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34.

Mr. [[strikethrough]] Gingold [[/strikethrough]] -- Dingle

MINNIE: That's right. I wrote to him--

MRS STARR: You sent him some of your paintings?

MINNIE: --wrote to him to see what he had done with the paintings.

MRS STARR: Well, I mean, did you send him paintings first?

MINNIE: Oh, yes.

MRS STARR: When did you send the paintings?

MINNIE: That what I can't get round to. It's a--it's the time.  See--it was sort of--  I could spend every bit in (unintelligible)--but--about twelve years ago or more, 'cause--about thirteen years ago.  Because my little Gary then wasn't--just startin' to walk good and he's goin' on for fifteen or something like that.  Now--what-- When he sent these pictures to him, he--this man --was not to send them back, he was to take them to Tibet.

MRS STARR: [[strikethrough]] Oh, now I see. [[/strikethrough]]

MINNIE: You see?

[[strikethrough]] MRS STARR: Yes. [[/strikethrough]]

MINNIE: To see if they could interpret the writings. Every one of these had a lot of that all kind of writing on it. So he wanted--Louis wanted to keep in touch with him.  But the last--he wrote him--the last letter he got fro this man--it wasn't much--little something--I can't remember it now. But anyhow, Louis wrote two or three more times to them my [[strikethrough]] knowinsome [[/strikethrough]] knowledge, and they never sent him by answer back. Now, I have wrote three different letters to this man myself