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HomeMy WebLinkAboutThe Seaforth News, 1926-01-21, Page 2ED REDMAYN�E, EDEN PHiPOYls RIuSTRAICD By 11.w. SA?ig R1'IOta BEGIN HERE TO -DAY. Mark Brendon, famous criminal in- vestigator,is engaged by Jenny Pen - dean to solve the mysterious disap- pearance of her husband, Michael: Pendean is last seen in the company of Robert Redmayne, uncle to Jenny, when the two .men visit a new, bung- alow being built. by Michael near Fog- gintor.;Quarry, • - Blood is found on the floor of the cottage and witnesses testify to hav- ing seen Robert ride away on his Motor bicycle with a heavy sack be- hind the saddle.. The sack is found at a far distance from the scene of Mystery. • Jenny goes to live with her- uncle Bendigo Redmayne. Brendon calls at ndigo's home and meets Giuseppe Doris, wileworks there. ` Bendigo sow' $$ boe frs Mark a letter supposed to b ons Robert Redmayne. pP W GOSTORY. NOW ON WITH - THE S O "Plow, what Ls more both Miss Reed and her parents made it clearthat the soldier was of an excitable and uncertain nature, In fact Mr. Reed didn't much approve of the match. He described a man who might very easily alip over the border line between rea- son and unreason. No, Halfyard, you'll not find any theory to hold water but the theory of a mental breakdown. The letter he wrote to his brother quite confirms it. The very writing shows a lack of restraint and self-control." "The writing was really his?" "I've compared it with another Iet- _ter in Bendigo Redmayne's possession. !Vs a peculiar fist; I should say there couldn't be a shadow of doubt.". "What shallyou do next?" asked Halfyard. "Get back to Plymouth again and. make close inquiries among the onion boats. They go and come and I can trace the craft that left Plymouth during the days that immediately foie lowed the posting of Redmayne's .let- ter. These will probably be back again with pfietber load in a week or two, One ought to be able to cheek then." • "A wild-goose chase, Brendon." "Looks to lie as though the whole inquiry had been. pretty much so from the first. We've missed the key some`: where. How the man that left Paign- ton in knickerbockers; and a big check suit and a red.waisteoat on the morn- ing after the murder got away with it and never challenged a single eye on rail or road—well, it's such it flat con- tradictio'n to reason and experience that 1 &eat'easily believe the face value." ' "No—there's a breakdown some- where --that's what I'm telling you; but whether the fault is ours, or 'a trick has ,been played to put us fairly out of the running, no doubt you'll find out soon or late. I don't see there's anything more we can do up here Whether or no." "There isn't," admitted Mark, "It's all been routine work and a devil of lot of time wasted in my opinion. Be- tween ourselves, I'tn rather ashamed of myself, Halfyard. I've missed something, -the thing that most mat- tered. There's a sign -post sticking up somewhere that I never saw." The ,inspector nodded. "It happens so sometimes—cruel vexing—and then` people laugh at us and ask how we earn our money. Now and agaimnas you say, there's a dan-I ger signals to a caSe so clear 03 the. nose on a man's face, and yet, owing to following some other clue, or stick- ing to a theory that we feel can and Must be the only right one, we miss the real, vital point till we go ands bark our shins on it. And then, per- haps, it's too late and we look silly." Brendon admitted the truth of this experience. "There' can only be two possiblo situations," he said; "either this was a motiveless murder—and lack of mo:'' tine means insanity; or else there was + a deep reason for it and Redmayne killed Pendean, after plotting far in! advance to do so and get clear ]rim -i pelf, In the first case he would have been found, unless he had committed euicide in seine such yenning fashion' that we can't discover the body. In' the second case, he's.a very cute bird COLOR IT NEW WITH "DIAMOND DYES" Just Dip to Tint or Boil to Dye Each 15 -cent pack. age eontains dir•ec- tions so simple any woman can tint soft, delicate shades or dye rich, permanent colors in lingerie, silks, ribbons, skirts, waists, dresses, coats ,. stockings, sweaters, 'draperies, •coverings, hangings •1 -everything! Buy Diamond Dyes—no other kind— and tell your druggist whether the ma- terial you wish to color is wool er silk, or whether it ii linen, cotton or mixed goods., indeed and the • ride .to. Paignton and disposal of the corpse -that air looked so mad—was,..supercraft on, his part. But, if alive, mad or sane, I'm of opin- ion he did what he said in his Letter to his brother he meant to do, and got off for a French or Spanish port. So. that's the next step for me—to try and hunt dawn the boat that took him." . He pursued this policy, Ieft Prince - town for Plymouth on the following day, took a room e,t :a sailors' inn on the Barbican and with the help of the harbor authority followed the voy- ages of a dozen. small vessels which had been berthing at Plymouth dur- ing the critical days. A month of arduous work Mark de- voted to this stage of the inquiry, and his investigation produced nothing whatever. Not a skipper of an vessel Y;. involved could furnish the least in- formation and na man resembling had been seen b Robert RedmayneY the harbor police, or any independent person at Plymouth, despite sharp Watchfulness. A time came when the detective was recallled to London and heartily chaff- ed for his failure• but his own unusual disappointment disarmed the amuse- ment at his expense. The ease had pre- sented such few apparent difficulties that Brendon's complete unsuccess astonished his chief. He was content, however, to believe Mark's own con- viction: that Robert Redmayne had never left England but destroyed him- self—probably soon after the dispatch of his letter to Bendigo from Ply- mouth. Much demanded attention and Brendon was soon devoting himself to a diamond robbery in the Midlands. Months passed, the body of Michael Pendean bad not been recovered, and longer existed. She had acknowledged every letter, but her replies were, brief and she had given him no information concerning herself, or her future in- tentions, though he had asked her to, do so. Ono item of information only He followed the 'voyages of a. doze 1 small vessels. had she vouch-safed and he learned that she was finishing the bungalow to her husband's original'plan and then seeking a possible customer to take over her lease. She wrote: "I cannot,se•e Dartmoor again, for it means' my happiest as well as my most unhappy hour's. I shall: never be so happy again and, I hope, never suffer so unspeakably as I have -tering the recent past." He turned over this sentence many times aid 'considered the weight of every word. He concluded from it that Jenny Pendean, while aware that her greatest joys were gone forever, yet the. little world of Scotland Yard pigeon -holed the mystery, while the larger world forgot all about it. Meantime, with a sense of secret relief, Mark Brendon prepared to face what had sprung out of these inci- dents, while permitting the events themselves to pass from his present interests, There remained Jenny Pen - dean and his mind was deeply pre- occupied with her. Indeed, apart .from the daily toll of work, she filled it to the exclusion of every other personal consideration. He longed unspeakably to see her again, for though he had correspond- ed during the progress of his inquiries and kept her closely informed of everything that he was doing, the ex- cuse for these communications no looked forward to a time when her present: desolation might give place to a truer tranquility and content. The fact that this should be so, however, astonished Brendon. He judged her words were perhaps ill chosen and that she implied a swifter return to peace. than in reality would occur. Re had guessed that a year' at least, instead of merely these four months, meat pass before her terrible sorrow could begin to dim. Indeed he felt sure of it and concluded that he was reading an implication into this pregnant sentonce that she had never intended it to carry. He longed to see her and was just planning how to do so, when chance offered an, oppor tuni'ty. Brendon was called to arrest two Russians, due to arrive at Plymouth from New York upon ,a day in mid. December; and having' identified theta „k.r:...,ar A._____ ______-.r .� HOW TO BUILD CONVENIENT CLOSETS The Editor's Node—This Mille 10 one of a series on Furnishing, Decorating and •Gardening es pertaining to moderate ;priced Canadban. Homes. Copyright 1525, MacLean Building Reports, Limited. My husband and I are "cranks" when ft comes to closets! Wo want them light, airy, ,ample, easily cleaned,: at- tractive! The houses we have bought if they have bald any-a-osets wt all, have been peovlded.witll the most un- attractive, . dark, stingy "cubby.holes" imaginable! The very worst detail of the home we now occupy Was thelfi'to iron cup- board. . One look within its chocolate colored depths madie me shudder! It suggested dirt—and worsee 1 Lta warns weu-e papered with .dark brown paper, the shelves were deep and thick, the • doors ssbld' wood. I felt I could not live with that horror long, so the first doing -over' was chosen to be that epotl We took off the heavy doors at the top, leaving solid doors below, for Ube cupboard reached Prom ceiling to floor. We substituted glass mill -order doors, with a single plain panel in each. The alt 1 e ves were removed, and cal the wall paper' taken off. Ae the wallts were not in good shape, they garmeitts.enn go in a given space then with the old plan ,of hooks about the wall. The pole sats in a socket, so: that it is removable. It Is painted to match the wall color, and it hangs at t11e easiest height, at which- clothes may be hung, and allow ecpaeebetweeu' them and floor. ` Above the .pole '10 maven a shelf, .and not inirequentay:. when telling -height: allows, two. Our most successful closet was made out of the unused waste front- end of the upstairs hail. This is about five feet, square, opening into the largeat bed. ronin, wihich before . we made the change had, only a -narrow,. single cdostet to hold the wardrobes of two people. Now the large cloeet pas' a window, shoe -shelves, two tvi(1e sh1Aves. above blue slobber -pore, the• lower of which has a hinged ,.cov,erf, -which, dropping down, rests on til! •.8'he1t braces form lug a )1aat emelf: l» Closed, it • makes 'a complete bait -cause for six .hats! All the work we did ourselves, my has. banal and I, except foe tate help he had in making over a very old door (which. we purchased at a b•argain).and hang- ing it. When the closet was finished ' thele was still the apace bordering the stair - 1, rail in hail, all claim mg , up s. we had ' • were covered with wall board, and shelves graduating from a wide-wititb at the bottom to a rather• narrow one at the 'top, four in all, replaced true old shelving, The whose closet was then given sevo•al oats of fiat cream paint end one of enamel. To -clay, that horror le the centre of a host attractive kitchen! All small supplies like spices are kept In glass jars; special emergency supplies or extra -nice jenha and •jellies are to be found at the top, while the two lower s'helves• hold the gayest bats of china used in the daily cooking—howls, plate's, pitchers. ' No one comes lute our kitchen without exclaiming over that bright, attractive smpply-closet. Of course, its doing -over lea to other improvements in- tinge, cream painted walls, new bluish iinoieums, etc., so .that In.. trnine the whole atmosphere on tile work centre of the house is .translformed cheerful, attractive and convenient, as it slhould be If one is to enjoy -working in it. All. bed room Closets have been pain ed. 'I1 1s not only because paint is. More bygenlc than paper and can be easliy cleaned, but 11 looks Nish and dainty, as any clothes -press kitould; look. Two of our bedrooms had no closets. In these rooms we built eor- uel• closets. of wall -board, pleasuring carefully so that not' an extra inch would he used of room space that''vas; deeded, and yet that there was width enough for clothes -pole, with waicll every closet is fitted. Anyone who has used clothes -poles for hanging know now many more 110 linen C1(:•iel, Wo felt this space 'was the answer to our need! IAfter carefully measuring the silage and con4usting mall -order 'dta'talogums•, tire sent for. two sets of doors, -and be- gan beading 01)1' new linen closet. It cis tour shelves for bed -linen in its ripper' two-thirds, and two shelves Lor bath towels end bath -room supplies in the lower tier, each strut off by their ownpair of doors. The elite was made of wallboard, as is. the beck, which, of eourse,is one side of my large clothee- eioeet described. • The Miele has been Deemed lllte the walla of the hall and the deers are white enamelled, -ovith good grade of brase hardware, It is probably the mord; useful of all the closets In the iouse, convenient, 0111pie, light, good- looking. Our store -roost has a aarg'e closet. - space., well shelved as may be done for• any storage space of any home. First we made It as tight as possible, so that no dust. or dirt would sift ie.. Then we ran an extcnelon light In, eo that every, corner' is (velnlighted and there is no fumbling Por- a bundle which, must be found In a berry - Here there areshelves for bedding, each bundle tied and labelled plainly; shelves for travelling bags, all off, th•e floor, nod ready for ;use at any am= meat; below the bag -shelves there ar'e' places for the family trunks, easy to get at, Wesel; against the wall, out of the way. There are shelves' for hat- boxes, races. for unused pictures and -shelves .for books. and testified to their previous activi- ties in England, he was free for a While. Without sending any warning, he proceeded to Dartmouth,, put up there that night, and started, at nine o'clock' an the following morning, to walk td "Crow's Nest," His heart beat hard and two l thoughts moved together in it, for not 1 only_ did he intensely desire to see the, widow but also bad a wish to surprise the little community on the cliff for another reason. Still some vague sus- picion held his mind that Bendigo Redmayne might be assisting . his brother'. The idea was shadowy, yet he bad never wholly lost it and more than once contemplated such a sur- prise visit as he was now -about to pay. Suspicion, however, seemed to di- nhitush as he ascended great heights west of the river.' estuary; and when within the space of two hours he had reached a place from which "Crow's Nest" could be seen, perched between the cliff heights and a'gray, wintry sea, nothing but the anticipated vision of the woman held his mind. He came, ignorant of the startling events awaiting . him, little guessing how both the story of his secret dream and the chroniele.of: the quarry crime were destined to be advanced by great incidents before the 'day was done. His road ran over the cliffs and about him swept bi'ewn and naked fields under the winter' sky: dere and there a mewing gull flew overhead .-_ and'the'on:y sign of other `life was a Millard's `Liniment for sore throat. plowman crawling behind his^ horses with more sea fowl fluttering in his wake written in letters stamped upon" a bronze plate,and above it rose a post with a• receptacle for holding' a lamp at night. The road to the house fell steeply.. clown and, far beneath, he saw the flagstaff and the tower room rising above the dwelling. A bleakness and melancholy seemed to encompass the spot on this sombre day. The wind'sighed and sent a tremor' of light through the dead grass; the horizon was invisible,' for mist concealed it; and from the low and ashcolored vapor the sea crept out with its monotonous, ‘myriad wave- lets flecked here and there by a feather of foam. As he descended Brendon saw' a man at work in the garden setting up. a two -foot barrier of woven wire. It was evidently intended to keep' the rabbits from the, cultivated flower beds which hadl been Jug '- from: the green s:ope,,,of ,the womb. (1'o. be continuod•) Although oeil thirteen months old, g Y Roland Wildash recently crossed the Atlantic from C'anad'a to rejoin his parentis in. England,. Brendon came at hist to a tvhite gate facing on the highway, and found' that .he :had reached' his destination. Upon the gate "Crow's Nest" was Fresh___Flavor OC deiiafoul; :GREEN TEA Hen is preserved in the eair-tight,SALADA ac .et., Finer , thf� n Orly •apan or ...,zi„Vi* o der Insist �t zx ]rn �A I) -_-+ The Old Rail Fence. It roves the farm all over With awkward -stepping feet, Here close beside the clover • Where just beyond the wheat. Along' the fallow fragrant ^ll r0Q� 1l'or woodland ways It brakes, i it4- s'^'�" - And many a sylvan vagrant As boon:companion takes. he � d 1 a lovee d oo b ne tangles, zt v s . x ng , Invites the milkweed pod,-,. 1 its n angles And all ern Y ng Laugh out, in golden. rod. til the erevi ride' IIenea a ted h • The Mickel arias close hide And from the stake beside her ' Complains the katydid., The squirrel -is its lover, . And unafraid and fond Are bobolink and plover Of the genial vagabond, OE all around, above it:, It has, the confidence,. And man and nature love it— The homely, old rail fenpe. --Charlotte Whitcomb. A Sociable Hat. - She—"You raised swim .hat to that girl who passed., You don't know her, do you?" He—"No, but my brother does, and this is his hat." 1016 ROUSE FROCK BOTH ATTRAC- TIVE AND PRACTICAL.; To be smartly and appropriately attired for the house is the first con- sideration of every woman. If one's dress is attractive --and it may be practical and inexpensive at the same time -one is going to feel cheery in the thought that they look nice. A dress that is dainty enough to wear all days is pictured here, made of a fine quality pink blocked gingham, with set-in kimono -sleeve section' of lain col 1 ox mid trimmed 't (P B with a wash !braid in a deeper shade of rose. The i gathers'at side front and back•give a 'comfortably wide 'hem to the skirt which is otherwise, very plain. - The sleeve section may be omitted and the 1 result Will be an apron of. unusual design. The diagram pictures the -simple design of laao. 1016, which is ire sizes 84, 36, 38, 40, 42 and 44 inches bush Size 38 bust requires 3% yards 36-inch,`or 9311 yards 40 -inch ynateria1. Price 20' cents. Every woman's desire is to achieve that smart different appearance which draws favorable comments fr•oln the observing public. The designs illus- trilled in our nerd Fashion Book are originated in the heart 'of the style centres and \via' 'help you to acquire that much desired air of individuality. Price of the book 10 cents. the copy. HOW TO ORDER PATTERNS. Write your name and address plain- ly, giving numbeb and size of such patterns as, you want: Enclose 20c le stanips or coin (coin preferred;' wrap it carefully) for each number, and 1. address your order to Pattern Dept., Wilson Publishing Co., 73 West Ade- laide St., Toronto, Patterns sent by return mail. Christian Science Lecture by Radio A Lecture by Salem A. Hart, Jr,, C.S., of ,Cleveland, 01110, a member of the Board of Lectureship, of The Mother Church, The First Church 0f Christ Scientist, in Boston, Maes., will be rndiocast from the Parkdale Theatre, Toronto, on Sunday after- noon, Jan. $let, at 3.15 pan., by Station CAM, 357 meters wave length. You are cordially invited to "listen in" f Swiss Immigration. About a year ago, a few men in terested in Canada's colonization prob-. ]erns, formed the "Swiss Settliement Society," with. the purpose in view of establishing on farms of their own, Swiss Immigrant Perm Bern nb•endy In Canada. The Society Is wonting In co -Operation with M.o.-migration and colonization experiment by Switzer - .and and during the past year has :rrdd- ed to its membership a large slumber of prominent Canadians. The funds necessary to get the Soelety established have been :eased by vo`•uhtauy contributions, the moat of it being furnished by lneiebers and friends of the Society, outside of the cordis,. -.As the SWIC's bas always risen looked upon as a particularly de- sirable immigrant in all British coun- tries the existence of t•he -Society should prove a good thing for Canada. Fpture success will depend, Lo ti. con- siderable extent, on the measure of suI1sc0 L and co-operation ' which this. Society receives here and it is encour- aging to loarn""that the,governmeni and tranhportatiori companies are, realising the liosaibilillies of the or- ganzation. Minard's Liniment, relieves headache: Wireless sets are under a temporary lean of the Venezue;an,Government, It is clairned that listening -in interferes with the work of the nation. No elan 15 a hopeless fool until he has made ft fool' of• himself twlee- lit the .°are way. WATED Local representative wanted by well established Termite .Firm dealing in Government, Mutilcl• pal and High Grade Corporation Bonds. - Must be thoroughly trustworthy, reliable and Well connected. Apply by letter to - T';O. Box 253, Toronto 1 Use Crescent Ground Saws; their teeth areal even thickness throughout the enure length of the saw, thus mekingbieding iathakerl Impossible CrescentGdnd,. lag is an exclusive Simonds featurc.Simonds Canada Ss, Co. tat fres saNOAI ST. W.. ST.JOHN YANCOOVCa MONT„eAL ST. JOHN wianme "Creeostegauad" Lanes Tooth Cross Cut, St 9'74 1 • r. Canadian brae, tor' Cnnn- dlan Climate. Douhle wall, Copper not Water heating system. Sensitive Automatic regulates. "batches strong; bottthy chicks. write for • irR)la ,Circular too— S. o. Maekontte. t7e oreetown, O rat.s T�Ima�gssn/. _ BOOT REPAIRING MADE EASY No Naile No Tools No Trouble Repair diem yourself at home 111)11 savo tlolitir s.'• As easy ds spreading butter. Each can corltalns sufflclent voln- tyouud for 4' ordinary soles Put on at night, It hardens and is ready for wear in the morning. Rcpalr Your Rubber's, Goloshes and 'i'irct� with . RE - SOL i T Agencies Open. Price, Per Tin, 88c Poet .Paid. RE SOL -TT 296 Concord Ave. Toronto V sJ Oxygen le the thing that puts life nto the blood. In cold -weather the windows and doors of the house should be opened for at least ten minutes the first thing every morning, and after' eiuclt meal there should be a thorough' airing of- the lower hoer, for 110 matter how perfect any ;.l'atom of ventilation may be it in almost impossible to pre- vent cooking odors from fouling the air.. This airing is doubly necessary if there are smnokers in. the fatnbly. The family sitting room should have ai 0n- stant change of ant. A good plan, which does away. with drafts, 15, to insert a narrow board be- tween the batten) of the lower' sash and the sill. It should fit perfectly' so theme:' will be no stream of cold air•. from the sides or top or bottoin'edges. It Is bad enough to have poorly von- tliated living rooms, but the tight sleeping room whet° one is shut up for eight or nine hours is an abom'ina- tlon, Of course, no one wants to sheep in thein and teeth oicynorth w au f d, it is not necessary. If the wind is too strong, a light frame eau be fitted to _ the window and covered with cloth. Normal free outdoor air contains a . certain pet centage of moisture, and that moisture le essential to our physi cal well-being. being. Obviously it is neces- sary for every mother to know how to gauge and regulate the atmospheric moisture of the home. No house Is fit to aye in unless there is moisture on the windowpanes in winter. The miss- ing'moistnre may be supplied in munY• watt's, but a good plan is to have pans of water were the heated air of the stove or furnace passes over thein. A very good iiitmidilfor can be made by hanging strips of wicklike cloth over the stove, with the ends in water. These cloths "'draw upthe water and the air absorbs the moisture. But best of 011 is to keep a constant cur- rent of fresh air coming into the room. Do you know that half the air you breathe on the first floor comes from the cellar? What kind of air is your cellar furnishing you? Is' it being wafted from decaying vegetables, damp Moors and walls, old furniture, caet=olf -clothing and the like? Your family wiIi not have good air to breathe unless you have a well -venti- lated cellar and free from possible sources of poisonous gases. -Mary Hamilton Talbott, More Reasonable Than Bribing a Child. Small Helen Is paid by her parents 10 cents an hour for', practicing her music lesson. She receives special commendation frem her isaCex. "Her faithfulness 7s touching," says her nlothe1. The case is a true one, matched by a second. limiter romped - through six years of school alw=ays at ' the foot of his ()lass. "And now he leads the seventh grade," his -'father envounces with pride. "I. suspected lie could do..11, i1 I made him want to; and I managed it both. quickly and simply.' what was' your method?" the writer eagerly inquires, thinking o4 Jinuny, and Ethel and Howard. "1 merely promised lam 26 cents for every 'Excellent' on las report card," the father replies. "Last month he lead four. Just think of iti" Yes, just think! If the bribers of'dtlldren only would think! To grown-ups, educated under old ' systems, artificial rewards in home and. echo()) may seem but rightful re- cognition of work well done. Bust to the child as yet "tinsedueed by the nr!ee" the reward of a thing welatione really is to have done it, Observation' of very little children gives ample proof, : What the prize does to the thuds attittide toward his accomp- • liehlneat--the gradual shifting in em-', phasic for the thing wall done to the: mei inlet payment for doing it—is food' for thought. There are so many natural ways, of recognizing a itne piece of wdrklnon, 011111 01' a strong injustice for good in a:boy or girl -,When one thinks or these genulne rewards, not always' 7m= mediate but ringing true \Alan they come, the artificial prize that is given for high scholarship; for shouldering tie's responelblti.ttos, foe courtesy, for doing. good, then (11011 tin itself' a :onnerfeit. What trophy reams more to a girl than the realization that he Ilea expressed her own joyous. self- essness? How can a boy be more ully rewarded for sportsmanship, than y the'respect and love of teachers, :entractes, and his own father and mother? • 'Brought r1•p' on school and home rises, the child may develop an Elan mitite for such stimulation. The world s Cull of prizes --stet the bait dangled penly as an advertising scheme and eyond the limits of this discussfo; 111 the more subtle reward, the super- 5101 and mai:erial. result. 'Phe' child 'he gradually dcvelope a taste for mels prize whining, out of 'dkI proper - ion to the unwritten ru . on the 1(110, may logically boodine a salmi- -ding grownup lwko cares less for the 'leans, than the, end, For that matter, e it t•easonable to expect a child, gibed at home or a tiflciadly motf- ated at school,to doasi'esso manhood ✓ womanhood that unerringly,, seeks Perfect, beautiful thought' and ant • or its own sake? "'1'lie reward of a lithe well done is to have clone it." L`helittle child knows this. to itaov- ug 11uen,' for a parent OS' a school, to srdietitute a counterfeit and 'take away Trema ebild the Clod-seutrjoy 115 beteg FRESH AIRS A FRIEND 0 s b p 0 it b n IS ga l i• b a f t f turd doing, that, is his genuine and00- ISSU1•.No. 4---'26. them reword 7