✨ Land Settlement, Civil Service Regulations
406
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 20
Increasing the Holding Area of Land to Settlers in the Orari Village Settlement, Canterbury.
WM. F. DRUMMOND JERVOIS,
Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government Buildings, at Wellington, this fifteenth day of March, 1887.
Present:
THE HONOURABLE THE PREMIER PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS an Order in Council was issued on the sixth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and eighty, under the authority of the twenty-third section of “The Land Act 1877 Amendment Act, 1879,” fixing the terms and conditions upon which certain village-settlement lands therein enumerated should be disposed of in the Orari Village Settlement:
And whereas by section one hundred and seven of “The Land Act, 1885,” it is provided that no person can select more than one allotment of suburban or of rural lands:
And whereas the allotments in the said Orari Village Settlement contain an area of one acre each or thereabouts:
And whereas it is expedient to allow any settler in the village settlement aforesaid to hold such additional area, as with his present holding shall make a total of not exceeding five acres in extent:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor, in pursuance of all powers and authorities enabling him in that behalf, and by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the Colony of New Zealand, doth hereby amend the Order in Council aforesaid so far as it affects the areas in which the land in the Orari Village Settlement shall be held, and doth declare that, on and after the date hereof, any settler at present residing in the village settlement aforesaid may apply for and acquire additional land therein as with his present holding shall make a total of not exceeding five acres in extent in the whole; and it is hereby further declared that all the provisions of the Order in Council of the sixth day of April, one thousand eight hundred and eighty, aforesaid, shall apply, except as regards the area in which the sections may be held, to the village settlement in the Orari Village Settlement aforesaid.
FORSTER GORING,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Regulations under “The Civil Service Reform Act, 1886.”
WM. F. DRUMMOND JERVOIS,
Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government Buildings, at Wellington, this twenty-second day of March, 1887.
Present:
THE HONOURABLE THE COLONIAL TREASURER PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS by “The Civil Service Reform Act, 1886,” it is enacted that, with certain exceptions, all appointments to the Civil Service shall be by competitive examination, which shall be held periodically in the chief centres of population, and that from the most successful competitors in the order of their merit shall be selected candidates to fill all vacant cadetships in the Civil Service:
And whereas by the same Act it is enacted that no cadet hereafter appointed shall receive more than one hundred pounds per annum until he has passed the Senior Civil Service Examination:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor, by virtue of the power and authority conferred upon him by the tenth section of the said Act, and by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the colony, doth make the following regulations respecting the examinations required by the said Act.
REGULATIONS.
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THE competitive examination, hereinafter called “the Junior Examination,” required by “The Civil Service Reform Act, 1886,” and the Senior Civil Service Examination referred to in the same Act, and hereinafter called “the Senior Examination,” shall be held every year in the month of January, between the sixth day and the eighteenth day of the month, in every city or borough in which the Board of any education district has its office, and in any other places that may from year to year be selected for the purpose by the Minister of Education.
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Every candidate for the Junior Examination must give notice to the Minister of Education, and such notice must be in a form prescribed by the Minister of Education, and must be sent so as to be delivered at the office of the Minister not later than the thirty-first day of October next before the examination. With the aforesaid notice each candidate must send—
(a.) Evidence of having attained the age of fifteen years;
(b.) Testimonials as to character;
(c.) A bank receipt for the payment of one guinea to the Public Account at some branch of the bank at which the Public Account is kept; and
(d.) The names of the two optional subjects chosen by the candidate.
Every candidate for the examination who is also a candidate for appointment to the Civil Service must also send at the same time—
(e.) A medical certificate of fitness for the Civil Service.
If the candidate is willing to accept appointment to some one particular department only, or to one of two or more departments, and to no other, it will be necessary—
(f.) To name the particular department or departments.
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At every Junior Examination every candidate will be examined in the three following subjects: 1. English grammar, composition, and spelling; 2. Arithmetic; 3. Geography; and these will be called compulsory subjects for the Junior Examination; and, at the same examination, also in two (and not more than two) subjects, chosen by the candidate, from the following list of subjects, which will be called optional subjects:—
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Latin;
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Greek;
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French;
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German, or Italian;
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Maori;
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Algebra;
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Euclid;
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English history;
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Elementary mechanics;
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Elementary physics;
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Elementary chemistry;
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Elementary biology;
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Shorthand.
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At the Junior Examination the papers set in English, arithmetic, geography, and English history will be based on the programme of the public-school standards. In geography the elements of mathematical and physical geography will be required, and the general topography of and political geography of the world (without minute detail), with map-drawing (from memory) of European countries and British dependencies; in history, a fair knowledge of the period from 1603 to 1837, and a cursory knowledge of the chief events prior to 1603.
Latin and Greek: Questions in grammar; translation of easy passages at sight, from and into the language in which the candidate is examined.
French, German, Italian, and Maori: As in Latin and Greek; but the papers not so elementary.
Algebra: To simple equations, inclusive.
Euclid: Books I. and II.
Elementary mechanics: The elements of statics, dynamics, and hydrostatics.
Elementary physics: Heat, sound, light, and electricity.
Elementary chemistry: The non-metallic elements, and the atomic theory.
Elementary biology: Questions will be set in zoology and botany, but candidates will not be required to answer in both subjects. The subjects are—(a) zoology: elements of animal physiology; (b) botany: elements of the morphology and physiology of flowering plants, including the main characteristics of the chief native and introduced natural orders.
Shorthand: Writing fifty words a minute (reporting style).
NOTE.—In English, arithmetic, geography, and English history the papers set for Class E at the examination of teachers will be used at the Junior Examination. In shorthand and in Maori special papers will be set for the Junior Examination. In the other subjects of examination the papers set for Class D at the Teachers’ Examination will be used.
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As soon as possible after a Junior Examination has been held, the Minister of Education will publish a list of the names of the candidates arranged in the order of their merit, which order will be wholly determined by the marks assigned to the several candidates by the several Examiners; except that if the marks assigned to any candidate in any subject are so low that, in the judgment of the Minister, they indicate failure in that subject, such marks will not be counted.
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Appointments to places in the Civil Service (with the exceptions indicated by the Act) in the order in which vacancies occur will be offered to the candidates in the order in which their names appear in the published list of the results of the Junior Examination of the January next preceding the date at which the appointments are offered; except that no offer of appointment will be made to any candidate who has not sent in a medical certificate of fitness for the Civil Service; that a candidate for appointment to one particular department only, or to one of two or more par-
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✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🗺️ Increasing Holding Area for Settlers in Orari Village Settlement
🗺️ Lands, Settlement & Survey15 March 1887
Orari Village Settlement, Canterbury, Land Holdings, Settlers
- WM. F. DRUMMOND JERVOIS, Governor
- THE HONOURABLE THE PREMIER PRESIDING IN COUNCIL
- FORSTER GORING, Clerk of the Executive Council
🏛️ Regulations under Civil Service Reform Act, 1886
🏛️ Governance & Central Administration22 March 1887
Civil Service, Competitive Examinations, Cadetships, Appointment
- WM. F. DRUMMOND JERVOIS, Governor
- THE HONOURABLE THE COLONIAL TREASURER PRESIDING IN COUNCIL
NZ Gazette 1887, No 20