NEW ZEALANDERS AT HOME.
[IT.OH OTTR OWN CORRESPONDENT.] LONDON, Mar. 20. Messrs. J. H. and L. W. Holt (Auckland) have been on the Continent. They went Kna the battlefields, Paris, the Riviera, as far as Rome, and included on their return to England the most interesting centres in Northern Italy. A stay was made at Montreux, Brussels, and Bruges. Messrs, Holt have now left for the Midlands and Scotland. Mr. G. O. Bayley (Auckland, and Magdalen College, Oxford) is spending his vacation in Sootland. Mr. F. R. Callaghan, M.A. (Auckland), who is on the staff of the New Zealand section of the British Empire Exhibition, has just arrived with Mrs. Callaghan.
Dr. Brown (Waihi) has been talcing a post-graduate - course at London Hospital, and he has also been on a' professional visit to Vienna and Paris. He found many facilities for study in the Austrian capital He is in London now, and ho will be here for some time longer. Mrs. Brown stayed at Bournemouth while her husband was working on the Continent. Since therir arrival by the Ruahine, Mr. and Mrs. A. R. Lawrence (Auckland) have been visiting in Kent. They are now en route to Halifax, and they will go to Scotland later. In July they will start on their return voyage. New Zealanders who have just been elected Follows of the Royal Colonial Institute include Mr. A. G. Davis (Auckland), Mr. A. T. Markman (Wellington), and Mr. T. C. List (New Plymouth*). Mrs. E. A. Kidd" (Auckland) and her sister, Miss L. Bridgman, have been visiting friends in this country, and have also made an extensive tour of the Continent. They have visited Holland, Belgium, Italy, and France. Mrs. Kidd is now making a motor journey through to Scotland, and she contemplates returning to New Zealand in the spring. Miss Bridgman,- before coming to England, had spent a year studying in New York, and now she has sailed for Australia, where she goes to organise the girl citizen movement. Miss E. Bishop (Auckland), who has been in East Africa for about two and a-half years in charge of a hospital, has come to England to spend her furlough instead of going out to New Zealand, and she expects to remain here until July. Miss Bishop has not made definite plans for the future, but she thinks it more than likely that she will return to Tanganyika for another term of service.
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New Zealand Herald, Volume LXI, Issue 18635, 29 April 1924, Page 8
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404NEW ZEALANDERS AT HOME. New Zealand Herald, Volume LXI, Issue 18635, 29 April 1924, Page 8
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