209 to the entire satisfaction of the ruler. This service of Mr. A. J. Dunlop is in no way inferior to the services rendered by him to the State in the Revenue Department at the head of which he remained as Director-General till his retire- ment in 1911. He was succeeded by Mr. G.E.C. Wakefield, C.I.E., O.B.E., anotherfine officer and a man of great practical ability. He too, like Mr. Dunlop, spoke Urdu fluently with a correct accent, and had a courteous and pleasing manner which made him popular. Mr. A. ^C Hankin Soon after my final return from England in 1896, I was staying with my father at the Waran- gal Subedari and there I met Mr, Hankin* one day at lunch. He had been appointed Inspector- General of the District Police a short time before that, and was on his inspection tour in the Warangal Suba. I was favourably impressed with what I saw of him and felt that we should be friends in future ; and so it actually was, all the years that he remained with us. Our friendship not only continued, but increased. We did not meet very often, but whenever we did meet, it was as old friends between whom there was no barrier of formality. Mr. Hankin's service to the State can never be forgotten or overestimated. From the wretch- ed condition of inefficiency in which the District Police had remained for years, since the departure 1 c. i. E. ; 1896-1920. 14