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19 October 2022

A very short marriage




At the end of June in 1891, Annie McInerney and Michael Nash were celebrating their wedding. They had both grown up in and around Tarlee.
Their fathers, Michael McInerney and Denis Nash and families were well known in the district. Little could any of them have foreseen how short their joy was to be. Less than three months later they would be following Annie’s coffin to Navan following her early death at age 26 on October 25th that same year.

 
Death is no stranger in our midst. On Tuesday the remains of Mrs. M. Nash, daughter of Mr. Mclnerney, an old and respected resident in this district, were interred in the Navan cemetery. The funeral was largely attended, between forty and fifty vehicles, besides a number of horsemen, being in the procession. The Rev. Father Lee officiated at the grave. Much sympathy is felt tor Mr. Nash, as he had only been married about three months and both had lived in the neighborhood from their childhood and were highly respected
1891 'COUNTRY INTELLIGENCE.', Kapunda Herald (SA : 1878 - 1951), 3 November, p. 3., http://nla.gov.au/nla.news-article108359024

2 October 2022

Have you ever tried this?

 

Page banner in the Australian Woman's Mirror in the 1930s


The Australian Woman's Mirror started publishing a self help column under the above heading in November 1924.
It included household hints about cooking, cleaning, washing and do-it-yourself suggestions.
The heading graphic changed several times during the years 1924 - 1954 but the essence of the column remained the same. The Australian Woman's Mirror is available via Trove.

Some ladies from Tarlee sent in a selection of hints in the 1930s using nom-de-plumes.

Perhaps you can identify the ladies listed below their hints. 

Would you take this 1933 advice from A.W.?

Here's another one from the same contributor.

In 1934 "Glenbur" provides this handy hint.

She contributed a cooking hint in 1935
Another lady styling herself "Urnie" added a hint about steaming puddings.
These were the only hints I located from Tarlee. It would probably have been a thrill to have one's hint selected from all those submitted. These women mentioned had enough money to afford a stamp even though the depression years had robbed many others of that privilege.

I used Tim Sherratt's useful tool Explore Trove's Digital Journals for searching inside magazines.
Using the search term Tarlee, I filtered the titles to find The Australian Woman's Mirror.

2 Oct 2022, CRGalvin