PERSONAL.
A Vancouver message reports that the Austraj who Britain have arrived. The death of a highly-eespected «- Taranata resident at Auckland is reported, in the person of Mrs. George Death. ™»&< x of Mems T. Death (P*tea) and Mr. A." E. Death (Hawera). The United Press' Paris correspondent reports that Major Theodore BoWelt jun., has been wounded in action and taken to hospital, .but that the wounds are not serious.—New York cable. A - G0, ? ld ' MJL ' ias ■**«■'»? his dirties as an inspector in the Wanganui Education District. . Mr. Gould has had a long experience in primary school work, has occupied the position ' of inspector in the Wellington District, and also organised school work atTonea and neighboring islands. The many friends of Rifleman D L Hutton will learn with regret that word reached Hawera yesterday that he died of wounds on July 7. He leaves a wife and two children, to whom the sympathy of a large circle of friends will be extended. /
><ews has been received that SecondLieutenant D. G. Laurewn (Cavalry s>.HO is a prisoner. He was formerlV Kegimentaf Sergeant-Majpr i„ the Canterbury Mounted Rifles, a „d was discharged from the New Zealand Expeditionary Force in January last year for an Imperial commission.
There passed away in Wellington on Sunday one of New Zealand's earliest settlers, in the person of Mr. Thomas Snow, who was in his S5Hi vear. Deceased was born in Devonshire, and arrived in Nelson 76 years ago, Mr. Snow had been living in Wellington foi some.time before his death. °He remembered well the excitement in Nelson following the Wairau massacre, and- he took an active part in the search for the oodies of the men murdered on the His wife died a few yearn ago at the age of 81. jPhe surviving members -of the"fami!v are Mrs. John Morrison, Miss* Snow, Mr. H. Snow of the District Lands Office, Wellington and Mr. L. Snow, of Ohura. Paul Cinquevalli, whose death is reported from London, had for the past twenty-five years been pne of * the tonlmers in the vaudeville world, and during that time had been regarded as facile princeps as a juggler and equilibrist, both as a performer and an inventor. It has been said that half the jugglers and balancers of the world live on feats invented and perfected by Cinquevalli. He was born in Poland in 1859, and owing to his father being exiled for political reasons, the family took up their residence in Berlin, where, as a student, young Paul became a skilful and daring'gymnast. As such ho went upon the stage, being featured as "The Little Flying Devil." An accident cut short his career as a gymnast, but, nothing daunted, he set out to qualify himself as a juggler and equilibrist, an™ rose meteor-like to the head of bis profession. He first visited Wellington in IAO2, when under the management of the late Mr. P. R. Dix he appeared at the old Theatre Royal in Johnston Street, where ho attracted cnormoiH audiences. Some years later lie again visited New Zealand under emaaeificnt" to the late Mr. Henry Rickard-. <nf t!va Tivoli Theatres)
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Taranaki Daily News, 24 July 1918, Page 4
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520PERSONAL. Taranaki Daily News, 24 July 1918, Page 4
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