✨ Awards and Notices
Aug. 25.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 1219
1108, 1109, 1110.—WILLIAM MOLONY, of Westport, New Zealand, a labourer, aged twenty-four years; HENRY HUCKSTEP, of the same place, a labourer, aged thirty-two years; and MICHAEL BRADY, of Cape Foulwind, a quarryman, aged twenty-one years, who rescued John Bennett, of Ngakawau, a labourer, aged thirty years, from drowning at Cape Foulwind, on the 5th September, 1891. Each a certificate of merit.
1143.—EDWARD MCKAY, of Napier Street, Auckland, New Zealand, a police constable, aged — years, who rescued Eliza Rice, of Henderson’s Creek, Auckland, from drowning at the Queen Street Wharf, Auckland Harbour, on the 19th October, 1891. Certificate of merit.
1152.—PERCY TOM PRITCHARD, of High Street, Rangiora, New Zealand, a compositor, aged fifteen years, who rescued Cycil Samuel Crothers, of the same place, aged eleven years, from drowning at Mount Grey Bush, in the Grey River, on the 16th December, 1891. Certificate of merit.
1159.—BESSIE HOWARD, of Blenheim, New Zealand, aged eighteen years, who rescued Robert Stanley Brewster, of the same place, aged four years, from drowning in the Opawa River, at Blenheim, on the 14th January, 1892. Certificate of merit.
1170.—JOHN BATES, of Ratanui, Woodlands, New Zealand, aged nineteen years, who, with the assistance of Andrew Miller (see case 1171), rescued several men, women, and children from drowning in a high flood at Hoipapa, Upper Catlin’s River, New Zealand, on the early morning of the 8th February, 1892. He swam a deep rushing river, secured a boat, and then, with the assistance of Miller, rescued seventeen persons. Bronze medal.
1171.—ANDREW MILLER, of Ratanui, Woodlands, New Zealand, aged forty years, who assisted John Bates (see case 1170). Certificate of merit.
1173.—WILLIAM GREY, of Inglewood, New Zealand, a police constable, aged forty years, who rescued Henry Taylor, aged twelve years, of Mount Roskill, Auckland, New Zealand, from drowning in Auckland Harbour, at 3 a.m., on the 12th January, 1892. Certificate of merit.
1174.—JOHN FORSYTH CONNELLY, of Waipiro Bay, Gisborne, New Zealand, a storekeeper, aged forty-two years, who rescued Walter Gellender, of the same place, aged twenty-eight years, station-hand, from drowning at Waipiro Bay, East Coast, at 8.30 a.m. on the 18th September, 1891. A boat returning from the s.s. “Australia” was upset in the surf, two men were drowned, and Mr. Gellender, who had given up hope of being saved, was rescued by Mr. Connelly, who swam out to him through the surf with a rope. Bronze medal.
Bonus for the Manufacture of Salt.
Mines Department,
Wellington, 24th February, 1892.
NOTICE is hereby given that a bonus of £1 per ton will be paid on the production of the first 500 tons of salt, exclusively either by evaporation of salt-water or from rock mined in the colony, on the following conditions, that is to say:—
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The bonus must be claimed before the 31st March, 1893.
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Not more than £250 will be paid for salt manufactured in the North Island, and not more than £250 for salt manufactured in the South Island.
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The bonus will be payable in instalments of £50 as each lot of 50 tons of salt is manufactured, on the certificate of an officer appointed by the Minister of Mines that the salt is of good marketable quality.
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In the event of more than one person manufacturing the stated quantity of salt in the North or South Islands respectively before the 31st March, 1893, inquiry will be made by the officer above referred to, when, if it is found that each applicant is equally entitled to a bonus in either the North Island or the South Island, the amount will be divided, but in no case shall more than £250 be paid for salt manufactured in the North Island and £250 for salt manufactured in the South Island.
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The salt in respect of which any bonus is claimed and the material used in its manufacture will be examined by the officer aforesaid, who may require proof that the salt is of genuine New Zealand production, and that sales have been made at fair market prices.
R. J. SEDDON,
Minister of Mines.
Bonus for the Manufacture of Pig-iron from Ironsand or Iron-ore.
Mines Office,
Wellington, 24th February, 1892.
NOTICE is hereby given that a bonus of £1 per ton will be paid on the production of the first 500 tons of pig-iron of marketable quality manufactured in the colony after this date from magnetic or titaniferous ironsand or iron-ore, all material, fuel, and fluxes being the produce of New Zealand, on the following conditions, that is to say:—
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The bonus must be claimed before the 31st March, 1893.
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The bonus will be payable in instalments of £50 as each lot of 50 tons of iron is manufactured, on the certificate of an officer appointed by the Minister of Mines that the iron is of good marketable quality.
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In the event of more than one person manufacturing the required quality of pig-iron before the date named, inquiry will be made by the officer above referred to, when, if it is found that each applicant is equally entitled to a bonus, the amount will be divided; but in no case shall the total amount of money paid by way of bonus exceed £500.
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The iron in respect of which any bonus is claimed and the ironsand or ore from which it is manufactured will be examined by the officer aforesaid, who may require proof that not only the ore, but that the lime, coal, and any other material used in the manufacture, is of genuine New Zealand production, and that sales of pig-iron have been made at fair market prices.
R. J. SEDDON,
Minister of Mines.
Civil Service Senior Examination.
Education Department,
Wellington, 16th September, 1891.
IN pursuance of regulations under “The Civil Service Reform Act, 1886,” notice is hereby given that for the Senior Examination of January, 1893, the period of literature will be the reign of Elizabeth, and the special books will be Shakespeare’s Hamlet and Macaulay’s Essays on Bacon and Walpole.
W. P. REEVES,
Minister of Education.
Officiating Ministers for 1892.—Notice No. 27.
Registrar-General’s Office,
Wellington, 23rd August, 1892.
PURSUANT to the provisions of an Act of the General Assembly of New Zealand, passed in the forty-fourth year of the reign of Her Majesty Queen Victoria, and intituled “The Marriage Act, 1880,” the following name of an Officiating Minister within the meaning of the said Act is published for general information:—
Seventh-day Adventists.
Pastor M. C. Israel.
E. J. VON DADELSZEN,
Registrar-General.
Te Makarini Scholarships, held at Te Aute College, Hawke’s Bay.
THREE scholarships of the yearly value of £35, tenable for two years, are offered for competition. One of these scholarships, to be called the senior scholarship, is open to all Maoris under sixteen years of age at the end of the month preceding the date of the examination; the other two scholarships are junior scholarships, and are open to all Maoris under fifteen years of age at the end of the month preceding the date of the examination who have not been pupils at Te Aute or St. Stephen’s, and whose attendance at school during the previous year is considered by the Inspector of Native Schools to have been satisfactory. The senior scholarship is offered for competition among Maori boys on the conditions laid down in the regulations of the Trustees of the Te Makarini Scholarships Fund, as printed in the Native Schools Code, 1886, and in the supplementary regulations that have been sent out to all teachers. Candidates for the junior scholarships will be examined in the subjects specified for Standard IV. in the Native Schools Code, 1886. The questions set will, however, be more difficult than those given at the standard examinations. The examination will be held at convenient centres on the 19th and 20th December, 1892.
Candidates must, either directly or through their teachers, send notice to the Inspector of Native Schools, Education Department, Wellington, of their intention to present themselves for examination. Such notice must be posted not later than the 31st October next.
Copies of the regulations and forms of notice may be obtained from teachers of Native schools and boarding institutions, the Secretaries to Education Boards, or the Secretary for Education.
JAMES H. POPE,
Inspector of Native Schools,
Wellington, 31st May, 1892.
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✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🏥 Awards of the Royal Humane Society
🏥 Health & Social Welfare25 August 1892
Awards, Royal Humane Society, Rescue, Drowning
16 names identified
- William Molony, Rescued John Bennett from drowning
- Henry Huckstep, Rescued John Bennett from drowning
- Michael Brady, Rescued John Bennett from drowning
- John Bennett, Rescued from drowning
- Edward McKay (Police Constable), Rescued Eliza Rice from drowning
- Eliza Rice, Rescued from drowning
- Percy Tom Pritchard (Compositor), Rescued Cycil Samuel Crothers from drowning
- Cycil Samuel Crothers, Rescued from drowning
- Bessie Howard, Rescued Robert Stanley Brewster from drowning
- Robert Stanley Brewster, Rescued from drowning
- John Bates, Rescued several persons from drowning
- Andrew Miller, Assisted John Bates in rescue
- William Grey (Police Constable), Rescued Henry Taylor from drowning
- Henry Taylor, Rescued from drowning
- John Forsyth Connelly (Storekeeper), Rescued Walter Gellender from drowning
- Walter Gellender (Station-hand), Rescued from drowning
🌾 Bonus for Salt Production
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources24 February 1892
Bonus, Salt, Production, Market Quality
- R. J. Seddon, Minister of Mines
🌾 Bonus for Pig-iron Production
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources24 February 1892
Bonus, Pig-iron, Ironsand, Iron-ore, Production
- R. J. Seddon, Minister of Mines
🎓 Civil Service Senior Examination
🎓 Education, Culture & Science16 September 1891
Examination, Civil Service, Senior, Literature, Shakespeare, Macaulay
- W. P. Reeves, Minister of Education
🎓 Officiating Ministers for 1892
🎓 Education, Culture & Science23 August 1892
Marriage Act, Officiating Ministers, Seventh-day Adventists
- M. C. Israel (Pastor), Officiating Minister
- E. J. Von Daldelsen, Registrar-General
🎓 Te Makarini Scholarships
🎓 Education, Culture & Science31 May 1892
Scholarships, Maori, Te Aute College, Examination
- James H. Pope, Inspector of Native Schools
NZ Gazette 1892, No 68