Pacific Islands Monthly JUNE, 1964 VOL. 35. NO. 6. lkjkl/jm>< istered at G.P.0., Sydney, and at P. 0., i, for transmission by post as a Newspaper.
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HAVE YOU NOTICED HOW MUCH BETTER GILBEY’S f GIN IS!
So why mix with others 7 T GILBEY’S GINA THE COVER: Lady Jakeway, wife of Fi Governor, enjoys the novelty of be carried ashore at Lomaloma, in the I group, by two stalwart Fijians. The casion was a visit by the Governor in official yacht "Ra Marama". But see a the picture on p. 19. The photo is by li Wright, Fiji PRO.
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Pacific Islands Monthly
. 35. No. 6, JUNE, 1964 This Issue ERAL 1 Americans in Polynesia 87 is, Philp Figures 119,121
Irican Samoa
merings Over Political Status .... 63 tening of Immigration Regulations 65 >K ISLANDS ' Month 15 m for Rarotonga's Blue Laws .... 71 f British Crown Became Involved 77 I Tenure Study 89 itific Stations Established 115 r Eclipse at Manuae 115 oceros Beetles Found—Dead 144 iber System for Legislative Council 14 jbau's War Club 17 ernor in Lau Group 19 ist Boom 27, 116 liry Into Civil Service 39 ilems for New Governor 41 I Problem 45 on Tobacco Advertising 49 ick Technical Institute Opened 72 apples Air-Freighted to NZ 114 power Survey 115 re for Church Unity 116 i Not Ripe for TV 121 . Gold Yield Expected 122 f Bus Link Across Viti Levu .... 133 oceros Beetle Near Yasawas 144
Jch Polynesia
r Edition of Arii Taimai's Memoirs 93 >ur for Papeete Harbour Project 95 eum to Honour Gauguin 132
Gilbert And Ellice Islands Colony
Air Link With Fiji in July 67 Christmas Island's Future 115 Long Drift Voyage 116 NAURU Sovereignty Issue in Resettlement 9
New Caledonia
Workers' Strike 11 Lavish Hospitality for NZ Yachtsmen 111 Election for New Deputy 113 Comet Jets for Auckland Service 115
New Hebrides
New Copra Pest on Efate 13 Seabed Object May be Jap Sub. 99 Forestry Survey 115 NIUE New Look in Island Life 63 Beer Cargo Gets a Ducking 107
Norfolk Island
Oldest Resident is 94 113 Brochure Planned on St. Barnabas 113
Papua-New Guinea
House of Assembly to Open 10 New Guinea Corporation Formed 11,119 Visit by Trade Ship Planned 12 Electoral Laws to be Amended 12 World Bank Survey 13 Cocoa Crop Pest 13 Mace for New Assembly 17 Border Problems of the Future 19 Bride Who Wouldn't be Bought 31 Ex-Servicemen in Colour Bar Fuss 35 Malarial Pills Allergy 37 Madang Catholic Seminary Opened .. 55 A Tale of the Morobe Goldfields .... 79 Capuchin Priest in Territory 50 Years Ago 81 Profile of Ivan Champion 85 Lae Wharf Damaged—Again 107 Second Hotel for Lae 114 Survey for Milne Bay Area Airstrips 115 Moresby Rape Case 116 New Government Building in Rabaul 116 Carpenter Tea Enterprise 119 Representation at Osaka Trade Fair 121 Bigger Cocoa Crop Expected 122 Decimal Currency 123 Nail Factory for Lae 123
Solomon Islands
Grounded Ship Was Overloaded .... 14 New High Commissioner Knighted .... 37 Deep Water Berth for Honiara 95 Long Swim to Save Companions ... 97 Tasman Islanders Blown to Choiseul .. 99 Twice-Weekly Air Service to Begin 113 First Logs from Gizo Shipped 114 Copra Production Down 114 Royal Society Expedition Planned 114 Timber Co. Withdrawing from Vanikoro 121 TOKELAUS Problem of Political Future 17 TONGA Liquor Laws Work Happily 25 Hospitality for Prominent Visitors 25 Woman's Shot Put Record 26 200 for Women's Conference 116
Western Samoa
Cigarette Sales Down 49 New Cabinet Selections Criticised 57 First Sugar Milled 59 Banana Prospects Dim 59 Archaeological Discoveries 61 NZ Governor-General's Visit 61 "Adler" Wreck to be Enclosed 61 Site for Apia Wharf 95 DEPARTMENTS: Tropicalities, 17; From the Islands Press, 20; Territories Talk-Talk, 51; Magazine Section, 77; New Books, 87; Shipping, 95; In a Nutshell, 113; People, 117; Commerce, 119; Deaths of Islands People, 129; Travel Talk, 131; Shipping and Airways Information, 134.
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"Sovereignty Or No Deal"
The Nauruans Still Say
By a Staff Writer The Nauruans still want a guarantee of sovereign independence from the Australian Government before they will agree to any plan to resettle them in or near Australia. \ SPECIAL representative from l*- Nauru, Austin Bernicke, is exacted to say this bluntly at a meetng of the United Nations Trusteeihip Council in New York early in hme. However, the Australian Gov- :rnment has already stated categoricdly that it will not entertain the idea )f a sovereign Nauruan nation withn or near its borders.
Nauru’s special representative to he UN is a member of the Nauru Government Council which liscussed the question of attaining ndependence for Nauruans “as soon is is practicable” at its monthly meetng on April 29.
At this meeting, which was pre- ;ided over by the Australian Adminstrator, Mr. R. S. Leydin, Head [Thief Hammer Deßoburt said that lie council wished “to aim at lovereign independence for Nauru by 1967.”
“We have at times discussed the late of January 18, 1967,” he said.
He went on to say that, “to enlance and promote and pave the way 'or the eventual achievement of selfgovernment,” the Council thought it accessary to elevate the status of the Council and increase its responsibilities to those of a Legislative Council.
Mr. Leydin replied readily that he would be glad to discuss the question of a legislative council with a committee of the local government council at any time.
But he was probably somewhat taken aback by the Head Chief’s statements, as members of the council had not breathed a word about independence or resettlement for months; and when resettlement was last mentioned, the council stated that it intended to submit counterproposals to the Australian Government’s stand that sovereign independence for the Nauruans could not be entertained.
Will Buy Curtis Meanwhile, the Australian Government has decided to acquire all the residential leaseholds at Southend on Curtis Island—in case the Nauruans finally decide to accept this island for resettlement on its terms.
Curtis is an island of 180 square miles which forms part of the port for Gladstone, Queensland. It is separated from the mainland by a narrow channel, which, at one point, at low tide, is virtually dry land.
The Nauruans have told the Australian Government that this would be a suitable place for their resettlement, but they have not agreed to the Government’s terms that they should become Australian citizens, subject to Australian laws, etc., if they do accept it.
In announcing that the Australian Government would acquire the residential leaseholds on Curtis, Australia’s Territories Minister, Mr. C. E.
Barnes, said that the Government had decided to do this “knowing that it could, in the final event, transpire that Curtis Island was not used for Nauruan resettlement.”
He added: “Nevertheless, this decision would be justified if it served to convey to the Nauruans and the international community that Australia was deeply concerned to honour its obligations under the United Nations Trusteeship Agreement to Home, Sweet, Home Of The Nauruans Nauru, in the Central Pacific, is only 12 miles in circumference and its highest point is about 200 ft. above sea level. In this fine aerial picture the phosphat loading cantilever, with a ship loading, can be seen at the right.
The airstrip is above it on the right-hand tip of the island.
Nauru has no regular air services although the strip will take aircraft of DC4 standard. —Photo: Australian News and Information Bureau. 9 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
safeguard the future of the Nauruan people, and was prepared to back its offer by whatever preliminary action is practicable.”
Despite Mr. Barnes’ statements, it would appear that the Australian Government is fairly confident that it will eventually win the Nauruans around to accepting its terms.
It would also appear that most Nauruans don’t really want sovereign independence as much as they say they do—they simply don’t want to make the irrevocable decision of accepting Curtis Island or anything else, and so they keep on asking for what they know they won’t get to ward off the dreaded day when they will have to make the decision.
There are probably half-a-dozen reasons—some of which they may not have recognised themselves—why they are reluctant to make a decision.
No Support The basic reason is that Nauru, despite its lack of fresh water and general barrenness, is the Nauruans’ home, sweet, home. It is their land.
It has always been theirs. It has belonged to them and their ancestors for so long that the present-Nauruans have no traditions—as is the case in most parts of Polynesia, for example —that their ancestors ever lived anywhere else.
This being the case, some islanders —particularly the older ones—feel that it would be ungrateful of them to abandon the land that God gave them; yet, on the other hand, they know that once the island’s phosphate is exhausted, there will be virtually nothing to support them there.
However, as it is frequently stated that the phosphate deposits will not be worked out for at least 30 years, many of the older people say they want to live out their lives where they are.
This view naturally inhibits the younger people from making a decision to move elsewhere because they are reluctant to leave their elders.
But this is just one of several inhibiting factors for the young people —especially those who have never been outside Nauru.
There is also the fear of venturing into an unknown world; the fear of not being able to make a living of the kind they are accustomed to; the fear of being social outcasts in a new environment (in White Australia); and the fear that any move would result in their being broken up.
Next to leaving Nauru itself, the question of fragmentation probably weighs more heavily on the average Nauruan mind than any other resettlement problem because the islanders are such a closely knit community that they speak of being members of the same family.
Anyway, with so many reasons to deter them from making the decision that would cast them adrift from their homeland for ever, it is not surprising that the Nauruans do dream up the problems they do for the Australian Government.
But they can’t go on doing this for ever—and they know it. They also know that Curtis Island is the best new island that anyone is likely to offer—and so does the Australian Government.
So whatever their representative says in the* United Nations this year, next year or the year after for that matter, it’s not likely to make much difference to the situation that existed this time last year—i.e. that the Nauruans can move into Curtis Island any time they like but they can’t have sovereignty over it.
And What Kind
Of Assembly
For New Guinea?
From a Port Moresby Correspondent On the eve of the opening oi Papua-New Guinea’s majorityelected House of Assembly or June 8 the big interest in New Guinea is in what kind of legislature it will be.
WILL it be a tame cat, or will il shape up from the beginning as something, at last, with a bite to it?
On the strength of past experiences most people predict that things will be tame, but they could be wrong.
There were some reasons for thinking so at the end of a seminar held near Port Moresby in May and attended by the elected members of the House, who were brought togethei for a lesson in parliamentary procedure. The school was conducted by Dr. D. Bettison, director of the P-NG Research Unit of the Australian National University. During the week members were presented with dummy copies of bills and a suggested form of Standing Orders for the new House.
It quickly became apparent that in some cases the members were a jump ahead of their teachers.
Mr. Graham Pople, elected member for Gumine, who is a European, commented that the new memben obviously weren’t going to be led by the nose.
The first headache for the Administration came when the members indicated they felt that the P-NG Director of Native Affairs, Mr. J. K McCarthy, should be elected Speakei of the new House. Trouble is thal Mr. McCarthy is one of the ten official members and can’t be released, and also the Administration has made no secret of the fact thal it would like to see former Morobe District Commissioner Home Niall, who is an elected member, in the Speaker’s chair.
On learning of the decision Six Donald Cleland hurriedly called Canberra and had his doubts confirmed, Mr. McCarthy could not get the job, So the members reconsidered.
Names mentioned were those of Mr. Don Barrett, Mr. John Guise, the Rev. Percy Chatterton and New Plenty Of Traffic There are not many cars, but plenty of bicycles and motor cycles among the prosperous Nauruans, and policemen are needed to direct traffic in the main street. At right, a family party goes for a week-end jaunt.— Photos: Australian News and Information Service. 10 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
luinea member Matthias Toliman rom Rabaul.
Lepani Watson (Esa ’Ala Losuia) idicated Mr. Guise had instructed im to inform members he was not vailable for either the Speaker’s hair or that of his deputy. Mr. ’hatterton also declined the post and o did Toliman.
But finally, it was agreed that Mr. hall should be elected when the me came. Why the opposition to im in the first place?
“We all knew he would be an leal man for the job,” explained one European private member, “but we esented the Government’s blind asumption we would all support him or it.”
That was one indication that the lew House is not going to be led by tie nose as the Administration has xpected. The other, and just as sigificant, was the objection raised by irivate members to the proposition hat the Administrator should appoint the Under-Secretaries.
Members felt strongly that they hould have a hand in appointments ud said they wanted the Administraor informed of their objection. Sir Jonald was not impressed.
Standing Orders also came in for nuch criticism at the seminar and nembers decided to simplify them as ime goes on.
The new House will be opened by he Governor-General, Viscount De ./Isle, who in May was making an :xtensive tour of P-NG.
He will give the Queen’s Address, ifter which a delegation from the Australian Parliament will present a Vlace (see p. 17), and the Minister ’or Territories, Mr. C. E. Barnes, will iddress the House. There will be a narch past of troops and an RAAF ly past.
A Workable Plan For
P-Ng Development
By A Staff Writer Not since the Foot Mission’s controversial recommendations on Papua-New Guinea has there been such a splash of publicity. Certainly never before had private enterprise cribbed so much headline space on New Guinea affairs. The newspapers and TV stations broke out in a rash of articles and interviews, in Canberra the Territories Minister said the news was a great encouragement, and in Port Moresby the Administrator described it as most progressive.
THE occasion was the announcement in Sydney on May 11 of the formation of the Australia-New Guinea Coporation Ltd., with an initial paid capital of £250,000.
The chairman, Mr. Steven Rich, together with all four of his fellow directors, faced a news conference to explain that the corporation was a consortium of Australian banks, insurance companies and businessmen designed to provide investment opportunities in New Guinea.
It hoped to chart new courses, yet at the same time support and assist the pioneers. It would channel funds, some from overseas, to agricultural and industrial development, and would have a strong management team based in Port Moresby by June 30.
New Guinea was entering a critical time, the directors said, and world pressures meant speedy development was required there.
No Details To questioners, they said they could not reveal the list of shareholders yet or be committed on what specific projects they might have in mind.
There could, of course, be political hazards due to emerging nationalism, but if P-NG was to emerge as a prosperous, independent nation there just had to be development of private enterprise at the same rate as Government development, they added.
Yet at the end of the first week of publicity there was still one major question about the corporation left unanswered: What was the corporation all about?
Just how would it go about its high-sounding tasks and why had it chosen to announce itself in such broad national terms?
The answers reveal that somebody in the corporation has had extensive experience of the ways of Government in New Guinea matters—experience so wide that it is most unlikely that newcomer Mr. Steven Rich is really the chief architect of the corporation, as claimed by the newspaper pundits (although not claimed by Mr. Rich, be it noted).
It would occur to a man with the New Guinea experience of Mr. F. M.
Hewitt that the most intelligent way of overcoming official reluctance to give private enterprise in New Guinea the support it deserves and needs— the best way of overcoming, in fact, the suspicions of bureaucrats who have long considered New Guinea to be a unique socialist State within a Commonwealth dedicated to free enterprise—is to attack it on a national front with full Cabinet support.
Only big businesses and lending institutions working together have the money and influence required to do (Continued on page 14)
Noumea Has A Workers'
Strike—With Ail
The Trimmings
Workmen in Noumea held a threeday strike in May in protest against what amounted to their failure to get higher wages to meet the everrising cost of living. They went back on May 15 when negotiations were resumed to find a solution to their grievance.
During the strike, police used tear gas—for the first time in New Caledonia's history—to break up a disturbance, although most Noumea people who saw the incident thought that a few strong shoulders would have been sufficient.
Also much in evidence during the strike were French metropolitan gendarmes armed with rifles, native gendarme auxiliaries, a Black Maria and a number of radioequipped trucks, some of which also had public address equipment. [?]he June meeting of the P-NG House of [?]ssembly will be the first meeting of the P-NG legislature in which the Adminis- [?]ator, Sir Donald Cleland (pictured), has [?]ot taken part as president. The new House will elect a Speaker. 11 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
P-Ng'S Electoral
Laws To Be
Altered-Already
Papua-New Guinea’s Administration finally admitted to a blunder in the Electoral Ordinance under which the House of Assembly elections were held, when Administrator Sir Donald Cleland publicly announced in Port Moresby in May that legislation would be introduced at the House’s first session to amend Section 161.
THIS is the section on which an unsuccessful candidate, Mr. Mick Casey, has said he would base his appeal against the declaration of Mr.
Graham Gilmore as winner of the poll in the South Markham electorate.
But so far Mr. Casey has not lodged his appeal, and there now seems some doubt as to whether he will.
Time is running out for him. The law requires any appeal to be lodged within two months of the declaration of a poll, which gives Mr. Casey until 8,30 a.m. on June 5 to enter his objection.
Many believe Mr. Casey will wait until the last moment before lodging his appeal so that the result of it won’t be known in time for other unsuccessful candidates to be encouraged by his example. It has been feared that a run of complaints would turn P-NG’s first common roll elections into a laughing stock.
Others say Mr. Casey has been talked out of going on with it.
Letters have appeared in the Territory’s Press urging the planter to drop his case, and an editorial in the South Pacific Post said, “If this were an action motivated by a desire to correct an injustice, nothing but good could come of it.
“But it is clearly a challenge of the people’s will on technical grounds, in which goodness has been given little consideration.”
Following the appearance of the South Pacific Post editorial, Mr. H.
G. Cooke, the newspaper’s general manager, made a trip to Kainantu to see Mr. Casey.
“He’s a friend of mine,” explained Mr. Cooke. He would not divulge the outcome of his visit.
Mr. Casey explains his reasons for appealing this way, “There is an obvious flaw in the ordinance and I feel I have a duty to bring the section under discussion to the notice of the Court of Disputed Returns.”
Other than that he has remained silent.
There have been strong inferences that Mr. Casey intended to appeal only because he was anxious to defeat Mr. Graham Gilmore. And it has been suggested that if the South Markham election were re-held Mr.
Casey would hot stand, thereby making things easier for Mr. Lloyd Hurrell whom Gilmore beat by a mere 348 votes.
But this doesn’t sound reasonable.
In fact Mr. Casey had given the Chief Electoral Officer, Mr. R. R.
Bryant, an indication he might appeal as early as March 19, only one day after the poll closed.
And at that stage Mr. Casey, or no-one else for that matter, could possibly have known who would poll heaviest; there were still thousands of primary votes to be counted and preferences to be distributed.
Footnote: Mr. Casey claims Mr.
Gilmore does not have an “absolute majority” as defined by the ordinance.
The ordinance defines an absolute majority as more than one-half of the total votes polled.
Mr. Gilmore polled 9,311 of 23,932 votes recorded. His opponents, Mr. Hurrell and Mr. Casey polled 8,963 and 5,658 respectively.
World Bank Sees Land Problem The World Bank survey sees the native land tenure system in Papuanew Lruinea as a bar to important development in the Territory.
Tv, ie y es that a better system will nave to be devised if the land is _, . *}j! ly developed economically and intelligently. The present system ties too many strings to development.
The World Bank report is to be released soon.
The members of the World Bank Mission made an extensive survey of the Territory last year, aimed at produring recommendations for economic viability. It was led by Mr. K, R.
Iverson, Assistant Director of the ervdc< r s . Department of on u ’ ai ? d m 9 lu ded experts on agriculture, education, industry, livestock, transport and finance. The World Bank was invited by the Australian Government to make the survey, T+ • a * , + It is understood that the recommendations in the report are regarded aS extremely intelligent and helpful.
The mission sees a real future in the cattle industry in the Territory, 50 long as careful selection is made of the right breeds. It sees this development as a long-term one.
It sees increasing development in tea and even in copra, about which it says more can be done.
Trade Ship For Ng
Australia will make its first trade drive in Papua-New Guinea, and possibly the neighbouring Solomons, next March, Australian Export Promotions Pty. Ltd., which is an association of manufacturers and Chambers of Commerce supported by the Department of Trade, plans to send a trade ship to main ports in the area.
Beautiful New Church This unusual church near the Korolevu Beach Hotel, in Fiji, on land given to the Catholic Church by the late Sir Hugh Ragg, was dedicated in April. It is a condition of the gift that the building be available to people of all denominations. The art work in the interior decorations is a tourist attraction. 12 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
New Crop Pest
Scares In The
South Seas
Outbreaks of crop diseases nd pests were causing problems i several South Pacific terrifies in May. rHE New Hebrides was warned about a new coconut pest, at resent occurring only around Vila, hich can have a serious effect on ipra production.
It is a small, flat, scale insect named spidiotus destructor, and looks like miniature, brown, waxy shield ttached to the leaves of plants. It produces itself so quickly that it m completely cover the undersides I leaves, and the flower buds and >ung coconuts, and by sucking the ip it can kill the palm.
Dr. F. J. Simmonds, Director of ic Commonwealth Institute of iological Research, saw this pest hen he passed through Vila on his ay from Honiara to Apia for the >uth Pacific Commission’s plant jarantine conference, and he warned iat it was a very grave danger.
If it spreads through a plantation can completely finish copra produc- -3n for two or three years. It also tacks fruit and vegetables, including manas, papaw, sugar cane and •eadfruit. The leaves of infested ees turn yellow, and later the contion spreads until the tree is cometely covered with scale.
The pest has been found in variis plantations near Vila, from evil’s Point, Tagabe and Bellevue to £ Pango Pensinula.
In other countries where this scale sect exists, it is kept in check by edators, including ladybirds.
Mr, de Boissoudy, the Con- >minium Senior Agricultural Officer, scussed the problem at the Apia inference with Dr. Simmonds, Dr. arrau of the South Pacific Comission, and the entomologists, Mr. ochereau, of the French Institute of ceania, and Mr. B. O’Connor, of e Fiji Agricultural Department. As result of the discussion, one species ladybird is being introduced into e New Hebrides.
But control by introduced predators kes time, while the predators build » to a strength where they can keep e numbers of a pest down. Meanbile precautions are being taken the New Hebrides at once to prevent Aspidiotus destructor from spreading.
Leaves and nuts carrying the pest are being cut off roadside trees and burned, and planters have been advised to burn leaves and nuts wherever they find infected trees in their plantations.
Warning has been given of the danger of carrying coconut leaves from place to place, or leaving them on the side of the road, and the Department of Agriculture in the New Hebrides has appealed to people to report the presence of this pest whenever they find it, so that the Department can help to deal with it. Experiments are being made in spraying with oil, washing soda, and various chemicals.
Mr. M. J. Macquillen, Government Entomologist in the Solomons, says that outbreaks of this scale insect affecting coconuts and bananas have occurred before in Fiji and Mauritius.
Ladybirds were introduced, and a report states that in Mauritius palms which had been so severely damaged that there was no suggestion of their possible recovery returned to health and full bearing when the predators became fully established.
P-NG Cocoa Problem Papua-New Guinea’s second most important industry, cocoa growing, is being attacked by a fungus disease.
Thousands of cocoa trees, mostly in the Gazelle Peninsula of New Britain and the Markham Valley on the New Guinea mainland, have been struck by the fungus.
According to a survey by the Rabaul branch of the New Guinea Planters’ Association, 28 of the 37 European-owned plantations in the Gazelle Peninsula have been hit by the fungus disease.
In addition, it is present in varying degrees in at least 20 native-owned plantations.
The survey showed that in some (Continued on page 144)
Pim By Air To All Pacific Islands
FROM July thousands of PIM readers in the South Pacific Islands will get their copies of PIM quicker and cheaper. All copies are to be air freighted from now on.
This has been made possible by a 0f n lr u frelg i £ har E g , e , s ; which m future will be paid by instead of the various selling agents who, of course, have had to pass these charges on to readers Thus the selling price of PIM varied widely in tb Ti?° Utb Baclb , c m tbe past ' .
The improved arrangements make it possible to fix a standard nominal price for PIM, which from July will be 3/- local currency in all British Commonwealth South Pacific Territories, Tonga and Western Samoa; and elsewhere in the South Pacific, 50 French Pacific francs or 60 US cents.
Australian or French Pacific currency will be accepted in the New Hebrides, Yearly subscriptions will be 36/-, 600 francs or 7 dollars. Subscription copies will be air freighted to the Islands and posted there.
Many Islands readers now pay up to 7/6 to obtain their copies of PIM by air; others pay as little as 2/6.
The new selling price of 3/ . win mean some readers will pay slightly more for their copies ,£ a ' past; but , he spreading of the distri . bution costs will enable the publishers t o give South Seas readers the same spe edy service, r .*?. . e few Islands with no air facilities yet, PIM will be air freighted to the nearest connecting seaport.
The new rates will only affect subscriptions due from now on.
ISLANDS DOCTOR: Newly appointed Resident Medical Officer for the New Guinea Island, based in Rabaul, is Dr. Paul Enders, of Wewak, who has taken over from "genial dictator" Dr. Charles Haszler, who is now on leave. Dr. Haszler will be appointed to Port Moresby as assistant to the Director of Health, Dr. R. Scragg. 13 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
the job that private enterprise must do in P-NG. Pioneer fields of investment, and new secondary industries, need Government support in the form of tariff and tax concession (such as “tax holidays” for new industries m their formative years).
And New Guinea investment also needs protection against established mainland interests, some of whom in the past have attempted to hold back New Guinea business development for their own ends by crying “cheap black labour”. When this happens it is P-NG native progress that suffers most.
Because of these things the corporation is apparently, and understandably, reluctant to show its hand on specific projects until all the ends have been tied up. But it appears to have at least three specific plans in mind.
Mr. Rich, for instance, whose interests manufacture Venetian blinds and insect screens, might normally be expected to start such an industry in a tropical country, and even export from there. Sir James Kirby would find plenty of opportunities for his engineering interests. And there is much to be done with Mr. Hewitt’s timber.
Need For Publicity But there is another vital consideration. Men of their experience know that the future progress of New Guinea will largely be determined by the attitudes of the Australian public. For that reason Australia needs a public fully-informed on just what the problems are in New Guinea. At present it gains most of its information from academic theorists writing in intellectual journals or from banner headlines on inconsequential happenings reported in the afternoon Press. Both points of view are equally narrow if one reads nothing else.
What Australia needs is wellrounded reporting on all aspects of New Guinea affairs using all media, and designed for all kinds of people.
This it will get as a result of the formation of the Council on New Guinea Affairs, which was launched exactly a week after the corporation.
It is no coincidence that its board includes three of the five directors of the corporation. But its chairman is Mr. Norman Cowper, and foundation members include people prominent in business, government, the professions, religion and the trade unions.
The council will appoint a permanent executive director and encourage seminars and discussions on all aspects of New Guinea, stimulate contact between New Guineans and Australians, with the help of scholarships, and produce an independent journal. The council will, in fact, be that overdue organisation—a New Guinea public relations body in the truest sense.
Such an organisation can, and ob viously will, be left alone by th< sponsors to run independent!’ once it is established, for all kno\ that neither Government nor privat enterprise has anything to hide ii New Guinea and that the wealth o facts that the council can bring t light are overdue for intelligen public consideration.
The formation of both the Aus tralian New Guinea Corporation an the Council on New Guinea Affair is the most important developmer in P-NG for many a year. And fo its clever planning it deserves ac miration. • See Commerce, page 119.
Wrecked Islands Ship Overloaded A SHIP that was wrecked on a reef in the Solomons last December was carrying 59 people when she was licensed to carry only 22.
This was revealed in the Central District Magistrate’s Court in Honiara in May when the former bosun of the ship, the MV Fauambu- Twomey, pleaded guilty to a charge of carrying more people on her last voyage than her licence permitted.
The court was told that after the Fauambu-Twomey grounded on a reef in Sealark Channel, off Guadalcanal, on December 12, it was established that she had been carrying 51 passengers and a crew of eight.
The accused was convicted and ordered to pay a fine of £3O, in default two months’ imprisonment.
Fiji On The Way To A Cabinet System The Colony of Fiji will take a first step towards selfgovernment on July 1 when a “membership” system is introduced. It is expected to be the forerunner to a ministerial system.
APPROVAL for the system was given by the Legislative Council in January but in early May the Government made a firm announcement.
Just before July 1 the Executive Council will be reconstituted to provide for the appointment of six ui official members two Europeai two Fijians and two Indian.
At present it is comprised of or unofficial member each for thr< racial groups, and an addition; European.
For many years it has been tl practice for each racial group of ui official members to elect one of the number to the Executive Counci In addition, the Governor appoin another unofficial member, n< necessarily from the Legislate Council.
Three of the six unofficial men bers of the Executive Council will I associated with the formation < policy on matters of natural r sources, social services and works ar communications and thus ga “ministerial” experience.
The membership system was fir suggested in 1961 by the previoi Governor of Fiji, Sir Kenne Maddocks. The idea was receiv< very coolly by the unofficial membe of the Legislative Council, but it w not dropped. Sir Kenneth refern to it several times during the r mainder of his term, often qui petulantly. • Australia will take more i terest in Fiji, p. 41. 14 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL (Continued from page 11)
Council Will Boost P-Ng
With Self-Government Soon, The Cook Islands Are Humming With internal self-government coming up next year, Cook Islands affairs are now moving at such a pace that it is quite a job keeping up with everything that is happening. The first three weeks of May were particularly busy and newsworthy.
Zealand's Governor-General, Sir Bernard Fergusson, comleted a tour of the islands in MNZS Royalist; a five-man delegaon from the Cook Islands Legislave Assembly spent a week in New ealand for constitutional talks; the fZ Minister of Island Territories, [r. J. R. Hanan, announced that his rovernment was considering the adding of a jet airport at either arotonga or Aitutaki.
Here is a day-by-day summary of le most important Cook Islands sws to May 22: May 5: A party of New Zealand IP’s who had just returned from the ook Islands said they believed the iain problem in the Cooks was that le Group would find it difficult to jcome economically self-supporting hile maintaining a reasonable andard of living. Some members so thought self-government had jen thrust on the islanders too soon; it all agreed that the islanders ished to retain the closest possible iks with NZ.
May 6: Mr. Hanan announced the overnment was considering a jet rport at either Rarotonga or itutaki; that with improved air screes and better tourist facilities, arotonga had “a definite tourist jtential,” but that the development : the Cook Islands pineapple inistry was of more immediate imjrtance. He added that many more ook Islanders would probably nigrate to NZ when more transport as available.
May 7: Mrs, Inanui Rio Nie, mghter of the late paramount ariki Rarotonga, said in Wellington at the NZ Government, by unwitigly allowing itself to become the ime mover in the establishment of If-government in the Cook Islands, ould bring disaster to the social and onomic well-being of the Rarongan people. She said self-governent would result in the complete dlapse of the traditional way of :e on which the people’s social, onomic and cultural well-being en- •ely depended; and that it would tablish a breeding ground for communism. She added that all Rarotongans, including those in NZ, should be allowed to vote on whether they wanted self-government.
May 8: A five-man delegation from the Cook Islands Legislative Assembly, led by the Leader of Government Business. Mr. D. C. Brown, arrived in NZ for constitutional talks.
Mr. Brown denied an allegation by Mrs. Nia that most Cook Islanders did not want self-government.
On the same day, Mr. Hanan told the Press that the election in the Cook Islands early next year for the new Legislative Assembly would be fought on the issue of the constitution for the Cook Islands. Tabling of the constitution in the NZ Parliament was the next step towards selfgovernment.
May 13: Mr. Hanan announced that excellent progress had been made in ironing out problems of drafting a constitution with the five-man Cook Islands delegation. He added: The delegation reiterated the wish of the Cook Islands people to remain NZ citizens and to accept the Queen as Head of State.
May 14: Four members of the five-man Cook Islands delegation to New Zealand left Auckland on a sixweek overseas tour sponsored by the UN Technical Assistance Board, The four men, who included Mr. D. C.
Brown, and the Deputy Leader of Government Business, Mr. W. Estall, will visit the US, several Caribbean islands, Hawaii, Fiji and Western Samoa.
May 18: NZ’s Secretary of Island Territories, Mr. I. M. McEwen, told a Victorian University seminar in Wellington that boredom rather than economic reasons was behind the big migration of Cook Islanders to NZ.
Cook Islands leader, Mr. D. C. Brown.
Gone Fishing! West Samoa's school holidays in May, coupled with a run of mackerel, brought fishermen, young, old, and in their hundreds to the Apia jetty and seafront. In spite of the premium on space it was an unlucky fisherman who went home empty-handed. —Photo: Samoana. 15 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
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Tropicalities In these days when very small nations just aren’t tolerated and when the Western Powers are shedding their colonies c s fast as they can go, the 2,000 people of Nukunono, Atafu and Fakaofo —the three atolls that make up the Tokelau Group—have a burning political problem. dOULD they link themselves with independent Western Samoa or should y become associated with the Cook mds, which are due for internal selfernment next year?
"he islands in question are about 270 es north of Apia and round about three es that distance from Rarotonga, the tre of Cook Islands affairs. \t present, the Tokelaus are adminis- ;d by New Zealand through Apia—as y have been since 1925. Before that, y were a very inconveniently-situated t of Great Britain’s Gilbert and Ellice lids Colony. t is probably not generally known that Tokelauans are British subjects and tv Zealand citizens. So if they should ide to throw in their lot with stern Samoa—which, from the point of v of distance and present shipping ser- -SS, seems the most sensible thing to do hey would lose their present status. )n Atafu, at least, the people seem retant to give up this status for when New land’s Governor-General, Sir Bernard gusson, visited that atoll in May, the coming speaker, Faipule Agoni, asked i if land could be made available to his pie in New Zealand. )n Fakaofo, Faipule Itieli said in his coming speech that the New Zealand vernment had asked his people which y they wanted to go, but they were disjointed because they did not know ctly which direction they should follow. >ir Bernard soothed, but did not really ighten, the troubled people of Fakaofo h a speech which was more or less word word with those that he delivered at ifu and Nukunono. n it, he said that if a change in the itical status of the Tokelaus had to ne, the future would be decided-by the kelauans themselves.
Sir Bernard went on: “Before you are asked to decide, the leaders among you will be invited to see conditions in Samoa and in the Cook Islands, and, after taking your time in seeing both places, you will have time to talk with the other people of the Tokelaus, discuss it, and then make up your minds.
“One thing will not change. For 40 years New Zealand and the Tokelaus have been going hand in hand. Whether you choose to go hand in hand with Samoa or the Cooks, New Zealand will still be able and willing to help you, perhaps by helping Samoa to help you. or by helping the Cooks to help you. We are not going to forget you, any more than the Queen is going to forget you.”
On his return to New Zealand, Sir Bernard Fergusson said in a talk at the Christchurch Rotary Club that the Tokelauans wanted to be left as they were, being administered by New Zealand through the High Commissioner in Apia.
New Guinea's Mace Is The Latest, But Not The Most Colourful WAY back in Richard I’s time (1189-99), the serjeants-at-arms of the King’s Bodyguard were armed with maces for the protection of the King’s person. And as the duties of those officers included the apprehension of persons and the summoning of them to the king, the mace came to be regarded as the symbol and warrant of the King’s authority, and was adopted as such by the British Parliament.
Later, as Britain’s empire spread across the seas and her colonies acquired parliaments of their own, they, too, had to have maces to show that their parliaments were properly constituted. (Over) ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
So far, the only mace in a South Pacific parliament is that in Fiji’s Legislative Council. (See picture at right on p. 17.) But Papua-New Guinea’s House of Assembly will get the one pictured at the top of p. 17 as a gift from the Commonwealth Parliament when it is formally opened for business on June 8.
Outwardly—at least in photographs —the Fiji and P-NG maces seem to have quite a bit in common. But there is a world of difference in their individual histories, for whereas Fiji’s mace really was a war club and probably did crack a skull or two, the one that P-NG is to get has never seen anything more warlike than the chisels and knives of the man who made it.
The Fiji mace was originally the war club of King Cakobau. It was first used as a parliamentary mace in the early 1870’s—with decorations in frosted silver added in Sydney—after Lieutenant George Austin Woods, RN, got Fiji’s principal hereditary to get together in a “House of Lords” while representatives elected by the British settlers sat in a “House of Commons”.
Shortly afterwards—on October 10, 1874—King Cakobau gave his war club to Queen Victoria when the Deed of Cession was executed by which the sovereignty of Fiji passed to the British Crown.
During the next half century, Cakobau’s mace was forgotten by the people of Fiji. Then, in 1930, Mr.
A. B. Brewster, who had been in the Fiji Civil Service, wrote to The Times asking if anyone knew what had become of it.
Mr. Brewster’s letter came to the attention of King George V, who sent word to Mr. Brewster that the mace had an honoured place among Royal Treasures in Windsor Castle.
A couple of years later. King George returned the mace to Fiji for ceremonial use in the Legislative Council “as a visible token of his abiding concern for the welfare of his Fijian people, of whose unswerving loyalty he is deeply sensible”.
It has been in continuous use there ever since.
The history of P-NG’s mace, by comparison, is unexciting and prosaic.
It was made at the suggestion of the former Minister for Territories, Mr.
Paul Hasluck, and was designed by an Australian artist, Mr. J. T. Gray, of the Australian News and Information Bureau, following suggestions made by the Territory Administration and the Department of Territories in Canberra.
The actual maker was Mr. Maurice Steeth, a Melbourne goldsmith, who was supplied by William Drummond & Co. Ltd., also of Melbourne.
The mace is made of 160 ounces of Australian sterling silver, heavily plated with pure gold. A polished stone ball incorporated in it symbolises a stone war club, a traditional P-NG weapon and symbol of authority.
Other features of it represent such things as the people of the Highlands, Lowlands and small islands; the link between P-NG and Australia; primary products, industry, transport and communications; medicine, education and Christianity.
A Territory’s Department hand-out says that as the Queen had to approve the presentation of the mace to the P-NG House of Assembly, “it will have special significance for the peoples of the Territory of Papua and New Guinea.”
Let’s hope nobody ever decides it would be handy to crack a few skulls.
Blurred Impression From Samoa's Printing Office THE remarkable activities of Samoa’s Public Service Commissioner’s office, already highlighted and roundly condemned by administrative expert Harry Elvins, seem to have reached unprecedented heig in the case of the Governm Printer, New Zealander Frt Sprague.
In the last three months I Sprague has had his resignation fused, been suspended, dismis; from the service, and finally just ] hanging.
The case first hit the headlines February 10 when the Public Serv Commissioner, Vaiao Alailima, s pended Mr. Sprague, took over printing department, and posted police guard on the works to prev Mr. Sprague having access.
The reason given was that I Sprague, in defiance of a directive public servants, had been found the Apia Club by the Public Serv Commissioner, and on other occ ions by his staff, during work hours.
Departmental head B. L. Cl; said at the time the action of PSC was entirely “unconstitutiom Mr. Clare said that trouble 1 arisen because of printing staff ( content over wages and working c< ditions. This trouble had been agg vated by the PSC allowing dir access to himself by junior si members who went over the head the Government Printer and dep£ mental head.
It was because of this that J Sprague had resigned, but his res nation had not been accepted.
When PSC Alailima took leave contest a seat (unsuccessfully) in i April elections, his assistant Tufi S. Atoa took over.
On March 24 Mr. Atoa annoum that as a result of an inquiry he i conducted Mr. Sprague was to be c missed from the Samoan Pub Service. This meant that Mr. Sprag would have to pay the fares back NZ for himself and his family a lose certain other privileges.
Mr. Sprague lodged an appeal.
On May 6 Chief Judge P.
Molineaux handed down his writt decision.
Bright New Light A statement made on the Nauruan question in May by Australia’s new Minister for Territories, Mr. C. E. Barnes, might not have answered all the queries that could be raised on this ticklish problem. But it certainly made an effort to answer most of those that could be answered by a Ministerial handout designed for general release, and thus it went a great deal further than would any statement on the same subject made by Mr. Barnes’ predecessor, Mr. Paul Hasluck (who is now Australia’s Minister for External Affairs).
Mr. Barnes’ Nauruan statement was typical of the new approach in Territories. Since Mr. Barnes’ appointment he has shown he is not scared to open his mouth outside of Parliament as well as in it, and that he believes that people have a right to know something of what is going on in Australia’s Island territories.
Business Before Pleasure IF you wonder how to get y< annual general meeting o v quickly, follow this example fr Niue. The Niue Public Service C held its recent annual general me ing at 3.30 p.m. after work, i published an agenda together witl notice advising members that “ refreshments will be served until meeting is over.” It was a very sh meeting. 18 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
fhe judge said the penalty of dissal was out of all proportion to irregularity of the conduct disced. n evidence, Mr. Sprague (repreted by Mr. R. Metcalf) said that had formed the habit of taking e off from the printing works as ipensation for the long hours of ►aid overtime, sometimes as much 20 hours a week, that he worked. 7 ormer bar manager of the Apia ib, Si’uleo, gave evidence that >lic Service Commissioner Alailima 1 called at the club before the PSC airy and offered him £5O to give lence against Mr. Sprague. He 1 he had refused.
I formed the impression,” said ge Molineaux, “that the practice pted by the appellant, if not exssly condoned by his permanent d, at least carried the tacit acsscence of that officer.
Had his conduct been considered atisfactory the regulations require t he be informed of the fact and in an opportunity to mend his /s . . . There is no evidence that ; was done, and prior to the inry there was no indication that practice adopted in regard to rtime had met with official dis- ►roval.” fhe judge cancelled the penalty of missal and fined Mr. Sprague £3 each of the four occasions he had m found in the Apia Club. For dng failed to keep appointments was severely reprimanded, rhen, a few days after the judge’s diet, Public Service Commissioner ailima claimed that the decision s void because it was unconstiional. The PSC insisted that under : new constitution the Chief Judge s not entitled now to hear the case his own, but it should have been ird by a three-man appeal board.
Ten days after the Chief Judge’s vision, the perplexed Mr. Sprague md himself still unemployed. sw Problems For le Map-makers IO the sins of commission and omission of our pioneering mdfathers we can now add maps, rticularly the map of Papua and :w Guinea as it relates to terriial boundaries. This is the conered opinion of Paul W. van der iur, of the Australian National liversity.
Mr. van der Veur has been work- * on the subject and has published } findings in an article entitled istralian New Guinea’s borders and elves—lniquities and Idiosyncracies, in a recent issue of the learned journal, Australian Outlook.
Mr. van der Veur got some quick reactions in Australia, where an article based on his opinions appeared in a Melbourne newspaper and was followed by questions asked in the Senate, in Canberra.
Did the Minister for External Affairs know, asked Senator Kennelly, that van der Veur claimed that Australian maps showed the border of Papua and New Guinea overlapping into Indonesian territorial waters?
Senator Gorton, answering on behalf of the Minister, “found it difficult to credit the report”, and spoke at some length on the land boundary between P-NG and West New Guinea, which had, in fact, concerned van der Veur to only minor degree in his article.
What he had complained about were the northern territorial limits of New Guinea, which he claimed were taking in too much ocean; and the southern territorial limits of Papua, which were not taking in enough.
For convenience sake, the mapmakers have, in relation to the Trust Territory of New Guinea, continued the boundary between that territory and Indonesian West New Guinea (i.e. the 141st. deg. of E. Long.) clear up to the Equator, then drawn a line along the Equator to 160 deg.
E. Long.
This effectively surrounds the small North-Western Islands, Ninigo and islands north of Manus, but it also encloses vast areas of ocean far beyond the three-mile limit of each individual island, or beyond any other internationally recognised “limit”. This area enclosed, however, does not impinge on anything that could be claimed by Indonesia, and van der Veur did not claim that it did.
If ever challenged, it is unlikely that Australia would have a chance of defending her claim to this area of international water, and of course, the Japanese have been fishing in it for years. It is, in fact, unlikely that Australia ever intended the boundary to be anything but a convenience.
And a convenient alternative it is to the long rigmarole that would have to take its place if one had to describe, in words, a boundary that skirted the correct distance out from the score of small islands in the NW of the Territory that are indubitably Trust Territory properties.
What the Australian map-makers clearly didn’t expect was for Senior Research Fellows in their own ANU PSSST! DON'T TELL THE RUSSIANS: Last time we published a picture like this — of Fiji's previous Governor, Sir Kenneth Maddocks, and Lady Maddocks—the Russians kicked up a fuss in the United Nations, because, they claimed, carrying people lowers the dignity of the carriers. But in Fiji, the Fijians don't see things that way. Carrying people ashore is an honour they like to bestow on the highest of dignitaries. So when the new Governor, Sir Derek Jakeway, and Lady Jakeway visited Lomaloma, Lau Islands, recently on a familiarisation tour, they got the "treatment".— Photo: Rob Wright. 19 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
to sit up nights getting meticulous about the business.
As far as Papua is concerned the complaints made by van der Veur have a much more practical application—in the future, if not now.
The trouble here stems from the late 19th century when Queensland and other Australian States were anxious to annex Papua and were thwarted in their original efforts by the British Government of the time.
Because they were thwarted, Queensland then decided to draw its own boundaries with Papua (in the words of one of Queensland’s statesmen) “as close as possible to the Papuan mainland”.
In practice, the Queensland-Papua boundary is virtually on the Papuan coast, in places; and off-shore islands like Saibai, Boigu and others, which are as geographically part of Papua as Daru, have simply been shorn off by the line drawn by the map-maker’s pen and are now part of Queensland.
Papua was, after the original boundary was drawn by Queensland, annexed and finally became an Australian territory; therefore there has never been any great need to change the boundaries and no pressure from Papua to do so.
The point made by van der Veur is that if, or when, Papua becomes a sovereign state in her own right, she will have every reason to press for a redrawing of the present boundary. One glance at the map is sufficient to convince even nonprofessional types that Papua would have a pretty good claim for about one-third of the present Torres Strait islands.
It might be said here and now that Australia is not the only country to draw convenient oblongs on the map of the Pacific and claim millions of square miles of ocean. The Gilbert and Ellice Islands Colony consists of 376 sq. miles of land—and the territorial boundaries enclose more than a million sq. miles of ocean.
It is obvious that if the Australian National University is going to redesign the maps of the Pacific it has a job that is going to last into the next century. Truth will out, of course, but some people must cringe to see it all woken up. It needs only an out of context question like Senator Kennelly’s—which had little relation to what van der Veur said originally— to get all the Indonesians out with their tape measures, figuring just what further territory they can liberate for Dr. Soekarno.
Paul van der Veur is currently 7h°J p n Lt a detailed P a P £r about the , P-NG-West New Guinea border, and that is one we are waiting for.
From the Islands Press IF there is no more to be had from the current session of the Legislature but the circus acts which have led to two near fist fights in five days, then it’s time to close up the Fono and allow the 32 lawmakers to return to more worthwhile occupations.
It was nothing short of shame to watch our lawmakers challenge one another to a fist fight on the floor—in both Houses.
The ugly mess in the Senate grew out of an argument that should never have taken place.
And to all the spectators, the performers were under the influence of liquor. . . The public never heard about it as the WVUV conveniently left it off the tape [recording].
If the public is forced to listen to the Fono’s hymns and prayers, let them all witness the opposite side. It gives them a better idea of their selections for the lawmaking jobs, and allows them to make notes for the future,—Editorial in “Samoa NewsPago Pago. 11 ON behalf of myself, other Europeans, and all the decent natives of the Gazelle Peninsula, I would like to know why our Administration apparently has a “hands off” instruction towards native drunks who infest our roads, particularly on a weekend.
I approve heartily of equal rights for natives, but I also believe they should be subject to equal punishments.— Letter from Mrs. E. R. Reece, Kokopo, in the “New Guinea Times-Courier”, Lae.
MANY of the outside world hold the view that Pitcairn is only a lonely island where people just sit around in the sun carving flying fish and weaving baskets.
Nothing is really further from the truth . . .
Time, the factor which waits for no man, is a very scarce commodity even on Pitcairn. Most find the day far too short to get through all that needs doing.— Editorial in “Pitcairn Miscellany”.
T>ECAUSE the Fiji Legislative Council last year refused to agree to legislation which would have enabled the Transport Control Board to limit the number of private taxis, their number has climbed since last August from 750 to nearly 1,200, and there is no provision for curbing this growth.
These private taxis, not operating a regular service for the benefit of customers, have turned pirate. They operate near bus stations and along bus routes, and pick up passengers whose fares would otherwise help to maintain the services that run to timetables, and are a permanent element in the public transport system.
The pirates also eat into the business of the organised taxi companies, who normally operate to a fixed, and known, fare schedule, and whose individual cars can be traced if there should be overcharging or other malpractice.
This is not the case with the piratical private taxi, and reports, especially from visitors to Fiji, of excesive charges for taxi hire are growing in number.
The situation ... is getting quite out of hand, and so long as the proliferation of private taxis continues, it must get worse, to the detriment of the operator who provides a properly organised public amenity and observes the law. —Editorial in “The Fiji Times”.
I AM a trifle weary of the discrimination against the poor, dear European. Letter from Mrs. Joan Meatcham, in the “South Pacific Posf’, Port Moresby.
PERHAPS our legislators figure that it will be at least eight and probably 11 years before Apia becomes the venue for the Games, and that it is too soon yet to make preparations. Papua-New Guinea has already made a bid for the Games to be held there at Rabaul in 1969 and is planning accordingly. With all these territories scrambling to get the Games, perhaps one day Samoa, too, might acknowledge the value of sport. Columnist in “Samoana”, Apia. 20 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
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In Tonga , The Liquor Laws Work Happily From Dorothy Lavin, in Nukualofa The casual tourist to Tonga, who might like to rest his \eet and cool off with a long cold beer, would find it virtually 'mpossible to quench his thirst on anything more potent than coconut milk. But this sad state of affairs is shortly to be r emedied with a tourist hotel planned for the waterfront.
OR the resident of Tonga, or in particular of its main town, kualofa, the picture is very dif- ;nt. Being an independent kingn, Tonga has not felt constrained follow any laid down pattern of r s governing liquor, but has desd for itself what is best suited people and circumstances. The r s apply to both Tongans and ropeans.
Anyone who wants to drink must t have a liquor licence. The grantof the licence, and the amount of lor allowed by the licence, is a tier for the Minister of Police, 0 takes into account the reputa- -1 of the person concerned. The intity of liquor allowed on that mce depends on the applicant’s mcial position, but in any case it a very liberal allowance.
The licence allows a monthly ration —so many dozen Deer, so many bottles of spirits and wines— and what is not consumed in one month may not be carried over to the next.
The licence comes up for renewal every year, when the drinker may have his ration reduced or increased, depending on what he requires and what he has proved he can handle ... (or hold?).
Controlled, Not Restricted Special permits are always available for anyone giving perhaps a big cocktail party, to cover that particular night’s entertainment, without affecting their monthly allocation. In short, although liquor is controlled in Tonga, it is not restricted for those who want to enjoy it in moderation.
Two licences for a married couple are issued, and they can be left at either of the two main European stores where liquor is sold, or perhaps one at a store and the other at any of the clubs licensed to sell liquor.
The three main clubs in Nukualofa are the Tonga Club, the Nukualofa Club and the Yacht Club.
Each has its own bar, where members can drink, and if their licence is deposited there they can take home their choice of a bottle. Hours are virtually unrestricted, seven a week, yet such a thing as a police raid is unheard of—or unnecessary.
No Drunkenness The Nukualofa Club is primarily a European club, but the Tonga and Yacht Clubs are open to all. There is no colour bar—only a behaviour bar!
Drunkenness in Tonga is almost non-existent.
Possibly the lack of ready money has a lot to do with it. Although food is there for the growing and fish are there for the catching, the Fit For a Queen : The feast is still an important part of Tongan hospitality, and probably nowhere in the South Pacific is more attention paid to the apperance of the groaning board. The feast at left is fit for a Queen, and for her Vice Regal guest, who is the Governor-General of New Zealand, Sir Bernard Fergusson, on his recent 24-hour visit to Tonga. Queen Salote seems to be recommending a special delicacy. Below is the feast of welcome tendered the Rev. Cecil Gribble, Secretary General of the Methodist Overseas Mission, Sydney, who is a former Headmaster of Tonga's Tupou College and a Director of Education there. With his wife he recently made a return visit. From left are Mrs. Gribble, Prince Tungi, Mr.
Gribble and the British Consul, Mr. E. J. Coode.— Photo: Tulua Bros. 25 ICIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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The old idea of Europeans becoming sodden with gin in the tropics, is a complete fallacy in Tonga. You could walk into any of Nukualofa’s clubs on a Saturday around 5 p.m., and frequently find them deserted, for most everyone is boating, playing golf or out on a tennis court. There is no lack of social life. Cocktail parties are popular, generally from 6.30 p.m. to 8.30 p.m.—not from 6.30 to drunk, as in more “civilised” centres—after which groups will migrate to the clubs for a game of billiards, table tennis, or just a quiet drink and a talk.
The home-brewer is rarely found in Tonga, at least in the town.
Out in the bush, where transport is sparse, there may be found a few keen souls brewing up a jungle juice of fermented pineapple juice and pumpkins, plus coconut milk. But they are exceptional.
Sly-grogging is practically nonexistent, too. It is confined perhaps to the odd bottle passed over to a mate, who for some reason has been denied a liquor licence, but little m( than that.
What is the reason for this succe ful handling of the liquor probl< in Tonga? Perhaps it can be mail attributed to the fact that the Tong is more interested in his kava.
These non-alcoholic parties i much beloved by Tongan men a frequently turn into all-night parti There is, as elsewhere in the Pacil a great deal of ceremony involv( not just in the drinking of kava, t in the making of it. As the gue sit cross-legged on mats and £ served in strict order of precedes it is a time for talk, and any subjc may be discussed at length, and wi great oratory.
Although the Tongans are a high religious race it is doubtful if th< religious fervour has any bearing ( their abstemious behaviour, except f members of certain religious sects.
It seems that lack of ready ca and lack of inclination are the ma factors in Tonga’s success, for the is no doubt that the liquor syste works.
Women's Shot Put Record Goes Eighteen-year-old Miss Losaline Vakauta, in Nukualofa, Tonga, on May 16 broke the women’s South Pacific shot pui record, established at the Firsi South Pacific Games last September by Fijian Merewai Turukawa.
Miss Turukawa’s record wai 37 ft. 7 in., which established t long lead from the silver meda, winner, M. Tetuaira, (French Polynesia) of 33 ft. 2 in., and V Pua (Western Samoa) who tool the bronze medal at the Gamei with 32 ft. 8% in.
Miss Vakauta, who is studying at the Queen Salote College, wai taking part in the Tongt Amateur Athletics Sports Meet ing in Nukualofa. She put the shot at 37 ft. 11 in., establishing a mighty lead over the next bes t competitor at the meeting, whc managed only 24 ft. 10 in.
The previous month in Nuku alofa a Tupou College boy, Sam i Latu, broke the Games pole vault record of 11 ft. 6 in., with a vault of 12 ft. The Games pole vault was taken by Sami’i brother, Alipeti Latu. 26 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
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Fiji’s Tourist [?]oom Is Away „ a From a Suva correspondent There are indications that •y • a. * ™ *U O 1 s tourist traffic, as me result skilful propaganda and deopment in very recent years, 1 soon become Fiji’s second ■ . . J That lustry -next to sugar. A f; ai 1 be quite an achievement, beise Fiji’s second industry }pra production) and third inf z ii Stry (gold production) are )stantial money-makers. [ONEY brought into the country by tourists in recent times is beien <£F 1,000,000 and <£F2,000,000 ear; and Suva’s Mayor, Mr. Charles ison, who is one of the driving ces behind the organisation of rism, is confident that the gross ome from tourism this year will £F2,000,000. That puts it close to d production (which may exceed £F2,000,000 in the current year) and chasing copra production.
A necessary corollary of tourist development is the provision of modern hotels; and in that respect Fiji has made remarkable progress.
There are now several modem hotels in Fiji. In their order of seniority of age, they are the Grand p ac ifi c Hotel, in Suva; the Korolevu Beach Hotel, at Korolevu; the Club Hotel, in Suva; the modernised Lautoka Hotel, in Lautoka; the Cathay Hotel, at Lautoka; the Mocambo Hotel, at Nadi; the Sky Lodge, at Nadi; the Suva Hotel, at Suva—all carrying modern equipment i n the shape of air-conditioning, bedrooms with private baths, firstdass restaU rants, etc.
And there are the Beachcomber Hotel, Deuba, sold by Northern Hotels Ltd. to a new company and brought to first-class tourist standard; the wellequipped and managed country hotels owned by Northern Hotels Ltd. at Nadi, Ba, Tavua, and Raki Raki; and some good commercial hotels, like the Garrick and Metropole, in Suva, and the Labasa and Savu Savu Hotels, in Vanua Levu. All now cater for tourists.
A modern hotel (Reef Lodge) was opened recently by a New Zealand group on the Korotogo coast—the time for the opening ceremony unfortunately fell directly into the middle of Fiji’s recent phenomenal rain and floods. This originally was a beautiful lagoon-side bungalow built for his own use by Mr. Barry Philp (builder of the Mocambo Hotel at Nadi) and the hotel was cleverly planned and built by Philp interests to include the bungalow and swimming-pool. The buyers are part of the group which runs the well-known Hamner Springs resort in North Canterbury, NZ; and, as their lavishly-equipped Fiji hotel becomes known, they should get a fair share of the first-class tourist traffic.
The hotels now catering effectively for Fiji’s tourist traffic fall roughly into three groups, These are the old-established Northern Hotels Ltd. (a Ragg family concern, managed since the death of Sir Hugh Ragg by his son, Mr. D. P.
Ragg) which runs the Korolevu Beach and Club Hotels; the Cathay interests, from Singapore, who bought and enlarged and modernised the Grand Pacific Hotel (built in 1908), and built 27 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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CoUtnan he new Cathay Hotel at Lautoka; nd an American group, headed by Ir. George Wilson, who have made resounding success of the Mocambo lotel, at Nadi, which they bought rom Mr. Barry Philp, and who are ow engaged in an interesting new roject on the Korotogo coast.
Another Resort Planned This latest George Wilson project ould be an interesting addition to ■iji’s tourist facilities. At Cuvu, a ittle distance from the Queen’s Road, bout five miles on the Nadi side of ligatoka, there is a charming little nlet with a good beach and a large Teen island immediately off-shore, lere, for a long time, the sugar com- ►any’s staff have gone for rest and ecuperation, and there is a group of ottages there. The Wilson interests iave bought or leased the island and iow are proceeding with the building if a causeway from a point near the :SR resort to the island to provide ccesfi for the heavy equipment and »uilding materials needed for convertng the island into a first-class tourist esort. The work may take the better >art of two years, but when it is :ompleted, and if it is run with the mergy and ingenuity displayed at the tfocambo Hotel, it could join the dd-established Korolevu Beach Hotel, md the new Reef Lodge in providing nemorable entertainment for overleas visitors.
There has been much talk of other ourist resort projects; but nothing is aking shape at the moment except an mterprise now being carried out by he Reddy Construction organisation, >n behalf of a group of Indian busilessmen, on a hill-top near the Vlocambo Hotel, and overlooking the airport.
It is reported that the Indian group will establish, in this very fine location with a 360 degrees view over the Sfadi plains, a hotel-motel type of resort.
New Nadi Plan Among the new projects still to take shape is a modern hotel contemplated by a group of Canadian businessmen headed by New Zealand born Mr. D. W. Samuel, who is a Canadian citizen. It was Mr. Samuel and some associates who bought the Beachcomber at Deuba.
Using a new company, Pacific Hotels Limited, they plan to build a hotel costing ££240,000 at Nadi Bay, according to an official Government announcement in late May.
It was also reported that they plan to acquire the property at ludu, known as Trade Winds Bay, which Mr. Barry Philp started to develop.
After he sold his Korotogo establishment to the New Zealand group, Mr. Philp moved his equipment to this charming bay on the coast between Korotogo and the Korolevu Beach Hotel, and announced that he would build a tourist resort on a considerable area of land he had acquired there.
At that stage the main road ran close to the beach; so the Government co-operated with Mr. Philp in his plan by closing the old road, and building a new sealed road a little distance inland.. As a result, there is a fine area of land now between the road and the beach, which could be developed for holiday cottages, a hotel, or motel.
Mr. Philp was recently interested in building a hotel at Dunk Island, Queensland, for an Australian promoter.
The Fiji picture is one of growing enterprise and apparently sound planning, and all concerned seem confident that the long-awaited tourist boom is on, and will expand, It is a good example of what can be done by private enterprise under Government encouragement and protection. 29 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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-that Looked Over Your Will Lately? the The Will that lies undisturbed for years is bound to disturb those who hear its terms read. To remain effective, a Will should continue to be a current record of how the Estate is to be distributed. If specific legacies are sold, and not replaced, the original purpose of the Will quickly disappears. Over the years, too, the names of the beneficiaries themselves may have to be altered.
Regular revision under a Solicitor’s guidance is one sure safeguard. Another of even greater importance—it protects everyone concerned—is to choose a professional Executor who cannot grow old and tired. You achieve this lasting security when you appoint Burns Philp Trust as your Executor. All the facts about this enduring protection are given in a free, 20-page booklet. Ask for your free copy at any branch of Burns Philp South Sea) Limited, Burns Philp (New Guinea) Limited, Burns Philp (New Hebrides) Limited, or contact the Trust Company’s nearest office.
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[?]he Problems Of [?]uying Your Bride
The Belle Of
Kalo Village
From Don Hogg, in Port Moresby She was the belle of Kalo illage and her father knew it.
A ND the man with his eye on her \ was the Hula trade store owner, x-Londoner John Meikle, 50, an unuccessful candidate in Papua-New juinea’s recent House of Assembly lections.
It all began about 18 months ago, yhen Dorothy was little more than 6.
Mr. Meikle would give her presents rom his well-stocked shelves each ime she passed on her way to the .MS school, and the slender Dorothy Cila would smile her thanks.
The presents from the trade store helves continued to go to the girl done for some months, then the rader extended his generosity to her 'amily.
Dorothy’s father. Pastor Kila Pat —for seven years an LMS pastor— vould often call on the generous Mr.
Meikle and go away well rewarded.
Then one day about a year ago Mr. Meikle asked for Dorothy’s hand.
The pastor was delighted. “But, of course, it will all depend on Dorothy,” tie said. It is legal for a Papuan to marry at 16 if she has her parents’ consent.
That night the family held a conference at which the ins and outs of such a marriage were explained to Dorothy, who was then asked what she thought.
According to Dorothy, she remained mute, but according to her father and other members of the family who would share in the bride price, she agreed to Mr. Meikle’s proposal.
Pastor Kila Pat told Mr. Meikle of Dorothy’s willingness to marry him and the gifts continued.
Mr. Meikle, an ex-Royal Navy officer who lost his English wife and two children in a wartime air raid on London, wanted the ceremony held as soon as possible, But there was unexpected opposition.
The Rev. Maurice Nixon, Austra- Han missionary at Hula, refused to marry them. He doubted that the girl wanted to marry Meikle.
But her father still insisted she did.
There were two alternatives for the match-making pastor. Either the couple could be married by the District Officer or by native custom, “But,” Kila Pat told John Meikle, “you must wait a little longer.”
The trader was fast becoming tired of waiting and in a letter written to Dorothy with a village elder. 31 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Branches throughout the Cook Islands rothy’s father three months ago ed him to “quit stalling”.. he pointed out that by now pastor’s family had accepted ds and cash to the value of 104/8/5 from him.
I have kept my side of the bargain 1 now you must keep yours,” he >te. “And so I shall,” replied the man pastor. dr. Nixon left the village for ic months’ leave in Australia and a Pat assured his daughter’s or that “it won’t be long now”, lut events took another unexpected i. tumours that a girl was being :ed by her father to marry a man inst her will reached District ce in Port Moresby. ‘She doesn’t love John, she loves her aoldays’ sweetheart, an apprentice ;r now in Port Moresby,” went rumours. icting District Commissioner Mr. dd Marsh sent Assistant District cer Neil Lucas from his office at rby Rigo to interview the Kila family and Mr. Meikle.
"She Must Marry Him" le was there when I arrived in the age. The officer had turned out whole family for a meeting. He [ the pastor that to force the girl » marriage was against the law.
Tie pastor argued back that Mr. :as did not understand the ways of people.
The family decided she would :ry John and we have accepted bride price. She must marry him, t is the way of the people,” he I. Mr. Lucas turned to Dorothy > had stood silently staring at the d black earth.
Do you want to marry John?” asked. But the girl would not wer.
She is very shy,” explained her ler.
Mr. Lucas asked the same question of Dorothy’s mother. But she, too— after casting a fearful glance at her husband—remained mute.
Mr. Lucas left the village after warning the pastor to do nothing to influence the girl in her choice of a husband.
But as I, too, left the village Maki, Kila Pat’s father, and Dorothy clambered aboard the Land Royer.
Maki spoke to me as we jolted toward Hula, “Don’t let them make her marry John. He is a good man but she is too young and he is too °ld-”
“Do you want to marry John?” I asked Dorothy, “No,” she whispered, , At his trade store I found John Meikle weighing out brown rice, “Dorothy doesn’t want to marry you,” I told him.
“I was beginning to suspect that,” he answered, “but her father has always insisted she wanted to.”
“Will you press your claim?”
“I’d be a fool to marry a girl who didn’t) want me,” he said, “And what about the bride price?”
“I won’t press for its return. I’ve been here for 12 years and thought I John Meikle. 33 CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
0 relaxing There’s no cure quite like a few days at one of New Zealand’s fine resort hotels like The Hermitage at Mount Cook.
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Vi-Stim To restore | Vim and 1 Vigour lew the people, but now I agree— •u can never really know what’s gog on,” [An expert in the bride price stem, Oala Oala-Rarua, says that if orothy now marries someone other an Mr. Meikle, her husband will ,ve to pay a bride price for her, ila Pat would then, by native custom, be obliged to pay £604/8/5 of that bride price to Mr. Meikle.] Latest development in the story came in the form of a letter from Mr.
Meikle to the editor of the South Pacific Post, Port Moresby, “You can put in your paper that Dorothy still has one suitor—me,” wrote Mr. Meikle!
Native Ex-Servicemen On The
March Oyer 'Colour Bar' Fuss
Prom a Port Moresby Correspondent A long-standing feud between the Papua-New Guinea Ex- Servicemen’s Association and the Returned Services League flared up again late in April and, fanned by charge and countercharge, had by mid-May reached new heights of bitterness.
IHE first shot in the latest outburst of fighting was fired on Anzac ay by Daera Ganiga, president of e P-NG Native Servicemen’s Assoation, who bitterly complained his embers had been barred from enterg the Port Moresby Ex-Serviceen’s Club for a drink following the aditional march.
He accused the RSL (which beuse of its influence on the club’s ecutive, does in fact control its fairs) of allowing a colour bar to Ist at the club.
Surely it wouldn’t have hurt the Lib to invite native ex-servicemen for a convivial drink on the one iy of the year when comradeship ould be at its highest, he protested.
Many of Ganiga’s 80 members who ok part in the march that day hoed their leader’s hurt complaints.
The club replied to the charges ying, “Only members are allowed the club on Anzac Day, and none ' the native ex-servicemen are mem- ;rs.”
They're Eligible In fact, native ex-servicemen are igible for membership, but so far me has applied. Although they bejve some of them would be sucissful applicants for membership, ey say they wouldn’t feel welcome a club which they claim for years is been little more than polite to em.
The inference is, quite clearly, that the club now accepted, some native L-servicemen it would be doing so ir political reasons only.
A second complaint Ganiga and s men voiced on Anzac Day was iat they were barred from memberlip of the League itself.
It was this complaint which drew the fire of RSL officials.
They angrily snorted that native ex-servicemen couldn’t become RSL members because they weren’t holders of the “Returned from Active Service” badge. And this, pointed out the secretary of the P-NG State Branch of the RSL, Mr. Jim Knight, was not issued by the League, but by the three branches of the Armed Services.
But this argument hasn’t meant much to Ganiga’s men.
“We fought here in exactly the same way the Australians did. No one asked us to go away and fight, if they had we would have” they say, and, of course, they have a very sound argument.
Frightened But they also point out that the real qualification for RSL membership is the “39-45 Star”, a medal showing that its bearer served in a theatre of war. And they argue that the Returned from Active Service Badge has been “no more than just an excuse” to keep them out of the League.
“They were frightened to let us into the RSL directly after the war because they were frightened we would ask for repatriation benefits,” says Ganiga.
Ganiga adds, and he is backed up by many an old Territorian, that the badge has been promised them on several occasions over the years.
Until last year the matter of native ex-servicemen entering the club for a drink on Anzac Day had not arisen, for last year was the -first 35 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 19 64
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Until then the executive of the -Servicemen’s Club on Ela Beach 1 always invited the men from the ive contingent to enjoy “lolly ter” and buns in some back room the premises, while they and their mbers enjoyed beers at the bar.
Sfaturally enough the natives exited that with the lifting of the nor ban they would be invited to nk with club members. But not m the lolly water and buns were ered last year, and officers of the :ific Islands Regiment came to the cue when a scene looked like deoping. They invited the men to the £ Mess.
Phis year the native ex-servicemen ren’t going to take it lying down, ey saw the club’s failure to invite ,m in for a drink as an insult, and In’t hesitate in saying so.
Following reports in the Australian jss of the Anzac Day incidents in rt Moresby, members of the Native -Servicemen’s Association received flood of letters from sympathetic servicemen in Australia.
Encouraged by this support and by : growing body of opinion among rritory RSL members that native servicemen should be admitted to : RSL, Ganiga has now decided on irm stand.
He has said his association will proach native members of the mse of Assembly asking them to :k the withdrawal of liquor licences >m RSL clubs throughout the Terri- •y until the RSL alters its stand. If » matter is raised in the House — d there’s nothing to prevent this— » RSL is going to be placed in an tremely embarrassing position.
There’s no doubt that Ganiga and } suporters know this, and perhaps 2 threat of action will be enough.
Knighthood For New W.P.H.G.
As everyone expected, Mr.
Robert Sidney Foster, Sir David Trench’s successor as British High Commissioner for the Western Pacific was knighted just before he left London to take up his appointment in Honiara.
The Queen received him on May 7 and invested him with the insignia of a Knight Commander of the Most Distinguished Order of St. Michael and St. George.
Sir Robert (at least, we presume it’s Sir Robert ) and Lady Foster are expected to arrive in Honiara in mid-June.
Dead NG Man Was Allergic To Malarial Pills Prom a Port Moresby Correspondent The recent death in Port Moresby of 20-year-old Queenslander Graham Kruse from a condition caused by a rare reaction to anti-malarial pills has been described by Papua-New Guinea’s Director of Health, Dr. R.
F. Scragg, as “the only recorded case of its kind I have heard of”.
KRUSE, brought to the Territory only 10 days before his death to play Rugby League with Paga Club, complained on April 7 that he was feeling ill.
He went home from work but he felt better and attended a training session with his team that night.
The following morning he became violently ill and was admitted to Port Moresby General Hospital, where he died a week later.
The doctor who attended him said the young man’s allergy to the pills had resulted in a breakdown of the mechanism that produced white corpuscles.
A laceration on his knee became infected and Kruse had been completely defenceless against it.
The doctor said Kruse had been told in Australia before coming to the Territory to take two Camoquin tablets daily.
“This amounted to an excess of the recommended suppressive dose, but it is impossible to say whether this contributed to his death,” he said.
The correct Camoquin dosage as a suppressive is two tablets on the same day each week. A treatment course is 10 tablets—four the first day and three each on the second and third days but this is not a toxic dose.
Doctor Scragg said people intending to come to the Territory should seek proper medical advice on the correct dosage on anti-malarials.
Medical authorities stressed that any brand of anti-malarial tablets would have produced the same effect on Kruse’s system.
They point out also the extreme rarity of the allergy which contributed to Kruse’s death.
A Sydney spokesman for the Camoquin makers, Parke Davis and Co., said there was less than one chance in a million of a similar occurrence. 37 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Budget Goes
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From a Suva Correspondent Fiji for 1964 has a recurrent dget of £9,413,918, but of it ,480,083, or 36.96 per cent., es in personal salaries and yments. This startling inf oration was revealed in a report ade by Sir Alfred Savage and r. C. A. Grossmith, who spent t months in Fiji as a Salaries ammission for the Civil Service. r ET those figures do not represent the full cost of the employment civil servants. Together with leave, isages, pensions, subsidised quarters d other overheads the Civil Service sts the taxpayer £F4 million a IT.
And the cost of the civil service increasing at a greater than normal awth. In 1955 the recurrent budget is £5,832,426, and personal emolumts cost £1,749,419, or 29.9 per at.
Despite this trend the commismers recommended increases for a mber of grades of officers, mainly the lower or junior categories, and imated that these, if adopted by i legislature, would cost £350,000 £375,000.
About £300,000 of that would go the “junior” scales.
Recommendations The commissioners’ recommendams included: • A 5-day, 40-hour week for overnment servants (to be modified 82-hour fortnights of 10 or 11 lys if necessary). • The establishment of an ormisation and methods unit. • The restriction of overseas leave issages to Australasia for future cal entrants (at present, depending i conditions of employment, officers e entitled to United Kingdom leave intervals). • Equal pay for men and women achers and prison officers.
In their examination of the cost : passage grants, the commissioners ime up with some surprising inforlation, and said there could be big ivings.
For example, a local officer in the :ale £560 to £735 a year, taking pension, leave, passage and living-in in Government quarters, was actually in receipt of £926 a year, and there were similar increases for higher scales.
For expatriate officers it was even better: An officer on £1,060 with inducement allowance, paid by the UK, pension, leave, passage, educational visits, quarters, actually received £2,355; at £1,475 the officer received £3,378; and on £1,875 he received £4,178.
The commissioners found unequal work for the same pay, and unequal pay for the same work. Senior staff spent an appreciable amount of time on purely routine duties.
They were informed that there had been inadequate training, and a lowering of standards because of the rapid expansion of the Civil Service in the last 10 years.
They also referred to the advantage the expatriate has through inducement allowances paid by the United Kingdom Government and mentioned the case where a deputy head of a department, an expatriate, received more than the head, a local.
But they left the overall impression that Fiji is not getting the best return from a service which is costing £4 million a year—a point which many people not in the Fiji Civil Service had been claiming for years. 39 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE. 1964
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SOUTH PACIFIC The Territories' finest LAGER Brewed just right for your taste Uncertainties For New Governor: Australia Will Take More Interest In Fiji From R. W. Robson, in Suva The new Governor of Fiji, Sir Derek Jakeway, is going to find life in the Antipodes anything but dull. kN his arrival here in January, he was handed a plate-full of Litical and economic uncertainties; t before he could get his teeth o the mess, he had to deal with ee disasters—a major flood, a gic loss of life in the foundering . , an overloaded ? ,p ’ ? nd ,he f Iden death m London of one of most valuable Fijian advisers, vuama Vunivalu.
The wrecked bridges are being itored. The Bailey bridge at ivua—sent quickly from New aland and put into place with narkable speed—is functioning.
A motor-punt on a steel rope is rying traffic, with little delay, ross the turbulent Sigatoka, while series of hardworking teams are ing to replace the two shocking ;aks in the long bridge there.
Public Works men have begun ; construction of a hard crossing. >t above the wrecked bridge at idi, to allow vehicles to ford the stream while another bridge is built nearby.
The Government is doing a very good job in restoring road communications; but the overall cost is distressing, at this time, Meanwhile, the Governor is tackling his plate-full of uncertainties, in wor 6 kman T ik e fashion. n e « nt i ,„,i Better Use Of Land Fiji urgently needs development of its natural resources, so that it may feed its rapidly-growing population of Fijians, Indians, Chinese and Euronesians.
That means, first, bette- of the land.
There is enough land m Fiji to feed four times the population of 420,000; but it is not readily accessible. Under the Deed of Cession, made in 1874 before the Indians came to man the sugar industry, Britain promised that the land F iji's Financial Secretary, Mr. H. P. Ritchie (left) accepts a cheque for £A15,000 for [?]ood relief from Mr. R. N. Hamilton, Australian Commissioner in Fiji. The donation was made on behalf of the Australian Government. —Photo: Rob Wright. 41 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Most Fijians still live in village and family groups. Although muc native land has been leased to th sugar-growers and to Europea copra-producers, use and develoi ment of land have been jealous guarded, and are not keeping pac with population needs.
The present bitter controvers over the future of the Ba lease (Fijian-owned land, worked for long time by Indian cane-growers highlights the problem. The lease approach expiry. The Fijians no> need some of this land for thei own sustenance. The Indian tenant naturally are complaining about th loss of their assets and security an livelihood.
The Governor, of course, had a briefing at the Colonial Offic before he arrived here. He arrive with the knowledge that more sell government and faster economi development are vital. He also mus have known—if he did not the com plaints of the Indians over Ba wouli have told him—that adjustment o the growing difficulties between th land-owning Fijians and the landles Indians is a necessary preliminar to any progress in the fields o political administration and economi development.
There he has met his first head ache.
Irresponsible Indian agitators am mischievous little Indian newspaper always have been a feature of lift in Fiji; and Fiji has learned to liv< with the nuisance, and ignore it.
Unfortunately, that has created : bad habit among men of affairs ii Fiji. They are inclined to turn i deaf ear to all Indian grievances— and the Fiji Indians have some rea ones—and that was how they treater the wailing at Ba.
This had a bad sequel.
"Mischief-Making"
The Governor and his adviser* were trying to bring the suspicious reluctant Fiji leaders into a sort ol inner council of mutual trust with the Indian leaders, with the idea ol dealing with land and self-government on an inter-racial basis. The Fijians were being “difficult”, but were not unreasonable.
The Indians in Legco are dominated by Mr. A. D. Patel and followers; and Mr. Patel, although now apparently prepared to cooperate with high authority and play the game, has a long, lively history of anti-this and anti-that, which the Fijians have interpreted as a sort of “Fiji for the Gujeratis”.
Therefore, it was unfortunate that 42 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
this moment, when the semi-literate ne-farmers thought they were being ckeyed out of their rights at Ba, one those agitator-group nuisances ould have come into action.
It insisted that the Patels were >w currying favour with the Govnment, that the Ba farmers were :ing sacrificed, and it appealed to e United Nations to intervene, and mounced that 80,000 oppressed idians would leave Fiji for a better id freer island (name, place and Tie unspecified).
It was sheer, silly mischief-making; it it started sensation-seeking newsipers howling—and, worst of all, it :t the Fijian leaders right back i their heels.
In Legco, on May 6, Semesa ikivou declared that the Fijians ould stand uncompromisingly on ieir land rights and privileges— 3thing would be given away.
So there is the irresistible force of idian population-growth meeting the nmovable rock of Fijian land wnership. A way around that npasse must be found, if “another yprus” is to be avoided and real evelopmental progress made. But ow?
That is No. 1 in Sir Derek’s dish f uncertainties.
Legco Men As "Ministers"
The next lies in administration. l year or two ago, Fiji was comlitted to the Member-Minister astern. Selected Legco men—preamably, two Europeans, two Fijians, vo Indians —will take charge of rovernmental departments next lonth. This is to be a first, careful tep towards self-government.
Already, the names of the selected men are being canvassed. There has been no official announcement yet; but the commentators are sure the be Fijians Ratu Mara and Ratu Gamlau, Indians Messrs.
Patel and Deoki and Europeans Messrs> Fal and Kermode . .
Put the Fijians who came into this pl an warily and most reluctantly may leave it at any moment. They do not wish to lessen the influence of the old, separate, Fijian admimstration, and they fear the Indians. adminisfra JZ political control, and the threat of a common roll (which, of course, would give unlimited new powers to the Indians), the Fijians immediately would leave the governmental structure, and prepare to defend their rights. There is little doubt of that.
That is the Governor’s next uncertainty.
Fiji Floods Bring
A Backwards Move
The lower picture shows the site of the bridge over the Nadi River, Fiji, following the recent floods. Only abutments remain. The footbridge, floating on oildrums, allows pedestrians to cross. A hard crossing, to allow cars to ford the stream when it is low (which it is normally), has been built upstream.
At left is the punt which at present ferries two cars at time across the Sigatoka River.
Note the line of cars waiting on the Sigatoka town side.
The Colony is in a muddle over its developmental organisation.
Commissioner Sir Alan Burns, in { recommended the establish- ~ Natural ™nt of a Council Natural Resources, working through a Development Commissioner with Ja p oWers and, presumably, au thority over departmental heads, Development Muddle , \ .. ~ . e , om .
But the late Maddocks regime and the Comm i ss i o ner j s little more than an i nte r-departmental messageuu >- . .
The first Commissioner, Mr.
Bevington, retired in 1963 after a short time in the job, and the new Commissioner, Colonel Basil Rogers, who has had wide experience of this type of work in Africa, obviously is 43 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE. 1964
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There is another complication.
One of the new Member-Ministers almost certainly will be in charge of Economic Development. Is there room for “Minister” and Commissioner?
That looks like another uncertainty for the Governor.
If Fiji, in the future, is to remain orderly and well-governed, there must be large-scale development.
That needs a lot of money. Where will it come from?
Britain, since World War 11, has been generous with grants—millions have been poured into all sorts of necessary constructions and services.
But that system is ending. Both the spirit and the machinery for it have gone with the Empire, wiped out by a combination of American politicians and bearded sociologists who have made a fetish of anticolonialism.
Closer Fiji-Australia Links Britain is turning a cold and calculating eye upon Australia.
There is no doubt about it.
Already, as the result of talks in London, an Australian Commissioner (Mr. R. N. Hamilton) has been sent to Fiji. The appointment of a Fiji official representafr in Australia is expected at ai moment.
Even as this is written Mr. H.
Ritchie (Fiji’s Colonial Treasure] and Colonel Rogers (Fiji’s Develo ment Commissioner) are in Canberr on an official visit, meeting Au tralia’s new External Affairs Minist (Mr. Hasluck); and they are goii also to Sydney, to meet the heads < the big Australian corporations whic operate in Fiji.
What does all this mean? Qui clearly, it points in one direction Australian corporations own ar operate at least 70 per cent. < Fiji’s trade and industry. Australi annually, sells millions of poun< worth of goods and service to Fi and buys Virtually nothing from tf British Colony.
Australia, therefore, has certai obligations towards Fiji—statists cannot be denied.
It is probable that the Australia corporations will make no effort 1 dodge those obligations—in fac most of them, and the CSR Co. i particular, have done a great de; in that respect. Probably, Australia investors will put many more millioi into Fiji development—always pr< vided that the investment is attende by political security.
And there’s the rub.
How can there be political securil while there is mutual suspicion an distrust between the two largest con munities in Fiji?
That is perhaps the second bigge: uncertainty on the Governor’s disl How can he get those two race working together in harmony, in sue a way as to permit big-scale oversea investment in the country?
What Of Next October?
Finally, here is His Excellency major uncertainty. What will be th attitude towards Fiji of the Goven ment which will take charge of th British Colonial Office after th general election in October?
Will it follow the Colonial Office present praiseworthy plans? Or wi it have different ideas, involving common roll, or withdrawal fror the Colony, as in Africa and Asia In the latter event, will respor sibility for Fiji be dumped in the la of the country which already owe so much of the Fijian economynamely, Australia?
Fiji’s new Governor faces a rathe terrifying task.
But Fiji appears to have bee given the right man for the jobyoung, capable, unflappable, and ver widely experienced in the difficu] inter-racial problems which he ha found in Fiji. 44 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
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Behind The Ba Leases FIJI LAND PROBLEM From a Suva Correspondent The vital problem of Fiji land has been thrown into sharper focus in recent weeks. It has become clear even to people who have never thought much about it before that land can become an explosive subject between races.
ALTHOUGH the Fijians own most of the Fiji land it is the Indians, who outnumber the Fijians and who make up more than half the population of the colony, who are the major agriculturists. The Fijians, through the Native Land Trust Board, lease much land for cane-growing by Indians.
The recent public interest has arisen following notification by the board that 5,425 acres leased by the CSR company in the Ba area will not be renewed to the CSR after December 31, 1965, when the 50year leases are due to expire.
This in itself is nothing unusual.
But the fact that the opportunity has been taken to make a public issue out of the Ba release is indicative of the feeling that can be aroused on land matters in Fiji.
Whether the issue has been contrived to any extent is not the point.
The CSR at present has more than 300 cane-growing tenants on the Ba land, and the company has asked the board to consider leasing direct to the tenants any land not required by the Fijian owners.
On the expiry of native leases like these, the Fijian owners are entitled to exercise their rights as landlords and decide whether they want some or all the area retained for their own use, or released.
In the Ba area some of the owners have asked for possession, and the board in May was investigating individual cases.
The board chairman urged the Fijians to think carefully before deciding, because Fijian individuals would have to farm the land properly so that the cane contracts were not lost.
The possibility of the land going to new owners has not unnaturally caused some agitation among the present Indian tenants, but more fuel seems to have been added to the smouldering embers.
"UN Intervention"
This showed itself in rather spectacular fashion in April when the Fiji Kisan Sangh, a major group of Indian cane-growers, met at Lautoka and came up with a curious resolution which was sent to the United Nations Secretary-General, with a copy to Mr. Duncan Sandys, Secretary of State for the Colonies. (Over) These Fiji-lndian children call in to see how work is progressing on the canefields while on their way to school —a typical sight any day in Fiji. 45 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
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The resolution said that Indian rimers were being deprived of their nds by the Fiji Government, and at UN intervention was required.
Furthermore, the Fiji Kisan Sangh ould make arrangements to resettle e unhappy Indians in some other mntry. About 80,000 Indians ould be involved in the resettleent.
The action of the Fiji Kisan Sangh •ought a sharp response from the iji Government, which said it was irprising that direct representations ad been made to UN by a small ction of cane-farmers without first jproaching the Fiji Government.
The Government statement menaned that other organised caneirmers had put their grievances to le Indian MFC’s, who would put icm to the Government.
No Indian farmer would be sprived of land, crops or money to hich he was lawfully entitled.
If the leases of any of the present issees (at Ba) were not renewed, le lessees would be given priority i the allocation of land under Govrnment settlement schemes. It was □true to say that the Government as not assisting farmers.
The Government described the nplications in the UN telegram as mischievous and misleading”.
Indian View Later, the Government released etails of an interview with the rovernor which had been sought and ranted by the six Indian members f the Legislative Council.
The members had expressed conern at the possible plight of the odian families who might have to acate the Ba land.
They said great hardships would e incurred by the farmers and their amilies. They would lose not only heir tenancies but their cane conracts as well; no compensation /ould be paid for improvements; heir contributions to the Sugar Price itabilisation Fund would be lost; md the access roads they had built ind the school building contributions hey had made would be enjoyed by rther people.
"Landless"
The problem was not one affecting he Ba district tenants alone. If and leased to Indians were taken wer by native owners when the eases expired, the end result would be to leave the Indian community landless, the Indian MLC‘s added.
The Governor, Sir Derek Jake way, said he was acutely conscious of the issues involved both in the Ba district and in their wider application.
It should not be taken for granted that none of the present leases would be renewed to existing tenants.
Not all the land under lease was in fact being claimed. Even when claims were made and substantiated it did not follow automatically that the leases would not be renewed.
Larger Issue The larger issue of greater security of tenure for farmers in general was one which the Government was exhaustively considering.
The evolution of a fair and equitable relationship between land occupier and land owner was a matter of such vital importance that he felt he should make a personal study of the problem.
This he was doing, in preparation for the day when Members with portfolios would be associated with his official advisers in the formation of Government policy on such matters.
The Governor said he understood and sympathised with the anxieties of tenant farmers who felt their livelihood threatened.
No good, however, would come from playing on these fears for temporary political advantage or of reckless talk of a mass exodus to some unnamed Promised Land.
This would merely lead to a hardening of attitudes and make eventual solution infinitely more difficult.
The right and only way ahead was for the political leaders of the three main communities to get together with him to work out agreed and mutually acceptable policies.
The Indian members could help the community they represented and the country as a whole by cooperating in this.
It seemed that this interview had hardly been concluded when another Prominent Indian MLC Mr. A. D. Patel, one of those who put the position on the Ba land question to the Governor, Sir Derek Jakeway. 47 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
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Bank of New Zealand, Sydney; Bank of New South Wales, Sydney last was fired off —this time from le Fijian camp.
Speaking to the adjournment in ic Legislative Council, Fijian ;mesa Sikivou issued a blunt “hands I Fijian land” warning.
“The subject of Fijian land is an [plosive one,” he said, in a tense mosphere in the House. “We lost uch land in the past and we don’t tend to lose any more land.”
Sikivou said some political leaders id been making capital of the Ba nd question, but the Fijians would unand fullest consultations before ly change was made in Fiji land ws.
He said the political leaders had ily succeeded in “worsening spicion and mistrust”.
He said one could appreciate the irdships some Indian farmers might i faced with, and he hoped every nsideration would be given them, it the Ba land matter was a simple atter of an expiry of leases—a rfectly normal thing. The Fijian md Board should be left alone thout agitation to complete its liberations.
Sikivou’s comments were not going be the last on a vital subject, everybody in Fiji knew. The oblem of Fiji lands is in fact wider an a mere 5,000 acres at Ba. [?]an On Tobacco Advertising From “PIM” Correspondents The Fiji Broadcasting Comission has decided that when rrent cigarette advertising conlets expire at the end of this ar they will not be renewed.
HIS decision was reached after consideration of all the reports the link between lung cancer and ;arette smoking and after receiving vice from the Fiji Director of ;dical Services, Dr. C. H. Gurd. r years the FBC has banned yertising of liquor products.
However, the timing of the FBC’s arette announcement came in for lot of criticism.
It was made when the current yertising contracts all had more in eight months to run, and the tics pointed out that if smoking dangerous to health, then it is as dangerous now as it Will be in eight months’ time, when the ban takes effect.
Meanwhile, until the end of this year Fiji’s radio listeners will continue to be told that Brand X is “Kind to Your Throat”, whatever, allegedly, it might be doing to their lungs!
Samoan Position In Western Samoa, too, cigarettes have been suffering some adverse publicity since the American cancer report was given full publicity in March.
One leading Apia store reported that in the month following release of the report sales of pipes went up 400 per cent!
Sales of pipe tobacco are still heavy.
If all goes well, a Samoan Agriculture Department official may soon be sent to the Philippines for training in home cigar-making.
According to UN adviser, marketing expert J. J. van der Goes, Samoan tobacco lends itself well to cigar-making and with very little expense a thriving small scale cigar industry can be established there.
And cigars are not supposed to be as dangerous. 49 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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The ancient recipe for Drambuie includes old Scotch whisky, heather honey and delicate herbs Territories TALK-TALK With Tolala Turning the pages of the Sydney Morning Herald the other day I sighted a heading on the financial page: “Choiseul Profit Rises 27.6 p.c.” and the sub-heading showed the net profit of Choiseul Plantations (Holdings) Ltd., copra and cocoa planter, for the year ended November 30. ’ PAUSED a moment and I did some • back-thinking. The mention of le month of November (the close of le company’s financial year) rang a ttle bell, and I went back just on 0 years to when CPL was only a sry small pup in the Burns Philp tter. No “(Holdings)” in its title len; life was much more simple; no igh-pressure tactics . . .
It was in November, 1912, that I let W. H. Lucas (BP’s Islands injector at the time) in Kieta (Bougaiville).
He was land-seeking for this newly- >rmed company and was accomanied by his able lieutenant, Jim Campbell. They were travelling in the Dod ship Sideia, with Capt. Buckley 5 master and engineer Tally.
Choiseul Island had offered no litable areas in the British Solomons, nd the untouched, extensive isle of ougainville in the neighbouring terman colony, with its affable Comlissioner Doellinger, eager to develop le area, appealed to WHL as holding ossibilities: good soil, unlimited ibour and official encouragement ad co-operation.
After a slight delay, caused by my larriage ceremony, WHL and Doelnger went land-hunting, which reilted in the acquisition of the areas iter to be known as Soraken, Kunua, aniu, Teopasino and Arigua planitions.
CPL’s First Estate: Soraken, was :arted in 1913 with Jim Campbell 1 charge of operations. Being located ot distant from Buka Passage it ttracted the Buka Island natives to make paper”. They had the reputaon in the colony of being the cream f labourers.
At long last the “English” had sturned, a Buka kukurai (luluai) Did me when he heard the news. As Don as I had taken over the old hieen Emma trading station on 'ororan Island from Paul Schmidt later “Karkar”) in 1912, the Buka ids had quizzed me as to “What ime English he come now?” To diich I, naturally, being a foreigner and not having the foggiest idea of the coming 1914-18 conflict, had replied a terse: “No got!”
But with the advent of CPL at Soraken a year later the chiefs smiled knowingly, for had they not asked when the English were coming?
They had already started, laka?
And they had big schooners and plenty of tobacco; they gave out tea and sugar and biscuits in the morning. Jim Campbell had been allowed to “let his head go” and, knowing the native mind, had done just that, with amazing results.
Natives swooped on Soraken from near and far to “make paper”.
This was the “slave labour” of German times, so often referred to in later years when describing the “bad old days” of colonialism.
So ready was the response that the other estates, Baniu, Teopasino and Arigua were soon in operation and I found myself caught up in the vortex to “join the English” and started planting the Arigua property in late 1913 and was in rather the unique position of being the only married man (with the exception of Jimmy Gibson, the diver, at Man- A TRIER: New Guinea girl Shirley Mackellar made history by being the only European woman to stand in an open electorate in the recent New Guinea elections, and one of only two European women who stood at all (the other was Kay Ascroft-Smith, who stood in the Central Special electorate). Mrs. Mackeliar, who is the wife of a patrol officer, wasn't successful in her Madang electorate. But she was game, and more power to her. 51 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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4 O'Connell Street, Sydney P.O. Box 3838, G.P.0., Sydney. Cable Address: "Carefulness". ning Straits) on the plantation staff of the island estates under Lucas’ control “I don’t want married men,” Lucas used to say. “They are only ruddy verandah planters. I’d rather lose a few bolts of calico out of the trade store, given to a ‘mary’, than lose the whole plantation.”
The First Annual Stock-Taking: Early in November, 1914, I received word by runner (all CPL ships had been out of action since September, owing to the war) from Jim Campbell to proceed from Arigua to Soraken for the purpose of assisting in the annual stock-taking.
So I hied me forth in a whale boat and a week later was busy counting the few bags of rice (no supplies had been received since the latter end of July, and the main diet had been kaukau), tins of bulamakau, salmon, tobacco and the general what-haveyou’s on a plantation in those days.
The Aussies Arrive. We had reached the stage of costing and the general faking of plantation returns, which takes place on every well-run establishment; reconciling stocks consumed with stocks on hand and received, when we heard that everwelcome cry of “Sailoo!”
Was it a German or an Aussie steamer? It was slowly nosing its way through the reefs of the Buka Passage.
Excitement reigned as we recognised the Australian flag and we charged our glasses with a modicum of Painkiller (one of the few remaining stimulants).
It was the old German steamer Meklong with 500 Australian troops aboard en route to Kieta, where opposition was expected from the German settlement there, I was able to tell the CO (a chap named Colonel Watson) that Doellinger and his staff were sitting down, with their bags packed and ready to hand over the keys.
Doellinger had even scuttled his dearly-loved steamer Buka in Rorowana Bay.
It was a happy conclusion to Choiseul's first stock-taking in 1914.
The “English” had come, even as the old Buka chiefs had foreseen.
Our months of isolation from the outside world were finished.
Once again we could receive supplies from Faisi (BSI) and we toasted Meklong with her Aussie troops (members of the AN & MEF) in something more tasty than Painkiller, And from those early days to 5C years later I would say that CPL has never looked back. It was the first big Australian planting enterprise tc start in New Guinea.
Ng Artifacts
Spears, bows and arrows, masks, wooden statues from New Guinea ai one time were known simply as native curios and were looked upon by the more privileged people as crude and, at times, obscene.
Today they come under the category of Art—with a capital A Whether this is due to the modern trend towards abstract or contemporary paintings and sculptures 1 wouldnt know.
Anyway, they are referred to b> critics as avant garde and thus accepted, despite the fact that most ol the noses and eyes are in the righl places.
Whether this trend to acclaim these native works as Art is connected in any way with a subtle integration campaign is anybody’s guess. Suffice it to say native curios of almost any type are very much U Kieta, Bougainville, as if was in 1914 —the time that "Tolala" discusses in "Talk- Talk" this month. 52 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLI
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Australia at the moment, judging recent reports of art critics at the mgry Horse and other Sydney lleries. Artifact-seekers from other ids have long ago recognised their itinctive features, as I mentioned t month.
It reminds me of an experience I d 52 years ago in Sydney when I -ived there in mid-1912 and, as is usual in those days, loaded down th hessian-bound bundles of spears, ws and arrows and the usual paraernalia that comprise the parting ts from native friends who had ed “Yoko” to me as I left the and.
Curios of any description are bulky anyone’s luggage and I had them >wed away in the baggage-room of j Metropole Hotel, where most ;w Guinea folk stayed in those days.
To get rid of them was a problem I visited a curio shop. Today it >uld be in Martin Place; then it was oore Street and known as Tost & )hu. I entered the dim-lit premises, ;erviewed the manager, told him lat I had for sale. He was not terested.
New Guinea? It didn’t appeal to m.
I was about to leave the shop when spied a chap whom I recognised imediately as a Yank tourist. With e precociousness of youth I apoached him and asked him for iat was he looking. He wanted me “genu-wine” South Seas curios decorate the den of his home in ew York.
I told him I had what he wanted id after a noggin or two at the etropole he inspected my collection 1 farewell gifts and, after having awn on my imagination to some :tent, giving him a case history of ich item, its authenticity and rarity, * realised how fortunate he was.
He wanted them, I sold them and e were both satisfied.
From this early experience I ialised the value of native artifacts, ie proceeds of which enabled me to :e the sights of Sydney Town with /o ship-board companions, Frank id Jim Pryke, who had joined the rinz Sigismund at Samarai after a respecting venture up the Yodda.
Catty Question
With all the modern scientific aids hich we are said to have at our disosal it would seem that when it jmes to a show-down we must rely n Mother Nature. I refer to the ise of Rats on Bougainville. An rgent SOS was sent out last month >r two thousand cats, to keep the its down. It received appropriate üblicity.
Rats have been pests in certain
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arts of TNG for many years. One p the worst infested spots (to my nowledge) was the Carteret Islands, so in the Bougainville district.
I stayed there one night and never ept a wink. The rodents in number id size reminded me of the trenches p the Western Front in World War I.
Tbe Chinese trader on the Carpets was well supplied with cats, ut they were so fat and well-fed ley had lost their usefulness as •adicators.
Fresh supplies of “pussies” were nported to him from Rabaul about very three months and the skipper E the schooner about to leave Rabaul >r the island would send his boatsrew ashore “pussy-hunting,” paying small bonus for the felines.
No Rabaul cat was safe at such me, and cat-lovers, knowing then ich a clean-up was due, would romptly lock up their pets.
The Carteret trader always had •esh meat on the island. He told me; Pussy he good fella kai-kai too mch”.
Perhaps the newly-formed New ruinea Biological Foundation will find solution to the problem.
Hot In The Arm
The announcement last month of le formation of the New Guinea lorporation must certainly be an ncouragement to the private Aus- •alian investors in primary and inustrial development of the Territory, t received a good Press coverage nd the names connected with the enture are impressive.
I liked chairman Steven Rich’s emarks when he said; “The coloration would be as dedicated to its New Guinea’s) development as the ioneering Australians already there,” bus giving due credit, indirectly, to hose private individuals and companies who had really pioneered the [erritory This was in contrast to a statenent by an official of the Departnent of Territories who is reported o have referred to the new company is “Pioneers in New Guinea Finance” md followed on with the usual )fficial view that nothing had been lone in either Papua or New Guinea >efore the end of War 11.
He said: “Australian pioneers and explorers helped New Guinea with lealth and education. It is now the urn of the businessmen to help the territory towards economic maturity”.
Ye gods and little fishes!
What of the old German pioneers who brought trading to the country in the ’7o’s and ’Bo’s, such as the Neu Guinea Compagnie, Hernsheim & Co. and the D.H. & P.G., then later Queen Emma and H. R. Wahlen in New Guinea and UNO's Capt.
Fitch (which became Steamships), the Whitten Bros, and the Buntings in D P fd p^Vdo b nth r ?n g^ ar I?
And what of BP, WRC, Guinea Airways, Bulolo Goldfields, and NG Goldfields in the post-War I period?
To say nothing of private individuals like Cecil Levien, the Big six, and the Leahy brothers.
Other recent commercial fillips, of course, have been the W. R. Carpenter ‘E a ! n ! he , Valley and the NG Biological Foundation, which has acquired Aropa plantation and which was, incidentally, Started as a big experimental estate back in the German days when old Louis Somer was the manager.
There are other big ventures pending (SO I hear) that also have Bougainville Island as the locale for the^e OP w r hole nS attitude of officialdom towards private enterprise at long last appears to have softened, which will be to the Territory’s advantage, even if it does bring down the wrath of the Afro-Asian clique at Lake Suecess as encouraging capitalism!
Madang Seminary For
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Described as the "biggest thing to have happened in the Catholic Church in the South Pacific Islands", the Holy Spirit Regional Seminary was officially opened at Madang, New Guinea, on May 1, before a representative gathering of more than 300 people. The gathering included the Anglican Bishop of P-NG, Rt. Rev.
David Hand. The seminary is the major training school for the Catholic priesthood in P-NG and the Solomons. Rector is an Australian from Sydney, Father Patrick Murphy, SVD. The seminary is staffed by Divine Word missionaries. The opening was performed by the Apostolic Delegate to Australia, Most Rev. Domenico Enrici.
The photos show the seminary buildings from the sea, and at the official opening, from left, Father English, of Chanel College, Kokopo; Rt. Rev. David Hand; Archbishop Enrici; and Bishop Noser, of Alexishafen. 55 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE. 1964
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The Month In Western Samoa
Criticism Of Selections For New Cabinet From R. F. Rankin, in Apia The only surprise following the first West Samoan elections since independence was the Prime Minister’s choice of three new Cabinet Ministers. The elections themselves were very quiet, with a common-sense result, and with votes being cast by 90 per cent, of those eligible. [HAVE been guided in my choice of Ministers by the inspiration f God,” said Fiame Mataafa aumuania Mulinuu 11, a few days fter the Assembly had re-elected im Prime Minister, unopposed, for further three years (or until his Jovemment is removed by a noonfidence motion, which is a distinct ossibility unless Government conimiPR tn run smoothlvY Tut before MatS announced he names in the Assembly, very few leople thought any of the new Minsters would have had any chance of election The three new faces are: . • 61-year-old veteran politician falamaivao Ulualofaiga Vaela’a, who s Minister of Health. Strongly conicrvative and reportedly embittered it missing out on ministerial selecion in 1961, Talamaivao has spent nore time attacking the Government n the past three years than in offerng constructive suggestions. • 49-year-old one time school- ;eacher, and for the last 22 years a clerical employee of O. F. Nelson md Co., Laufili Time, who is new Minister of Agriculture. Laufili first entered the Assembly in 1961. He bas proved to be an enthusiastic debater, speaking on most tropics Linder discussion, but in the main his contributions have been neither particulariy original nor of much substance.
O 62-year-old newcomer to politics and former Court interpreter and Registrar of Lands and Titles Court, Papalii Poumau, CBE, who has been given the portfolio of Education. He is the greatest surprise of the selections.
Former Minister of Agriculture Asiata Lagolago was dropped from the Cabinet, and former Minister of Education Tuatagaloa Leutele was switched to Justice.
Other Ministers, G. F. D. Betham (Finance), F. C. F. Nelson (Public Works), Toomata and Faalavaau Gain (Post Office and Radio) retained th e‘ r P ort f° >° s m .
In answer to Press cr cism o the new selections, and claims that obvicmslylrettermcn w’ereoverlooked, the Public Relations Office, in weekly programme, Oe ma lou Male (You and Your Gove me) which is broadcast over 2AP, stated that it was better to have Ministers with little knowledge and who worked hard, than to have smart Ministers who got nowhere.
“It’s no good having Ministers who talk too much and cause trouble m Cabinet, the Office said, Public Relations is a part of the Prime Ministers Department, ' „ , ~ , c 1%/TEANWHILE in the midst of changing times and at the start of an era of revolutionary economic development, Prime Minister Mataafa, in his sneech after his reelection to the office, illustrated how much so many top Samoans still cling to the past.
“I do not say this because I have been re-elected through our customs and traditional relationships, but I assure the House that once we deviate or stray away from our customs and traditions God knows what will happen to our country,” he said, At the other end of the scale, and representing a still unknown quantity, is the young Samoan public servant with a NZ university education who was a polling clerk at a more distant booth during the recent elections, He was reported to have told the successful candidate, “I’m just helping you people out. This my country, I don’t get a vote.”
“It’s time you took a matai title,” he was told.
“I think 1 have a clear enough mind to enable me to choose the best 57 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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A FTER a struggle against top level apathy in the Agriculture Dejartment, FAO marketing and sugar sxpert P. J. van de Goes at the end 3f April finally was successful in producing the first sugar ever milled n Samoa.
The mill, situated on a 600-acre )lock of Government land atVaivase, ;wo miles out of Apia, can produce me ton of sugar a day. It was given ;o Western Samoa by the FAO Freedom from Hunger Campaign.
The sugar is fairly fine textured and light brown in colour. It is tioped that by the expansion of this industry at a small-scale village level Samoa will become self-sufficient in sugar requirements, which last year zost £108,919.
“All that is needed now is the wider cultivation of better varieties of cane,” said Mr. van der Goes, who svas expecting cane for propagation from Fiji and USA in May.
WHILE prospects look bright for sugar, the reverse is true for the banana industry. According to Fruit Distributors’ managing director, Ross Walker, in Apia in early May, “future prospects look extremely grim.”
Even the Agriculture Department, which has so often in the past, and at a meeting with Ross Walker earlier this year, claimed that supplies were plentiful, has expressed concern at the situation.
Acting Director T. Cunliffe has ordered a full-scale investigation into shortages which have plagued shipments to New Zealand for the past three months. Both the Prime Minister and Minister of Agriculture Laufili have assured Fruit Distributors, the company which handles supplies in NZ, that every effort will be made to maintain supplies.
Main cause of the present shortage is said to have arisen from the fact that many planters gave up banana growing in disgust when they could not get increased quotas for their surplus fruit.
“With growing difficulties of disease control, I foresee the trend away from a very large number of growers with small plantations towards a smaller number of growers running larger and more efficient plantations,” said Ross Walker.
Most people agree with him. Seven thousand growers shipping an aver- 59 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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JJAMOA was inhabited at least J 2,000 years ago and some of the nhabitants used pottery they made hemselves.
These new facts came out at a ecture given by Auckland University ’rofessor Roger Green at the Nelson Memorial Public Library and atended by over 100 Apia residents ;arly in May.
Professor Green dug up the pottery tom mounds at Vailele. The fragnents of large, flat-rimmed bowls vere made of local materials and heir age was determined by carbon iating charcoal found in the same ayer.
Furthermore, a newly investigated fort behind the village of Luatuanuu shows so many similarities to the fortifications of NZ Maoris that the evidence points to a “direct connection” between the two, said the Professor.
He has been supervising archaeological studies in Samoa for the past five months.
FOLLOWING in the vice-regal steps of his grandfather and father, the Governor-General of New Zealand, Brigadier Sir Bernard Fergusson, GCMG, DSO, OBE, en route to the Tokelau Islands and return, visited Samoa as a guest of the Samoan Government over the weekend, May 9-10.
The vice-regal party stayed with Head of State Malietoa at Vailima, Robert Louis Stevenson’s old home, where a reception for 400 was held.
Under prodding from the police, householders spent a lot of time cutting grass and cleaning up their road frontages to make the environs of Apia more spick and span than they had been for a long time.
Wreck To Be Enclosed
Work on Apia’s big £1 million wharf project, which has now begun, will enclose the historic wreck of the German warship Adler, a landmark in the town since 1889, when she was one of six ships driven ashore in the great hurricane.
The bones of the Adler (left) are in an area to be reclaimed. A move is afoot to have the prow of the ship, which will jut above the reclamation, incorporated in a monument. The British warship Calliope was the only vessel to escape in the hurricane. 61 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Murmurings Over Status In American Samoa
Second-Class
CITIZENSHIP "INTOLERABLE"
On the 64th anniversary in .pril of the raising of the United tates flag in Pago Pago, the sar-old American Samoa newsaper Samoa News took a long, ard look at the question of olitical status in the territory, nd was little pleased at what it iw.
N its most important editorial in • its first year of publication, the amoa News said: “It is no longer ifficient to have the American flag an Samoan soil), and the fact that e are even less than second-class itizens is becoming intolerable. To orrow a Kennedian phrase, we nould ‘think out now’ our moves for )morrow.
“Discontent with the present olitical set-up is bound to continue > grow. It is poor policy to brush thing off with the excuse that our me is being put to better use elsewhere.
“If the Samoan population is not t present equipped to decide on such question, there is but one alterative and that is to get them ducated —not indoctrinated —so they ould reach their own decisions on , future political set-up soon.”
Samoa News said that a test esolution “thrown at” the local legislature in the last session or the creation of a commission to tudy the possibility of making \merican Samoa part of the State )f Hawaii.
Negative Attitude The Lower House agreed to the ■esolution, but the Senate “refused o give it the full measure of consideration such an important suggestion should deserve”.
The newspaper said that a negative attitude had been shown all dong on various proposals on the political status of American Samoa.
Independence, it had been argued, was almost out of the question, be- :ause American Samoa was too poor and too small. However, that was before Van Camp, Star Kist, Coconut Processing, and Samoan Development (Continued on p. 65) Times Are Changing On Niue BUT THE POPULATION DOESN’T GROW Anyone who has not visited Niue in recent years would now scarcely recognise Alofi, the principal village and “capital” of the island.
NEW buildings have changed Alofi’s appearance, more motor vehicles have made it busier, and the shrill ringing of telephones, has added a note of urgency.
Besides all this, efforts are being made to stop the people burying their grandmothers and other relatives less than 50 yards from their houses, whereas, previously, people used to bury their relatives as close to their houses as they could get.
It is illegal to dig human graves within 50 yards of a dwelling. These regulations have been in force for a long time, but more often than not they are ignored.
The fact is that Niue has no cemeteries and the custom has always been for the people to bury their dead in the vicinity of their homes.
Verandah View This custom, besides being a menace to health, has meant that many of the most desirable housing sites have been otherwise occupied—so much so that a man can often sit on his verandah and see the last resting places of all his ancestors dotted about his lawn.
In an effort to get the people to observe the regulations, the Police Department recently drew attention to them in the local newsletter.
However, the morning after the newsletter was published, some people were digging a grave within a few feet of a house and only a couple of hundred yards from the police station!
Among the new buildings that have been built at Alofi recently are three new Administration blocks to house the Treasury, Resident Commissioner’s Office, Native Land Court, Agriculture Department and Police Department.
New stores include one of two storeys for Swan Jessop—one of the few two-storey buildings on the island and single-storey buildings for the traders, R. R.
Rex, A. Strickland and L. L.
Kingi.
Meanwhile, almost every month, the Tofua seems to bring a new deep-freeze storage unit for one store or another, and the demands on the power supply provided by Niue’s electrician, Ernie Welch, are so great that plans are in hand to enlarge the power house.
The demands on Niue’s telephone system are not growing quite as fast, but the number of telephones is always increasing— the total now being 119, mostly in Alofi.
Motor vehicles on Niue now number more than 300, and all this traffic has necessitated the widening of the island-encircling road north and south of Alofi.
This is being done, not by modern earth-moving machinery, but by hard work with picks, shovels and sledgehammers, and by laboriously building up the road level with rocks placed by hand.
But while it is not easy to get the people to change their ways in such things as burial places, little inducement is needed to get them to change their habitat.
Indeed, every time the Tofua leaves for New Zealand, she carries a group of Niueans quitting their homeland for what they look on as El Dorado, As a result, the island’s population at the last count on September 30 last year was only five more than it was in 1863 when a London Missionary Society census placed it at 5,021. — J.
EDW ARD BROWN. 63 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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CHEQUE ACCOUNTS SAVINGS ACCOUNTS ANZ.39268 Corporation had become factors in he territory’s economy.
Suggestions that American Samoa hould be merged with Western lamoa into a single independent tate had been decried by the terriory’s leading chiefs because they eared a merger might down-grade heir titles.
Then, when the question of citizenhip of the United States was brought o the people 18 month ago, the idea vas rejected because the chiefs irgued that it did not respect the natai system, and that it would be ‘incompatible with the existing and situation in Samoa”.
“So 64 years after the first raising )f the US flag in the territory, \merican Samoa is still an insular jossession of the United States,” lamoa News said.
“It has a constitution that is currently undergoing its first five fears of trial. But the authority behind the document is the Secretary Df the Interior, not the US Congress.
“But what about tomorrow? Are ve content with the present status? \re we going to keep on procrastinating until we find ourselves face to face with realities for which we have not had any previous plans and thoughts?”
The newspaper’s opinions, together with a letter from a New Guinea man published in PIM, April (p. 27) brought comment in the Samoan newspapers. [The PIM letter, signed for publication “Winds of Change”, said that the fact that the American Samoans owed America a great deal, just as the New Guineans owed a great deal to Australia, had nothing to do with nationalism.
Although they couldn’t afford it the American Samoans would “probably insist on going their own political way also”, and there was not likely to be a longish transitional period for America. America should fix target dates for Samoa’s future.] A letter, signed “Liberty”, published in Samoana, Apia, on April 29, commented that “our American friends may yet have to face up to reality”.
The writer said the Americans had “always disguised their colonial possessions under other names, e.g., ‘unincorporated territory of American Samoa’, and similar high sounding but meaningless phrases”.
The writer added, “In this day and a ge of independence America is deliberately driving a wedge between the Samoan people. This is done in a number of ways. The grafting of a Stateside type of life, education and economy on the people of Eastern Samoa; the forced registration of aliens, i.e.. Western Samoans resident in Eastern Samoa, and other discriminatory practices serve to drive the Samoan people apart. In this day of a divided Germany, Vietnam and Korea, we can add Samoa.
“It may be that many Samoans in Eastern Samoa prefer to stay under American domination, but the United States is not allowing the people there the right of self determination nor the opportunity to discuss union with their aiga in Western Samoa.
American Samoa To
Tighten Up On
Alien Immigrants
Because of the great number of aliens now living in and entering American Samoa, and particularly because of the local legislature's concern over this, the American Samoa Government will strictly enforce regulations on the entry of aliens into the territory from June 1. These regulations have sometimes been waived in the past.
The regulations provide that no alien will be permitted to enter the territory unless he possesses a passport or other travel document which is valid at the time of entry for at least 60 days beyond the expiration date of his permission to enter, and which authorises him to go somewhere else at the end of that period.
Aliens now resident in American Samoa have to present a valid passport or travel document to the Attorney-General for inspection by September 1 so that they can be "properly identified".
An alien is anyone other than an American Samoa or a United States citizen. 65 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Cables: "Lumba", Suva. [?]ilberts Will [?]ave Air Link [?]ate July From a Suva Correspondent The fortnightly air service beveen Fiji and the Gilbert and Tice Islands Colony will be inugumented late in July. It will e carried on by Fiji Airways ith the small, 4-engined Heron raft which that company has perated successfully in the Cenal Pacific in recent years. for the new service, begun last year, have not een hurried. The G & E Adminisation (which has provided the airelds and much of the ground organation) and Fiji Airways have been ery fussy in guarding the safety ictor in what, from the air transort viewpoint, is completely new srritory.
For example, the planning and lacing of a beacon at Nanumea, bout half-way between Funafuti and arawa and the site of a wartime mergency landing-ground, has taken jme time.
There is little prospect of airways rofit in the circumscribed economy f the G & E Colony. But the new :rvice will be gratefully received by oth Administration and civilians. d present, they are dependent on regular, copra-gathering ships.
On present plans, a plane will leave lausori (near Suva) every fortnight nd fly, via Nadi, to Funafuti, in the Tice Islands. Next morning, it will y 700 miles along the Ellice and filbert line of islands to Tarawa, diere there will be an overnight top. The following day it will fly 11 the way south to Fiji, a distance f about 1,500 miles, along the same oute.
This round trip could become a ourist attraction. The plane, from hmafuti to Tarawa, will seldom be iut of sight of land.
The Gilbert and Ellice Islands are he world’s most remarkable chain of tolls. They are all similar—each is i more or less circular string of slets enclosing a sheltered, but isually shallow lagoon. Few of these slets are more than 10 or 24 ft above ea-level; but they appear higher be- :ause of the extraordinary growth >f tall coconut palms carried by nost of them.
The G & E Government has built modern hotel-guesthouses at both Funafuti and Tarawa, to take care of passengers and crew on the overnight stops. Each is a single-storey L-shaped building with five doublebedrooms and all amenities, and a limited liquor licence. Hitherto, the G & E Colony has had no accommodation for travellers.
The Tarawa airfield (called Bikenibeu) is on Bonriki islet, near the hospital, and the hotel has been built there. Tarawa is a very big atoll, and the Administration officials axe mostly on Betio or Bairiki islets.
For a long time, Betio carried much of the Colony’s administrative establishment—headquarters were on Ocean Island, wheie the phosphate comes from—but Betio was almost blown to pieces in the bitter fighting of World War 11. Launches, within the lagoon maintain communication between the main islets, It is interesting to note that, with the establishment of the G & E Colony service, Fiji Airways will complete its central Pacific network of communications. Henceforward FA planes, in addition to very fully servicing all centres within Fiji, will provide regular communication eastward to Samoa, southward to Tonga, westward to the New Hebrides and Solomons, and northward to the Gilbert and Ellice.. 67 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
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Please send full details of your "f Name Address PIM/GS34 (If for School Project—Mark X) 70 JUNE. 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
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Another Body Blow [?]or Rarotonga's Blue Laws Ever since missionaries of the ondon Missionary Society moved ito the Cook Islands in the early art of the 19th century, the happyo-lucky Polynesians of those islands ave had to put up with a whole ookful of Calvinistic regulations nd customs that are known as the lue Laws. [JUT one by one those regulations 3 and customs are being whittled way—though not without opposition rom some of the Cook Islanders, lemselves.
In March, for example, members f several Rarotongan youth clubs ocked a snook at custom by going board a tourist liner to entertain ome 1,400 passengers —to the conternation of their elders ( PIM, May, 65).
Now it looks as if the Rarotonga sland Council is about to repeal ection 35 of the Rarotonga Regulaions and Offences Ordinance of 1917 vhich provides that “No man and roman shall cohabit together without »eing married to each other”.
Councillor R. J. A. Ingram, of he Island Council, moved at a recent neeting of the council that section 15 of the regulations should be epealed, and this motion was carried ifter some opposition. A repealing >y-law will therefore be prepared dr the next council meeting, when :ouncillors will have another opporunity to speak on the matter.
Archaic Speaking to his motion, Councillor [ngram said that, in his opinion, section 35 was archaic and that to ;he best of his knowledge no similar •egulations existed anywhere in the world.
The Police Department, he said, lid not pursue offenders unless it was officially notified, and even then, the department found that many complaints were lodged spitefully by people bearing a grudge, and consequently were largely hearsay.
Councillor Ingram added that his motion to repeal the regulation was his own idea, not his electorate’s, and that he was not questioning the laws on adultery, which he fully agreed with.
Speaking against the motion.
Councillor Teariki Tuavera said the police should take more positive steps to stamp out cohabitation ,nS T He said he was concerned for the children begotten m such a relationship, because, in many cases, the father would not accept responsibility and invariably the mother and child were deserted without any means of support.
Coundllor Pa Ariki, a woman, spoke in favour of the motion. She said that in many instances the young people concerned were not entirely at fault, and that much of the blame £ .."XTiS of p parents who opposed their marriage and thus forced them into th t ® of i; vine tnat Way ° r “ g ‘ Interference Decried she the right of an individual freely to choose his or her mate, and decried the interference of 71 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Councillor Vakatini Ariki said that the London Missionary Society was trying to counteract an increase in unmarried cohabitation by getting the deacons in each village to enter the homes of such couples and urge them to get married.
These couples were told that if they did not get married within three months, their offence would be brought to the attention of the police.
Councillor Ingram said he agreed with the church’s method of approaching the problem; and several other councillors pointed out that the council did not wish to relax the laws relating to cohabitation, but rather to transfer the responsibility from the police to parents.
Fiji Technical Institute May Train Other Islanders The help given by Australia in the establishment of the Derrick Technical Institute in Suva was acknowledged by Fiji’s Governor, Sir Derek Jakeway, when he officially opened the institute on April 22. The institute (pictured) is the first school of its kind in Fiji.
It conducts a wide range of courses in technical, commercial and academic subjects, and its present enrolment of 1,000 includes 600 part-time students attending evening classes.
Sir Derek said the flow of educational assistance from Australia under the Commonwealth Co-operation in Education Scheme really started from 1960, when Mr. J. M. Carswell visited Fiji from Australia. Australia had trained several of the instructors for the institute and had made available the principal of the institute, Mr.
J. W. Wilson, for two years at a nominal cost.
Australia had trained or made available technical instructors for other schools in Fiji, and her contribution to the development of technical education in Fiji was “considerable and generous”, said Sir Derek.
He added that Fiji planned to develop a comprehensive system of technical and vocational education as soon as possible.
The Derrick Institute would have a hostel so that it could serve students in other Pacific territories. A promised grant from the Colonial Development and Welfare Fund would meet 90 per cent, of the cost of £50,000 for the hostel.
The Derrick Institute (named after the late Mr. R. A. Derrick), cost £240,000, 90 per cent, of which was provided by the British Government. Various firms and organisations provided some of the equipment for the institute. There are well-equipped specialist rooms and workshops.
Teaching staff comprises 12 full-time and 32 part-time instructors.
Sir Derek made the point that there needed to be a much more universal acceptance of Fiji’s recently introduced indentured apprenticeship scheme by Fiji business undertakings if all who should be trained were to be trained.
Photo: Rob Wright 72 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
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Pacific Islands Monthly
Magazine Section
Sir Bernard'S Visit To
The Cooks Made It
Three Of A Kind
From GORDON RUSSELL, in Wellington When Sir Bernard Fergusson, New Zealand’s Governor-General, landed at Rarotonga from HMNZS Royalist on May 2 in the course of his Pacific islands tour, he became the third member of his family to visit the Cook Islands in a vice-regal capacity.
IIR Bernard’s father, Sir Charles ' Fergusson, visited the island as overnor-General in 1926, and Sir ernard’s grandfather on his mother’s de, the Earl of Glasgow, did the line thing in 1894. (The Earl was le first NZ Governor-General to do >)• The visits of Sir Bernard’s family > the Cook Islands thus span a ;riod of exactly 70 years, which is nly six years short of the total sriod that those islands have been nder the British Crown.
And now that the Cook Islands re on the verge of internal selfivernment, it is pertinent to ask ow the British Crown got involved i that handful of small islands in le first place, and what part Sir ernard’s family has played in the inning of them.
It all dates back to the year 1823 hen missionaries of the London lissionary Society, who had been -orking in the neighbouring Society rroup since 1797, spread to the outhern Cook Group (Rarotonga, lauke, Mitiaro, Mangaia, Manuae, diu and Aitutaki). These islands 'ere then known as the Hervey dands.
In the Hervey Islands, the LMS lissionaries achieved a theocratic utonomy unmatched in any other roup. In- 1837, however, Roman 'atholic priests reached Tahiti and, acked by the French Navy, soon ad a following. By 1842 the ociety Islands became a French irotectorate and the LMS lissionaries were on the way out.
Meanwhile, in the Hervey Islands, he LMS missionaries lost no opportunity of emphasising the “horrors of Papism” to their converts, and the outcome was a petition from the arikis of Rarotonga to LMS headquarters in London praying for British protection in the event of French aggression.
Nothing came of this petition, nor of one made in 1865 by the arikis of Rarotonga, the resident missionary and 11 European residents through the NZ Governor-General, Sir George Grey.
French Warship Scare Another appeal for British intervention was made by the Rev. W.
W. Gill, of Rarotonga, in 1881 after a French warship visited Rarotonga ostensibly to promote trade with Tahiti. This time, Gill asked LMS headquarters to persuade the British Government to guarantee the island’s independence.
Britain was too engrossed in colonial expansion elsewhere to pay much attention, but the Foreign office was persuded that New Zealand interests in the area needed protection and appointed a local trader, Goodman, as British Consul for the Hervey Islands.
Meanwhile, as early as 1870, New Zealand had acquired the bulk of the Hervey Islands’ trade from the Tahitian merchants, with Auckland schooners carrying cotton, coffee, vanilla, arrowroot, oranges and pineapples to New Zealand.
By 1888 two steamers were operating a six-weekly service to Tonga, Samoa, Rarotonga and Tahiti and, despite the activities of France, Germany and America in these groups, New Zealand statesmen were talking quite aggressively of a British Pacific Ocean and of their right to be agents and advisers to the Crown m matters of Imperial interest in the Pacific. , The two most powerful figures m the group at this time were the Makea, anki of the Rarotongan tribe Je Au Tonga, and her husband Ngamaru, Virtual ruler of the islands °f Atm, Mauke and Mitiaro.
In 1885, the Makea had paid a visit to Auckland and was acclaimed the Queen of Rarotonga, Three years later, a petition from the Makea convinced the British authorities that a French invasion of the Hervey Islands was imminent, and Exham, who had succeeded Goodman as British Consul, was instructed by the Colonial Office to Before going to the Cook Islands in May, Sir Bernard Fergusson paid a visit to Tonga.
In this picture, he is seen being greeted in Nukualofa by Tonga's Premier, Prince Tungi.
Photo: Tulua Bros. 77 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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■mally proclaim a British protorate over the Group.
A month later, in October, 1888, plain Bourke reached Rarotonga >m Hawaii in HMS Hyacinth to □firm the proclamation at each and.
Instead of this, he went through » motions of annexation—being w to such duties, in a hurry, and t properly briefed.
The Colonial Office was not greatly rturbed, however, as it was conent that the arikis did not underind the legal technicalities of what d been done.
Frederick W. Moss, a member of e NZ House of Representatives, as appointed the first British Resint of the Protectorate and took fice in April, 1891.
Building upon the established iuncils of chiefs. Moss created district governments, island governments and a federal government for the Group.
In 1894, Sir Bernard Fergusson’s grandfather, the seventh Earl of Glasgow, visited the Group (which had become known officially as the Cook Islands) as NZ Governor- General.
With him in the Government steamer Hinemoa went his wife and two daughters, one of whom was destined to become Lady Alice Fergusson.
The Earl saw the local situation as a most interesting experiment and believed that Moss had the confidence of the peonle.
However, although Moss had truly made a brave start, by 1896 differences had developed between him and the arikis which the local Europeans ensured did not heal.
Moss was succeeded in 1898 by Lt.-Col. Gudgeon, a forceful leader with long experience of the Maoris of New Zealand. He was ushered into office with much pomp and ceremony and acclaimed as a great White chief.
Secure in this mana, he soon put the Europeans in their place, cleaned up the liquor trade, came to terms with the LMS, introduced land reforms and carefully whittled away at the feudal powers and privileges of the arikis.
Annexation He was confident that annexation was just round the corner and planned to that end. Within his considerable term as British Resident and then Resident Commissioner, he set in motion the administrative structure that was to serve, with modifications, to the present day.
The Earl of Glasgow was not happy about annexation by New Zealand, believing that her lack of skilled colonial administrators would mean that the Colony would merely A Tale Of The Morobe Goldfields Keep In A Cool Place And Stow Away From Boilers By J. M. Bourke A little sandy strip separating a sago swamp from the south-east surf became dotted with bamboo-walled huts roofed with sago palm. This was the residential section of Salamaua, the beginning of the trail to Edie Creek, a famous New Guinea goldfield of 30-odd years ago.
WHITES and natives were herded together in the hot moisture-saturated climate. For the Europeans, sanitary arrangements were primitive indeed, but for the native carriers conveniences were practically non-existent.
Filth deposited haphazardly in the jungle attracted rats, and the rats played host to a tiny mite which seemed to single out the Europeans for destruction.
The Medical Services of New Guinea had not, at that time, isolated the minute organism that burrowed under the skin of their victims and caused the deadly disease later known as scrub typhus.
The symptoms of scrub typhus were somewhat similar to malaria, but those whose resistance was low before the onset of the disease rarely recovered.
Salamaua had very little to boast of in those days, least of all an undertaker. So the miners constructed the coffins, carried them to the gravesides, read the services and buried their dead. No native was allowed to construct a cross, or carry a corpse.
The coffins were made of green timber, split on the job, and the finished article often weighed several times that of the occupant.
When a funeral was over, the mourners adjourned to Burley Gorman’s shanty and drowned their sorrow in OP rum. Each funeral was the signal for a wake, but funerals occurred in rapid succession, and the wakes became so frequent that the regular mourners sometimes bordered on the DT’s.
Often the pall bearer of today became the corpse of tomorrow.
When Peter Reedy—whose sister was once a famous actress — passed on, Joe Fanning, of Townsville, was the only Catholic sober enough to read the burial service.
Next day, Joe, too, was dead.
By this time, funeral arrangements had become more relaxed, and a native was given the privilege of constructing a cross to mark Joe’s final resting place.
Instead of laboriously hacking a cross out of green wood, he constructed the symbol of sacrifice from the slats of a Carnation milk box; and so, standing at the head of Joe’s grave, in bold black letters, was this advice to visitors: “Keep in a Cool Place and Stow Away from Boilers”.
Joe would have appreciated that epitaph had he been able to see it. 79
Magazine Section
ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964 intinued from p. 77) Britain In The
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However, his successor, Loi Ranfurly, who visited the group 1899 and assessed the calibre of tl local Europeans, recommend* annexation by New Zealand as tl only way of obtaining law and orde The Premier of New Zealand this time was Richard (“King Dick’
Seddon, the most dynamic ai vociferous imperialist that Ne Zealand had produced and it w he who engineered the annexatu of the Cook Islands in 1901.
Seddon's Arguments Two of his arguments warrant i airing. These islands, he said, cou easily be made self-supporting; ai unless immediate steps were tak* to expand New Zealand’s interesi the newly-formed Australia Commonwealth would overshadc New Zealand in the Pacific.
Sir Charles Fergusson, who w appointed NZ Governor-General 1924, visited the Cook Islands in tl Government steamer Tutanekai 1926. With him was his wife, La* Alice, who had already tasted Rar tongan hospitality with her fath in 1894.
The State machine, by this tim was an accepted institution, chuggii along by trial and error and witho much reference to the people. Ai whereas the Church was a pote factor in their lives, the State ai the people were just neighbours, ( a nodding acquaintance. Both tl arikis and the merchants were favour of this peaceful co-existen without fraternisation.
More Say Today it is rather different. With the last decade, a genuine effort h: been made to reach the people, ar there is no doubt that the persiste background noise from anti-coloni agitators in the United Nations wi a factor in promoting this lon delayed approach.
The Cook Islanders have bee given more say and more respoi sibility in the running of their affai and are responding as people do such circumstances. Some like local leaders are emerging and her in contrast to other spots where tl lid has been lifted, they are contei to walk before they run.
International self-government promised for 1965 and a “shadov government is busy facing up to th reality. 80 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
Capuchin Priest Planted Coconuts In New Guinea 50 Years Ago i N 88-year-old Capuchin priest, who founded a a- coconut plantation in New Guinea 50 years ago, jlebrated the occasion in Rome on May 3. He is ather Callistus Lopinot, OFM, Cap., who has already debrated his 70th anniversary as a Capuchin and his Dth as a priest.
The plantation that Father Callistus founded is at rayaba, near Madang, and is now part of the Alexisafen Catholic Mission.
Father Callistus, now bowed and grey, arrived in lew Guinea on May 3, 1914, as a member of the !atholic Mission then known as the Vicariate Apostolic f the Mariana and Caroline Islands. This mission was at off from overseas economic aid and had to underike plantation work to be self-supporting.
Father Callistus started cutting down the Gayaba ingle with 22 workers from the adjoining Danip rice lantation on May 25, 1914; and by June, 1919, with le help of 100 workers, had already planted 325 of is 500 hectares.
In the week before the signing of the Treaty of Versailles on June 28, 1919, the Japanese removed the 'apuchin missionaries from the Mariana and Caroline slands to Yokohama, and the mission and Gayaba lantation passed into the hands of the Jesuits.
Two Spanish Jesuits took over the Gayaba plantation a February, 1921, and after Father Callistus introduced tiem to plantation work, he left in June, just as the rees were beginning to bear their first nuts.
An Australian Jesuit from Sydney, Father Brennan, yas next placed in charge, and then the Spanish Jesuit 7 ather Guimera, a professor. The plantation then be- :ame the property of the Alexishafen Catholic Mission.
From 1921 to 1932 Father Callistus served as Mission Jecretary at the international headquarters of the Capu- :hins in Rome, and from 1932 to 1937 held the office )f Prefect Apostolic with the title of Monsignor at Mossi Be in Madagascar.
In 1937 he was named Consultor to the Vatican’s Propagation of the Faith Congregation, an office he lolds to the present day.
Father Callistus still has a journal that he kept from May 3, 1914, the day he arrived in New Guinea, until June 19, 1921, the day he left. This journal is today a valuable historical document and Father Callistus has placed it at the disposal of the author of this article who is writing a history of Catholic missions in mainland New Guinea.
Father Callistus still has a host of memories from the seven years that he spent in New Guinea, and on April 18 he was able to share them with Brother Serenus Lindemann, SVD, a Divine Word missionary who ran the coconut plantation at Mugil Catholic Mission near Alelxishafen for seven years before World War 11.
Recently Father Callistus sent greetings to Brother Nyssenus Boek, SVD, 79, bookkeeper at Alexishafen Mission whom he remembers well. He also remembers Father Peter Ladener, SVD, 79, at Alexishafen, who was the first Divine Word Priest to reach the golden jubilee of his ordination in New Guinea, and Father Iwo Schaefer, SVD, 77, at Marienberg on the Sepik River, who has also since celebrated his golden jubilee.
And he remembers Father Theodore Averberg, SVD, 76, now stationed in Bottrop, Westphalia, Germany, who trained him in plantation work and managed the flourishing Danip rice fields.
Father Callistus says he had a very close friendship with Monsignor Eberhard Limbrock, SVD, the Divine Word missionary from China who headed a band of three priests and three brothers who landed at Madang (then Friedrich Wilhelmshafen) on August 13, 1896, and pioneered Catholic mission work on the northeastern coast of New Guinea.
Father Callistus is still extremely interested in the progress of Christian missions in New Guinea, and speaks with wonder of the progress made in the Highlands, which, he says, “had not been penetrated in my day”. • Father Callistus, who came originally from Alsace-Lorraine, is pictured above with Dr. Wiltgen, the author of this article.—Divine Word Photo. rom Rev. Dr. Ralph M. Wiltgen, SVD, in Rome 81
Magazine Section
PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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yesterday “The lasf four weeks have been filled with great events,”
PIM said in its issue for June, 1944, “and we should know definitely by the end of July whether this global war is likely to end soon, or whether it will continue for a further period of years.”
The great events that ‘ PIM” referred to were the Anglo-American invasion of France, the breaking of the German line in Italy, the invasion of Rome, and the defeat of Japanese armies in the South-West Pacific and Burma.
OTHER news items in that issue of PIM of 20 years ago were: — When United States forces drove the Japanese out of Hollandia in May, 1944, they found and succoured about 90 men and women missionaries who had been suffering severely from imprisonment, cruelty, sickness and starvation. They also gained tidings of some 65 north coast missionaries who had died or been killed, and were told that about 50 had disappeared. * * * Suva’s Central Medical School had received what PIM called “some well-merited publicity abroad” since the British Colonial Office launched a £600,000 scheme for Central Pacific medical services. America’s Time magazine and the British Medical Journal were among the publications that had “written up” the school. * * * Rumours that the United States Government was paying $25 to Levers Pacific Plantations Ltd. for every coconut tree destroyed by American war operations in the Solomons were officially denied, and it was stated that there seemed to be no basis for the rumours. ♦ ♦ ♦ A ship laden with petrol and onions had arrived from the United States in petrol-less and onion-less Tahiti, and, according to PlM’s Papeete correspondent, the people were about to “return to a life of peril and suffocation, after a season of tranquility and the enjoyment of Nature’s fragrance”. * ♦ * The work of two European artists living in Samoa was attracting attention overseas. The artists were Charles McPhee and Charles Reed.
The Rev. J. F. Goldie was about to return to his post in the Solomons as head of the Methodist Missionary Society of New Zealand. He had just completed 43 years’ service as superintendent of the mission, and claimed to have lived in the Group longer than any other European ordinarily resident there. * * * Stately ceremonies were held at Arue, Tahiti, in May, 1944, to mark the centenary of the death of the Rev. Henry Nott, pioneer London Missionary Society missionary, who worked in Tahiti for 47 years from 1797 and translated the Bible into Tahitian. * * * After 35 years, the branch of the Bank of New South Wales at Levuka, Fiji, had closed —like many other branches of the bank in Fiji. The reason? Lack of manpower. * * * Mr. F. P. (Fred) Archer, formerly a planter on Buka, was serving as a lieutenant in the British Solomon Islands Labour Corps. He sent word to PIM that there were still some Japanese on Buka “very depressed and hungry Japs, but still willing to shoot at European visitors”.
When this picture was published in PIM for March, 1938, it was a general custom among mothers of the Mekeo district of Central Papua to balance their babies on the palms of their hands in the belief that it strengthened their legs. It probably still is. The baby pictured was three months old.
The "Laurabada", the yacht of the Governor of Papua, had just made a mercy dash from Port Moresby to Thursday Island with a dangerously ill boy when this picture was published in PIM in July, 1931. Now, 33 years later, the yacht, rebuilt, is again in service—as a trader. Old New Guinea hand Ivan Champion is to take over soon as master. (See p. 85.) 83
Magazine Section
•ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Ng'S Retiring
CHAMPION Ivan Champion, who recently :ired as Chief Commissioner : Native Lands in Papua and ;w Guinea, was bom in Port oresby in 1904. His father, H. . Champion, had arrived there 1898 to work with Burns lilp, and was later Government cretary for 30 years. /AN was educated at the Southport School in Queensland, and ned up as a patrol officer in 1923.
In 1926-27, he and Karius achieved great epic of exploration in jssing New Guinea from the Fly the Sepik. Ivan made later iterations with his brother Claude d with Jack Hides, but received ■y little official recognition for his >rk at the time. This may have en partly due to his natural )desty and retiring nature.
Ivan’s book, Across New Guinea )tn the Fly to the Sepik was pubtied by Constable in 1932.
Ivan became an Assistant Resident agistrate in 1928, discovered Lake itubu in 1936, and served in ferent parts of Papua until 1942. iving had his share of experience small Government vessels, he was ;n made a Lieutenant RANVR on i approach of the Japanese, and -ved in the hydrographic service, ainly as a pilot, around the coasts of New Guinea for the duration of the war.
He then returned to District Services and Native Affairs until the formation of the Native Lands Commission in 1952. He was awarded the QBE in the Coronation Honours of 1953.
In 1929, Ivan married Elsie May Ross, and they have one daughter, Ivane, who is married to Harry Plant in Port Moresby.
Ivan’s brother Claude retired not long ago as P-NG’s Director of Civil Affairs, and brother Alan finished his service in the Territory as District Commissioner, Port Moresby. These three brothers, with their father, certainly formed a strong segment of the Administration and set a wonderful record of family service, Although Ivan is the last of the Champions to retire from service, the Territory has not seen the last of him, for he intends to return as master of the ex-Government yacht Laurabada, now owned by Ted Yabsley, to trade around the Territory.
This lovely vessel will keep Ivan busy in his retirement, and that should keep him happy. —Brett Hilder.
A Brett Hilder Profile 85
Magazine Section
ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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The Month'S New Reading
What The Americans Did In Polynesia In The Early Days With Judy Tudor In 1783, a couple of years after the conclusion of Captain Cook’s third and last voyage to the Pacific, John Ledyard, an American marine who had accompanied Cook, got an American publisher to publish a journal he had kept on the voyage in which he spoke of the possibility of developing a profitable trade in sea-otter furs between the north-west coast of America and China.
EDYARD followed up his book I by interesting some influential n in his China trade scheme, and, hough this scheme fell through, ier merchants in Boston and Salem )k it up and subscribed $50,000 to out an expedition for the proposed de.
Ehe expedition comprised two ps, the Columbia under Captain bert Gray, and the Lady Washingi under Captain John Kendrick, ich sailed into the Pacific in 1789 d got the sea-otter trade under y- Phe opening up of the sea-otter de has provided W. Patrick auss, an American university prosor, with the starting point for his ok Americans in Polynesia: S 3-1842 because it was this trade it brought the first Americans to lynesia.
In Ship's Track Polynesia, in this context, comsed only the Marquesas and waiian Islands—the two groups it were directly in the track of the i-otter ships after they picked up ; south-east trades on rounding the irn.
But during the next few years, as ; whaling, sealing and sandalwood des developed, American ships md their way to other parts of lynesia, and by 1835, there were tually no islands in the area that d not had an American visitor.
Meanwhile, in 1819, American otestant missionaries had reached iwaii, where, favoured by the lent overthrow of the ancient igious system, they quickly imposed Western standards of morals and worship on the natives.
Except for an abortive attempt to Christianise the Marquesas in the 1830’s, American missionaries made no efforts to extend their influence in Polynesia beyond Hawaii during the first half of the 19th century.
But in Hawaii, despite opposition by French Catholics, they went from strength to strength—until by 1842, they had transformed the government of those islands from a loose federation of chiefs to a well-oiled constitutional monarchy.
Meanwhile, the American Government had showed little interest in Polynesia apart from the dispatch of an occasional warship to the area to enforce law and order, and the appointment of a commercial agent or consul here and there.
However, the visits of the warships were too infrequent to have any permanent influence except in Hawaii; and the American Government representatives were of such mediocre calibre that they did more harm than good.
It was not until 1838, when the six ships of the United States Exploring Expedition were dispatched to explore and survey the South Pacific Ocean in the interests of American commerce and whaling, and to “extend the bounds of science and promote the acquisition of knowledge” that the American Government tried to do anything really notable in Polynesia.
But although the expedition amassed a vast collection of useful information in the fields of meteorology, hydrography, zoology, etc., during the next four years, it was—in Professor Strauss’ view— virtually a failure.
The reasons for this, he says, were the poor relations between Charles Wilkes, the expedition’s commander, and the other officers; a change in the national government during the expedition’s absence which seriously delayed the printing of its material on its return; the dismissal of the expedition’s scientists before they had tendered their reports; and, finally, the indifference of the American people to what the expedition did.
All in all, therefore, American achievement in Polynesia during the 60 years from 1783 to 1842 was not particularly impressive, except in Hawaii.
But anyone seeking information on any aspect of it, such as it was, will find it set out, with bibliographical notes, in Professor Strauss’ book.
Tacked on the end of the book is a chapter called “The Literature of Paradise” in which Professor Strauss details American publications on Polynesia during the period covered by his study.
LANGDON.
ROBERT (AMERICANS IN POLYNESIA, 1783- 1842. Published by The Michigan State University Press. $5.)
English For The Pacific
REACHING Structural English, by G. Pittman, offers a simple yet comprehensive analysis of English for those who will teach it as a foreign language. It is presented, therefore, from the point of view of its structure rather than its grammar.
Simple sentence patterns are taken and from these increasingly complex ones are built up. The manual is designed particularly for teachers in the Pacific area; however, as a clear, up-to-date exposition of what constitutes the English language, the book would interest all linguists.— JS. (TEACHING STRUCTURAL ENGLISH.
Jacaranda Press, Brisbane. 30/-.) 87 ICIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE. 1964
Plantagenet England The second volume of Sir Arthur Bryant’s Story of England is as meticulous and detailed as all his writing. But it is not designed for light moments of relaxation for all that it comes within the category of ‘‘popular history”.
TT is 10 years since the first volume, . Makers of the Realm, was published and it was originally the intention of the author to finish the rest of the history in two further volumes.
However, as The Age of Chivalry, which makes up volume two, covers only a comparatively brief period in English history—the 125 years between the time of Edward Ts accession to the throne and when Richard 11 was forced to abdicate—three further volumes will now be necessary. v, .^ rt^ur 65 it is obvious mat it will be necessary to shorten the intervals between volumes if he hopes to accomplish the task in his lifetime.
The period covered in the present volume was one of transition for the English. At its beginning, England still ruled large tracts of Europe, her governing class spoke French and she was linked strongly to the rest of Latin Christendom and its preoccupation with freeing the Holy Land.
When Edward returned to England in 1274, he had been away four years on a Crusade and for two of those years he had been King.
At the end of the period, England had lost her possessions in Europe, had subdued the Welsh (but not the Scots), had weathered the Black Death and the Peasants’ Revolt and had become what she has been, for most of the time, ever since—a parliamentary monarchy. This reconciliation of what appeared to be two irreconcilable political forces has been an important contribution to the evolution and civilisation of mankind.- JT. (THE AGE OP CHIVALRY-The Story of England. Published by Collins. 47/6.)
Offerings For
Light Fiction
ENTHUSIASTS Best of the light fiction th has arrived this month is Hek Maclnnes’ The Venetian Affai Like her other novels, it American in flavour but Eun pean in background.
MOST of this writer’s novels got into the best-seller list and although they are technical thrillers, they are exceptions to tl rule that this type of writing a succeed only if it is violent and h a bed-to-bed description of the here sex life.
The Venetian Affair, like Decisu at Delphi and North from Rom depends on good writing, the suspen of normal people drawn into tl whirlpool of international intrigi and an authentic travelogue bac ground.
Hero of the present novel is B Fenner, a well-set up young Amei can, drama critic on a New Yo newspaper. When he leaves on month’s holiday in France to stu< the local theatre, he does n anticipate that he’ll find hims« involved in one of those Them ai Us dramas that could shatter tl Western world.
But when he picked up the wroi raincoat at Orly airport it was tl beginning of a trail that led to son strange quarters of Paris and endi amongst the canals of the romanl city of Venice. (THE VENETIAN AFFAIR. Publish by Collins. 26/-.) * * * Peter Cowan is a latter-day Au tralian story teller and any r semblance between his style and th of Frank Dalby Davison is purely the scenery.
Summer is the story of peop rather than places, and of Har; Simpson in particular—although it the kind of novel in which yc don’t find out his name uni Chapter 5.
Simpson’s marriage has broken i and although he doesn’t appear i have done very much to prevent i he goes off into the country to “fir himself”. There, in the hot sun < Kupa's View- "Tourist passengers this end of the island, first class to the more scenic area.” 88
Magazine Section
JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
Zest Australian wheat-siding, he’s py for a time with wheat lumping solitude. The only other people miles around are a storekeeper his wife and there sex raises jgly head again and provides the id of the story.
SUMMER. Published by Angus and ertson Ltd. 21/-.) * * * he friends of writer Jane Duncan ear to be endless and turn up veen the covers of a novel at ever reasing intervals. My Friend Rose he latest of them, lot only the beautifully vulgar e inhabits this book, however, nerous other of My Friends vd in to make the whole thing a more complicated than is mal to Miss Duncan’s chatty inine style. iIY FRIEND ROSE. Published by Millan. 26/-.) ♦ ♦ * 'iona Sinclair was an actress until started writing Whodunnits some rs ago. She died tragically at end of 1961 and the manuscript Three Slips of a Noose was subaently found amongst her papers, il thriller addicts will find gaps a e wide in her technique as a stery writer but there is some ;rest in the strange, “stagey” and lewhat unreal characters who ry the plot. fHREE SLIPS TO A NOOSE. Pubed by Bles (our copy from Collins).
B.) ♦ * * n contrast to the above, Jan ffman writes like a writer—she 3 a police-roundsman on a London vspaper for 20 years until she gave up to write her own murder steries. Likely to Die is a piece good writing apart from its ister question; Who killed Edward mmond? His brother’s widow? 5 illegitimate son? His stepighter? Poor hen-pecked Albert? could have been anyone. —Judy dor.
LIKELY TO DIE. Published by Geoffrey s (our copy from Collins. 17/-.) All prices quoted are in Australian currency unless otherwise stated.
Who Owns What On
RAROTONGA A clear head and a specialised type of brain is necessary to grapple with any system of land tenure. And this usually goes double in the Pacific Islands where the basis of native land ownership is hidden deep in the mists of forgotten centuries.
THE uncompromising title of Land Tenure in the Cook Islands is almost a guarantee that this book will be directed into the academic and semi-academic hands for which it was intended.
Nonetheless, if you can stand an occasional mental struggle, Dr. R. G.
Crocombe’s study of land ownership in Rarotonga does provide, as well, a skeleton on which a lot of the history of the island can be hung.
Although most of Rarotonga’s history began about the end of the 12th century. With the arrival of Tangiia’s canoe from Raiatea, in the Society Group, and of Karika’s canoe from Samoa, it is believed that Rarotonga was first inhabited by other Polynesians at least two centuries before.
It is thought that the original road right round Rarotonga was built by these earlier settlers —something that may be proved in time by the modern technique of radio-carbon dating.
Land Divided Up The earliest settlers were absorbed by the newer arrivals and the whole of the land was parcelled out to one chief or another. Out of this partitioned land and the titles that went with it developed the tribes whose titular head was an ariki.
Land was the basis of the social system, a means of sustenance and the reason for tribal wars. At the time of first European contract in the early 19th century, there were about 7,000 people living on Rarotonga —a similar population to that of today—and every inch of land was claimed by one partv or another, and sometimes by several, as land disputes were endless. The present Avarua district had been laid waste by war and land that was in dispute lay idle and neglected.
The apparently idle land and the disputes about it early inspired interference by Europeans the Missions being the first to impose “law codes” in an attempt to prevent wars over ownership.
In the period of colonial expansion in the Pacific, New Zealand became interested in the Cooks before Britain declared a protectorate over the Southern Cook Group in 1888 and handed actual administration oyer to the young Dominion. Annexation by NZ did not, however, take place until 1901 and part and parcel of the necessary legislation was the setting up of a Land Court. The prime reason for the Court was to determine, once and for all, land ownership and to provide that such lands as the Maoris were not using were made available to European settlers.
Although the Cook Is. Maori was willing enough to get title to his land he never was disposed to believing that any was surplus to his requirements, and seldom showed the inclination to move over and make room for the European settlers that the early administrators envisaged.
The number of foreign planters in the whole of the Cook Islands has remained insignificant and none today derives a livelihood entirely from the land. „ In effect, the new land laws and their subseauent modifications often just exchanged new problems for old.
Rarotongans no longer went to war about their land disputes, but there was plenty to wrangle about in the Court. . , , Dr. Crocombe is a graduate of Victoria University, Wellington, NZ, but at present is a member of the Australian National University team engaged on research into land tenure systems in New Guinea. —Judy T udor.
(Land Tenure In The Cook
ISLANDS. Oxford University Press. 42/-.) 89
Magazine Section
ICIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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[?]. Cumpston Makes [?]t Even Easier For Pacific Historians lound about a year ago, iberra historian Dr. John npston published a valuable rence book on Sydney’s early itime history entitled Shipy Arrivals and Departures, ney, 1788-1825. This book, an edition limited to 200 ies, is in two parts. iRT I lists in chronological order the dates of arrival and de- □re of every ship visiting Sydney ng the period covered, their ports all before reaching Sydney, their [nations on leaving it, their ports sgistry, tonnages, cargoes, owners’ masters’ names, and sometimes names of supercargoes and pasers. art II is an alphabetical index to the ships listed in Part I. ow, as Part 111 of his reference k, Dr. Cumpston has published an abetical index to the names of ons mentioned in Part I. his index greatly enhances the e of Dr. Cumpston’s earlier work t enables a research worker to a in a flash when and in what s a seaferer such as, say, Captain r Dillon, visited Sydney, and re those ships had come from, his information, in turn, when re- -1 to Part I, facilitates reference the contemporary sources from :h Dr. Cumpston’s details were lined. •r. Cumpston is sending copies of ; 111 gratis to all holders of his ier two-part work; and as the twowork is now out of print, he has inted it and bound Part 111 in i it. he price of the complete reprint F which 200 copies are available £A2/10/-. These are obtainable •ugh booksellers or direct from Cumpston, 24 Holmes Crescent, ipbell, Canberra, Australian Capi- Territory. l few copies of Part 111 only are liable from Dr. Cumpston at I/- each. The full title of this is iping Arrivals and Departures, ney, 1788-1825; Part HI: Index to nes of Persons.
RL.
Australia As A Top Story Writer Sees It Australian writers are probably still at their best when writing atmospheric pieces about their own country and Frank Dolby Davison's stories are classics in this context.
HE was a well-known shortstory writer of the 1930’5, mostly in the old Bulletin, and some of the best of his work has now been put together in a collection called The Road to Yesterday. The selection is by the author who says that these are the stories he wishes to be remembered by.
The pieces are not entirely autobiographical although they follow closely Davison’s experiences in the Australian outback and elsewhere. With the Wells of Beersheba, called a “prose epic” of the Australian Light Horse in Palestine during the 1914-18 war, the stories provide an excellent background for the Australian mystique, as it existed until, say, 1946.
The collection takes its title from the last story in the volume —a story set in the berry-belt of the Plenty Ranges near Melbourne. Today they grow good potatoes there in the red soil, but before World War I it was still a forested area which had been little more than scratched by the efforts of settlers who had been allowed to take up blocks “on selection”.
The author describes through the eyes of an Australian youngster whom they employed, for little more than his keep, as the farm “useful”, the efforts of a Kentish farmer and his family to tame the Australian bush.
As he chipped the weeds from raspberry canes, sprayed apple trees or helped whittle cleared land from the forest, the sensitive lad suffers through Sims, the man of Kent, all the successive optimisms, disappointments and frustrations of trying to wring a living from the reluctant earth of a Victorian hilltop.- JT. (THE ROAD TO YESTERDAY.
Published by Angus and Robertson Ltd. 27/6.) A Trio For The Children Three children’s books that we have received recently seem to add up to just one unforunate fact of modern life: The high cost of giving your children something better to read than pulp-comics.
ELEANOR Frances Lattimore, who seems to have descended from a long line of Far East missionaries, has at last given up writing about old China ( Wu the Gatekeeper’s Son, The Chinese Daughter, etc.), and has turned her attention to American children, in the Southern States.
Both The Bittern’s Nest and Fair Bay, although they concern everyday youngsters, have an ethereal quality about them that will probably appeal to the fey in children on the brink of teenage.
But, for the amount of reading in the books, the cost seems rather excessive for Australian parents. (THE BITTERN’S NEST; FAIR BAY.
Published by Angus and Robertson Ltd. 13/6 each.) EVEN more expensive but more in the nature of a picture book is The Muddle-Headed Wombat on Holiday, the exuberant creation of Australian novelist, Ruth Park. The drawings of the zany-looking creature doing on holiday what many Australian adults do on the same occasion, are delightful. They are by Noela Young.
This is the second book about Wombat, Tabby and Mouse, characters known already to thousands of Australian children who listen to the ABC Children’s Session.
Like the first of the series ( Muddle-Headed Wombat), the new adventure is published by Educational Press of Sydney, the organisation responsible for the Australian Children’s Newspaper.
JT.
(Muddle-Headed Wombat On
HOLIDAY. Our copy from Angus and Robertson Ltd. 16/6.) 91
Magazine Section
CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
Best Of The Paperbacks Practical Dept.:
Pan Guide To Public
SPEAKING, by Robert Seton Lawrence, who is an expert on the subject—examiner in speech and drama at the London Academy of Music and Drama. (5/6.) LET’S GO DANCING, by Albert Morgan, provides a quick way to learn 21 dances, including the Twist, Bossanova, Tango, etc. With plenty of diagrams. (Four square; 7/6.) JUDO, by Eric Dominy, who is one of Britain’s top experts in the Japanese art of self-defence. The basis of all judo is to break your opponent’s balance while preserving your own and this allows small persons (in the know) to toss large ones (who aren’t) over their heads.
The author dedicates the book to his wife—which probably hasn’t any significance. (Four Square; 5/6.)
Parties And Politics In
AMERICA, by Clinton Rossiter of Cornell University. It explains something that every non-American wants to know and no non-American has yet been able to understand. (Signet; 6/9.) Factual: THE OVERLANDERS, by Garry Hogg. The story of the men who between 1813 and 1876 crossed the sun-scorched continent of Australia and wrote the names on the map. (Pan; 5/6.) SNAKE MAN, by Alan Wykes, who tells the story of C. J. P. lonides who in his love of catching snakes is the East African version of Eric Worrall of Australia. (Four Square; 5/6.) Fiction: THE BULL FROM THE SEA, by Mary Renault, is an historial novel based on Theseus, King of Athens, who slew the Cretan Minotaur. (Four Square; 6/9.)
Captain Newman, Md, By
Leo Rosten. A “doctor” book with adult appeal. Compassionate, sad and funny account of a US Armv psychiatrist. (Pan; 7/6.) I KNOW MY LOVE, by Catherine Oaskm, is an historical novel based on the gold rush to Ballarat, Victoria, in 1854. (Fontana; 5/6.) ALL THIS AND HEAVEN TOO, by Rachel Field, is a pre-war bestseller based on an incident in French history, in 1841, that drove an Emperor from his throne. (The novel was the basis of an early postwar movie). (Fontana; 7/6.)
The Golden Greek, By
Warren Tuto, a story of our time about a man who started with little but a dynamic personality and won power and wealth on little but bluff. (Four Square; 5/6.)
The Spanish Bride, By
Georgette Heyer, who usually writes on more light-hearted subjects than the Peninsular War. The love angle in this story takes second place to history. (Pan; 7/6.)
The Intrigues Of
CAROLINE CHERIE, by Cecil Saint Laurent, in which the much travelled Caroline is swept into Napoleon’s Russian war—and into many beds in trying to “further her husband’s career”. (Pan; 5/6.) Thrillers: UNEASY TERMS, by Peter Chaney Slim Callaghan again. (Fontana, 4/-); UNNATURAL DEATH, by Dorothy L. Sayers of her mid-thirties period when Lord Peter Wimsey was at the zenith of his detective powers. (Four Square, 5/6); DEATH TRAP, by John D.
MacDonald, in the chiller-thriller method of the American tough tradition. (Pan, 4/-); N OR M, by Agatha Christie, is an early wartime mystery in which her occasional husband and wife team of Beresford have trouble with Nazis. (Fontana; 5/6.) AIR BRIDGE and THE STRANGE LAND, are both by Hammond Innes, who thereby demonstrates his versatility. The former is an incredible aviation story based on the Berlin airlift; the latter concerns a reformed smuggler turned missionary who selects Morocco as the scene of his endeavours. (Fontana; 5/6 each.) THREE ACT TRAGEDY, a mi period Agatha Christie. (Pan; 5/t
A Man Called Jones
Juliana Symons (Fontana; 4/-.) Classics:
The Golden Age An
DREAM DAYS, by Kenne Grahame, who is best known for 1 Wind in the Willows. His books a usually about children in the secoi half of the 19th century but not / children. His writings mirror i that was tranquil in Victorian, upp middle-class England. (Signet.)
The Twelve Dan C I N
Princesses And O T H E
FAIRY TALES, collected by Alfn and Mary Elizabeth David, who si in an introduction: “Fairy tales a not a form of children’s literatm they are, like fables, legends ai ballads, amongst the many forms adult literature that children ha 1 adopted”. (Signet.) THREE TALES, by Gusta 1 Flaubert, are the last of this write] work. He was born in Rouen, 1821, and devoted his adult life his writing which reflected both scoi at French bourgeois society and romantic attachment to historic subject matter. Like others of th generation of French writers, mu( of his work was regarded i immoral. (Signet.) (Pan and Fontana books from W: Collins (Overseas) Ltd., Sydney: othe from Tudor Distributors Pty. Lt Sydney.) For Beatlemaniacs Paperback of the month—or so we should imagine—is called “Here are the Beatles”. It's assembled by Charles Hamblett who is a show-business writer from way-back. It has over 100 pictures of the mop-haired entertainers and their life histories, from Mersey-side jazz cellar to Royal command performance.
Unfortunately you have to be really with it to know what most of it is about—but we’re sure it’s good.
In May, half of the Beatles were resting in Papeete where no one had heard of them. This proves that even in this jet-age, it is still possible to get away from it all in the Pacific. (Four Square Book; 5/6.) 92
Magazine Section
JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
*5
Pacific Islands
YEAR BOOK and WHO'S WHO YOU CAN'T BE WITHOUT THIS BOOK!
Pacific Islands Year Book
and WHO'S WHO (9th Edition) —Published October, 1963 The World’s Standard Reference Book on the Islands of the Pacific 792 pages of comprehensive reference information on commerce, facilities, tourist data, etc. Includes new section of over 1,500 biographies of people important in the Pacific Islands World.
Special sections deal with: Population of the Pacific Territories; Early History of the Pacific; Political Changes in 1949-63; The South Pacific Commission; The Peoples of the Pacific; Pacific Radio Network; Shipping and Air Services; Brief History and Chronology of War in the Pacific—l94l-45.
EVERY TERRITORY AND ISLAND GROUP IS DESCRIBED IN DETAIL.
There is a COMPLETE DIRECTORY of all the Christian Missions operating in the Pacific. A special section lists the facilities at Islands Ports. There is a GEOGRAPHICAL INDEX AND A GENERAL INDEX—the inclusion of the latter giving the YEAR BOOK increased value as a handy work of reference.
Five detailed, large fold-out maps and 80 sectional maps.
PRICE: 50/- per copy, plus 2/9 postage, packing, etc. (5/- to foreign countries), of $7.00 U.S. (including postage).
Available from the publishers: Pacific Publications Pty. Ltd.
TECHNIPRESS HOUSE, 29 ALBERTA STREET (G.P.O. BOX 3408), SYDNEY, AUSTRALIA.
Or from Islands Stores and Booksellers.
Memoirs Of
A TAHITIAN CHIEFTAINESS )ne of the most notable books in endless stream of publications on liti is a slim volume called the emoirs of Arii Taimai”. It is able in that it is the only book 'Otten by a Tahitian.
RII TAIMAI (1821-1897) was a Tahitian chieftainess of great stige, whose family was connected h all the great figures of her nd, and whose life covered the day of LMS missionary influence, proclamation of the French tectorate, and, finally, the iblishment of full French ereignty.
Taimai did not write her moirs herself. This was done by American historian Henry ams, who visited Tahiti in 1891, I spent many hours getting a iitian’s-eye view of Tahitian tory from the old chieftainess. \.rii Taimai’s Memoirs (which lude a good deal of historical terial that Adams added from )ks) first appeared in an edition six copies in 1893. A second, arged and corrected edition of nit 20 copies was published in )1, followed by a German translan in 1920, and a facsimile version the 1901 edition in 1947.
Sow, at last, there is a translation the people who should be most erested in Tahitian affairs—the ;nch. The translation has been oe by Suzanne and Andre Lebois. rhe Swedish writer Bengt Danielsi and his French wife Marieerese, who are domiciled in hiti, have contributed a valuable roduction, explaining in detail the aesis of the book.
MEMOIRES D’ARII TAIMAI. Publed by the Societe des Oceanistes, isee de I’Homme, Paris. 30 francs.) FOR CIRCUMNAVIGATORS: / venturer’s Log, an attractively jstrated free booklet by Geoff Scott scribing a trip around the world P & O-Orient Lines, plus a spot touring on the Continent, has rently been published by P & O- •ient. It is addressed to “the young d to the young-in-heart” with the ject of persuading them that they, o, can go on such a trip and write sir own Adventurer's Log. 93
Magazine Section
ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
Taikoo Dockyard
HONG KONG Above: M.V.
"HERVAR", one of two motor cargo vessels built for Messrs.
Bruusgaard Kiosterud Drammen, Norway.
Ship And Engine
Builders And Repairers
(Doxford And Sulzer Licensees)
Salvage Operators
Left: M.V.
"TARAWERA", all refrigerated motor cargo vessel built for the Union Steam Ship Co. of New Zealand Ltd.
Right: "LUNG SHAN", one of two bunkering vessels built to the order of Shell Tankers Ltd., for use in Hong Kong, supplying fuel and lubricating oils to ships at harbour moorings. «i: ■ _ ■i ■' ■ V .> m 111 General Representatives: AUSTRALIA: NEW ZEALAND: SWIRE & YUILI PTY. LTD. C. W. F. HAMILTON & CO. LTD.
Swire House", 8 Spring St., Lunns Road, Middleton,
Sydney Christchurch
94 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
Pacific Shipping And Cruising Yachts Important Developments In Islands Harbour Plans There were some important developments in May in plans to improve harbour facilities in several Islands territories. 1 the Solomons, the name of the contractor was announced for building of the deep-water berth Point Cruz, Honiara; in Western noa, a couple of experts made intigations to determine the exact ; of the wharf at Matauta, Apia; i the New Zealand Federation of hour expressed concern at a ;nch proposal to recruit Cook anders for the Papeete harbour )ject.
Fhe contractors for the Point Cruz )ject are Hornibrook Constructions i. of Port Moresby.
The contract price provisionally lounts to £160,850, which includes 2,500 for alterations and extra >rks if ordered.
The chairman of the BSIP Ports ithority, Mr, L. M. Davies, says it at present, no additional works ; envisaged.
The period of construction quoted the company is 19 months. * * * Investigations to determine exactly where Apia’s wharf should go were made by two engineers, Messrs.
Steven Olko and Joseph Peraino.
Mr. Robert Gittins, vice-president of the Tecon Corporation, who was also in town, told the Apia newspaper Samoana that a test boring that went down 60 ft to the basalt revealed formations that could cause trouble if the wharf was not sited exactly right.
He said that Swedish engineers had discovered that structures on reclaimed land, if not sited correctly, could later slip out of place. This was known as the “Swedish fault”.
It had helped cause the destruction of dams in France and the United States over the past two years.
Samoana said that, acting on results of the test borings, Messrs. Olko and Peraino had decided that to ensure the stability of the wharf, it would have to be situated 100 ft further out from shore than originally planned.
The exact situation of the Apia wharf also gave concern to Apia’s Harbour Master, Captain H. J.
Moors, in May. In a letter to Samoana, he said: “As the prevailing wind in Apia harbour is easterly, I hope the experts in command of our harbour project will decide to run the Apia wharf in an east-west direction.
“With the wharf parallel to the wind, berthing a ship will be easy and safe. . . .
“If the wharf is to run in any In The News This Month Age Unlimited Akatere Annette M Blue Water Boussole Charlotte Donald Coral Princess Cotton Blossom gs? sart Geneve Hamatana Jessica Karu Koae Malekula Manuia Manuia II Marama Montoro Naomi Neophyte Princess Persephone Red Boomer Sarabande s ar i Marais Seeadler Southbank Southern Cross VIII Tasrua SB?
Takiri Tarikl * Tarua Matangi Moana Tiare Taporo Traveller Windsong [?]his photograph of the “Tulagi” at [?]t Cruz, Honiara, shows the diffi- [?]ies overseas vessels now experience berthing there. The stub jetty [?]re the ship is tied up is only wide [?]ugh to allow one hatch to be [?]ked at a time. At the approach [?]rf, where the man is standing, the [?]er is only deep enough for small [?]s. The new deep-water berth (see [?]w) will be an extension of the [?] jetty—roughly from the bow of “Tulagi” to the left of the picture. 95 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
- ,r» ■ It i ' • ■ Jtj I |||||| m '1 . . / » * r a* -i , - '£ Ijyi % " fi -*J f* r &# s ■* ■' v i$L vH * »# % : f ■'- - ' I ■ -; - - \p s : a.#”- ■■;■■: ' is „ ; , - a ■ ';■ Ballina, Richmond River, N.S.W.
Wood And Steel Ship Building
Ship Repairs
And All Forms Of Marine
And General Engineering
Cargo Copra, island vessels, fishing boats and yachts, cargo winches and windlasses, etc.
Quotations Invited
Ships slipped up to 300 tons Owned by:
S. G. White Pty. Limited
WORKS: Diesel and General t'ngineers 10 Lookes Ave., Balmain, N.S.W.
Phones: W 82170, W 82171, W 82119.
SYDNEY CITY OFFICE: 30 Grosvenor St., Sydney Phone: BU 5062
ion that will cause the easterly to act on the ship’s beam or aft earn, ship handling will be dittimd unsafe, unless powerful tugs vailable. erthing a ship would have to till the lull of the wind. A ship eking with the wind abaft its , will be lucky to clear West Also a ship alongside the whart the wind acting on its beam d be pushed off the wharf, xtra precautions would have to iken to prevent the cargo from i g into the drink between the and the dock, and with a fresh i wind blowing it may be necesto periscope the ship’s l strong gust could part a ship s and cause her to fetch up in It would be unusual to find a looking for a berth at the no.”
Papeete Project be New Zealand Federation of aur has warned Cook Islands e unions by letter that their ibers should not accept employt on the Papeete harbour prowhich will give that port much e wharf space. he federation says it was recently rmed that the French Governit in Tahiti had invited the Cook nds Legislative Assembly to ply 600 workers for the harbour ject. ’he warning letter, signed by the oration secretary, Mr. K. McL.der, was addressed to the Cook ,nds Industrial Union of Workers. :he letter said; “It would be well your union’s executive and its mbership to have a very careful k at this proposed action to reit the 600 male workers to be emyed at Papeete. ‘lt seems that the project is closely ociated with the French nuclear ts in the Pacific. ‘lt is understood that Tahitians are tnanding higher wages for their iployment. Introduction of cheaper d more amendable Cook Islands >our would possibly lead to serious ishes of workers as the Cook anders would be regarded as ‘scab xmr’.”
An Swims For 12 Hours
) Save Companions
A Solomon Islander swam for ore than 12 hours in mid-April to ing news that three companions are adrift between Nugu and uadalcanal following the wreck of eir boat near Sealark Reef.
The man, Paul, from Walande, crawled ashore near Tasimboko after his long swin and triggered an air-sea search for his companions which resulted in all three being saved.
Two of the survivors were sighted at Nugu by the Megapode Airways plane, and were picked up by the Coral Princess. The third came ashore at a village on Small Gela on Tuesday afternoon, after 56 hours in the water.
The three survivors Kenneth Lo, Caspar, and Talaira, were brought to Honiara by the Coral Princess and admitted to hospital for observation. All three were permitted to leave next morning.
Paul was back at work within a day or so as if nothing had happened.
Raftman To Resume Drift
Voyage Soon
William Willis, the 70-y ear-old American raftman, returned to Apia, Western Samoa, in mid-May to prepare for the second leg of his drift across the Pacific on his metal raft Age Unlimited.
Willis reached Western Samoa on November 12 last year after drifting 7,000 miles or so in 130 days from Peru. He later flew home to New York for medical attention to injuries received during his voyage.
Age Unlimited was anchored off the Apia seafront during Willis’ absence in New York, and the broken rudders that gave him much trouble during his trip from Peru were repaired by the Public Works Department.
When Willis resumes his voyage, he hopes to drift to Sydney, or to Brisbane if the winds are unfavourable. He expects the voyage to take 10 to 12 weeks.
Master'S Licence Suspended
Over Grounding
A Marine Board of Inquiry into the grounding of the MV Karu off Cape Lemankoa, Buka, on January 24, has directed that the ship s master, Bernard McMahon Ritchie, be disqualified for six months from acting as an officer or from commanding a ship under Papua-New Guinea’s Coastal Shipping, Ports and Harbours Regulations.
The board, consisting of Captain G. A. Hawley, Superintendent of Marine, Lieutenant-Commander J. S.
Hill and Mr. Keith Chambers, delivered its report to the Administrator, Sir Donald Cleland, in May.
Sir Donald later announced that he had accepted the board’s findings and recommendations.
Sir Donald Cleland said that the board’s decision on the disqualification of Captain Ritchie was reached despite his experience and record, because it felt it could not condone “disclosures relative to the navigational and general direction” of the Karu.
The board found, among other things, that;— • The grounding of the Karu was due to an unexpected current which placed the ship 19 miles William Willis' raft "Age Unlimited" photographed soon after her arrival in Apia last November.— Photo: K. R. Bremner. 97
Pacific Shipping
ACIFIC ISLANDS M O N T H L Y J U N E . 1964
m M.V. NAVAKA Operating in the !\eu It eh ride Powered by V GARDNER
Diesel Engine
MARINE PROPULSION & MARINE AUXILIARY DIESEL ENGINES " J The GARDNER BL3B Marine Diesel Engine, 200 b.h.p. at 1,000 r.p.m.
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GARDNER 6LX Series HO b.h.p. at 1,300 r.p.m.
GARDNER LW Series GARDNER 6L38 Serie* »o 4 b.h.p. 150 jj h p at T OQO r.p.m. 2 to 6 cylinders.
STOCKS OF SPARE PARTS AND REPLACEMENTS FOR ALL GARDNER MARINE DIESEL ENGINES—IMMEDIATELY AVAILABLE.
Sole^Agenf S^f or N.S.W., Papua, New Guinea and South West Pacific Islands _ 71 u^uu ' " ew vau.nea and bouth West Pacific Islands
Ferrier & Dickinson
Telegrams: "FERREOUS", Sydney PT Y LTD ~ SALES SERVICE SPARF p* DTc rl * * Telephone: 43-1215 Herbert Street, Artar mo nN E <:w AR I S: .• POSTAL ADDRESS: —— ' N S W ' Auitrall ° P O. Box 21, Artarmon, N.S.W., Austral!
Captain W. L. Kennedy
(Established 1931)
Shipbrokers, Business G R Real Estate
82-B4 Bridge Street Sydney Phone; BU 3797. Cables: “CAPKEN” Sydney.
STEEL YACHT, 102 ft., twin 600 h.p. diesels, speed 15 knots, well maintained, CARGO VESSEL, 85 x 20, built 1947, main engine BL3 Gardner diesel installed new 1960 large hold 4,500 cu. ft., el. winch, 4 single cabins, 2 twin cabins and Master’s cabin. This vessel is in Survey and is in excellent condition.
For quick sale owners will accept £12,000.
CARGO VESSEL, 65 x 18.6, 200 h.p. diesel, hold capacity 3,000 cu. ft., large hatch, accommodation aft, £9,500.
TRADING KETCH, 45 x 15 X 5.3, built 1955. SLW Gardner diesel, well kept and with good equipment, £6,600.
WORKBOAT, 36 x 12.6. wheelhouse aft., large hold, Cummins diesel, 10 knots, good seagoer, £5,500. , _ . .. . .
HEAVILY CONSTRUCTED WORKBOAT, 33 x 11, Lister diesel, 3 berths, toilet, verv large cockpit, echo sounder, radio, £4,200. 28 V WORK LAUNCH, launched 11/1963, 4 cylinder diesel, 12 knots, large cockpit, 2 berths, toilet, galley. £2,750. 18 ft. HALF CABIN LAUNCH, twin cylinder marine engine, near new, £626. we shall be pleased to obtain independent Surveys of any craft we offer and subsequently arrange delivery either on ship’s deck or sea as desired. 043 degrees true from the dead reckoning position. The master was not to blame for the grounding, though he may have contributed towards it by a lack of vigilance after sighting the land and by a decision to turn to starboard.
The navigation of the Karu was not negligent but it left much to be desired. The master failed to stream a log, claimed to have used a chart which had, in fact, been superseded, failed to make full use of that chart, failed to take soundings after sighting unrecognised land and failed to keep under observation the movement of the ship’s head after sighting land and after orders had been given hard to starboard to 270 degrees.
The conduct of the ship left much to be desired. The master was unaware of the revolutions of the engine and had no knowledge of the qualifications of his officers; and though the fact that he was not aware that the auxiliary power engine was under repair was not necessarily his fault, it was, in common with the other factors, ail indication of an inefficiently run ship. • The vessel was not manned in accordance with regulations insofar as concerned the officers, as the engineer held no certificate and official approval had not been obtained for the employment of another officer.
The board recommended that the owner of the MV Karu, G & M Shipping Company, should be proceeded against for failure to comply with the regulations concerning officers; and the regulations should be amended so that a harbour master or port authority could only issue a sailing permit if a vessel was properly manned.
TWO CANOES BLOWN 200 mii cc in SOLOMONS
Miles In Suluiyiuini
Two native canoes reached Choiseul Island, BSIP, in mid-May after having been missing for more than a week, during which they had been blown about 200 miles off course.
The canoes, with 11 people on board, and another two canoes carrying 13, left Ontong Java (Lord Howe Island) on May 6 to return home to the Tasman Group, 26 miles to the north.
Strong easterly winds blew the canoes off course and on May 12 two of them arrived at Kieta, Bougamv -jj e They reported the other two were still at sea and the Department of Civil Aviation was asked to look out for them.
The first of the two arrived at Nuatabu on Choiseul a day or two later, and the second turned up at Polo on the north-east coast on May 16.
The Superintendent of Marine,
Diver'S Find May Be
Midget Japanese
SUBMARINE New Hebrides diver Reece Dis . combe, who has already made a name for himself as the discoverer a t Vanikoro of the wreck of La Perouse's flagship "Boussole", has now found in Vila Harbour what he believes is the wreck of a midget Japanese submarine, Reporting this, the French Residency's "Bulletin d'lnformation" says that Discombe was diving in Vila Harbour to ascertain the nature of the coral bed when he discovered a metal form about 20 metres ,ong (65 ft) and two to three metres w - lde to ]q ft.). It was about 25 metres (81 ft.) below the surface, The o bj ect wa s also seen by Mr.
Ardimanni, for whom Discombe was working.
The "Bulletin d'lnformation" says that American authorities stationed !n t h e New Hebrides during World War n believed that a small Japanese submarine had succeeded in penetrating Vila's wartime harbour defences.
AT IS IT? When the French Resident [?]missioner in the New Hebrides, Mr.
Delauney, went to Vanikoro earlier year to see the wreck of the "Bous- [?]", the flagship of his famous country- [?] La Perouse, the copper chain which is holding was brought up from the [?]ed. Nobody is quite sure what it [?] used for, but one suggestion is that it was a sounding chain.
Photo: Reece Discombe. 99
Pacific Shipping
PACIFIC ISLANDS M O N T H L Y - J U N E . 1964
With every Dunlite Power Plant you pay no more for these EXTRA feature:
1 Engine Hour Meter
Fitted to the Dunlite remote and automatic control plants. With your generating set you know exactly when to carry out maintenance and oil changes.
2 Single Unit Design
The Dunlite Single Unit Design mounts the alternator rotor directly to the engine shaft—there is no coupling wear or unsightly or dangerous belts.
3 Oil Pressure Safety Shut-Down
Dunlite plants are fitted with an oil pressure switch that shuts down the engine in event of low oil pressure. Should a failure occur in the lubricating system or the oil level be too low, costly breakdowns are prevented.
4 Automatic Type Starter
The automotive type of starter motor starts the engine with a ring gear on the flywheel. This is more positive and eliminates decompressor solenoids, linkages, etc.
5 Simplified Control Panels
The Dunlite automatic control panel has only three moving parts.
Installation is extremely simple.
6 No D.C. Windings
Eliminates commutator and brush gear problems, and eliminates radio and television interference.
7 Static Voltage Control
No adjustment is necessary to the voltage control unit and voltage is maintained within close limits under load conditions. 8 0.8 POWER FACTOR ALTERNATOR This eliminates fitting expensive power factor correction condensers to maintain correct voltage when using motor loading.
9 Heavy Cast Base Plate
All Dunlite plants are mounted on a heavy cast base plate to ensure even weight distribution. Provision is also made for fitting low cost, resilient, mounting blocks, enabling the plant to be installed on 3 in. concrete floor. 9* DUNLITE Electrical Company Limited Frome Street, Adelaide, South Australia Telegrams/Cables: "Dunliteco" Adelaide.
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N.G.G. Trading Company Ltd Lae ’
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Model LADA 18 KVA—3 phase
Dunlite Belt Driven Alternators
The easiest and least expensive way to convert existing plant to 240 AC.
Can be coupled to existing stationary engine to operate all AC appliances, motors, etc. Simplicity to install— no intricate wiring —easy to maintain.
Available 1-15 KVA single phase 6 KVA £164 10 0 10 KVA £196 14 0 15 KVA £360 0 0 • Simple to operate • Completely safe • Portable • Robust
Dunlite Hi-Rate Battery
CHARGER For 6 and 12 volt Batteries.
This charger will charge at trickle, normal or high rate charges. Special design transformer and tapping gives complete control of charging currents without use of resistors. £25 packed F. 0.8. 100 JUNE. 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
perfect boat's compass MERIDIAN compensated for use in the Southern Hemisphere ese compasses are precision-made in Switzerland Dm a strong corrosion resistant anodised aluminium oy. Special selected jewel and pivot ensure maximum curacy. Unbreakable glass cover.
Type 1540: Small >at's compass. 360® rd, 2° divisions, com- -sss points. Dial 2J in. eight If lbs. • Type 1543: Large boat's compass. 360° card divided in 2° with prominent cardinal point markings. Dial 3f in.
Weight 7* lbs.
For further details, please contact 0
(Australia) Pty. Limited
291-295 Sussex St., Sydney. Phone: 26-6945 in M. A. Campbell, said that board were well. ;y were to be repatriated to the in Islands.
Her Burns Philp Ship
\ll AT KAVIENG : Burns Philp motor vessel :ula will call at Kavieng ixly from about July 30, followle decision of the China Navii Co. Ltd. to abandon services vieng for the time being (P/M, p. 14). •ns Philp (NG) Ltd. announced in mid-May after some 50 ng residents had complained to linister for Territories, Mr. C. arnes, that Kavieng would be with a “drastic shortage” of es if another ship did not rethe China Navigation Com- > Soochow. i Burns Philp ship Montoro, i now serves Kavieng, will conto call. This means that, with addition of the Malekula, ng will get two freezer cargo a month.
He'S Interested In The
Pacific'S Small Ships
If, in the next 12 months or so, you should happen to see a sandyhaired Scotsman disembarking from a small ship in the Gilbert and Ellice Islands, Fiji or Tonga, and asking a lot of questions, it’s a pretty safe bet it will be 32-year-old Alastair Couper, a master mariner-turneduniversity man, who is writing a thesis on the small ships trade of the Central Pacific for his doctorate of philosophy.
Mr. Couper, who has an honours degree in economics, a diploma in education, and a master of arts degree from Aberdeen University, came to Australia about seven months ago and is now connected with the Department of Geography at the Australian National University, Canberra, Before he moved into the academic world, he spent 10 years at sea, dur- ALL THAT'S LEFT: This is all that now remains of the Melanesian Mission vessel "Southern Cross VIII", which ran aground at Morovovo, Guadalcanal, in March, 1960, only a year or so after she was launched. Fiji PRO photographer Rob Wright took the picture during a recent visit to the Solomons. 101
Pacific Shipping
CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
Shipyard Division Of
STEAMSHIPS TRADING COMPANY LTD.
Port Moresby, Papua
HI ■ % m, & I A view of Port Moresby showing the Company's shipyards at Paga Point (enclosed within white line).
All Classes of Ship Repairs—Slipping to 500 Tons
General Engineering
Steel Fabrication
Ships' Chandlery
Sheet-Metal Work
Electrical Rewinds
Engineering Supplies
Representing: BEAUFORT (AIR-SEA) EQUIPMENT LTD.
HONG KONG STEEL ROPES LTD.
SIDNEY WILLIAMS Gr CO. (PTY.) LTD.
MATTHEWS FIRE ALARM PTY. LTD, ORANGE STEEL TANK CO. PTY. LTD.
CROSSLEY BROTHERS LTD.
DEUTZ PLANT Gr EQUIPMENT AUST.
ROLLS-ROYCE OF AUST. LTD. 102 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
Advertisement Lemon Bath Luxury bath becomes a luxury when >u use a smoothing supertted lemon complexion soap to ;autify your body. There’s □thing quite like Caribbean mons to smooth and tone your dn, so ask your chemist for ;lph lemon complexion soap bu’ll emerge from your bath ith a lovely lemon beautified dn.
For All Island Boats Halvorsen and Kessler Pty. Ltd. (Successors to Bjarne Halvorsen Ltd.) Bradley Avenue, North Sydney, N.S.W., Australia • Please write for details and prices of the faster, more capacious "L" type cargo vessels in lengths from 50 ft. to 70 ft.
POSTAL ADDRESS: CABLE ADDRESS; Box 508, North Sydney. Berrysboat, Sydney. ; he spent a lot of time on small on the Norwegian coast. He ater chief officer of a cargo ship ag between Australia, New Zeaand Fiji. . Couper, with his wife and children aged one, three and was due to leave Sydney for i Island in the Trlaser on May 7 rom there he will go to the ) where he plans to spend three iur months “going to as many is as possible in colony ships to le methods of loading and worker his look-see in the GEIC, he jpend seven months in Fiji and ibly three months in Tonga.
Dus Old Schooner Back
« Cook Islands
len the 173-ton trading schooner Taporo reached Rarotonga Auckland in April, the people arotonga, who had not expected e her again, greeted her like a dear friend. ie Tiare Taporo, which was built uckland in 1913 to the order of 3. Donald Ltd., of Auckland, d her owners in the Eastern ic for 50 years—many of them ie Cook Islands—until Donalds ired the 150-ton Akatere late year. ie Tiare Taporo (meaning of the lime” in Tahitian) then sailed to Auckland where was put up for sale and bought, darch, by Mr. W. B. Christophers, of Rotorua. Mr. Christophers promptly sailed her back to Rarotonga on a trading voyage with a crew of three Australians, two New Zealanders and two Danes.
Her presence at her old familiar berth in Avatiu Harbour prompted the Cook Islands News to publish a sort of biographical profile of the ship which ended with the wish that “the ‘Flower of the Lime’ will have calm seas and pleasant landfalls for the rest of her sailing life and that it will be a long time before we say farewell (again) to this sturdy little schooner”.
As the details of the old schooner given in the Cook Island News are likely to be of interest to many readers, we reproduce them here.
The schooner was built of New Zealand kauri with frames of pohutu- New Hebrides Harbour The southern New Hebrides island of Tanna is not well endowed with harbours —as can be seen from this photograph which depicts Lenakel Bay, the safest the island has.
Lenakel, on the west coast, is one of two trading settlements on the island. The other is at White Sands on the east coast.
Near Lenakel is the Condominium administrative centre (upper right) and a mission hospital. Bob Paul, a wellknown trader, operates a trading store here, as does the French company, CFNH.
Photo: Rob Wright. 103
Pacific Shipping
CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
Two New Marine Engines from the U.K. and FINLAND, Sport Attractiv
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THCL 102 Plus with Clutch and Long Shaft —5 H.P Packing included F. 0.8., Sydney.
SPARES Post coupon for further details. £lOl £lOO £lO5 0
Pacific Islands
SEAGULL U ff AGENT FOR & "VIRE ff Now from Finland comes the 6 h.p. marine petrol engine that the boating public have been waiting for. This lightweigh compact, reliable, power packed, quality unit is ideal for yachts auxiliarys, fishing boats and runabouts up to 35 ft. loni VIRE ff 'VIRE" model • Direct Drive Model • Weight: 86 lbs. £92/-/- "VIRE" model "BVK' • Clutch Model • Weight: 97 lbs. £97/10/- "VIRE" model "BVR" • Red. & Rev. Gear Model • Weight: 117 lbs. £136/-/- Now the rage for small boats in Australia, in only 6 months over 100 units sold already
New Marine Catalogue—64
Now released for 1964-65 with over 100 pages colour, illustrated and priced. Write for your copy including 6/money order or cheque.
NEW "R.W.0." s/s FITTINGS Arriving from the U.K. in June. First shipment of these super quality stainless steel lightweight yacht blocks and deck fittings. ; ijp COUPON I''*'' Please post further details on: p "SEAGULL" ( ) "VIRE" ( ) | Forward new 64 Cat. ( ). Find inc. 6/-. | NAME ■ address 1 I
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PHONE: 29-6331.
Cables: "Kopsen" Sydney. 104 .1 n N u IQR4 P A f! T F 1 C ISLANDS MONTH
PLAIN AND
Self Raising
FLOUR.
Oak fob**/ ESTABLISHED 1868 Agents for Fiji, Tonga and Samoa; C. SULLIVAN (PACIFIC ISLANDS) LTD., Suva, Fiji G.P.O. Box 172, Walu Bay, Cable Address: "BISHLIMITED"
Suva, Fiji. Suva, Fiji.
Bish Limited
Engineers —Suva
Marine, Structural & General Engineers Iron & Brass Founders
Agents For
DEUTZ Marine and Stationary Diesel Engines Manager: C. G. Wood, A.M.I.Mar.(London)R.E.A.
Residence 'Phone: 5943 Works 'Phones: 3021 & 3022 i and a keel of heart of kauri, measurements are: Length, 97 ft ~ breadth, 23 ft 5 in., depth, 9 ;ross tonnage, 172.59, registered ;onnage, 137.33. le was one of the last fore and lailing ships built in New Zealand islands trading. . B. Donald Ltd. first used her a trader among the Society ids, based at Papeete, with Cap- Joe Winchester in command, ne of the captain’s daughters is h Hall, widow of author James man Hall, who collaborated with rles Nordhoff in writing Mutiny he Bounty, Men Against The Sea, Pitcairn’s Island. uring World War I, the Tiare oro was in continuous service in Society Islands, and was fortunate keeping out of the track of the man raider Seeadler. However, ship did come into the Seeadler ode when she sailed for Mopelia pick up the marooned Allied )rs whose ships had been sunk by Luckner and who were left on Delia when von Luckner and his v escaped in one of the Seeadler’s ts. he Tiare Taporo’s only souvenir the Seeadler is the oval, brassned mirror from von Luckner’s in. n 1918, the Tiare Taporo sailed San Francisco and loaded case oil Auckland, where she arrived on uary 8, 1919, after a voyage of days.
Mter an overhaul the vessel was ired for Rarotonga where she entered the Cook Islands trade of A.
B. Donald Ltd.
Captain Viggo Rasmussen, a Dane who had lived in Tahiti since 1896, commanded the vessel for the next 17 years.
On his retirement two temporary masters were in command until 1939 when Captain Andy Thomson took command after the sale of his former vessel Tagua. He remained with the ship until 1949, when the Tiare Taporo was retransferred for the company’s trade in the Society Islands.
The ship remained in these islands until April, 1960, when she returned to the Cook Islands and Captain Andy Thompson was again put in charge of her, after serving in the , MV Charlotte Donald. He remained in command until his retirement last year at the age of 74 years.
Captain A. J. Pickering then commanded her until her owners put her up for sale.
Although the old schooner weathered several hurricanes during her 50 years with A. B. Donald, she year at the age of 74. jjer new owner sa y s s he is still in “good fettle”, and very shipworthy under strain and stress, The ship was practically renewed (hull, deck, etc.) in 1961 and further improvements were carried out recently.
Shipping News In Brief • ATOLL NEEDS MOVING: servations by the United States mltation team which has been rking in the GEIC have proved it Marakei atoll is wrongly ented on the charts. It should pivoted two points clockwise. • NEW ISLANDS CRAFT: muia 11, a new 24-ton motor jsel, was launched at Uturoa, iatea, recently for service between uatea. Bora Bora and Maup’iti rench Polynesia). The vessel reices the ill-fated Manuia, which is wrecked in the pass of Maupiti May last year with the loss of lives, after 21 years of service. anuia II has two Lister motors d a speed of nine knots. 105
Pacific Shipping
ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
International Btd-6 Crawler Tractor
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International BTD-6 is a general purpose crawler tractor for use on farms and plantations and is ideal for contractors and logging operators. The 4 cylinder diesel engine is designed for greatest economy
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with power to spare. International BTD-6 has every modern improvement to make light work of any job.
See your local IH Distributor now for further details! □ HI PAPUA: Steamships Trading Company Ltd., Port Moresby and Samarai.
SOLOMON ISLANDS: Solomon Motors Ltd., Honiara.
NEW GUINEA; N.G.G. Trading Company, Lae.
Colyer Watson (New Guinea) Ltd., Rabaul.
New Guinea Goldfields Ltd., Wau.
FIJI: Niranjan's Service Station, Suva.
TAHITI: Hintze & Company, Papeete.
NEW HEBRIDES: Kerr Bros. Pty. Ltd., Sydney.
NEW CALEDONIA: Noumea.
Agence Automobile, INTERNATIONAL HARVESTER COMPANY OF AUST. PTY. LTD., SOUTH MELBOURNE. WORKS: DANDENONG, GEELONG, PORT MELBOURNE c EXII3/H9BB/fP/PIM 106 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
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Australian unit of International Paints Ltd.—the world’s foremost authority on protective coalings for marine and structural purposes
Ship For Cook Islands
CD\/irc cnnw tKVILt iuun e Tagua, a steel vessel of 80 deadweight cargo capacity, will %rs.wssf,a , s New Zealand Trade Commisr n f “ noi f silk and Les Livings- ' V in Hone Kong recently wising I final Stages of contion, Ind Captain Dunsford, who Tno„n\ master ipft Ancklariv Tn May to go to Hong , fn/the delivery voyage [e Tagua has accommodation for assengers. She will be registered , va
(Seas Freighter Damages
5 Wharf—Again!
le western end of Lae’s wharf damaged to the tune of about )0 early in May when the overfreighter Southbank cut much ic fender system from the wharf nulled buffers about eight feet af alignment Rppional Works Officer of the imonw B eTth Department of ks, Mr. Tom Passmore, said later that it would be some time before the damage could be repaired as contractors erecting a 100 ft extension t the wharf nee ded the damaged t wor i f ; n u s . c. s .
WKfcfeins time a shi P had run into il since December 22, 1958.
Mr. Holland said that the masters °f these vessels could not be blamed a 8 a combination of varied tides and strong currents from the inflowing Markham created extreme navigational hazards.
However, it was necessary to do something soon “to change this embarrassmg and costly situation .
New Life For Fiji'S Old
CAPITAL Levuka, once a thriving copra port and the capital of Fiji until 1882, was dealt a severe blow when copra mills began operating in Suva. But its economy will be boosted soon when the Pacific Fishing Company s factory goes into operation, and the town, which has an attractive, oldworld air, will come to life again.
A minimum of 30 Japanese fishing craft will operate out of Levuka, and the total will rise to 100 when the Fishing Company’s factory is fully operational.
Cargo Of Beer For
Niue Gets A Ducking
Niue is a dangerous port for ships to work and all loading and unloading is carried out by lighters. During the unloading of the Tofua a few weeks back one of the Niue Island Administration lighters went ashore on the reef.
Desperate attempts were made to get her off with her cargo intact, but each succeeding wave carried her further inshore.
Luckily, or unluckily, she was loaded mostly with canned beer, and as she filled with water and it was obvious she wasn’t going to come off easily, she was unloaded.
Although the first cartons taken out were undamaged, the later ones burst and cans of beer floated in the lighter until they were salvaged.
Remarkably, almost no cans were lost, but for the next few weeks customers at the Government bond store were asked to bring their own containers to take away their beer. 107
Pacific Shipping
PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
Advertisement New" Stay-in"
Waves Beautiful, stylish hair sets that stay m position are here. And these new “stay-in” waves are f* 1 !! . Wlth Bj onous highlights y ° U i hair P retti er, more and J?. or e stylish than ever before. This is because of a new water-clear” spray that has been produced by Delph. elphset keeps the hair in pereWes POS i> 10n i fr ° m set t 0 set “d fowling l! orious translucent loveliness. Have a new stylish hair set and ask your hairdresser ‘°^ e , Ihe new Delphset or take chemist* 01116 W ' th y ° U from your • JESSICA, a handsome yacht owned and skippered by Ted Jacobsen, was in Apia early in April following a cruise from Honolulu which began on March 15. Mr. Jacobsen planned to go on to Pago Pago and then possibly to Tonga, Rarotonga or Aitutaki, and Tahiti, returning to Honolulu about the end of July. • TRAVELLER, a yacht, was in Avatm Harbour, Rarotonga, in mid- April. • SARABANDE, an unusuallooking craft from Guernsey, Channel Islands, arrived in Papeete on April 29 with a crew of four men and three girls, all either Britons or New Zealanders. Sarabande is a 45 ft lobster boat that has been turned into a pleasure craft.
She left Guernsey last November for New Zealand skippered and navig?ied xT by Charles Cottrill, a 36-yearold New Zealand chiropractor who was m the Merchant Navy during the war.
The other crew members are Glyn Hurley, 28, a UK engineer; Bob Abbotf 1 2fi 23 ’ ?i£ iW i salesman ; Tim tiv^ b ]u- 26 \^ U - K advertisi ng execu- Adkn^ IS p,f Va i en ? Gadson and Miss for™ w lford ’ both 23 > and both former Wrens; and Miss July Dyas, :’ an Auckland hairdresser.
Mr. Cottrill left New Zealand six years ago for the United States to train as a chiropractor. After two years’ training, he went to the United Kingdom to practise, but the climate finally caused him to decide to return to New Zealand.
After buying Sarabande, he advertised for a crew and got 125 applications.
Those finally chosen were those who seemed most likely to stay happy in a small ship for several months.
They were a good choice.
En route to Tahiti, Sarabande called at Spain, the Leeward Islands, Panama and the Marquesas. In Spain, Mr. Cottrill raised funds by running a chiropractic clinic four hours a day.
Mr. Cottrill expected to reach Auckland about the first week of June. His wife and small child will fly out from England to join him there. • TALALOGA, a tiny yacht of only 19i ft, reached Tahiti on April 17 in the course of a voyage round the world. The yacht is being sailed by a young Canadian couple, Mr. and Mrs. Hein Zenker. • NEOPHYTE, 45 ft ketch skippered by Lee Quinn, arrived in Rarotonga from Bora Bora on April 14.
Neophyte, which is noted for having all-girl crews, is on a cruise to Australia.
Skipper Quinn was in the news earlier this year when his wife Mary divorced him in San Jose, California, and Quinn married Mrs. Bernice Berkson, a former crew member, in Honolulu {PIM, April, p. 47). • TEMATANGI, Block Island ketch, built, owned and skippered by American Jack Ferguson, reached Lord Howe Island from Whangarei, NZ, on April 21. Also on board was Jack’s wife Daisy. They married in NZ. The pair were on their way to Brisbane where they intend to spend the winter. They will go on to Sydney next summer.
Te Matangi, which is registered in San Diego, California, has been cruising the Pacific since 1955. Her itinerary has been: Hawaiian Islands (1955-58), Tahiti (late 1958), Bora Bora, Rarotonga, Palmerston Island, Tongatapu, Vavau and Auckland (1959), Fiji (1961) and back to New Zealand (1962). • GENEVE, 25 ft Marcon’ingged sloop with lone-handed Swiss yachtsman Michel Mermod, arrived in Manila (Philippines) in May.
Mermod left Callao, Peru, about two years ago to sail around the world. So far, he has called at the Galapagos, Marquesas, Tuamoti Society and Cook Islands, Fiji, N< Caledonia, New Hebrides, Solomo and Carolines. He says he is ma ing his voyage not so much for t love of sa'illing, but because he wai to see as many countries as he ca After three weeks in Manila i pairing his yacht, Mermod plans sail across the Indian Ocean ai around Africa to Europe. • KOAE, 30 ft ketch, wi 61-year-old C. B. (Buck) Taylor, 1 60-year-old wife, and crew memb John Burgess, 24, arrived in Pc Moresby in the first half of May.
Koae has been in and out of tl pages of PIM for the past two yea as she has moved across the Pacil from Seattle.
We last heard of Koae when M Taylor wrote to us from Townsvil two or three months ago after doir a leisurely trip up the Barrier Re from Brisbane.
Mr. Taylor, who spent 30 yea in the US Navy, decided 1 “couldn’t stick around home for tc long” after he retired in 1949.
He says he keeps on travellin because “when you get to the rod ing chair and television stage yo might as well use a gun on yourse! —you’re dead anyway”.
From Port Moresby, Mr. Taylc plans to go on to Indonesia, Indii the Mediterranean and Caribbear and home through the Panam Canal. • ANNETTE M, ketch-rigged, 4 ft motor-sailer, from Launcestor Tasmania, arrived at Norfolk Islam on April 28 and spent a couple o days at Cascade Bay. The vessel i skippered by Jim Pike and has i crew of two. Annette M called a Lord Howe Island on her way t( Michel Mermod. 108 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
Pacific Consultants
Consulting Engineers and Architects Vita House, 412 Lower Khyber Pass Road, Auckland, New Zealand.
Reports, Design, Supervision in the field of Civil, Mechanical and Structural Engineering. Highways, Bridges, Harbours, Quarries, Aerodromes, Soil Mechanics, Public Health, Water and Sewerage, River Control, Factories, Buildings, etc.
Principals ROBERT L JAMES, B.Sc., M.1.C.E., A.M.I. Struct. E., M.N.Z.I.E.
J. BRUCE WALLACE, 8.E., A.M.1.C.E., M.N.Z.I.E.
J. DON DUNNING, A.M.1.C.E., A.M.I. Struct. E., A.M.1.W.E., M.N.Z.I.E.
Cables: "PASCON". 'Phone: AUCKLAND 549-995.
Advance orders are now being taken
Fourth Edition
The Handbook Of Papua-New Guinea
To be published about July PRICE: 15/-, plus 1/6 postage.
Pacific Publications Pty. Ltd., Box 3408, G.P.0., Sydney, or from Islands Stores and Booksellers.
MUNGO SCOTT PTY. LTD.
Established 1894 AUSTRALIAN DC UJ A HHiHiEI SYDNEY AUSTRALIA
Flour Millers
Summer Hill, New South Wales
Cables & Telegraphic Address; SUPERB, Sydney -folk. She is bound for the Cook nds and will possibly call at New land on her return trip.
I ELSIE, 29 ft yacht, sailed solo a 60-year-old white-bearded icrican, Frank Casper, reached liti early in May from Miami. . Casper left Miami on December and hopes to go right round the rid after spending a month or two Tahiti making repairs to his sel. Mr, Casper once made a ise from Miami to Gibraltar and ;k in the Elsie. » WINDSONG, 48 ft ketch, was ; to leave Papeete on May 8 for Leeward Group of the Society mds, then the Marquesas, Honoj and San Francisco.
Windsong —it’s Windsong IV, to absolutely correct —left Meljrne on January 12 for a cruise the Pacific and has since called Sydney, several spots in New aland and Rarotonga. The passage im New Zealand (Auckland) to rotonga, beginning on March 12, >k 17 days. Papeete was reached April 20. • RED BOOMER, 42 ft ketch >m Fremantle, which arrived in irt Moresby in December with ipper Bob McNeil, his wife fonne, daughter Yvette, and two ;w members, is now in Rabaul and ely to stay there for about three Dnths. • SARI MARAIS, 45 ft American ;tch with Royce Hubert aboard, rich has been in Port Moresby and ipuan waters for some time, was ported to be heading for the obriands in May, en route to Darin, the long way round, apparently, id from there to Indonesia.
A note from Mr. Hubert coments on our report of him in the pril issue (p, 107). He felt that •me readers could have misunderood the few words referring to his ove affair with a chiefs daughter Manihi, Tuamotus”.
He writes; “She was a lovely jung lady of 13, intelligent, charmig and highly moral. She was no tore than a welcome visitor aboard iri and both my own daughter and lyself regarded her with sincere afjction.”
Mr, Hubert adds that he has Iways enjoyed reading PIM and folding the news of his yachting riends. 109
Pacific Shipping
ACIFIO ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE. 1964
what’s the difference between WALPAMUR M M m and other GLOSS PAINTS?
The fact that it’s MADE in the Territory makes all the difference. Walpamur has developed its paints in the Territory especially for Territory conditions with a powerful mould-resisting fungicide additive which ensures troublefree finish and outstanding durability.
Walpamur Quality Paints Include
F!n^i! m C rL Glo bl Enamel Walpamur Coloramic Satin Enamel Walpamur Latex Structural p? m - Q “ ,cl< - dr ring Treadwell Floor and Paving Paint-Nevarust Roof and Metal-An, a " d ' n,erior U n O'««ts - Sealers _ Primers for Wood and Made in New Guinea by THE WALPAMUR CO. (N. 6.) LTD.
IfIWES ROAD, KONEDOBU, PORT MORESBY Phone 4420. P.O. Box 106, Port Moresby 110 JUNE. 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLI
(Advertisementi Be Beautiful at Forty The secret of a youthfully radiant complextion, even when first youth is past, is simple daily care. Start your personal beauty care at night by removing all make-up with a nourishing milk cleanser. Next work in a layer of rich ulan vitalising night cream massaging gently in a circular movement —always upwards and outwards—tissuing off any surplus. In the morning after brisk patting with toning lemon delph skin freshener give your skin the benefit of moist oil care and protection all through the day. Smooth on a film of oil of ulan before you make up—it will guard against the drying effect of weather and cosmetic pigments and feed your skin with lastingly youthful beauty. .... Margaret Merril.
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Managing Agents: New Guinea Co., Ltd.
Island Representative: G. D. A. Kent, Rabaul Branch.
Suva, Fiji
Colony of Fiji Branch Office: McGowan’s Building, Margaret St..
Suva.
Branch Manager: L. M. Rolls.
Southern Pacific Insurance Co., Ltd.
Head Office: The Wales House, 60 Pitt St., Sydney.
Lavish Noumea Hospitality For
RACING YACHTSMEN FROM N.Z.
The presence on Noumea streets on April 25 of a number of lobsterhued gentlemen, some unshod, most looking as though they had passed through a wringer, and one or two developing towards evening a gait that was not acquired aboard a ship indicated that the first yachts of the New Zealand —New Caledonia yacht race were in port.
URST across the line was Tara, a beautiful, 59 ft Auckland ketch ippered by Norman Galbraith, son the owner. Her time was 5 days, hours, 55 minutes.
Tara’s * crew believe this time will md for a long time.
Cimpers, the smallest and last of e entrants, came to anchor m oumea on April 29.
Thirty-six yachts had raced, othered by three escort ships. mong the crews were three women id two children.
Perfect weather and a strong ;ady 15-knot, south-easterly breeze ade the race a “real pleasure uise”, as one skipper put it.
If the race was no ordeal, the reption for the crews in Noumea as something of a trial. The Munipal Council of Noumea turned on cocktail party, the Nickel Company ovided further entertainment, there as a reception at the Governor’s :sidence, and another reception at ie New Caledonian Yacht Club hich also marked the opening of the üb’s new clubhouse.
The yachts’ crews unanimously greed that their first task on returnig home was to organise another few Zealand-New Caledonia yacht ace; while many people in Noumea rged that the next race should coicide with the Second South Pacific lames in Noumea in 1966.
Results of the race, on corrected times, were that Tarua took the first prize of £2OO and a trophy.
The skipper of Tarua, Mr. M.
O’Donoghue, very generously presented his prizemoney to the French division of the Red Cross.
Finishing line results were: Ist, Tara, 131 hr. 59 min.; 2nd, Tamure, 132 hr. 43 min. 46 sec.; 3rd, Cotton Blossom IV, 134 hr. 15 min. 54 sec.; 4th, Tarua, 134 hr. 26 min. 8 sec.; sth Marama, 136 hr. 25 min, 16 sec.; 6th, Taipo, 136 hr. 38 min. 4 sec,; 7th, Takiri, 137 hr. 2 min. 12 sec.; Bth Tiare Moana, 144 hr. 32 min. 20 sec.; 9th, Princess Persephone, 145 hr. 28 min. 29 sec.
Corrected time results were: Ist, Tarua, 91 hr. 45 min. 57 sec.; 2nd, Taipo, 94 hr. 55 min. 12 sec.; 3rd, Cotton Blossom IV, 95 hr. 39 min 2 sec.; 4th, Takiri, 96 hr. 23 min. 30 sec.; sth, Tamure, 96 hr. 35 min. 50 sec.; 6th, Tiare Moana, 98 hr. 3 min. 18 sec.; 7th, Princess Persephone, 98 hr. 27 min. 36 sec.; Bth, Maraval, 10 hr. 49 min. 27 sec.; 9th, Blue Water, 102 hr. 18 min. 35 sec.; 10th, Naomi, 103 hr. 7 min. 46 sec.
FRED DUNN. • Some 50 Boy Scouts, accompanied by 10 volunteers, climbed to Tahiti’s Lake Vaihiria recently and built a galvanised iron shelter for the benefit of anyone hardy enough to want to stay there overnight. [?]he 89 ft. ketch "Hamutana", an escort vessel for yachts in the Whangarei-Noumea [?]acht race skippered by Captain Gallagher, called at Norfolk Island on April 22 [?]o pick up the skipper's wife and daughter Jenny who had bene holidaying on [?]he island. Jenny Gallagher, second from left, is pictured here with three other [??]i r ls who were travelling in the yacht. They are, from left, Faith Gilberd, Evelyn Page and Jilt Brewer. —Photo: Ray Hoare. 111 ACIFIC I S L A N D S MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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Differential lock Live all-purpose hydraulics with draft control and linkage lock Exclusive anti-wheelslip device (TCU) Extra-high front axle clearance Adjustable drawbar Full range tractormeter Full field and road lighting Category 1 and 2 linkage Hand parking brake Deluxe fully adjustable seat Extra high lift linkage Now available with 6 or 12-speed transmission David Brown Implematic tractors are designed anc built in the United Kingdom for better, easier farrrv ing under tropical conditions.
David Brown owners in Pacific centres may rel\ upon the David Brown factory in Sydney, Australia for a complete technical advisory and replacemenl parts service.
Ask your nearest David Brown dealer for details of the ful range of David Brown Implematic tractors — Or write to:
David Brown Tractors
49-51 Derby Street, Lidcombe, N.S.W. 112 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
TURNERS & GROWERS LTD.
Auctioneers Fruit & Produce Merchants
Auckland, New Zealand
We Specialise In The Export To The Tropics
OF NEW ZEALAND PRODUCE, POTATOES, ONIONS,
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All Inquiries to our Export Organisation: Turners Supply Company Limited Box 1370 Cables: Auckland, N.Z. “Tusco”, Auckland. :W CALEDONIANS and French citizens in the New Hebrides will to the polls on June 7 to elect new deputy for the French mber of Deputies to replace Mr. arice Lenormand, who was ousted n his position after being found ty of complicity in a dynamiting ir. (P/M, April, p. 15 and May, rD- 'hree candidates are standing for election —Mr. Rock Pidjot, of the ion Caledonienne (Mr. Lenornd’s party); Mr. Edouard Pentet, a mining and commercial aon; and Mr. Pierre Jeanson, who generally known as a Socialist and o played a big part in seeing that Vietnamese were repatriated.
Each candidate has an understudy, o, under a new law, will replace succesful candidate in case of ith but not —as PlM’s Noumea •respondent puts it—if he falls foul the law and is heaved out like *. Lenormand.
PlM’s correspondent says that Mr. mson is “presumably just going >ng for the ride”, and that the fight tween Mr. Pidjot and Mr. Pettiest will be a close one.
He adds that Mr. Lenormand arred in Noumea from France toirds the end of May to support Mr. djot, and that if Mr. Pidjot should n it will be “a smashing affront to e Metropolitan Government”.
Whatever the outcome, the new puty will be a man of colour. • The Roman Catholic Bishop of the Southern Solomons, Most Rev.
Daniel Stuyvenberg, who recently attended a conference of bishops at Alexishafen, P-NG, to discuss a proposed substitution of vernacular texts in place of Latin in some parts of the services of the Catholic Church, said on his return to Honiara that the conference had accepted the use of English, Pidgin English, and native languages in certain parts of the service.
As texts for the English version, the bishops adopted a simplified translation of the Latin text, and it was agreed that texts should be prepared in the other languages. These texts must be sent to Rome for approval before they can be used. • Fiji Airways has announced that its proposed twice-weekly service to the BSIP will begin on Friday, July 17. • It is being freely rumoured in the French section of the Pacific that the French Prime Minister, Mr.
Georges Pompidou, will visit the Pacific about the end of June to inspect French military installations. • A brochure on Norfolk Island’s historic church, St. Barnabas Chapel, is planned by the Church of England Committee under the chairmanship of the Rev. O. Weaver. It will include a history of the church written by the Rev. John Tyrrel and will be aimed at Norfolk’s growing army of tourists.
The Church, completed in 1880, was built by the Melanesian Mission, She's Norfolk Island’s Oldest Resident Mr. and Mrs. Enoch Cobcroft Robinson, of Rocky Point, Norfolk Island, celebrated 65 years of married life on April 20. Mrs. Robinson, who is 94, is Norfolk’s oldest resident.
Mr. Robinson’s main occupation has been farming, though as a young man he was engaged in whaling around the Norfolk coast. He is a veteran of the Boer War and represented Norfolk at the coronation of King Edward VII.
Some years ago he received the MBE for his community services. He served on the Executive and Advisory Councils for more than 21 years and was Council President four times. Always active in Church of England affairs, he held the office of churchwarden for 30 years. — Photo: Merval Hoare. 113 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
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For Jarrah, Cedar, Stained Floors & Woodwork Piccaninny Polishes are manufactured by PICCANINNY MANUFACTURING CO. - 254 PiKwo * er Road, Manly, N.S.W., Australia which had its headquarters on i island for nearly 60 years. • Lever’s Pacific Timbers Limi made their first shipment of logs fr Gizo, BSIP, in May by the J Daisei Maru. Just over a mill super feet of logs were loaded. • The lease of a site for a secc hotel at Lae has been granted Lae Hotels Pty. Ltd., a subsidiary Steamships Trading Co.
Lae Hotels tendered £31,367 seven acres and must build a he for not less than £A50,000.
The company plans a fully j conditioned hotel with 40 double b< rooms and swimming pool. • Copra production in the B 5 for the first quarter of this year v about 600 tons below production j the first three months of 1962 a 1963. The Acting Director of Ag culture, Mr. J. T. Hall, says Janrn was a particularly poor month, w unseasonably dry conditions whi tended to prevent coconuts from h ing. • The GEIC Advisory Coun will hold its second meeting for t year in November. • A full-scale scientific expedite from the Royal Society will visit t Solomons next year to make obsen tions on flora and fauna, and assess the BSIP’s ecological relatio ship with the East Indian tror region and South America. About ! scientists are expected to be includi in the party that will vi: Guadalcanal, San Christobal, San Ysabel, Choiseul and Kolombangai • More than half a ton of pin apples arrived in Auckland by a from Fiji recently as a beginning ( what is hoped will develop into regular trade. The idea of supplyii the New Zealand market was th of Mr. G. Ewins, a Fiji surveyor, wh with his son, bought 11 acres ne; to Nadi Airport. • New Zealand exporters have ‘ substantial market” awaiting thei in the Pacific islands, accordin to a report released recently by M K. R. Gillon, who led a party ( Hawke’s Bay (New Zealand) mam facturers to Fiji and Samoa la: October. • Students and experts from Ne' Zealand’s Victoria University bega a survey in Auckland in May aime at improving the housing and soch welfare of about 7,000 Cook, Niu and Tokelau Islanders living in tha city. 114 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL!
BURNS PHILP (New Hebrides) LTD.
REGISTERED Office: VILA, NEW HEBRIDES Branch office at SANTO Exporters, Importers and General Merchants Commission, Shipping and Customs Agents Reoresentatives for BURNS PHILP TRUST CO. LTD., QUEENS- LAND INSURANCE CO. LTD., and LLOYD’S OF LONDON, Agents
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DU PACIFIQUE, and numerous overseas manufacturers of all classes of merchandise.
Sydney Agents: BURNS, PHILP & CO., LTD., 7 Bridge St.
San Francisco Agents; BURNS-PHILP CO. OF SAN FRANCISCO INC., 311 California St.
London Agents: BURNS, PHILP & CO.. LTD., 35 Crutched Friars, E. 03. ■r> ' ' ';TW,«Tr PHILIPS I PHILIPS Representatives in the South Pacific area: B H. 6. Trading Co. ltd., Port Moresby. Rabaul, Lae.
British Solomons Trading Corporation, Honiara, British 5 Bums Philp (New Guinea) ltd., branches in Papua and is Burns Philp (New Hebrides) Ltd,, Vila and LuganviHe. ; , Bums Philp (South Sea) Co. ltd., Nuku Alofa. Vavau Bums Philp (South Sea) Co. Ltd., Pago Pago, Eastern Sanfefe, | Max Halech, Pago Pago, Eastern Samoa. p .
Burns Philp (South Sea) Co. ltd., Apia, Western Samoa.
Burns Philp (South Sea) Co. Ltd., Norfolk island, i Comptoirs Frangais des Nouvelles Hebrides, V»l* and Etablissoments Batiande Noumea, New Caledonia, Fiji Trading Co. ltd., Suva. Fiji Islands.
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Guinea, } Ocean Island.
PHILIPS FOR- LAMPS • RADIO • TELEVISION • RADIOGRAMS • RECORD CHANGERS* ELECTRONIC VALVES • MEASURING APPARATUS • ELECTRIC DRY SHAVERS • HOUSE* HOI D APPLIANCES • X-RAY APPARATUS • H.F. GENERATORS • WELDING MACHINES • FLUORESCENT LAMPS • AMPLIFIERS • CINEMA EQUIPMENT • TELECOMMUNICATION EQUIPMENT* AUTOMATIC AND LINE TELEPHONY INSTALLATIONS • TAPE RECORDERS (See advertisement on page 38) t is being made at the request of Island Territories Department, ich hopes it will produce facts that 1 provide a basis for legislation improve the islanders’ conditions • A satellite tracking station has ;n set up at Rarotonga, and a smographic station will soon be ;ned there, according to NZ Press >orts. • New Zealand will send an exdition to the Cook Islands in May xt year to observe a solar eclipse >m Manuae atoll, 124 miles northst of Rarotonga. (PIM, Feb., p. 85.) The NZ Minister for Science (Mr. dboys) said in May that various terested organisations had set up a mbined working committee, with e Scientific and Industrial Research apartment providing co-ordinating cilities. It was hoped the Royal ew Zealand Navy might provide a transport for the expedition durg a routine cruise. • TEAL will use Comet jets on ; Auckland-Noumea service from me 5 instead of Electras. It is unjrstood that one of the reasons for le change is that much more freight being booked on the service. • A manpower survey which will alp to determine the future course f Fiji’s educational system is to be lade by Professor A. Rodger, Projssor of Occupational Psychology at iirkbeck College, University of ,ondon.
Professor Rodger, brother of Fiji’s Director of Education, Mr. J. G.
Rodger, will spend about seven weeks in the Colony beginning in early May. • The Papua-New Guinea Departments of Civil Aviation and Public Works have finished a survey of islands in the Milne Bay area to find airstrips to link the D’Entrecasteaux Group, the Louisiade Archipelago and the Papuan mainland.
They located a possible “A” strip site which will takes planes up to DC3 standard on Normanby Island and a category “B” strip site which will take planes up to Piaggio size on Misima. • A United Kingdom Defence Ministry spokesman said in May that the future of Christmas Island, Britain’s H-bomb testing ground in the Pacific, was under review now the nuclear test ban agreement had been signed with Russia. Associated Press of America reported that the base would soon be closed, but the Defence Ministry spokesman said no decision had been reached. • The Chief Forestry Officer in the BSIP, Mr. K. W Trenaman, recently visited the New Hebrides with Forestry Adviser to the Department of Technical Co-operation, Mr. C.
Who Threw The Overalls . . .' For a brief spell at the end April, Western Samoan stomers had second thoughts \out their favourite delicacy nsupo” {canned meat).
It all started when Faafei’i ?leua, of Vaimoso, scraped out tin of corned beef for Sunday nner and found at the bottom 1 the tin a worker's cloth glove.
The glove was handed over • the local agents, A. lacdonald & Co., and sent to \e overseas manufacturers for lentification.
“It could have been a trick > get a free tin of pisupo,” ley said, not very appreciative f the publicity given their articular brand of pisupo.
We’ve found worse things in <ur competitors’.” 115 •ACIFIC ISLANDS M O N T H L Y J U N E , 1964
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Swabey, to consider timber possibilities in the Condominium.
They made an aerial reconnaissance over the kauri forests of Erromanga, and then flew to Aneityum, where they saw forest which was last exploited 15 to 20 years ago.
Mr. Trenaman said later that there was some promising regeneration of kauri on Aneityum, but it was not nearly as far advanced as it would have been if it had been given some silvicultural assistance. At the present stage, a worthwhile new growth of kauri would be possible if such assistance could be provided fairly soon. • More than 200 delegates will attend the 10th international conference of the Pan Pacific and South East Asia Women’s Association, in Nukualofa, Tonga, on August 15.
The woman delegates will be billeted in private homes. • At a public meeting in Suva on May 13, the leaders of three leading Christian churches spoke of a growing desire for a united church in the Pacific. They said this was leading towards a Pacific Christian Council and, in Fiji, a Fiji Council of Churches. The three main speakers at the meeting, which was held to promote Christian unity, were the Anglican Bishop in Polynesia, Rt.
Rev. John Vockler; the Roman Catholic Vicar Delegate of Fiji, the Rev. Father Hannan, and the Rev.
L. D. Fullerton, of the Methodist Church of Fiji. • Fiji’s Central Liquor Board, in its annual report, says that the relaxation of liquor laws in Fiji has brought about an improvement in drinking habits and a decrease in drunkenness and liquor offences.
There has also been a decrease in the making of home brew and the drinking of methylated spirits. In 1962, Fiji abolished the permit system for male Fijians and Indij wanting to buy spirits. The boj reported it was still too early to commend that the permit system ] women should also be abolished. • With several new hotels unc construction or planned, Fiji is the verge of a tourist boom compi able with that on Queensland’s Gc Coast about 12 years ago, accordi to Mr. H. E. Brumby, New Zeala sales manager for Air India, w visited Fiji recently.
Air India will begin a service Fiji on August 4 as an extension its New York, London, Sydney rou • Two Gilbertese, Te Tewai bai and Te Kaeba, who borrowed canoe without the owner’s knowled, at Tarawa on March 20, were carrii by a strong current into the opi ocean and cast up nine days later Nauru, 500 miles away. Except f< being fatigued and hungry, they we in good health on reaching their ui expected destination. • Two natives appeared in cou: in Port Moresby on May 20 charge with the rape, at Jackson Airpoi four days earlier, of a 29-year-ol woman barrister from Queenslam The natives are Bauwai Giava, alia Steven Bauwai, airlines mechanic, an Ambrose Lovevaia, electrician. The were remanded in custody unt June 4.
Three weeks earlier, P-NG’
Administrator, Sir Donald Cleland told a Press conference that thi number of arrests for sex offences h Port Moresby in the first quarter o this year was 28 per cent lower thai in the last quarter of last year. Si; Donald was commenting on i Press report that Port Moresby householders were “living in fear’ following a recent wave of bashing: and attacks by natives on Europear women in the town.
THE RABAUL SCENE: Rabaul, NG, is at last to have new Government build ings. They will be air - conditioned and cost about £l80,000.
Here is the first stage under construction.
Photo: C. H. Meen. 116 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
Liquid Petroleum
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operated by safe, dean, non- Efficient—Economical —Safe poisonous, portable gas, this Malleys wash boiler gives efficient, economical service.
Low installation costs. Instant lighting—simply turn the tap and light. Capacity 12 gallons Finished in vitreous porcelain enamel in Cream, Green or White. 33£ in. high x 22£ in. wide x 25i in. deep. Approved by Australian teal Authorities.
Suitable for all liquefied petroleum gases.
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Sydney • Melbourne • Brisbane • Adelaide V 194 Steaming hot water in minutes fn People I s Director of Public Works, Mr. John Common, will retire in smber to take a post with ondon building and engineering He has been Director of Public ks since 1956, although he first ; to Fiji in 1947. He is well m throughout the South Pacific, :ially for his work as chairman he organising committee for the South Pacific Games. He is an national boxing referee and ed and refereed at the 1962 imonwealth Games and has been linted a referee for the Olympic les at Tokyo in November. ; have got the death pallor of g ridden cities, but it’s wonderto breathe in the sweet pure air he Pacific after the foul air of isation,” commented lone rafts- William Willis when he arrived ipia, Western Samoa, on May 10, ly to resume his raft journey to tralia (see “Pacific Shipping”), was accompanied by a friend, ner Woehlk, who will help him irepare Age Unlimited. He plans leave Apia in June after the ual three-day Samoa Indepenze Day celebrations are over. Wil- >aid he liked Samoa so much he ht go back with his wife and re- He is 70. ♦ * * gt. Tohovaka, of the Niue Police iartment, retired on May 4 after years’ service. His was the first [?] Fijian nurse Elenoa Ravai, now [?]ing at the Sydney Sanitarium, Wah- [?]ga, had her 21st birthday celebration [?]tly the symbolic key was presented [?]er by Pastor A. G. Stewart, who has a friend of four generations of [?]a's family on the maternal side. In [?]ey for the occasion was Elenoa's [?]er, Adi Torika, taking time off from her active life in Suva.
SHELF* COVERING POWDER A favourite haunt for cockroaches is under the paper linings of drawers and shelves.
This offers an excellent opportunity for wiping them out.
Simply sprinkle Pea Beu odourless, non-poisonous cockroach powder under the shelving paper and all cockroaches will be completely eliminated.
A luxury talc to keep you cool on the hottest day Yardley Talcum Powder pampers your skin, soothes it, makes you feel so fresh, keeps you so nice to be near with its own subtle temptation ... its own very special fragrance. Choose from Yardley April Violets, Red Roses, Freesia. English Lavender. retirement of any Niuean civil servant.
Sgt. Tohovaka joined the police force in July, 1929, and was promoted sergeant in 1945. He was selected to travel to New Zealand to meet Queen Elizabeth II when she toured New Zealand and Australia in 1953 and 1954. In 1961 he was awarded the British Empire Medal. * * * Mr. Barry Philp, who has been associated with several successful enterprises in Fiji, chiefly hotels, pi to retire and settle in Australia, wife and his two children are now Sydney. Mr. Philp went to Fiji 1951 and established the Dei Hotel, after which he took over Nadi Airport concession—the Mocambo Hotel, opposite the t] terminal building. He ran that hi till the reconstruction of the airp * * * Miss Carol Schultze, 21, is present launched on a two ye working holiday in the UK and Continent while her parents, Mr.
L. (Bob) Schultze and Mrs. Schu] and younger sister hold the fort Mosman, Sydney. Bob Schultze \ a pioneer New Guinea Territorian the best sense—he was born th( His mother was a niece of Qui Emma. He decided he’d had enoi of New Guinea in 1951 when brought his family to live p manently in Sydney although, he t us in May, he still retains a pi of land near Rabaul “for sentimer reasons”. * * * Norfolk Island’s Official Secrete Mr. Gordon Williams, in May i “somewhere in the Australian c back” on a 3,000-mile road joun from Darwin to Sydney with his v Beryl and their three children, eldest nine and the youngest ei months. Mr. Williams had an pointment with the Northern Te tory Administration before be posted to Norfolk recently, and \ making the long car trip to pick family up and take them to their n Norfolk home—which was built convicts. * * * The well-known family of Ce Smith of Nukualofa and Suva, currently widespread. Father Sm is working as an interpreter in 5 Francisco, Anna Joy is in I Angeles, Dennis is studying in loi Carol is in New Zealand, Gailey in Sydney and Gus is driving arou Australia, being last reported Perth.
HOME: Among friends in Cologne, Germany, during a recent trip to his homeland after 66 years is Mr. R. P.
Berking, of Apia.
With him (left) is Mrs. M. Offermanns, daughter of the late Mr. Schaafhausen, and Dr. J. Lehmann, formerly of Apia. 118 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTH!
Pacific Commerce and Produce
Australia-Ng
CORPORATION DIRECTORS The largest interest held any investor in the newly rme d Australian New dnea Corporation is no ire than five to seven per tt., according to the Corratioris chairman, Sydney sinessman, Mr. Steven ch.
IMATION of the Corporation vas announced on May 11, in >y. It is a consortium of Ausn businessmen, banks and ince companies joined together to in the development of the comal and industrial potential of a-New Guinea. e company will provide investand development facilities. Deof its plans are in the news t on p. 11. ;sent directors are Mr. Rich, M. T. Hansen, the Hon. F. M. tt, MLC, Sir James Kirby and lon. F. M. Osborne. Secretary is N. F. Stevens. Sir John Craw- Director of the Research School acific Studies of the Australian mal University, will act as al adviser. e board is to be progressively ged to eight. e company’s authorised capital )0,000 ordinary shares of 10/fully paid, totalling £250,000. rther 500,000 ordinary shares of are held in reserve for future though the directors do not into apply immediately for Stock ange listing some of the shares in reserve may be allotted by Jirectors to expand the share reir “when listing appears desir- ’. The directors will not make forecasts on divided payments. ;low are the directorships of the il five members of the Corpora- Their industries will give a to the kind of development the >oration will probably concenon, certainly initially: S. Rich (Corporation Chairman), tiairman of Pacific Islands Timbers (Holding) Ltd. and Tasman Pacific Pty.
Ltd.; Deputy Chairman, Hunter Douglas Limited; Director, Huvei Plantation Limited and a member of the Manufacturing Industries Advisory Council.
Mr. M. T. Hansen is Chairman of Realty Development & Mortgage Co. Ltd.; Deputy Chairman, PGH Industries Ltd.; Director, Development Finance Corp. Ltd.; Duncan Holdings Ltd.; Kauri Holdings Ltd.; Martin Place Holdings Pty. Ltd.; Pacific Islands Timbers (Holding) Ltd.
Hon.. F. M. Hewitt, MLC, is Chairman of Huvei Plantation Ltd.; F. M. Hewitt Pty. Ltd., and Director, Pacific Islands Timbers (Holding) Ltd.; Associated Plywood Pty. Ltd.
Sir James Kirby is Chairman of the Manufacturing Industries Advisory Council; the James N> Kirby Group of Companies; Champion Spark Plug Co. (Aust.) Pty. Ltd.; International Products Ltd.; Wales Superannuation Fund Ltd.; Wales Unit Investment Ltd.; Vice- Chairman of Conveyancer Fork Trucks (Aust.) Pty. Ltd.; Director, Beneficial Finance Corporation Ltd.; CSRC/Dow Pty. Ltd.; Qantas Empire Airways Ltd.; Re-Insurance Co. of Australia Ltd.; The British Motor Corporation (Aust.) Pty.
Ltd.; The Mutual Life & Citizens’
Assurance Co. Ltd.
Hon. F. M. Osborne is a partner of Ebsworth & Ebsworth; Director, English Electric Co. of Australia Pty. Ltd.; Macdonald Hamilton & Co. Pty. Ltd.
Special Adviser to the Board. Sir John Crawford, is Professor of Economics at the Australian National University; Director of Research School of Pacific Studies, Australian National University: Chairman of the Australian Wool Industry Conference; Vice-Chairman, Commonwealth Government Committee of Economic Inquiry.
Approval Soon For Big Carpenter Tea Enterprise THERE can be little doubt that by the time this appears Papua-New Guinea’s Administrator Sir Donald Cleland and his Administrator’s Council will have approved of the W. and R. Carpenter applications for three tea leases in the Wahgi valley.
The Administrator’s Council was to have met to consider the applications—already recommended by the Territory’s Lands Board—on June 4.
The Carpenter applications deal with three blocks totalling 5,327 acres near Mt. Hagen.
Carpenters were the only applicants for the three blocks on which a 99-year lease is offered. Already the company indicated that if their applications are granted they intend to spend up to £1 million on the establishment of tea plantations over the next ten years.
The giant island trader is the second applicant for a tea lease in the Western Highlands. The first was Mr. Ivor Manton, a Melbourne businessman, to whom in April a block of 800 acres was granted.
To date there has been little tea planted iit the Wahgi, but the experimental plots sown by the Territory’s Department of Agriculture have proved most successful.
The most successful experimental strain has been of an Assam type known as South Johnson.
More land for tea growing is expected to be made available for lease within the next few weeks.
Representatives of overseas firms engaged in the tea industry, either as growers or processors, have been regular visitors to the Western Highlands since the interest in tea-growing there developed with Administration announcements last year.
Yet Another Bonus Issue For Burns, Philp BURNS, Philp & Co. Ltd., proposes to issue 1,800,000 £1 shares on the basis of one-for-four held at October 30. This will be BP’s fourth bonus share issue since 1958. The 1958 bonus issue had been the first in 40 years. The new issue will increase paid capital from £7,2000,000 to £9 million.
When news of the new issue was announced to the Sydney Stock Exchange on May 21 the shares rose 5/6 to £5/14/-. On those prices BP market capitalisaton was more than £4l-million.
Dividend has been 10 per cent, since 1953.
The new balance sheet will be released in August.
RETURNING TO SUVA: Manager of the Bank of NSW, Suva, Mr. Noel Hopcraft, with his wife, still seem to have something to smile about at the end of a two months' holiday in Sydney. They were photographed at a bright farewell party aboard the Matson liner "Mariposa", on which they made a five-day cruise home via Noumea. 119 CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
A Makes the Difference ■■■ 'm
Without Morea Liquifeed
With Morea Liquifeed
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Both pictures were taken on Yaqara Estate. Compare the lean, rough, bony appearance ot the cattle without MOREA Supplement with the well filled, smooth coated, alert appearance of the cattle receiving MOREA Supplement. MOREA LIQUIFEED enables cattle and sheep to make the best use of available pasture.
Further information about MOREA LIQUIFEED can be obtained from Mr. A. H.
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Another Pro[)Uct
w. R. CARPENTER & CO. (Fiji) LTD.
Rodwell Rd., Suva, G.P.O. Box 299 Node St., Lautoka Telephone: SUVA 3801 Telephone: LAUTOKA 7 120 JUNE. 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTH
rns Philp (SS) Co. sfit Up HE net profit of Burns Philp (South Sea) Co. Ltd. rose by 7 10,536 to £F163,029 for the year led January 31. This was an inase of 6.9 per cent, fhe profit is reported to be the ond highest in the company’s :ory and only £6 below the record 1960. rhe chairman, Mr. H. Maurice >tt, said in his report at the comly’s 44th annual meeting in Suva May 23 that the increased profit s a result of the improved morny in Fiji caused by a healthier 1 more stable sugar industry, a ger sugar export quota, im- >ved returns from other primary >ducts and a substantial incease in irist traffic.
Parts of Tonga, particularly the rth, were still suffering from rricane damage to crops but results tained from operations in Samoa 1 other island branches and from r estment were satisfactory.
The report added; “The volume of the company’s merchandise sales showed a marked increase during the year to offset considerably higher working costs and depreciation.”
The net profit for the year is after providing for depreciation of £88,686 (up £18,335) and unstated tax.
The earning rate is an increase from 15.2 to 16.3 per cent, on paid capital of £lm..
The dividend is 10 per cent, for the 14th successive year.
Company To Pull Out From Vanikoro MR. I. ROGERS, secretary of Kauri Holdings Limited, went to Vanikoro in mid-May in the MV Milos to arrange for the Kauri Timber Company Limited to withdraw from the conduct of logging operations at Vanikoro. (PIM reported on these pages last month that a development of this nature was expected).
Timber has been extracted from Vanikoro since 1922, and the Kauri Timber Company has been closely associated with these activities almost since the beginning.
Mr. Rogers has stated that the company’s decision to terminate extraction has been made with very great regret, in view of the long association of the company with the Vanikoro people and with the BSIP Government.
It is believed that another timber company may take over KTC’s operations at Vanikoro.
No Television For Fiji-Yet THE Fiji Government has decided the time is not ripe for the introduction of television into the Colony. An official statement in May said the first necessity was to achieve 100 per cent, radio coverage of the Colony and improve reception in outlying areas.
The statement added: “Government appreciates that television must Selling P-NG In Japan DURING the last few years, numerous enterprising Japanese businessmen have “invaded” the South Pacific to seek markets in the area for Japanese goods, or to arrange fishing, mining, or timber-cutting concessions from Islands Governments.
Now, at last, the process has been reversed and an attempt— a very successful one—has been made to sell Islands products in lapan.
The occasion was the recent Osaka Trade Fair, where the Australian Department of Territories arranged an attractive exhibit from Papua-New Guinea in the Australian pavilion.
Immediate results from this included the sale by agents of about 100 tons of coffee, 100 tons of cocoa, a shipload of New Guinea timber worth about £12,000 with monthly shipments to follow, and crocodile skins valued at £l2O with more orders following. Great interest was also shown in coconut products, basketware, peanuts, passionfruit, tapa cloth and artifacts.
Public interest in the exhibit was reflected in the extensive coverage of it in the Japanese Press and on television. It was also covered in a documentary film.
Other features were the distribution of about 25,000 copies of a booklet in Japanese on P-NG products and the distribution, daily, of 2,000 to 3,000 cups of New Guinea coffee to Japanese visitors to the exhibit.
The exhibit was staffed by Mr. H. V, Clarke, of the Australian Department of Territories; Mr. N. F. C. Jackson, a P-NG Administrative Co-operative Inspector; five Japanese, three of whom represented major Japanese cocoa and coffee-importing firms; and two New Guineans, George Mapai, an Administration co-operatives inspector, and Napoleon Ikerere, a Popondetta cocoa planter.
George (pictured) made a great hit with everyone when he presented a live crocodile (caught by Mr. Max Wright at Cape Hoskins) to the Mayor of Osaka on behalf of the P-NG Administration. The crocodile is now in the Osaka Zoo. 121 % C I F I C ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
A. B. S. WHITE & CO.
H. S. LLOYD, E. C. S. WHITE, O. B. LLOYD, J. L. KING, K. H. WATERHOUSE, P. C. WOLFE.
Members Op The Sydney Stock Exchange
82 p m c, 51 ® 8 & TELE GRAMS: “WHITLOYD”, SYDNEY. 25-6111 Sydney * 181 Church Street, Parramatta. 635-5078 come to Fiji sooner or later and it proposes to keep the issue under constant review and, as and when circumstances change, will reconsider the issue.”
Electronic Industries Ltd., of Australia, had applied to establish and operate a television service in Fiji and inquiries about the possibility of television being introduced had also been made by Thomson Television (International) Ltd., and Cathay Hotels (Fiji) Ltd.
Big Increase In P-NG Cocoa Crop Expected AT current world prices, Papua- New Guinea’s cocoa crop will be worth more than £4 million this year, according to an article in Mac.
Robertsonland News, the official staff journal of the Mac. Robertson group of companies.
The paper says experts predict a jump in cocoa production from 17,000 tons this financial year to about 30,000 tons in 1966-67 because the area of pod-bearing trees will soon be doubled.
The paper adds: “With world cocoa prices rising and falling between wide limits, Mac. Robertson interest in our Wanaru plantation (in the Markham Valley, near Lae) has seldom been higher”.
Fiji's Gold This Year Could Reach £F2,000,000 A LTHOUGH a source of considerf* able speculation by people who have bought Emperor shares, the Melbourne interests which own and operate the gold mines at Tavua, on the northern part of the island of viti Levu, are regarded with affection and esteem by the economists respon- Slb jf f °r the Government of Fiji The Emperor Goldmining Company has not paid a dividend for six or seven years; but the company seldom exports, from Fiji, gold worth ess than £1,500,000 per annum, and will hf r ,^ e val r e of its production Wfil be at least £2,000,000.
Ihis enterprise-established some Dttro y f- ars a B°— I maintains the very at i^ ti y e little town of Vatukoula which houses a community of European and Fijian workers, with their families.
Except for considerable sums which are sent abroad for the purchase of plant, supplies and expert service, the whole of the goldmines’ earnings, during the last few years, have been ploughed back for the development of the valuable strata discovered by deep drilling a few years ago, after the rich veins which could be got at by open cut had been exhausted.
A great deal of the developmental expenditure authorised by the directors may be credited to capital, of course; but it is a patent fact that the greater part of the £1 million to £2 million per year taken out of the ground at Vatukoula remains in the Colony for the Colony’s benefit.
To keep that Melbourne group operating in Fiji, the Government in recent years subsidised the company by between £lOO,OOO and £200,000 per annum, and gives Customs concessions. The subsidy has now ceased.
No one questioned the wisdom of the directors in withholding dividends and ploughing back most of their profits into development. Obviously, it would not have been wise to distribute dividends while the Government of Fiji was providing subsidies. But now onlookers, especially among the shareholders, hope that with the increasing quantity of gold coming out of the deep levels there may be a dividend or two coming along. Otherwise, why continue operations? The company cannot be expected to carry on this important industry merely to provide salaries and wages. Something must happen soon. So the 1/- shares of the Emperor Company remain at 6/and 7/- in the Australian market.
Close observation, however, does suggest that dividends may be postponed for some little while yet.
Probably the real answer lies in the world price of gold. As long as the United States keeps the price where it is—there is not a great margin of profit in the operations at Vatukoula. But should the price of gold move up—and most economists argue that it should have done so long ago—the output at Vatukoula could become very prof able indeed.
Even if the price of gold does n move for the present, there seer to be enough profit in the oper tions to justify the directors carryii on the industry on its present sea for some further period.
Since this Melbourne group cor menced operations at Vatukoula tl value of the gold taken out of t] three mines (Emperor, Loloma, ai Dolphin) is £27 million Fijian (£' million, Australian).
On today’s operations the compai is paying out in wages and salari alone no less than £765,000 a ye —a very important item in t] country’s economy.
There are some who think th an increase in the world price of go would not only stimulate the indust: at Vatukoula, but probably wou encourage a search along the V Levu ranges for more gold countr Several places in Fiji were provi to be richly gold-bearing in the pai but when post-war conditioi throughout the world held the pri< of gold down at its present lev* all enterprise in that direction grad ally faded out.
Disappointing Year For Kerema Rubber ltd.
I/'Erema Rubber Ltd., P-N
rubber producer, had had a di appointing result for the year end( December 31, 1963, the chairma Mr. H. D. Underwood, said at tl 12th annual general meeting of shar holders in Port Moresby on May 2 For this reason, directors had recoil mended that no final dividend for tl year should be paid, and the directo had voluntarily reduced their fees t 50 per cent, for the year.
Mr. Underwood said the profit f( the year was £1,166/6/7, after pr( viding £750 for directors’ fee £2,282/0/8 for depreciation an £2,415 or amortisation of plant: tion property. (The previous year profit was £5,178/10/3).
An associated company, Rubbe: lands Limited, made a net proft fc the year of £12,445/8/2, after pn viding for directors’ fees of £1,50( depreciation, £2,492/1/2; amortis* tion of plantation property, £ and provision for income ta £1,923/4/. (The previous year’s prof was £10,535).
The board recommended paymer of a final dividend of 2i per cent, oi the issued ordinary capital of th company, making 71 per cent, for th year ended December 31, 1963. 122 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLI
Sydney Sales
PRICES 1 Apr. 22 May 22 Plantations . . 6/1 6/6 s Phllp .... 98/6 112/6 s Phllp (SS) . 64/- 62/seul Plntn. . . 95/- 90/- 1. Co 82/3 85/p Plantations 8/- 8/3 Industries . . . 22/- 18/9 .shall’s .... 19/- 19/ma Rubber . . 3/11 3/9 akl Rubber . . 17/9 17/9 •ua Rubber . . 9/11 9/9 urapau Plntn. . 5/- 5/bol Rubber . . 6/6 6/8 Be Is. Timbers . 4/1 4/11 rave 2/4 2/3 tation Holdings . 4/- 3/6 jnsland Insurance 95/- 93/6 jerlands .... 4/6 4/6 rl Rubber . . 8/3 8/- . Pac. Insurance 32/- 32/mshlps Trading . 13/- 14/11 Carpenter . . 35/5 35/7 cins Consolidated 3/3 2/8
Oil And Mining Shares
Dec. 4.
Apr. 22, May 22, 1958 1964 1964 eror . . b9/b6/3 s6/3 ma . b30/- S21/3 NQ lo G.D. b32/b46/3 b49/- G. Ltd. b2/3 s3/4 b2/10 Search . b9/9 s3/l Va b2/llVa of N.G. slid s3d b2d I. Mines — S3/10 b3/8 3 Opt. . — sl/8 bl/3 uan Apin. b4/6 s5/2 NQ er Dev. b91/- S307/6 b320 ar Oil . n.q. slOd b9d iAMBRIDGE CREDIT
Corporation Limited
Incorporated under the Companies Act of New South Wales Bth March, 1950. (ASSETS EXCEED £9.000,000) PER ANNUM 4 YEARS REGISTERED
First Mortgage
DEBENTURE STOCK
Interest Period
9% P.A 4 years BVa% P.A 3 years 8% P.A 2 years 7Vi% P.A 12 months 6Vz% P.A 6 months REGISTERED
Redeemable Deposit
NOTES
Interest Period
9% P.A. 3 years BVi% P.A 2 years 8% P.A 12 months 7% P.A 6 months
Funds May Be Withdrawn In
A Personal Emergency
Applications for debenture stock and notes accepted only on form of application attached to prospectus, obtainable from: Any Branch of the BANK OF N.S.W.
OR The Company's Offices, Suite 53a, sth Floor, T. & G. Building. 137 Queen Street. Brisbane 'Phones: 24-509, 26-981 OR Any Member of a Stock Exchange Underwriting Brokers: RALPH W. KING & YUILL, 340 Queen Street. Brisbane (Members of the Sydney Stock Exchange) CORRIE & CO., 400 Queen Street, Brisbane (Members of the Brisbane Stock Exchange) LEONARD G. MAY & SON (Members of the Stock Exchange of Melbourne) CC.123/G The Stock Market rdney Stock Exchange share price infer “Ordinaries” on May 22 was 33, on April 22, it was 365.54.
Trading Notes ECIMAL CURRENCY IN P-NG.: station will be submitted to the new se of Assembly in Papua and New nea for the adoption of Australian lical currency at the same time as is introduced in Australia. The ister for Territories, Mr. C. E. Barnes, announced that the Australian Govnent has agreed to compensate owners monetary machines in Papua and New nea on the same terms as those lying in Australia.
OCK COMPANY’S PROFIT DOWN: Hongkong and Whampoa Dock ipany Ltd., shipbuilders and ship airers, made a profit of only 173,258 (Hong Kong dollars) for the r ended December 31, 1963, compared ti $7,077,643 the previous year. This i due to a dearth of work for most the year. Repairs on a total of 1,058 sels with an aggregate gross tonnage 5,542,528 tons were carried out during year. These comprised merchant as of 26 nations and warships of five. [AIL FACTORY FOR LAE; Titan nufacturing Co. Pty. Ltd., a subsidiary Broken Hill Pty. Ltd., is reported to planning to produce nails and barbed e at a factory to be built at Lae, IG. Initial output will be about 1,000 s. 123 ICIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
VENTURA TRADING CO. PTY. LTD. 247 GEORGE STREET, SYDNEY Island Merchants and Buying Agents SOLE AGENTS FOR:
• Armstrong Siddeley Diesel Engines
• Ajax Liquid Alarm Relays
• Norman Petrol Engines
• Dunedin Engine Testing Equipment
• Hollandia Canned Fish
Highest farn 3; * rade requirements and merchandise, on consignment. or OCOa ’ Coffee, Shell and other produce handled lte rect to our Islands Export Manager with over 35 years experience in the Islands.
Cables: Ventura Sydney
Produce Prices (Unless otherwise stated, quotations are in Australian currency. Aust. £ equals approximately 16/- Stg., NZ, or W.
Samoa; 18/- Fiji; 20/- Tonga, Solomons & WPHC areas; 196 Pac. Frs.; $U52.26.) COPRA PAPUA-NEW GUINEA:—AII production is delivered to Copra Marketing Board, controlled by six members, including three planters’ representatives; and the Board directs distribution and sales, and makes payments to the producers. Production goes mainly to (a) Unilever, in UK, (b) Australia for local consumption, (c) crushing-mill in Rabaul, and (d) Japan as available). Prices generally tally with ruling rate in Philippines, with premiums for hot-air dried.
P-NG Board’s Tentative Purchase Prices for copra delivered main ports are: Dned> £6l/10/- per ton; FMS, p f r ton: Smoke-Dried. £59/-/- per ton.
FIJI:—No Government control—producers sell where they wish. Bulk of copra goes to crushing-mills in Suva £PS2/To/- es were: HAD r^ 81 SAMOA:— Official Copra a£d all P roductlon - sells same apd ma !f e f Payments to producers. it mainly to Abels Ltd., NZ crushers SlffiJ* 8 ° Pen market - Local price regrade 7 WaS £ 56/12/6 Samoan. first conSS GA: R S o a d eS f Te under Government Part of production goes to Europe, under arrangement with Unilever « prlce " “ Bsi pr ss ion ßoT r rM market S ’ balance on to the open St grade £ Rn/, . P o lC „ e in May was: ISI grade, £6O/-/-; 2nd grade, £5B/10/-marketed in Europe through® official Cop°ra Board, at prices based on Philippines rates less freight, etc. The Copra Board subsidises the price at: First Grade £6/4/2 per ton, Second Grade £2/2/1 per ton.
NEW HEBRIDES:—Price in early May was approximately £A3B/10/- (7,700 Pac. francs), French price at that time was 910 francs per metric ton, c.i.f Marseilles.
COOK IS.:—Copra goes to Abels, Ltd., of Auckland, who operate the only NZ copra crushing mill. Price paid Is average London price for previous three months less handling charges. Prices for second quarter, Apr.-June, 1964, is £NZ6O/8/10 Ist grade, £NZS9/3/10 standard grade— both f.0.b., Rarotonga.
Other Produce
COCOA:—lslands prices are usually based on the rates for Ghana cocoa.
Apr.-June shipment is £Stg. 182/10/- per ton, c.i.f., Sydney.
P.-N.G.: Sydney buyers on May 22 reported: Quote No. 1: In store, Rahaul export quality £175 per ton, or on wharf Sydney, according to quality £200; quote No. 2: Best quality, on wharf Syd., £205, in store, N.G. ports, £lBO (for UK, Continent and USA shipments).
W. SAMOA:—Nominal prices quoted In Sydney, May 12, were: Grade 1, £Stg.lBo- -2, £Stg.l6s, f.0.b., Apia.
COFFEE:—P.-N.G.: May 22, good quality A grade, per lb, 4/- to 4/2; B grade, 3/9 to 4/-; C grade, 2/9 to 3/6, c.i.f,, Sydney.
Overseas c.i.f. coffee prices were reported on May 15 as Kenya AA £ 5t.388-£ 5t.405, A £ 5t.384- £St.4Ol, B £5t.357- £ 5t.390, C £St.37l-£St.4l3; Bugisu AA £ 5t.380, A £St.37B, B £ 5t.372, Tanganyika AA £St.3BO, A £ 5t.378, B £5t.372; Uganda Robusta (standard) £St.3Ol.
PEANUTS. P.-N.G.; Sydney agents reported May 22—f.0.b., Lae; Kernels— white Spanish 1/5 lb.; Virginia bunch 1/7 lb.
RUBBER.—P.-N.G. price is based on Singapore rate, which on May 19 was: No. 1, RSS, Spot, 68% Straits cents per lb (23.84 d Aust.).
VANILLA BEANS.—Victor Karp Tulk Co., Sydney, reported May 22: White i yellow label processed, standard pac 33/3, green label 32/6, c.i.f., Sydney.
I Q^ ICI L < A J? st - ): Prices untll Ma y S T P, ' N-G " Dry brown and dress 112 lb bags, £59/10/- per ton, f.o Vitamised and enriched white, 112 bags, £65/15/- f.o.w. Other Pac. Islan Dry, white or brown, etc., £6B/-/- (i quantity), f.0.w., Sydney or Melbourne PEARL SHELL.—Quotations for A tralian M.O.P. Shell on May 22 Sydney independent shell agents we Sound £B5O, D £625, E £350, . £235 (in store Sydney). Cook Islan Penrhyn £NZ42S (approx.), f.0.b., Ra tonga.
TROCHUS.—Sydney buyers on May indicated the following quotations Islands producers: No. 1. Papna nominally £9O-£95 per ton, f.0.b., Papu Ports; N.G. — £9O, c.i.f., Sydney; 8.5.1 £9O-£95, f.0.b., Honiara. No. 2. — Pap £llO per ton; N.G., 8.5.1. £lOO i ton.
GREEN SNAIL SHELL.—Sydney buy quoted on May 22: No. 1: £325 ] ton, f.0.b., Rabaul; £3OO on wha Sydney. No. 2: £3OO (best qualit on wharf, Sydney; or £305 f.0.b., Islar ports.
CROCODILE SKINS—On May Sydney buyers quoted for 12 in, and ov first grade quality as follows: P.-N.G, 30/- per in., f.o.b. P-NG ports, sm scale (salt water); large scale (fre water) 18/- per in. 8.5.1. 24/6 (sm scale) del, Sydney.
PAPUAN GUM: £B2/15/- f.o.b. Islau port, £95 del. Sydney or Melbourne.
BECHE-DE-MER: Chang Sing Loong C Suva, quote P 2- (4 in. to 7 in.) to P 2 (9 in. to 11 in.) lb for well process commercial varieties.
ICEP Pty. Ltd., Sydney, are interest in offers of well prepared edible varietii SHARK FINS: Suva merchants ofl P4/6 per lb for well-dried fins of coi mercial quality. Sydney buyers quote 6 to 8/6 lb., ex-store Sydney, according quality.
London and US Quotations COPRA: LONDON, May 20, Philippinf in bulk, $193 US (equal £Stg. 68/18/10) per long ton, c.i.
UK/Nth. European ports. Malaya FMS, NQ, UK/Nth. European porl NEW YORK: May 20, Philippine $lBO US per short ton, c.i.f.. Pad) Coast ports. CEYLON: 910 Rupees p ton, c.i.f.
Coconut Oil: LONDON, May 20, Ceylo: 1% in bulk, £Stg.lo2/-/- per ton, c.i.: UK/North European ports. Straits, 2 1 /z t , NQ c.i.f.
Rubber:: LONDON, May 19, c.i.f., RS No. 1 Spot, 20%d Stg. lb, August c.i.) 20%d Stg. lb, June c.i.f., 20%d Sti lb. (£1 Australian is equal to about 2 US Dollars or 10V 2 Rupees.) Copra Market In his report on the overseas copr market for April, the chairman of th P-NG Copra Marketing Board, Mr. ] McDonald, said: There were some un quiet price fluctuations during the month but the trend was firmer towards th end of the period.
“However, it is understood that som fairly heavy forward purchases at aroun £Stg.67/5/- have been made recently b: certain large consumers, and thus 1 seems likely that prices might drop bad to between £Stg.67 and £Stg.6B durinf the next few months.” 124 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLI
GENERAL TIRE INTERNATIONAL GENERAL TIRE TfflE INTERNATIONAL Agence Alma 4824 Rue de I’Alma (Boite Postale 41) Noumea, New Caledonia S. V. MacKenzie & Company, Ltd.
P. 0. Box 39 Apia, Western Samoa NEW CALEDONIA — WESTERN SAMOA GENERAL TIRE GENERAL TtRE INTERNATIONAL Yet Sing P. 0. Box 255 Papete, Tahiti Summit Retreading Co., Ltd.
Walu Bay Suva, Fiji Islands FIJI
The Sign Of Quality And Service
Throughout The Pacific Islands
xcellence never goes unrewarded. With ill knowledge of this precept, General long lo decided to build only superb quality res. The decision has been rewarded. Toay, more and more people in the Islands 'e switching to General Tires because they ave learned to appreciate their excellence, ny one of the above General Tire Distribu- >rs can attest to this fact. We suggest you top at the sign of quality and service the ext time you need tires.
Jet-Air Jet-Cargo
125 ACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
Electrolux Kerosene Deep Freezer Electrolux kerosene-operated deep freezer conserves up to 100 lb. dry weight of pre-frozen packaged foods for many weeks in tropical ambient temperatures as high as 100 deg. Fahr. (38 deg. Cent.) or even higher, provided there is a drop at night. Even resh foods (meat, game, fish, vegetables, butter, etc.) may be kept tor several weeks or many times longer in C 80 than in an ordinary refrigerator.
Uses no tce or electncty. The Electrolux C 80 operates anywhere by kerosene, economically and with high efficiency.
Anywhere in the Tropics . 9 I ■m f. // & xi IMc NEW GUINEA CO. LTD.
Rabaul, Madang, Lae, Kavieng.
Kokopo 5.C.1.E., Noumea BURNS PHILP (N.H.) LTD., Vila, Santo ISLAND PRODUCTS LTD, Port Moresby E V. LAWSON LTD., Honiara 126 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
f o *L» / VJ* / o s.
O 4. 5£ 4&fc % % 50 ■ v
EVAPORATED weight 14Va oz. (13 02 in its most convenient form Heies the liquid milk you cun use for cooking and drinking, for creaming coffee, and as a topping on desserts. Carnation Evaporated Milk is simply country-fresh milk with over half the water removed, leaving pure, double-rich milk with the texture of finest dairy cream.
AS MILK Dilute creamy-rich Carnation with water for pure milk.
One \4j oz. can makes 1 n pints.
Wherever a recipe calls for milk, use diluted Carnation.
Carnation is 100% pure and safe Carnation Evaporated Milk is sterilised not once, but twice the second time after the milk has been sealed in the can. Unopened it keeps indefinitely. No other form of milk is so safe . . . none so nourishing and digestible.
AS CREAM Pour creamy-rich Carnation straight from the can.
Delicious with coffee, fruits and favourite desserts. fit In 11 Li 8M evaporated WEIGHT 14% 02. (13 m 128 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS M O N T H L
s
The Steel Tube Age
Steel tube is, almost without exception, the best way to convey things. Oil, gas, chemicals, wires, voices and water —all can be carried equally well.
Steel tube is, also, a most versatile structural medium, especially suited to humid climates with its resistance to corrosion when ends are properly sealed.
Stewarts and Lloyds are also distributors for galvanised iron, electrodes and welding equipment—John Valves and Saunders Diaphragm Valves.
Stewarts And Lloyds
(Distributors) Pty. Limited
For enquiries and supplies, contact any of the following merchants: New Guinea: Burns Philp, Steamships Trading, Colyer Watson, New Guinea Co., Rabaul Metal Industries.
Fiji Agent: Burns Philp (S.S.) Co. Ltd., Suva.
Established Cable Address: 18 70 “ WEYSEAS , SYDNEY”
Place yourselves in the hands of Specialists for your requirements in
Fresh Fruit & Vegetables
Potatoes & Onions
★ We invite your inquiries WEYMARK & SON (Overseas) Pty. Ltd. 14-18 STEAMMILL STREET, SYDNEY, N.S.W.
Deaths Of Islands People
Mr. R. A. Crompton :. Robert Allen Crompton, a lawyer and principal partner in veil known firm of Cromptons, at his home at Suva on May t the age of 69. :. Crompton was born in ington, Lancashire, and went to n 1905 to join his parents. His r had already set up the legal which still bears his name. ; later returned to England to d university and on the outbreak ar he enlisted for service. After var he lived in England for a or two and then joined the Fiji irnment service. 5 served in many parts of the ny, and was also in the Solomons i period. While on one of his is he qualified as a barrister and called to the bar of the Inner pie. 1935 he resigned from the Govicnt and joined Cromptons. He me senior partner on his father’s sment in 1946. r. Crompton married Miss le Hedstrom, a daughter of Sir nard Hedstrom. Mrs. Hedstrom a few years ago. icy had one son, Robert William, is a student at Auckland Unity.
Mr. Wu Yen Hung [r. Wu Yen Hung, a merchant one of the leading members of Chinese community in Vila, New rides, died in Vila on April 23. was generally known as Charley. i a graveside tribute, the French ident Commissioner in the New irides, Mr. M. Delauney, said that trley had played a big part “in construction of Vila as it has ! become”.
Mr. R. H. Beverley lr. R. H. (Bob) Beverley, a welliwn resident of Lae for the past years, died in Sydney on May 11 d 63. Mr. Beverley had his own :trical business in Lae and was a jctor of Guinea Brewery.
Mr. Tom Snow Slews was received in Rarotonga April of the death on Mangaia of m Snow, an elderly Englishman, o settled in the Cook Islands in ; early thirties.
Mr, Snow was a World War I veteran, who tried keeping a pub in an English county town after being discharged from the British Army.
Finding this too quiet, he migrated to Canada, where he led a wandering life, working at many different jobs.
He later did the same thing in the United States until he reached California.
From California, Mr. Snow moved to the Cook Islands where he became manager for A. B. Donald, first at Atiu, then at Mangaia. On Mangaia, he married Parani Katuke, of Atiu, and finally settled dov^ 1 - Mr. Snow was m bad health for many years before his death, and was something of a recluse in his last years. But the “Cook Islands News says he “retained his mordant sense of humour and spirit of mdependence” to the end.
Mr. Snow left a widow and three children, Ngari, Pauline and Richard. 129 kCIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE. 1964
I* 4 /< ¥ \ ’'"~7 m i . *. * f(& > COME AND
“ Enjoy The
“MATSON DIFFERENCE’’
IVI the most magnificent service afloat S.S. Mariposa S.S. Monterey a t Come aboard S.S. MARIPOSA or MONTEREY.
As you cruise the Pacific between Australia and the U.S.A. discover the princely comforts and magnificent service that only MATSON provides.
Enjoy the difference . . . choose a continental breakfast at the pool, a leisurely breakfast in the dining room or a lazy breakfast in bed . . . savour the gaiety of the cocktail hour wit hors d’oeuvres “on the house.” Dine in gourmet splendour in the Grand Manner of Matson and dance through star-filled nights in the Polynesian Club. Our service never ceases.
See the difference in the matchless beauty of Matson’s Ports of Paradise . . . Noumea, Suva, Niuafo’ou (Tin Can Island), Pago Pago, Honolulu and San Francisco. There’s time to spare as you explore them all.
Appreciate the full difference as you return in the Grand Manner of Matson through Los Angeles, Bora Bora, Tahiti, Rarotonga and Auckland.
Why not make 1964 your year to discover new friends, and enjoy this incomparable experience? There is no other way of travel to the U.S.A. that equals the Grand Manner of Matson.
We sail every three weeks. There’s so much more to know ... let us tell you, or ask your Travel Agent. 50 Young Sf., Sydney. Phone 27 4272 • 454 Collins St., Melbourne. Phone 67 7237 9041A/FP 130 JUNE. 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
ENGLAND - U.S.A. - EUROPE CANADA - SOUTH AMERICA -
South Africa - Japan
Bramair will arrange steamer and air reservations on all principal services for travel anywhere.
BOOK NOW FOR 1964 AND 1965.
No service fees charged.
Steamer Air Rail
Greyhound Reservations
COMPLETED.
Individual itineraries—a specialty— prepared FREE.
Tour Planning, Maps and Brochures Supplied.
Book Now With
Bramair International
PTY. LTD.
Incorporating James Burness (Travel) Pty. Ltd. 188 Goulburn Street, Sydney, N.S.W.
Phone; 26-1601.
Official Passenger Booking Agents
Coing To Tokyo?
[?]Hen Try Manila, Too
With the Olympic Games coming up in Tokyo i October, now is a good time to have a look at he possibilities of other tourist spots in that vicinity hat are within the reach of those heading for the james. Manila, capital of the Philippines, is one uch spot.
SMOULDERING ruin at the end of the war, Manila has >me a sprawling metropolis of tial villas, luxury hotels and itclubs. The city is, in fact, often ;ribed as a bubbling social [dron with its bright lights attracta steady flow of Filipinos from farm and travellers from abroad, he spacious boulevards are filled ill hours with vehicles of every age from air-cooled Cadillacs to ie-drawn rigs. The runways at lila Airport with its new terminal s become a strategic hub for jet el in the Orient. lanila is now making a big bid travellers. The aim is to attract tourists now pouring into prorous Hong Kong across the South na Sea, and to draw spectators at October Olympics from Tokyo.
Famous Hotels Tie famous old hotels, temples of lition overlooking the bay from vey Boulevard, are more than ibling their capacity. The Manila tel is not only adding 500 auditioned rooms but a convention t and arcade, while the Pilipinas mtting up an annexe and the Bay w has plans for another 150 rooms, at is more, seven new hotels, ably the Sunset with 500 rooms I the 12-storey President are being It. With the peso currently worth und 3.80 to the American dollar, ts for a single with bath average 3/7/-.
Several new restaurants have ;ned in recent months. Heading list is the Sulo, serving Filipino I European dishes in the Rajah om, American steaks in the Vinta ille and Chinese cuisine in the ;i-Ling Room.
Fwo of the great dishes of the d are roast pork with a thick liver ice (the feast at every fiesta), and cken-pork “adobo”, a spicy stew h black pepper, onions and garlic, ere are restaurants to suit every palate and passport from the Spanish Casa Marcos to the Cafe Indonesia.
The tours now available to travellers in and around Manila take in many of the leading attractions in the Philippines. You can make a sentimental journey to Corregidor, the famous “rock” in Manila Bay, where General MacArthur made his valiant stand.
Today, this national shrine with its rusty cannons and dark tunnels is a 45-minute trip by hydrofoil across the harbour. Visible across the way is the peninsula of Bataan with jungle fringing its white sands, the scene of another historic and hopeless battle in 1942.
A new package which takes a full day combines city sightseeing with a drive up to Tagaytay, a town perched on a ridge some 2,250 feet above sea level. The road climbs past coconut plantations, papaw orchards, rice paddies and fields of sugar cane.
There is a stop at the church of Las Pinas with its famous pipe organ made entirely of bamboo. Lunch is served at Taal Vista Lodge overlooking the lake with the crater of Taal Volcano in the centre, and fishing villages along the shore.
Week-end Excursions Weekend excursions draw many visitors from Manila to Baguio, the summer capital in the hills with its trout streams, pine forests and Alpine chalets. Everyone flocks to the Sunday morning market, where Igorot tribesmen sell pots, pans, fruit, straw, silver jewellery, fabrics and wood carvings. Cigar-smoking women actually do the selling, while the men in loin cloths and straw hats sit in the shade eating peanuts and corn-onthe-cob.
Anyone with a day to spare can drive from Baguio to the Banaue Rice Terraces, one of the most spectacular irrigation systems on earth. The terraces, carved by primitive engineers 3,000 years ago, stretch some 12,000 miles up and down the slopes. Natives who paddle about to do the planting live in grass huts built on stilts.
Thanks to jet runways and new hotels, the southern regions of the Philippines are now ready for tourists, too. An hour’s flight down from Manila is Cebu City, founded in 1565, the oldest in the land. Here, in 1521 Magellan planted a cross to "Pacific Islands Monthly" is a member of the Australian National Travel Association and the Pacific Area Travel Association. 131 4 C I F I C ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE. 1964
Se ch a Wimet!
Make the highlight of your Holidays this year a Melbourne Cup Cruise on M.S. "Kuala Lumpur" departing Sydney at noon on October 31; in Melbourne 9 a.m., November 2, to 6 p.m., November 7; back in Sydney, 3 p.m., November 9.
The excitement of Cup Day and the Spring Meeting at Flemington is combined with a relaxing sea voyage, making an altogether luxurious holiday.
All cabins are air-conditioned, most having their own private bathrooms.
Fares include accommodation and all meals, and range from £65-£lOO for a two berth cabin, and £7O-£l 10 for a single cabin.
★ For All Your Travel Requirements Consult The ★
Nelson & Robertson Travel Service
197 CLARENCE STREET, SYDNEY.
OR Our Territory Agents; Rabaul Trading Co. Ltd., Lae-Madang-Rabaul mark the coming of Christianity to the Far East.
While most of the country is Catholic, the deep south around Zamboanga is Moslem despite Spanish efforts to subdue the followers of Mohammed. The most delightful people of the south are the water gipsies who live in houseboats and fishing villages on the sea. The children who learn to swim before they walk are trained to dive for pearls, abundant in the tropical waters.
The only airline running a service from Sydney to Manila at present is Qantas. Pan American Airways has connections with Manila and the United States Trust Territory through Guam.
Qantas fares from Sydney are; First class—single, £200; return, £380; Economy class—single, £146/5/-; return, £277/18/-.
From Manila, the Qantas plane goes on to Hong Kong, and from there to London, providing the fastest service ever offered between Hong Kong and London.
Elapsed time westbound is only 18 hours 50 minutes, or two hours faster than any previous flights. The eastbound time is 18 hours 30 minutes, more than U hours faster than previously.
There are two services a week in each direction.
New Bus Link Across Fiji's Main island OACIFIC Transport Limited, which -*• operates buses daily between Suva and Lautoka, has introduced a new mid-day service to cater particularly for visitors to Fiji. It will be a welcome one, as anybody knows who has tried to make the long journey between the airport and Suva and keep within the budget. Taxis are expensive.
In addition to the normal timetable a bus now leaves Suva daily at 1.30, stopping at the Beachcomber Hotel, Korolevu Beach Hotel, Reef Lodge, Sigatoka, Nadi and Lautoka.
In the other direction and making the same stops the departure time is 12.50.
Bus travel in Fiji is economical and the Suva/Lautoka fare on this bus is 18/6 Fijian currency. We can recommend this form of travel to the budget tourist and already the bus company reports a steady increase in the number of visitors travelling by bus.
Museum In Tahiti Will Honour Gauguin A MUSEUM in honour of th( once-despised French painte Paul Gauguin, who lived in Tahit between 1891 and 1901, is being bail at Papeari, an attractive district abou 30 miles from Papeete.
The museum, which the promoter! hope will be a tourist attraction, wai well under way in April. It will com prise four buildings connected h\ roofed, but open-sided passageways.
One building will be a replica o: Gauguin’s long-since-demolished hous( at Punaauia; another will be thf museum proper; the third, which ii pyramidal in shape, will be a library and the fourth will be what the architect calls a sanctuary.
The museum is being built on front land owned by Mr. Cornelius Crane, proprietor of the botanical garden founded years ago by Harrisoi Smith.
The Singer-Polignac Foundation, al the suggestion of Mr. Andre Siegfried, is putting up the money; and the architect is Mr, Claude Bach.
A somewhat ironical aspect of the museum is that, although Gauguin did many of his best known paintings in Tahiti, none of them will be on 132 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY
YOUR NEXT LEAVE Modern up to the minute homes between Dee Why and Palm Beach available to Island Residents for Holidays. Write for information to:— J. T. STAPLETON PTY. LTD., ESTATE AGENTS, 133 PITT STREET, SYDNEY.
BE 5305, BL 1737 or any of the Branch Offices located at Dee Why, Narrabeen, Mona Vale, Avalon or Palm Beach. / at the museum as none are a be found on that island, and in Europe and America are . so highly that they are virtually i price. vever, there will be plenty of lin reproductions, books, photo- ;, manuscripts, etc., etc., which omotors expect will satisfy the lers. )on't Have To Be ilomat In Geneva ■ONE has to be a diplomat to njoy life in Geneva, according ecent tourist bulletin from there, tside the conference halls, the in says, there are diverse disans, and, beneath the interlal facade, there is a provincial i evident in many local customs. ien Geneva celebrates its indemce, for example, there are les and masked balls, but the e mark” of the event is a caulmade of chocolate with three like old iron cooking pots. ese chocolate pots are smashed ;aten to commemorate an eventlay in 1602 when the Duke of y, aided by Henry IV, sought to Geneva to his domain. ic night, while the city slept, Savoyards propped a ladder ist the high stone ramparts, and v men, planning to open the city to the Duke’s army, stealthily n to scale the walls. jwever, a Geneva housewife, suffering from insomnia, happened to be looking out the window, and she grabbed a pot of hot soup from the coals and doused the invaders.
She then bounced the pot off the head of the leader, and the ladder collapsed as did the Duke’s scheme to take Geneva.
Today, the walls still partly encircle the old city, and narrow lanes wind up to St. Peter’s Cathedral, where the Romans built a citadel in 58 BC.
But the city has many modern buildings, too. One of the newest is the 400-room Geneva Intercontinental Hotel, a 9 million dollar structure rising 18 storeys from Olympic pool to rooftop supper club.
This hostelry, under the management of Intercontinental Hotels Corporation, a subsidiary of Pan American World Airways, is the largest in Switzerland.
Like the city of Geneva itself, the decor of the hotel is both international and Swiss. The cuisine too, will feature the dishes of many lands as well as such Swiss specialties as fondue, raclette and rarebit.
Pan American says the opening of the Geneva Intercontinental is welcome news for tourists to that city as many a traveller in the past has been forced to bypass Geneva during the major conferences which seem to follow one on the heels of another.
Although the town is frequently linked with such names as Voltaire and Rousseau, Byron and Shelley, no man left a more lasting legacy than John Calvin. Everywhere are reminders of the great reformer who settled here in 1536, Lying at the south end of Lake Geneva (Lac Leman), Geneva is a flourishing resort both summer and winter. The lake is ideal for swimming, sailing, and water skiing. Excursion boats ply back and forth from one small wharf to another.
Along the shores are palatial chateaux, and many historic shrines, now occupied by diplomatic and oilrich princelings from the Middle East.
A full day’s cruise across the lake to Monetreux takes in the Castle of Chillon, immortalised by Byron. A major attraction for tourists on Lake Geneva is the 1964 Swiss National Exposition in Lausanne. A £l/15/9 ticket buys a trip on the monorail and a one-day tour of the Exposition, a showcase of Swiss culture and industry.
Interest In P-NG 9 laces in Papua-New Guinea, such this quiet corner of Madang, are •ly to see more tourists soon. A >rld Bank survey, to be released m, is expected to underline the ue of tourism to the emerging tertry, and in anticipation of new felopments, travel agents have )wn a greater interest in it. In \y, Miss Nancy Cochrane, an Auslian travel consultant in the New rk office of the Australian tional Travel Association, was in w Guinea studying latest travel deopments. 133 CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
Shipping and Airways Information
Shipping Time-Tables
All sailings are approximate and may vary by as much as two weeks, Sydney-Fiji MV Rona (4,500 tons) leaves Sydney approximately every three weeks for Suva and Lautoka with cargo and passengers.
Next Sydney sailing: June 24.
Details from Colonial Sugar Refining Co.
Ltd., 9 Bent St., Sydney (B 0151).
Sydney-Fiji-T onga-Samoa Union Steam Ship Co. maintains monthly services from Melbourne and Sydney (periodically from Adelaide) to Lautoka, Suva (including transhipments for Vavau and Niue), Apia and Nukualofa.
Next sailing: Waiana July 10 (approx.).
Details from Union Steam Ship Co. of NZ Ltd., 247 George Street, Sydney (B 0528); or other branches and agents.
Sydney-Fiji-Vancouver Pacific Shipowners Ltd., of Suva, normally operate a service three times yearly with the Lakemba along the above route.
Next sailing from Sydney; Late July (approx.).
Details from American Trading and Shipping Co. Pty., Ltd., 19 Bridge St., Sydney (8U4147).
Sydney-New Caledonia- New Hebrides-Fr. Polynesia Vessels of Messageries Maritimes Line, from Marseilles, via West Indies and Panama, call about every 'six weeks at Papeete (with occasional calls at Talohoe, Marquesas Group), Vila, Noumea and Sydney, and return by same route.
Next inwards voyages, ex-Marseilles: Caledonien; Papeete July 11-14, Vila July 21-22, Noumea July 23-26, arr.
Sydney July 29.
Oceanian: Taiohae Aug. 14, Papeete A ug. 16 ‘ 19, Vila Au S- 26-27, Noumea Aug. 28-31, arr. Sydney Sept. 3.
Next outwards voyages, ex-Sydney; Tahitien; Dep. Sydney June 10, Noumea June 13-16, New Hebrides June 17-25 Noumea June 26, Papeete July 2-6.
Caledonien: Dep. Sydney Aug. 1 No-rnea Auor. 4-7. New Hebrides Aug!
Noumea Aug. 17, Papeete Aug. 23-27, Taiohae Aug. 30.
Polynesie maintains monthly passenger sailings between Sydney, Noumea, Vila, Pt. Sandwich (occasionally), and Santo.
Next Sydney sailings: June 19, July 17.
Details from Messageries Maritimes, 36 Grosvenor St., Sydney (BU 2654).
Sydney-NZ-Fiji-Tahiti Panama-UK Southern Cross and Northern Star each make four round-the-world voyages per year, two west-bound, then two eastbound, calling at Fiji and Tahiti every trip.
Southern Cross: From Southampton (UK), via Panama, at Tahiti June 19-20, Fiji June 25, Wellington June 29-July 1, arr. Sydney July 4, thence via South Africa to Southampton, arr. Aug. 10.
Northern Star: From Southampton (UK) via South Africa at Sydney Sept. 9-11, Wellington Sept. 14-16, Auckland Sept. 18, Tahiti Sept. 23-24, thence via Panama to Southampton, arr. Oct. 21.
Details from Shaw Savlll Line, 8a Castlereagh St.. Sydney (BW 1828).
Sydney-Norfolk Is.
New Caledonia Colorado del Mar and Milos del Mar (owned by Societe Maritime Caledonienne, Noumea) carrying cargo only, make a regular three weekly voyage from Sydney or Melbourne to Lord Howe Is., Norfolk Is., New Caledonia (Noumea).
Next sailings; Colorado del Mar from Sydney June 13, July 4 (approx.).
Details from P. H. Stephens Pty. Ltd., 13 Bridge St., Sydney (27-8311), Sydney-Norfolk Is.-New Hebrides-BSI-Bougainville MV Tulagl leaves Sydney about every six weeks for Norfolk Is., Vila, Santo, Honiara and BSI ports, Bougainville ports.
Next Sydney sailing; July 2.
Details from Burns, Philp and Co. Ltd., 7 Bridge Street, Sydney (B 0547).
Sydney-Papua-New Guinea Malekula sails from Sydney for Brisbane, Pt. Moresby, Lae, Madang.
Alexishafen, Wewak, Rabaul, Pt. Moresby, Sydney. Next Sydney sailing: July 14 (approx.).
Malalta sails from Sydney for Brisbane, Pt. Moresby, Rabaul, Lombrum, Lorengau. Madang. Lae, Samarai, Brisbane, Sydney. Next Sydney sailings: June 9. July 28 (approx.).
Bulolo sails about everv six weeks: Sydney, Brisbane, Pt. Moresby, Samarai, Lae, Madang, Rabaul, Samarai, Moresby, Brisbane, Sydney. Next Sj sailings: June 12, July 24 (approx.) Montoro sails from Melbourne Sydney, Brisbane, Pt. Moresby, San Rabaul, Kavieng, Wewak, Madang, Pt. Moresby, Sydney. Next Sydney sai June 30 (approx.).
Braeside sails about every four \ from Sydney for Singapore and call cargo inducement offering) at Pt. Mo: (Papua) and Indonesian ports.
Sydney sailing: June 25 (approx.).
Details from Burns, Philp and Co. 7 Bridge Street, Sydney (80547).
Soochow and Shansi leave Sydney £ every four weeks for Brisbane, Moresby, Samarai, Sydney.
Next Sydney sailings: Soochow 22; Shansi July 6.
Details from New Guinea Australia (Swire and Yuill Pty., Ltd., agents Spring Street, Sydney (BU4701).
Slitan: Leaves Sydney approxinu every five weeks for Brisbane, Pt. Mor Lae, Madang, Wewak, Sydney, Sydney sailing: July 20 (approx.).
Sletta: Leaves Sydney approxlmi every five weeks for Brisbane, Ral Wewak, Madang, Lae, Sydney.
Sydney sailing: June 26 (approx.).
Details from Karlander NG Line H. Stephens Pty., Ltd., agents), 13 Bi Street, Sydney (BU8311).
Austasia Line’s vessel Matupl between Australian ports (turn rount Adelaide) and Papua-New Guinea.
Matupi: Dep. Melbourne May Sydney June 5, Brisbane June 8, Moresby June 13, Rabaul June 18, June 22, Madang June 24.
Details from Blue Star Line (Aust.) ] Ltd., 17-19 Bridge St.. Sydney (BU 12 Sydney - P-NG - Far East Australia-West Pacific Line’s Mo vessels maintain services between 1 tralia and Hong Kong via Islands pc Southbound vessels call at: NG, (quarterly), New Hebrides (irregular and Australian ports. Northbound ves from Sydney call regularly at NZ pc Samos: From Melbourne, dep. Syd June 10, arr. Brisbane June 12, Ral June 16-17, Lae June 18-19, Madang J 20-21, thence Hong Kong and Mani Delos: From Hong Kong and Mar arr. Rabaul June 11-12, Madang J 13-14, Lae June 15-16, Brisbane J 20-22, Sydney June 24, thence Adeh and Melbourne.
Details from Wilh. Wilhelmsen Ager 13 Bridge St., Sydney (BU6301).
PlM's shipping and airway schedules are up to the minute. The are revised each month just befor publication from information supplie[?] by the shipping and airways com[?] panies. 134 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTH
Daiwa Line
Direct Service
Japan/South Pacific
M.V. "DAISEI MARU" Voy. No. 16 (D/W 6,059 Tons) Dep. YOKOHAMA, JAPAN, June 9 GUAM June 16 APIA June 30 PAGO PAGO July 1 SUVA July 5-6 LAUTOKA July 10 NOUMEA July 14-15 VILA July 18 SANTO July 19-20 HONIARA July 24 Cargo for U.S. Trust Territory of Pacific Islands (Truk, Saipan, Yap, Ponape, etc.) and Nukualofa acceptable subject to transhipment with through B/L Reefer space and heavy lift available.
SUBJECT TO ALTERATION WITH OR WITHOUT NOTICE.
The Daiwa Navigation Co., Ltd.
Osaka: "Dailine'
Tokyo: "Funedailine'
AGENTS: GUAM: Atkins and Kroll (Guam) Ltd.
APIA: Burns Philp (South Sea) Company, Ltd.
PAGO PAGO: B. F. Kneubuhl.
NUKUALOFA: Tonga Shipping Agency.
SUVA: Banno Oceania Ltd.
LAUTOKA: Banno Oceania Ltd.
NOUMEA: Agence Maritime Pentecost.
SANTO: South Pacific Fishing Co. (N.H.) Pty. Ltd.
VILA; Burns Philp (New Hebrides) Ltd.
HONIARA: British Solomons Trading Corp. na Navigation Co. Ltd. vessels L g and Anshun call at Rabaul, on way north from Sydney to Hong Next vessels: ting: Dep. Sydney June 27 for ane June 29-July 1, Rabaul July thence to Manila and Hong Kong, ihun; Dep. Sydney July 31 for ane Aug. 2-4, Rabaul Aug. 8-9, e to Manila and Hong Kong, jails from Swire and Yuill Pty. Ltd., s, 8 Spring St.. Sydney (BU4701). minion Navigation Co. Ltd. (UK) Is maintain monthly service between a y and Japan (via Manila, Hong and Keelung), return via Guam Rabaul. mcis Drake: Dep. Sydney June 10, Brisbane June 12, Manila June 24, Kong June 27, Japan July 6. Guam 17, Rabaul July 22, Sydney July orge Anson: Dep. Sydney July 11, Brisbane July 13, Manila July 25, Kong July 28, Japan Aug. 6, Guam 17, Rabaul Aug. 22, Sydney Aug. tails from H. C. Sleigh Ltd., 115 Street, Sydney. Tel. (2-0253).
Sydney-Tahiti-Europe derland Line Royal Dutch Mail’s lie sails irregularly from Sydney for pe via NZ. Papeete and Panama il; ’ occasionally calls are made also suva. >xt northbound Tahiti call; From iey, at Papeete June 13-14. ist voyage, to be removed from Ice. stalls from Royal Interocean Lines, 261 rge St.. Sydney (2-0573). rope-Tahiti-New Caledonia BSI-P-NG-West NG regular service from the Continent UK via Panama, to Tahiti, New sdonla, BSI. P-NG and West NG is •ated Jointly by Nederland Line Royal ch Mail and Royal Rotterdam Lloyd.
Arimata (NL): From Continent and don, arr. Papeete May 26, Noumea e 5, Honiara June 10, Pt. Moresby e 13, Rabaul June 16, Lae June 18, iang June 19, Alexishafen June 21, arak June 22, Kota Baru June 24, k, Manokwari, Sorong. details from Royal Interocean Lines, George St., Sydney (2-0573). irope-Tahiti-New Hebrides- New Caledonia-Australia iessageries Maritlmes cargo vessels run nthly between France and Noumea via it Africa and Australia. From Sydney, sels go to Brisbane and Noumea: ren to France via Australian coastal •ts. *ext sailings from Sydney: Vanoise le 29 (Noumea July 5); Velay July 27 oumea Aug. 2), Dther MM vessels run between France d Sydney, via Panama Canal and clflc ports.
Next vessel; Godavery (Papeete June Vila June 23, Noumea June 27. istralia July 5).
Details from Messagerles Maritlmes.
Grosvenor St., Sydney (8U2645). 135 ACIFIC ISLANDS M O N T H L Y J U N E . 1964
The "Pacific's Most Modern Cargo , Consign refrigerated and general cargo b Crusader, for fast, efficient delivery to leadin Pacific Ports.
Regular services connect
New Zealand, Pacific Islands, New Guinea
JAPAN. SINGAPORE, MALAYA, INDONESIA, HONG KONG, MANILA.
Apply to Managing Agents— SHAW SAVILL & ALBION CO. LTD.
Branches and Agents throughout the Pacific. * £
Shipping Co. Ltd
• PlM's shipping and airways timetables are correct to time of publication.
Far East-Fijl-NZ-Sydney Royal Interocean Lines operate a service from Singapore to Fiji, NZ, and Australia, with three vessels (Van Cloon, Van Noort and Van Neck) calling periodically at Suva and/or Lautoka.
Van Cloon calls at Lautoka June 16, Suva June 18; Van Noort calls at Lautoka July 11, Suva July 13.
Details from Royal Interocean Lines, 261 George St., Sydney (2-0573).
Far East-P-NG-BSI-New Hebrides-Fiji-New Caledonia China Navigation Co., Ltd., vessels maintain monthly service from Japan southwards through P-NG, BSI, New Hebrides, Fiji and N. Caledonia, usually return to Japan direct.
Chungking: From Japan and Hong Kong due Kavieng June 19, Rabaul June 21, Madang June 24, Lae June 28, Pt.
Moresby July 5, Suva/Lautoka July 10, Noumea July 15, thence to Japan, arr.
Aug. 4.
Chengtu: From Japan and Hong Kong due Rabaul July 11, Madang July 15, Lae July 19, Samarai July 23, Pt. Moresby July 31, Santo Aug. 4, Vila Aug. 7, Suva/Lautoka Aug. 10, Noumea Aug. 16, thence to Japan, arr. Sept. 5.
Details from China Navigation Co., Ltd. (Swire and Yuill Pty.. Ltd., agents) 8 Spring St.. Sydney (BU4701).
Japan-Samoa-Tonga-Fiji- N. Cal.-N. Heb.-BSI The Daiwa Navigation Co. Ltd. runs a regular service from Japan, calling at Guam, Kota Baru (opt.), Apia, Pago Pago, Nukualofa (opt.), Suva, Levuka, Lautoka, Noumea, Vila, Santo, Honiara, thence returning to Japan.
Current voyage: Daisei Maru dep. Japan June 7.
New Zealand-Cook Is.
NZGS Moana Roa (40 passengers) makes approximately monthly voyages from Auckland (NZ) to Rarotonga (Cook Islands), with calls at Niue and some other Cook Islands when cargo warrants.
Details from NZ Department of Island Territories, Wellington (Tel. 45-117) or any office of Union SS Co. of NZ, Ltd.
NZ-Fiji-Tonga-Samoa Tofua maintains a service from Auckland to Suva, Nukualofa, Vavau, Niue, Pago Pago, Apia, Suva and return to Auckland. Next Auckland sailings: July 7, Aug. 4.
Matua maintains a service from Auckland to Lautoka, Suva, Nukualofa, Apia, Suva, and return to Auckland.
Next Auckland sailings: June 23, July 23.
Details from Union Steam Ship Co. of NZ, Quay and Commerce Sts., Auckland. (Tel.; 49-430).
NZ-New Caledonia - P-NG Far East Crusader Shipping Co.’s cargo ves running between NZ and the Far ] call at New Caledonia and Papua, am some instances, Guam. Next voyag Crusader: Dep. Auckland June 19, Noumea June 22, Pt. Moresby June thence Singapore, Pt. Swettenham, M£ and Hong Kong.
Details from Shaw, Savill Line, ag( 101 Queen St., Auckland. (Tel.: 30-2 New Zealand-Tahiti New Zealand Shipping Co. Ltd. ves operating between NZ and UK, Panama, make a call every two mol at Tahiti, northbound and southboun Next northbound voyage: Ruah dep. Wellington July 4, due Pap July 9.
Next southbound voyage; Rang! from London, due Papeete July 7.
Details from NZ Shipping Co. I Customhouse Quay, Wellington, NZ.
Tonga-Flji-Samoa Tonga Shipping Agency operates cargo and passenger service bet\s Nukualofa and Fiji (Suva, Laut( Ellington, Rotuma) with MV Aonlu. C are also made as required at Apia Samoa) and Pago Pago (Am. Sam( Turn-round in Suva is usually two di and the Agents there are W. R. Carper (Fiji) Ltd. 136 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
ORIANA i IBERIA ARCADIA ORSOVA SYDNEY depart June 22 Aug. 24 Sept. 14 Nov. 16 AUCKLAND arr/dep June 24-25 thence Sept. 17 Nov. 19 SUVA arr/dep June 27 Manilat Sept. 20* Nov. 22 HONOLULU arr/dep July 1 Sept. 16 Sept. 26 Nov. 27 VANCOUVER arr/dep July 5-6 Sept. 22 Oct. 1-2 Dec. 2-3
San Francisco
arr/dep July 9-10 Sept. 24-25 Oct. 4-5 Dec. 5-7
Los Angeles
arr/dep July 11 Sept. 26 Oct. 6 Dec. 8 HONOLULU arr/dep thence via Oct. 1 thence via Dec. 13 SUVA arr/dep West Indies tt West Indies Dec. 20 AUCKLAND arr/dep to UK to UK Dec. 23 SYDNEY arrive Oct. 28 Dec. 26 • Thence to Pago Pago, arr. Sept. 21. t Hong Kong and Japan. tt Thence Japan, Hong Kong and Manila.
Details from P. and O.-Orient Lines of Aust. Pty., Ltd., 55 Hunter St., Sydney (2-0317) MARIPOSA MONTEREY MARIPOSA MONTEREY
San Francisco
depart May 28 June 21 July 12 Aug. 6
Los Angeles
arr/dep May 29 June 22 July 13 Aug. 7 BORA BORA arr/dep June 6 June 30 July 21 Aug. 15 PAPEETE arr/dep June 7-9 July 1-3 July 22-24 Aug. 16-18 RAROTONGA arr/dep June 10 July 4 July 25 Aug. 19 AUCKLAND arr/dep June 15-16 July 9-10 July 30-31 Aug. 24-25 SYDNEY arr/dep June 19-22 July 13-16 Aug. 3-6 Aug. 28-31 NOUMEA arr/dep June 25 July 19 Aug. 9 Sept. 3 SUVA arr/dep June 27 July 21 Aug. 11 Sept. 5 NIUAFOOU arr/dep June 28 July 22 Aug. 12 Sept. 6 PAGO PAGO arr/dep June 28 July 22 Aug. 12 Sept. 6 HONOLULU arr/dep July 3-4 July 27-28 Aug. 17-18 Sept. 11-12
San Francisco
arrive July 9 Aug. 2 Aug. 23 Sept. 17 Details from Matson Lines, 50 Young St., Sydney. (BU 4272) UNION STEAM SHIP CO. OF N.Z.
LIMITED Serving the Pacific since 1875.
Regular Sailings by Modern Vessels From Melbourne and Sydney (periodically Adelaide) to Lautoka, Suva (including transhipments for Vavau and Niue), Apia and Nukualofa.
Also from Auckland to Lautoka, Suva, Nukualofa, Vavau, Niue, Pago Pago and Apia.
Ship your cargo by a Union Company Vessel.
BRANCHES AT ALL MAIN AUSTRALIAN, NEW ZEALAND AND ISLAND PORTS.
IK-Panama-Samoa-Fiji Fiji Direct Service is maintained ference vessels, sailing at regular r intervals out of London, via ~ for Apia, Suva and Lautoka, Gwyn and Co., Ltd., act as Loadkers in London, sailing, ex-London; June 18.
UK-Papua-NG-BSI Line operates a direct service from to P-NG and BSI, vessels going Australia for cargo-loading and ig to UK via Suez. Next vessels; ink; From Continent and London, Moresby June 18, Samaral June June 24, Madang June 27, Wewak I, Rabaul July 4, Honiara July 8. iank; From Continent and London, . Moresby July 24, Samarai July July 29, Madang Aug. 1, Wewak Kavieng Aug. 7, Rabaul Aug. 8, , Aug. 13.
Is from Bank Line (A/asia.) Pty. 19 George St., Sydney (BU2041). i-Tahiti-Am. Samoa-Fiji- Australia »n-Oceanic Line operates a flvepassenger-cargo service from Los with the Sonoma, Sierra and Terminal ports, in Australia, ith cargoes offering. Vessels call eete, Pago Pago, Suva, Sydney, e, etc. trans-Paciflc sailing; From Brislierra June 17 (approx.).
Is from Matson Lines, 82 Elizabeth iney (8U4272).
USA-Tahiti-Australia lean Pioneer Line ships on US ! Coast-Panama-Sydney service eriodical calls at Tahiti on southvoyage. Next Papeete calls: Gem July 5; Pioneer Star July Is from Wllh. Wilhelmsen Agency, ge St., Sydney (BU 6301).
JSA-Tahiti-Samoa-Fiji- New Caledonia c Islands Transport Line’s vessels le and Thor I maintain approxsix weeks service from West Coast merican ports to Pacific Islands.
I: Dep. San Francisco June 24, igeles June 27, arr. Papeete July ago Pago July 13-15, Apia July Suva July 20-21, Lautoka July Noumea July 25-28, Santo July 1, Apia (open), Pago Pago Aug. due Los Angeles Aug. 23, San co Aug. 26. sisle; Dep. San Francisco Aug. 7, igeles Aug. 11, arr. Papeete Aug.
Pago Pago Aug. 28-30, Apia Aug. . 1, Suva Sept. 4-5, Lautoka Sept, oumea Sept. 9-10, Apia (open), •ago Sept. 14-15, due Los Angeles 8, San Francisco Oct. 1.
Is from General Steamship Corn Ltd., 1 Bush St., San Francisco, ad Islands Agents.
Australia-NZ-Fiii-Canada-USA USA-Eastern Pacific-NZ-Sydney-Central Pacific-Hawaii
Airways Time-Tables
Trans Pacific Services
Sydney-Brisbane-Honolulu- Nth. America By Qantas Empire Airways, with Boeing 707 V-Jets NORTHBOUND Weekly from Sydney, dep. 5 p.m. every Sat., arr. Brisbane 6.15 p.m., dep.
Brisbane 7 p.m., arr. Honolulu 7.30 a.m. Sat. Dep. 9 a.m., arr. San Francisco 4.40 p.m.
SOUTHBOUND Weekly from San Francisco, dep. 8 p.m. every Sat., arr. Honolulu 9.50 p.m., dep. 11.59 p.m. Sat. Arr. Brisbane 5 a.m. Mon., dep. Brisbane 5.45 a.m., arr. Sydney 7.05 a.m.
Sydney-Fiji-Hawaii-USA
By Qantas Empire Airways
(Boeing 707 V-Jets) NORTHBOUND Tues., Thurs. and Sun.; Sydney (dep. 7 p.m.), Nadi (arr. 12.40 a.m., dep. 1.25 a.m.), Honolulu, San Francisco.
Mon., Wed. and Sat.: Sydney (dep. 137 I F I C ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
7 p.m.), Nadi (arr. 12.40 a.m., dep. 1.25 a.m.), Honolulu, San Francisco, New York.
Frl.: Sydney (dep. 7 p.m.), Nadi (arr. 12.40 a.m., dep. 1.25 a.m.), Honolulu, San Francisco (extends to Vancouver alternate weeks; from Sydney, June 19, July 3, 17, 31, Aug. 14, 28, etc.).
SOUTHBOUND Mon., Wed. and Frl.: New York, San Francisco, Honolulu, Nadi (arr. 3.25 а. dep. 4.15 a.m.), Sydney (arr. б. a.m.).
Tues.. Thurs. and Sun.; San Francisco.
Honolulu, Nadi (arr. 3.25 a.m., dep. 4.15 a.m.), Sydney (arr. 6.30 a.m.).
Sat.; San Francisco (service begins from Vancouver alternate Sats. (June 20, July 4. 18, Aug. 1, 15, 29. etc.) Honolulu, Nadi (arr. 6.55 p.m., dep. 7.45 p.m.), Sydney (arr. 10 p.m.). (International Dateline is crossed between Nadi and Honolulu.)
By Canadian Pacific Airlines
(Bristol Britannia and DCS Jet) NORTHBOUND Alt. Sat. (June 13, 27. July 11, 25, Aug. 8, 22, etc.): Dep. Sydney 11 a.m. by Britannia for Auckland (arr. 450 p.m.).
Weekly from Auckland, dep. 5.35 p m every Sat. for Nadi (arr. 9.40 p.m. dep. 10.35 p.m.i, Honolulu (arr. Sat! 10 a.m., dep. Sun. 10 a.m. by DCS) Vancouver, Amsterdam (arr. Mon. 2 25 p.m.).
SOUTHBOUND Weekly from Amsterdam, dep. 2 n m every Sat. by DCS for Vancouver.
Honolulu (arr. Sun. 10.35 p.m., dep ®“ n - -i. 1 ' 55 pm - by Britannia), Nadi (arr. Tues. 7.20 a.m., dep. 8.05 a.m ) Auckland (arr. 12.15 p.m.).
A”- Tues. u ne 16. 30. July 14, 28, Aug. n, 25 etc.); Dep. Auckland 1.05 p.m for Sydney (arr. Tues. 3.35 p.m.).
Date,lne crossed betWMB Sydney-Fiji (or Am. Samoa) Hawaii-USA
By Pan American Airways
(Intercontinental Jet Clippers) c * NORTHBOUND M P? rs - : Dep - Sydney 7 p.m for Nadi (arr. 12.45 a.m., dep. 1.30 a.m) szrvsru 08 Angeies ’ arr - Mon.; Dep. Sydney 7 p.m, for Paeo Pago (arr. 2.55 a.m., dep. 3.40 am) Honoiuiu and Los Angeles (arr. 7.10 _ SOUTHBOUND f S nr T £ UrS V , Dep - Los An eeles 9.45 p m Thurf Saf U ’ ? ,di <arr - 515 * m ' 532? St T&Vsat. S’a.rf sPio”5 P io” al“ am. Mon r m K and Sydney <“«■■ 8.55
Australia-New Zealand
Auckland-Brisbane QANTAS-TEAL with Electra Mk. n*« bane eP I. 20 AU p C S and “ am " arß Brls ' SUn iand D 6 P ss® r m bane 1 pm - arr - Auck - Auckland-Melbourne QANTAS-TEAL with Electra Mk. IPs Wed., Frl.: Dep. Auckland 8.30 a.m., arr. Melbourne 11.30 a.m.
Thurs., Sat.: Dep. Melbourne 12.30 p.m., arr. Auckland 7 p.m.
Christchurch-Melbourne QANTAS-TEAL, with Electra Mk. IT* Thurs.: Dep. Christchurch 9 a.m., arr.
Melbourne 11.40 a.m.
Sat.: Dep. Christchurch 7 p.m., arr.
Melbourne 9.40 p.m.
Wed., Sun.: Dep. Melbourne 12.30 p.m., arr. Christchurch 6.40 p.m.
Sydney-Auckland QANTAS-TEAL. with Electra Mk. IPs.
Dally: Dep. Auckland 9 a.m., arr. Sydney 11.05 a.m.
Daily; Dep. Sydney 1 p.m.. arr. Auckland 6.45 p.m.
Sun.: Dep. Auckland 10 p.m., arr. Sydney 12.05 p.m. •Mon., Fri.: Dep. Auckland 8 p.m., arr.
Sydney 10.05 p.m. tTues., Wed., Pri., Sat.: Dep. Sydney 12.30 a.m., arr. Auckland 6.15 a.m. • No service on June 15, 22, 26, 29. tNo service on June 13, 16, 23, 27.
BOAC, with Comet IV’s.
Tues., Sat.: Dep. Auckland 8.30 a.m., arr.
Sydney 10 a.m.
Mon., Thurs.: Dep. Sydney 9.45 a.m., arr. Auckland 2.45 p.m.
Sydney-Christchurch QANTAS-TEAL. with Electra Mk. IPi Tues., Thurs., Pri., Sat.: Dep. Sydney 12.15 p.m., arr. Christchurch 6 p.m.
Tues., Thurs., Fri., Sun.; Dep. Christchurch 7.30 p.m., arr. Sydney 9.35 p.m.
Sydney-Wellington QANTAS-TEAL, with Electra Mk. IP« Daily: Dep. Sydney 9.30 a.m., arr.
Wellington 3.25 p.m.
Dally Dep. Wellington 4.30 p.m., arr.
Sydney 6.50 p.m.
Wellington-Brisbane TEAL, with Electra Mk. II Sun.: Dep. Wellington 9.15 a.m., arr.
Brisbane 12.05 p.m.
Sat.: Dep. Brisbane 2.15 p.m., arr.
Wellington 8.35 p.m.
Wellington-Melbourne TEAL, with Electra Mk. II Sat.: Dep. Wellington 8.45 a.m., arr Melbourne 11.45 a.m.
Fri.: Dep. Melbourne 12.30 p.m., arr Wellington 7 p.m.
Australia-Pacific Islands
Sydney-Lord Howe Is.
Airlines of N.S.W. (Sandringham Flyingboats).
Return flight from Rose Bay base every Tues. and Sat. Departure time from Sydney is dependent on time of high tide at Lord Howe Is. • PlM's airways schedules are am alphabetically from point of dep< under five main headings; Pacific Services, Australia-New land, Australia-Pacific Islands, Territory Services and Internal vices.
Sydney-New Caledonia QANTAS—UTA with Electra Thurs.: Dep. Sydney 10.10 a.m.
Noumea (arr. 2.40 p.m.), dep. p.m. for Sydney, arr. 7 p.m.
Sydney-Norfolk Is.
QANTAS, with Skymaster DC4 Ain Pri.: Dep. Sydney 8 a.m., arr. NI p.m. Plight extends NI-Aucklar (See “Inter-Territory Services”).
Sun.: Dep. NI 2.45 p.m,, Sydney arr, p.m.
Sydney-Papua-New Guim Trans Australia Airlines and Ansett operate from Sydney to Lae and r with DCGB’s. TAA runs the si Mondays, Wednesdays, Fridays Saturdays: Ansett-ANA Sundays, days, Thursdays and Fridays.
NORTHBOUND TAA; Mon., Wed., Sat. dep. Sydney p.m., arr. Brisbane 11.50 p.m.
Brisbane 12.40 a.m. next day, an Moresby 6.10 a.m., dep. Pt. Mo 7 a.m., arr. Lae 8 a.m.
Frl.: Dep. Sydney 9.30 p.m., Brisbane 11.35 p.m., dep. BrL 12.25 p.m. Sat., arr. Pt. Mores a.m., dep. Pt. Moresby 6.45 a.m., Lae 7.45 a.m.
Ansett-ANA: Sun., Tues., Thurs., dep. Sydney 9.45 p.m., arr. Bri 11.45 p.m., dep. Brisbane 12.40 next day, arr. Pt. Moresby 6.10 dep. Pt. Moresby 7 a.m., arr. 8 a.m.
SOUTHBOUND Ansett-ANA: Dep. Lae Wed., Frl., Sun., 9.15 a.m., arr. Pt. Moresby a.m., dep. Pt. Moresby 11 a.m., Brisbane 4.10 p.m., dep. Brisbane p.m., arr. Sydney 6.55 p.m.
TAA: Tues., Thurs., Sun. dep. Lae a.m., arr. Pt. Moresby 10.15 a.m., Pt. Moresby 11 a.m., arr. Brli 4.15 p.m., dep. Brisbane 4.50 arr. Sydney 6.55 p.m.
Sat.: Dep. Lae 9.30 a.m., arr Moresby 10.30 a.m., dep. Pt. Mo 11.15 a.m., arr. Brisbane 4.30 dep. Brisbane 5.05 p.m., arr. S] 7.10 p.m.
Qld.-Papua-New Guinea TAA. with Fohker Friendship Pro Alt. Mon.: Dep. Townsville 1.50 Cairns, arr. 2.45 p.m., dep. 3.50 arr. Pt. Moresby 6.10 p.m. (Jum July 6, 20, Aug. 3, 17, 31, etc.) Alt. Wed.: Dep. Lae 12.30 p.m., Moresby arr. 1.30 p.m., dep. 2.15 Cairns arr. 4.35 p.m., dep. 5.35 arr. Townsville 6.30 p.m. (June July 8, 22, Aug. 5, 19, etc.).
Cairns-Pt. Moresby-Cairns
Ansett, with Fokker Friendship Pro Alt. Sat.: Dep. Cairns 3.35 p.m., arr Moresby 5.55 p.m. (June 13, 27, 11, 25. Aug. 8, 22, etc.).
Alt. Sun.: Dep. Pt. Moresby 9.05 arr. Cairns 11.25 a.m. (June 14, July 12. 26, Aug. 9, 23, etc.). 138 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTH
Fiji Direct Service
Via Panama
Regular Sailings every four weeks London to Suva & Lautoka Through Bills of Lading to
Labasa - Levuka - Apia - Pago Pago
Nukualofa • Vavau • Niue
For further particulars apply to
Bethell. Gwyn & Co. Ltd. Burns Philp
Beaufort House, Gravel Lane, (SOUTH SEA) CO. LTD.
London, E.l. Suva SERVICES Fiji-Am. Samoa PAA, with DC7C Aircraft lep. Nadi 12 noon, cross Internal Dateline, arr. Pago Pago 4.05 Sat.
Dep. Pago Pago 4 p.m., cross national Dateline, arr. Nadi 6.10 Wed.
Fiji-Am. Samoa-NZ 'EAL, with Electra Mk. 11.
Bp. Auckland 8.30 p.m., arr. Nadi a.m. Mon. Dep. Nadi 2 a.m., International Dateline, arr. Pago Sun. 5.45 a.m. )ep. Pago Pago 10 a.m., cross national Dateline, arr. Nadi Mon. a.m. Dep. Nadi 12.30 p.m., arr. land 4.20 p.m. iji-New Hebrides-BSI rways, Ltd., with Heron Aircraft id alternate Thurs. (June 11, 25, 9, thence every Thurs.): Dep. 9 a.m., Nadi arr. 9.40 a.m., 10.25 a.m., Vila arr. 1 p.m. Next (Tues. or Fri.) dep. Villa 8 a.m., j arr. 9.15 a.m., dep. 9.45 a.m., ara arr. 1.40 p.m. id alt. Sat. (June 13, 27, July 11. ;e every Sat.): Dep. Honiara 6.45 Santo, arr. 10.40 a.m., dep. 11.10 Vila, arr. 12.25 p.m., dep. 1.10 Nadi, arr. 5.45 p.m., dep. 6.30 Suva, arr. 7.15 p.m.
Fiji-New Zealand PAA, with DC7C Aircraft hurs.: Dep. Nadi 6.45 a.m. lor land, arr. 11.30 a.m. hurs.: Dep. Auckland 6.30 p.m.
Sadi, arr. 11.10 p.m.
EAL, with Electra Mk. ll’s.
Dep. Auckland 8.30 p.m., arr. 12.15 a.m.
Churs., Sat.; Dep. Nadi 5.45 a.m., Auckland 9.35 a.m.
Pri.; Dep. Nadi 8.45 a.m., arr. land 12.35 p.m.
Dep. Nadi 12.30 p.m., arr. Auck- -4.20 p.m. s., Wed., flights ex-Auckland, and 'hurs., flights ex-Nadi are operated tas under charter to TEAL.
Fiji-Tonga irways, Ltd., with Heron Aircraft It. Thurs. (June 11, 25, July 9, Dep. Suva 7 a.m., arr. Nukualofa > a.m. Dep. Nukualofa 12 noon, Suva 2.15 p.m.
Is from Fiji Airways, Ltd., Victoria le, Suva.
Fiji-Western Samoa irways, Ltd., with Heron Aircraft urs. (June 18, July 2, 16, 30, Aug. 27, etc.): Dep. Suva 7.45 a.m., cross rnatlonal Dateline, arr. Apia 1.25 , Wed. (June 17, July 1, 15, 29, . 12. 26. etc.). iurs. (June 18, July 2, 16, 30, Aug. 13, 27, etc.): Dep. Apia 10 a.m., cross International Dateline, arr. Suva 1.40 p.m., Fri. (June 19, July 3, 17, 31, Aug. 14, 28, etc.).
New Caledonia-Tahiti-Fiji- New Caledonia UTA-Air France with DCS Jet Wed.: Dep. Noumea 7.50 a.m. for Papeete (cross International Dateline) arr.
Tues. 4.10 p.m. Tues. dep. Papeete 11.15 p.m. for Nadi (cross Dateline) arr. Thurs. 1 a.m. Thurs. dep. Nadi 2 a.m. for Papeete (cross Dateline) arr. Wed. 8.05 a.m.
Sun.: Dep. Papeete 1.40 a.m. for Nadi (cross Dateline) arr. Mon. 4.25 a.m.
Dep. Mon. 5.25 a.m., arr. Noumea 6.30 a.m.
New Caledonia-New Hebrides DTA, with DC4 Aircraft Tues., Sat.: Dep. Noumea 8 a.m. for Vila (arr. 9.55 a.m., dep. 10.30 a.m.), Santo (arr. 11.45 a.m., dep. 1.15 p.m.), Vila (arr. 2.30 p.m., dep. 3.05 p.m.' Noumea (arr. 5 p.m.».
New Caledonia-NZ TEAL, with Electra Mk. ll’s Fri.: Dep. Noumea 1 p.m. for Auckland, arr. 4.25 p.m.
Fri.: Dep. Auckland 10.30 a.m. for Noumea, arr. 12 p.m.
New Caledonia-Wallis Island UTA, with DC4 Aircraft Monthly service (second Wednesday) Wed. (June 10, July 8, Aug. 12, etc.): Dep. Noumea 8 a.m. for Wallis Is., arr. 3.30 p.m.
Fri. (June 12, July 10, Aug. 14, etc.): Dep. Wallis Is. 8 a.m. for Noumea, arr. 1.30 p.m.
Norfolk Is.-New Zealand TEAL, by Qantas Skymaster (Charter) Fri.: Dep. NI 4 p.m., Auckland, arr. 7.45 p.m.
Sat., June 13, 27: Dep. NI 2.15 p.m., arr.
Auckland 6 p.m. Dep. Auckland 10 a.m., arr. NI 1 p.m.
P-NG-Solomons TAA, with Fokker Prop-Jet and DCS.
Alt. Mon.: Dep. Lae (DCS) 6 a.m. for Rabaul. Buka, Munda, Yandina.
Honiara, arr. 4.20 p.m. (June 15, 29, July 14, 28, Aug. 11, 25, etc.).
Alt. Wed.: Dep. Honiara (DCS) 7.30 a.m. for Yandina, Munda, Buka, Rabaul.
Lae, arr. 3.45 p.m. (June 17, July 1, 15, 29, Aug. 12, 26, etc.).
Alt. Tues.: Dep. Lae (Fokker) 9 a.m. for Rabaul. Buka, Munda. Honiara, arr. 4.20 p.m. (June 23, July 7, 21, Aug. 4, 18, etc.).
Alt. Wed.: Dep. Honiara (Fokker) 6.45 a.m for Munda. Buka, Rabaul, Lae arr. 12 noon (June 24, July 8, 22, Aug. 5, 19, etc.).
P-NG - West NG TAA, with DCS Aircraft Alt. Tues. (June 23, July 7, 21, Aug. 4. 18, etc.): Dep. Lae 10 a.m. for Madang, Wewak, Kota Bam, arr. 2.35 p.m.
Alt. Wed. (June 24, July 8. 22, Aug. 5, 19, etc.): Dep. Kota Baru 11.35 a.m. for Wewak, Madang, Lae, arr. 5.05 p.m.
Biak (West No-Lae
Garuda Indonesian Airways (DCS).
Alt. Tues. (June 16, 30, July 14, 28, Aug. 11, 25, etc.): Dep. Biak 6.15 p.m., Kota Baru, arr. 8.25 a.m., dep. 9.25 a.m., arr. Lae 1.30 p.m.
Alt. Wed. (June 17, July 1, 15, 29, Aug. 12, 26, etc.): Dep. Lae 9.15 a.m., Kota Baru, arr. 12.15 p.m., dep. 1 p.m., arr. Biak 3.10 p.m.
Tahiti-(Hawaii)-USA UTA, with DCS Jet Aircraft Wed.; Dep. Papeete 6 p.m. for Honolulu, arr. 11.35 p.m. Dep. Honolulu 12.20 a.m. Thurs. for Los Angeles, arr. 8.35 a.m. Dep. Los Angeles 12.30 p.m.
Thurs., arr. Papeete 6 p.m.
Fri.; Dep. Papeete 8.30 a.m. for Los Angeles, arr. 7.25 p.m. Dep. Los Angeles 1 a.m. Sat., arr. Papeete 6.30 a.m. 139 I F I C ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
Europe, West Indies, New Zealand
Australia And South Africa
One Class (Tourist) liners, Southern Cross (20,000 Tons) and Northern Star (24,000 Tons) — air-conditioned with the latest in amenities.
For full particulars apply: — VSrty branch ° r agency of Bum* Philp (South Sea Co. Ltd.) Cable Address; Burphil. rthl 11 sa 8 er ies Maritimes Papeete.
Cable Address; Messagerie Papeete.
Around the world east or west bound via Panam; and South Africa calling Fiji, Tahiti, Balboc Curacao, Trinidad, U.K., Las Palmas, Cape Towr Durban, Fremantle, Melbourne, Sydney, Nev Zealand. Occasional calls, Miami (Pt Everglades] Bermuda, Lisbon.
Shaw Savill Line
Tahlti-USA Pan American Airways, with Intercontinental Jet Clippers Mon.: Dep. Los Angeles 9 a.m., dep. Los Angeles 1 p.m., arr. Papeete 6.25 p.m.
Tues.: Dep. Papeete 8.25 a.m., dep. Honolulu 3.30 p.m., arr. Los Angeles 11.25 p.m.
Sat.: Dep. San Francisco 10 p.m., dep.
Los Angeles 11.59 p.m., arr. Papeete 5.15 a.m. Sun.
Sun.: Dep. Papeete 8.45 a.m., arr. Los Angeles 7.45 p.m., arr. San Francisco 9.45 p.m.
W. Samoa-Am. Samoa Polynesian Airlines Ltd., with DCS Aircraft Between Western Samoa and American Samoa—flight time: 45 minutes.
Dep. Faleolo (W. Samoa); Sun. 5.30 a.m., 8 a.m.; Mon. 8 a.m.; Tues. 2 p.m., Wed. 8 a.m.; Thurs. 3 p.m.; Sat. 3 p.m.
Dep. Pago Pago (American Samoa): Sun. 6.45 a.m., 9.15 a.m.; Mon. 9.15 a.m.; Tues. 3.15 p.m; Wed. 9.15 a.m.; Thurs. 4.30 p.m.; Sat. 4.30 p.m.
W. Samoa-Cook Islands Polynesian Airlines Ltd., with DCS Between Western Samoa and Cook Islands (Aitutaki and Rarotonga).
Dep. Faleolo 8 a.m. each Friday arr.
Aitutaki 2 p.m., dep. 2.30 p.m., arr.
Rarotonga 3.35 p.m.
Dep. Rarotonga 7 a.m. every Sat., arr.
Aitutaki 8.05 a.m., dep. Aitutaki 8.50 a.m., arr. Faleolo 1.20 p.m.
W. Samoa-Fiji Polynesian Airlines Ltd., with DCS Alt. Wed. (June 10, 24, July 8, 22, etc.): Dep. Faleolo 11 a.m., arr. Nadi next day 2.40 p.m.
Alt. Fri. (June 12, 26, July 10, 24, etc.): Dep. Nadi 4.25 a.m., arr, Faleolo alt.
Thurs. (June 11, 25, July 9, 23, etc.) 8.25 a.m.
International dateline crossed between Faleolo and Nadi.
Agents: Polynesian Booking Office Terminal, Air-Centre Buildings, Beach St., Apia; R. E. Pritchard, Pago Pago; Tasman Empire Airways Ltd., Nadi Airport.
Internal Services
Fiji Fiji Airways, Ltd., with Heron and Drover Aircraft Suva-Nadi-Suva: Two flights daily: Dep.
Suva 7.30 a.m., arr. Nadi 8.15 a.m., dep. Nadi 9 a.m., arr. Suva 9.50 a.m.; and dep. Suva 3 p.m., arr. Nadi 3.45 p.m., dep. Nadi 4.10 p.m., arr. Suva 5 p.m.—all Heron flights.
Suva-Nadi: Dep. Suva Mon., Wed., Fri and alt. Thurs. 4 p.m., arr. Nadi 4.50 p.m. (June 11, 25, July 9, 23, etc.).
Nadi-Suva: Dep. Nadi Tues., Thurs., Sat. and alt. Fri. 6.15 a.m., arr. Suva 7.05 p.m. (June 12, 26, July 10, 24, etc.).
Suva-Labasa-Suva: Dep. 11 a.m. Wed., Thurs., Fri., Sat. and Sun.
Suva-Labasa-Savusavu-Labasa-Suva: 11 a.m. Tues.
Suva-Savusavu-Matei-Suva: Dep. i: Mon.
Suva-Ura-Savusavu-Suva: Dep. 7.2 C Wed.
Suva - Savusavu - Labasa - Savui Suva: Dep. 11 a.m. Thurs., Sat., Suva-Ura-Suva: Dep. 7.20 a.m., Sur Suva-Labasa-Matei-Labasa-Suva: D( a.m. Mon.
Suva-Matei-Labasa-Matei-Suva: De a.m. Fri.
Suva-Savusavu-Suva: Dep. 11 a.m., Details from FIJI Airways, Ltd., V Arcade, Suva.
French Polynesia RAI, with DC4 Aircraft Services to the Leeward Group Sous le Vent), Society Islands.
Mon., Fri.: Dep. Papeete 9 a.m., Ri arr. 9.55 a.m., dep. 10.20 a.m., Bora, arr. 10.40 a.m.
Tues.: Dep. Papeete 7 a.m., Ralatei 8 a.m., dep. 8.20 a.m.. Bora arr. 8.40 a.m.
Wed.: Dep. Papeete 9 a.m,, Huahin 9.50 a.m., dep. 10.10 a.m., Raiate 10.30 a.m., dep. 10.50 a.m., Bora arr. 11.10 a.m.
Thurs.: Dep. Papeete 8 a.m., Bora arr, 9.10 a.m.
Fri.: Dep. Papeete 9 a.m., Ri arr. 9.55 a.m., dep. 10.20 a.m,, Bora, arr. 10.40 a.m, Mon., Fri., Sat.: Dep. Bora Bora 4 Raiatea, arr. 4.20 p.m„ dep. 4.4 E Papeete, arr. 5.35 p.m. 140 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTH
Dep. Bora Bora 9 a.m., Ranglroa, r. 11 a.m., dep. 3.15 p.m., Papeete, r. 4.45 p.m.
Dep. Bora Bora 2.45 p.m., Ralatea, r. 3.05 p.m., dep. 3.20 p.m., Huahine, r. 3.40 p.m., dep. 3.55 p.m., Papeete, r. 4.45 p.m. .: Dep. Bora Bora 5.30 p.m., Papeete, r. 6.40 p.m. ails from RAI, Quai Blr Hakeim, te, or any UTA office.
New Caledonia fSPAC, with Herons and/or Dragons ea-Mare: Tues. dep. Noumea 2.30 n. for Mare, Noumea, arr. 4.30 p.m. i. dep. Noumea 2.30 p.m. for Mare, umea. arr. 4.30 p.m. ,ea-Lifou; Tues., Wed., Fri. dep. mmea 8 a.m. for Lifou, Noumea, r. 10 a.m. Mon. dep. Noumea 8 cn. for Lifou, Noumea, arr. 10.15 a.m. ea-Isle of Pines: Mon., Wed., Fri., ,t. dep. Noumea 10.45 a.m. for Isle Pines, Noumea, arr. 12 noon, in. dep. Noumea 8 a.m. for Isle of nes, Noumea, arr. 5.30 p.m. ica-Ouvea: Tues. dep. Noumea 10.45 m., Noumea, arr. 2 p.m. Sat. dep. mmea 8 a.m., Noumea, arr. 10 a.m. ica-Houailou-Poindimie: Mon., Wed., l. dep. Noumea 1 p.m. for Houailou id Poindimle, Noumea, arr. 4.10 p.m. lea-Kone-Koumac; Mon., Thurs. dep. mmea 1.15 p.m. for Kone and sumac, Noumea, arr. 4.15 p.m.
New Hebrides ew Hebrides Airways, with Drover. , Fri.: Dep. Vila 8.30 a.m. for mna, arr. 9.15 a.m., dep. 3.30 m. arr. Vila 4.45 p.m. (Usually flight is made from Tanna to either neityum, Futuna, Aniwa or rromanga before the scheduled jparture for Vila). ; Dep. Vila 8.30 a.m. for Tongoa, arr. 05 a.m., dep. 10 a.m., Vila, arr. 10.35 m. (with extension to Pentecost and anto on demand). tails from New Hebrides Airways, Papua-New Guinea Operated by TAA MORESBY-LAE (Fokker Prop-Jet) Tues.; Dep. Pt. Moresby 6.40 a.m., rr. Lae 7.40 a.m. (June 23, July 7, L, Aug. 4, 18, etc.).
LE-RABAUL-LAE (Fokker Prop-Jet) Tues. Dep. Lae 9 a.m.. Rabaul arr. 3.55 a.m. (June 23, July 7, 21, Aug. , 18, etc.).
Wed.; Dep. Rabaul 10.10 a.m., Lae rr. 12 noon (June 24, July 8, 22, Aug. , 19, etc.).
Port Moresbt-Daru (Dcs)
Fri.: Dep. Pt. Moresby 8.45 a.m. for )aru, returning same day via Balimo, rr. 2.25 p.m. (June 12, 26, July 10, 4, Aug. 7, 21, etc.).
MORESBY-WEST. PAPUA (Catalina) .: Dep. Pt. Moresby 8 a.m. for Kerema, Jaimuru, Kikori, Paibuna, Kerema, Pt.
Moresby, arr. 3.25 p.m.
Thurs.; Dep. Pt. Moresby 7 a.m. for )aru, D’Albertls Junction, Lake lurray, arr. 1.25 p.m. (June 18, July , 16. 30, Aug. 13, 27, etc.).
Fri.: Dep. Lake Murray 7 a.m. for 3aru, Pt. Moresby, arr. 11.40 a.m.
June 19, July 3, 17, 31, Aug. 14, 28, itc.).
PT. MORESBY-EAST PAPUA (Catalina) Alt. Mon.; Dep. Pt. Moresby 8 a.m. for Samarai, Esa-Ala, Samaral, Pt.
Moresby, arr. 4.30 p.m. (June 15, 29, July 13, 27, Aug. 10, 24, etc.).
Fourth Mon.: Dep. Pt. Moresby 8 a.m. for Samarai, Deboyne, Samaral, Pt.
Moresby, arr. 4.30 p.m. (June 22, July 27, etc.).
Fourth Mon.; Dep. Pt. Moresby 8 a.m. for Samarai, Pt. Moresby, arr. 4.30 p.m. (June 8, July 6, etc.).
LAE-MAD ANG-WEWAK-MANUS-
Kavieng-Rabaul Service (Dcs)
Mon., Fri.: Dep. Lae 7.30 a.m. for Madang, Wewak, Manus, Kavieng, Rabaul, arr. 4.05 p.m.
Mon.: Dep. Rabaul 7.30 a.m. for Kavieng.
Manus, Wewak, arr. 12.50 p.m.
Sat.: Dep. Lae 9 a.m., for Madang, Wewak, arr. 11.55 a.m.
Sun., Tues.: Dep. Wewak 6 a.m. for Madang, Lae, arr. 8.45 a.m.
Wed.; Dep. Kavieng 6.30 a.m. for Rabaul, arr. 7.35 a.m.
Tues.; Dep. Rabaul 12.45 p.m. for Kavieng, arr. 1.50 p.m.
Central Highlands (Dcs)
Wed.: Dep. Madang 9.40 a.m. for Wabag, Wapenamunda, Baiyer R., Hagen, Banz, MinJ, Goroka, Lae, arr. 3.55 p.m.
Thurs.: Dep. Lae 9 a.m. for Goroka, MinJ, Banz. Hagen, Baiyer R., Wapenamunda, Wabag, Madang, arr. 3.20 p.m.
Sun.; Dep. Mt. Hagen 7.20 a.m. for Banz (opt.), Lae, arr. 9 a.m.
Sun.; Dep. Lae 9 a.m. for Goroka, MinJ, Banz, Mt. Hagen, arr. 12.05 p.m.
Pt. Moresby-Popondetta-Lae (Dcs)
Sat.; Dep. Pt. Moresby 11.30 a.m. for Kokoda (opt.), Popondetta, Garaina, Lae, arr. 2.05 p.m.
Sat.: Dep. Lae 7.40 a.m. for Gazaina, Popondetta, Kokoda (opt.), Pt. Moresby, arr. 10.15 a.m.
Pt. Moresby-Wau-Bulolo-Lae (Dcs)
Thurs., Sun.: Dep. Pt. Moresby 10.45 a.m. for Wau, Bulolo, Lae, arr. 1.20 p.m.
Thurs., Sun.: Dep. Lae 7.30 a.m. for Bulolo, Wau. Pt. Moresby, arr. 10 a.m.
Madang-Goroka-Lae (Dcs)
Tues.; Dep. Lae 9 a.m. for Goroka, MinJ, Banz, Hagen, Madang, arr. 1.30 p.m.
Mon.: Dep. Madang 11.30 a.m. for Hagen, Banz, MinJ, Goroka, Lae, arr. 3.55 p.m.
Pt. Moresby-Goroka-Madang (Dcs)
Sun., Tues., Thurs.; Dep. Pt. Moresby 8 a.m. for Goroka, Madang, arr. 10.50 a.m.
Sun., Tues., Thurs.: Dep. Madang 7.30 a.m. for Goroka, Pt. Moresby, arr. 10.20 a.m.
Lae-Rabaul-Lae (Dcs)
Tues., Thurs., Sun.: Dep. Lae 9.30 a.m., arr. Rabaul 12.05 p.m.
Sun., Tues., Thurs.; Dep. Rabaul 6 a.m., arr. Lae 8.35 a.m.
Thurs.: Dep. Lae 10 a.m. for Flnschhafen, Kandrian, Talasea, Hoskins, Jacquinot Bay. Rabaul, arr 3.10 p.m.
Sat.: Dep. Rabaul 9 a.m. for Jacquinot Bay, Hoskins, Talasea, Kandrian, Cape Gloucester (on request), Flnschhafen, Lae, arr. 2.10 p.m.
LAE-FINSCHHAFEN-LAE (Cessna) Tues.; Dep. Lae 7 a.m. for Pinschhafen, Lae, arr. 8.15 a.m.
Rabaul-Buin-Rabaul (Dcs)
Wed., Fri.; Dep. Rabaul 8 a.m. for Buka, Wakunal, Aropa, Buln, Kleta, Wakunal, Buka, Rabaul, arr. 3.40 p.m.
Rabaul-Talasea-Rabaul
Tues.: Dep. Rabaul 12.30 p.m. for Hoskins, Talasea, Rabaul, arr. 3.45 p.m.
Operated by Ansett-MAL (with DOS’s) Mon.: Dep. Lae 6.30 a.m. for Goroka, Madang, Rabaul, arr. 11.35 a.m.
Dep. Goroka 7.45 a.m. for Kalnantu, Lae, Wau, Pt. Moresby, Wau. Lae, Goroka, Mt. Hagen, arr. 5 p.m.
Tues.: Dep. Rabaul 7 a.m. for Wewak, Madang, Goroka, Lae, arr. 3 p.m.
Wed.; Dep. Lae 6.30 a.m. for Goroka, Madang, Wewak, Momote, Kavieng, Rabaul, arr. 4 p.m.
Dep. Lae 8.55 a.m. for Goroka, Madang, Wewak, arr. 12.15 p.m.
Dep. Lae 9.20 a.m. for Rabaul, arr. 12 noon.
Dep. Rabaul 5.45 a.m. for Lae, arr. 8.25 a.m.
Dep. Madang 7 a.m. for Goroka, Lae, arr. 8.45 a.m.
Dep. Mt. Hagen 6.30 a.m. for Banz, Goroka. Wau. Pt. Moresby, Wau, Lae, Goroka, Madang, arr. 3.45 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Wewak 6.15 a.m. for Goroka. Wewak, Vanimo, Wewak, arr. 2.45 p.m.
Dep. Madang 8 a.m. for Mt. Hagen, Banz, MinJ, Madang, arr. 11.45 a.m.
Dep. (Plaggio) Goroka 8.15 a.m. for Mt. Hagen, arr. 8.50 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Mt. Hagen 6.30 a.m. for Banz, Goroka, arr. 7.30 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Wewak 8.30 a.m. for Luml, Nuku, Wewak, arr. 11.05 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Wewak 1 p.m. for Maprlk, Yangoru, Wewak, arr. 2.45 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Mt. Hagen 9.30 a.m. for Mendl, Erave, lallbu, Kagua, Mt, Hagen, arr. 12 noon.
Thurs.; Dep. Madang 7.30 a.m. for Goroka, Wau, Pt. Moresby, Wau, Goroka, arr. 2.30 p.m.
Dep. Rabaul 7 a.m. for Kavieng, Momote, Wewak, Madang, Goroka, Lae, arr. 4.40 p.m.
Dep. (Cessna or Piaggio) Mt. Hagen 1.30 p.m. for Banz, MinJ, Goroka, arr. 2.50 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Wewak 8.30 a.m. foi Telefomin, Wewak, arr. 11.40 a.m.
Dep. (Cessna) Wewak 8.30 a.m. for Aitape, Slssano, Vanimo, Dagua, Wewak, arr. 12.15 p.m.
Dep. (Cessna or Piaggio) Wewak 3 p.m. for Angoram, Wewak, arr. 4 p.m.
Fri.: Dep. Lae 8.55 a.m. for Goroka, Madang, arr. 10.35 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Lae 9.05 a.m. for Kainantu, Goroka, MinJ, Banz, Mt Hagen, Wabag, Mt. Hagen, arr. 1.10 p.m.
Dep. Lae 9.20 a.m. for Rabaul, arr. 12 noon.
Dep. Wewak 6.15 a.m. for Madang, Lae, arr. 8.50 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Goroka 7.30 a.m. for Lae, arr. 8.25 a.m.
Dep. Rabaul 5.45 a.m. for Lae, arr. 8.25 a.m.
Dep. Lae 6.30 a.m. for Goroka, Madang, Wewak, Momote, Kavieng, Rabaul, arr. 4 p.m.
Dep. Goroka 7.45 a.m. for Wau, Pt.
Moresby, Wau, Lae, Goroka, arr. 2.40 p.m.
Dep. Madang 8 a.m. for Mt. Hagen, Banz, MinJ, Goroka, MinJ, Banz, Mt.
Hagen, Madang, arr. 3.30 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Mt. Hagen 9.30 a.m. for Mendi, Kagua, Erave, lallbu, Mt.
Hagen, arr. 12 noon.
Sat.; Dep. Lae 8.55 a.m. for Goroka, Madang, arr. 10.35 a.m.
Dep. Lae 9.20 a.m. for Rabaul, arr, 12 noon.
Dep. Madang 7 a.m. for Goroka, Lae, arr. 8.45 a.m.
Dep. Rabaul 5.45 a.m. for Lae, arr. 8.25 a.m. 141 CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY JUNE, 1964
FROM SYDNEY (Anst. currency) T< Single Reti £ s. d. £ Moresby . . . 48 14 0 92 i Lae .... 60 4 0 115 i Eabaul . . . 70 9 0 135 ii Noumea . . . 56 18 0 108 Honiara . 92 4 0 179 i Norfolk Is. . 27 10 0 52 i Lord Howe 16 9 0 32 ii Nadi .... 85 9 0 162 i Suva .... 91 5 0 175 < Auckland . . 54 10 0 103 i: Christchurch . 54 10 0 103 i: Wellington . . 54 10 0 103 i: Pago Pago . . 121 4 0 278 ii Honolulu . . . 282 12 0 536 1!
San Francisco 350 9 0 665 1) Vancouver . . 350 9 0 665 U Papeete . . . 181 5 0 344 i
From Auckland (Nz
currency) 1 TC Nadi .... 43 0 0 81 i Norfolk Is. . . 20 15 0 39 S Papeete . . . 114 10 0 217 1] Noumea . . . 45 10 0 86 1< FROM SUVA (Fiji currency) TO— Nadi .... 5 16 0 12 15 Nukualofa . . 18 10 0 45 Apia .... 25 0 0 47 1( Honiara . . . 67 10 0 128 c Vila 30 13 0 58 c Santo .... 39 14 0 75 £ FROM NADI (Fiji currency) TO Pago Pago . . 31 15 0 60 1 Noumea . . . 35 11 0 67 11 Papeete . . . 87 5 0 165 ie Pares quoted are First ' Class.
The Pacific Islands Society (Founded 1937) Visitors from the Pacific Islands to Sydney, or persons interested in Islands affairs, are invited to communicate with the Honorary Secretary of the above Society which was formed to constitute a social and cultural centre for those Interested in the Pacific Islands.
Regular meetings and social gatherings, with lectures, are held at the Feminist Club Rooms, 7th Floor, 77 King St.
Sydney, on the last Thursday of each month, at 8 p.m.
Address for correspondence;— THE PACIFIC ISLANDS SOCIETY, Box 2434, G.P.0., Sydnry.
Pacific Islands Transport Tine
Owners: Thor Dahls Hvalfangerselskap A/S Sandefjord, Norway Motor Vessels "THORSISLE" and "THOR I"
Regular Freight and Passenger Services between Pacific Coast Ports of U.S.A. and Canada and
Tahiti - Samoa - Tonga - Fiji - New Caledonia
New Hebrides New Guinea
GENERAL STEAMSHIP CORPORATION LTD. . General Agents ? an Franciseo 4, California, U.S.A Maritime Inter- SYDNEY—Birt & Co. (Pty.) Ltd.
PAPEETE Agence Rationale Tahiti.
PAGO PAGO—G. H. C. Reid & Co. li T B “ ,n! PI,Mp tSo '” h *••) Company, NOUMEA Etahlissoments Ballanrl.
“ 1 Will (X V>U, V r I 7 ./ LI u • SUVA—Burns Philp (South Sea) Company, L t d.
LAE/RABAUL—Burns Philp (New Guinea) PORT VILA--Comptoirs Francais des Nouvelles Hebrides.
Dep. Rabaul 6.30 a.m. for Kavieng, Momote, Wewak. Madang, Goroka, Lae, arr. 4.40 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Wewak 8.30 a.m. for Ambuntl, Burul, Wewak, arr. 10.05 a.m.
Operated by Papuan Airlines Transport Ltd. (“Patalr”) Mon.: Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 7.30 a.m. for Popondetta, Kokoda, Pt. Moresby, arr. 10.10 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 8.30 a.m. for Rorona, Aroa, Kalruku, Bereina, Taplni, Woitape, Taplni, Bereina, Kalruku, Aroa (opt.), Rorona (opt.), Pt. Moresby, arr. 1.30 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 8.20 a.m. for Taplni. Woitape (opt.), Pt. Moresby, arr. 9.50 a.m. (30 min. later if call made at Woitape).
Tues.: Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 8.30 a.m. for Kokoda. Popondetta, Pt. Moresby, arr. 11 a.m.
Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 7.30 a.m. for Daru, Ballmo. Daru, Pt. Moresby, arr. 1.50 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 11 a.m. for Cape Rodney, Paili (opt.), Pt.
Moresby, arr. 12.50 p.m. (20 min. later if call made at Paili).
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 8.30 a.m. for Woitape, Taplni, Pt. Moresby arr. 10.30 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 1.45 p.m. for Rorona (opt.), Aroa (opt.) Kairuku, Bereina, Pt. Moresby, arr. 3.35 p.m. (35 min. later if call made at Rorona and Aroa» Wed.; Dep. *DC3) Pt. Moresby 7.30 a.m. for Popondetta, Kokoda. Pt. Moresby arr. 10.10 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 8.30 a.m. or Tapini. Woitape, Pt. Moresby, arr. 10.30 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 1.45 p.m. for Rorona, Aroa, Kalruku Pt Moresby, arr, 3.35 p.m.
Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 11.15 a.m. for Bereina, Pt. Moresby, arr. 2 p.m.
Thurs.; (Piaggio) Dep. Pt. Moresby 8.30 a.m. for Woitape. Taplni, Pt. Moresby arr. 10.30 a.m. „ De P- (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 1.45 p.m £ T t Rorona (opt.). Aroa (opt.).
Kairuku, Bereina, Pt. Moresby, arr. 3.35 p.m. (35 min. later if call made at Rorona and Area).
Alt. Thurs. (June 18, July 2, 16, 30, etc.); Dep. (DCS) Pt. Moresby 7 a.m. for Popondetta, Embl, Wanigela, Viviganl, Losuia, Popondetta, Pt. Moresby, arr. 1.45 p.m. (June 11, 25, July 9, 23, etc.): Dep. (DCS) Pt. Moresby 7 a.m. for Popondetta, Pt. Moresby, arr. 9 a.m.
Fri.: Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 7.30 a.m. for Popondetta, Pt. Moresby, arr. 9.30 a.m.
Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 10.30 a.m. for Gurney, Pt. Moresby, arr. 2 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 11 a.m. for Cape Rodney, Paili, Pt. Moresby, arr. 1.10 p.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 8.30 a.m. for Taplni, Woitape, Pt. Moresby, arr. 10.30 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 1.45 p.m. for Rorona, Aroa, Kalruku, Pt.
Moresby, arr. 3.35 p.m.
Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 2.30 p.m. for Bereina, Pt. Moresby, arr. 4.35 p.m.
Sat.: Dep. (DC3) Pt. Moresby 7.30 a.m. for Popondetta, Kokoda, Pt. Moresby, arr. 10.10 a.m.
Dep. (Piaggio) Pt. Moresby 8.30 a.m. for Woitape, Tapini, Pt. Moresby, arr. 10.30 a.m.
Pacific Air Fares
(Approx. First Class)
Exchange Rates
FlJl.—Through BANK OF NSW, i BANK and BANK OF NZ. Australia Fiji, basis £lOO Fiji: Buying, £AIII/J Selling, £ All 3. Fiji-London, basis £ London: B, £llO/15/-; S. £ll2. NZ-1 basis £lOO NZ: B, £lll/11/9; £llO/4/3.
SAMOA.—Through BANK OF NZ. A tralia on Samoa, basis £lOO Samoa: T. B. £AI23/12/6; S. £AI24/10/9. Sam London, basis £lOO London: B. £99/1 S. £lOl/10/-. Samoa-NZ, basis £lOO 1 B. £100; S. £lOO/10/-. Samoa-Fiji hi £lOO Samoa: B. £111; S. £llO.
NORFOLK IS.—Commonwealth B: quotes exchange rate Australia-Norf Island: 5/- per £AIOO.
Papua-Ng. Commonwealth Ba
(Pt. Moresby, Lae, Rabaul, Goroka, Bul< Kavieng, Madang, Wewak), BANK NSW (branches: Port Moresby, Lae, Bul( Rabaul, Madang, Samaral, Goro agencies: Wau, Boroko, Kokopo), A BANK (Port Moresby, Lae, Rabaul) a
National Bank Of A/Asia. P
Moresby, Lae) quote exchange n Australla-Papua-NG: 10/- per £AIOO.
French Pacific Colonies.—Pad
francs (CPF) are used In New Ca donia, New Hebrides, and Pr. Polynes FRENCH BANK (Comptoir Natioi D’Escompte de Paris, Sydney), in M 1964, quoted: Selling, Noumea, 196 Pi francs to £ Aust.; Papeete 196 (nor Pac. francs to £ Aust.; 247 Pac. frar to £ Stg., 96.5 Pac. francs to US Noumea 18 Pac. francs to 1 Fren franc (conversion rate: 1 Pac. fra equals 0.055 French franc), Parls-Londc Selling 13.7 1 1 francs to £Stg. 142 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTHL
ACCOMMODATION
Hire Ob Buy Your Volkswagen
for southern leave from Dong Elphinstone, 243-259 Pittwater Road, Manly. Sydney.
Telephone; 97-0287.
Wanted To Buy
ARTS AND CRAFTS from all islands of Oceania. Primitive art, woodcarvlngs, artifacts, masks, weapons, etc.—Send your price list by airmail. Seven Seas Arts, 1254 East Miner Rd., Mayfield Hts., Ohio 44124, USA.
Books, Magazines
WANTED —THE RAFT BOOK (Harold Gatty), published by Grady Press, U.S.A., 1943. Send price, details of condition to; W. Francis, “Borekepo”, Rigo CD, Papua.
KEEP IN TOUCH WITH BOOKS! Books on any subject. Island customers receive personal attention. Discounts to schools, libraries. Free catalogues. Write to; The Salon Bookshop, 26 Eddy Road, Chatswood, N.S.W., Australia.
ALL BOOKS AND JOURNALS ON AUS-
Tralasia And The Pacific Bought
AND SOLD. Catalogues issued and sent free on application. Correspondence invited. Berkelouw, 114 King St., Sydney.
Telephone: BW 7874. assified Advertisements line, 4/6; Minimum rate, 4 lines.
FOR SALE •S 30 ft. carvel launch, 4. cyl. i diesel, 2 way radio, echo sounder ). 36 ft. steel bridge deck launch, wing, cargo, personnel, 60 h.p. maresel, 2 way radio £3.750. 45 ft. diesel cruiser £lO,OOO. 45 ft. workboat £7,000 shallow draft diesel steel passenger ship, cargo available. £I7,SOO.FLEETS Rowes Edward St.. Brisbane, Queensland.
“Fleets Brisbane.”
Oan Songs Of Love Ant)
ING”. 33-1/3 LP record containing the most melodic Samoan songs— led in Apia. £2/10/- Samoan icy, post paid. Samoa Records. P O .39. Apia. Western Samoa.
Rokers (Auckland) Ltd. Sale
Purchase Brokers for Island ger and trading craft, tugs, lighters leasure craft Box 1679. Auckland : “Shipsales”. F. B. Blakey. Agent. 4850. Suva
All Steel Diesel Powered
Gerated Passenger Vessel
1C SEAS”, 48 ft., 6 passengers. At ; used from Cairns along Barrier With or without business connec- Enqulrles: V. Vlasoff, P.O. Box alrns.
L REFRIGERATED VESSEL’S. 425 deadweight, built 1947. Lloyd’s 100 Special survey late 1963. Refrigerated space 22,368. 2 hatches 2 holds 'tween decks independently refrigera- Freon plant fibre glass insulation, eratures regulated by blower units >th ’tween decks for chill or low matures. Equipment capable of alning minus 5 degrees Fahrenheit [ spaces. 4 cycle heavy duty diesel e 400 HP. Speed 9V2 knots. Range miles. Accommodation for 11 lean crew plus 2 spare. Ideal Island erated trade from N.Z. or Australia.
SUS 150,000. For further details P.O. Box 34455, Auckland.
Ie Quantities Of Japanese
i FISHING LINES in perfect order. 5 with hooks, also large fish-finding ine. For particulars, contact: Storck es, Box 2034, Suva, Fiji.
STAMPS
Top Prices Paid For Island
STAMPS. Current issues, old accumulations (used or unused), covers, collections.
Seven Seas Stamps Pty. Ltd., Sterling Street, Dubbo. N.S.W., Aust.
Pacific issues purchased at highest prices.
Send for your Free Copy of the only Catalogue giving complete list of buying prices for used Fiji, Papua-New Guinea Aust., N.Z. and other Pacific stamps.
P. Downie, 94 Elizabeth St., Melbourne.
Vic.
WE PAY THE BEST PRICE for Pacific Island stamps, obsolete or current, singles, 100’s, I,ooo’s, for private sale or auction.
Melbourne Stamp Auctions, 377 Bourke St.. Melbourne.
Trade Enquiries
MAIL ORDER. Whatever you might want from Hong Kong (Photographic and Cine Equipment. Transistor Radios, Household Appliances, Chinese Brocades, Plastic Flowers, Cultured Pearls, etc.) we can supply you. Right prices and personal care assured. Please write us for quotations. Filmo Depot Ltd., 313 Marina House, Hong Kong. Established in Hong Kong since 1936.
C. S. & JOHNSON YOUNG CO., Box 423, Hong Kong. Exporting consumer goods. Mail order welcome. Importing fungus, pearl shell, shark fin.
PERSONAL PURCHASE. Mercantile Trading Co., 10/F Alexandra House. Hong Kong, supply what you want. We buy fungus and Islands products. Twentyfour years’ experience. Enquiries welcome.
"A Family In Fiji"
A delightful description of life on a small isolated coconut plantation on a beautiful island in the South Seas.
Price: 18/9, plus 1/3 posted (2/3 to foreign countries) or $2.50 U.S. (including postage).
Pacific Publications
PTY. LTD. 29 Alberta St. (G.P.0., Box 3408), Sydney, Australia.
Whites Pictorial Reference
Of New Zealand
A superb complete visual reference of New Zealand of over 400 pages of whole page representative aerial views of cities, towns and counties, with informative and useful text and maps. DE LUXE PRESENTATION BINDING ENZ7/7A.
Coloured enlargements of New Zealand views available in all sizes —send for full price list.
WHITES AVIATION LTD.
C.P.O. Box 2040, AUCKLAND, New Zealand.
The Fiji Times
Established 1869 Published Every Morning Except Sunday, The Fiji Times is the only English Language Daily Newspaper in the Southern Pacific Islands. It is Distributed by Fiji Airways and Road Bus Services, Every Day, all over Fiji.
Details of this Effective Advertising Medium and of Shanti Dut (Hindi weekly) and Nai Lalakai (Fijian weekly) may be obtained at the Australian Office—PACIFIC PUBLICATIONS PTY. LTD., 29 Alberta Street, Sydney, and 247 Collins Street, Melbourne.
Proprietors: FIJI TIMES AND HERALD LTD. 20 Gordon St., Suva, Fiji NORTH-WEST BRANCH—VidiIo Street, Lautoka.
Uy Wholesale And
Save Money
• Electrical Equipment
• Household Appliances
• Industrial Equipment
• Commercial Machines
New and Reconditioned Let us quote you for your requirements.
Dalcon Pty. Limited
Box 105 P.O. Broadway N.S.W., Australia 143 CIFIC ISLANDS MONTHLY— JUNE, 1964
cases the disease had struck only a few isolated trees, but in others, nearly every tree in a plantation, from the oldest tree down to the youngest seedling, had been attacked and was dying.
The fungus is Botryodiplodia, one of the most common tropical fungi according to the Territory Department of Agriculture’s Chief Plant Pathologist, Dr. Dorothy Shaw.
It obtained an entry to the tree through a wound in the bark then grew m the water ways in the wood, Dr. Shaw said.
This virtually “strangled” the branch or trunk, killing it. • spoke at a meeting held m Babaul recently between agricultural officers and European, Chinese and native planters. said that f °r the last six years, the department had been carryinto all aspects of mZ? e had been known for many years, but little work had been ntvU-u ° n • 11 because it was not a fng area/" m ° St o,her cocoa S™w- “We now probably know more about fungi and other organisms which attack cocoa than anyone else in the world,” Dr. Shaw said. “We even found a new species of fungi.”
A survey of cocoa growing areas had shown that Botryodiplodia hit where the rainfall was highest, Dr.
Shaw said.
Where the rainfall was below about 85 in. a year, Botryodiplodia either did not attack cocoa trees or only slightly affected them, although the spores were present in the air.
In Port Moresby the Acting Director of Agriculture, Mr. W. L. Conroy, warned planters against believing “exaggerated and distorted accounts” of the effects of the disease.
He said published statements that there was no control or that the Territory’s cocoa could be progressively killed out by the disease were “false” and had caused some concern in New Guinea’s major cocoa market areas.
The disease would not effect the market reception of Territory cocoa.
He said early identification of the disease and the pruning out of affected wood, together with insect control, was a satisfactory control method and the only one available at present. But the Department was continuing its inquiries into finding other methods.
Rhinoceros Beetle The rhinoceros beetle, the dee pest that attacks and kills coco palms, was found recently on Vc Island, 12 miles from Lautoka 15 miles from the nearest island the beetle-free Yasawas. The covery meant that the beetle ] made the jump from an infested i of Fiji.
However, according to Mr. C.
Stokes, executive officer for the Cc nut Pests and Diseases Board, beetle’s existence on Vomo was vealed before it could become fin entrenched.
Mr. Stokes told The Fiji Tit that, as there were only 1,000 pa] on the island, it would be possi “to clean the island right out”.
“We will treat every palm on island and also search every bure £ anywhere where the beetle mi lurk,” he said.
A couple of weeks before Vomo infestation was announced, discovery of two rhinoceros beel in the unaffected Cook Islands g; agricultural officers there a b scare.
Both had come from Samoa, whi has been troubled by the pest sir 1909. Both were dead.
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Ltd 131 Braybon Bros. Pty. Ltd. .. 8 Breckwoldt & Co. Wm. .. 90 British Solomons Trading Co. Ltd 68 Brown, David, Tractors Pty. „ Ltd 112 Brunton & Co 105 B.P. .. 31, 76, 115, cov. Hi Cadbury-Fry-Pascall Pty. Ltd. 59 Cambridge Credit Corporation _ Ltd. 123 Canon Camera Co., Inc. ~ 28 Carlton & United Breweries Ltd 1 Carnation Company .. 128 Carpenter, W. R., & Co. Ltd. 75, 126, cov. iv Carreras (Overseas) Ltd. .. 69 Classified Advertisements .. 143 Crammond Radio Co 86 Commonwealth Bank of Aust*. 62 Crusader Shipping Co. .. 136 C.S.R. Co. Ltd., The .. .. 48 Cystex 57 Uaiwa Shipping Line .. .. 135 Dalcon Pty. Ltd 143 Donald, A. 8., Ltd 33 Drambuie Liqueur Co. Ltd. 51 Dunlite Electrical Co. Ltd. .. 100 Everyday Products Pty, Ltd. 116 Ferrier & Dickinson Pty.
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Ltd 103 Handi-Works Co 68 Hastings Deering Ltd. .. 46 Hellaby, R. & W., Ltd. ~ 26 Hongkong & Whampoa Dock Co. Ltd 30 Industrial Enterprises Ltd. . 70 International Harvester Co 106 International Majora Paints Pty- Ltd 107 Kennedy, Capt. W. L. ~ 99 Kerr Bros. Pty. Ltd 52 Kopsen & Co. Pty. Ltd. .. 104 Kraft Foods Ltd. . .. 58,148 Lane's Pty. Ltd 120 Lawrence, Alfred, & Co. P/L 64 Love, J. R., & Co. Pty. Ltd. 22 Mai leys Ltd 44,117 Marrickville Margarine Pty.
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Ltd Shell Co. of Aust. Ltd. ..
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Ltd 7 A Steelcrete Pty. Ltd. . ..
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Tatham, S. E., & Co. P/l T.E.A.L Tilley Lamp Co Tooth & Co. Ltd Turners Supply Co. Ltd. ..
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Ltd Wills, W. D. & H. 0. (Aust.) Ltd Wild (Aust.) Pty. Ltd. . ..
Wilhelmsen, W., Agency P/L Yardley of London (Aust.) Pty. Ltd Yorkshire Insurance Co. Ltd. 144 JUNE, 1964 PACIFIC ISLANDS MONTH!
Crop Pest Scares (Continued from page 13)
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