✨ Provincial Notices and Proclamations
NEW ZEALAND
GOVERNMENT GAZETTE.
PROVINCE OF CANTERBURY.
Published by Authority.
All Public Notifications which appear in this Gazette, with any Official Signature, are to be considered as Official Communications made to those persons to whom they may relate, and are to be obeyed accordingly.
By His Honor’s Command,
THOMAS WILLIAM MAUDE,
Provincial Secretary.
VOL. X.] TUESDAY, MAY 19, 1863. [No. VI.
PUBLIC NOTICE.
Provincial Secretary’s Office,
Christchurch, 16th May, 1863.
HIS Honor the Superintendent directs it to be notified that MONDAY, the 25th instant, will be observed as a HOLIDAY, in honour of HER MAJESTY’S BIRTHDAY; and that the Public Offices, including the Waste Lands, will be closed on this day.
THOS. WM. MAUDE,
Provincial Secretary.
PROCLAMATION.
WHEREAS by an Ordinance enacted by the Lieutenant-Governor of New Zealand, by and with the advice and consent of the Legislative Council thereof, Session VII., No. 7, entitled “An Ordinance for the Regulation of Prisons,” it is enacted that it shall be lawful for his Excellency the Governor from time to time, as to him shall seem meet, by proclamation, to declare any house, building, enclosure, or place to be a public gaol, and after the publication of any such proclamation, such house, building, enclosure or place shall be deemed and taken to be a public gaol; and whereas by an Ordinance of the Superintendent and Provincial Council of the Province of Canterbury, entitled “The Empowering Ordinance, Session II., No. 2,” it is enacted that the powers conferred on the Governors of New Zealand, by the above-recited Ordinance, are within the limits of the Province of Canterbury conferred on the Superintendent thereof; and whereas it is desirable that the building now used as a lock-up in Hereford Street, in the City of Christchurch, in the Province of Canterbury, should be proclaimed a public gaol: Now therefore I, Samuel Bealey, Superintendent of the said Province, by virtue of the powers vested in me as aforesaid, do hereby proclaim and declare that the building aforesaid shall be deemed and taken to be a public gaol.
Given under my hand, at Christchurch, this Twelfth day of May, in the year of Our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-three.
S. BEALEY,
Superintendent of Canterbury.
DISSOLUTION OF PARTNERSHIP.
NOTICE is hereby given, that the Partnership heretofore subsisting between us under the firm of TAYLOR and COMPANY, as General Merchants, at Boston, U. S. America, and Lyttelton, New Zealand, was, so far as regards the retiring of the undersigned, Mr. THOS. B. TREW, mutually dissolved on the 9th day of May, 1863.
ISAAC TAYLOR,
By T. J. CURTIS,
T. J. CURTIS,
THOS. B. TREW,
C. H. LUNT.
Witnesses—THOS. S. DUNCAN, Solicitor, Christchurch; WM. THOS. LOCKE TRAVERS, Solicitor, Christchurch.
VOL. X. NO. 6.
Next Page →
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏛️ Public Holiday Announcement
🏛️ Governance & Central Administration16 May 1863
Holiday, Queen's Birthday, Public Offices
- Thomas William Maude, Provincial Secretary
⚖️ Proclamation of Public Gaol
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement12 May 1863
Prisons, Public Gaol, Hereford Street, Christchurch
- Samuel Bealey, Superintendent of Canterbury
🏭 Dissolution of Partnership
🏭 Trade, Customs & IndustryPartnership, Dissolution, Taylor and Company, Lyttelton
6 names identified
- Isaac Taylor, Partner in dissolved partnership
- T. J. Curtis, Partner in dissolved partnership
- Thomas B. Trew, Retiring partner in dissolved partnership
- C. H. Lunt, Partner in dissolved partnership
- Thomas S. Duncan (Solicitor), Witness to dissolution
- William Thomas Locke Travers (Solicitor), Witness to dissolution
Canterbury Provincial Gazette 1863, No 6