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I hereby certify that, after investigation of the publisher's lists and other records, the average circulation of the New Zealand Railways Magazine for the 12 months ended May, 1928, is in excess of 20,000 copies per month during the whole of that period and that, during the months of February and March, 1929, the circulation has increased to over 22,500 copies.
Controller and Auditor-General
The breaking down of barriers between nations through the ever-increasing ease with which travel on and over the earth's surface is accomplished, has had a beneficial effect upon the individuals composing them. It has widened their understanding and increased their toleration. Similarly, the diffusion of education within each nation has made social life and intercourse easier. It now has its field of action rather on a gradual inclined plane than on a series of steep steps.
In the industrial world the application of scientific research to the principles of employment has shewn the need for changes in methods of management conformable with the ameliorating process going on in social life. Psychological studies have shewn how helpful a cheerful frame of mind is to successful operation, and much thought has been devoted to devising means where-by those engaged in industry may be kept happy in their employment.
Warmth, light, and orderliness, rest periods and pleasant surroundings all aid towards removing the irksomeness of the ancient curse of Adam.
Although the Railways of this country have not a special “Sociological Department,” such as is found in some ambitious industrial companies, there is no feature of modern sociological welfare work which has not received attention here. Our new workshops have devices for removing dust and gases; they have shower-baths and fire-brigades, luncheon rooms and catering, apprentice classes and first-aid outfits, libraries, and homes for employees. The present railway sick benefit fund carries a most generous subsidy to assist those suffering from sickness or injury. All this is practical sociological work, and is in line with what current social ideas hold to be good for society in general. It supplies the framework within which opportunity is provided for healthful expansion.
But the introduction of the social element supplies probably the greatest help in making the day's work go with a swing. In a widespread organisation such as the Railways this is particularly the case. There are many places in New Zealand where small communities are composed almost entirely of railway folk. They have to make their own amusements—and some of them do it very well. The Department has done a great deal in the way of supplying social halls in many parts of the system to encourage the social side of life amongst its employees. In the larger centres, as at the principal workshops, well laid out grounds have been provided, with ample facilities for sports, and lawns and gardens help to make the
Speaking at the Railway Officers’ Institute reunion in Auckland, Mr. H. H. Sterling, General Manager of Railways, complimented the Institute on their breadth of outlook. He said that the words on the toast list concerning the Institute made one of the finest texts he knew of: “The Institute still maintains that dignity of outlook and responsibility which has characterised it from its inception; it recognises that the success of its membership is coincident with the progress of the railway service of New Zealand.
“I feel that if members of the Institute live up to that text, I, as General Manager, have a comparatively easy task before me,” Mr. Sterling said. “The Department then would give a measure of transport service satisfactory to the people owning the Railways and to do the management. I am glad to know that I have your confidence, and as far as I am able to come in contact with members of the staff they have all of mine.”
Mr. John Cameron, District Traffic Manager of Railways for the Wellington district retired last week on superannuation after completing 40 years in the service of the Department.
Mr Cameron joined the Railway service in 1889, and, after filling, with distinction, many important positions (including those of Assistant Traffic Manager at Auckland, and District Traffic Manager for the Ohakune Section), he was appointed to the high position which he recently vacated.
This country has been fortunate in the calibre of its chief departmental officers and Mr. Cameron may be added to the list of those men who, by their outstanding ability and unselfish devotion to duty, have written their names indelibly in the records of the various State Departments.
The position of District Traffic Manager in a centre such as Wellington is one of great responsibility which is ever increasing because of the revolution taking place in the transport world and the organising difficulties associated therewith.
Mr. Cameron gave much time and thought to the changing transport conditions of the times, and he was most successful in retaining and fostering new business for the Railways.
He was recognised throughout the Railway service as being right in the front as a transport officer, his technical knowledge and capacity in attention to detail being of quite an exceptional nature, whilst his relations with his large staff as well as with the public were always most cordial.
In the retirement of Mr. Cameron the Railway Department loses the services of one of its most efficient officers and his severance from the service will be keenly felt alike by the staff and by those members of the public with whom he came in contact.
A recent visitor to New Zealand was Mr. F. L. Castle, General Manager of an English railway signal company, who spent a month touring the North and South Islands. Mr. Castle has an intimate knowledge of the railway systems in the principal countries throughout the world and his opinion of our system is therefore of more than usual interest.
“New Zealand is exceedingly well advanced in electric signalling, and has little to learn from the signalling devices of other countries,” said Mr. Castle. Generally, he considered the railways were well run and the comfort and facilities offered compared more than favourably with those of other countries where railways of similar gauge were in operation. Considering the curves which were necessary to negotiate and the gradients in New Zealand, he was impressed with the degree of comfort offered.
“People have a habit of criticising their railways instead of setting out to help them,” said Mr. Castle. “The man in the street should not ‘grouse’ that the Department does not pay, but set himself out to do something for the good of the railways and the country. If he sends his goods by road the railways cannot pay. They belong to the country, and the profits are not distributed to shareholders in the form of dividends as they are in England and in many other countries, but are for the benefit of the country as a whole.”
The “Best Friend” was built by the West Point Foundry at New York, in 1830, and put into operation on the Charleston & Hamburg R.R., where it hauled the first train of cars in America. It had a vertical boiler and the cylinders, set obliquely, were six inch diameter by six inch stroke. The wheels, all of which were drivers, were made of wood, with iron hubs and tires. In terms of present day computations, the tractive force, with 50 pounds boiler pressure, was about 400 pounds. It weighed four-and-a-half tons. When its boiler exploded, due to the negro fireman placing his weight on the safety valve to prevent the steam escaping, the first locomotive boiler explosion in America was recorded.
(From “The Development of the Locomotive” published by The Central Steel Company, Massillon, Ohio, U.S.A.).
I recently had an opportunity of addressing members of the Railway Officers’ Institute at their annual social function at Auckland and I expressed a few thoughts on the matter of organisation. I regard this as a subject of such importance that I think I might well embody in this message, for general information, a few of the thoughts to which I then gave expression.
In the course of my discussions with both staff and public whenever the matter of organisation of the Department has come up, it has seemed to be regarded as some special prerogative or exclusive concern of the general management. Such an idea involves a misconception that, I think, goes to the very root of our efficiency. True, the general management lays down the general lines of the organisation of the Department, and an inadequate scheme so laid down might well be fatal to the working of the railway system; but the best scheme that might be laid down by the head of the Department will be ineffective if the organising activities of the Department's staff stop at that point. The railways are essentially a system, and their best results can be obtained only by systematic working. Organisation is nothing else but the bringing into harmony of the functions of the various parts of the system. To bring about this harmony involves the organising efforts, not of any one man, even though he be the head of the Department, but of every man on the railway staff.
Organisation runs through groups right down to individuals. Controlling officers organise the work of individuals in the groups, and higher officers are charged also with the harmonising of the work of the groups. The point I wish to emphasise is the necessity for everyone of the staff to realise that he must be an organiser. Even a man who is alone on a station has a duty to so organise his work that he will fit in with the general scheme. Lack of organisation on his part will cause disorganisation in the system. The man whose work is not ready for a train at the time the train is due to depart disorganises the work of the guard and enginedriver and of the staff at the other stations who have organised their work in anticipation of the train arriving on time. Organisation is interactionary throughout the parts of the system from the top to the bottom and from the bottom to the top. Disorganisation or lack of proper organisation at any point in the system has its inevitable reflection on the work of the system as a whole.
Another aspect of the responsibility of the staff in regard to organisation is that no system of organisation should be regarded as permanent. It is not safe to conclude that the organisation that might meet requirements to-day will do so for all time. The arrangement of duties is of such importance that it should be kept under constant review so that it may be speedily adapted to meet changing conditions.
A thorough-going degree of organisation operating throughout the system means order in our efforts, the absence of organisation means chaos, and between the two lie the varying degrees of muddlement. The work of organisation is everybody's job.
General Manager
Do/sc you ever pause, dear reader, in your pursuit of fame and fireworks, to contemplate those opti-mystic words: “Make me a child again, just for to-night.” How often have you heard this sophomorical supplication raised like the cry of a radio-uncle sore smitten with infantile paralysis in the child-welfare department, or a son of Haggis, who would, perchance, qualify for a half-price ticket as an applauder of Lauder.
From Greenland's ice-cream fountains to India's rubber bands, opti-maniacs pay good money for a bad imitation of Youth. They hie them to Vienna to get a brace of chimp's lymphs welded onto their conjunctional isthmuses, in the belief that, by monkeying with glands they may become impregnated with the germs of juvenility. True, some prefer to accept the art of plastic surgery at its face value, inclining to the belief that by wearing their ears back to front, bending the nose, putting a crimp in the cranium, and generally upholstering the facial furnishings with pseudo-moles and embroidered eyebrows, they can put back the hands of time on their clocks, and regain those careless days of soapless childhood.
Nay, dear reader, mother knows best—youth is not a matter of physique or physic; it cannot be recalled at will like the lingering flavour of garlic; neither can it be regained by wearing cast-off twiddly-bits from the zoo, nor by being insulated with Dunlop arteries.
Youth is of the arts rather than of the arteries. In speaking of rejuvenation, we do not refer to the art of make-believe or make-up, once practised by the female “juvenile lead,” in those dear old bellow-dramas we used to revel in, with titles like Yeast Lynn, Greased Sin, ‘Ell in a Glim, and The Face Round the Bathroom Door. Even the “juvenile lead” realised that rejuvenation was a matter not to be taken lightly, especially in view of her tonnage and the fact that her vocal vibrations were normally of the variety that caused movable objects to rock on their bases, bitumen to bulge, and strong men to quiver from end to end. But she, dear soul, refused to grow old, although foully treated by wicked uncles and beaten by ferocious step-mothers in a manner calculated to strain the rivets in the hull of an armour-plated armadillo.
Neither do we refer to the methods of rejuvenation urged by certain prophylactic propagandists in the monthly magazines, who shoot off salvos of subtle suggestion concerning our inner histories, which even the modern biographer might (and might not), hesitate to divulge—interrogational insinuendos, such as:—
At a curse-ory glance, such instances of human frailty as the aforementioned, have no apparent bearing on the question of youth; but the altruistic advertiser knows his homeopaths, and hastens to point out how, by such errors as wearing a hissute hiatus under the hat, and allowing our luncheons to rest heavily on our conscience, we are beating the basinette, cheating childhood, and throwing away a golden opportunity of living according to Plunket.
Believe me, dear reader, Youth depends on none of these artful aids. Youth is not in the cells, but in the cerebrum. It is only kept in the mind by keeping it in mind. It can be regained, once lost, solely by glueing the optic of optimism earnestly to the wrong end of Time's telescope and thus keeping the soda-fountain of the soul permanently refreshed with youthful effervescence.
Indulgence in retrospect is not a futility or senility—it is the secret of eternal youth. In those rare moments of sanity, snatched from an existence satiated with dough-getters, synthetic sinners, strong strident men, and the wool of the bull, an existence in which Youth and Beauty is sacrificed on the cash-register of Loot and Booty, let us slip back into mental
rompers; let us experience again the soothing influence of hot asphalt on the soles of the bare feet; let us sniff the elusive odour of good red clay on a winter's day, and perchance feel it welling greasily but fascinatingly up between the toes; let us indulge in the time-honoured practice of neglecting to wash behind the ears; let us Eat—not merely eat, but Eat!!!
Let us tear each other's collars off, tender the provocative “skatty blow”; stalk by night, the forbidden apple to its native lair; dodge the daily task; scorn the weaker sex ruthlessly; yelp for no apparent reason; and generally get back to fundamentals, which is the real secret of youth, both eternal and internal—let's!
No one really knows who started the advertising bawl arolling, and no one can predict when—if ever—it will stop. Some assert that it was the work of a certain Mr. Barnum, the King of Beasts—the man who put the hippo in hippodrome, spotted the leopard, circuited the circus, lassooed the Ilama, put the gumbo on Jumbo, made allegations about alligators, gave talks on auks, knew all about guns, and introduced five hundred specimens of fearsome but jaded fauna to a pop-eyed populace.
Everybody who knows a circus from a surplice has heard about Mr. Barnum, but although it must be admitted that he possessed the faculty of forcing continuous draughts of air through his vocal chords in such a manner as to produce a plethora of personal plaudit, and although, by perpetrating publicity perpetually, he left his imprint on the pages of natural and
You will recollect, intelligent reader, that man was adjured not so long ago, to “hide not his light under a bushel,” an injunction which has since proved to be a superfluity of advice; for history does not disclose that man has ever been in danger of snuffing his illumination with a bushel, or even a ton. In fact hundreds of tons of reinforced concrete, arranged in tiers and provided with sound-proof doors, have proved insufficient to keep within bounds his egoistic emanations. You may inter him in an ornamental sarcophagus of stone and steel, and still he booms—in truth, the larger the tomb the louder the boom. Booming, however, is one of the necessities of emancipated existence.
The man who is not a boomer is a “bloomer.” On this cosmic battlefield of boomers, no individual who has anything to sell, say, or even give away, can afford to emulate the dumbwaiter, for he who is dumb awaits in vain the falling of the fruits of silence—silence is no longer golden.
Booming, commonly known as advertising, is the art of titillating the subconscious unconsciousness of the many-headed with torrents of terminalogical tintinnabulations, or (to use the vernacular of the Excited States), “slinging the blobs an earful.”
The art of spreading the gospel of gold-getting is applied to innumerable commodities, from the ferro-concrete tooth-pick to the panoramic pretensions of whole slabs of Mother Earth; but advertisers themselves can, broadly and loudly, be divided into two classes, i.e., the Advertootler and the Advertiddler.
The Advertootler puts the printed word across in no uncertain type; he advances in double column, sends up “flares,” and slings over ink bombs continually. His slogan is “spare the cash and crash the splash.”
On the other hand, the Advertiddler tiddles timidly with his munitions. He is no advertising astronomer; he possesses no appreciation of the wonders of “space.” His motto is “An inch at a time saves nine,” forgetting the truism that “An advert, a day keeps the bailiff away.”
Perhaps an ad-verse or two from the pen of Allfired Noise, the Bard of Rave-on, might throw some lightning on the subject of “space.” Let her go—allegretto!
“Guys with the goods,” who are after the “dust,”
Boom like a boomerang—“Babble or Bust!”
You will no doubt gather from these stunning stanzas, dizzy reader, that, to keep pace with the whirring wheels of commerce it is necessary to step on the pedal of the press, race on with rhetoric, and hit up the headlines. Fail to accelerate, and you miss the bus to Easy Street.
Railway travellers are of two varieties—train-catchers and time-stretchers. Train-catchers call for no comment except that they catch trains, but time-stretchers are ambulating anachronisms who misconstrue the term tempus fugit as meaning “time-for-another.” They likewise believe, probably, that sotto voce is Alcoholese for “the voice of the drunkard,” that a bigamist is a big-game hunter, and that a basinette is a musical instrument. When you pause to consider the matter they are seen to be not altogether in error.
Speaking of missing the bus, reminds us that there are people who find it impossible to catch a train. They may catch colds with impunity, catch fish with bated breath, catch rats without cats, and “catch it” from their nearest and dearest. But these people, when it comes to connecting with the rolling stock, are as futile as a cow-catcher without an engine. Professor Clutch, a well known exponent of the art of tying ring adversaries in lover's knots, was like that. In his professional capacity he could catch anything on legs and tie it up so adroitly that for days the victim would have to look in the glass to manipulate his handkerchief successfully, and yet Clutch could not catch trains. Train after train he missed. For years he has been trying to move to another town, but he is always late for the last train and misses the next. The authorities refused him permission to camp on the platform, so it is easy to predict that he will continue to reside at the old address, Sine Die, which is the name of his residence. People forget that a locomotive is a lady of her word, and that when she advertises that she intends to become unstationary at 2.2 she is not toot-tooting for fun, or merely letting off steam.
In an address at Hastings to the touring Southland farmers who, 300 strong, have just made a comprehensive tour of the Dominion, under the care of the Railway Department, the General Manager of Railways (Mr. H. H. Sterling) gave some interesting particulars regarding the genesis and purposes of the movement and the methods by which it had been developed to its present stage of popularity.
Mr. Sterling said that a number of years ago a request was made for the granting of a general issue of excursion fares during the winter months. This was in order that the farming community might have the benefit of winter travel at low rates equivalent to the privilege granted those other sections of the public that were able to take their holidays when cheap travel facilities were available, as at Easter and during the period of the Christmas and New Year excursion-ticket issue.
The Department had not been able to agree to the above proposal because it was not practicable to confine a general reduction in rate solely to the class for whose benefit the concession was asked, and there would not be sufficient numbers travelling together to justify the granting of concession fares. Thus the effect would have been to lower the general rate of travel for everyone, and thereby impose an undue financial strain upon the Department. Various plans were put forward, by Farmers’ Unions and others, in an endeavour to reach such an arrangement as would enable the farming community to gain the benefit of cheap travel at the season of the year when they could most conveniently leave their farms, and, at the same time, provide adequate protection for the ordinary passenger revenue of the Department.
At last, about three years ago, a plan was evolved and put into operation for excursions of farmers by special trains. “This,” said Mr. Sterling, “was arranged whilst I was with the Railway Department, and the first experiment was made when a party of farmers was sent from Hamilton, in the Waikato district, to Hawera, in South Taranaki.
“The trip was a success in every respect. It ensured for the Department a sufficient volume of traffic to justify the running of an excursion train at remunerative low-fare rates and satisfied the desires of the farming community in one district for group travel at concession rates to a particular, place and for a specific purpose. The result of the experiment was to indicate that an equitable method of meeting the situation had been discovered.
“By a strange coincidence, by the time the first excursion was arranged, I was myself out of the Department and, as General Manager of the New Zealand Co-operative Dairy Company with head-quarters at Hamilton, was in a position to see matters from the other side of the fence—that of the farmers. I was thus able to assist in forwarding the movement from outside the Department, and was very pleased to do so, as I realised the great benefits which facilities of this kind would confer upon the farming community.
“From that time the movement has never looked back. It has developed stage by stage until this year a most ambitious programme of group travel by farmers at reduced rates between one province and another and between one Island and another has been carried through. In arranging for and carrying out these excursions the Railway Department is truly functioning in its proper capacity as a service department of state; but it is also able to run these excursions on an economically sound basis. This is, of course, the ideal combination of purposes to be served by a public utility such as ours.
“We have welcomed the interest taken, and assistance given, in the matter by the Farmers’ Unions throughout the Dominion, and the opportunity for personal interest and personal association as between the farmers and ourselves, which such excursions have provided. We have set out to supply a service that will be of practical benefit to those who take advantage of the opportunities afforded.
“I am a firm believer in the principle of personal contact in the conducting of business, and always welcome any opportunity of dealing directly with the Department's customers. I have, therefore,
“I have been delighted to meet you and find from the universal expressions of appreciation given by everyone with whom I have personally conversed that you have enjoyed every minute of your tour. It is particularly pleasing to know that the personal interest taken in you by our Passenger Agents who have accompanied you on the tour has served the purpose of making the tour enjoyable by removing from your shoulders all responsibility for the minor incidentals of travel which often serve to detract from the full enjoyment of a tour of the kind. It is good to know that the direct association between yourselves, as representative men and women of the rural community, and ourselves as the national transport service, have been of a mutually helpful and informative character.”
Mr. Sterling said that the Department had two great responsibilities—to provide efficient transport and to secure the best possible financial returns so that the burdens of the taxpayer may be lightened. It was impossible to develop without having, to some extent, to draw upon the taxpayer. He considered that the Department had fulfilled both the responsibilities referred to. It was now giving a service which was meeting with an increased public approbation, and it was augmenting its revenue. It was essential that the fares for excursions such as that of the Southland farmers should be cheap, and he did not think they could cavil at the rates that they had been charged. Their all-round fare for 1,300 miles of travel, including the voyage from Lyttelton to Wellington by steamer, had been only £8 4s. 5d. No other system of transport could give such extensive and comfortable travel at the price. Mr. Sterling said he thought that the fares he had quoted would bring home to the public the fact that the Railway Department was still very much alive, and that it was willing to give every possible service.
The officers of the Department tried to think of the railways in terms of national service, and the public should do likewise. Excursions such as that of the Southlanders afforded the means of industrial and of social advancement. A great many national and parochial disagreements arose from a lack of understanding of the other man's point of view, and the more people were brought together, as by excursions, and the more they came into contact and exchanged ideas with one another, the more would mutual regard and understanding arise among them.
Mr. Sterling was heartily applauded at the end of his speech, and was thanked by Mr. D. Dickie on behalf of the farmers, for the kindness that he and his staff had shown.
“I am confident that the railways are once more coming into their own,” said the General Manager, Mr. H. H. Sterling, in a recent address at the Commercial Travellers’ Club in Auckland.
“I do not say that in antagonism to other forms of transport, but I do feel that the position of the railways in this, as in many other countries, has been largely subject to misunder-standing.”
Mr Sterling said that while the railways accounts had shown an improvement this year, he did not think they should be judged entirely by that standard. He was inclined rather to judge the effectiveness of the system by the measure of satisfaction it gave to the people. In that respect he considered an advance had been made during the year. Service to the public could not be shown in terms of money. There were certain forms of service carried out by the railways which gave no return in money, but which were indispensable for the smooth working of industry and the needs of the people.
The Department was now operating under a new administrative policy and Mr. Sterling appealed for a chance for the new system to prove itself. The railways were a national institution, and as such had to operate for the benefit of the country. This was a policy he always followed.
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We have pleasure in reproducing, from the July issue of the New Zealand Railway Review, the following appreciative reference to the coloured contour maps of New Zealand (featuring particularly the railway system of the Dominion) recently published by the Department's Publicity Branch:—
“The Publicity Branch of the Railways Department, which shows great enterprise and originality in many directions, has produced nothing more attractive than the two large maps of New Zealand now being published. The railway system stands out prominently, as it should, but the unique feature of these maps, which makes them of far greater value than the usual productions, is that a considerable amount of knowledge of the country's configuration has been utilised in clearly showing the mountain ranges and the plains. By adapting a method of coloured shading, the mountains stand out apparently in bold relief, and show at a glance the characteristics of New Zealand. These maps should be placed in every school, for they constitute a great advance on anything formerly issued, and will serve as a very effective reminder that the Dominion, though a difficult country for internal communications, is splendidly served by its railway system.”
[It is pleasing to record a heavy and continuous demand for these maps throughout New Zealand. They are available on application to any stationmaster at 2/- each.—Ed. N.Z.R.M.]
The ninth annual “Careful Crossing Campaign,” which is sponsored by the American Railway Association, is now in full swing. During the months of June, July, August and September each year all of the important railways in the United States co-operate in this campaign, which has for its object the reduction of accidents at level crossings.
This year the Pennsylvania Railroad is distributing throughout the territory served by its lines, 120,000 “Cross Crossings Cautiously” pamphlets, as well as 100,000 posters.
The posters invite attention to the fact that 2,568 persons were killed and 6,667 injured in accidents at railroad crossings in the United States last year.
In 1,200 cases, or 21 per cent. of the total crossing accidents, automobiles were driven against the side of trains moving over, or standing at, crossings. It is pointed out that this type of accident was responsible for the deaths of 259 persons and the injury of 1,701 others.
Any reader who cares to ask for information upon points of railway work in regard to which he desired enlightenment, is invited to forward his queries to the Editor, New Zealand Railways Magazine, Head Office, Wellington. Replies will be inserted in these columns.
One way and another politicians worry much, but perhaps they do not worry so much about the people as the people worry about the politicians. Now and then you see a Party worrying to get a magnetic plank into its platform, and soon worrying a great deal more to get it out, when it turns into a very uncomfortable springboard threatening to bounce its makers into dangerous waters.
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A man has to be very wary lest his political platform should turn into his own political gallows. As soon as he begins nailing down the planks somebody secretly becomes busy underneath with a silent fret-saw, and a confederate is ready to slip a noose around the neck of the platformer when an opportune time comes for sliding the bolt of the trap-door. It is easy to stand on a political platform, but much easier to fall from one.
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Mother Hubbard, the cupboard, the dog, and the bone, or no bone! Somebody will write a big book about the matter—perhaps it is already written—showing that it is an allegory of life, with Mother Hubbard as any kind of public benefactor, from a politician to an up-lifter, and the public as the dog, for circumstances sometimes oblige the world's politicians to make nothing seem to be a bone, and a bone to look like a hunk of undercut.
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“Committees are the invention of the devil,” is a saying credited to the creator of a great religious and social organisation which is working to-day on a world-wide front. The leader's galvanic drive made him impatient of the vexatious hitches and delays usually inseparable from committee procedure. He was ever eager to take the shortest way between two points, and he knew that committees would involve him in a tortuous course. Therefore he rendered to the devil the thing that was allegedly the devil's—and did without committees, and did very well.
All over the world committees have been the cemeteries of enthusiasm. Many a good idea has died very young in the desert stretches of committees. That extreme of caution, which is often the first cousin of cowardice, may be wedded to inertia in committees, which are not usually the collective wisdom of their components but the consolidated and confounded reluctance to take definite action.
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One sees wild crazes for changes in educational methods in the apparent belief that any kind of change is good, even if it is a change for the worse; but on that point the lines of Lowell hold good:
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Altogether, the world's educationists are much too apt to regard the school pupil as raw material for experiments—and the pedagogues “get away with it,” as our American cousins have taught us to say. The parents are toddling along in the background hoping for the best.
However, they are too apathetic to do either, even if they were invited to do so—which, of course, they are not.
The Age of Analysis set in long ago, but it is only a few years since its inquisitiveness and assertiveness became blatantly obtrusive. Reading as deeply as his wits will permit into the scientific mazes of words, the average man is left with an impression that whatever is is not, that matter does not matter; in fact that matter is not matter at all, but a mere swirl of ions and electrons, and that he himself is just a case of fussy electricity; and that the whole world is just a jumble of emanations, vibrations, and wave-lengths of ether and other things which do not really exist.
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What is to be done with all the knowledge when the last and least of the ions has yielded the last of its secrets? When all movements of the heavenly bodies have been calculated and charted? When every comet's tail has been accurately measured? Some of that knowledge may help to reduce the cost of living, but much of it will not; some of it may increase human happiness, but much of it will not. There will be a big surplus of knowledge which will be merely an intellectual toy for new generations.
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While some folk are yearning for the reaction from this restless noisy epoch—with the world and his wife shouting at each other from the ends of the earth, mostly about tragedies and miscellaneous messes, domestic, social, political, international—and watching for announcements of ships or buildings guaranteed to be free from wireless and gramophones, one may read of reactions against the opposite kind of living, when staidness and silence were sanctified, and solitude was regarded as a blessed state. “Hibernation is played out,” wrote a philosopher (name forgotten) many years ago. “I have chewed more or less on my own vitals this winter. Solitude may make a man a philosopher, but it puts too high a premium on the grave. There is such a thing as erecting meditations into a mausoleum.” A contemporary's comment on that philosopher includes these words:—“Here was a great soul lowering buckets into its own consciousness all his life. They came up brimming and sparkling, but the man never got away from the winch. You will hear its little squeak occasionally.”
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The encouragement given by “Punch” (London) to jokes about the bagpipes indicates an opinion of the editor that Scotland's national instrument or weapon is one of the worst inventions. But is it an invention? It may be rather a discovery. Somebody may have trodden on something squidgy in the sea or in the swamp and got a notion from it. “Or trodden on a cat,” you interject. Well, there are lots of things I like less than the bagpipes—and the saxophone is one of them, and the bass-viol (played solo by an unsoulful philosopher) is another. One way or another the bagpipes will stir you—perhaps goad you or erode you—but the bass-viol will numb you and dumb you and make you feel like a vanished pomp or pump of yesterday.
“‘Gallant little Belgium’ leads the world in the employment of light railways for aiding the farmer, and everyone interested in the development of agricultural transport should become acquainted with the wonderful work of the sixty centimetre railway network serving the Belgium farm lands”—says our special London Correspondent, in his current review of British and Continental railway developments.
Statistical data concerning railways is not usually of especial appeal to the rank and file worker. A few enthusiastic statisticians there are on every line who know no greater joy than to spend long hours playfully juggling with average train and wagon loads, ton-miles, and all the other ingenious tools of their craft, but most railwaymen are wisely content to leave the close study of statistics to the expert. In such hands statistics can be of the utmost value in furthering railway progress: in the hands of the inexperienced, conjuring with elaborate statistical data is frequently productive of distorted views, quite foreign to the true state of affairs. Simple figures relating to railway operation, however, are worthy of the attention of one and all engaged in the transportation industry, and in this connection there have recently been put out interesting statistics on general lines concerning the four big railway systems that serve the Homeland.
Railways have now been serving the British public for more than one hundred years. Railway working at Home involves over £1,200,000,000 of capital, and the steel tracks seam the whole of Britain from end to end. The track, stations and rolling-stock of the British railways cost more than £1,000,000,000, and some £40,000,000 is spent annually on maintenance and renewals. The railway tracks of the British Isles would stretch twice round the world, and the number of passengers conveyed by the four big group lines each year is equivalent to twenty-seven journeys for every man, woman and child in the country. Each year passenger and freight trains run more than 400,000,000 miles, or approximately equivalent to two journeys from the earth to the sun and back. Three-quarters of the coal produced in Britain passes from pit to consumer by rail, while every year there are handled 65,000,000 tons of stone, iron and other minerals, and 60,000,000 tons of general merchandise. Immense quantities of fish, meat and fruit, are dealt with in train loads, and, annually, some 300,000,000 gallons of milk are conveyed over the Home railways.
Time was when a railway was regarded solely as a carrier of mankind and mankind's belongings. By degrees, the activities of the railways have expanded in a hundred-and-one directions, and to-day a progressive railway engages in many important activities far removed from the simple act of transportation. Many of these subsidiary activities rank among the most profitable branches of modern railway operation. Thus we find the big railways of to-day performing valuable public service and reaping considerable profit out of the ownership of
Until a few years ago most of the railway hotels in Britain were located in London and the big provincial centres. Some time ago the London, Midland and Scottish Railway launched out on new lines, and opened a sumptuous guest-house at Gleneagles, in the heart of the Scottish Highlands, far removed from any important centre of population. This hotel now draws thousands of sportsmen and tourists annually. It has its own golf course, swimming bath, tennis courts, concert house, and other amenities, and the establishment brings much business to L.M. and S. rails as well as making a profit in itself. Following the lead of the L.M. and S. line, the Great Western Railway has now acquired, and is converting into a sumptuous hotel, a large country house in the heart of Dartmoor, in beautiful Devonshire. The place, surrounded with 200 acres of picturesque parkland, was once a Ducal residence. The building is in Jacobean style, containing much old oak, a lofty banqueting hall, furnished with an old-world minstrels’ gallery, and other interesting features. Private angling rights are at the disposal of the visitor, and there are splendid facilities for the golfer, motorist and pedestrian. Altogether, the Great Western Railway seems likely to reap a great deal of benefit from this enterprise, which will be watched with the closest interest by railways the world over.
Typical of the energy with which the Home railways develop any subsidiary service of promise is the whole-hearted manner in which the big lines are entering the road transport field. All the systems are making fullest use of the Government powers secured last August, and are operating large numbers of road services for the conveyance of passengers and merchandise. In many instances road services are actually being run between points already served by rail. The main idea in cases of this character is to reduce transit times and effect cuts in handling. Merchandise to and from specified areas is centralised upon conveniently situated
Hand-in-hand with the development of road services, the Home railways are placing a new facility at the disposal of the trading community. This is what is styled the railhead distribution service. Traffic is despatched in bulk by rail to storage depots on the railway premises, for distribution therefrom in small lots by road motor service to meet retail requirements. The road motors are operated by the railways themselves. Another facility associated with this movement is the reception by the railways of traffic for bulk storage and subsequent delivery as and when required by retailers. In other words, the Home railways now act at these railhead depots as manufacturers’ agents, and perform all the usual services of such agents, at a reasonable fee. Here, without doubt, is an especially worth-while activity in this present era of road transport competition.
No railwayman needs reminding of the important part played in railway operation by the goods department. Passenger movement is much more in the public eye than the transport of freight, but goods department working represents equally as vital a part of railway operations. A most interesting development in freight working now taking place in Europe is the consideration given by the railways to the employment of two-storey goods stations to serve the larger centres. Germany is to the fore in this experiment, and already several of the older city goods stations on the German railways have been converted to the double-deck principle. In the new two-storey depots one floor is usually employed for the receipt of incoming freight and its unloading and transfer to road motor for delivery to consignees; the other floor is utilised for the receipt of outward freight from road motor, and its loading and despatch by rail. Close connection is maintained between the two storeys through the agency of mechanically operated belts and conveyers.
By the installation of ramps on a gentle gradient provision is made for road motors to reach the upper floor. The lay-out of the depot usually provides for one central bench for accommodating the freight traffic, with a railway track on one side and a road motor track on the other. By the adoption of the two-deck principle, difficulties now experienced in extending goods depots in many large cities promise, in the near future, largely to be overcome.
Modern transportation devices include no more useful piece of equipment than the ocean-going train ferry. We have several interesting examples of the train ferry in Europe, notable among these being that connecting Harwich with Zeebrugge, and the very efficient Baltic train ferries linking Sweden with Germany. Now, new train ferry routes are contemplated, the most important being a train ferry to connect the port of Immingham, in Lincolnshire, with Gothenburg, in Sweden. It is proposed that two ferries be employed for the purpose of making three return journeys across the North Sea every week between the points named. The ferries would be about 445ft. long, and be equipped with turbine machinery of 7,200 h.p., giving a normal speed of 16 1/2 knots. Each would be capable of accommodating about sixty fully loaded goods wagons, or 300 passengers. Through running of freight between England and Sweden would be of the greatest service, and in view of the marked success that has been achieved by the Harwich-Zeebrugge ocean-going train ferry, there would seem to be a distinct future for new links of this type connecting Britain with the Continent.
The Harwich-Zeebrugge train ferry is operated jointly by the L. and N.E. Railway, of England, and the Belgian State Railways. It has performed much useful service in through movement of perishable traffic between Britain and the rest of Europe, and, incidentally, has done much to aid in the post-war restoration of the Belgian State Railways. The Belgian Railways suffered greatly during the war, but a wonderful improvement has been effected by the Brussels transportation authorities during the past few years. The State Railways, operated as a commercial concern on similar lines to the New Zealand Government Railways, are now on a paying basis, and great extensions everywhere are being undertaken. At Antwerp new docks and shipping facilities are being provided, main lines are being widened, and many additional miles of light railway are being built to serve the rural areas. These light lines, usually of sixty centimetre (about 2ft.) gauge, are a feature of transport in Belgium. They are controlled by the Sociètè Nationale des Chemins de Fer Vicinaux, and there are in all 2,820 miles of light railway serving farms and rural communities. Both steam and electricity are employed as haulage agents, and almost every farm of any size has its own “back-yard siding” giving connection with the standard gauge railway system. “Gallant little Belgium” leads the world in the employment of light railways for aiding the farmer, and everyone interested in the development of agricultural transport should become acquainted with the wonderful work of the sixty centimetre railway network serving the Belgium farm lands.
The official welcome given to the officers and crew of the German cruiser Emden on the 8th July at the Government luncheon in Parliament House, Wellington, was one of those honourable gestures towards world peace that are becoming increasingly significant of settled conditions and revised convictions. All this augurs well for the future.
The first toasts honoured were “The King” and “The President of the Republic of Germany.”
The Prime Minister (the Rt. Hon. Sir Joseph Ward) said it was a great pleasure for him to propose the toast of the guests, coupled with the name of the Commander of the Emden. “The Emden,” said Sir Joseph, “is the first warship of the German State to visit these waters since the war. I trust, however, that the welcome our guests have experienced both at Auckland and here in Wellington will have proved to them that the people of New Zealand, no less than the people of the Old Country, and of the other civilised communities throughout the world, are anxious to recognise the bonds of common humanity, and to endeavour, in co-operation with their fellow-men, to build a better and a safer world for the generations to come.
Co-operation—this is the key word to much that is best in the world to-day. In the spheres of industry, of national life and lastly, of international politics, strenuous efforts are being made to put the principles of co-operation into living practice. We who are sitting here to-day, citizens of the German Republic and New Zealanders, who eleven years ago were at war with one another, are now representatives of States, Members of the League of Nations, and Signatories of the Pact for the Renunciation of War. Side by side we, together with the other nations of the world, are making a united, honest, and sincere attempt to solve the problems of international peace and security, and to make a repetition of the disaster of 1914 an impossibility. We can follow no more uplifting ideal, and in justice to those who fell on both sides, we must, in the pursuit of that ideal, be satisfied with no less than the utmost that our strength of purpose will permit.” In this connection he read the following cablegram, which he had received only that morning:—
“His Royal Highness the Prince of Wales, who spoke last night at the Rhodes Scholarship Trust dinner at Oxford, welcomed the announcement previously made by Mr. Baldwin that the trust was going to renew to Germany scholarships which were abolished during the war. ‘We have with us to-night some old German Rhodes Scholars,’ said the Prince. ‘We welcome them back to Oxford most heartily. I myself have had the pleasure this evening of shaking hands with an old Magdalen man who was a German Rhodes Scholar, whom I had not seen since 1914. In this building and in the colleges there will be found on the rolls of honour the names of German Rhodes Scholars who fell in the war, which shows that this foundation is not based on any narrow racial feeling, and that its ideals are those which all may follow, forgetful of past enmities and reviving old friendships.'”
Sir Joseph said that those words conveyed the feeling of New Zealanders and he felt sure they were re-echoed by the people throughout the country.
In the following article, Miss Elsie K. Morton presents our readers with a word-picture of the beautiful sea-and-mountain road that now supplies the only connecting link between Canterbury and the Northern Provinces of Marlborough and Nelson.
You can, of course, make the trip from Christchurch to Wellington in the ordinary way, by rail through the electrified tunnel of the Port Hills, a night on the ferry from Lyttelton, breakfast in Wellington next morning. Very convenient and prosaic, no exertion whatsoever, no loss of time. Thousands of passengers go that way every week; the confirmed traveller does it again and again as a matter of course.
But a few others, tourists from overseas, New Zealanders who want to see all that is worth seeing in their own country, add a couple of days to their itinerary, and set out on one of the most interesting motor tours in New Zealand, the 245 mile run from Christchurch to Picton, via Kaikoura and Blenheim.
The morning is one of sparkling brightness, crisp with the tang of late autumn. Down through the pretty suburban district of Papanui, past miles of gardens and cheerful bungalows, out on the smooth highway, and northward through Kaiapoi to the vast level stretch of the Canterbury Plains. Kaiapoi is the home of one of New Zealand's most famous woollen mills, but its outstanding feature, from the tourist's point of view, is a magnificent avenue of poplars stretching in straight line for over two miles to Kairaki Beach.
Out into the open country we pass swiftly, and for mile upon mile, we speed through some of the richest land in all New Zealand, the fertile reaches of the Canterbury Plains, with their immeasurable wealth of golden grain, luxuriant pastures, and flocks of sheep. Down on the western horizon gleams the mighty wall of the Southern Alps, a shining barrier of glittering sword-peaks upthrust into the cloud-curtains of the sky. Just ahead is one of the lesser giants of the Plains, Mount Grey, bold in outline, red-brown in the glow of sunshine, with deep blue shadows in the sharp-etched valleys and ravines.
By mid-day, we are at Half-way House, Domett, where a brief stop is made for lunch. Then on again, through the hills of Cheviot. The glory of the Alps is left behind; they are just a jagged edge of silver now, a shining shield close-bent over the far horizon. We are in a world of little hills, the wonderful hills of Cheviot, all dimpling in the sunshine, looking for all the world as though some Olympian jester had moulded them in brown dough when our earth was in the melting pot, kneaded and pressed the little soft lumps, and then scattered them with a mighty “plop!” all over the edge of the North Canterbury Plains. These, surely, are the “little hills” of the Psalmist; they look as though at any moment they might skip off their bases, clap their hands and sing! Very rich is this pastoral district of Cheviot, once the estate of one of Canterbury's pioneer sheep kings, now cut up into smaller farms.
Our route takes us across the Waiau River, where we have the unique experience of travelling on the railway track. A few miles farther on we come to Parnassus, the southern rail-head of the uncompleted South Island Main Trunk line, divided from the northern terminus, Wharanui, by a gap of eighty miles. There are great sheep stations in these Parnassus hills, beautiful homes and lovely gardens, but from the road you see only heavy plantations of fir trees and acacia, flax-filled gullies and broken country.
The only sign of life on the long, empty road is a travelling grocer's pantechnicon pulled up beside a wayside home; a motor van with shuttered sides rolled back to show shelves laden with bottles of jam and pickles, tins of meat
Soon the last vestige of civilisation and man's habitation is left behind. The lone road winds ahead, through the Conway valley across the surging river, down through fertile Oaro to the sea. Always ahead are the towering heights of the Seaward Kaikouras, black against the clear sky, with thin silver dazzle where the snow rests on the highest peaks.
In from the sea again, and into the Hundalee Hills, sharp-peaked, thickly wooded, out by a narrow road that twists and turns most gaily along the bare edge of precipitous cliffs. A tricky road this for drivers unaccustomed to the route, but the big car swings to the curves, swoops down the steep descending grade with the nonchalance of perfect familiarity.
Now the world is lit with the dusky flare of sunset. Broad shafts of light strike down the slopes of the distant hills, flooding the valleys with waves of amber light. The high snow peaks burn with sudden fire; the glow dies away; the rugged heights become deeply, darkly blue, remote, like the indigo depths that lie beneath storm-shadowed seas… Now we are out on the coast again, running through a magnificent seaside park, with the blue Pacific stretching away into a pearl-pink haze on the horizon. Twelve miles of one of the most beautiful seaside roads in all New Zealand, a road that runs through groves of ngaio, glossy-leafed karaka, golden kowhai, and bronze-green totara! What grace, what rare beauty is in these woodland temples, rising from close green sward, deep-shadowed, breathing the leafy odours of dim forest places, touched with the salt tang of the sea! Rocky cliffs suddenly close down on the road; a fern-grown tunnel looms darkly ahead. Then out to the sea again, with the little waves making a soft splashing on the shores of tiny curving bays. More tunnels, more groves, and so at nightfall, after a run of 120 miles, into the seaside township of Kaikoura, one of New Zealand's historic whaling stations, happy hunting ground of bloody old Te Rauparaha who came down from Kapiti with his cut-throat gang nearly a century ago, and soaked the coast in blood. Kaikoura's history goes back into the dim days of ancient tradition, for here it was, according to Maori mythology, that Tama, one of the great Polynesian Vikings, landed from his canoe, the Tairea, and cooked his first New Zealand meal of cray-fish on the beach.
But not an echo of those roystering days of battle and carousal sounds in Kaikoura to-day. At nightfall, Kaikoura is one of the quietest, most solitary little townships in all New Zealand. The clear Southern stars flash and burn
in the indigo deeps of the sky, the wide curving bay lies silent, mysterious, and the wall of the mountains is a vast rampart of black and silver, upthrust twixt sea and sky… Down by the seashore is Kaikoura's Garden of Memories; a simple obelisk rises beside the blue waters, and bright flower-beds, tended by loving hands, carry the names of distant battlefields where the lads of Kaikoura fought and died… Hushed and still is the little seaside garden this gentle autumn night; the slow beat of waves on the pebbled shore, the sighing of wind in the trees, sound a requiem for those who will never return.
Kaikoura offers to holiday-makers the rare beauty of forest-glades backed by majestic, snow-clad heights, the bird-paradise of seaside groves, sport of fighting-fish, surf-bathing, all the usual tourist attractions, and over all, the exhilaration of ocean breezes tempered by the warmth of clear sunshine, and a mild, genial climate. At the far end of the curving bay is the little port and wharf, where steamers come to take away the bounteous harvesting of the fertile hills and valleys that stretch far back to the foot of the mountains.
A night at Kaikoura, and an early start next morning on the second stage of our journey. Here are more seaside groves and thickets, and the morning sun striking through the glossy foliage with long, slender golden spears. For over fifty miles, our road runs beside the sea-shore, grey-shingled, curving to deep bays where the tempestous rivers of the South come surging out to the sea. We cross the Hapuka and Clarence, over strong bridges with massive concrete supports, built to withstand the wild onslaught of the torrents that come roaring down when the snows melt on the mountains, and turn riverbed and valley into raging seas. The approaches to the bridges are built up with heavy groynes, vast piles of stones enclosed in criss-cross wire casing, built into the banks and bridge supports, to protect them from the swirling scour of the flood. Yet, despite these formidable ramparts of rock and wire, bridges and embankments are often swept away, and the flood goes tearing down the valley. But the river is low as we pass, just a thin silver trickle winding through acre upon acre of grey shingle-bed.
Still on our right is the seashore, bathed in sunshine, sea-birds riding softly on the crests of the little waves, still on our left the frowning cliffs, and farther back, high-piled masses of rugged peaks and precipices of the Kaikouras,
gashed with great ravines and crevasses, rivulets of glistening snow trickling down the harsh rock faces.
Soon we pass Wakatu Point, and the chauffeur relates a diverting story of a little coastal trader, wrecked one wild night of storm and pitchy darkness on her way down the Kaikoura coast. The boat stuck hard and fast on her rock. The lifeboat was lowered in utmost haste on to the flat shingled beach of Wakatu, within a stone's throw of the main road! The old boat still stands upright on the stony point, so who could doubt the story?
Halfway between Kaikoura and Blenheim is Kekerangu, a tiny post-office-and-store village, lying hot beneath giant eucalyptus trees. Now we are in tussock country, with sheep grazing on hillsides and in bush-filled valleys. A lonely, lonely road now, with the empty sea on one side, wide leagues of tussock-brown hills and snow-capped peaks on the other. The only soul we meet in miles is a drover jogging slowly along in a buggy, his dogs trotting behind, a little sack slung beneath the vehicle to give the animals a spell when they grow foot-sore and weary. Many leagues has he driven in his ramshackle old shay, all the way down from Marlborough, for he is one of the best-known drovers in three provinces, and now he is jogging his long slow way home again.
Now and again we pass the desolate little huts of roadmen and rabbiters, for this is champion rabbit country.
As we speed along, a man in dungarees comes from a roadside hut and waves the car to stop. A silent thin man who shambles up and mutters something, as he hands a scrap of paper to the chauffeur. The latter nods, the man goes back to his hut without a backward glance.
“Cheque for £50,” observes the chauffeur, tucking it carefully away. “Wants me to cash it for him in Blenheim.” Trustful folk, these Kaikourans!
Much of the country through which we are now passing is under cultivation, and beneath sheltering groves of trees we catch glimpses of the comfortable homesteads of station-owners. Close beside the road is one beautiful home with well-tended gardens and sweeping driveway, a home lit with electric light, so our chauffeur assures us, and replete with every modern convenience.
A few miles farther on, at Wharanui, we come in at last from the sea, and pass into typical South Island sheep country, grass and tussock hills, treeless and bare as the back of your hand,
but yielding magnificent pastures to the great Marlborough flocks. Wharanui is at present the northern terminus of the South Island Main Trunk Line.
On and on through the gold-brown hills, across the dried-up bed of Lake Grasmere, a shallow lake that mysteriously disappeared in 1911, and has never re-filled. Far away on the northern horizon, we get a clear glimpse of Wellington Head, in the North Island, a great blue bluff standing out boldly against the sunny sky. Over the Awatere Bridge, a splendid double structure with traffic and railway tracks side by side, and into Seddon, named after the Dominion's great Prime Minister. Lunch at Seddon, then through beautiful Awatere Valley, where the river runs to the sea through fertile country broken by sheer chalk cliffs, dazzling white in the strong mid-day sunshine. On the horizon rise the Inland Kaikouras, as distinct from the Seaward Kaikouras, austere, snow-clad giants rising grandly above the dimpled brown hills. Soon the hills grow steeper; the road is a narrow ledge cut in precipitous cliffs that slope straight and steep to the river beneath.
“Redwood Pass,” announces the chauffeur confidentially. “Supposed to have been more fatal accidents on this here bit of road than any in New Zealand. Motor car went over a year ago from that bit straight ahead, and three people killed. Motor lorry was wrecked in the same place a month or two ago, and if you look right down at the bottom of this cliff we're coming to, you'll see what's left of a hawker's cart that went over last week… I don't mention it to too many passengers, they get the ‘wind up,’ but I know it won't make any difference to you!”
I thanked him in trembling tones, trying to shut my eyes, but they remained glued upon the scene in a kind of dreadful fascination until I had looked at the remains of the hawker's cart, seen the exact spot where the other tragedies took place. Yet, had he not told me, my heart would never have missed a beat, for Redwood Pass seemed no whit more dangerous than a dozen other narrow hillside roads of the South.
Early in the afternoon we came down from the hills into Blenheim, capital of “Golden Marlborough,” a prosperous, well-built city, centre of a thriving pastoral and agricultural district. Twenty miles by rail, and we are in Picton, slumberous, picturesque little Picton, dreaming peacefully on the beautiful wooded shores of Queen Charlotte Sound. Out beyond lies Cook Strait, and the North Island… The tour is ended… The long, winding road has come home at last to the sea.
The supply and circulation of fresh, pure air, is recognised by authorities the world over as being of paramount importance to workers, whether engaged in manual or professional duties. In the following article is described the modern “Plenum” system of heating and ventilation recently installed in our workshops.
Visitors to the new Railway Workshops in the Hutt Valley invariably comment upon the efforts of the Department to make the lot of its workshops employees brighter and more comfortable. Improved lighting facilities, clean and attractive dining - rooms, and, most striking of all, the system of heating and ventilating the various sections of the shops, are among the many improvements introduced under the workshops reorganisation scheme.
In the very early days (in the old workshops), fires, other than in the regulation blacksmiths’ forges, were, for heating purposes, absolutely forbidden. The first attempt to heat the old workshops was made by the installation of a system of steam pipes laid around the machines. This scheme, however, did not prove a success, and was abandoned in favour of circular stoves, a number of which were placed at selected points in each shop. These stoves certainly increased the temperature within the various shops, but had one drawback in that, while those farthest removed from the source of heat desired an increase in the temperature, those nearest the stoves were inclined in the other direction.
In summer's heat, ventilation was effected principally by open windows and roof ventilators.
The building of the new workshops, therefore, provided an excellent opportunity for the introduction of a thoroughly up-to-date heating and ventilating system. The installation of the modern system was entrusted to the wellknown general and sanitary engineering firm, A. and T. Burt, Ltd., to whom a contract was recently let to install throughout the main workshops of New Zealand a heating and ventilating plant known as the “Plenum” system. The whole of this important work
Strenuous efforts were to ensure that the new heating system would be in operation before the coming of the cold days of winter. The accompanying photos will enable the reader more readily to understand the details of the scheme, the operation of which is confidently expected to give general satisfaction.
Mounted upon a high girder platform at one end of each bay in the shops, is a motor-driven, centrifugal circulating fan, and an ingenious arrangement of piping. This latter is set up in the form of a large inverted “U,” with square corners. The lower ends of the pipes are screwed, steam tight, into special cast iron bases. These castings (the number depending on the size of that section of the plant and quantity of heated air required) have cored spaces in the bottom whereby any condensation may be drained off. Steam from low pressure, oil-fired boilers, circulates through sections, or nests, of these heater pipes. The duty of the fan is to draw air around and through the nests of pipes and then force it along suitable galvanised iron ducts or pipes. Supported on the cross braces of the roof, the ducts traverse the full length of each shop, two ducts to a bay. Openings, giving a downward direction to the air, are provided at regular distances along the ducts. Whether the air is to be heated, or cooled (as in summer) it is diffused over the entire area of the shop, and in such a manner as to cause no inconvenience.
The fans, being motor-driven, operate with a minimum of attention. No time is wasted stoking up, as with the old stoves, and a more even air temperature is maintained.
The “Plenum” system, moreover, provides for the circulation of cool air throughout the shops during the heat of summer. In the summer months fresh, cool air is drawn from the atmosphere, through a separate inlet, and circulated by the fans, through the ducts, in the same manner as the warm air is distributed in winter. By this means the air in the buildings will be completely changed once every hour, enabling the men to work in a cool and comfortable atmosphere inside the shop, whatever the conditions may be outside.
Some idea of the work such an installation involves may be gathered from the fact that 60,552 pieces of pipe had to be cut and screwed for the 150 heaters required. These separate units, if arranged in one line, would reach an approximate distance of 15 miles. Then, in the manufacture of the ducts and bends, no less than eighty tons of galvanised iron plates were used. The sections comprising the bends, known to the trade as “lobster backs” (see illustration No. 1), are a first-class example of plate work. In passing, it is interesting to mention that the work of screwing and cutting the heater pipes was performed by the Department's own men and machines in a thoroughly efficient manner in the Hutt Valley Workshops.
This is the first installation of the “Plenum” system of heating and ventilating carried out in New Zealand, and is on a scale not hitherto attempted in either Australia or here, and gives ample evidence of the desire of the Railway Department to make the working conditions of its employees as near the ideal as possible.
Next to the invention of printing, the most powerful instrument of civilisation that the ingenuity of man has devised, is the railway.
(Concluded.)
Leaving the Grey River again at the beginning of March, 1848—during the whole of 1847 not a white man was seen—Thomas Brunner and his companions, Piki and Kehu and their wives, tramped through the bush to the Buller again, and struck the great river somewhere below where Murchison is to-day. Sometimes the party had a square meal; sometimes all hands were on starvation rations.
They cooked the roots of the ti (cabbage-tree) and enjoyed the sweetness thereof; ti is New Zealand's sugar-tree. They made nets of ti leaves and caught the upokororo and grayling in the streams; they got eels, too; they shot and snared birds—the weka, paradise duck, dabchicks, even sparrow-hawks—all went into the pot. Then in the mountain-beech country they had to tighten their belts. On the South bank of the Buller Brunner tried “a new species of fruit”—the berries of the mako tree. They were palatable enough, he wrote, if you were careful about it, “so that your teeth will only slightly crush the berry without breaking the seed, which has a most nauseous bitter taste.”
“The beastly drip of the bush” got on the explorer's nerves sometimes—no wonder, after a solid year of the West Coast. Rivers were a nightmare; they used to ford some of the rapid streams by “sparring” them, an art which the gold-diggers found necessary along the coast twenty years later—all hands holding a pole horizontally and pressing against it up-stream as they crossed. Other rivers they had to swim, or cross by making rafts.
“Very bad walking,” wrote Brunner of that return journey up the Buller, where our splendid smooth highway runs today. “The immense, gigantic rocks that belt the river rendered it impossible for us to keep to the bank, and the mountains were too high to ascend, so our day's walking was one continual ascending the spurs and decending the water courses, which only brought us on a short distance by nightfall.” No better picture of the untamed Buller Valley could have been given than this brief but sufficient scrap of topographical description.
“Hail, snow an’ ice that praise the Lord: I've met them at their work, An’ wished we had anither route or they anither kirk.”
So wrote Mr. Kipling in “McAndrews’ Hymn.” Mr. Brunner and his party of ragged-kilted Maoris could have said something like that, but with more emphasis, about their Bad Lands journey in the wet and cold. Brunner, indeed, in his diary entries written painfully in shivering camps has left us vivid vignettes of fearful days and nights. Here are notes covering three days in April of 1848; scene somewhere on the Upper Buller:
“Rain continuing to pour down. About midday a stream came rolling down the cliffs above us, destroying the shelter on which we had been working all the morning to render our situation comfortable. The fresh also increased so fast that the natives declared we must find means
(Next day)—“Rain and thunder continuing. This was truly a wretched day to spend on a cliff in a black birch (beech) forest. The rain poured down in torrents and loosened the stones of which the hill is formed, and these rolled by us and plunged into the river with a fearful noise. The wind tore up the trees on every side, and the crash which ensued caused a simultaneous shudder by all hands.”
(The next day)—“An increase in the gale; and the fresh in the river exceeding all bounds, having reached forty feet perpendicular. God only knows when we shall be able to proceed; for to ascend is impossible, and we can move nowhere until the fresh subsides.”
However, they pushed along, Brunner limping with a stick, for he felt very ill. One day's diary entry: “It was with great difficulty I could move at all to-day, but want of provisions compelled me. Found two fern trees and made an oven.” The reference is to an item of food, the pith of the fern tree, which is just eatable, but no more. It helped to maintain life. At Matakitaki the party got a little fern-root again.
Diary entry, in a miserable bush shelter at the Matakitaki:
“May 15th, 1848.—Heavy fall of snow. Kehu collecting ti roots. The river much swollen. I was seized with violent vomiting, which lasted all day and night, and my side gave me much pain. I attributed it to the badness of the living and exposure to the cold weather.”
A few days later: “Camped on the banks of the Tiraumea. Rain… . We proceeded to our shelter of last year, an overhanging rock, which protected us from the rain, and there dried our clothes. A small basket of mine, which was hanging to the roof of our rock, fell down on
Some days later Brunner and his Maoris reached the shore of Lake Rotoiti, and found their canoe safe. They came to the river Puhawini, named the Howard, and camped, in fearful weather—snow, rain and a fresh in the river. Civilisation now was near; they went on and saw some sheep on the Rotoiti hills.
When the weary little party reached the junction of the Motupiko and Mapou rivers they caught twenty-five wekas. It was a glad camp that night, a square meal for all hands once more.
Sore-footed, scratched and scarred, and shaggy as an Antarctic explorer, Brunner stumbled into a white man's hut at ten o'clock the next night. It was the shepherd Fraser. He wrote in his diary: “It is a period of nearly 560 days since I wished Fraser good-bye on the bank of the Rotoiti River to my seeing him at his house this evening. I have never during this time heard a word of English since, but the broken gibberish of Kehu and the echo of my own voice and I rather feel astonished to find I can both understand and speak English as well as ever, for, during many wet days, I had never spoken a word of my own language, nor conversed even in Maori, of which I was well tired.”
Brunner expressed himself satisfied of one thing; he had shown that it was possible to live in the bush entirely independent of any food, but that which the country provided. (But it was mighty hard living.) He also had proved it possible for a white man to go without boots for a long period. He had travelled long distances barefooted, or with flax or ti leaf sandals for the rougher places.
In a note at the end of his journal and report, Mr. Brunner expressed the opinion that the introduction of goats would be a benefit to the Maoris along the West Coast. His remark was in a way prophetic, for are not goats recommended for Westland to-day? Not indeed for the natives, who are very few in the land—it is difficult to find them—but to deal with that notorious blackberry bush, which, as all truthful
In 1860 a great deal of arduous exploration work was done by James Mackay, of Nelson, afterwards a high officer of the Native Department, for many years in the North Island. We saw much of him in Auckland in the ‘eighties and ‘nineties. His summary of his adventures, written at my request, is a little Iliad of endeavour and endurance to one who can read between the lines and fill in the local colour of weather stress and hard travelling and semi-starvation. After recounting his explorations between 1855 and 1860, he described as follows his work between the Buller sources and the Grey River:—
“In 1860 I travelled from Nelson to the Grey by way of the Upper Buller, Devil's Grip, Tiraumea, Matakitaki, Maruia, and Grey River, to what is now Greymouth. I had Alexander Mackay and Frank Flowers (one of my sheep station hands) and three Maoris. We ran out of food by the time we reached Maruia Plains, and my cousin and Flowers returned to Nelson.
I and the three Maoris kept on; we were forty-eight hours once with only one woodhen to eat between the four of us. We blazed the present line of coach road through the bush from the Upper Buller to the Grey River. On my return to Nelson the Provincial Government gave me £150 for this service. I purchased the seven and a half million acres of Westland for £300, and 14,500 acres of Native reserves.”
Another doughty explorer down the Buller seventy years ago was John Rochfort. In after years he made the pioneer surveys of the present Main Trunk railway route in the North Island. Rochfort, unlike the Mackays and his colleague, Charles Wilson Hursthouse, in the North, was not a big man physically. His feats of endurance and strength, however, were often the source of surprise to his fellow-bushmen. Mr. W. Aitchison, who was one of Rochfort's party on some of his exploring journeys, said of him that his ordinary swag was never less than 75lbs. weight. With this pikau up he had been known to tramp and climb six miles without a spell. A 50lbs. swag, he used to say, only served to “steady a man.”
Away back in the early ‘eighties of last century, when the writer was beginning to make his first collection of books, he found that a great many of the volumes which he read and placed aside “for keeps” were published by Messrs. Chatto and Windus. Despite the passing of years and the multiplicity of publishers that have sprung into being during the last half-century, the old firm of Chatto and Windus still holds its place in the sun. Among the writers of to-day who approach the public through Messrs. Chatto and Windus are Prof. J. B. S. Haldane, Edward Garrett, T. F. Pows, S. T. Warner, R. H. Mottram, Wyndham Lewis, Lytton Strachey, Luigi Pirandello, Norman Douglas, Julian and Aldous Huxley, and others equally well known. I am reminded of these things by a perusal of “A Chatto and Windus Miscellany,” in which I found much far above the ordinary of such publications, not only as to literary merit, which is really outstanding, not to say remarkable, but as being all a book should be in type, illustrations, paper, binding—and all for half-a-crown. From among the many splendid articles let me quote the following in reference to a writer's use of “slang,” from the pen of the late C. E. Montague, which, I feeel sure, will find an echo in the heart of many an Australasian journalist:—
Is it beyond hope that in this matter a quite respectable job may be found for those who ply the homely, slighted trade of the journalist? Not, of course, at the heart of the Empire of letters, but somewhere on the shady borderlands of its demesne, where language may be corrupt and uncouth and yet commendably alive… . Like the nimble groom who holds the halter and runs, the pressman can assist at the trial of an aspiring idiom. He can use it experimentally in his own fugitive pieces, for the learned world to see how it looks.
Why Mr. Montague should have excepted “the heart of the Empire of letters” from being subjected to such trials may puzzle the uninitiated; but Mr. Montague was speaking from experience, his own, or that of others. Some sceptics may ask: “What of C. J. Dennis? His ‘Sentimental Bloke’ was hailed as a work of genius ‘at the heart of the Empire of letters'—London!” But Dennis anticipated Montague's advice by experimenting first on what the latter terms “the shady borderlands”—if one may dare thus to refer to our Big Brother, the Commonwealth. It is also well to remember that a greater poet than Dennis failed to anticipate Montague's advice, and came to grief. He wrote the same slang in the form of ballads and other verses, but the critics did not damn them with faint praise—they simply ignored them; while his “In Hospital: Rhymes and Rhythms,” and “Life and Death”—in the last of which his “Out of the Night that Covers Me” first appeared—written in the purest and choicest of English, caused him to be placed by these same critics in the forefront of Victorian lyrical poets.
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“The Golden Treasury,” World Classic Series (University Press, Oxford, per Whitcombe and Tombs). This in another “new edition” of Palgrave's famous anthology, compiled exactly sixty-eight years ago. When first issued by Palgrave the work contained nearly four hundred lyrics representative of English, Irish and Scots poets down to the middle of last century. When the World Classics edition first appeared, a couple of decades ago, some eight dozen additional poems had been added, representative of writers between 1850 and 1900. Now a further addition has been made, representing the first quarter of the present century. The smallness of the number of later poets selected as worthy of a place in the book, and the small number of poems added are surprising when one considers that the years covered were very rich in poetic output, particularly so in lyric verse. Compared with former similar periods represented, a considerably larger space ought to have been given up to selections from our modern lyrists. Twenty-seven new names are represented by thirty-six new poems. The Poet Laureate and Rudyard Kipling are each represented by three poems, five poets by two
The great importance of modern signalling equipment is illustrated in the case of the Underground Railways of London. In the rush hours, train succeeds train with an interval between them of only a couple of minutes, and the system rightly claims to be the most important transportation undertaking in the metropolis. During the year 1928, the London “Underground” conveyed 1,803 million passengers, an increase of 134 millions over 1927. This is the heaviest traffic ever handled, and the increased business has largely been secured by a bold policy of constructing extension tracks tapping rapidly growing outer suburbs.
Following the recent complete reconstruction of the Piccadilly Circus depot, the London Underground Railways have lately opened another large new depot, this time at Charing Cross, the official centre of London. Here it will be possible to handle fifty million passengers a year. An imposing concourse and booking-hall, 112 feet long and 83 feet wide, is equipped with twenty automatic ticket-selling machines of the self-printing type, at which passengers are able to attend to themselves.
In view of the recent remarkable revival of the machine tool industry in Great Britain, expressed in increasing world demand for British-made machine tools, the story of the trials and triumphs of the British pioneer in this field, told in the following article reproduced from the “British Engineers’ Export Journal,” is of particular interest at the present time.
For more than a hundred years, between 1770 and 1875, Great Britain was the chief source and centre of machine tool development in the world. The origin of nearly every advance or improvement in the equipment of engineering machine shops made in other countries, can be traced to the British inventor, either as an idea embodied partially in one form of tool or another, or an experiment abandoned because the need for developing it was not apparent at the time it was made.
That fact is too often ignored by those who institute comparisons between the progress shown in machine tool manufacture by the engineers of the United States or Germany, and those of Great Britain, during the past forty years. Originated and trained for the service of the engineering industry of the country, British machine tool manufacturers have always had a practical duty to perform which could not be put aside for the sake of engaging in doubtful experiments or attempts at cheap production. Others, less responsible, have made thousands of experiments which have issued in a few successes so spectacular in effect as to obscure both their numberless failures and the solid work done by British makers in the minds of many people.
Although the iron and steel parts of the machinery coming into use during the early years of the 18th century were shaped by the crude tools available, it was not till after the steam engine had begun to revolutionise manufacture that machine tool production becomes a recognised branch of industry. In his “Lives of the Engineers,” Samuel Smiles described the severe trials James Watt endured because of the lack of tools with which to shape the cylinders and pistons of his engines, and the almost total dearth of skilled workmen. In 1765, when erecting his first complete steam engine, the situation of the great inventor could be described thus: “The improvement of the cylinder and piston continued Watt's chief difficulty, and taxed his ingenuity to the utmost. At so low an ebb was the art of making cylinders that the one he used was not bored, but hammered, the collective mechanical skill of Glasgow being then unequal to the boring of a cylinder of the simplest kind; nor, indeed, did the necessary appliances for the purpose exist anywhere else.” Eleven years later, when the famous partnership of Boulton and Watt was entering upon its fruitful labours in Soho Foundry, Birmingham, the position was little better. “In organising the works at Soho,” says Dr. Smiles, “Boulton and Watt found it necessary to carry the division of labour to the
Dr. Smiles, however, seems to have been imperfectly acquainted with the mechanical equipment of Soho Foundry. It is now known that James Watt improved the crude foot-lathe then in use for his own purposes, and invented a wall-planer and several other machine tools, but the sense of justice of the proud, sensitive Scottish genius had been so often hurt by pirating rivals stealing his inventions, that he entrusted the working of the most of his improved machine tools only to workmen sworn to secrecy. Consequently, the greatest mechanical genius of the age contributed very little directly to the progressive development of machine tools in Great Britain, and it is necessary to look elsewhere for record of the stages through which the present-day equipment of the machine shops was evolved.
The first mechanical appliance designed for the cutting of hard substances, the lathe, still remains the central pivot upon which the organisation of the engineering shop is based. When it was invented no record tells; like the spindle, the loom and the boat, the lathe is a social product and improvement of the appliance has been a purely private affair for many centuries. Used from time immemorial in China, India and Persia, it was brought to Egypt and improved there, but neither in Egypt nor in Europe were the improvements noted. It is impossible, therefore, to date the early stages of the evolution of the machine tool. A curious instance occurred in quite recent times. For a long period historians assumed that the use of the lathe as a metal-cutting tool in Great Britain, originated with the steam engine, but a highly elaborate machine of the lathe type, known to have been built for the second Earl of Macclesfield in 1740, was unearthed and presented to the British Museum some years
(To be continued.)
Every railroad is measured by the character of its employees, as reflected in the service the railroad provides. Upon all the employees, to some extent, but more especially upon those who come in direct contact with the public, depends the reputation of the railroad.
In the early days of the Wairarapa railway I was travelling down to Wellington one afternoon when I met in the train a gentleman who, for the purpose of this chronicle shall be called McPherson. He was an engine-driver on the Hutt section, and having by some accident scalded a leg, was travelling in and out to the hospital to have it dressed. McPherson was known up and down the line as an expert angler, and when we met on the train he at once broke into a recital of the wonderful white moth that he had been wrapping and how deadly it had proved in luring the large “trooties” from the shallows and depths of the difficult Hutt River.
Presently, looking up into the rack of the carriage, his attention was captured by a brace of cock pheasants that I had rather ostentatiously displayed there.
“Whase burds are thae?” he asked excitedly, and when I assured him that they were mine, he asked where I had got them, and what sort of a dog I was using.
I told him that I shot the pheasants on Mr. Buchanan's place, in the Taueru River, and that I was using a setter.
At once he was up in arms. “I wadna’ ha'e ane o’ thae setters on my min',” he declared; “the great big lolloping brits! They gang smashin’ an’ crashin’ through the raupo an’ the fern an’ wauken up ilka burd i’ the country side. Gi'e me a tarrier!”
I told him that a terrier was not my idea of a sporting dog at all, but he quietly replied: “Ha'e ye ever h'ard tell o’ the wee bit tarrier that I had whan I was drivin’ the “Fell” engine on the Cross Creek?”
I told him that I had not. He expressed the greatest incredulity. “Why, man, the fame o’ that douggie is world wide. He was a wee bit thing jist aboot sae high, but intelligent—he was a damned sicht mair intelligent than maist human bein's! An’ I'd gang doon to the Wairarapa Lake o’ a nicht for a crack at the deuks. Crawlin’ on my belly through the raupo, I'd luik roun', an’ there wad be my tarrier doun, on his hauns an’ knees too, jist like a buddie. An’ come to the shelter on the edge of the loch, an’ the deuks wad come fleein’ in jist at the daurk'nin’ for a feed o’ chickweed. I wadnae fire at them settin', as that wad ha'e been a waste o’ ammuneetion, but I'd put my barrel into them as they were comin’ doun, an’ anither barrel into them as they went fleein’ oot, an’ I've seen as mony as forty deuks lyin’ dead on the watter a’ ance!” “Forty?”
“Weel, maybe no’ aye forty, but whiles twenty or ten, as the case micht be. An’ syne my douggie wad jist slip owre intil the watter an’ bring thae deuks in ane at a time till there'd be a big hump-lock sae hie alangside me. Of coorse there were
“Ye'll maybe ken Wullie McKenzie's place?
“You mean the Pigeon Bush?”
“Ay, the Pidgeon Bush. Weel Wullie had a lot o’ them damned great American turkey cocks. Some o’ them wad wei’ as muckle as achty puns.”
“Eighty pounds?”
“Weel no’ a’ o’ them achty puns. Some fifty, or sixty, or the like. I sort o’ took an interest in thae burds, an’ sometimes on a fore-nicht J wad tak’ my gun under my oxter and ha'e a daunder round Wullie's place, jist to ha'e a bit keek at them. An’ sometimes I'd fin’ ane o’ them lyin’ deid, an’ I'd tak’ it hame to the wifie to mak’ kail wi', an’ syne it was gey eaten cauld.
“Ane nicht I was up at Wullie's place wi’ my tarrier an’ my gun, whan I h'ard a terrible squawkin’ i’ the bush up alang the ridge. I rins up the ridge, an’ there was the tarrier grippin’ the neck o’ ane o’ Wullie McKenzie's great big turkey cocks. As sune as the burd saw me he kind o’ ta'en fricht, an’ flew awa’ up onto the tap o’ a big white pine, and there he was rollin’ up and doun until my dog chokit ‘m and thae baith fell to the gr'und thegether … But ye ocht to ha'e some of thae white moths o’ mine for nicht fishin', they're gey guid!”
A few Sundays after this recital, our friend McPherson was sitting on the banks of the Hutt River. It was a delightfully sunny day with just the slightest touch of a southerly. Along in the distance was seen approaching an immaculate figure wearing the latest in waders and gear and carrying a Hardy split cane rod. As soon as he got within hailing distance McPherson called, “Guid mornin', are ye gettin’ ony luck, the day?”
“Oh, yes, excellent luck,” exclaimed the fisherman. “I've got quite a few nice fish.”
“Let's ha'e a look at them!”
“Oh, certainly!” and carrying his bag across the stream he opened it for inspection.
McPherson dragged a handful of fish out on to the dry sand, and then looking at them contemptuously exclaimed: “Wee bit McTavishes!”
“I don't understand you, sir!”
“Weel there's a banker chiel ca'd McTavish comes up here frae Wellington ilka Sunday; I've never seen him mysel', but I've h'ard telt o'm. He's aye dressed up to dick an’ he gangs fishin’ in a’ the backwatters an’ creekies and catches a’ the wee bit spratties in the river. Syne he gangs aboot Wellington a’ the next week as proud as a cock wi’ twa tails tellin’ folks what a wonderfu’ catch he made on Sawboth.”
“Sir, my name's McTavish!”
“Weel, wha'd a’ thocht it!”
From Mr. J. Coburn, Hamilton, to the General Manager of Railways, Wellington:—
I happened to be touring the North recently, and owing to the wet weather was obliged to send my car from Maungaturoto by rail to Helensville. A Mr. Pearson of Edgecombe, Bay of Plenty, also had his car ready for shipment and we can assure you that our inquiries were met with the fullest possible information, the stationmaster and his staff doing everything possible to assist us. The prompt manner in which the trucks were supplied and unrailed at Helensville was indeed appreciated and we feel sure that if the Railways conduct their business along such lines they need have no fear for the future.
Mr. Pearson, in mentioning the matter to me stated that his motto in the future would be “Ship by rail.” Quite apart from any patriotism entering into the matter at all, the manner in which the business was conducted was most satisfactory and we felt sure that you were certainly making your presence felt at the head of the great organisation of the Railway Department.
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From the Secretary, Timaru Trotting Club (Incorporated), to the Stationmaster, Timaru:—
At the committee meeting of the Trotting Club held last evening, reference was made to the assistance that you, personally, and members of your staff, rendered to the owners and trainers of horses for our meeting.
The little courtesies granted to these men were much appreciated and one and all could not say enough for the way you and your staff looked after their interests.
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From the Hon. Secretary, First Lower Hutt Troop of Boy Scouts, Lower Hutt, to the Railway Bus Manager, Wellington:—
At a meeting of the parents’ committee of the above troop I was instructed to write to you on behalf of all the passengers travelling by the special bus to the Scouts’ Camp at Akatarawa, to convey the appreciation of the passengers of the very careful driving and courtesy of your driver, Mr. Smith, under very difficult circumstances caused by the narrow roads and bad bends.
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From the Secretary, Civil Service Club, Wellington, to the Railway Bus Manager, Wellington:—
The Executive and Committee of the Civil Service Club desire to express their warmest thanks and appreciation for the excellent service given at the club's annual picnic, especially mentioning the officer in charge of the bus despatch, also the drivers, who were most obliging and helpful, and largely contributed to the success of the outing.
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From the Assistant-Manager, The Milburn Lime and Cement Co., Ltd., Dunedin, to the District Traffic Manager, Dunedin:—
We desire to express to you and your officers our appreciation of the manner in which you conveyed our guests to the Cement Works’ opening at Burnside, on Monday last.
The “special” provided had adequate first-class accommodation, was run promptly to time, carried our guests there and back in comfort, and greatly assisted towards the success of the gathering.
It has, indeed, been a pleasure to work with your Department's officers, and we feel that it is only right that we should place on record your good work on our behalf.
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From the Manager, Waitoa Butter Factory, to the Assistant Traffic Inspector, Frankton Junction:—
I have been transferred to Waitoa and I wish to convey to you my thanks for the way in which you have attended to the supply of trucks, etc., while I have been in charge here. It has been a pleasure to deal with you and the Railway Department generally.
(Mr. J. McGrail, wagon supply officer, Frankton Junction, was the officer who attended to the supply of wagons referred to.)
As a result of four years’ work there has recently been completed the vast new passenger station of the London, Midland and Scottish Railway in Manchester, the great Lancashire commercial centre. This station is unique in that it has been formed from two existing depots, and possesses the longest passenger platform in the world—a new platform of no less a length than 2,196 feet. Previously the longest railway platforms at Home were the 1,692ft. platform at York, and that of 1,680ft. at Edinburgh. With the possible exception of India, the Manchester platform now ranks as the longest in the world.
To form this new Manchester terminal, there have been joined together the former Victoria Station and the Lancashire and Yorkshire line, and the Exchange Station of the old London and North-Western Railway. Both these lines have been swallowed up in the London, Midland and Scottish consolidation. A feature of the unification is the elaborate power-operated light signalling system which has been introduced. The majority of the new signals are of the four-aspect type, and the change-over has enabled six mechanically-operated signal boxes to be replaced by two electrically-worked boxes, having 91 and 85 levers respectively. Route levers are installed in the cabins with the corresponding route indicators at signal locations, five signals with route indication displaying four routes in one instance being operated by a single lever. Track circuiting is employed throughout, but block working is retained in a modified form. The railwayman from New Zealand, interested in signalling problems and visiting England, could hardly find a more attractive location for his enquiries than this new station at Manchester. (says our London Correspondent.)
The driver of a goods train (in Canada) which was running up a steep gradient saw a motor-car on the line a few hundred yards ahead. He applied the brakes, but the train did not stop until the car had been given a gentle push. The train crew, on investigating, found a man at the wheel of the car fast asleep. Even the impact of the train on the car had failed to waken him. The crew awakened him; he gave one startled glance at the men around him and the engine towering above his car, stepped on the self-starter, and went off without even saying “Thank you.”—“British United Press,” Montreal.—Courtesy “Railway Gazette,” London.
The elaborate system of modern train control designed for the protection of the rail travelling public, and the functioning of the emergency machinery of the railways in the event of a mishap to a train (fortunately a rare occurrence in New Zealand), is described briefly in the following article by “A.O.H.” in the “Dominion.”
Thundering wheels, a rush of air, and shrill blasts from the engine whistle screaming into the night; a line of carriages writhing behind like an illuminated centipede, and above them a trailing pennant of black smoke. The rounding of a curve, a jolting and grinding as the wheels of the engine strike a slip on the line, and sudden disaster threatens. In a flash the steam is cut off and the brakes applied, but the engine cannot right itself, and with a stagger as from a fatal thrust, it topples over, while the driver and the fireman jump for safety. The carriages remain shuddering.
The manner in which the Railways Department sets to work demonstrates the careful provision made for cases of accident. Serious disruptions of the railway service of New Zealand, although few and far between, are a contingency for which the Department has always to be fully prepared. With up and down traffic on a main line blocked, urgent measures are needed, and the breakdown service that is always ready at a moment's notice is one of the most important factors in railway transport.
Immediately after an accident in this district, advice of what has occurred is flashed to Wellington, the District Engineer is notified and the machinery of the Department is set in motion. Where an ordinary railway line is affected, the Inspector of Permanent Way takes over, and if the accident concerns a bridge, then the Bridge Foreman is the man of the hour. A breakdown gang, composed of men from the workshops and other sources, is at once dispatched, and they set off at full speed with a fully-equipped train. If the accident is nearer Wanganui, then a breakdown train is sent from there.
Back in the central control office at Wellington the operator of the wonderful selective telephone instrument clears the way for them. By means of his machine, which is in constant, independent and simultaneous touch with all stations along the line, he directs that any trains between Wellington and the scene of the accident are to allow the breakdown train through. The operator also advises certain stations to obtain a quota of gangers, plate-layers and workmen, who are to be ready to join the breakdown train as it passes. In addition, he notifies gangers in close proximity to the accident to proceed independently to the scene of the trouble. This they do, taking their trolleys, and as there are a ganger and a team of four, five or six men on every seven miles of railway line in New Zealand, it is not long before a good number are scurrying along the rails.
As the relief train speeds on its way those on board give their equipment a final inspection. It is not likely that anything will be missing, because one of the most important tasks of the Store Foreman back at Wellington is to keep the breakdown train provided with every requirement for an emergency. There are, first of all, a complete first-aid outfit and medical stores needed by a doctor in case there are any injured persons. At a glance one can lay one's hand on anything required. For the use of the workmen there is a crane on a wagon, supplemented by all manner of tools, jacks and lifting
In the meantime the operator at the control office in Wellington is working at top speed. One of his first acts is to secure an engine from the nearest station where one is ready or if none is obtainable at once then he directs that one be uncoupled from the least important train and dispatched by itself or with carriages to the relief of the passengers of the wrecked train. In this case also, every facility is given the relief train to get through with the least possible delay. The train schedules are rearranged in the best manner possible, and stations are notified of the emergency measures, which are varied or sustained until the railway system in the affected area is again running smoothly.
The system of train control is intricate, yet simple. In his office at Wellington the operator at the telephone apparatus is the central figure. By the turn of a small switch on the board in front of him he is immediately in touch with the particular station he desires. A two-valve wireless set, used in conjunction with the telephone, amplifies the voice of the man at the other end, which is heard through a loud-speaker to the right of the operator. The latter can call Marton—the furthest station in his district—as easily and quickly as he can get into touch with Thorndon.
In the course of his ordinary duties a voice comes to the operator from the reproducer, announcing the arrival or departure of a train from a station. The operator immediately marks the great chart on his desk, which shows the progress of trains on the different lines in his district. A man who has “been through the mill,” the control operator knows how to direct the running of trains. No train may proceed on its journey to a further point unless on advice from him. The goods that trains carry are distributed and loaded at his direction—all particulars of their freights are beside him. He directs shunting at a distant station, authorises watering operations, enables trains to make up for lost time, holds up others, and generally has the whole transport business of the railways in his district under his thumb. In the night watches he is still a constant worker, and by means of the red lines on his charts, ever growing, one can watch the progress of each train from station to station, while from the reproducer come the hollow tones of voice after voice, setting his pencil flying.
Such is the control operator's regular work; planning, informing, inquiring, directing. His is a task of great responsibility, and little do sleepy passengers, listening to the rumbling of the wheels over the rails, realise the careful control that is being exercised. So elaborate is the control operator's check on trains and so accurate his calculations, that if a train is much delayed between stations he soon makes inquiries, and if the delay continues he directs the stations on each side of the section in question to send along a man to investigate. Upon advice of an accident being received he has only to turn the “universal” switch to call up instantly and simultaneously every station in his area and give his directions to an unseen host of listeners.
The central control office in Wellington is the nerve centre of an extensive organisation.
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It must not be thought that extension of electrified railroad lines implies that the days of steam transportation are ended. On the contrary, steam power is basic to railroad operation.
… The new era in railroading will not supplant the old, but will supplement it.—General Atterbury, President, Pennsylvania Railroad.
For freight train working and long-distance passenger haulage, the steam-driven locomotive will for long remain supreme. At Home vast progress has been recorded during the past few years in steam locomotive development, and there are, to-day, few finer haulage machines at work on the Home railways than the “Flying Scotsman” engines of the L. and N.E. Railway, the “Royal Scot” giant of the L.M. and S. line, the Great Western “King George V.,” and the Southern Railway “Lord Nelson” and “King Arthur” machines. Of late there has been a much greater employment of the three and four-cylinder simple locomotive in Britain. Higher working pressures have been introduced, and steam distribution valves of the poppet or Lentz design brought into service. In some instances the steam distribution valves are operated by the Caprotti valve gear, around which such great interest centres. Super-heating has made rapid strides, and everyone is very closely watching the experiment of the L.M. and S. Railway with the Schmidt-Henschel high-pressure system, previously referred to in these pages. Much more probably yet remains to be heard concerning the trials conducted by the L. and N.E. Railway with the Kitson-Still locomotive. This is a combined steam and internal combustion 2-6-2 tank locomotive. It has eight 131/2in. by 151/2in. double-acting cylinders working on the Deisel principle, these being arranged under the boiler in two opposing groups of four each. Through a geared jack shaft the cylinders drive 5ft. six-coupled wheels. Steam pressure is 180lbs. per sq. in., and tractive force 24,500lbs. Steam is employed in the cylinders for starting and for low-running speeds, the locomotive otherwise being operated as an internal combustion machine.
Figures recently published give the number of accidents in factories and workshops in England and Wales in 1928, as 126,366, of which 578 were fatal. The action taken last autumn in response to official representations regarding safety-first arrangements by a number of important employers’ associations, however, has had good results and substantial progress was being made on accident prevention in the industries chiefly concerned. Commenting on the above figures and the progress of the accident prevention campaign now in progress in England, the Home Secretary observed that the outlook was distinctly encouraging and he hoped for a much fuller and wider development of this movement in the near future.
The staff of the Hutt Valley Workshops certainly lived up to their reputation for capacity to do things well when their Social Hall was opened on the 15th July.
Skilled craftsmen had helped to make the large hall a bower of delight. A thousand coloured electrics shone through the graceful fronds of giant fern trees. A panoramic view of sea and seashore gave the impression that the glass-like floor ran out upon the beach. It was a great night for the girls; for though the brawny builders of locomotives and wagons rolled up in full strength, a large proportion of them appeared to be unattached, and there were always many men looking on when every lady was skimming through the mazes of the latest thing in “hops.” A fine spirit of hospitality and comradeship was found from the Workshops Manager (Mr. Walworth) right down through all the members of his staff, and had its effect in making all the guests thoroughly enjoy the evening.
The inclusion of social halls at places where large numbers of railwaymen are employed is, of course, part of the scheme for fostering the social and educational intercourse of the railway staffs. This commodious social hall of the Hutt Valley Workshops was officially opened by the Minister of Labour (Hon. W. A. Veitch) in the absence from Wellington of the Minister of Railways (Hon. W. B. Taverner).
Apologies for non-attendance were received from the Prime Minister (Right Hon. Sir Joseph Ward), the Minister of Defence (Hon. T. M. Wilford), and the Leader of the Opposition (Right Hon. J. G. Coates).
In declaring the hall open, the Minister of Labour complimented the Department on the provision of such a fine social hall and expressed the hope that the present gathering would be the forerunner of many of its kind.
“There are few people in New Zealand who realise the quality of work performed by the skilled artisans of the Dominion, particularly in the Railway Workshops, the Minister said. “I have had no experience as a mechanic, but I have driven locomotives over many miles in New Zealand, and the man who handles the train can claim to know something about the quality of the work in it. As the result of many years’ experience with locomotives, I say that there has never been a locomotive put on the railways in New Zealand equal to those built in our own workshops by our own men.”
As further evidence of the skill of the local men, the Minister recalled that during the war the workshops had produced a really serviceable machine-gun, notwithstanding the absence of the special machinery required for such work.
Proceeding, Mr. Veitch said that one of the greatest, if not the greatest, things in life was true friendship; and the hall would provide a common meeting ground for the creation and cementing of the best friendships between the men and between their womenfolk. In his judgment that feature of the institution was the most important, for, without friendship and social intercourse, there was very little in life that was worth while. Gatherings of the future, he hoped, would consolidate the goodwill now being established.
Mrs. T. M. Wilford offered an apology for the absence of the Hon. T. M. Wilford, who was unable to attend, as he had just recovered from an attack of influenza. Mrs. Wilford wished the railwaymen and their wives every happiness in their social gatherings.
The Leader of the Labour Party (Mr. H. E. Holland) said that the railwaymen of New Zeal-land were engaged in a great social service, since the work of production and distribution depended in the end upon the work of transportation. The service itself, therefore, owed it to the employees that they should be made to feel that the whole of life was not simply to work, but to work and get as much joy and pleasure out of life as possible. He was confident that enjoyment of those amenities would make for greater efficiency in the service the men rendered the community. To-day it was recognised that the best workers were those whose lives were filled with pleasure and who were made to feel that life was worth living.
The General Manager of Railways (Mr. H. H. Sterling) said he believed that it was worth while for an employer to take an interest in his staff outside the hours of work. He had always believed in this, not only from altruistic and humanitarian motives, but because he believed it paid any employer to see that his staff were made happy in their employment. A happy staff meant better work and less strain for the worker. In addition, it led to common understanding—a factor which would prevent difficulties from arising. As facilities for that contact developed, so would grow smooth working in the railways, for the betterment of all concerned.
The frock illustrated, in light wool, silk, or rayon, is as becoming as it is smart. The yoke ties with a bow at the left side, the wristbands of the slightly full bishop sleeves repeating this tie motif. The blouse fits closely about the hips and the skirt is pleated all round.
On 10th July a team chosen from the ladies of the Railway Department met a representative eleven of the ladies of the Pensions Department in a friendly game of hockey.
Although the ground was in a bad condition and showers frequent, the game was thoroughly enjoyed by all, the numerous “spills” providing an abundance of entertainment for the onlookers.
Miss H. C. Kitto refereed in a very able manner, the game ending with the well-merited score of 7-1 in favour of Pensions.
On the 25th July a most interesting game was played, on the Government Printing Office court, between the typistes and the girls of the Chief Accountant's office.
Both teams were evenly matched and the keenness on each side made it an interesting game for the spectators.
Although the Chief Accountant's girls gained the victory by 7 goals to 1, the game could not be judged by the score as the passing of the typistes’ defenders was of high standard.
As great interest was shown in the match it is hoped that more games of this nature will be played in the near future.
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Never put a cake away in an airtight tin until quite cold.
Many mothers of to-day are, quite rightly, anxious that their children should receive as much sunlight as possible, and refuse to enclose the youngsters’ heads in bonnets or their faces in veils. But the baby's head is unprotected by any thick growth of hair, and its eyes are very sensitive structures, the power of shutting out light being much more ineffective than that of the adult. Therefore, when the sun is very strong it should by no means be allowed to shine directly on to the uncovered head and face. The ordinary bonnet or round hat without a brim protects the skull, but is practically of no use for shading the eyes.
A much better protection is a linen shade, lined with thick green material, and with a similarly lined frill four or five inches long all round it. The entire shade is stretched on a wire frame which can be adjusted above the perambulator, that the direct rays of the sun can be intercepted from the head and face in whatever position the child may be lying, without interfering with a free current of fresh air. With such arrangement, no hat or bonnet is necessary.
* * *
Early dental decay in children may be a sign of some constitutional disorder, such as rickets, or some other condition in which the absorption of calcium from the food is deficient; but often the seeds of dental caries are sown in early life by lack of attention to the teeth.
It is essential to cleanse the teeth thoroughly before the child goes to bed, as otherwise fragments of food which may be lodged between the teeth will undergo fermentation and undermine the dental enamel. Certain foodstuffs, particularly those containing starch or sugar, are especially prone to ferment. These should, therefore be avoided at the child's last meal, if this is given shortly before bedtime. — Dr. E. M. Anderson.
The Prime Minister (the Right Hon. Sir J. G. Ward), in discussing the statement recently published regarding the working of the Public Trust Office during the year ended 31st March last, gave some further particulars about the Office which he considered would be of interest to the public generally and the large number of clients who have shown such steadily increasing confidence in the Public Trustee's administration.
“Looking back on the past thirty years,” said Sir Joseph, “the figures recording the changes that have taken place are remarkable.”
In 1899 the value of the estates under administration was £2,110,316.
In 1904 it was £3,152,882, and in 1929 it was £48,334,790.
The increase in the amount of the cash balances held on behalf of estates and accounts under administration in the Public Trust Office throws a further light on the development that is taking place.
In 1899 the total cash balances amounted to £956,153; in 1904 they were £1,660,716, and in 1929 they were £31,043,172.
“If further evidence were needed,” added Sir Joseph, “it is given by the fact to which reference was made in my earlier statement that more than 63,000 wills are held by the Public Trustee on behalf of living persons who have appointed him their executor. Fifteen years ago the number of wills so held was only 6,427.” The present estimated value of the assets affected by the wills held on deposit exceeds £251,000,000.
The new business handled each year now reaches imposing figures, and its value in the year ended 31st March last was in excess of seven million pounds.
The Public Trust Office is an important lending institution, and provides financial assistance to all classes—to farmers for the purchase and improvement of their holdings, to business men for the erection of city buildings, to town dwellers for the erection of their own homes, and to local bodies for the completion of public works.
The expansion of business generally is reflected in the growth of the Office investments as shown in the following table:—
The Public Trust Office has always been self-supporting, and although its integrity is guaranteed by the State, no call has been made on the Consolidated Fund to meet any loss, while it is exceedingly unlikely that any call ever will be made on the general taxpayer.
There was a circus in Newcastle. Two little fellows had a threepenny piece each, but the admission was sixpence. One of them had a bright idea: “Let's put them on the railway line and get them flattened out,” he said, “and they'll look like sixpences.” So they placed them on the line and waited till a train passed, but alas! when they went to get the coins there was nothing there. The train happened to be the Aberdeen Express.
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A ganger received the following note from one of his men: “I'm sending in the accident report on Casey's foot when he struck it with the spike maul. Now under ‘Remarks,’ do you want mine or do you want Casey's?”
* * *
A farmer once said that “he ear-marked his hogs by cutting a piece off their tails.”
* * *
“You know,” said the woman whose motor car had run down Jim Brown, “you must have been walking carelessly. I am a very careful driver. I have been driving a car for seven years.”
“Lady, you have nothing on me. I have been walking for over fifty years.”
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He: “Darling, is it yet the psychological moment to ask your crabbed old dad for your hand?”
She: “It is my hero—he is sitting in his stocking feet.”
Melba—where Napoleon was imprisoned.
A circle is a round straight line with a hole in the middle.
The liver is situated south of the stomach.
A vacuum is nothing shut up in a box. They have a way of pumping out the air. When all the air and everything else is shut out, naturally they are able to shut in nothing, where the air was before.
Algebra was the wife of Euclid.
Water is composed of two gins, oxygin and hydrogin, oxygin is pure gin, hydrogin is gin and water.
A magnet is a thing you find in a bad apple.
Explain the word “buttress.” A woman who makes butter.
The masculine of lass is ass.
Imports are ports very far inland.
Coal is decayed vegetarians.
* * *
“Your father couldna’ pass the doctor,” said one boy to another. “Ach, that's naethin,” was the retort. “Your father couldna’ pass a public-hoose.”
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Dorothy: “My baby brother is going to be a great ladies’ man.”
Margie: “Why do you think so?”
Dorothy: “He got hold of my doll yesterday and chewed her complexion off.”
Sustained speed of 90 miles an hour for six or more hours, with a load of 7 to 12 coaches, said to make it the fastest locomotive on American railroads, can be achieved by a new streamlined passenger engine developed by the Delaware and Hudson Railroad (says the Christian Science Monitor.)
No. 62, as the locomotive is designated, is of the Pacific type, and wind pressure is reduced to the minimum. No outside pipes show. The air compressor is beneath the trucks, the bell is beneath the pilot, and the front of the pilot has a smoothly curved surface designed to divert the air current along the sides of the boiler.
The engine has a tractive force of 41,600 pounds, weighs 283,300 pounds, is 90 feet long, and has a boiler pressure of 260 pounds, 50 pounds higher than the average passenger locomotive. It was built in the Carbondale (Pa.) shops of the railroad, and was planned for the New York-Montreal run.
Anderson, J. J., to Stationmaster, Gr. 6, Cross Creek.
Brosnahan, D., to Shift Clerk, Gr. 6, Ohakune.
Cameron, A. M., to Stationmaster, Gr. 5, Springfield.
Cullen, F. C., to Stationmaster-in-charge, Gr. 3, Nelson.
Howard, C. C., to Assistant Audit Inspector, Gr. 5, Wellington.
Jacobson, J. L., to Rating Clerk, Gr. 6, Dunedin Goods.
Kerr, C. J., to Section Clerk (expenditure), Gr. 5, Chief Accountant's Office, Wellington.
Munro, W. J., to Chief Clerk, Gr. 3, Hutt Workshops.
McLean, G. H., to Train Running Officer, Gr. 4, Christchurch.
Rees, H. A., to Goods Clerk, Gr. 5, Hamilton.
Rennie, W. H., to Rating Clerk, Gr. 6, Wellington Goods.
Undrill, C. A., to Parcels Clerk, Gr. 4, Auckland.
Rogers, C. A., to Gr. 7, Carterton.
Dennehy, J., to Relief, Te Kuiti.
Hayward, T. C., to Opua.
Lennon, A., to Ashburton.
Murray, R. J., to Tauranga.
McGaffan, N., to Spare, Auckland.
McLaughlan, W. H., to Spare, Christchurch Passenger.
Seager, H. E., to Taihape.
Tucker, C., to Greymouth.
Wright, J. H., to Greymouth.
Adams, J. H., to Christchurch Passenger.
Bannester, F. L., to Taumarunui.
Casey, J. J., to Timaru.
Cattermole, G. A., to Ashburton.
Crabb, W. T., to Upper Hutt.
Ingram, D. P. S., to Relief, Taumarunui.
Prichard, C. G., to Marton.
Rose, A. J., to Shunter, Taumarunui.
Derbridge, C. H., to Taumarunui.
Hislop, J. P., to Forgeman, Hutt.
Henderson, A. S., to First Assistant Engineer, Gr. 1, Signals, Wellington.
Lovatt, C. R., to Assistant Engineer, Gr. 3, Signals, Wellington.
Mackersey, C. A., to First Assistant Engineer (electrical), Gr. 1, Wellington.
Swift, L. A., to Assistant Engineer (telephone), Gr. 3, Wellington.
Gubbins, A. E., to Marton.
Murdie, J. S., to Palmerston North.
Scahill, J., to Summit.
(Promotions continued)
Batchelor, G. H., to Sub-Foreman, Gr. 6, Hillside.
Kempton, B. J., to Sub-Foreman, Gr. 6, Invercargill.
Piper, A. L., to Assistant Loco. Engineer, Gr. 1, Christchurch.
Pointon, R., to Timber Inspector, Gr. 6, Otahuhu.
Smith, W. S., to Blacksmith Shop Foreman, Gr. 4, Hutt Workshops.
Sutton, O. L., to Sub-Foreman, Gr. 6, Invercargill.
Yamm, W. J., to Car and Wagon Inspector, Gr. 4, Wanganui.
Wood, A. J., to Car and Wagon Depot, Christchurch.
Snelgar, L., to Raetihi.
Smith, W., to Reefton.
Timperley, W. B., to National Park.
Welsh, R., to Waimahaka.
Sheehan, E., to Whangarei.
Note.—“Minus” sign indicates decrease. In all other cases the figures indicate the increase in number, quantity or amount.
The total operating revenue for the Dominion shows an increase of £26,666 for the three periods as compared with the corresponding periods of last year. Heavy traffic in sheep, timber and other goods in the main districts of the South Island is mainly responsible for the increased revenue.
The decrease in the number of ordinary passengers carried by rail is due largely to the greater part of the Easter traffic for 1929 being included in last year's figures.
The increase in the livestock traffic in the Auckland district is accounted for by movements of store stock and operations of buyers in fat stock for export, while the decrease for the other districts of the North Island is the outcome of good pastures, and to prices being firmer than last year. The increase of sheep traffic in the South Island is due to heavy consignments to the various freezing works as a result of the good season experienced, fat stock coming forward earlier this year.
The improved state of the timber traffic arises from a better demand for building timber. The substantial increase in the Christchurch district is, however, partly due to the depressed state of the industry last year.
The tonnage of “other goods” conveyed by rail discloses a substantial increase of 115,000 tons. Auckland and Wanganui districts had abnormal consignments of manure last year. The increase for the Ohakune and Wellington districts is due largely to metal for road-making and to shipping fluctuations. The substantial increase of 104,000 tons for the South Island is due to shipping fluctuations, heavy traffic in metal for road-making, and manure for farmers.
Published by the New Zealand Government Railways Department, and Printed by Whitcombe & Tombs Ltd., Lambton Quay, Wellington, August 1st, 1929.