Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image
Article image

PERSONAL

Sir William Hunt was a passenger for the south last night from Wellington.

Mr. O. N. Cathie left Wellington for the north last night.

Mr. P. Borthwick, Masterton, left Wellington for the south last night. Mr. W. A. Flavell, of the Westport Coal Co., left Wellington last night for Dunedin. Mr. A. E. Donne was a passenger from Wellington last night for the south.

Mr. W. Henderson, Dunedin, will arrive at Wellington on Thursday to join the Monowai, eu route to Sydney. Dr. S. K. Phillips and Mr. G. R. Hutchinson, of the Broadcasting Board, left Wellington last night for Auckland.

Mr. T. O. Bishop, secretary of the New Zealand Employers’ Federation, was a passenger for the north last night from Wellington. Mr. R. V. N. Wallace, Australian representative of the Port Line, arrived at Wellington yesterday from Sydney.

/ Dr. J. R. Elder, of the Chair of History at the University of Otago, returned to Wellington yesterday from Sydney.

Mr. J. Mclntosh was elected president of the New Zealand Club at the annual meeting of members at Wellington last evening In succession to Mr. A. Leigh Hunt.

Captain A. H. Davey, who is going home to England to take command of the new trans-Tasman liner Awatea, arrived at Wellington yesterday as a through passenger on the Maunganui. The Rev. Neville Watkins, formerly of Hororata, will arrive this morning from the south, on his way to Mangaweka, to which parish he has been appointed, in succession to the Rev. Mr. Burgin. The Rev. G. E. Moreton, Auckland, who is visiting England, has taken charge of St. Michael and All Angels’ Mission Church, Gainsborough, Lincoln, at the Invitation of Canon RoundTurner, rural dean in the diocese of Lincoln. Mr. Moreton will fulfil several preaching engagements in other parts of England. Later, he will visit Scotland Yard and some of the principal prisons in England and Scotland.

This article text was automatically generated and may include errors. View the full page to see article in its original form.
Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19360609.2.66

Bibliographic details

Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 216, 9 June 1936, Page 8

Word Count
315

PERSONAL Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 216, 9 June 1936, Page 8

PERSONAL Dominion, Volume 29, Issue 216, 9 June 1936, Page 8