United States or Ethiopia ? Vote for the TOP Country of the Week !


I don't know this, of course; I advance it merely as a possibility." Mr. Latham turned to Mr. Schultze and Mr. Czenki with a triumphant smile. Diamonds in meteors! Tommyrot! "Of course," the detective resumed, "the whole investigation centers about this man Wynne.

The three of us came here to see if Mr. Schultze could give us any information, and he telephoned for you." Mr. Latham listened blankly. "It's positively beyond belief," he burst out. "What what does it mean?"

He stared dumbly, first at Mr. Czenki, then at Mr. Schultze. There was not even incredulity in the look, only faint amazement that two such well-balanced men should have gone mad at once. At last the German importer turned upon him flatly. "Why don'd you ged egzited aboud id, Laadham?" he demanded. "He iss all righd, nod crazy," he added with whimsical assurance.

I mean," he added hastily, "that beyond a mere hint of their value I know nothing whatever about the diamonds which Mr. Wynne had in the gripsack. I gathered, however, that they were worth a large sum of money perhaps, even a million dollars?" "Yah, a million dollars ad leasd," remarked Mr. Schultze grimly. "Thank you," and the detective smiled shrewdly.

O. Schultze, Anatomist in Wuerzburg, says: "The idea entertained by Darwin, that the development of species may be explained by a natural choice Selection which operates through the struggle of individuals for existence, cannot permanently satisfy the spirit of inquiry.

First it was necessary to find how many other jewelers had received duplicates; then it was necessary to find whence they came. A plan was adopted, and an investigation ordered to begin at once. "Dere iss someding back of id, of course," declared Mr. Schultze. "Vas iss? Dey are nod being send for our healdh!"

Ernst Schultze. "In the Pillory! Our Enemies' Campaign of Lies," by Reinhold Anton. "London's Lie Factory: Renter's Office," by A. Brand. "England's Wicked Deeds in the World's History," by A. Kuhn. "Our Settlement with England," by Professor Hermann Oncken. "England's Betrayal of Germany," by M. Wildgrube. "England's Guilt," by Gaston von Mallmann.

Dere iss no reason ve should nod produce diamonds." "But look here, Schultze," Mr. Latham expostulated, "it's it's unheard of." "So vas der Mizzizzippi River until id was discovered," the German argued complacently. "You are a diamond dealer, Laadham, bud you don'd know much aboud dem from whey dey come at. Iss Czenki here? Send for him. He knows more aboud diamonds as any man vat ever lived."