THE OUTLAW OF THE AIR
CtM« have already been recorded in Europe and America in which daring criminate have used the aeroplane to aid their deeds on land, but the first great air pirate hai- yet to arise. The development of aviation, wireless telegraphy and telephony, and latterly the experiments with the helicopter, which would enable a 'plane to r»e vertically and hover in the air, place potent weapons in the hands of the skilled but unscrupulous adventurer who w prepared to repeat from the air what the old time buccaneers did upon the sea. The theme in a fascinating one for the novelist, and we have been fortunate in securing a fine atorv, vividly picturing the sensational exploits of an aerial bandit, whose adventure* range from abduction to the holding up and robbing of an ocean liner- on the high seas. The story, which has been aptly titled THE OUTLAW OF THE AIR." is from the pen of MR. JOHN L. CARTER. AND THE OPENING INSTALMENTS WILL APPEAR IN THE STAR" OF MAY 27.
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Auckland Star, Volume LIII, Issue 120, 23 May 1922, Page 8
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175Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Auckland Star, Volume LIII, Issue 120, 23 May 1922, Page 8
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