Bonding Warehouse and Bonus Notices




52

THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.

[No. 4

The warehouse known as

DALGETY’S BOND,

as appointed and described in Commissioner’s Order No. 89, of the 1st March, 1876.

Given under my hand, at Wellington, this ninth day of January, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-six.

J. G. WARD,
Commissioner of Trade and Customs.
Commissioner’s Order No. 525.]


Approving and appointing a Bonding Warehouse.

CUSTOMS.—In exercise of the powers in me for this purpose vested by “The Customs Laws Consolidation Act, 1882,” I, the Commissioner of Trade and Customs, do hereby approve and appoint the under-mentioned warehouse to be a warehouse for the reception of goods under bond, namely,—

Port of Timaru.

Portion of a brick building with iron roof and concrete floor, situate in Church Street, on Section No. 98, with entrance from Church Street, to be known as

TAYLOR’S BOND.

Given under my hand, at Wellington, this ninth day of January, one thousand eight hundred and ninety-six.

J. G. WARD,
Commissioner of Trade and Customs.
Commissioner’s Order No. 526.]


Bonus for Destruction of Rabbits.—Notice No. 436.

Department of Agriculture (Live-stock Branch),
Wellington, N.Z., 14th December, 1895.

A BONUS of £1,000 is offered for a practical scheme for the destruction of rabbits.

The following are the conditions:—

  1. All applications for the bonus must be sent addressed to the Hon. the Minister for Agriculture, Wellington, New Zealand, and must reach him not later than 31st May, 1896. Each application must be accompanied by a full description of the means proposed to be adopted.

  2. The Government shall appoint a committee of three or more experts, to whom all applications shall be submitted. Such committee shall, after perusal, state what schemes they deem worthy of further consideration, and are satisfied may be used with absolute safety.

On completion of the committee’s preliminary investigations each applicant will be notified of the decision arrived at, and whether or not his individual scheme will be further inquired into.

The committee may afterwards inspect the whole or any of the schemes at any place or places within the colony, or may direct that the whole or any of them be submitted for trial at such time and place as they may think fit.

The following shall be a basis of the trial:—

  1. A suitable piece of rabbit-infested land shall be allowed to each applicant (of whose scheme the committee have approved), and on which he will have full power to carry out a trial of his scheme for a period not exceeding two years.

  2. Each applicant on expiry of the period named shall submit a detailed and accurate statement of the actual cost incurred in testing his scheme.

On the expiry of the period named the committee shall as soon as convenient thereafter (should they deem it necessary) make a personal inspection of each applicant’s allotment, and shall take into consideration—

  1. The actual cost incurred by each applicant in testing his scheme for the period above mentioned.

  2. The result of the work done on each allotment.

On completion of the tests the committee shall furnish a report to the Minister on all the schemes which they have examined or tested, and shall state—

  1. The scheme which they consider on the whole the most practical, efficient, and economic; and if they consider such scheme worthy of the bonus.

  2. Whether, in the event of no one scheme being entitled to the whole bonus, they deem any one worthy of a part, and, if so, how much.

The committee has power to withhold all awards if they think none of the schemes submitted of sufficient importance to merit a bonus.

A sum not exceeding 6d. per acre may be paid to each competitor whose scheme is accepted for test by the committee, and who, in the opinion of the committee, has done work deserving of recognition.

JOHN McKENZIE,
Minister for Agriculture.


Bonus for the Manufacture of Potassium Cyanide.

Department of Industries and Commerce,
Wellington, 17th January, 1895.

NOTICE is hereby given that a bonus of £1,000 will be paid for the erection of a plant and the manufacture in New Zealand of the first 200 tons of crude cyanide of potassium from colonial produce.

  1. The plant must be capable of producing at least 70 tons of crude cyanide of potassium annually.

  2. The crude cyanide of potassium so manufactured shall contain at least 70 per cent. of potassium cyanide.

  3. The bonus will be paid in two equal instalments, the first instalment being payable on the production of the first 100 tons, and the second instalment on the production of the second 100 tons, of crude cyanide of potassium containing the required percentage of potassium cyanide.

  4. On the completion of the plant, notice in writing must be sent to the Minister of Industries and Commerce, Wellington, who will appoint an officer to inspect the same, together with the raw material then available from which the cyanide of potassium is proposed to be manufactured.

  5. The officer so appointed shall from time to time inspect the process of manufacture, in order that he may satisfy himself that the whole of the cyanide of potassium is being manufactured from material of New Zealand production; and before any bonus is paid such officer will be required to certify that he is satisfied the crude cyanide of potassium is the product of New Zealand material only, and that it contains the required percentage of potassium cyanide.

  6. The bonus must be claimed for the first 100 tons on or before the 31st March, 1897, and for the second 100 tons on or before the 30th September, 1898.

J. G. WARD.


Bonus for the Production of Quicksilver.

Mines Office,
Wellington, 19th September, 1895.

NOTICE is hereby given that a bonus of fourpence (4d.) per pound will be paid on the production of the first one hundred thousand pounds weight (100,000lb.) of good marketable retorted quicksilver, free from all impurities, from any mine in New Zealand, on the following conditions, that is to say:—

  1. That at least one-third of the quantity is produced on or before the 31st March, 1897, and the remaining two-thirds on or before the 31st March, 1899.

  2. No bonus will be payable until the whole of the one hundred thousand pounds (100,000lb.) of quicksilver has been produced as stipulated to the satisfaction of an officer to be appointed by the Minister of Mines, and on whose certificate alone the bonus will be paid.

  3. In the event of more than one person producing the required quantities of quicksilver before the dates 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 in proportion to the quantities produced by each applicant, but in no case shall any bonus be paid until at least one hundred thousand pounds (100,000lb.) of quicksilver has been produced in the aggregate.

A. J. CADMAN,
Minister of Mines.


Bonuses for Encouragement of New Zealand Hemp (Phormium tenax) Industry.—Notice No. 430.

Department of Agriculture,
Wellington, 1st November, 1895.

Bonus No. 1.

A BONUS of £1,750 is offered for a machine or process for dressing New Zealand hemp (Phormium tenax) which shall be an improvement on the machines or processes now in use, and which shall, after trial, be found to materially reduce the cost of production, improve the product, or increase the quantity of dressed fibre.

The following are the conditions:—

  1. All applications for the bonus must be sent addressed to the Hon. the Minister for Agriculture, Wellington, and must reach him not later than the 31st March, 1897. Each application must be accompanied by a description of the machine or process, particularly stating improvements on present machines or processes, and also the cost at which the machine or process can be supplied.

  2. The applicants must be prepared to submit their machines or processes to examination at such time and place as the Government may direct.

  3. The Government shall appoint a committee of three or more experts, to whom all applications shall be submitted. Such committee shall, after perusal, state what machines or processes they deem worthy of consideration, and may inspect the same at any place within the colony; and, having



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1896, No 4





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏭 Revocation of Dalgety's Bonding Warehouse

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
9 January 1896
Revocation, Bonding Warehouse, Wellington
  • J. G. Ward, Commissioner of Trade and Customs

🏭 Appointment of Taylor's Bonding Warehouse

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
9 January 1896
Appointment, Bonding Warehouse, Timaru
  • J. G. Ward, Commissioner of Trade and Customs

🌾 Bonus for Destruction of Rabbits

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
14 December 1895
Bonus, Rabbits, Destruction, Agriculture, Wellington
  • John McKenzie, Minister for Agriculture

🏭 Bonus for Manufacture of Potassium Cyanide

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
17 January 1895
Bonus, Potassium Cyanide, Manufacture, Industries and Commerce
  • J. G. Ward

🌾 Bonus for Production of Quicksilver

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
19 September 1895
Bonus, Quicksilver, Production, Mines
  • A. J. Cadman, Minister of Mines

🌾 Bonus for New Zealand Hemp Industry

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
1 November 1895
Bonus, Hemp, Phormium tenax, Agriculture
  • John McKenzie, Minister for Agriculture