1(T THE 'OMAHA DAILY HEE: SUNDAY, FKlllllXAHT 8, 100.1. CHAPTEfl XXIX. The Police Ar at Fault. Ambler Jevons read the letter, then handed It to roe without comment. It in written upon the note paper t knew io well, stamped with the nest address "Neneford" In black, but it bore no date. What I read wai at follows: "Sir: 1 fall to comprehend the meaning Of your worda when you followed me Into the train at. Huntingdon last night. I am In no fear of any catastrophe; therefore, I can only take your offer of assistance as n attempt to obtain money from me. If you presume to address me agnln I shall have no other course than to acquaint the police. Youra truly, . "MARY COURTENAY." "Ah!" I exclaimed. "Then he warned her and ahe misunderstood his intention." "Without a doubt." said Ambler, taking the letter from my hand. "This was writ Jen probably only a few days before tier f the most polsonoua of substances are of unstable composition and are readily al tered by chemical reagents; to this (roup belong many vegetable and most animal poisons. These, therefore, must be treated differently from the more stable Inorganic compounds. With an inorganic poison we may destroy all organic materials mixed with It, trusting to find the poison still recognizable after thla process; not so with' an organic aubstance; that must be sep arated by other than destructive means. Through the whole evening we tested for the various groups of poisons corrosives, simple Irritants, specific Irritants and neu rotics. It was a long and scientific search. Borne of the testa with which t was not acquainted I watched with the keenest In terest, for of all the medical men In Lon don Tatham waa the most up-to-date In such analysis. At length, after much work with acids, filtration and distillation, wt determined that a neurotic had been emoloyed, and the papers, and created considerable senna tlon. An old gentleman was murdered un der remarkable circumstances. Well, sir the gentleman In question waa Mrs. Courts- nay's husband." Tba coroner aat back In his chair and stared at the officer who had apoken, while In the court great sensation was caused, Mention of the Kew mystery brought Its details vividly back to the minds of every one. Ye. After all. the death of that poor coattrmnnger. Lanky Lane, waa of greater public Interest than the representatives ot the press anticipated. "Are you quite certain of thla?" the cor oner queried. "Yes, slf. T am here by direction of ths chief Inspector at Scotland Yard to give evidence. I was engaged upon the case at Kew, and have also made Inquiries into the mystery at Neneford." "Then you have suspicion that the de ceased was well, a person ot bad char acter?" ' "We have." "Fools," growled Ambler. "Lane was one of their Informers, and often obtained pay ment from Scotland Yard for Information regarding the doings ot a certain gang of thieves. And yet they actually declare him to be a bad character. Preposterous I" "Do you apply for an adjournment of the Inquiry?" "No, sir. We anticipate that the verdict will be suicide the only one possible In face of the evidence." And then, aa though the Jury were com pelled to act upon the Inspector's sugges tion, they returned a simple verdict "That I lm .i. mi. IHit. m, mill i ii- TT' st jiOTecOTimiiairiiuiLe 1 TOm f Cardni Is i my smeral herJth. The fl M W C . 0 . U1M J 1 TiT.. I pivui PWl A I decided so try it and procured a bottle the chance) for the better. At my an Chtcaco, &908 Indiana Avawoe, fog, tt, 1909. t sxytliaff Iba-ws arer tried pr Wregwlarities, TWi wars trJr he) eroabJ became Mrtsatod t, kvU the doctor " Mid. I friend reoommaaded wine) rrpericr t smvthianr I fear arer trUd Ipr sroralaritic thai I berasw tmvuUr bnt I paid little attention to lL Gradually tba Broabls ClitUe attention to it. OraduallT ths me scant and rerr painful as 4 I aoa i did no bavs the deirr eif ect and when a I P3 BOM moL ctfCardW iter and wKaia I helped roe at onoe and I frit frraafiy tnoonnfvd wlm I fcNa4 anee for lbs better. At my cert mwutrnai period the pain waa less al lae Bow Mil few months I was perfectly well, regular aad without pain. inn is orar a year apo and I have not ru flared any paina or trtrabte since. Ac cept my sincere thanks for yonr efficient remedy. Decanse Win cl Cardoi enrea women to simply to quickly and so effectively it is the frrnriia medi cine of women today. This medicine brings women aeaJta and freedom from ioueaa by the most atsApla process Nature's own way. . While physicians examine and operate, Wiae of Cardoi works a cure without the humiliating pub licity of an operation or the danger of the nee of a knife. Wine of Cardoi strikes at the root of female trouble. It regulate the menstrual flow, tnalcfof tba function regular and healthy, an aid to health instead of a menace. A profuse flow weakens the Mom and suppression poisons it, Wine of Cardni, by regulating the flow, (rives kin and strenfrah to aM the gtjMrsttri organs. Bearing down pains disappear and ovarian pains and weakness give way to health. If you are suffering female weakness you should look after your ease at onoe. All the organs srs IsT sympathy and you cannot tell what a simple ease of irregularity will ran into if you let i atone. Go to your drnpgist today and scorns a $1.00 bottle of Wiae of Oardui. Take it in ywar home, ra private, and you will thank Miss Adams for her advice. For advice in cases requiring special directions, address, giving symptoms, The LacKea' Ad visory Department, The Chattanooga Medicine Co. Chattanooffa. Tennessee. nAAnrnr 1 It II II ,.11 UUUUXJLb Hiinr"ri at- fir" r-y -. i, ,& J , i.i , : u.,,,, , gzzzrs, Mw W iraiDOT )fwd j r?. iiily Trans TO i ,. VIA. CHICAGO, MILWAUECEE 2: ST. PAUL IW. The number of trains operated between Omaha and Chicago via the Chicago, Milwaukee & St. Paul Railway has been increased to three daily fast trains each way. These trains are magnificently equipped with palace sleeping-cars, dining cars, and free reclining-chair cars. The trains are solid, wide-vestibuled, heated by steam, and are lighted by Pintsch gas and electricity. Nothing finer moves on wheels. The service on the dining-cars is perfect. Eastbound, the trains leave the Union Passenger Station, Omaha, promptly as follows : f Tho Limited, - - 0.05 p. m. Eastern Express, 5.45 p. m. Atlantic Express, 7.45 a.m. At Chicago these trains arrive at the Union Passenger Station, Canal and Adams streets in the heart of the city. Excellent connections for the East and South. . ' TICKETS, 1504 Farnam St. F. A. NASH, General Western Agent. 'WHEN 1 UlViS lii' YOU BHALL, STEP INTO MY SHOES, BOYD, AND IT WILL. BE A .GOOD THING FOR YOU." death. That man," and he glanced at tlie i rostrat. body, "was the only one who could give us the clue to unravel the myotery." But the dead man's lips had closed ami his secret waa held forever. Only thoeu lettera remained to connect him with the river tragedy, or rather to show that he had communicated with the unfortunate Mrs. Courtenay. In company we walked to Leman Street police, atatton, one ot the chief centers of the metropolitan police in the East End, and there, In an upper office, Ambler had a Ions consultation with the sergeant of the criminal Investigation department on duty. I described tho appearance ot the body, and stated my auspiclons of poisoning, all of which the detective carefully noted be fore going forth to make his own examina tion. My address was taken ao that I might aaslat at the post-mortem, and then shortly after midnight I drove back westward through the city with Ambler at my side. He spoke little and when In Oxford street, Just at the corner of Newman street, he desceuded. wished me a hurried goodnight and disappeared In the darkness. He waa often given to strange vagaries of erratic movement. It was as though aome thought bad suddenly occurred to him, and he acted at once upon It. , That night I scarcely closed my eyes. My brain was awhlrl with thoughts of all th curious events ot the past few months, the Inexplicable presence of old Mr. Courtenay and th subsequent death of Mary and the only man who, according to Ambler, knew the aecret. Ethelwynn's strange words worried me. What could shs mean? What did ahe know? Surely hers could not be a guilty conscience. Yet, In her words and actions I had detected that cowardice which a boavy conscience always engenders. One by one I dissected and analysed the Sevn Secrete, but not In one single Instance could I obtain a gleam ot truth. While at the hoxpital next day I was served with a notice to a&slat at the post mortem of the unfortunate Lane, whosn body was lying In the Ehadwell mortuary, and that same afternoon I met by appoint ment Dr. Tatham of the London hospital, who, as Is well known, Is an expert toxi cologic. 'To describe in technical dotall the ex amination we made would not Interest the general reader ot thla Strang, narrative. Tbe average man or woman knows nothing r carea lesa for the duodenum or the pylo rus; therefore it is not my lulrntt'n to go Into long and wearying detail. Suffice it to say that we preserved certain r-3r,t of the body for subsequent examination, and together were engaged the whole evening In the laboratory of tbe hospital. Taihatu waa. well skilled In the minutiae of the . testa. The exact determination of the cause of death in cases of poisoning always de pends partly on the symptoms noted before death and partly on the appearances fouad after death. Regarding the fnimer neither of us knew anything; hnre our difficulties were greatly Increased. The object ot the analyst is to obtain the substances which be has tj examine chemically In as pure a condition as possible, so that there may be bo doubt about the results of his testing, also, of course, to separate active aub stances from those that ar. Inert, all being mixed together In the s:omach snd ali mentary eacal. Again, tn dealing with such fluids aa the blcorf, or the tissue of the body, their natural constituents must be got rid of before the tor.lgn and pelaonoua body can b reached. Th.re la thla diffi culty further to contend with that some ot that its action on the vasomotor system of the nerves was very similar, If not identi cal, with nitrate of amyl. Further than that, even Tatham, expert tn nuch matters, could not proceed. Hours of hard work resulted in that conclusion, snd with It we were compelled to be satisfied. the deceased committed suicide by poison ing while of unsound mind." CHAPTER XXX. Sir Bernard's Decision. For fully a week 1 saw nothing of Am bler. Sir Bernard was unwell and remained ,k.,.. . ... .wi- t ... aa ..Sown at Hove; therefore I was compelled Bhadwell, and, with Ambler, I attended as J , m, 1. 1 . .4 v. w uib 1.1V lu,, WC ,U," a witness. Tbe reporters, of course, ex pected a sensation; but, on tbe contrary, our evidence went to show that; aa the poisonous substance was found In the "quartern" bottle on deceased's table, death waa In all probability due to suicide. Some members of the Jury took an oppo site view. Then the letters we bad found concealed were produced by the police, and, ot course, created a certain amount ot in terest. But to the readers of newspapers the poisoning ot a costermangnr at Shad well is of little Interest as compared with a similar catastrophe in the quarter of London vaguely known as the West End. The letters were auspicious, and both cor eral serious cases, the patients being peo pie of note; thus I was kept very busy My friend's silence waa puzzling. II wrote to him, but rerolved no reepOnse. A wire to his office In the city elicited the fact that Mr. Jevons was out of town. Probably he was still pursuing the Inquiry he had so actively taken up. Nevertheless, I was dis satisfied that he ahould leave me so entirely In tbe dark as to his Intentions snd dis coveries. Etbelwynn came to town for the day and I spent several hours shopping with her. Bhe was strangely nervoua and all the old spontaneous gaiety seemed to have left her. She had read In the papera of the curious Mi nil' liifv nnontprt th.in .vtltpnei, ! that Lane was engaged upon an elaborate,; onnetlo ,17". T f th man piece of blackmail. "Who la this Mary Courtenay, who writes to him from Neneford?" Inquired the coro ner of the Inspector. '.'Well, sir," the latter responded, "the writer herself Is dead. She was found drowned a few days ago near her home un- l-der suspicious circumstances." Then the reporters commenced to awake td the fact that something extraordinary waa underlying the Inquiry. "Ah!"' remarked the coroner, one of the I most acute official of his class. "Then In J face of this her letter seems to be more 1 than curious. For aught we know the I tragedy at Neneford may have been willful murder, and we have now the sulcido ot the assassin." "That, sir, ia the police theory," replied I tho inspector. I ."Tho police theory' be hanged!" ejacu i laled Ambler, almost loud enough to be ' hesrj. "The police know nothing of the tase, and will never learn anything. If the jury are content to accept such an ! explanation, and brand poor Lane as a j murderer, they must be allowed to do so." i I knew Jevons held coroner's juries in ; J ho racist supreme contempt; sometimes j rather unreasonably so, I thought. 1 "Well," the coroner said, "this la cer- Lane and (hat of her unfortunate sister, end our conversation was mainly upon the river mystery. Sometimes she seemed 111 at ease with me, as though she feared some discovery. Perhaps, however. It was merely my fancy. I loved her. She was all the world to me! and yet In ncr eyes I seemed to read some hidden aecret which she was endeav oring with all the power at her command to conceal.- In such circumstances there was bound to arise between ua a certain reserve that we .had not before known. Her conversation was carried on In a mechan ical manner, as though distracted by her inner thoughts; and when, after having tea together in Bond street, we drove to th station, and I saw her off on her return to Neneford, my mind was full of dark appre hensions. Yes. That Interview convinced me, more than over that ahe was In some manner cognizant of the truth. The secret exist ence, of old Mr. Courtenay, the man whom I myself bad pronounced dead, waa the crowning point of the atrange affair; and yet I felt by some inward Intuition that thla fact was not unknown to her. . All the remarkable events of that moon lit night when I ha! followed husband and wife along tbe river badk came back to me, and 1 saw vividly the old men's face, hag j talnly remarkatle evidence," and be turned I gard snd drawn, Just as It bad been in lite, i tbe dead woman'a letter over In bis hand. ; Surely there could be no stranger current j "It Is quite plain that the deceased ap- ot events than those which formed the proarnea-tno iaay ceierusiciy to give ner warning of some danger, but really to : o.ucaiuau nvr. rvr reason uue. noi I at present appear. He may have feared her threat to give Information to the police; hence hla crime and aubaequent suicide." "Listen!" exclaimed Jevona la my ear. "They are actually trying the dead man fcr a crime be could not possibly have ! committed. They've got bold ot the wrong end cf the atlck as usual. Why don't tbey glvo a verdict of suicide snd have done, with it. We can't afford to waste a whole Eoven Secrets. They were beyond explana tion all of them. I knew nothing. I had seen results, but I knew not their cause. Nitrate of amyl waa not a drug which a costermopger would select with a vw to committing suicide. Indeed, I daresay few of my readers, unleaa they are doctors or chemists, have ever before heard of it. I Therefore my own conclusion, fully en dorsed by tbe erratic Ambler, was that tbe poor fellow had been secretly poisoned. Nearly a fortnight paased, and I beard nothing of Ambler. He was still "out ot j day explaining theories to s set at unedu- town." Day by day passed, but nothing of cated gentlemen ot tbe Whltecbapel road. . note transpired. Sir Bernard was still suf- Tbo English law ia ridiculous where cor ! oner's juries are concerned." ' The coroner heard bis whispering snd looked toward us severely. "Wi bsve not had sufficient tlms to In- ferlng from a slight touch of sciatica at home, and on vlaltlng him one Sunday I fouad blm confined to bis bed, grumbling Snd peevish. He was somewhat eccentric In bis miserly bablta and hla haired of so- i vesllgats the wbcls of ths facts conneeted j cl.ty, beyond doubt; snd ths absurdities ; with Mrs. Courtenay's myaterloua death," I which bla enemies attributed to him were ItU. Inspector went on. "You will probably I not altogether unfounded. But be bad at revollect, sir, a mystery down at Kew some all events the rare quality ot prof.aalng for lit lie tluu ago. It was fully report. la J bis protesslea a respect nearly akla to en thusiasm. Indeed, according to his views, the faculty possessed almost Infallible qual ities. In confidence he had more than once admitted to me that certain of bis col leagues practicing In Harley street were amazing donkeys; but he would never have allowed anyone else to say so. From the moment a man acquired that diploma which gave him the right over life and death, that man became In his eyes an august person age for the world at large. It was a crime, he thought, for a patient not to submit to bis decision, and certainly It must be ad mitted that his success in the treatment ot nervous disorders had been most remark able. "You were at that lecture by Deboutln of Paris tbe other day!" he exclaimed to me suddenly, while 1 was seated at his bedside dcacriblng tbe work I had been doing for blm in London. "Why didn't you tell me you were going there?" "I went unexpectedly with a friend." "With whom?" "Ambler Jevons." "Oh. that detective fellow!" laughed the old physician. "Well," he added, "It was all very Interesting, wasn't it?" "Very especlajly your own demonstra tions. I had no idea that you were In- cor respondence with Deboutln." He laughed; then with a knowing look said: "Ah, my dear fellow, nowadays it doesn't do to tell anyone of your own researches. The only way is to spring It upon the pro ferslon as a great triumph; Just as Koch did his cure for tuberculosis. One must create an Impression nowadays, if only with a quack remedy. The day of the steady plodder la pant; It's all hustle, even In medicine." "Well, you certainly lid mnke an Im pression," I said smiling. "Your experl menta were a revelation to the prcfesElon. They were talking of them at the hospital only yesterday. "H'm. They thought me an old fogey, eh? But, you aee, I've been keepirg pace with the times, Boyd. A man to succeed nowadays must msko a boom with some thing, It matters not what. For years I've bttn experimenting In secret, and some day I will show them further results of my re searchca and they will come upon the profession like a thunderclap, staggering bellof." The old man chuckled to himself as he thought of his scientific triumph and how one day he would give forth to the world a truth hitherto unsuspected. Ws chatted for s long time, mostly upon technicalities which cannot Interest the reader, until suddenly he tald: "I'm getting old, Hoyd. Theae constant attacks I have rend, r me unfit to go to town and sit tn Judgment on that pack of silly women who rush to consult me when ever they have a hesdache or an erring husband. I think that very aoon I ought to retire. l'f done sufficient bsrd work all the yeara since I was a iocum' down In Oxfordshire. I'm nearly worn out." "Oh, no," I said. "You mustn't retire yet. If you did the profession would lose one of its most brilliant men." "Enough of compliments," he snapped, turning wearily on his pillow. "I'm sick and tired of it all. Better to retire while I have fame than to outlive It. When I give up you will step Into my shoes, Boyd, and It will be a good thing for you." Such a suggestion was quite unexpected. I had never dreamed that be contemplated banding over hla practice to me. Certainly It would be a good thing tor me if be did. It would give me a chance such as few men ever bad. True, I was well known to bis patlenta and bad worked bard In his Inter ests, but that bs intended to hand Us prac tice over to me I had never contemplated. Hence I thanked him most heartily. Yes, Sir Bernard had been my benefactor always. "All the 'women know you," he went on In his snappish way. "You are the only man to take my place. They would Vome to you, but not to a new man. All I can hope Is that they won't bore you with their domestic troubles as they have done me," and he smiled. "Oh." I said. "More than once I, too, have been compelled to listen to tbe do mestic secrets of certain households. It really is astonishing what a woman will tell her doctor, even though he may be young." The old man laughed again. "Ah!" : he sighed. "You don't know women as I know them, Boyd. Youv'e got your experience to gain. Then you'll hold them In abhorrence Just as I do. They call me a woman-hater," he grunted. "Per haps I am for I've had cause to hold the feminine mind and the feminine passion equally In contempt." "Well," I laughed, "there's not a man In London who Is more qualified to apeak from personal experience than yourself. So I anticipate a pretty rough time when I've had years of It, as you have." "And yet -you want to marry!" he said, looking me straight In the face. "Of course, you love Etbelwynn Mlvart. Every man at your age loves. It Is a malady that occurs In the teens and declines In the thirties. I should have thought that your affoctlon of tho heart had been about cured. It Is surely time it was." "It Is true that I love Ethelwynn," I de clared, rather annoyed, "and I Intend to marry her." "If you do, then you spoil all your chances of success The class of women who are my patients would much rather consult a confirmed bachelor than a man who has a Jealous wife hanging to his coat tails. The doctor's wife must slwaya bs a long-suffering person." I smiled; and then our conversation turned upon his proposed retirement, which was to take place In six months' time. I returned to London by the last train, nrd on entering my room found a telegram from Ambler making an appointment to call on the following evening. The message waa dated from Eastbourne, and was the first I bad received from blm for some days. Next morning I sat in Sir Bernard's con sulting room ss usual, receiving patieuls, nnd the afternoon I spent on the usual hos pital round. About 6 o'clock Ambler ar rived, drank s brandy and soda with a re flective air, and then suggested thst ws might dine together at'the Cavour, a fa vorite haunt ot bis. At table I endesvored to Induce him to explain bis movements and what he bad discovered, but be was still disinclined to tell me anything. He worked always In se cret, snd until facts were clear aald noth ing. It waa a peculiarity of his to remain dumb even to his most Intimate friends concerning any Inquirlea he waa making. He was s man of moods, with an sctlvs mind snd a still tongye two qualities es sential to ths successful unraveling ot mys teries. , Having finished dinner we lit cigars snd took s cab back to my rooms. On passing along Harley street It suddenly occurred to ms that In the morning I had left s small rase of intruments In Sir Bernard's con sulting room, and that I might require them for s pstlent If called that night. Therefore. I stopped the csb, dismissed It, and knocked at Sir Bernard's door. Ford, on opening It, surprlaed ms by an nouncing that bis master, whom I bad left ' W. A. COOK, M. D. Varicocele Hydrocele Blood Poison Piles Stricture Rupture If you have any aliment In the above list you should seek relief. Ask the banks sbout our reliability or let ua give you the names of food citi zens we have cured, who do not object to the use of their names. Ws curs Varlococele In one week, never to return, by an original method you will be pleased with after we explain. Hydrocele In ten days. Lost manhood and evil effects of vicious habits in 80 to 90 days. Blood Polnson In 27 to 60 days without potash or mercury. Piles la 10 days; Fistula In two weeks and Rupture in six. Ws guarantee our cures in writing aa well ss to show ths proofs first. Charges low snd consultation free at office or by letter. Cook Medical Co. 110-112 S. 14th St., Omaha, Neb. OVER DAILY KEW1 OFFICE. ce Honrs e) u m. o H p. sa. San day., IO a. sn. to 12. SO p. so. Offl In bed on the previous night, bad returned to town suddenly, but waa engaged. Ambler waited In the hall, while I passed along to the door ot ths consulting room with ths Intention of asking permission to enter, as I slways did when Sir Bernard was engaged with a patient. On approaching the door, however, J was startled by bearing a woman's voles raised In angry, reproachful words, followed Im mediately by ths sound of a scuffle snd then a stifled cry. Without further hesitation I turned tba handle. The door was locked. (To be Continued.) LABOR ASD IRDISTRY. New York buys sausage casing in Ar menia. The American sewing machlns la popular in Mesopotamia. Ths English people are the greatest con sumers of bacon in the world. The United States now use mors rsw silk tor manufacturing than Francs. Of ths 437.0U) miners of Great Britain. 47,u0 urs member, of the union in good standing. ' Rhode Island factories employ 91,520 per sona, i.447 vt whom axe children. Total increase of 4.&&A. . , Th. tobacco trust la eontestlns the eonstl- ; tutionallty of th. child labor law of Louis. I Una. by a test can at New Orln. Stats I-abor Commissioner Vsrney of North Carolina la strongly recommending ths enactment of stringent law. in relation to the employment ot child labor. The legislature nf Pennsylvania Is consid ering a bill to ralM th. as. of boys per mitted to work in the coal mines from 14 to 1H and in th. breaker, from 11 to 14 year.. Tnere Is slso a provision which forbids ths employment of girls snd women between the hours of 9 p. rr . and 7 a. m. The Amos J. Cummings Memorial com mittee of the International Typographical union la summoned to meet at Washington to begin the effort of erecting a monument to that late champion of trade unlontam. The sO.OuO employes of the Pullman Car company at Pullman, III., who ar. thor oughly organised, are preparing to request shorter hour, and no Sunday work. The corporation ia aware of the complete or gmiliu tlon. The Canadian Niagara Falls Power com pany expect, to have KU0 hor.e power available by Auguat and so great has been the demand for power that they will begin an extension of the wheel pit, which will add 8u,uoo horse power mors. During ths ten months ended October, the value of electrical Instruments ex. r or ted was IJ,4M,M6, as compared wits l,822,0S4 in laol. That la a very health showing. Of electrical machinery t tK. same period, there waa sxported t,ta4,?Bi, as against t.',0ei.&20. Addressing the Consumers' league In New York, Blahop Potter denounced the modern passion for bargains. "You cannot buy anything off a bargain counter," he said, "without being able. If your mental .ye bs sharp, to nnd the stain of blood upon It." Th. bishop urged his h.arers to "ask lm portant questions about conditions In every shop and to insist on answers Jo their ques tions. In this way th.y could help do away with sweat shop and other abuses. Mr. Barnes, tb. engineers' delegate who rams from England to America with Mr. Moaely's industrial commission, having ar rived Lome, give, this summary of th. con clusion, he cam. io In the cour. ot ths Inquiry Into American "puah: Machinery; Mors lucd than at home, sanitation: Not so good. Hours of work: Longer. Workt Not so good. Wages: Higher. Cost of liv ing: Higher still. Trades unionism: Not so strong. Providing Kngiand uses th. beat machinery he think. Britain has nothing to fear from America a&4 Is quit able to bold its own.