Otago Daily Times

Carnival Week crowds

-

THE rush for Carnival Week visitors may be said to have started in earnest on Saturday, when all the incoming trains were large and laden with an unusual crowd of passengers. At the same time the numbers of country visitors are still considerab­ly below expectatio­ns, and the arrangemen­ts made by the Housing Committee continue to cope quite adequately with the requiremen­ts. Certainly, no one need be deterred from visiting Dunedin for fear that suitable accommodat­ion will not be available. It is considered possible by some that

a certain number of country people may have been deterred from visiting the city because they do not care, in the meantime at anyrate, to take such risks as may be involved in joining the Carnival Week crowds, but perhaps if the health reports continue to be as favourable as they have been they may yet make the journey. Two further factors, which are operating to keep the country people at home are the rapidly ripening harvests of hay and cereals in many districts, and the fact that the milking season is now at its greatest height. Neverthele­ss, there is a great crowd of people in the town, and, with a continuanc­e of the fine weather which was experience­d on Saturday, Carnival Week should prove highly successful, and should be establishe­d as a permanent fixture.

pest was narrated by a prominent member of the Canterbury Sheepowner­s’ Union. Recently he shot a ‘‘killer,’’ and in the vicinity there were several sheep lying that had been killed by keas. Owing to the bush providing plentiful cover, he found it necessary to wait in hiding till this particular bird came down to start his nightly operations. The kea began on a mob of sheep on a spur of about a quarter of a mile from his hiding place. When he had worked his way towards the bird and had shot it, he found that the kea had succeeded in attacking the sheep's kidney. Last November his head shepherd killed three keas while each was in the act of eating sheep. During the past season he estimated that he lost 2000 as the result of the kea’s fondness for the fat in the vicinity of the kidneys.

University dinner on Friday night, said that it was a national institutio­n, unhampered by restrictio­ns of class or creed. Our democratic State system of education from the primary school to the University opened a straight way from the threshold of every abode, however humble, in the country or in the town to the high places of usefulness, influence, and honour. It was in the interests of the State that the promising boys and girls of the poorer classes should be given the chance of all education could give. Talent should not remain undevelope­d or ability lost to the nation for want of educationa­l opportunit­y. He hoped to see a growing public recognitio­n of the fact that the future of the world belongs to the people which is most rich in education and mental efficiency, and which is most strong in moral power, and which, therefore, sees and strives towards the noblest possibilit­ies in life. — (Applause.)

— ODT, 8.2.1920.

 ??  ?? A punga hut and tents serve as a home for men working in the New Zealand bush. — Otago Witness, 10.2.1920.
A punga hut and tents serve as a home for men working in the New Zealand bush. — Otago Witness, 10.2.1920.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from New Zealand