✨ Miscellaneous Notices
118
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 5
Officiating Ministers for 1902.—Notice No. 2.
Registrar-General’s Office,
Wellington, 20th January, 1902.
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 late Majesty Queen Victoria, and intituled “The Marriage Act, 1880,” the following names of Officiating Ministers within the meaning of the said Act are published for general information:—
Presbyterian Church of New Zealand.
The Reverend James Johnstone Cairney.
Congregational Independents.
The Reverend Benjamin Lewis Thomas.
Hebrew Congregations.
The Reverend Isaac Zachariah.
Church of Christ.
James Greenhill.
GEO. DRURY,
Deputy Registrar-General.
Branch of Friendly Society registered.
Friendly Societies’ Registry Office,
Wellington, 20th January, 1902.
THE Cable Lodge, No. 19, situated at Redcliffs, is registered as a branch of the Grand Lodge of Canterbury District, New Zealand, of the United Ancient Order of Druids Friendly Society, under “The Friendly Societies Act, 1882,” this 20th day of January, 1902.
EDMUND MASON,
Registrar of Friendly Societies.
Subsidies to Public Libraries.
Education Department,
Wellington, 20th November, 1901.
NOTICE is hereby given that the sum of £3,000 has been voted by Parliament for distribution to public libraries.
The distribution will take place on the 8th February, 1902, and no claim will be entitled to consideration that shall not have been sent in in due form and received by the Secretary for Education, Wellington, on or before the 31st January, 1902.
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A library to be entitled to a subsidy must be public in the sense of belonging to the public, and of not being under the control of an association, society, or club, whose membership is composed of a section of the community only, and if within a borough it must be open to the public free of charge. The receipts for the year from subscriptions and donations must not have been less than £2, exclusive of moneys received from endowments, or from Government, or from Borough or County Councils, or for special building purposes, or as rent, hire, or consideration for the use of any room, or building, or land belonging to the institution, in respect of none of which will subsidy be allowed. The net proceeds of concerts, lectures, or other entertainments on behalf of the current expenses of the library will be regarded as voluntary contributions. A subsidy will not be given to more than one library in the same town.
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In the division of the vote, a nominal addition of £25 will be made to the amount of the income of each library derived from subscriptions, donations, and rates, and the vote will be divided according to the amounts thus augmented; but no library will receive credit for a larger income than £75—that is, in no case will the augmented amount on which distribution is based exceed £100.
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The whole of the subsidy must be expended in the purchase of books for the library.
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Application to share in the distribution must be by means of a statutory declaration by the Chairman, or Secretary, or Treasurer of the institution on behalf of which it is made, and must be accompanied by a statement of the receipts and expenditure of the institution for the year ending on the 31st day of December, 1901; and such declaration must be on the form provided for the purpose, which form shall be as follows:—
DECLARATION.
I, [Name], of [Place of abode], [Occupation], do solemnly and sincerely declare that I am Chairman [or Secretary, or Treasurer] of the [Name of institution]; that during the year ending on the 31st day of December, 1901, the receipts of the aforesaid institution for the maintenance of the library only were as follows: From rates levied by a local governing body under “The Public Libraries Act, 1869,” pounds shillings and pence; from the subscriptions of members, pounds shillings and pence; and from voluntary contributions other than members’ subscriptions, pounds shillings and pence. And I do solemnly and sincerely declare that the information hereinafter furnished by me in the appendix hereto is correct in every particular; that the abstract of accounts is a true statement of the receipts and expenditure of the institution for the year herein specified; that the whole of the subsidy received during the year was expended in the purchase of books for the library; and that by the rules of the institution admission to the reading-room is open to the public free of charge.
And I make this solemn declaration conscientiously believing the same to be true, and by virtue of an Act of the General Assembly of New Zealand intituled “The Justices of the Peace Act, 1882.”
(Signature.)
Declared at , this day of , 190 , before me— , Justice of the Peace [or Solicitor, or Notary Public].
[Here affix and cancel a stamp at 2s. 6d.]
[NOTE.—The words relating to last year’s subsidy and to free admission may be struck out if they are not applicable. The words in brackets are not part of the form, but indicate matter to be inserted or substituted.]
Copies of the form of application may be obtained from the Secretary for Education, Wellington, and from the Secretary of any Education Board.
W. C. WALKER.
Bonus for the Production of Quicksilver.
Mines Office,
Wellington, 7th June, 1900.
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 (100,000 lb.) of good marketable retorted quicksilver, free from all impurities, from any mine in New Zealand, on the following conditions, that is to say:—
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That at least one-third of the quantity is produced on or before the 31st March, 1903, and the remaining two-thirds on or before the 31st March, 1904.
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No bonus will be payable until the whole of the one hundred thousand pounds (100,000 lb.) 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.
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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 (100,000 lb.) of quicksilver has been produced in the aggregate.
JAMES McGOWAN,
Minister of Mines.
Bonus for Treatment of Auriferous Black Sand.
Mines Department,
Wellington, N.Z., 14th November, 1901.
NOTICE is hereby given that a bonus of £2,000 will be paid to any person who, before the 1st January, 1904, shall invent such appliances as will successfully save gold from black sands in New Zealand.
The bonus will be paid on compliance with the following conditions:—
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The invention shall, in its main features, differ from all machinery and appliances at present in use for the saving of gold, whether coarse or fine.
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It shall be readily transportable from place to place, and shall be capable of utilising local water for all its requirements.
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The invention must be capable of treating not less than 30 cubic yards an hour of black sand or any coarser material up to a diameter of 4 in.; and it must be capable of treating such material profitably where there is not more than a value, in gold, of 3d. per cubic yard; not less than 80 per cent. of the gold contained in the material to be recovered by the machine.
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No bonus to be paid until the invention has been continuously worked for not less than six months, and it shall, during that period, have treated not less than 100,000 cubic yards of material, working three shifts a day.
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The bonus will be paid on the certificate of an officer that not less than twenty persons other than the applicant for the bonus are successfully working the invention.
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Any person who receives the bonus shall not be allowed to take out patent rights in New Zealand for his invention.
JAMES McGOWAN,
Minister of Mines,
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⚖️
List of Officiating Ministers for 1902 under the Marriage Act, 1880
(continued from previous page)
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement20 January 1902
Marriage Act, Officiating Ministers, Presbyterian Church, Congregational Independents, Hebrew Congregations, Church of Christ
- James Johnstone Cairney (The Reverend), Listed as Officiating Minister
- Benjamin Lewis Thomas (The Reverend), Listed as Officiating Minister
- Isaac Zachariah (The Reverend), Listed as Officiating Minister
- James Greenhill, Listed as Officiating Minister
- GEO. DRURY, Deputy Registrar-General
🏘️ Registration of Branch of Friendly Society
🏘️ Provincial & Local Government20 January 1902
Friendly Societies, United Ancient Order of Druids, Redcliffs, Branch Registration, Canterbury District
- EDMUND MASON, Registrar of Friendly Societies
🎓 Subsidies to Public Libraries
🎓 Education, Culture & Science20 November 1901
Public Libraries, Subsidy, Funding, Book Purchases, Education Department, Application Process, Statutory Declaration
- W. C. WALKER
🌾 Bonus for Production of Quicksilver
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources7 June 1900
Quicksilver, Mercury Production, Mining Incentive, Bonus Scheme, Mines Office, Marketable Output
- JAMES McGOWAN, Minister of Mines
🌾 Bonus for Treatment of Auriferous Black Sand
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources14 November 1901
Gold Recovery, Black Sands, Mining Innovation, Bonus Scheme, Invention, Transportable Machinery, Water Use, High Efficiency
- JAMES McGOWAN, Minister of Mines
NZ Gazette 1902, No 5