✨ Industrial bonuses and customs
AUGUST 24.]
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 1145
FORM B.
FORM of burial-warrant for interment of persons in the public
cemetery at Dunsandel, County of Selwyn, New Zealand :--
To the Sexton.
You are hereby authorized to prepare a grave according to
the following particulars, viz. :--
Name of deceased:
Age:
Denomination:
Officiating minister:
Day and hour of funeral:
. If unpurchased ground:
Number of plot, if private ground:
Approved in Council, 21st August, 1882.
FORSTER GORING,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Bonuses on Colonial Industries.
Colonial Secretary's Office,
Wellington, 18th July, 1882.
NOTICE is hereby given that the following
bonuses will be paid on articles produced in the
Colony of New Zealand, as under :--
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 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 50 tons of oil-
cake, of good marketable quality, from linseed grown
in the colony.
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.
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, produced 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.
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 100 tons of cane sugar. The esta-
blishment by which such refining is effected must be
what is ordinarily known as a sugar-refinery. The firm
refining the first 100 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.
OSTRICHES.
A bonus of five pounds (£5) per head will be given
for healthy ostrich chicks landed in New Zealand for
the purpose of being reared and maintained in the
colony; the number of any importation to be not
less than ten nor more than fifty.
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.
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, 1882. - The claim must be made before the 30th June,
- 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 to the Colonial Secretary's
Office.
IRON.
A bonus of one thousand pounds (£1,000) will be
given for the production, in New Zealand, of 300
tons of pig-iron, of marketable quality, from ore pro-
duced in New Zealand.
Conditions.
- The bonus not to be given for any quantity less
than 100 tons. - Notice of the intention to erect ironworks and
claim the bonus must be given to the Colonial Secre-
tary before the 31st December, 1882. - The bonus must be claimed before the 31st De-
cember, 1883. - In the event of more than one claimant giving
such notice, not more than seven-tenths of the bonus
may be claimed by the first producer, and not more
than three-tenths by the second producer; but if
only one claimant becomes a producer on the above
conditions, he may claim the whole of the bonus. - The iron in respect of which any bonus is
claimed, and the ore from which it is manufactured,
will be examined by an officer to be appointed by the
Government, who may require the production of
bonâ fide account sales of quantities not less than
100 tons weight, showing that such iron has been
sold at a fair market price as pig-iron.
THOMAS DICK.
Changing Names of Bonding Warehouses.
Customs Department,
Wellington, 8th August, 1882.
CUSTOMS. It is hereby notified that, in conse-
quence of a change in the proprietorship of the
under-mentioned warehouses, their names have been
changed as follow:--
Port of Lyttelton.
A brick building, situate on Town Section No. 738,
in Hereford Street, in the City of Christchurch,
together with the cellar under the adjoining wooden
and iron building, in the occupation of Messrs.
Sclanders, Fletcher, and Co., approved and appointed
on the 19th April, 1879, under the name of
FLETCHER'S BOND,
will in future be known as
SCLANDERS'S BOND.
Port of Invercargill.
The basement floor of a brick building, situate on
Section No. 7, Block LXXV., fronting Tay Street,
and having a back entrance to Wood Street, ap-
proved and appointed on the 24th January, 1878,
under the name of
MCPHERSON'S BOND,
will in future be known as
THE INVERCARGILL BOND.
Given under my hand, at Wellington, this
twenty-third day of August, one thousand
eight hundred and eighty-two.
H. A. ATKINSON,
Commissioner of Customs,
Commissioner's Order No. 166.]
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🏘️
Rules and regulations for Dunsandel Cemetery management.
(continued from previous page)
🏘️ Provincial & Local Government4 July 1882
Cemetery, Dunsandel, Selwyn County, Rules, Regulations
🏘️ Form of burial-warrant for interment of persons in the public cemetery at Dunsandel, County of Selwyn, New Zealand
🏘️ Provincial & Local Government21 August 1882
Cemetery, Dunsandel, Selwyn County, Burial Warrant
- Forster Goring, Clerk of the Executive Council
🏭 Bonuses offered on colonial industries
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry18 July 1882
Bonus, Colonial Industries, Linseed Oil, Oil-Cake, Sugar, Silk, Sugar-Refining, Ostriches, Butter, Cheese, Iron
- Thomas Dick
🏭 Changing Names of Bonding Warehouses
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry8 August 1882
Bonding Warehouses, Customs, Lyttelton, Invercargill
- H. A. Atkinson, Commissioner of Customs
NZ Gazette 1882, No 70