facts he needed to solve it.
Suddenly his mother straightened. âIsnât Johnâs uncle that retired lawyer who is rather strange? Heâs always dashing around the world, photographing the longest of anything.â
âThatâs right,â Chief Brown said. âAlready this year he has photographed the longest bathroom shelf and the longest cigar ash.â
âIâve heard,â Mrs. Brown said, âthat he has ten albums filled with photos of the longest of almost everything.â
âI suppose everyone ought to have a hobby,â Encyclopedia murmured.
âThe uncle hoped to photograph the longest cockroach and the longest whatever else he can find in Brazil,â Chief Brown said.
He put down his soup spoon before continuing.
âThe safe with the ring in it is hidden behind a picture of the longest undershirt,â he said. âOn the safe itself, in the uncleâs handwriting, is the word
sleeveless.
â
âWhy write sleeveless? It isnât the longest word,â said Mrs. Brown, who had taught high-school English and other subjects. âThe longest is a Greek word. In English, it has one hundred and eighty-two letters. The word is lopadotemachisel â¦Â oh, I canât remember the restââ
She broke off. Encyclopedia had closed his eyes. He always closed his eyes when he did his hardest thinking.
When at last he opened his eyes, he asked his one question.
âDoes the uncle have a poor memory?â
âWhy, as a matter of fact, yes,â Chief Brown said. âNot only canât he remember what he had for breakfast, he usually canât remember
where
he had it.â
âI guess he got so busy in Brazil chasing down the longest things that he forgot the date of the wedding,â Mrs. Brown said.
âBut why did he write
sleeveless
on the safe?â Chief Brown said. âItâs such a common, everyday word.â
âCommon, yet uncommon, Dad,â Encyclopedia said.
Father and mother looked at their son questioningly.
Encyclopedia said, âThe uncle wrote
sleeveless
on the safe because itâs the longest example of a certain type of word. Every time he uses the safe,
sleeveless
reminds him of the combination.â
Chief Brown knitted his brows thoughtfully. âWhy didnât he simply write down the combination and keep it in his wallet or in a drawer?â
âBecause it might fall out of his wallet,â Encyclopedia said. âIf he hid it somewhere, he might forget where.â
âLeroy!â cried Mrs. Brown. âWhat is the combination to the safe?â
âTell us,â said Chief Brown, âbefore John gets married tomorrow! He wants to use his grandmotherâs ring so badly!â
Encyclopedia smiled.
Softly he said, âThe combination to the safe isââ
What Is the Combination?
(Turn to this page for the solution to The Case of the Sleeveless Lock.)
The Case of the Smoke Signals
B esides helping his father solve mysteries, Encyclopedia helped the children of the neighborhood.
When school let out for the summer, he opened his own detective agency in the garage. Every morning after breakfast he hung out his sign:
Brown Detective Agency
13 Rover Avenue
LEROY BROWN
President
No case too small
25¢ a day plus expenses
The first customer Tuesday was Muriel Rivers. Her hobby was Native American customs and crafts. Her favorite tribes were the Creek and the Susquehanna.
âI want to hire you,â she said, and handed Encyclopedia twenty-five cents. âBugs Meany cheated me.â
Bugs Meany was the leader of a gang of tough older boys. They called themselves the Tigers. They should have called themselves the Pots and Pans. They were always cooking up trouble.
Encyclopedia stayed busy keeping Bugs from bullying the little kids of the neighborhood.
âHow did Bugs cheat you?â Encyclopedia inquired.
âHe took my totem
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