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ROLL OF HONOUR.

' • * '•- #1111 TWO DEATHS REPORTED. ONE MAORI WOUNDED. The 334 th casualty list issued by th« ~ -"'* Defence Department, was circulated by the Press Association last night. Two men ' s/ one a Niue Islander, are reported as having died of disease, and one Maori as having been wounded. Arthur Henry Hall, cardiac failure, Jun a il 8-Edgar Hall, Wokington, BerksW ■ - Eng. (father). ' Hini Tioni (Corporal), pneumonia, Slav'3l —Maito, Niue Island (wife). REPORTED WOUNDED. Monu Kanukiwa, leg and chest, admitted hospital, May 51 - Te KanuW Waiohau (father). » HOSPITAL REPORT. ADMISSIONS ANNOUNCED. SOME SERIOUS CASES. The Defence Department last night issued the following hospital and progress report— B Seriously 111, dysentery : Private Eaton. Admitted to Hospital, about May 20* dysentery : Rifleman Price. " ' Admitted Hospital, about May 28 fractured arm : Rifleman Horn. ' Dangerously HI: Bugler Hiroti. Seriously HI in Hospital, tubercle of lung Private Paki. MEN WHO HAVE FALLEN, ' o CAPTAIN E. A. HARDING. Cable advice received by Mr. Alfred Harding states that his son, Captain Ernest Ashley Harding, of Dargaville who was mentioned in Saturday's casualty list, was only slightly -wounded, and that ha is now in England. LIEUTENANT D. WHITE. Lieutenant David White, reported woundeii, is one of five sons who went from Roxburgh with the early Expeditionary Forces. He went right through the . Gallipoli fighting without receiving injury. HOSPITAL IN LANCASHIRE. NEW ZEALANDERS ACCOMMODATED A letter was received a few days ago by Mrs. F. A. Raymond, of Timaru, from Sister M. Galloway, who left New Zealand with the hospital ship Maheuo on her last Homeward voyage. In her letter -'.;■■ Sister Galloway states that she has been ■■>.-.> transferred to the nursing staff of Whally ;•-- Hospital, Lancashire. This hospital, ',1 which is also known as Queen Mary's 'ssfs Military Hospital, la a t&ree-storeyed build- : : -\ ing, and has 4000 beds. The nursing staff -■> consists of 300 nurses and sisters. There ~" are 400 orderlies, a very large number of ■\i! domestics, and the medical staff numbers 35. The food supplied is plain, but excel- ~< ''J lent in quality, and there was an ample . : . : sufficiency of clothing for the use of the -'" patients- The institution had its own con- fife " cert hall, and entertainments and picture i! shows were held twice weekly for the"|'v\ amusement of the patients. Sister Gallo-<\ way states that on the day of her arrival'--" at the hospital, 600 wounded were • re-?%"l ceived from France, and the arrangements : • for their reception and treatment were so. perfect, that in a few hours every case' ''•**';■"■ was suitably disposed of. The hospital - . is used as a general hospital, and some . "■< of the New Zealand soldiers have been there as inmates. .

Permanent link to this item

https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/NZH19160613.2.92

Bibliographic details

New Zealand Herald, Volume LIII, Issue 16254, 13 June 1916, Page 8

Word Count
438

ROLL OF HONOUR. New Zealand Herald, Volume LIII, Issue 16254, 13 June 1916, Page 8

ROLL OF HONOUR. New Zealand Herald, Volume LIII, Issue 16254, 13 June 1916, Page 8

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