PERSONAL.
Mi- Eustace Lodcr, the well-known rac-eiior.se owner, is dead, repoits o. London cablegram. Mi- John Aloodie, instructor in Southland, Ims boon appointed agricultural instructor to the feoutii Cunierhui Education Board. The Hon. !). Buddo was among the pcssengm-s' i> ythc MaLnra to Am.-.-land. Air Buddo, who is in the best of health, looks forward with keenness to the coming election battle. Mr and Mrs S. A. Gooding’s youngest daughter, who has been seriously , ill at a private hospital in Stratford, lis now making a good recovery friends will be glad to learn. i I Air Campbell, station master, who ! lias been indisposed for the past lew | days and .coiiliued to his house, is, i we arc glad to learn, somewhat bcwI tor. Mr E. T. Beauchamp (Chief • Clerk) i.s acting station master duri ing Air Campbell’s absence. ! The remains of Mr and Airs A\ . I«.
Bloom Held and Aliss Hilda Bloomtiei (their only child), who wore drownc in the Empress ‘of Ireland, wor brought to Auckland yesterday morr
ing on board the Vancouver mail boa Alakm-a. Air Bloomfield was Colour commanding the 3rd (Auckland) Moan ted Hides, and he will be buried wifi regimental honors. Colonel Braitb waits has come specially from Welling ton to represent Major-General Sir A Godlev.
Miss Bertha Jennings, daughter o' Mr W. T. Jennings, ex-M.P. lor 1 an maranui, was married yesterday to .t! r Thomas O’Kelly (manager for Collett and Co., Auckland)* at St. Joseph's Church,/New Plymouth. The nuptial"mas was celebrated by Dean .McKenna. The bride was given away by her father, and was charmingly attired in a pearl grey cloth costume with grey vclevt hat and white ospreys. The bridesmaid was Miss C'ueeuio Hawkins, of Eltham, who wore a dainty violet cloth costume with hat of oriental silk t° match. The bridegroom’s present to the bride was a gob! brooch set with rubies and diamonds, and to the bridesmaid a gold brooch set with pearls and diamonds. Jhe duties of best man were carried out by Mr Alfred Jennings. After the ceremony the guests were entertained to a wedding breakfast at the Kio Ora rooms. Amongst very many vain able presents to the bride was a collection of d’oyleys from the Children of Mary, and a substantial cablegram from the bride’s brother, Mr Harold’ Jennings, of the British South American Bank, Buenos Ayres. Mr and Mrs O’Kelly will reside at Mt. Eden, Auckland, and they left by die Harawa last evening. The death of Mr Win. Trewetk occurred at his residence, Park Hoad. Palmerston North, on Monday. That day deceased was 69-years-oi age,"he having been born in the Taranaki province on July 27, 184.5. -Sir Treweek was the fourth son of Mr and Mrs John Treweek, early settlers in Taranaki. While he was yet m boy his parents left Taranaki to take up the Kai Iwi station on the Wanganui river. The family removed to Otago, where the late Mr Treweek entered the butchering trade in Dunedin, and in the sixties returned to the North Island to follow his business. During the second Maori war lie supplied the British troops with meat under contract with the Government during the • operations in Taranaki. Subsequent to the end of the war M v . Treweek entered into business in Patea and Bahiatua. About 25 years ago he went to Palmerston, where he resided to theitime of his death. Ho was an expert judge of'sheep and cattle, and was well-known as one of the best buyers of stock on the coast. Mr Treweek was often called upon to judge at shows in the Wairarapa and Waikdt-o. fa 1868 Mr Treweek was married to Miss Evans, of Tuapeka, South Island. Deceased leaves an adopted daughter, Miss Minnie Treweek, to mourn her loss. His only sister is Mrs Symes, wife of -Mr W. Symes, ex-M.P. lor Patea and Stratford. His live surviving brothers are: Charles, of the Post and Telegraph Department; George, farmer, of Ngaere; Joseph, Customs Department, Adelaide; James, lately a railway inspector of Invercargill; and Frederick, inspector of Permanent Ways, Pa Imorston,
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Bibliographic details
Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 83, 29 July 1914, Page 3
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675PERSONAL. Stratford Evening Post, Volume XXXIX, Issue 83, 29 July 1914, Page 3
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