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The Lucknow Sentinel, 1934-05-24, Page 6• to in.' '• 1 b y Boyd if t1 'e if, any Marko, ti iaI#dda for freelance std. f're bad st itrtic;- accepted,. "iter" • ` Glynn exploded suddenly • "Journalists , use, type- wr}teas, don't they* Machines, I mean; not girls." "Some do,' said Jimmy, "but' not me, thanks. More' beastly m.ebi>iiery.' "Yes, of course," , 'sighed Glynn, regretfullythinking how .perfectly •a typewriter could have been.. made::to fit '; ' ; whole choice of cost, `Well; •I'x4 goingto bed," 'Nora, said suddenly rising. • I, CHAPTER, Xll . bon Elliman, a pilot of imperial ays is, travelling as a' special lye' Coutier' bys. -ahAir, Mall to India •arrying two copies of a talking II1m. of 'the' Prince of Napalata, which it is most 'argent shall reach there safely. ': rhe ,Prince lir in L4nd'on, too: 111 travel and the. talking alai is sent loll the eXortq of. -THD, j/UL,TLTRE: itis half-brother, .ln India,• Ceche same Matt llue travel. Norah, seaman, a girl ilii n diad mot only. a Weak before. Stelan.t Mask and' Dg agents of the'. Volture _ adv ' •,felled - in °'several.attempts 'but at ale the at- tache ease ha which • Glynn dlrrles one •$1m is. stolen. Next morpirpe alter the Unit: his left.aaluse, .stefEi and•Max, wbo .haus "wet 'behind,,::tbinkin _ their --wore tlnieli•d, • fears„ that" two Cbples are serried by • the •Courier, Stefan hi;rete A *Mall Plane :and `hopes , . to catch • the finer, bot :endive=1trouble' developes• and they.leave without him. (31ynn is swift 'attaeked in Basra. • Ohran fe ord•rled by the Prince to' re - wore •the'man• Mating him at, Athens. • lie has s special; •chain made pud . gtses the _ke7! to NoratAtxhazga. ,iasis: aboard heplane. The Indian'. n yasen g et •bribes• a waiter to'. locate where , it nn keens the flm on his erson. Instantly the `Indian ,heard a poveutoeritt - inthe: •room; ' and µs: ones= tion; flint ' : Arabic and then in ho •is:'.there.7". .. D le' disappekied from the corridor )tie a :host; Slid when an''armed .P0- , versiti o- )atei; -tl►e=passages• utas: ^-.empty."-Ee shut locked the door, again, Ind sat dawn withhis/ eye'on the handle and 1e While this Was.in on,Glynn going g •.. S • yam, with the 'eonnivance 'of Norah, wee p obing,;.Jimmy .Doyle gently es .to iia tastes and ineli 'lion, hoping to Esther :some indication ; of What'.,sort o present would be most, acceptable ie :a ''Suitable reward' from `the .!tinea. H ut the 'problem was- less easy of: solution. than Glynn had, hoped, Jim-' was ;frankness itself about his. doings and future ambitions He had be nthrongh 'Public School, and had siveirything planned to go to the; Um versity, until the. 'depression"" period had . hit his people's business (like ts.. many others) and all plans for takin ' a ' degree and studying fir Laws with the usual protracted ' pe- riod'as briefless barrister had per - f roe been " Lucked in the 'di •c;, i•,,'' "I know how lucky I am," • said Jiinmy. reflectively, "that the pater was able to use influence, with. a friend and get "Me the, job 'in the •Bombs),• office I'm bound for now,. It's dashed' ungrateful of me; of course, but I don't ' bind ,admitting fulls doeW not' aPPeel to 'me . one' scrap! and I loathe the ,thought or an ofice ► anywhere. But needs Must,` he concluded; cheerf ally, 'and aiaabe I'll: get a chance 'to swot some Indian law, and :work up into some legal side -=.of -.the -business Pm- 'in if it has one.": :3 He was •. keen on' athletics °and sports of'•various kinds, "Motor bik-. frig'.'' : sad Glynn Iiopefiilly and try- ing to decide whether the price of a little motor cycle would be beyond the Prince's conception of a reward. "Not 'me," said': Jimmy promptly, 'I've no hanker at all for an .::sort lyra sighe "an'd tri to think of a , reasonable expensive .' "reward". that would fit;,. with ,Jimmy's sports and games, but could think of 'noth- ing in the shape of Rugger of boat- ing ',or 'cross-country carrier outfits that would qualify; .. and asomehow, • set' of law didn t` • ;,t_... seem,. the right kind of reward. "Is University cry expensive, y •�v a nsiv ,:,�„ , JimmyNorah asked casuall "Duniio abouty� some•fellows,'I "but pater and I had it -•a11 llguered out 'that twelve to 'fifteen; hundred • pounds ' was:. ' to see me' through , and • give': mea start in law_ at,. and-any_Y;bit-Icould-make on the side in freelance journalise)/ For more than,.;, eighty years preferred and, by the mothers of Canada because of their proven purity 'nd maintained' - ua ' . • • TMENT. of 'P WELFARE rovides for: The dependelt aged—through the Old Age 'Pensions Plan The dependent widow and children ---' by means=