ON TOUR AT HOME.
PERSONAL NOTES FROM LONDON. London, April 3. The Earl of Ranfurly has recovered from an attack of pneumonia, and is recuperating at Brighton. Miss Eileen Ward has just returned from a month's stay in Ireland. Miss M. 11. Horn, of Gore, spent January and February on the Italian Riviera, travelling via Turin and Genoa, and returning by the French Riviera, and is now in Devonshire. Mr. John Davios Enys, of Envs, Pcnrjrm Cornwall, who died recently leaving estate of the value of .£137,000, spent many years of his life in New Zealand. The Hon. Thomas Mackenzie and Mrs. Mackenzie, who with their daughter, Miss Mary Mackenzie, liavo since their arrival had rooms at tho Hotel Windsor in Victoria Street, last week moved into a house of their own at 11 Lindlield Gardens, Fincliley. Tho High Commissioner was one of tho guests at tho dinner given, by the Government at tho Foreign Office last weok, and at tho luncheon tho following day, given by tho Agent-General for South Australia to tho Premier of that Stato at tho Trocadero. Callers at tho High Commissioner's office last iveek were: Mr. A. Wallace, Auckland; Mr. K. Macltv, Auckland: Mr. L. Nael, Wellington j Mr. E. T. Tylee, Napier; Mrs. A. E. Bedford and Miss Bedford, Auckland; Mr. W. Ware, Auckland; Mr. B. Gray, Wellington; Mr. E. V. Smith, Christchurch; tlio Rev. G. Davys, Wellington; Mr. and Mrs. A. F. Foster, Auckland; and Mr. and Mrs. C. Banks, of Auckland. Tlio Hon. Thomas Mackenzie and Miss Mary Mackeuzio spent Easter in the South of England, visiting Selsey, Chichester, Goodwood, and Arundel. The lecture hall at tho Harlesden Public Library was well filled on Thursday nignt by an appreciative audience, when Mr. H. C. Cameron, Produce Commissioner for the New Zealand Government in London, delivered an illustrated lecture on "New Zealand—the Britain of tho South." Tho chairman, in proposing a vote of thanks, remarked that in his opinion the wonder was not that, after hearing such a lecture ns they had listened to, people were induced to go to Nmv Zealand, but that any remained behind in this country. Mr. Cameron has, durin" this season, delivered over a dozen lectures on New Zealand ill various parts of tho country, tho greater number of them being under tho auspices of tho Victoria League.
Miss Milsom desires to bring under tho notice of ladies and gentlemen tlio very latest methods and preparations for hair Mid faco treatments. Guaranteed euro for Alopecia, Areata (or bald spots). Genuino treatment of tlio scalp for oily, dry, perished, grey and falling hair. I'ositivo euro for Dandruff and Irritation. Write for Miss Milsom's book (freo), containing full instructions for homo treatment. Every client taught homo treatment. Scientific Face Massage, astounding results after' one course, with thorough lesson, .tl Is. Shampooing—Electrolysis (permanent and painless), Unir-work, every description, latest Natural Hair Pads Switches, etc. Ilair-dressing tnusht. Manicuring. Personal attention. Strictly confidential. Miss Milsoin, King's Chambers, Wellington. Telephone 811*
Permanent link to this item
Hononga pūmau ki tēnei tūemi
https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/DOM19130513.2.3.4
Bibliographic details
Ngā taipitopito pukapuka
Dominion, Volume 6, Issue 1748, 13 May 1913, Page 2
Word count
Tapeke kupu
497ON TOUR AT HOME. Dominion, Volume 6, Issue 1748, 13 May 1913, Page 2
Using this item
Te whakamahi i tēnei tūemi
Stuff Ltd is the copyright owner for the Dominion. You can reproduce in-copyright material from this newspaper for non-commercial use under a Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-ShareAlike 4.0 International licence (CC BY-NC-SA 4.0). This newspaper is not available for commercial use without the consent of Stuff Ltd. For advice on reproduction of out-of-copyright material from this newspaper, please refer to the Copyright guide.