PERSONAL
Mr Ernest O. Nees, who has been tour ing America, returned to Dunedin on Err day night.
Mr W. A, Moore, who has been on a visit to Christchurch, returned to Dunedin on Saturday evening. Mr Albert Ilanan (Invercargill) was a passenger for Timaru by the through express on Saturday. Mr R, Acton Adams left by the express train for the north on Saturday, en route to Auckland.
Mr A. E. Moffett, of Invercargill, travelled to Christchurch by the express train on Saturday. Captain Clmdiey, superintendent for the Shaw, Savil!, and Albion Co., left for Wellington by the through express on Saturday. Mr R. Slinger, who has been on a business visit to Winton, returned to Dunedin by the express on Saturday. Mr J. F. Peake, secretary of the Canterbury Cricket Council, returned to Christchurch by the north express on Saturday. Mr Walter Scales, who has been on a visit to Invercargill, was a passenger for Christchurch by the through express on Saturday. A Loudon Press Association cablegram states that Air Thomas MacPartlin, the Irish delegate to the League of Nations, was found dead in bed in a hotel at Geneva.
Mr E. L. Macassey. who has been on a business visit to Riverton, returned to Dunedin by the express train on Saturday. Mr William C. Robinson, chief clerk of the Department of Agriculture, ‘Wellington, left Dunedin by the through express on Saturday on the return iourney.
Mr W. D. Hunt (Wellington) was a through passenger by the express train to Invercargill on Saturday. He purposes returning to-day. A private cable message from Sydney announces the death of Air W. K. Bishop, formerly a well-known Wellington resident (reports a ress .Association message) Air J. Bruce Thompson, who nas been on a business visit to Dunedin, returned to Invercargill on Saturday evening by the express. rur E. A. Shrimpton, chief telegraph engineer, and Air R. D. Veitch, district telegraph engineer, left for Timaru by the express on Saturday. Mr Justice Frazer (president) and Messrs W. Scott and H. Hunter, members of the Arbitration Court, arrived from the north by the express on Saturday. Mr George A. Green, organiser and secretary of the New Zealand Association of Nurserymen, will leave for the north today to attend the annual meetings of the local councils in the different centres en route. Mr H. V. Fulton was a passenger by the north express on Saturday, en route for Marlborough, where ho will judge the Romney .sheep at the Marlborough Show. A Press Association cablegram from London states that i Lieutenant Henry Knox, aged 80 years, a well-known Navy League lecturer, had a fatal seizure while cycling in the Isle of Wight. H« organised many of the branches of the league in New Zealand. , . , Mr H. Hart will leave this morning for Pembroke, where his company has large business interests. One of the projected activities now under consideration is concerned with the tourist traffic, and in order to foster its development it may be found necessary to install an up-to-date service to cater for the Lake business.
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Bibliographic details
Otago Daily Times, Issue 18999, 23 October 1923, Page 10
Word Count
512PERSONAL Otago Daily Times, Issue 18999, 23 October 1923, Page 10
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