FORMER CHAMPION GOLFER
DEATH OF MISS CHRYSTALL
Many friends throughout the Dominion, especially in golfing circles, will learn with deep regret of the death of Miss Dorothy M. Chrystall, which occurred at Christchurch on Tuesday, states "The Press." She was the eldest daughter of Mrs. Chrystall and the late Mr. William Chrystall, formerly one of the leading business men of Christchurch. On her return from England after the last war,
when both her and her mother were engaged in war work. Miss Chrystall became an active member of the Christchurch Ladies' Golf Club, and in 1926 won the club championship. She followed this success by winning the New Zealand championship in 1928, and continued to play fine golf for many years.
The State Government, says the Sydney "Morning Herald," has approached the Women's Australian National Services for 3000 women transport drivers for emergency use. The women drivers would be used for short-distance traffic and for road services interstate if tho railways were occupied with longer distance and interstate traffic on a large scale.
tvvcen two laths which she tacked firmly together. This left enough of the laths (about 4i inches) projecting on cither side of the paper to reach to the outer edges of the casement window frame. -In the frame at each side high above the window she screwed a right angle cup hook, and on these she hung the completed black-out blind which proved absolutely opaque, the weight of the laths at the bottom keeping it flat against the window frame. The lady who devised this ingenious method staled that she had shared her roll of building paper with a neighbour and that there had been plenty for both. She suggested that other householders might do the same. In the daytime she keeps her black-out blinds hanging on hat brackets on the wall. Four can be hung on one pair of hat brackets.
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Bibliographic details
Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 120, 23 May 1941, Page 4
Word Count
315FORMER CHAMPION GOLFER Evening Post, Volume CXXXI, Issue 120, 23 May 1941, Page 4
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