✨ Regulations and Orders in Council
Oct. 25.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 2803
- No person shall take or catch more than twenty trout or more than twenty pounds weight of trout in any one day.
- The penalty for the breach of any of these regulations shall not be less than forty shillings or more than fifty pounds.
- If any person shall be convicted of an offence against these regulations, the license (if any) held by the offender shall thereupon become void.
SCHEDULE.
LICENSE TO FISH.
“Fisheries Conservation Act, 1884,” and Amendments.
THE holder of this license [Name in full], of [Address], [Calling or occupation], having this day paid the sum of , is hereby authorised to fish for trout within the Bay of Islands Acclimatisation District from the day of , 19 , to the day of , 19 , subject to the said Acts and to the regulations made thereunder for the time being in force in the said district.
Dated at , this day of , 19 .
, Secretary, Acclimatisation Society.
ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Regulations for Loading and Stowage of Ballast.
PLUNKET, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House, at Wellington, this twenty-second day of October, 1906.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS it is enacted by section two hundred and twenty of “The Shipping and Seamen Act, 1903,” that the Governor in Council may from time to time make regulations respecting the loading and stowage on any British ship of ballast of any description, and may prescribe a fine not exceeding fifty pounds for breach of such regulations:
And whereas certain regulations respecting the loading and stowage of ballast were made by the Governor in Council on the twenty-eighth day of June, one thousand nine hundred and six, and published in the New Zealand Gazette of the fifth day of the following month:
And whereas it is desirable to make additional regulations:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in exercise of the hereinbefore-recited power and authority, and acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony, doth hereby make the following regulations:—
REGULATIONS.
- When the ballast of a British ship is composed wholly or partly of shingle or sand it shall be properly levelled down, and the shifting-boards shall be at least three feet higher than the ballast, and shall be flush with one another.
- Any person committing a breach of the above regulation shall be liable to a fine not exceeding fifty pounds.
ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Defining District within which Liquor shall not be supplied to Maoris.
PLUNKET, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House, at Wellington, this twenty-second day of October, 1906.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS by section forty-six of “The Licensing Acts Amendment Act, 1904,” it is enacted that every person (whether a licensed person or not) who supplies liquor to any Maori for consumption off the premises within such parts of the colony as may be defined by the Governor in Council and gazetted is liable to a fine not exceeding fifty pounds:
And whereas by Order in Council dated the twenty-third day of July, one thousand nine hundred and six, and gazetted on the twenty-sixth day of July, one thousand nine hundred and six, the part of the colony known as the Waikato Licensing District was defined as a district within which liquor shall not be supplied to Maoris for consumption off the premises: And whereas it is expedient to revoke the said Order in Council, and to define other parts of the colony to be a district as aforesaid in lieu thereof:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the power conferred upon him by the said section forty-six of “The Licensing Acts Amendment Act, 1904,” and acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony, doth hereby revoke the Order in Council of the twenty-third day of July, one thousand nine hundred and six, as aforesaid, and doth hereby define the part of the colony to be known as the Waikato District, the boundaries whereof are set out in the Schedule hereto, and doth hereby declare such part of the colony to be a district within which liquor shall not be supplied to any Maori for consumption off the premises.
SCHEDULE.
WAIKATO DISTRICT.
ALL that area in the Auckland District, including the adjacent islands, bounded towards the north generally by the Ngati-Whatua Maori Council District and the ocean; towards the east generally by the ocean and the Tauranga and Te Arawa Maori Council Districts; towards the south by the Tongariro and Maniapoto Maori Council Districts; and towards the west generally by the ocean.
ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Empowering Native Land Court to inquire and ascertain who are the Natives beneficially entitled under the Trust expressed in the Title to Lot 99, Parish of Onewhero.
PLUNKET, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House, at Wellington, this twenty-second day of October, 1906.
Present:
HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS by section fifteen of “The Native Land Court Act, 1894,” it is enacted that the Governor in Council may, by Order, from time to time confer on the Native Land Court, as established by the said Act, jurisdiction in any matter or question referred to in such Order exclusively affecting the rights of Natives in any real or personal property: And whereas, under “The Onewhero Grant Empowering Act, 1879,” a Crown grant was issued on the twenty-first day of April, one thousand eight hundred and eighty, for the land described in the Schedule hereto to Patoromu Titoko, Meri Titoko, Timata Titoko, Parauri Titoko, Purenā Tamehana, Hori te Kanawa, Mere Paora te Karekare, Tuhira, Te Waru te Taiki, Roka Ihaka te Taiki, Tauwhara te Tatau, Te Katipa Tauwhara, Karira Kauahi, Kaweahau, Poukou te Tatau, Paroa te Ahiwera, and Tereti Ngataki, their heirs and assigns, for ever, in trust for the Ngatiamaru, Ngatikahu, and Ngatikaitutai Hapus of the Ngatipou Tribe of aboriginal Natives: And whereas it is expedient that the Native Land Court should be empowered to inquire and ascertain who are the Natives beneficially entitled under the trust recited in the said grant, and in what shares and proportions:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the powers and authorities conferred upon him as aforesaid, and acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said colony, doth hereby order and declare that the investigation and determination of the matters aforesaid, and of any matter or question which may arise in relation thereto, or which it shall be necessary to determine for the purpose aforesaid, shall be and the same are hereby brought within the jurisdiction of the said Court.
SCHEDULE.
ALL that piece or parcel of land, containing 4,314 acres, more or less. being Allotment 99 of the Parish of Onewhero, and being the whole of the land comprised in certificate of title, Vol. 20, folio 39, of the Register-book of the District Land Registrar, at Auckland.
ALEX. WILLIS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
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✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🌾
Trout Fishing Regulations for Bay of Islands Acclimatisation District
(continued from previous page)
🌾 Primary Industries & ResourcesFisheries regulation, Trout fishing, Bay of Islands, Acclimatisation Society, Licenses, Close season
- Alex. Willis, Clerk of the Executive Council
🚂 Regulations for Loading and Stowage of Ballast on British Ships
🚂 Transport & Communications22 October 1906
Shipping safety, Ballast loading, Stowage regulations, British ships, Penalty
- Plunket, Governor
- Alex. Willis, Clerk of the Executive Council
🪶 Defining District where Liquor shall not be Supplied to Maoris
🪶 Māori Affairs22 October 1906
Liquor licensing, Maori protection, Waikato District, Licensing Acts Amendment Act, Prohibition
- Plunket, Governor
- Alex. Willis, Clerk of the Executive Council
🗺️ Empowering Native Land Court to Determine Beneficial Entitlement under Trust
🗺️ Lands, Settlement & Survey22 October 1906
Native Land Court, Land trust, Onewhero, Ngatipou Tribe, Land entitlement inquiry
17 names identified
- Patoromu Titoko, Named in land trust
- Meri Titoko, Named in land trust
- Timata Titoko, Named in land trust
- Parauri Titoko, Named in land trust
- Purenā Tamehana, Named in land trust
- Hori te Kanawa, Named in land trust
- Mere Paora te Karekare, Named in land trust
- Tuhira, Named in land trust
- Te Waru te Taiki, Named in land trust
- Roka Ihaka te Taiki, Named in land trust
- Tauwhara te Tatau, Named in land trust
- Te Katipa Tauwhara, Named in land trust
- Karira Kauahi, Named in land trust
- Kaweahau, Named in land trust
- Poukou te Tatau, Named in land trust
- Paroa te Ahiwera, Named in land trust
- Tereti Ngataki, Named in land trust
- Plunket, Governor
- Alex. Willis, Clerk of the Executive Council
NZ Gazette 1906, No 89