notwithstanding all that is said of tho licalthfultiess of equestrianism, you will seldom got a dealer to tako iv horso back. Thoro aro several kinds of horsos, in cluding tho saw horse, the clothes horse, tho horso shoo and tho horse lly; but should wo go into tho description of these it would bo ox-horset'mg. But perhaps wo had best cud this sorrol lot of puns. Wo don't wisli to curry it too far. Our readers might show a trace of ill-humor, and bo a little sulky. Shall wo go on? Neigh. Boston Transcript. - Prescribing Pharmacists. When an, .apothecary recommends some particular remedy for your cold, ho is not usurping tho function of a physician to a dangerous extent. Ho may also,givo medical advice aboutyour corns or your toothache with' out "sub jecting you to much risk of injury. Just how far ho ought to go in prescribing is a dillicult question to settle, Tho Medical Association and tho College of Pharmacy of Washington have fallen out over it. Some of tho pharmacists: in that city havo taken it upon them selves to practice medicine as well as soil it, not hesitating to deal with dan gerous diseases. Tho doctors reason ably demand a law against this evil. Thoy further insist that a prescription shall not bo made up a second time un less permission to repeat it is marked on the paper. Their argument on this point is that tho use of perilous drugs is often continued longer than tho phy sician intondod. Tho apothecaries re ply that the doctors aro simply looking out for a multiplication of feosf and that como pharmacists can cure an unim portant malady as well as soiYio phy sicians. Tho best plan when, one is really sick is to go to a man who has M. D. after his name Those letters aro not a guarantee of skillful treatment, but thoy raise a probability of it. "You ain't taking any stock in woman's love, oh?" "No," ho an swered, despondently, "it's all llum mory." "Very strange." added his friend. "You didn't uso to talk that way." "Perhaps not," ho replied, "but l'vo been married nearly two years, and there aro four pair of trousers hanging up in my closot waiting to be patched, iiml not a stitch taken in them ;'ot." ,;. "'High Art in Larrtmlo. J Yesterday a man came into tho Iioom cramj ollico witli t)ie wild, hunted look oi.ix married man whoso wifo lias two majority in the House and full control of the Senate. After he had heaved a sigh as largo as a box car, and scratched his back on tho oriental hat rack, lie asked if ho might havo a word with tho high-art editor. A pensive blonde, with his feet in tho waste-paper basket, was pointed out to him, and tho domestic minority poured out, his woes: "I s'poso you manage tho fresco busi ness for this periodical, and you want to bring art, ami. frill, and homo deco rations up to a high standard. Well, my wife is some on homo decorations herself, and what 1 wanted was a sug gestion onco in awhile from your paper that would seem to tone her up and ele vato her tastes, as it wore. Sho is away behind. I want to try and discourage ,her from plastering lite shanty with Michael Angelo paintings that conic oil from pencil cans and tobacco pails. It clashes a little to havo a plaster cast of Shakespeare In' one corner of the room, and a picture pooled oil' a baked bean. can in the other. It brings poetry and grub too close together. My idea is that rcstlictics and cold chuck should not bo brought into immediate contact in art. Thoy don't liar monizo. That's why I told Apiamla not to hang 'Moses in tho Bulrushes' contiguous to her painting of a Magnolia ham. Last week she got homswogglcd into buying some Japanese tidies of a loading brick-a-bracker. He told her they woro tho latest thing in tidies, and she bought seven for twenty-one cents. Wo havo only threo chairs that aro able to bq out, anyway, and pno of them is foundered pretty bad, so four of tho tidiest had to be nailed up on tho wall. Tho perspective in these tidies is very bad. Another thing, tho red llannel dado on tho sky don't suit me. Then tho sand-hill crano is bigger than tho pngoda, or tho corral, or whatever it if. and tho lire-cracker funny business is ' bad for sore eyes. I havo brought ono of the tidies along. It speaks for itself. Imagine a man coming homo tired and hungry and sitting down on. a tidy that has the scarlet fever. Think of a home made desolate with a howling wilder ness of stump-tail storks standing on ono foot and trying to think of a big word. Put yourself in my place, and try to imagino a home filled with night mare of red wash bills with picturesque Japanese Congressmen in their shirt tails, as it were, drinking tea out of majolica washbowls. 1 am not a hard man to please, but I feel as though something ought to be dono. Of course it? wouldn't do for mo to suggest a change to my wifo directly, because she would put a symphony in navy blue aud. sago green on my brow with a gothic potato-masher, but if tho leading paper lntho country should come out, yoit un derstand, and say that there had been a change, and that blue-tailed snipes and bow-legged Chinamen had gone out of style, anil warm meals and porter house steak were growing in favor, with a leahing toward ham and cgg3 as homo decorations, 1 think that porhap3 tho old woman might tumble to the racket." That is why vo havo published the abovo interview. We want to do all thoood wo can. Bill Nye's Boomerang., i Hov the Snake (Jets a New Suit. " Sqmc people think that snakes only shod their skins at certain seasons o tho year." said tho keeper. "That's a mistake. If they aro well fed and kept right warm they change their coats about every eight weoks through the year." "Does it pain tliemp" "Not a bit of it. You see the skin of a snake does not increase in size as tho reptile grows, as with us. While the old skin is getting smaller by degrees, a new ono is forming underneath, and the other gradually gets dry. When it is ready to shed, it loosens around tho lips, and tho reptile rubs itself against the earth or tho rock in tho cage, and turns the upper part over the eye and tho lower part over tho throat. Then it commences to glide around tho glass case, all I ho time rubbing itself against fcomething until tho entiro skin is worked oil". Sometimes this takes three days; occasionally thoy get rid of tho encumbrance in a few hours. 1 don't bolievo thoy havo a bit of intelligence. For all I feed them and caro for them, thoy would as lief bite mo as any stranger. 1 can handle a good many of them safely, but it's only tho knack of the thing not that they won't bite, but that thoy can't get the chance." A bachelor too poor to get married, yet too susceptible to let the girls alone, was riding with a lady "all of a summer's day," and accidentally men's arms, awkward things! aro ever in the way dropped an arm round her waist. No objection was made for a while, and the arm gradually relieved the sido of tho earriago of tho pressure upon it. But of a sudden, whether from a Into recognition of tho impro priety of tho thing, or tho sight of an other beau coming, nover was known, tho lady started with volcanic energy, and with a Hashing oyo, exclaimed, "Mr. B., I can support myself!" "Cap ital!" was tho instant reply. You aro just tho girl 1 havo boon looking for tlicso live years. Will you marry me?" A story Is told of the old gentle man who always took notes of his min ister's sormons, and on ono occasion road them to the minister himself. "Siopj.-stopi" said ho, at tho occur rence of a certain soutoneo; " 1 didn't say that." " I know you didn't," was the reply; " 1 put that in myself to' mako sense." U