✨ Export Prohibition Order




3932

THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.

[No. 115

Prohibiting the Export of certain Specified Goods.

LIVERPOOL, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government House at Wellington, this second day of November, 1914.
Present:

HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL.

WHEREAS by section forty-seven of the Customs Act, 1913, as extended by section twenty-four of the Regulation of Trade and Commerce Act, 1914, it is enacted that the Governor may from time to time, by Order in Council gazetted, prohibit the exportation of any goods the prohibition of the exportation of which is in his opinion necessary in the public interest: And whereas in the opinion of the Governor it is necessary in the public interest that the exportation to the places hereinafter specified of the goods hereinafter set forth should be prohibited:

Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Dominion of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the powers and authorities conferred upon him by section forty-seven of the Customs Act, 1913, and section twenty-four of the Regulation of Trade and Commerce Act, 1914, and of all other powers and authorities enabling him in that behalf, and acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of that Dominion, doth hereby prohibit the exportation from the said Dominion, except to other parts of the British Empire, of rubber or of graphite suitable for the manufacture of crucibles; and, with the like advice and consent, doth hereby also prohibit the exportation from the said Dominion to foreign ports in Europe and on the Mediterranean and Black Sea, with the exception of French, Spanish, Portuguese, and Russian (other than Baltic) ports, of the following goods, in so far as they are not already covered by existing prohibitions, that is to say,

All foodstuffs for man and feeding-stuffs for animals, and all raw material for the same.
Aluminium.
Arms of all kinds, including arms for sporting purposes, and their distinctive component parts.
Articles of camp equipment, and their distinctive component parts.
Armour plates.
Aeroplanes, airships, balloons, and aircraft of all kinds, and their component parts, together with accessories and articles recognizable as intended for use in connection with balloons and aircraft.
Barbed wire, and implements for fixing and cutting the same.
Chrome ore.
Clothing and equipment of a distinctively military character.
Clothing, fabrics for clothing, and boots and shoes, suitable for use in war.
Copper, unwrought.
Ferrochrome.
Ferro silica.
Field-glasses, telescopes, chronometers, and all kinds of nautical instruments.
Fuel, other than mineral oils; lubricants.
Glycerine.
Gold and silver in coin or bullion; paper money.
Gun mountings, limber boxes, limbers, military wagons, field forges, and their distinctive component parts.
Harness and saddlery.
Haematite iron ore and haematite pig-iron.
Hides of all kinds, dry or wet; pigskins, raw or dressed; leather, undressed or dressed, suitable for saddlery, harness, or military boots.
Horse-shoes and shoeing materials.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1914, No 115


NZLII PDF NZ Gazette 1914, No 115





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏭 Prohibition of Export of Specified Goods (continued from previous page)

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
2 November 1914
Export prohibition, Customs Act, Regulation of Trade and Commerce Act, British Empire, Europe, Mediterranean, Black Sea, Rubber, Graphite, Foodstuffs, Aluminium, Arms, Camp equipment, Armour plates, Aeroplanes, Barbed wire, Chrome ore, Clothing, Copper, Ferrochrome, Ferro silica, Field-glasses, Fuel, Glycerine, Gold, Silver, Gun mountings, Harness, Haematite iron ore, Hides, Horse-shoes
  • HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR IN COUNCIL