✨ Military Disbandment, Industry Bonuses
884
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 54
Volunteer Corps disbanded.
Defence Office,
Wellington, 5th July, 1881.
HIS Excellency the Governor has been pleased to
The Bay of Plenty Cavalry Volunteers at their
own request.
The under-mentioned gentleman therefore ceases
to be an officer in the Volunteer Force, his com-
mission having lapsed under "The Volunteer Act,
1865:"-
Angus Smith, N.Z.C., late Captain.
WM. ROLLESTON.
Bonuses on Colonial Industries.
Colonial Secretary's Office,
Wellington, 18th May, 1881.
NOTICE is hereby given that the following bonuses
will be paid on articles produced in the Colony
of New Zealand, as under :-
SUGAR.
A bonus of one thousand pounds (£1,000) will be
given for the production of the first 125 tons of sugar,
manufactured in New Zealand, from beet or any
other root or plant grown in the colony.
LINSEED OIL.
A bonus of five hundred pounds (£500) will be
given for the production, by machinery permanently
established in New Zealand, of the first ten thousand
(10,000) gallons of oil, of good marketable quality,
from linseed grown in the colony.
OIL CAKE.
A bonus of one hundred pounds (£100) will be
given for the production of the first fifty tons of oil
cake, of good marketable quality, from linseed grown
in the colony.
STARCH.
A bonus of three hundred pounds (£300) will be
given on the first fifty tons of starch, manufactured
in the colony, which shall be shipped to an English
market, and for which a satisfactory certificate shall
be given by dealers or brokers in England that the
starch is of good marketable quality.
SILK.
A bonus of fifty per cent. on the value realized
for the first thousand pounds' (£1,000) worth of
cocoons of the silkworm, or silkworms' eggs, pro-
duced in the colony, to be paid on quantities of not
less value than fifty pounds (£50) nor more than
one hundred pounds (£100) produced by any one
person.
SULPHURIC ACID.
A bonus of five hundred pounds (£500) per
annum will be given for three years in succession
for the production each year, by machinery esta-
blished in New Zealand, of not less than fifty tons
of sulphuric acid, of good marketable quality. The
producer to the satisfaction of the Colonial Secretary
of the first fifty tons shall be also entitled to the
payments of the two following years if he fulfils the
conditions.
EARTHENWARE.
A bonus of two hundred and fifty pounds (£250)
will be given on the first £1,000 worth of household
earthenware manufactured in the colony, on proof
that it has been sold at such prices as to show that it
is of good marketable quality.
SUGAR-REFINING.
A bonus of five hundred pounds (£500) will be
given for three years in succession for the refining
each year, by machinery established in New Zealand,
of not less than one hundred tons of cane sugar.
The establishment by which such refining is effected
must be what is ordinarily known as a sugar-refinery.
The firm refining the first one hundred tons of sugar,
and receiving the bonus, shall be also entitled to the
bonus of the two following years upon fulfilling the
conditions above named.
GUNPOWDER.
The Government are prepared to receive pro-
posals from any person willing to establish a factory
for the manufacture of blasting and sporting powder.
The proposer to state what amount of bonus he would
require to induce him to undertake the manufacture.
The place where the factory is to be erected to be
subject to the approval of the Government, the
plans and specifications of the building to be also
approved by Government.
All the internal fittings and the arrangements for
carrying on the manufacture of the gunpowder to
be subject to the inspection of an officer appointed
by the Government.
BUTTER OR CHEESE.
A bonus of five hundred pounds (£500) will be
given for the first 25 tons of butter or the first 50
tons of cheese (produced in a factory worked on the
American principle, and to which factory any farmer,
subject to certain conditions, may send his milk),
which shall be exported from New Zealand, and sold
at such prices in a foreign market as shall show that
the articles are of fair quality.
MEAT.
A bonus of five hundred pounds (£500) will be
given on the first 100 tons of fresh meat exported
from New Zealand in vessels fitted with refrigerating
machinery. Such meat must have been collected in
a refrigerating chamber in this colony, and must
have been landed in Europe in sound marketable
condition.
CONDITIONS.
NOTICE of intention to claim any of the above
bonuses must be given in writing to the Colonial
Secretary not later than the 31st December, 1881.
The claim must be made before the 30th June,
1882.
The other conditions as to quantity, quality, and
value to be fulfilled to the satisfaction of an officer
appointed for the purpose by the Government.
Further information and particulars may be
obtained by application at the Colonial Secretary's
Office.
THOMAS DICK.
Gold Fields Notices.
Gold-Mining Lease refused.
Crown Lands Office,
Nelson, 2nd July, 1881.
NOTICE is hereby given that the gold-mining
lease applied for by A. D. Bayfield, for Foreigner
Company-namely, 16 acres, at Lankey's Creek,
Inangahua-has been refused; and the ground is now
open to persons holding miners' rights or business
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✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🛡️ Disbandment of Bay of Plenty Cavalry Volunteers
🛡️ Defence & Military5 July 1881
Volunteer Corps, Disbandment, Cavalry, Commission lapsed
- Angus Smith (N.Z.C., late Captain), Commission lapsed, officer ceased
- WM. ROLLESTON
🌾 Announcement of bonuses for colonial industrial production
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources18 May 1881
Industrial bonuses, Sugar, Linseed Oil, Starch, Silk, Sulphuric Acid, Earthenware, Meat export
- THOMAS DICK
🗺️ Refusal of gold-mining lease application in Inangahua
🗺️ Lands, Settlement & Survey2 July 1881
Gold-mining lease, Refused, Inangahua, Lankey's Creek
- A. D. Bayfield, Applicant for refused gold-mining lease
NZ Gazette 1881, No 54