MRS. NASH IN LONDON
INTERESTING ENGAGEMENTS
(From "The Post's" Representative.) LONDON, December 12.
Since the arrival of the New Zealand delegation in London, Mrs. Nash, wife of the Minister of Finance and Minister of Marketing, has had the opportunity at receptions given in her honour of meeting many prominent English people and New Zealanders resident here.
The New Zealand Women's Association tendered a reception to Mrs. Nash and to Mrs. Jordan, wife of the New Zealand High Commissioner, at Grosvenor House. Previously they were guests at luncheon of Miss Stella Murray, the well-known New Zealand contralto.
Mrs. Nash and the Minister of Finance were the guests of the English and Scottish Wholesale Society at a luncheon on November 24, while in the afternoon Mrs. T. A. Duncan, wife of the chairman of the New Zealand Meat Board,- entertained Mrs. Nash, Mrs. Jordan, and the other ladies of the party—Mrs. T. R. Aickin^ Mrs. J. P. D; Johnson, Mrs. W. B. Sutch, and Miss N. T. F Armitage—to tea at the Carlton Hotel. '
A private luncheon was given to Mrs. Nash and the Minister by Sir Howard d'Egville (secretary of the Empire Parliamentary Association) and Lady d'Egville, at the Houses of Parliament on November 26, and on November 30 Mr. and Mrs. Nash were entertained at luncheon by the Commissioner of Works, Viscount Stanhope, and Lady Stanhope.
On December 8 Mr. and Mrs. Nash had tea with Lady Wardlaw-Milne, wife of Sir John Wardlaw-Milne, M.P. for the Kidderminster Division of Worcestershire, and later they dined with Major-General B. C. Freyberg, V.C., and Mrs. Freyberg, at No. 7 Clarendon Place, Hyde Park. Kidderminster is Mr. Nash's birthplace.
The' following evening Mr. and Mrs. Nash were the guests of the Royal Empire Society at a dinner in the society's new building in Northumberland Avenue. The Minister delivered, an address on New Zealand. Viscount Bledisloe was in the chair. • •
Mr. and Mrs. Nash were both present at the House of Commons on Thursday afternoon, when the Premier, the Rt. Hon. Stanley Baldwin, made his momentous statement regarding King Edward VIII's decision to abdicate.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 155, 29 December 1936, Page 11
Word Count
349MRS. NASH IN LONDON Evening Post, Volume CXXII, Issue 155, 29 December 1936, Page 11
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