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[Page 114]

(2.)

touched by it. 

Mother heard in quite a roundabout way from Mrs. Edwards (one of the McNabs) of what a splendid flying man you are. A boy who was engaged to her niece wrote out most enthusiastically about his instructor, Lieutenant Geoffrey Hughes of Sydney, & gave you no end of a good character in every way, not having the slightest idea that what he wrote would find its way round to you again. I don't know his name but I have asked Mother to find out. Poor boy he is missing now.

Mrs Toohey wrote to me the other day & asked me to send her an urgent cablegram asking her to come back, as this would help her to get a passage. I sent the cablegram, so I suppose she will be coming back soon, if she can. Ocean travelling can't be an unmixed joy for women in these times.

The censors – or at least the Sydney variety of them – seem the foolishest creatures I ever came across. I had occasion to send a cablegram to a firm of London solicitors asking them to hurry up with some papers I wanted, & asking if they had been sent, & if so, when? When the cablegram was lodged for transmission here, I was rung up – after some delay – by the censor's office to say that a cablegram had arrived from the people I was cabling to, but that it couldn't be delivered till I had given a bond of secrecy as to its contents, & that meanwhile my cablegram had not been sent. In the end I

 

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