<?xml version="1.0" encoding="UTF-8"?><TEI.2 id="Gov11_10Rail" TEIform="TEI.2">
<teiHeader type="text" status="new" TEIform="teiHeader">
<fileDesc id="fileDesc-0001" TEIform="fileDesc">
<titleStmt TEIform="titleStmt">
<title type="245" TEIform="title">The New Zealand Railways Magazine, Volume 11, Issue 10 (January 1, 1937)</title>
<title type="sort" TEIform="title">New Zealand Railways Magazine, Volume 11, Issue 10 (January 1, 1937)</title>
<title type="gmd" TEIform="title">[electronic resource]</title>
<respStmt id="respStmt-0001" TEIform="respStmt">
<resp TEIform="resp">Creation of machine-readable version</resp>
<name key="name-121582" type="organisation" TEIform="name">Keyboarded by Aptara, Inc.</name>
</respStmt>
<respStmt id="respStmt-0002" TEIform="respStmt">
<resp TEIform="resp">Creation of digital images</resp>
<name key="name-121582" type="organisation" TEIform="name">Aptara, Inc.</name>
</respStmt>
<respStmt id="respStmt-0003" TEIform="respStmt">
<resp TEIform="resp">Conversion to TEI.2-conformant markup</resp>
<name key="name-121582" type="organisation" TEIform="name">Aptara, Inc.</name>
</respStmt>
</titleStmt>
<extent TEIform="extent">ca. 212 kilobytes</extent>
<publicationStmt TEIform="publicationStmt">
<publisher TEIform="publisher">
<name type="organisation" key="name-121602" TEIform="name">New Zealand Electronic Text Centre</name>
</publisher>
<pubPlace TEIform="pubPlace">Wellington, New Zealand</pubPlace>
<authority TEIform="authority"><name key="name-411207" type="organisation" TEIform="name">OnTrack (New Zealand Railways Corporation)</name> and <name key="name-411208" type="organisation" TEIform="name">Toll NZ</name></authority>
<idno type="ETC" TEIform="idno">Modern English, Gov11_10Rail</idno>
<availability status="unknown" TEIform="availability">
<p TEIform="p">Publicly accessible</p>
<p n="public" TEIform="p">URL: http://www.nzetc.org/collections.html</p>
<p TEIform="p">copyright 2008, by Victoria University of Wellington</p>
</availability>
<date value="2008" TEIform="date">2008</date>
</publicationStmt>

<notesStmt id="notesStmt-0001" TEIform="notesStmt">

<note id="note-0001" place="unspecified" anchored="yes" TEIform="note">NZETC acknowledges the kind assistance of the Wellington City Libraries and the Alexander Turnbull Library in helping to make this text available.</note>
<note id="note-0002" place="unspecified" anchored="yes" TEIform="note">Line breaks have only been retained for non-prose elements.</note>
</notesStmt>
<sourceDesc id="sourceDesc-0001" default="NO" TEIform="sourceDesc">
<biblFull default="NO" TEIform="biblFull">
<titleStmt TEIform="titleStmt">
<title TEIform="title">
<name type="title" key="name-413353" TEIform="name">The New Zealand Railways Magazine, Volume 11, Issue 10 (January 1, 1937)</name>
</title>
</titleStmt>
<extent TEIform="extent"/>
<publicationStmt TEIform="publicationStmt">
<pubPlace TEIform="pubPlace">Wellington, New Zealand</pubPlace>
<publisher TEIform="publisher">
<name key="name-025035" type="organisation" TEIform="name">New Zealand Government Railways Department</name>
</publisher>
<idno TEIform="idno">Source copy consulted: Wellington City Libraries, Serials Collection, Ref 052</idno>
</publicationStmt>
<seriesStmt id="seriesStmt-0001" TEIform="seriesStmt">
<title TEIform="title">
<name type="title" key="name-408509" TEIform="name">New Zealand Railways Magazine</name>
</title>
<idno type="vol" TEIform="idno">11:10</idno>
</seriesStmt>
</biblFull>

<bibl id="text-1-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="The Charm of Wanganui: A River City Of Enterprise And Culture" key="name-410191" TEIform="name">The Charm of Wanganui A River City Of Enterprise And Culture.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-120583" TEIform="name">O. N. Gillespie</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-2-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Famous New Zealanders: No. 46: Jessie Mackay: Poet, Idealist And Celtic Patriot (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410192" TEIform="name">Famous New Zealanders No. 46 Jessie Mackay Poet, Idealist And Celtic Patriot.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-207731" TEIform="name">James Cowan</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-3-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Our London Letter (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410193" TEIform="name">Our London Letter</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-407992" TEIform="name">Arthur L. Stead</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-4-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="The Thirteenth Clue Or The Story Of The Signal Cabin Mystery (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410194" TEIform="name">The Thirteenth Clue Or The Story Of The Signal Cabin Mystery</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408399" TEIform="name">Redmond Phillips</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-5-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" key="name-410196" TEIform="name">Historical notes on Hamilton Railway Bridge.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-407981" TEIform="name">A. S. Wansbrough</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-6-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Our Southern Coast: Off The Beaten Track In The South Island" key="name-410197" TEIform="name">Our Southern Coast. Off The Beaten Track In The South Island.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408031" TEIform="name">Dorothy Wiseman</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-7-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="An Early Visitor: Dr. Arnold's Son In New Zealand" key="name-410198" TEIform="name">An Early Visitor. Dr. Arnold's Son In New Zealand.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-123308" TEIform="name">Donald Cowie</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-8-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Familiar Ships in New Zealand Waters: The “Aorangi”—Old and New" key="name-410199" TEIform="name">Familiar Ships in New Zealand Waters The “Aorangi”— Old and New.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408390" TEIform="name">J. H. Kemnitz</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-9-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" key="name-410201" TEIform="name">An Old Australian Fisherman.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-208441" TEIform="name">Eve Langley</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-10-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" key="name-410202" TEIform="name">Auckland Cherries.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408170" TEIform="name">J. R. Hastings</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-11-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Pictures Of New Zealand Life (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410203" TEIform="name">Pictures Of New Zealand Life</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-207731" TEIform="name">Tangiwai</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-12-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Joyous January: The Month That Bucks You Up" key="name-410204" TEIform="name">Joyous January The Month That Bucks You Up.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408002" TEIform="name">Ken Alexander</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-13-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Panorama of the Playground: Physical Fitness and the “Daily Dozen (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410205" TEIform="name">Panorama of the Playground Physical Fitness and the “Daily Dozen.”</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408307" TEIform="name">W. F. Ingram</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-14-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Our Women Section Timely Notes and Useful Hints. (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410206" TEIform="name">Our Women Section Timely Notes and Useful Hints.</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408161" TEIform="name">Helen</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-15-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="The Wisdom of the Maori (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410207" TEIform="name">The Wisdom of the Maori</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-408259" TEIform="name">Tohunga</name>
</author>
</bibl>
<bibl id="text-16-bibl" default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Among the Books: A Literary Page or Two (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410208" TEIform="name">Among the Books A Literary Page or Two</name>
</title>
<author TEIform="author">
<name type="person" key="name-120773" TEIform="name">Shibli Bagarag</name>
</author>
</bibl>
</sourceDesc>
</fileDesc>
<encodingDesc TEIform="encodingDesc">
<editorialDecl default="NO" TEIform="editorialDecl">
<p TEIform="p">All unambiguous end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and
the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding
line.</p>
<p id="ETC" TEIform="p">Some keywords in the header are a local Electronic
Text Centre scheme to aid in establishing analytical
groupings.</p>
</editorialDecl>
<refsDecl doctype="TEI.2" TEIform="refsDecl">
<p TEIform="p"/>
</refsDecl>
<classDecl TEIform="classDecl">
<taxonomy id="nzetc-subjects" TEIform="taxonomy">
<bibl default="NO" TEIform="bibl">
<title TEIform="title">NZETC Subject Headings</title>
</bibl>
</taxonomy>
</classDecl>
</encodingDesc>
<profileDesc id="profileDesc-0001" TEIform="profileDesc">
<creation TEIform="creation">
<date TEIform="date">January 1, 1937</date>
</creation>
<langUsage default="NO" TEIform="langUsage">
<language id="en" TEIform="language">English</language>
</langUsage>
<textClass default="NO" TEIform="textClass">
<keywords scheme="nzetc-subjects" TEIform="keywords">
<list type="simple" TEIform="list">
<item TEIform="item">
<rs type="subject" key="subject-000001" TEIform="rs">General NZ History</rs>
</item>
</list>
</keywords>
</textClass>
</profileDesc>
<revisionDesc TEIform="revisionDesc"><change TEIform="change"><date value="2008-09-18T17:15:08" TEIform="date">17:15:08, Thursday 18 September 2008</date><respStmt TEIform="respStmt"><resp TEIform="resp">editorial</resp><name type="organisation" key="name-121602" TEIform="name">NZETC</name></respStmt><item n="catalogueAddition" TEIform="item">Addition of text to Library Catalogue</item><!-- BBID=1122214 --></change><change TEIform="change"><date value="2008-09-23T14:47:31" TEIform="date">14:47:31, Tuesday 23 September 2008</date><respStmt TEIform="respStmt"><resp TEIform="resp">editorial</resp><name type="organisation" key="name-121602" TEIform="name">NZETC</name></respStmt><item n="live" TEIform="item">Make text available on NZETC website</item></change></revisionDesc></teiHeader>
<text id="t1" TEIform="text">
<front id="t1-front" TEIform="front">
<div1 id="t1-front-d1" type="covers" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10RailFCo" id="Gov11_10RailFCo" TEIform="figure">
<figDesc TEIform="figDesc">Front Cover</figDesc>
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10RailBCo" id="Gov11_10RailBCo" TEIform="figure">
<figDesc TEIform="figDesc">Back Cover</figDesc>
</figure>

</p>
<pb id="n1" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10RailP001a" id="Gov11_10RailP001a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Caroline Bay, Timaru, South Island, New Zealand</hi>
</head>
</figure>
<pb id="n2" n="1" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail001a" id="Gov11_10Rail001a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<pb id="n3" n="2" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail002a" id="Gov11_10Rail002a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail002b" id="Gov11_10Rail002b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail002c" id="Gov11_10Rail002c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<pb id="n4" n="3" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail003a" id="Gov11_10Rail003a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<pb id="n5" n="4" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail004a" id="Gov11_10Rail004a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail004b" id="Gov11_10Rail004b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n6" n="5" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 id="t1-front-d2" type="contents" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Contents</hi>
</head>
<p TEIform="p">
<table rows="19" cols="3" TEIform="table">
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Wit and Humour</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n65" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">64</ref>
</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Page</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Among the Books</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n63" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">62</ref>–<ref target="n64" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">63</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">An Early Visitor</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n37" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">36</ref>–<ref target="n38" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">37</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">By the Quiet Waters of Waka-tipu</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n26" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">25</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Editorial—Peace and Goodwill</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n8" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">7</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Famous New Zealanders</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n14" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">13</ref>–<ref target="n16" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">15</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Familiar Ships in New Zealand Waters</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n40" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">39</ref>–<ref target="n42" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">41</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">General Manager's Message</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n9" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">8</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Historical Notes on Hamilton Railway Bridge</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n28" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">27</ref>–<ref target="n30" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">29</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Joyous January</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n47" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">46</ref>–<ref target="n48" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">47</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">New Zealand Verse</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n44" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">43</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Our London Letter</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n18" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">17</ref>–<ref target="n20" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">19</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Our Southern Coast</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n32" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">31</ref>–<ref target="n36" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">35</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Our Women's Section</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n59" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">58</ref>–<ref target="n61" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">60</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Panorama of the Playground</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n55" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">54</ref>–<ref target="n56" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">55</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">Pictures of N.Z. Life</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n46" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">45</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">The Charm of Wanganui</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n11" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">10</ref>–<ref target="n52" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">51</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">The Thirteenth Clue</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n21" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">20</ref>–<ref target="n24" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">23</ref>
</cell>
</row>
<row role="data" TEIform="row">
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">The Wisdom of the Maori</cell>
<cell role="data" rows="1" cols="1" TEIform="cell">
<ref target="n62" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">61</ref>
</cell>
</row>
</table>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">The <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">New Zealand Railways Magazine</hi> is on sale through the principal booksellers, or may be obtained post-free for 6/- per annum.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Employees of the Railway Department are invited to forward news items or articles bearing on railway affairs. The aim of contributors should be to supply interesting topical material tending generally towards the betterment of the service.</p>
<p TEIform="p">In all cases where the Administration makes announcements through the medium of this journal the fact will be clearly indicated.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The Department does not identify itself with any opinions which may be expressed in other portions of the publication, whether appearing over the author's name or under a <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">nom de plume</hi>.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Short stories, poetry, pen-and-ink sketches, etc., are invited from the general public upon New Zealand subjects.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Payment for short paragraphs will be made at 2d. a line. Successful contributors will be expected to send in clippings from the Magazine for assessment of the payment due to them.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The Editor cannot undertake the return of MS. unless accompanied with a stamped and addressed envelope.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">All communications should be addressed to The Editor, New Zealand Railways Magazine, Wellington</hi>.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="b" TEIform="hi">Result “Four-Sum” Competition:</hi> 569 points with TASS, TESTS, SPATS, SETS, (or SAPS or SPAS). Submitted by J. Herd, C. Young, G. Simmonds, E. White-law, E. Coleman, A. McCormick, Auckland. R. Wilson, G. Weston, G. Chambers, Wellington. L. Mitchell, Milton. J. Lawrence, Hokitika. Sass, Stys, Sess, disallowed.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail005a" id="Gov11_10Rail005a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<pb id="n7" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10RailP002a" id="Gov11_10RailP002a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">The hell of waters! where they howl and hiss, And boil in end-less torture.</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
—<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">Byron</hi>.<lb TEIform="lb"/>
The Twin Geyser, Wairakei, North Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<titlePage id="t1-front-d2-d1" TEIform="titlePage">
<docTitle TEIform="docTitle">
<titlePart type="main" TEIform="titlePart">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">The New Zealand<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Railways<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Magazine</hi>
</titlePart>
</docTitle>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Registered at the G.P.O., Wellington, N.Z., for transmission by post as a Newspaper.</hi>
</byline>
<docImprint TEIform="docImprint">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">“<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">For Better Service</hi>.</hi>”<lb TEIform="lb"/>
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Published by the</hi> <publisher TEIform="publisher">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">New Zealand Government Railways Department</hi>
</publisher>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Vol. XI. No. 10. <pubPlace TEIform="pubPlace">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Wellington, New Zealand</hi>
</pubPlace> <docDate TEIform="docDate">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">January</hi> 1, 1937</docDate>.</docImprint>
</titlePage>
</front>
<body id="t1-body" TEIform="body">
<pb id="n8" n="7" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 id="t1-body-d1" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">Peace and Goodwill.</head>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">The</hi> desire of every decent person is that 1937 may be a year of peace and goodwill. If we could have twelve months under these conditions, the increase in human happiness would be so great that no one would care to disturb that state of bliss in the after years.</p>
<p TEIform="p">But there are too many warring elements in the lives, conditions, temperaments, and mentalities of the peoples of the world for a desire such as this to be realised in the brief span of a year. The most that each individual can do is to live as peacefully and act with as much goodwill towards others as conditions will permit, and to encourage others to be of a like frame of mind.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Comparatively speaking, New Zealand might be described at present as a place of peace in a world of turmoil. In fact much of the tendency of world travellers to visit New Zealand and Australia is derived from the knowledge of unsettled and uncertain conditions elsewhere.</p>
<p TEIform="p">But before peace and goodwill can come completely into their own there must be, the world over, greatly increased opportunities for all to share more fully in the joys of life.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Here are just a few of the things that are desirable, and doubtless obtainable for all, in the years to come:—A plentitude of pictures and other art objects, to give in small space the aesthetic pleasures of colour and form; books, to set thoughts in motion; some adequate share of sunshine and seashore; plentiful parks with trees and lakes, rivers and flowers; gymnasia and other helpful inducements to exercise; abundance of food and drink of the right sort properly and pleasingly prepared and served; adequate opportunities for social intercourse under agreeable conditions; travel of all kinds to places of educational interest and attractive pleasure resorts; genuine endeavour to reach points of agreement regarding principles of behaviour and outlook upon life to avoid the distress of disagreements; intellectual activity and technical craftsmanship along the lines of personal aptitude or predilection; and friendly opportunities for showmanship of some sort—to strut for admiration, to gesticulate or talk or sing or orate either as a competitive exercise or for the pure pleasure of the effort—to relate facts and invent fictions—to have something to laugh about or to cause friendly laughter amongst others—to be kind and helpful, and to create and accept happiness as the chance comes along. These may not be great and gorgeous aims and objects, instinct with the rarified spirit of a lofty nobility, but they are at least among the things that are possible to all, if the right spirit exists along with a willingness to work cheerfully in any way possible that peace and good-will may reign in the affairs of men.</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n9" n="8" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 id="t1-body-d2" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">Railway Progress in New Zealand.<lb TEIform="lb"/>
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">General manager's message.</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">The New Year.</hi>
</head>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">In</hi> contemplating the New Year upon which we are about to enter, there are, I believe, good grounds for satisfaction both regarding the progress of the Department's business during the past year and also in the prospects of the coming one.</p>
<p TEIform="p">We change over from 1936 to 1937 in the knowledge that a great deal has been done to prepare the way for the considerably augmented traffic of all kinds that we may be expected to handle. The whole of our staff will agree with me, I feel sure, that 1936 was a year of outstanding activity in the Department's history, both in respect to the many changes and improvements introduced to advance the range and quality of service the Railways could give the public, and also in the upward tendency of every class of traffic through the more favourable economic and other conditions existing for the use and extension of railway services.</p>
<p TEIform="p">We are now ready to advance into another year in which even greater internal developments of the service may be expected, in keeping with the increased commercial and tourist activities already planned and the general buoyancy of trade that 1937 promises.</p>
<p TEIform="p">In a recent review of the many ways in which the members of the service can and do assist the public I had occasion to go into some very minor—but none the less very important—matters of detail where, perhaps, the best was not being done on all occasions by some members of the staff. As possibly certain members of the public may be inclined to judge railway performance rather by the minor failure than by the major accomplishment, I would again, while expressing the strongest appreciation of the good work done by the staff during the past year, ask members to examine carefully their actions and attitude in those matters of detail that come within the scope of their duties and opportunities, to see whether in some of these things they can effect further improvements—by some keener attention and greater zeal and more commonsense outlook in performing to the utmost of their capacity those duties which are covered by the specific instructions of the Department, and also those other obligations towards the patrons of the Department and their fellow-employees that develop from moment to moment in the course of the day's work but for which no hard and fast rules can be laid down.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Given this intensification of determination not to let the Department down in any respect, every member of the service may look forward to 1937 with a great deal of pleasurable confidence, and the public will find still more justification for faith in the ability of railwaymen to attend to and solve all their transport problems.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail008a" id="Gov11_10Rail008a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">General Manager.</hi>
</p>
<pb id="n10" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10RailP003a" id="Gov11_10RailP003a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Some Of The Leading Business Premises Of Wanganui.</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Rly. Publicity photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Top left: Kernohans Ltd. Right: Londontown Ltd. Centre: Gilberds Soap Works. Below, left: Lounge, Provincial Hotel. Right: Southern Cross Biscuit Factory. Bottom: Benefield's Nurseries—left, showing the layering process of tree growth.</head>
</figure>
<pb id="n11" n="10" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail010a" id="Gov11_10Rail010a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">The city of Wanganui, North Island, New Zealand, photographed from a new angle.<lb TEIform="lb"/>
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Rly. Publicity photo.)</hi>
</head>
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<div1 decls="text-1-bibl" id="t1-body-d3" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="The Charm of Wanganui: A River City Of Enterprise And Culture" key="name-410191" TEIform="name">The Charm of Wanganui<lb TEIform="lb"/> <hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">A River City Of Enterprise And Culture</hi>.</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(By <name type="person" key="name-120583" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">O. N. Gillespie</hi>
</name>.)</hi>
</byline>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">“The beauty which old Greece or Rome sung, painted, wrought, lies close at home.”</hi>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">The</hi> finest flowers of our New Zealand national growth are our lovely provincial towns, and Wanganui is the water lily in this garland of civic blooms.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The river winds down from a faraway wonderland of bush beauty, and as it flows past warehouse and home, park and busy wharf, it becomes the formative element in the distinctive qualities of the city. Wanganui, like so many of our urban dwelling places, is provided with countless prospect points which furnish views of bewildering richness and variety; but here, in every case, the broad silver ribbon of the river fills the eye, and dominates the picture. It also, by the way, presents the municipal administration with its most awkward problems. The city clusters on both sides of the river, gradually thinning out both lengthwise and laterally, with the result that within the long lengths of its boundaries, the population of Wellington could be comfortably housed. The river compensates for all of this, however, by its investiture of romantic and decorative values. From the sylvan beauty of the willow-planted banks as it enters Aramoho, to the wide reaches before Castlecliff, it is never anything less than picturesque. As a waterway of historic memories, it has left a legacy of delightful names. On its banks London is only four miles from Jerusalem, and I visited the craftsmen at work on the Maori carvings for the church at a place with a name as long as a tributary, but full of music—Putiki - wharanuia Tamatea - Pokai-whenua.</p>
<p TEIform="p">I took a tram ride from Castlecliff to Aramoho, a trip which measures up to most terminus to terminus journeys possible in Wellington or Auckland. As I have often said, this is one of the best methods for a quick survey of the “make-up” of a city. Castlecliff is possibly one of the best achievements of Wanganui folk. The rough sandhills, dotted with utilitarian “baches” have been replaced with a glorious and spacious level green, waterfront park, smart streets of good houses, and all the facilities of a modern seaside resort. Castlecliff is on its way to be the Caroline Bay of the North Island west coast. The joy of the tram-ride is the ever-changing spectacle it offered. Passing the handsome suburb of Gonville, the imposing grandstand of the racecourse shows up, and there is a peep of its teahouse on pretty ornamental waters.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail010b" id="Gov11_10Rail010b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Rly. Publicity photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
The fine Technical School Hostel at Wanganui.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">The river is just glimpsed before the substantial business buildings starten to thicken round the route, but on the final run to Aramoho, the river is skirted nearly all the way. Here I found a place which might be best described as a pleasuance. Huge English trees, a wide spread of velvet turf, a sparkling swimming pool give Aramoho Park the air of restful-ness of an old English pleasure ground. This is the principal camping ground for motorists; it is electrically lit at night, and there is an extraordinary range of amenities, including gas, shower baths, cooking equipment, and so on endlessly. But an individual touch is given by the ingenious use made of tram car bodies. These have been fitted with bunks, kitchenettes, furnished comfortably, and some thoughtfully artistic person had them painted a quiet green. A honeymoon couple permitted me to look through, and they already had the air of permanent inhabitants. A big Wanganui store, Kernohans Ltd., has instituted a “travelling shop,” a most complex and complete miniature warehouse on wheels. These pay regular calls to all camping grounds and a telephone call will bring a special trip.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Here at Aramoho, I found some explanation of the riot of colour in Wanganui gardens. Tucked away within arms-length of many great industrial undertakings are the extensive
<pb id="n12" n="11" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail011a" id="Gov11_10Rail011a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Rly. Publicity photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
One of the many educational institutions of Wanganui—the Aramoho Primary School.</head>
</figure>
nurseries of Benefield and Sons, where every November and December 25,000 roses can be seen in bloom. Established by Mr. Benefield, Senior, over half a century ago, this expertly administered plant kindergarten has been providing garden lovers with “green growing things” from the Bluff to Kaitaia. The founder retired 27 years ago, and is still hale and hearty. One of these days New Zealand will be a world leader in the export of plants, for its largesse of mild airs, rich soil, sunny skies and tender rains brings the same miracle of improvement in the realm of horticulture as in the domain of the thoroughbred. I mention, too, in this regard, that I suspect that Chief Ruler, Limond and Absurd have made Wanganui known to just as many people as the Drop Scene.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The climate needs no commendation in these pages. It is midway between Auckland and Wellington, and the swift tree growth, the good sun-tan already visible on the bathers, the universal provision for open-air enjoyment, all comprise evidence that the district has a good weather certificate.</p>
<p TEIform="p">For the tourist and holiday maker, Wanganui has a specially attractive menu. The river naturally takes first place both for sight-seeing excursions, and for aquatic sports, and I must not overlook the well known championship rowing course. Naturally, with a topography ranging from river flat to sandhills, from easy gully to high hill, perfect golf courses are in plenty, and the municipal links have a set of charges that are in the microscopic scale.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Scenic drives of varied and breath-taking beauty are numerous, and I instance the Waipuka glen where the tall cliff sides are patterned with giant tree ferns like a titanic mural fresco.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The hotels are famous throughout the Dominion and outrank many of our main capitals. There is a wide range of choice and tariff, and a well earned reputation for good service which is common to all. I found the lounge of the Provincial Hotel just as full of cheery “bright young things” and their elders as any metropolitan hostelry, and host Larsen's opinion is that the social life of Wanganui is as joyous as any in his experience.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The beauty spots of the city are in profusion. Three minutes from the Post Office are the Moutoa Gardens, containing monuments of aesthetic and historic charm. Virginia Lake is on the tree-feathered St. John's Hill, a clear sheet of ornamental waters surrounded by exquisite gardens. Durie Hill is a possession personal to Wanganui in a real sense. This immense bluff overlooks the town, and is reached by an electric lift as well as by paved winding roads. From its pretty hilltop park can be seen the roof of the North Island with Ruapehu on the one hand and Egmont on the other. This residential suburb is growing apace, and here is, of course, the lofty shell rock Memorial Tower. My own choice of these attractions, however, is the magnificent Esplanade Walk which “goes in beauty” from the town bridge to the Dublin Street bridge. By the way, if a citizen suggests a run up Roberts’ Avenue you will get a revelation of Wanganui's essential qualities. Roberts’ Avenue soon stops being a street and becomes a fascinating mountain road from whose top curve the breakers on Castlecliff beach can be seen, the enormous level airport area, and in between a panorama of matchless beauty.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail011b" id="Gov11_10Rail011b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Rly. Publicity photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
A view of the Motor Camping Ground at Aramoho, Wanganui.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">Victoria Avenue, the principal street, retains an individuality born of the time when it first ran between the Rutland and York stockades. The Pukenamu slopes, once fort-crowned, are now adorned with splendid public buildings, and the tree-lined “Avenue” breaks into a bustling, motor packed, well-thronged street of modern business premises. In common with the rest of our provincial capitals, Wanganui has a type of emporium which would set the standard in cities of a quarter of a million souls in older lands. Its deep drainage, paved streets, electric lighting, and the rest of the range of startling amenities which we treat as customary, are not in any sense peculiar to the river city, nor, of course, is the idea that Wanganui had the exclusive rights of the depression. I have found this latter notion in many other places, and have marvelled at the enthusiasm with which many “oldest inhabitants” furnished reasons why their town was specially</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Continued on p. <ref target="n50" targOrder="U" TEIform="ref">49</ref>.)</hi>
</p>
<pb id="n13" n="12" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail012a" id="Gov11_10Rail012a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail012b" id="Gov11_10Rail012b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail012c" id="Gov11_10Rail012c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail012d" id="Gov11_10Rail012d" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n14" n="13" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 decls="text-2-bibl" id="t1-body-d4" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Famous New Zealanders: No. 46: Jessie Mackay: Poet, Idealist And Celtic Patriot (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410192" TEIform="name">Famous New Zealanders<lb TEIform="lb"/> No. 46<lb TEIform="lb"/> <hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Jessie Mackay<lb TEIform="lb"/> Poet, Idealist And Celtic Patriot</hi>.</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">(Written for the “New Zealand Railways Magazine” by <name type="person" key="name-207731" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">James Cowan</hi>
</name>.)</byline>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d1" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="b" TEIform="hi">Miss Jessie Mackay, who has been described as a Celt transplanted by fate to the Antipodes, is the most honoured and admired figure in New Zealand literature to-day. She combines in her character and her writings the true spirit of our own land with the fire and enthusiasm and intense love of country of the Gael. Her ardent sympathies and her eloquent tongue and pen have throughout her life been devoted to humanitarian progress and to the helping of just causes. The weaker side, the little nations oppressed by the powerful, have drawn her passionate championship. Fire and compassion, one of her fellow-writers has well said, abide together in her nature. She has written much that is distinctively New Zealand; she knows the land as only the native-born and the country-bred know it. With that knowledge and affection there is blended the profound love of the older lands and their associations, and inspiring all is the soul of a mystic. Rightful honour was paid to her when she was chosen some years ago to visit Ireland and England and Europe as a delegate to the Irish Conference in Paris, where she met many of the great figures in the world of Celtic culture. Jessie Mackay, daughter of Robert and Elizabeth Mackay, was born in 1864 at Rakaia Gorge, among the Canterbury foothills of the Alps, where her father had his sheep station. The greater part of her life has been passed in Canterbury, and she lives now on Cashmere Hills, looking out over Christchurch City and the great Plains she knows so well.</hi>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail013a" id="Gov11_10Rail013a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Clifford, photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Miss Jessie Mackay.</head>
</figure>
</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d2" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">The Noble Rebel.</head>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">The</hi> quality in Jessie Mackay's poetry and her prose writings in the newspapers, that first greatly attracted me long ago was her divine spirit of rebellion. All that has ever been done in this world for the betterment of mankind has been done or begun by rebels against established tyrannies and long-persisting wrongs. Jessie Mackay's chivalrous soul was fired by the Celtic race's long struggle for self-government in Ireland. I imagine that if she had lived in New Zealand a generation earlier she would have championed that great patriot Wiremu Tamehana and his lost cause which a more just appraisal of Maori national rights by the pakeha has now given its proper place in history. Jessie Mackay could never conceivably have been found on the side of a land-acquisition war upon a weaker people. I do not at the moment recall her published views on the Boer War, that most debateable of subjects, but I can imagine that her opinion of the root-causes of that campaign agreed with mine. The mainspring of her life, in fact, has been her immensely strong sympathy for the peoples whose homes and liberties are threatened or demolished by the hand of wrongly-based authority and power. The Highland clearances in the name of the Law by the usurpers of the people's ancient rights were the first burning wrongs that gave a note of passion to her pen.</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d3" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">Poet of Old Lands and New.</head>
<p TEIform="p">The sorrows of “Dark Rosaleen” and the lament of the evicted crofter for his home-glen and his ruined clan were the two national calls of the Celtic race that inspired our sweet singer. She wrote, too, of the pioneer spirit, and she gave her own touch of mysticism to the poetry of that other most imaginative of folk-poets the Maori.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Only Eileen Duggan of all our poets has approached her fine quality—the inner dream-vision that informs everything it touches with the essence of spirituality.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Jessie Mackay's volume of verse, “Land of the Morning,” first published more than a quarter of a century ago, is a glorious treasury of such thoughts, as well as of great poems that incite to action like a war-song. She is a true daughter of New Zealand in her love of the country scene in the outer parts. Early memories colour one's outlook through life. Jessie Mackay was reared in a rugged tussock land. Like another Canterbury woman country-bred, she could say of her childhood surroundings:—“From the dark gorge, where burns the morning star, I hear the glacier river rattling on And sweeping o'er his ice-ploughed shingle bar.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">Something from those solitary places must have gone to shape her character, predispose her to calm, clear thinking, the “harvest of a quiet eye” yielded by the sight of far stretching ranges and roomy landscapes of the downs. Like yet another Canterbury-lover, her thoughts must often have returned in the noisy places of the crowds to the leisurely scenes of heartsease far back: “…. the pastures and peace Which gardened and guarded those valleys With grasses as high as the knees, Calm as high as the sky.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">She saw and felt her land in its every mood. Here is the nor'-wester, the hot and dusty wind that Canterbury knows only too well:—</p>
<pb id="n15" n="14" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">“A tinder earth, a burning blue With eyes of Nemesis glaring through, Heavy as death and hot as hate! Windy brown to the mountain-gate—</p>
<lg type="verse" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="lg">
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Windy brown to meet the sky!</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">All the sap of the earth is dry.”</l>
</lg>
<p TEIform="p">But relief comes in the evening, “the hour between the lights,” when the breeze of solace comes down from the Southern Alps:—</p>
<lg type="verse" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="lg">
<l part="N" TEIform="l">“…. the maidens of the cool</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Vast Eden of the after-glow</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Dream-heavy from the cooling snow,</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Their wings drop comfort as they glide,</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">To cure the world at eventide:</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">And more—they left the gate ajar</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Of Eden, where their dwellings are;</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">For here, unsealing ear and eyes,</l>
</lg>
<p TEIform="p">Returns the Wind of Paradise!”</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d4" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">The Dwellings of Her Dead.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Family and clan tradition, and her reading, long before ever she saw the homeland of her fathers, implanted convictions that made her a crusader for the Celt:—</p>
<lg type="verse" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="lg">
<l part="N" TEIform="l">“Lo and lo, mine ancient people!</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Cairn and cromlech hold them sleeping—</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Mine though the world divide!”</l>
</lg>
<p TEIform="p">This dreamy early love of kin and ancient glens grew “by the bright unstoried waters” round the world where the children of the clansmen found new life and room to grow. The story of the infamous Highland clearances and the eviction of the clans from their native straths and glens set the indignant grief-song ringing in two of her greatest poems. “For Love of Appin” is indeed a heart cry as poignant and pathetic as the tear-bringing “Lochaber No More” of the pipes.</p>
<p TEIform="p">It is a <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">kupu irirangi</hi> of the Celt. The Maori was in spirit a very Celt himself. He heard that unearthly message in the upper air, the voice of the dead, or soon to be dead, that sang to the awed and weeping people below.</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d5" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">The Tragedy of the Mackays.</head>
<p TEIform="p">“Strathnaver No More” is a <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">tangi</hi> poem that embodies the great sorrow of the Clan Mackay and their kin. Stern, sharp, indignant, it is a terrific indictment of the clearances that reft the land from the people and accounted them less than the aeer that roamed the hills:—</p>
<lg type="verse" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="lg">
<l part="N" TEIform="l">“O the shadow's on the glen and the gloom is on the heart</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Of the far-wandered men of Strathnaver,</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">When they look across the sea to the lost Land of Reay</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">And count the bitter fee for Strath-naver!</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">O if blood had been the price, then Mackay were lord to-day:</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Blood-bought, ay, and thrice, ran the Naver</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">From the days of Angus Du when the Aberach arose</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">And the White Banner flew by the Naver!</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">And if love had bought it clear, the Mackays were thick as grain Where wild run the deer in Strathnaver.</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">It was washed in tears as milk where the hearts of bold Mackay Wound like the silk round Strathnaver.</l>
</lg>
<p TEIform="p">* * *</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail014a" id="Gov11_10Rail014a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(A. Vaughan.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
The Bridge of Remembrance, Christchurch, South Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">It was gold of London town, it was foreign dross that dulled The sea-bright crown of the Naver; ‘This by English gold and gun and the lisping English tongue That the land lies undone by the Naver.</p>
<p TEIform="p">For the sea has opened wide her gates to bear away The flower and the pride of Strathnaver; And the songs of Rob the Bard, they will never sound again Where men loved and warred in Strathnaver!”</p>
<p TEIform="p">The ruin of the land of the good Highland fighting men is complete; the clan has sought new fields where there are no petty tyrants to rob them of their homes. “Let the salmon and the deer be your righting men to-day,” contemptuously says the poet to those who swept the people away from their homes. Let the salmon and the deer plead for the landlords when those who made the clearances are called “at the bar of heaven high, ye that swept the gallant glens, and reft away Mackay from Strathnaver!”</p>
<p TEIform="p">It was, however, some consolation to our poet of the Gael to hear later that the resumption of farms for deer-forests had been stayed in some parts, and that Strathnaver was being re-peopled by the children of its former occupants.</p>
</div2>
<pb id="n16" n="15" TEIform="pb"/>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d6" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">The Friend of the Landless Men.</head>
<p TEIform="p">There was the reverse side of the Highland clearances, the New Zealand settlement reform, that inspired the grieving yet triumphant pibroch note in “The Burial of Sir John McKenzie.” This is the greatest of Jessie Mackay's poems in a New Zealand setting. It tells how the Minister of Lands, who had been a Ross-shire shepherd, went to his grave, lamented by the young nation:—</p>
<lg type="verse" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="lg">
<l part="N" TEIform="l">“The clan went on with the pipes before</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">All the way, all the way;</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">A wider clan than ever he knew</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Followed him home that dowie day.</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">And who were they of the wider clan?</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">The landless man and the no man's man</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">The man that lacked and the man unlearned,</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">The man that lived but as he earned;</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">And the clan went mourning all the way.”</l>
</lg>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d7" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">On Maori Legends.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Miss Mackay has taken some of the dramatic Maori traditions that appealed to her and made poems of them, one or two with the true flame and vigour of the war-god Tu, others with the lilting charm of a fairy-lorist. The tale of Rona has the truth and simplicity that you find in Stevenson's Child's Garden of Verse:—</p>
<lg type="verse" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="lg">
<l part="N" TEIform="l">“In the moon is Rona sitting Never to be free;</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">With the gourd she held in flitting, And the ngaio tree.”</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Her fore-verse to the volume of poetry</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">that made her name contains two descriptive lines that haunt the memory</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">like a treasured tune, of long ago:—</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">“Land of the morning, Kiwa's golden daughter,</l>
<l part="N" TEIform="l">Land of the fleet-foot mist and singing water.”</l>
</lg>
<p TEIform="p">In those two lines the singer captures the essential character of these lands in Kiwa's Great Ocean.</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d4-d8" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">The Worker and Publicist.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Jessie Mackay is a very practical idealist and apostle of the political and social reforms that have engaged her pen for so many years. She was and is a keen pleader for improvement in the lot of women. She was a pioneer feminist, and she worked hard in the election which resulted in the return of her friend Mrs. McCombs as the first woman member of the New Zealand Parliament. For about ten years she was the woman editor of the “Canterbury Times,” and she put an immense amount of thought and effective writing into that work. She wrote much also for the “Otago Witness” and often for the Auckland “Star.” Educational methods and ethics engaged her pen; she had practical experience, for she taught in country schools for some years.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Miss Mackay's visit to Europe and to Ireland, Scotland and England in 1921–22, on her mission as a delegate to the Irish Conference in Paris, enabled her to realise the hopes of a lifetime, to see the lands of her ancient race, and to meet the leaders of Scottish and Irish thought.
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail015a" id="Gov11_10Rail015a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Thelma R. Kent, photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
A scene on the road near Lake Taupo, North Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
Her work and her genius were thoroughly well recognised. A colonial Scots-woman, she was yet thoroughly at home among the Irish politicians and writers, and she contributed appreciably to the successful issue of the gathering of enthusiastic Celts and Erse scholars.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The sunset of life gives one mystical lore, said a poet of the Gaels. Miss Mackay, we all hope, is still far from the sunset of, life, but mystic vision has found expression all her writing years. Long ago she peered like a priestess into the sunlit mists where the faerie land of Tir-nan-oge may lie.</p>
<pb id="n17" n="16" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail016a" id="Gov11_10Rail016a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail016b" id="Gov11_10Rail016b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail016c" id="Gov11_10Rail016c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
</div2>
</div1>
<pb id="n18" n="17" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 decls="text-3-bibl" id="t1-body-d5" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Our London Letter (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410193" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Our London Letter</hi>
</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">by <name type="person" key="name-407992" TEIform="name">Arthur L. Stead</name>
</hi>
</byline>
<div2 id="t1-body-d5-d1" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">The Famous “Silver Jubilee” Express</hi>.</head>
<div3 id="t1-body-d5-d1-d1" type="subsubsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div3">
<p TEIform="p">Interior of Dynamometer Car, employed for checking the “Silver Jubilees” record runs.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">A Happy</hi> New Year to all! Time's pendulum swings with unerring precision, and here we are once again at the beginning of another chapter in transportation's ever-varying story. Looking back, outstanding among railway activities of 1935, were the energetic measures taken to speed up passenger movement on both main and branch lines. At the opening of the New Year, Europe is immersed in still more ambitious plans for passenger train acceleration, through the introduction of new streamlined steam and oil-driven trains, many of almost futuristic design.</p>
<p TEIform="p">At Home, the most interesting streamliner is the “Silver Jubilee” Express of the L. &amp; N.E. system, covering the 268 miles between King's Cross, London, and Newcastle-on-Tyne, daily in both directions in exactly four hours, with a single intermediate stop at Darlington. This service has proved exceedingly popular, and recently the “Silver Jubilee” set up a new world's speed record for steam-operated trains conveying ordinary fare-paying passengers. Four 4-6-2 type streamlined locomotives are allocated to the “Silver Jubilee” service, and it was No. 2512, “Silver Fox,” which established the new record. With a load of 270 tons, a maximum speed of 113 m.p.h. was attained over a half-mile section. More than 100 m.p.h. was averaged for 11 miles, and for over 6 miles the speed was 110.8 m.p.h. A light-weight, seven-coach train, seating 198 passengers, the “Silver Jubilee” is decorated outside in silver. Two restaurant cars and a kitchen car are included in its makeup.</p>
</div3>
<div3 id="t1-body-d5-d1-d2" type="subsubsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div3">
<head TEIform="head">Accelerated Time-tables.</head>
<p TEIform="p">While experiments are being conducted by the Home lines in the way of introducing high-speed streamliners, the need for a general acceleration of passenger trains is not being over-looked. Normally, this season does not see any very important accelerations, but actually the winter time-tables show marked speeding-up throughout all the four group systems.</p>
<p TEIform="p">On the L.M. &amp; S. Railway, for example, no fewer than 1,146 passenger trains have been accelerated this winter. The “Royal Scot” throughout run from Glasgow to London (Euston) has been cut to 7 hours 25 minutes, the fastest booking ever recorded. The “Irish Mail” (Holyhead-Euston) has been speeded up, reducing by as much as 25 minutes the journey times between Dublin and many important cities.</p>
<p TEIform="p">A noticeable feature of the winter time-tables is the greatly improved Sunday services on many routes, and the bettered interchange arrangements between the four groups. Week-end travel has grown by leaps and bounds of late, and it is essential the railways should cater suitably for this demand, and not allow so valuable a source of revenue to go untapped.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail017a" id="Gov11_10Rail017a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">Streamlined “Pacific,” hauling the L. and N.E. “Silver Jubilee” Express.</head>
</figure>
</p>
</div3>
<div3 id="t1-body-d5-d1-d3" type="subsubsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div3">
<head TEIform="head">Railway Speeds on the Continent.</head>
<p TEIform="p">On the Continent of Europe, probably the best all-round showing from the viewpoint of speed is made by the railways of France. The Nord Railway comes first, with a splendid array of fast, daily heavy main-line trains, linking Paris with a hundred important centres. On this system, “Pacific” type locomotives daily haul 700- to 800-ton trains at average start-to-stop speeds of 55 m.p.h. Daily speeds recorded start-to-stop include runs between Paris and Calais, 59 m.p.h.; Boulogne, 61 m.p.h.; Aulnoy, 62 m.p.h.; Brussels, 64 m.p.h.; and St. Quentin, 65 m.p.h.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The Paris-Lyons-Mediterranean is another system which prides itself upon its high-speed attainments. A noteworthy run is that between Paris and the Italian frontier town of Ventimiglia, averaging 54 m.p.h. throughout. This includes speeds of 66 m.p.h. between Paris and Laroche; 68 m.p.h. between Dijon and Macon; and 67 m.p.h. between Avignon and Marseilles. On the Midi line, there are daily recorded in
<pb id="n19" n="18" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail018a" id="Gov11_10Rail018a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail018b" id="Gov11_10Rail018b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<pb id="n20" n="19" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail019a" id="Gov11_10Rail019a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">All-metal passenger carriage, Northern Railway, France.</head>
</figure>
the Paris-Bordeaux service speeds of up to 75 m.p.h.</p>
</div3>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d5-d2" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">Improved Accommodation at Plymouth Docks.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Plymouth ranks as a most important ocean gateway into Britain. For the comfort and convenience of the large number of passengers who disembark from ocean liners at Plymouth Docks, the Great Western Railway have recently provided greatly improved and modernised accommodation. A new reception room has been constructed, large and lofty, having seating accommodation for 170 persons. It has a single entrance, and serves generally the purpose of a waiting and writing room. Fronting the reception room is a roomy refreshment buffet. In suitable positions, kiosks have been installed for the despatch of telegrams and cables, the transaction of postal business, money exchange, and luggage registration. The scheme of decorations throughout the building gives a marked effect of cheerfulness and brightness. The walls are tiled in white to about half their height, where the tiling finishes in a pleasing green border. The floor covering is of tile pattern, and the furniture is upholstered in leather.</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d5-d3" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">More Attractive Stations.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Attractive passenger stations are now becoming the order of the day throughout Europe. During the last few years a great deal of attention has been paid to this question, with the result that the old drab terminus is becoming a thing of the past, and in its place has sprung up a really pleasing structure, attractive alike inside and out. After a series of experiments, the L.M. &amp; S. Railway has adopted a range of six standard colours for painting its 2,500 passenger stations in a more cheerful and more attractive guise. The colours comprise two light shades (deep cream or Portland stone), either of which can be used in conjunction with any one of three dark shades (middle brown, middle Brunswick green, or Venetian red). The sixth colour—golden brown—is being used sometimes by itself, and some-times with another paint. It is most useful at stations where there are electric trains, and there is consequently iron dust in the air. This iron dust, peculiar to conditions of electric traction, causes a rust-like stain on the paint, but its effects are minimised when golden brown paint is used. No hard-and-fast rule is observed as to any particular colour scheme in any particular district, the scheme adopted for each L.M. &amp; S. station being considered individually in relation to its environment and architectural characteristics.</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d5-d4" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">Passenger Carriage Design.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Wonderful progress has been recorded in recent years in passenger carriage design. A development at Home is the buffet car, providing a quick service of light meals on trains where there is insufficient demand for a full restaurant service. Four new buffet cars have just been brought into use on the L.M. &amp; S. line, between London and Manchester, York and Manchester, and Worcester and Manchester. Each carriage is 57ft. long, and has a kitchen and service counter at one end, with a quick-service cafeteria bar adjoining. The remainder of the interior is devoted to tables, of which there are four, seating four passengers each on one side of the car, and four seating two passengers each on the other, giving total seating accommodation for 24 persons. The chairs strike a new note in Home railway carriage furnishing, having chromium-steel tube frames, with red leather upholstery.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Other features of the cars include the employment of delicately-grained Empire timbers for the interior panelling, and the provision of deep, wide windows, affording an absolutely unrestricted outlook.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail019b" id="Gov11_10Rail019b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Mae Kettel, photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
The new Central Passenger Station, Geneva, Switzerland.</head>
</figure>
</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d5-d5" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">The Railway Storekeeper.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Of the thousand and one jobs within the railway service, few carry such heavy responsibility as that of the storekeeper. In theory, maintaining stocks of stores appears a relatively simple task, but when one thinks of the hundreds of thousands of items of equipment involved, upon the soundness and suitability of many of which depends the safety of human life and limb, there comes realisation of the importance of the storekeeper's work.</p>
<p TEIform="p">With the idea of enabling a sample of every item of equipment in use on the system to be available for inspection either by railway officers or suppliers, the L. &amp; N.E. Railway has opened in London a new department, classed as a “stores museum.” Here there have been gathered together sealed samples or drawings of every conceivable article used on the system, and a staff of four men spend their days classifying and testing new “exhibits.” Altogether, there are about 5,000 samples and 2,000 drawings in the building, and the equipment includes machines for testing all manner of stores supplied. It is part of the policy of the L. &amp; N.E. Company, in cases where contracting firms supply articles superior to those standardised, to scrap the standard pattern and replace it by the improved article.</p>
</div2>
</div1>
<pb id="n21" n="20" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 decls="text-4-bibl" id="t1-body-d6" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="The Thirteenth Clue Or The Story Of The Signal Cabin Mystery (vol 11, issue 10)" key="name-410194" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">The</hi> <hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Thirteenth Clue<lb TEIform="lb"/> Or The Story Of The Signal Cabin Mystery</hi>
</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(By <name type="person" key="name-408399" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Redmond Phillips</hi>
</name>.)</hi>
</byline>
<div2 id="t1-body-d6-d1" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">These incidents are complete in themselves, but the characters are all related.</hi>
</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d6-d2" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">Chapter VII.</head>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">For</hi> those many brave souls who have become immersed in this highly complex tale of mystery, it will be sufficient to remember that Imp-skill Lloyd had returned to Matamata in an aeroplane and a pair of bathing V's, after adjudicating in the British Llama Festival at Dunedin. His encounter in that city with Archie Teaswell, the manufacturer of Teas-well's Tasty Toffees, provides the basis of this month's instalment. Do not forget the milkmaid's sad lapse, or the strange circumstances of Gillespie's disappearance. Forget all about the dizzy doings at the coroner's inquest and read on.</p>
<p TEIform="p">All night long Impskill wrote, and into the next day and the next, his fingers quivering and cramping as they drove the pencil across a vast white acreage of paper. The pencil circled and zig-zagged on a seismological track, pirouetted and stabbed, reeling under the impact of cerebral shocks that illumined and penetrated the clue-cluttered labyrinth of his mind. His nerves were trembling telegraphic wires, thought impelled, whipping his digital extremities into a frenzy of performance.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The disordered events of the last few days, the over-heated dream and phantasmagoric entrance of the coroner's witnesses, the milkmaid's confession, the llamas and Gillespie's strange disappearance, no longer tortured him. The solution he had arrived at was clear-cut and ridiculously simple. He cursed himself for his stupidity in failing to distinguish the really important aspects of the crime. It was only a chance remark of Teaswell's at the Llama Festival that gave him the idea. How could he have suspected the existence of a secret society? It gave the crime a different complexion, and pointed to the work of a great but warped intelligence directing, not an individual, but a group. The twelve Possible Causes were the work of a detestable organization, and history would have a new crime to, set down in its calendar—crime by community. And so he stumbled on the existence of the Matamata Vice Squad….</p>
<p TEIform="p">As he wrote he saw the bespatted Teaswell chiding the llamas into domestic submission. Archie, bland and debonair, in strange communion with llamas. It was all so funny, and yet somehow neither ridiculous nor obscene, but fundamental and absolute. Teaswell, distributing Teaswell's Tasty Toffee to avid but perplexed llamas. Why had he allowed himself to become involved? Six months before he had doubted the very existence of the absurd creatures, and was not sure whether they were some kind of Tibetian ecclesiastical dignitaries, or a species of Peruvian goat. Even now, when he was still uncertain, he could not rid his mind of the picture of Archie making nice little after-dinner speeches to rows and rows of llamas.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Day came. The wife of a bag snatcher slunk with her bucket under his casement, and the unshod mare excruciatingly pawed the gravel. A Hindu, bottle in hand, eluded the Schipperke and trod savagely on the alley cat. All this was real and urgent and immediate. Gillespie was gone, by what dark channel might never be known. He knew he must go out and take up the search, yet could not. The Possible Cause held him, and always he saw a sharp-edged lump of Teaswell's Tasty Toffee, the most coolly callous, and cloysomely dangerous sweetmeat, wedged in the gullet of Patrick Lauder. “Lauder still in coffin. Stop. Toffee in throat. Stop. Throat in advanced state of decomposition….”</p>
<p TEIform="p">As long as he lived, he could never forget that night of the Llama Festival, how he stayed with Teaswell when all Dunedin slept (or did that cautious city sleep, but only crouch watchfully in its tartan bed?). It was the queerest confession that his host had made, and he offered it not with contrition and tears, but blandly and archly with twinklings of suppressed triumph. He might have been Maske-lyne performing before an incredulous Houdini.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Three facts were clear to Impskill Lloyd, and from them he built up his theses with mathematical precision:</p>
<p TEIform="p">(a) Teaswell was the manufacturer of a toffee, a specimen of which had been found in the throat of Lauder.</p>
<p TEIform="p">(b) Teaswell had lived in Matamata until recently.</p>
<pb id="n22" n="21" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">(c) The third fact, so clearly established, was the man's unbounded depravity. He had seen him with the llamas—and that was enough.</p>
<p TEIform="p">“You may remember this pamphlet of mine, Lloyd,” he said. He vanished behind the arras and dragged a saratoga into the middle of the floor. “These are the Society's minutes. Wouldn't Fanning and the Mayor love
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail021a" id="Gov11_10Rail021a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">“I called it “The Things that Matter in Matamata.'”</head>
</figure>
to have them!” He selected a typed folder and held it up to the light. “It contains the entire philosophy of the cult as propounded by myself. I called it. ‘The Things that Matter in Matamata.’ Wholly delightful. Something had to be done for those young people. They were dying of boredom, and didn't know what to do with their leisure. I suppose they have the five-day week now. God, how awful! The milkmaid was my first disciple, and so zealous….” He chuckled and tweeked his bow-tie. “She it was who set fire to the manse, and threw the District Nurse into the horse-pond. She brought her mother-in-law, and within a fortnight we were twelve.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">And then the disgusting recital began. The mysterious ills that had befallen Matamata during his years of occupation were jauntily explained. Impskill, sunk low in an ottoman, froze with horror. When he had seen Teaswell at the Llama Festival performing with his llamas he had suspected the man of complex and unfathomable depravities. The whole atmosphere of the Toffee Factory, which he had inspected in the morning, was overcharged. A man could not grow straight and hard there, and Teaswell had his roots in candy. As they walked, a column of peppermint rock crashed and splintered in their path. A young girl, struck with the flying fragments, uttered a wild scream of pain and collapsed on a tub of candy floss. The whole place was like that. Phantasmagoric and saccharine. And here was the prime cause of Possible Causes, expounding his infamies, boasting of his debased experiments, little suspecting the deadly trap he was setting himself. Had he not been so nauseated Lloyd would have rubbed his hands with glee at what was tantamount to an unequivocal confession…. They called themselves, under his fiendish tuition, the Disciples of Death. It was they who gave home-brew to the King Country, and birth-control to the Urewera. Grave-snatching, bag-snatching and cradle-snatching were not the least of their villainies, and petty larceny was a <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">fait accompli</hi> amongst the merest novices in the group. It was a cult that set small-town boredom at defiance, that began with minor breaches of the law, and ended….?</p>
<p TEIform="p">Impskill lurched out of his chair and anchored on the saratoga. “Call me a taxi, Teaswell,” he managed to say.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Teaswell touched his cuff links and beamed implacably. “I regret,” he said, “that I cannot render you that service. The taxi-drivers are much too busy completing their questionnaires for the Taxi Commission. You will have to walk.” His hand went out and he pressed a small knob protruding from a handsome bas-relief panel which depicted the growth of agriculture in Thessaly. Teaswell was a cultured man…. The wall fell away, and Impskill found himself standing at the head of a narrow flight of stairs. “Down there,” said his host with an imperious gesture, “and turn to the right.” He dumbly obeyed and after much groping found himself once more on the open road….</p>
<p TEIform="p">The Twelve Possible Causes, abstractions mathematically conceived, had become gibbering phantoms. But now, standing in the open window, shorn of the V's that had so cunningly disguised him, he saw them as twelve men and women, real and wicked, evil-doers with blood on their hands. The blood of Patrick Lauder. His report was completed and he was tempted to file it with the proper authorities and leave the Police to prosecute. But the insatiable curiosity of the Lloyds would not be satisfied with this procedure. He burned to identify the personnel of the Disciples of Death. Who were the depraved souls sheltering behind its anonymity? Would the Public Livers of Matamata be incriminated by the exposure? Teaswell had named no names, and the identification was a task that appealed to the sleuth. “To Matamata,” he muttered, and hurriedly disguised himself as a dental nurse….</p>
<p TEIform="p">P.C. Fanning had little to report, save that the coroner had made an open verdict.</p>
<p TEIform="p">“They're buryin’ wot's left in the mornin'. Might be worth a walk to the cemetery.” The strange disguise of Lloyd left him unmoved and, indeed, had the Great Man effected an entrance in orthodox habiliments, his disappointment would have been profound.</p>
<p TEIform="p">“It is absolutely essential that I should remain anonymous,” he said to Fanning. “The Twelve Possible Causes may be twelve leading citizens.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">“You might take a look at the horse-doctor,” volunteered the constable. “That draught horse we examined the other night ‘ad been interfered with … and keep your eye on the County Chairman. Look's a thorough-goin’ garrotter that bloke.” The idea of plurality of murderers delighted his simple heart, even if he failed to grasp the complex psychology of the experiment motive. “Seems to me you oughter have a proper motive,” he argued. He produced a copy of the licensing poll for 1904, and the two of them combed the lists until early morning. At midnight, the suspects stood at twenty, but after a careful reexamination it was decided to place the entire population under observation. The next night and the next, he devoted to a careful study of the nocturnal habits of the Postmistress. She was a squat little woman with a black mole on her right eyelid, which gave her an alert and suspicious appearance. She was dressed from head to foot in unbleached linen and disappeared every evening at nine-thirty into a grove of lupins near the Post Office.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail021b" id="Gov11_10Rail021b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">“Hurriedly disguised himself as a dental nurse.”</head>
</figure>
<pb id="n23" n="22" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail022a" id="Gov11_10Rail022a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail022b" id="Gov11_10Rail022b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail022c" id="Gov11_10Rail022c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail022d" id="Gov11_10Rail022d" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
<pb id="n24" n="23" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">Lying in a bed of water-cress he watched her, and could find no apparent reasons for her dubious behaviour. It was wet and odorous in the ditch, and his blue nurse's smock was ruined. He thought of the creature comforts of the police station, and stealthily moved in that direction…. Before a blazing fire he allowed his mind to travel over the incidents of the day. Out of a population of 1,200, seventeen had been wholly exonerated. The old inductive method never fails, he thought drowsily. Never fails. The flames licked and danced, and sap foamed at the ends of logs. He heard the clock strike three in uncanny silence, and rural noises far off. He heard a faint scuffling at the door, a noise of a lock being turned, and before he could move in his chair the door was flung open, and a heavy form lurched into the room.</p>
</div2>
<div2 id="t1-body-d6-d3" type="subsection" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div2">
<head TEIform="head">“Gillespie!” he gasped.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Gillespie stood there, white and motionless. In one hand he held a pyrex dish, and in the other, Lloyd saw to his horror, a cucumber.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(To be continued.)</hi>
</p>
</div2>
</div1>
<div1 id="t1-body-d7" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Popularity of the Railways</hi>.</head>
<p TEIform="p">Still they come! The long list of successful railroad film romances is further extended by “Florida Special,” in which the whole of the action takes place on the train. Jack Oakie, Frances Drake and Kent Taylor are the stars of this romantic, and often vastly amusing production. The printing press is also adding its quota to the undiminished popularity of the railway. “Famous British Trains,” by R. Bernard Way, is a book every train lover will enjoy. It tells the history of British trains, and much about the country through which they travel. A volume that would make a splendid Christmas gift book to a railwayman friend.</p>
<p TEIform="p">—O.W.W.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Mr. Punch's famous advice “To those about to marry” was “Don't.” Stevenson counselled girls if they thought of marriage, to “marry a smoker.” He knew! Smokers are easier to get on with, 99 times out of 100, than non-smokers, less exacting, easier pleased, less faddy, more generous, better tempered. Good tobacco rubs the rough corners off life and makes for contentment. But a whole lot depends on the quality of the tobacco. For brands there are which do not tend to make the smoker a model husband! On the contrary if they contain a lot of nicotine they may make him far from amiable and render him cross and peevish. The safest tobaccos are the genuine “toasted.” Toasting extracts the nicotine and makes for good health, bodily and mentally. There are five brands only of these famous blends; Navy Cut No. 3 (Bulldog), Cut Plug No. 10 (Bullshead), Cavendish, River-head Gold and Desert Gold. The two last make the most delicious cigarettes money can buy. All these brands are harmless. Attempts to imitate them have all failed. They are inimitable!<hi rend="sup" TEIform="hi">*</hi>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail023a" id="Gov11_10Rail023a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail023b" id="Gov11_10Rail023b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Photo., Thelma R. Kent).</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
A fine specimen of the tree fern on the shores of Lake Roto-ehu, North Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
<pb id="n25" n="24" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail024a" id="Gov11_10Rail024a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail024b" id="Gov11_10Rail024b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n26" n="25" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 id="t1-body-d8" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="By the Quiet Waters of Wakatipu: An Ideal Holiday Resort" key="name-410195" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">By the Quiet Waters of Wakatipu.</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/> <hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">An Ideal Holiday Resort</hi>.</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(By “<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Tourist</hi>.”)</hi>
</byline>
<p TEIform="p">In the calm peace of Queenstown's cradled beauty, in a setting of mountain and lake, exquisite in contour and overwhelmingly impressive in grandeur, there is found every desirable holiday pleasure.</p>
<p TEIform="p">You may walk by the lake, in the clear sunshine of a peaceful morning, to the jetty where the big trout leap for minced meat and the little ducks dive for bread. You may steam to the head of the lake and watch from the deck the unfolding of soul-stirring panoramas, where the scenic beauty of sheltered coves and mountain ravines and forest verdure charm and inspire the spirit. You may motor through the precipitous passes of the Skipper's drive up the route of the treacherous Shotover, or down to the old-world restfulness, the placid content of Maestown and Arrowtown—dreaming, in quiet stillness, of those bustling gold-mining days of last century. You may tramp in the early morning to the top of Ben Lomond, or fish the banks of the Kawarau below the ramparts of that now-famous Kawarau Dam; or you may shop in the heart of Queens-town for local curios in many small bazaars of quaint old-worldness that cater for the desires of memento-hunting tourists. In the season there is no fruit more pleasing than the strawberries picked in the gardens adjacent to the township, and the Peninsula Park has the loveliest of gardens, looking out through lazy tree fronds in both directions over the blue of Lake Wakatipu. Here tennis and bowls are played, and an amazing variety of native trees grow in a cultivated luxuriance.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Kinloch and Glenorchy, the townships at the lake head are the starting places for many very wonderful alpine expeditions. “Grandest of all the peaks in the Wakatipu country,” writes Mr. James Cowan, “is Mt. Earnslaw, and here, at Glenorchy, one is reminded that that climbing pioneer, the Rev. W. G. Green, with his two Swiss guides and two other companions, set out for the ascent of the eastern arete of Earnslaw in 1882. But few people want to tackle such a giant of the icy Alps. Most of us are content with easier jaunts, and, of course, everyone wants to see Paradise. That elysian spot is more readily reached than the stranger would imagine, it is only ten miles or so away.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail025a" id="Gov11_10Rail025a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Rly. Publicity photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Queenstown, on the shores of Lake Wakatipu, South Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">“The Rees Valley and the Lennox Falls make another expedition of unusual charm—a river of utter peace—except in the time of floods—a tussock plain shut in by long shouldering slants of ranges, Earnslaw's shining glaciers, and grand old forests hanging on its mountain side. And water-falls—they are so many in this land of streams that a cascade has to be of a beauty almost indescribable in words to be singled out for mention over the others. Mere photographs are inadequate for the proper picturing of this country; even an artist's brush is not altogether satisfying.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">“I always come here in the spring time, to get fit for the Christmas rush, and I always come up in the autumn—to get over it!” In these words one wise business man explained both the healing virtues of Queenstown and his own unfailing youthfulness. For this place of heartsease has its clientele of regular visitors who have tried elsewhere but found nothing quite so good.</p>
<pb id="n27" n="26" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail026a" id="Gov11_10Rail026a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail026b" id="Gov11_10Rail026b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n28" n="27" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 decls="text-5-bibl" id="t1-body-d9" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" key="name-410196" TEIform="name">Historical notes on Hamilton Railway Bridge.</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(By <name type="person" key="name-407981" TEIform="name">A. S. <hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Wansbrough</hi>
</name>, M.Inst.C.E., Designing Engineer, New Zealand Railways.)</hi>
</byline>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail027a" id="Gov11_10Rail027a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">The Hamilton Railway Bridge, in 1906.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">The</hi> Railway bridge over the Waikato River at Hamilton was designed in 1880 in the office of the late Mr. John Blackett, M.Inst.C.E., Chief Engineer for the North Island. Mr. Blackett came to New Zealand in 1851, entering the service of the General Government of New Zealand in 1870, and becoming Chief Engineer for the North Island in 1878, in which capacity he let the contract for the bridge. In 1884, he became Engineer-in-Chief for the Colony.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The original bridge was of three pin-jointed Warren deck girder spans of steel, each 132 feet long and continuous over two cast iron cylinder piers and supported at the ends on massive concrete piers. At each of the shore ends of the main spans were two 20 feet timber built-beam spans. The cylinders were 7 feet diameter, the pair nearest the Hamilton side being 160 feet long, and the pair nearest the Claudelands side 136 feet long. The respective depths below rail level would be 181 ft. and 157 ft., and depth below the river bed 78 feet and 54 feet respectively. The bridge was designed for a combined live and dead load of I 3/4 tons per foot, giving very little margin over the weight of the locomotives then running.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The first contract for the construction of the bridge was let on 3rd November, 1881, to W. Sims, for £5,519, but nothing was done and the contract was terminated. On 18th September, 1882, a new contract was let to J. R. Stone for £4,312/13/6, exclusive of the casting of the cylinders. These were supplied by A. &amp; G. Price, of Thames, the contract price being £1,376. The bridge was completed about the end of July, 1883, but was not brought into use until the opening of the Hamilton-Morrinsville railway on 1st October, 1884. The line to Cambridge was opened a week later.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The bridge was tested by the late Mr. John Coom, M.Inst.C.E., Resident Engineer at Auckland for the newly constituted Working Railways Department, on 5th December, 1884. A class F engine, and a class L engine coupled together, a total load of 40 ½ tons distributed over 40 feet, were placed on the centre of each span in turn. The deflection was about ¼ inch on each span, the effect of the continuity being noticeable in the adjoining span rising about one-sixteenth of an inch at the centre in each case.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail027b" id="Gov11_10Rail027b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Hugh Bennett, photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
A. typical suburban train on the New Zealand Railways. Locomotive No. 767 (WAB Class) with an Auckland-Waitakere train at Morningside station, North Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">The load was then increased to 117 tons on 123 feet by attaching to the locomotives three pairs of timber trollies loaded with rails. The deflection was from ½ inch to 5/8 inch, and this train was passed over the bridge at 10 or 12 miles per hour without appreciably increasing the deflection. Both Mr. Coom and Mr. F. W. Mac-Lean, M.Inst.C.E., who was associated with him on that occasion, later rose to the position of Chief Engineer to the New Zealand Railway Department.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The F and L class of tank engines, approximately 20 tons each, were the heaviest engines in use at that time in the Auckland district, which was then an isolated section. No example of the original L class engine is now in existence, but there are still several F engines in use for shunting purposes only. The heaviest axle load of any engine in use on the Auckland section at that time was 7 tons, and the designers of the bridges of that day did not think it necessary to design for any heavier loading, not visualising the remarkable expansion of railway development in the next fifty-years. A bridge of this class would to-day be designed for 18 tons axle loads.</p>
<p TEIform="p">There was no footbridge over the original bridge, but planks laid down the centre for the convenience of Railway
<pb id="n29" n="28" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail028a" id="Gov11_10Rail028a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail028b" id="Gov11_10Rail028b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail028c" id="Gov11_10Rail028c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<pb id="n30" n="29" TEIform="pb"/>
Maintenance workmen soon encouraged trespass by pedestrians, and the Resident Engineer had difficulty in preventing it. In May, 1887, he reported: “The Town Clerk, although I have written to him, still persists in crossing. Shall I take legal proceedings?” and received the reply, “Yes, prosecute trespassers on Hamilton bridge at once.” There is no record of what dire penalties were visited on the Town Clerk, but perhaps the Royal clemency was extended to him on the occasion of Queen Victoria's Jubilee the same month! The planking was removed, but still the more venturesome attempted to cross, but as there was no close sleepering as at present the procedure was very risky, and it was quite common for the pedestrian to finish the crossing on hands and knees.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The opening of the Rotorua line in 1894 called for heavier engines to cope with the through traffic, and in 1902 the N class engines were brought up from the south. These were tender engines, six-coupled, weighing 45 ½ tons including tender, in working trim. The tenders had to be lightened, the overall length increased by putting in a false headstock, and the speed kept down to 10 miles per hour to keep the engines within the capacity of the bridge. The strengthening of the structure began to be contemplated as early as 1898. The Railway Department would not allow a footway to be constructed on the bridge until it should be strengthened.</p>
<p TEIform="p">In 1900 the Hamilton Burgesses’ Association carried without dissent a resolution “that the Government be asked to construct a road for foot passengers on the Hamilton Railway bridge when carrying out the contemplated improvements to the structure.” The Minister replied that “when this bridge is re-constructed a footway will be constructed. It is not, however, intended to put the work in hand for some considerable time yet.” Similar answers were given to further requests from the Mayor of Hamilton, the Chairman of the Kirikiriroa Road Board, and the Claudelands residents. A deputation waited on Sir Joseph Ward in 1902, who advised the Council to go in for an independent suspension bridge, estimated to cost £850. A deputation to Mr. Seddon in 1903 reminded him of Sir Joseph Ward's promise, but Mr. Seddon, after reading the letter produced, “smilingly remarked that the letter was very diplomatic, and that his colleague had not committed himself very deeply.” He added that he believed in the old French proverb, “Heaven helps those who help themselves.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">The opening of the Waihi line in 1905, and the Taupo Timber Company's private line made the strengthening of the railway bridge an urgent necessity, and early the following year plans were prepared for the work, to be spread over the next two years. The Waikato County Council agreed to pay £500 for the construction of a footway on the strengthened bridge, and £25 per annum for maintenance. The £500 was ultimately paid, however, by the Roads Department.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The accompanying photograph, taken in 1906 just prior to the strengthening of the bridge, shows the bridge of two girders on two cylinders to each pier, with no footway and the sleepers wide-spaced. It also shows the sparseness of settlement on the Claudelands side and gives some indication of the expansion of the town in the subsequent thirty years.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Plans were complete in 1906 for strengthening the bridge by adding a third cylinder and a third girder, the railway being shifted to the centre of the three girders, over which the load was distributed by long steel cross-girders. The built-beam shore spans were replaced with steel plate girders. A contract was let for the cylinders on 14th September, 1906, to S. Luke &amp; Co., Wellington, for £2,354, and one for the fabrication of the superstructure on 8th January, 1907, to A. &amp; T. Burt, Limited, Dunedin, for £5,872, the erection to be carried out by the Railway Department.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The decking was completely renewed in jarrah in 1920, and in 1932 another renewal was contemplated.
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail029a" id="Gov11_10Rail029a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">District Engineer's and New Works Staff, Wellington.—Back Row (Left to Right): Messrs. E. O. Moore, D. S. Woodley, W. G. Tiller, W. C. S. Tilsley, F. R. W. Green, J. Young, E. V. Friend, E. H. Lovatt, H. J. Heron. Middle Row: J. G. Tandy, N. O. Russell, B. P. Dillon, G. Shrimpton, J. M. A. Devlin, A. E. Shaw, K. H. Le May, W. G. Keating, R. A. McDougall, T. Duignan, E. R. Willkinson. Front Row: H. H. Thompson (Foreman of Works), W. E. Puddy (Assistant Engineer), T. A. Anderson (Assistant Engineer), R. H. Lovatt (Assistant District Engineer), H. L. P. Smith (District Engineer), W. B. Lee (Chief Clerk), C. H. M. Hawk (First Assistant Engineer), B. Tangney (Second Clerk), J. Brough (Inspector Permanent Way). Absentees: E. R. Williams, T. A. Harrison, A. C. E. Rippon, W. J. Dunlevey, E. W. Chesterman, A. A. Walker, E. M. Simpson.</head>
</figure>
At the same time a further strengthening of the main structure became necessary to carry the new K class locomotives weighing 135 tons with 15 tons axle loads, and renewal of the decking was held over pending the larger works. In 1934, Mr. R. Worley, A.M.Inst.C.E., Borough Engineer, submitted an attractive design for a new footway in steel, of electrically welded construction. The footway, which consisted of 14 feet 8 inch spans supported on the cross girders and main rail beams, was fabricated by the Borough staff and inserted in place by the Railway staff as the work of strengthening proceeded. The deck consisted of a bituinastic surface carried on a steel plate. The Council agreed to pay the Department £105 for the extra work due to the presence of the footway, to lay and maintain the asphaltic surface, paint the completed footway and maintain the footway in lieu of the previous annual payment.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The strengthening of the bridge consisted in the are welding of flange plates on top chords, cross girders, and main rail beams, while the pin joints were strengthened by welding on plates uniting adjacent lower chord members in such a way as to relieve the pins of part of the load. This work was completed in May of the present year. The whole superstructure is now of steel except the subsidiary rail beams of 12 inches by 9 inches ironbark. The total cost of the strengthening was £5,200, and with the one exception of the Makohine Viaduct the bridge is the most notable example in the Dominion of the strengthening of a large steel structure by electric welding.</p>
<pb id="n31" n="30" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail030a" id="Gov11_10Rail030a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail030b" id="Gov11_10Rail030b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail030c" id="Gov11_10Rail030c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n32" n="31" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 decls="text-6-bibl" id="t1-body-d10" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Our Southern Coast: Off The Beaten Track In The South Island" key="name-410197" TEIform="name">Our Southern Coast.<lb TEIform="lb"/> <hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Off The Beaten Track In The South Island</hi>.</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(By <name type="person" key="name-408031" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Dorothy Wiseman</hi>
</name>.)</hi>
</byline>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">We</hi> New Zealanders frequently hear of the glories of our West Coast. Our East Coast, too, gets its share of the limelight. Of North Coast, of course, we have practically none, but of our very interesting and quite extensive Southern Coast we scarcely hear a whisper. Far down “at the bottom of New Zealand” it lies, Murihiku, where one of the canoes was beached at the first coming of the Maori, and along which and about which we had an opportunity some little time ago, to make a leisurely and entrancing journey.</p>
<p TEIform="p">From Balclutha, that flourishing South Otago town, we motored over a fine metalled road to Waikawa at the northern end of the South Coast, and the real starting point of our journey. The road from Balclutha takes the traveller through magnificent bush and coastal scenery, notably the Catlins River district, named after an early pioneer, Captain Edward Catlin, of Sydney, who, following the profitable practice of many others, early on the scene in New Zealand, bought 650,000 acres of this country from a Maori chief for £30. It was then densely forested, and still has large areas of splendid bush.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Waikawa, whence our journey was to be continued on foot, on horseback, and occasionally by car, was once a busy whaling station. Now it is a sleepy little village, prettily set on the coast among beautiful native trees.</p>
<p TEIform="p">We did not linger in little Waikawa, but rode off down the beach next morning to Curio Bay. That glorious three-mile ride over firm white sands, on a heavenly morning was something to be remembered, and so indeed was Curio Bay, when at length we came to it. This tiny bay has been visited by geologists and scientists from all over the world. It presents the extraordinary features of an extinct forest which was buried in the mud during the jurassic period. Here are the petrified stumps of trees, solid fossils showing all the natural markings that the trees had before they were turned to stone, and one finds on the beach fragments of rocks containing perfect fossil forms of ferns and other plants. Geologists say that millions of years have passed since these forest relics were living things. A great many of Curio Bay's fossilised trees and shrubs have, of course, gone, piece by piece, into the insatiable maw of the souvenir hunter.</p>
<p TEIform="p">So down the beach we rode again to Slope Point, and here we turned inland through bits of beautiful bush scenery. Temporarily we were leaving the Southern Ocean behind us, for we were now to spend a few days at a Southland farmhouse. Here, besides learning among other interesting things that the Southland “swede” (turnip, of course) stands practically supreme among the turnips of the world, and that modest little Southland also makes some of the world's finest cheese, we were fortunate in meeting and talking with Mr. John Ross, to whom, with his brother, belongs the distinction of having discovered, in 1898, the last found specimen of the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Notornis</hi> or takahe, that rare native bird which inhabited the wild mountain country of South-western Otago, and of which only three specimens had previously been found. This particular one was caught in the vicinity of Lake Te Anau by one of the Ross brothers’ dogs, and unfortunately too badly hurt when recovered for its life to be saved.
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail031a" id="Gov11_10Rail031a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Photo., Thelma R. Kent).</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
A view of Lake Howden, showing the Humboldt Range in the background, South Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
Being students of bird life the Rosses realised that their find was a valuable one and lost no time in sending it to Invercargill to be correctly treated. When the fact was established that the bird was a specimen of the rare takahe, the Rosses offered it for sale to the New Zealand Government, who asked for a fortnight in which to consider whether or not they would buy it. During that time several cables were received by the Ross brothers from Rothchild's, offering them more and more tempting sums for their find. They kept faith with the Government, however, to whom they had offered the bird in the belief that it ought to remain in New Zealand, and when at the end of the fortnight the Government elected to buy, the bird was sold for a very modest sum indeed, and may be seen in the Otago Museum at Dunedin to-day.</p>
<p TEIform="p">To these two brothers belongs the further distinction of having been the very first guides on the Milford Track, and Mr. Ross has many a wonderful tale to tell of his years there, when the famous track was lonely, isolated and splendid indeed, and when none but a real he-man might tackle its rigours.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Southland abounds in bird life. Tuis and bellbirds and other natives generally thought to be growing rather scarce, are a common sight along these country roadsides. The pretty little shining cuckoo, with his gleaming bronze wings and his barred breast, here sits on the fences and heralds
<pb id="n33" n="32" TEIform="pb"/>
the spring quite openly and cheekily, and in spring, too, come the funny little long-legged dotterels, all the way from Siberia, to scratch together a few stones in the open paddock, and in this light-hearted apology for a nest, set up their casual housekeeping. Hosts of sea-birds, too, frequent these southern shores—penguins, mutton-birds, mollymawks. It is a wonderful field for the student of bird life.</p>
<p TEIform="p">But we must be moving on—to Wai-papa Point and Fortrose. Down to the sea once more. At Waipapa Point there is now a lighthouse, for it was off here that the steamer <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Tararua</hi> was wrecked in a thick haze on the morning of Friday, 29th April, 1881. Down behind the yellow sandhills we found the burial-place of those of the hundred and thirty-odd victims whose bodies were recovered from the sea.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Upon the beaches in these regions sensational finds of ambergris have been made from time to time. Of course, ambergris is not now what it once was as a commercial proposition, though it is still well worth finding, but in the past, fortunes have been made from the discovery and sale of a sizeable lump. A story is told here-abouts of a certain farmer, the owner of a good, though heavily mortgaged farm. This man was riding along the beach one evening when his horse shied violently at a dark chunk of something lying on the sand. The farmer, enraged at this flightiness, used his whip till the animal was forced unwillingly to pass. Two young-men riding a short distance behind, idly curious as to the cause of this little episode, dismounted and investigated. The dark lump was a large piece of ambergris, and with the proceeds from its sale—some thousands of pounds—the two brothers purchased the property of the farmer, who, if he had not been so preoccupied with making his horse behave, could have paid off his mortgage twice over with the object of its fears!</p>
<p TEIform="p">Fortrose was once a busy whaling station. Now, it too, sleeps beside the sea—a cluster of cottages, a store or two, the yellow gorse, and a battered little cemetery.</p>
<p TEIform="p">From Fortrose there is a glorious view across Foveaux Strait to Stewart Island, whose highest point, Mount Anglem, rises a soft deep blue between sea and sky, and far down upon the horizon lie the titi or mutton-bird islands—faint, blue, mysterious, as isles of faery.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The road from Fortrose to Inver-cargill, a distance of some forty miles, is rather unimpressive, though one crosses on the way one of the most prolific whitebait rivers in New Zealand, the Titiroa, on whose banks parties of whitebaiters live in huts for the whole of the whitebait season. To these men whitebaiting is no idle sport, but a stern matter of business, as much as £4 or £5 a kerosene-tin full being realised at the beginning of a season. Also noticeable on this route are some of Southland's country schools, all painted a pleasant buff colour with white facings, and with the name set in a prominent position in black letters on a white board, all very neat and natty.</p>
<p TEIform="p">In Invercargill, a flat sensibly-planned and wholly admirable city, we did not linger, but sped on our way to Bluff, seventeen miles away. Immediately one leaves Invercargill, there bursts upon the view the solitary great hill of Bluff, <hi rend="b" TEIform="hi">the</hi> bluff, of course, and also that impressive landmark, the Awarua Wireless Station—towering from the plain—a four hundred foot latticed steel mast, built by Telefunken Ltd., a German company, just before the War.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail032a" id="Gov11_10Rail032a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(A. Vaughan).</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
In Milford Sound, South Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">Maoris are plentiful in Bluff, though there are few of them now who do not show some admixture of pakeha blood. On the outside walls of all their houses may be seen hanging the kelp bags in which the mutton-birds, those highly-prized delicacies, are stored.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The taking of mutton-birds forms part of the inalienable rights of the Maori. No white person may accompany the expeditions which leave every year when the season opens for the titi islands, rocky uninhabited islets scattered in and about the waters of Foveaux Strait. On these islands the mutton-birds breed, and it is early in
<pb id="n34" n="33" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail033a" id="Gov11_10Rail033a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Photo., The'ma R. Kent).</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
The ice-fields and summit of Graham's Saddle, Southern Alps, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
April, just before they are ready to start on their annual migration across the Pacific and the young birds are fat and tender, that the expeditions of the Maoris take place. The Government conveys the parties to and from their hunting-grounds where they remain for the season, and the “fare,” we were told, is paid by the Maoris to the Government in mutton-birds, so many sacks out of the total catch being earmarked for this purpose.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Quaint little Bluff! Many a pleasant hour we spent there gazing from the sunny hillside across the Strait to Rakiura (Stewart Island), “Land of Glowing Skies,” while the surface of the ocean was clouded with flocks of mutton-birds and gulls, or we would sit on the beach and dream and plan, as one does when on holiday, and eat hot fried oysters and potato chips, sultana biscuits and buns, washing down this dietician's nightmare with copious draughts of beer, ginger or otherwise, and feeding on our left-overs the hordes of greedy seabirds that hopped about the rocks on their slender red legs.</p>
<p TEIform="p">It was with some regret that we left Bluff at length to continue our journey. Back to Invercargill we went, and out through Otatara where the golf links are, to Oreti Sands, a firm white sandy beach, one of the finest in New Zealand, upon which the long rollers of the Southern Ocean break and roar, and where, they told us, the inimitable toheroa is to be found.</p>
<p TEIform="p">It is possible by riding or walking round this beach to reach Riverton, the oldest settlement in Southland, but instead we drove the twenty-four miles to Riverton over a good road. It is a picturesque little town situated on the estuary of the Aparima River at the point of its confluence with the Pourakino, and as far back as 1836 was established as a whaling station by Captain John Howell. The names of many of the old whalers are perpetuated in the place names hereabouts, a rather noteworthy one being “Gummie's Bush,” named after a notorious old character, who amongst his other attractions had scarcely a tooth in his head. Hence !!</p>
<p TEIform="p">From Riverton we now drove on through Colac Bay and Round Hill, certainly the roundest hill one could possibly imagine, to Orepuki on the coast once more. In the romantic “early days” Orepuki was one of the “gold” towns, unique in that the gold, over £1,000,000 worth, was mostly recovered by beach-combers from the shores of Te Wae Wae Bay, on which the town stands. Since the gold days, extensive shale deposits have been found in the neighbourhood and worked with varying degrees of success from time to time.</p>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail033b" id="Gov11_10Rail033b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Photo., Thelma R. Kent).</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Mountain lilies which grow in great profusion in the Southern Alps of New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
</p>
<p TEIform="p">Still following the coast for some distance we now made for Tuatapere. The character of the country here began to change rapidly. The level, fertile plains were left behind, and hills appeared once again, growing taller and more rugged as the road proceeded. There was heavy bush—Tuatapere is the largest saw-milling centre in Southland—and there were too, alas, large areas of sheer gaunt desolation, caused by bush fires. Tuatapere is a very <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">bushy</hi> bush township, literally hacked out of the forest. We began to realise here amongst the dense forest and the grim grey hills, just a little of what the mountain country of the south-west, whose fringes we were now barely touching, must be like.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Tuatapere stands upon the Waiau River, outlet of Lake Manapouri, and the swiftest river—and one of the most beautiful—in New Zealand. Overhung by heavy bush, the Waiau whirls along, powerful, deep and menacing. At its mouth, six miles from the township, it is responsible for
<pb id="n35" n="34" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail034a" id="Gov11_10Rail034a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail034b" id="Gov11_10Rail034b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail034c" id="Gov11_10Rail034c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<pb id="n36" n="35" TEIform="pb"/>
a curious formation. In its swift arrogance, the river seems to come unexpectedly upon the sea, and in a violent effort to avert its fate, turns at right angles and flows, speed and volume unabated, along the beach parallel with the sea. Between sea and river there has formed a high, narrow bank of stones. On one side of this flows the sullen, hurrying stream, while on the other booms the angry surf. At last, of course, the unequal struggle must be relinquished.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The Waiau has excellent trout, and is, besides, the only river in this country frequented by that wonderful fighting fish, the Atlantic salmon. In the spring and early autumn the salmon may be seen leaping three or four feet out of the water on their way up the river. Wonderful flounders, too, are caught at the river's mouth.</p>
<p TEIform="p">We were now almost on the last lap of our journey. We had determined that we would reach Puysegur Point at the westerly end of the Southern Coast, and though we had no idea before setting out just how we would do so, we trusted that some way would present itself. Now, however, we were told very firmly that it was quite impossible for us to go any further than Port Craig, the very last outpost before the inaccessible mountains of the west begin. Port Craig is a large sawmill and practically nothing else, on the western shore of Te Wae Wae Bay. Even that we could only reach by launch, as the beach was soft and treacherous and in many places barred by rocks.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Reluctantly then we gave in. We took the launch across the bay to Port Craig “away down under,” and quite literally the last place in the South Island. Here we had a ride on the sawmill train, great high unwieldy object, locally known as the “pie-cart,” which lumbers along on wooden rails, and we had an interesting talk with an old Maori who lamented the fact that there was now scarcely a pure-blooded Maori left in Otago or Southland. Most of them, he said, could trace their first white ancestor to one of the whalers who once swarmed about these southern shores.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Many of the place names, too, that
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail035a" id="Gov11_10Rail035a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
passed as Maori were not true Maori—Orepuki, Tuatapere, Monowai, all showed the pakeha influence—even Manapouri should be Manawapouri.</p>
<p TEIform="p">And so our holiday was over! We were a little wistful about our failure to reach Puysegur Point, and thus round off completely our journey
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail035b" id="Gov11_10Rail035b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Photo., Thelma R. Kent)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Rushing waters of the Hollyford River, Eglinton Valley, South Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
along the Southern Coast, but, we reflected, if we had not seen this, the point of land first sighted by ships coming from Melbourne to New Zealand, we had seen much else that was “rich and strange,” and some day perhaps, who knows, we shall be experienced enough to take that track.</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n37" n="36" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 decls="text-7-bibl" id="t1-body-d11" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="An Early Visitor: Dr. Arnold's Son In New Zealand" key="name-410198" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">An Early Visitor</hi>.<lb TEIform="lb"/> <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Dr. Arnold's Son In New Zealand.</hi>
</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(By <name type="person" key="name-123308" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Donald Cowie</hi>
</name>.)</hi>
</byline>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">It</hi> is not generally known that a son of the famous Dr. Arnold, of Rugby, came out to New Zealand as a settler in the early days. I recently learnt this in an interesting book of reminiscences written by the Arnold in question. His impressions of the infant colony are those of a man of culture, and consequently are of unusual value. His brief connection with New Zealand, moreover, is an addition to our country's pioneer literary associations.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Thomas Arnold, junior, was born on 30th November, 1823, at the village of Laleham in Middlesex, where his father was then parish incumbent. He first went to school at Winchester, but afterwards, with his elder brother, Matthew Arnold, attended Rugby. There he had the advantage of his father's splendid training and spiritual influence. He was a contemporary of Thomas Hughes, the author of “Tom Brown's Schooldays.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">In 1842, Arnold went up to Oxford, where he numbered amongst his friends Arthur Hugh Clough, Jowett, Stanley, and J. C. Shairp. In 1845, he took a good degree; and the next year he commenced to read law. A desire to know more about the colonies, however, made him accept a Colonial Office clerkship in 1847, and in 1848 he left for New Zealand. His reasons for this step were that his father, before his death in 1842, had purchased two land sections from the New Zealand Company, and that he had become dissatisfied with England's social institutions. He had long read about New Zealand:—“The descriptions of virgin forests, snow-clad mountains, rivers not yet tracked to their sources, and lakes imperfectly known, fascinated me as they have fascinated many since. And joining the two lines of thought together, my speculative fancy suggested that in a perfect locale such as New Zealand it might be destined that the true fraternity of the future—could founders and constitution-builders of the necessary genius and virtue be discovered—might be securely built up.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">Thus expectant the young man took a passage in the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">John Wickcliffe</hi>, Otago's first immigrant ship, and sailed to New Zealand in the company of Captain Cargill, the Rev. John Nicholson, and other well-known early settlers. His first impression of the New Zealand scene, as represented by Otago harbour in the grip of a strong south-easter, was “cheerless,” and that of its human element, a squalid camp of southern Maoris, was “discouraging.” But later, when he reached Wellington and made the congenial acquaintance of Alfred Domett, then Colonial Secretary of the Province of New Munster, Godfrey Thomas, stepbrother to Governor Grey, Frederic Weld and others, he felt more at home. And when he made a journey on foot up the west coast to Otaki, the scenery impressed him very much:
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail036a" id="Gov11_10Rail036a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Theima R. Kent, photo.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
Flowering Japanese Cherry Trees, along Riccarton Avenue, Christchurch, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
“The country was a Paradise. For miles to the north and east the land was nearly level, richly grassed and thinly timbered; gentle wooded rises succeeded; and behind these rose a chain of mountains of noble outline and delicious colouring, pierced by the deep gorge through which descended soundingly the beautiful river.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">Afterwards he enquired about his father's sections, and found they were in the Makara Valley, 100 acres each. On Colonel Wakefield's advice he exchanged one of these for a more accessible section adjoining the Porirua Road, about ten miles north of Wellington; he wrote home to his father's trustees for official permission, and began clearing the land. This
<pb id="n38" n="37" TEIform="pb"/>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail037a" id="Gov11_10Rail037a" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">The Waimakariri Gorge, South Island, New Zealand—a snap taken on the occasion of a “Mystery Hike” recently organised by the Railways Department.</head>
</figure>
was heavily wooded with flourishing rata, rimu, white pine, and tawa; and Arnold had to engage labour to assist him in his operations. Eventually he had a 20 by 12 two-room hut built, and five acres of the land cleared.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Even to himself Arnold's intentions were not very clear. He had no idea of becoming a settler in a large way, but thought he might “raise some tons of potatoes and a little wheat, besides garden vegetables on the land cleared, and gradually become the possessor of a cow, a horse or two, and a few sheep.” One day Governor Grey came to see him, attracted no doubt by his name, and offered him his private secretaryship, but the young idealist, convinced that “men of independent character ought not to have anything to do with the Colonial Government so long as it was carried on by means of nominee, not representative assemblies” respectfully declined the offer. A few months later, when his section was beginning to look really shipshape, he received word from London that his father's trustees would not consent to the already consummated Porirua exchange.</p>
<p TEIform="p">This effectively closed young Arnold's career as a farmer. Thoroughly disconsolate he returned to Wellington and sought the advice of Domett. Once again his luck turned, for Domett had an immediate suggestion. This was that the young man proceed to Nelson, where there were at present no educational facilities, and open a school there. Arnold liked the idea very much, and on 4th October, 1848, departed to his charge. He was accompanied by Frederic Weld, afterwards Prime Minister, Knight, and Governor of the Straits Settlements.</p>
<p TEIform="p">En route, Arnold stayed at Weld's Flaxbourne Cove station, and experienced the famous 16th October earthquake. This was the shock that killed two persons and threw down every house of stone or brick in Wellington. Arnold records his impression thoughtfully: “The sensation produced was singular and awful, its chief element being the feeling of utter insecurity, when that which we familiarly think of as the firm and solid earth was thus heaving and rolling beneath us.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">Arnold was much taken with the scenery of Nelson, which he thought resembled that of Athens. He secured an old wooden barrack for his school, and soon had a number of pupils—“sons of the principal residents, the Swans, Elliotts, Martins, etc.”
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail037b" id="Gov11_10Rail037b" TEIform="figure">
<head TEIform="head">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(Photo. J. D. Buckley.)</hi>
<lb TEIform="lb"/>
The Wellington-New Plymouth Express at Otaki station, North Island, New Zealand.</head>
</figure>
At that time Francis Dillon Bell was agent for the New Zealand Company at Nelson, and Arnold became very friendly with him. Other acquaintances he made and enjoyed were Major Richmond, the resident magistrate, Edward Stafford, later Prime Minister, Doctors Monro and Renwick, and the Redwood family. During his stay at Nelson, moreover, Bishop Selwyn called to see Arnold, who found him “very friendly” and “a remarkably handsome man.” Not long after, a naval corvette came into port and aboard was a Lieutenant Clarke, on his way to Tasmania, where, he told Arnold, Charles Stanley from Oxford was private secretary to the Governor. As a result of this encounter Arnold received an invitation to fill the position of Inspector of Schools in Tasmania. This was too good an offer to be ignored. He left Nelson almost immediately, and, at the conclusion of a long stay with friends in Wellington, sailed away from New Zealand on 2nd December, 1849.</p>
<p TEIform="p">But he was a disappointed man. “I left New Zealand without seeing any of the vague hopes of the rise of a regenerated society within its borders fulfilled.” He could not help comparing New Zealand with ancient Greece: “Two centuries hence, should English civilisation and power be overthrown, a few ruined embankments, bridges, fragments of locomotives and dynamos, and ugly buildings of all sorts, would alone testify that here the English Empire had been planted.”</p>
<p TEIform="p">His classical education might be blamed for all this; but Arnold may yet be justified.</p>
<pb id="n39" n="38" TEIform="pb"/>
<p TEIform="p">
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail038a" id="Gov11_10Rail038a" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail038b" id="Gov11_10Rail038b" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail038c" id="Gov11_10Rail038c" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail038d" id="Gov11_10Rail038d" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
<figure entity="Gov11_10Rail038e" id="Gov11_10Rail038e" TEIform="figure">
</figure>
</p>
</div1>
<pb id="n40" n="39" TEIform="pb"/>
<div1 decls="text-8-bibl" id="t1-body-d12" type="section" org="uniform" sample="complete" part="N" TEIform="div1">
<head TEIform="head">
<title level="a" TEIform="title">
<name type="title" reg="Familiar Ships in New Zealand Waters: The “Aorangi”—Old and New" key="name-410199" TEIform="name">Familiar Ships in New Zealand Waters<lb TEIform="lb"/> The “<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">Aorangi</hi>”—<lb TEIform="lb"/> <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Old and New.</hi>
</name>
</title>
</head>
<byline TEIform="byline">
<hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">(By <name type="person" key="name-408390" TEIform="name">
<hi rend="c" TEIform="hi">J. H. Kemnitz</hi>
</name>.)</hi>
</byline>
<p TEIform="p">
<hi rend="sc" TEIform="hi">In</hi> the early ‘eighties, when an All-British route across the Atlantic, Canada and the Pacific was first mooted, Lord Strathcona described it as the “British highway between Great Britain, New Zealand and Australia.” To-day it may be said of this, one of the busiest Pacific lines, that it is in truth a highway. It was, however, the last of the British mail and passenger services to be established on a Trans-Pacific route, and the credit for starting this important line, now known as the All-Red route, belongs to the late Mr. James Huddart, an Australian shipping man.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Huddart had on his hands two new steamers, the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Miowera</hi> and the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Warri-moo</hi>, of 2,393 tons and 3,800 Ind. H.P. each, which were engaged in the Australia-New Zealand inter-colonial trade in competition with the Union Line, but there was not enough traffic for both. In 1893 Huddart secured a contract with the Canadian and New South Wales Governments to carry monthly mail between Sydney and Vancouver, calling at Brisbane, Honolulu and Victoria, B.C. The yearly subsidy was £35,000, of which the Canadian Government paid £25,000. Leaving Sydney on the 18th May, 1893, the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Miowera</hi> was the first All-Red mail steamer to cross the Pacific, she being followed a month later by the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Warrimoo</hi>. In order to maintain a monthly service, it was found that another steamer was needed. The New Zealand Shipping Company's <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Aorangi</hi> was chartered, and after proving her suitability for the run, was bought by Huddart's new Company.</p>
<p TEIform="p">Built by Wm. Denny &amp; Bros. in 1883, the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Aorangi</hi> was a 4,163 ton steamer of the highest class. With her graceful clipper bows, barque-rigging, three masts, and one funnel placed between the foremast and mainmast, she was a splendidly built ship of really striking appearance. Originally fitted with compound engines she was, after her purchase by Huddart in 1893, sent Home to have triple-expansion engines installed, the total cost of this work being £40,000. In consideration of the ships calling at Wellington instead of Brisbane, the New Zealand Government in 1896 voted a subsidy of £20,000 to the new service. In 1897, however, the Company went into liquidation, the control passing into the hands of the Union Company.</p>
<p TEIform="p">The year 1913 was a milestone in the progress of the All-Red line, the Union Company bringing out the palatial new mammoth liner <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Niagara</hi>, of 13,405 tons. As there was now no further use for the <hi rend="i" TEIform="hi">Aorangi</hi>