✨ Regulations and Orders
APRIL 30.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 1589
County, to the summit of Rangitoto Mountain, and the conditions affecting the same, and also the form of license and the fee payable therefor.
REGULATIONS.
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FALLOW-deer bucks may be taken or killed within the Auckland Acclimatization District from the 1st day of May, 1914, to the 31st day of May, 1914, both days inclusive.
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Licenses to take or kill such deer may be issued by the Chief Postmaster at Auckland, and the Postmasters at Cambridge, Hamilton, Matamata, and Helensville, on payment of a license fee of £1, in the form prescribed in the Schedule hereto, and subject to the said Act and these regulations. The number of such licenses shall not exceed thirty; provided that not more than one such license shall be issued to the same person.
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No licensee shall take or kill more than five bucks, and no buck shall be killed carrying antlers with less than four points.
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No doe or fawn shall be taken or killed on any pretext whatever, and no licensee shall allow any dog to accompany either himself or any attendant he may have with him.
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Nothing herein contained shall extend to authorizing any person to sell any deer or portion thereof.
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Any person committing a breach of any of these regulations shall be liable, on conviction, to a fine not exceeding £20.
SCHEDULE.
No.
License to take or kill Game (Deer).
, of
, having this day paid the sum of £
, is hereby authorized to take or kill
deer (bucks), of not less than
points, within the Auckland Acclimatization District, from the
day of
, 1914, to the
day of
, 1914 (both days inclusive), subject to the provisions of the Animals Protection Act, 1908, and all regulations thereunder in force within the said district.
Dated this
day of
, 1914.
Chief Postmaster.
As witness the hand of His Excellency the Governor, this twenty-eighth day of April, one thousand nine hundred and fourteen.
H. D. BELL,
Minister of Internal Affairs.
Establishment of Experimental Wireless Telegraph-station at Canterbury College, Christchurch.
LIVERPOOL, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government Buildings, at Wellington, this twenty-fourth day of April, 1914.
Present :
THE HONOURABLE W. H. HERRIES PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS by virtue of section one hundred and sixty-four of the Post and Telegraph Act, 1908, as amended by section ten of the Post and Telegraph Amendment Act, 1913, it is unlawful for any person, without having first obtained the consent of the Governor in Council thereto, to erect, construct, or establish any station or plant capable of transmitting or receiving wireless-telegraphic signals :
And whereas application has been made on behalf of the Corporation of the Canterbury College for such consent as aforesaid to the establishment and construction of a station and plant for scientific and experimental purposes :
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor of the Dominion of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred upon him by section one hundred and sixty-four of the Post and Telegraph Act, 1908, and of all other powers enabling him in that behalf, and acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said Dominion, doth hereby authorize and empower the Corporation of the Canterbury College to establish and construct, in the buildings of Canterbury College, at Christchurch, a station and plant capable of receiving wireless-telegraphic signals, and to maintain and use the said station and plant during the pleasure of His Excellency the Governor for scientific and experimental purposes exclusively, subject to the conditions set forth in the Schedule hereto.
THE SCHEDULE.
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THE said station and plant shall be constructed and used exclusively for the reception of wireless-telegraphic signals, and not for the transmission of such signals.
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The said station and plant shall be used exclusively for experimental and scientific purposes.
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No person shall be permitted to use the said station or plant other than members of the scientific teaching staff of Canterbury College, and assistants especially authorized in that behalf by a member of that staff.
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No wireless-telegraphic message received by means of the said station or plant shall be communicated by the person receiving the same to any other person whatever other than a proper officer of the Post and Telegraph Department.
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The said station and plant shall at all times be open to the inspection of any officer of the Post and Telegraph Department authorized in that behalf by the Postmaster-General or the Secretary to the Post Office.
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The Postmaster-General may at any time and from time to time give notice to the Board of Governors of Canterbury College of any period or periods during which the said station or plant is not to be used, and thereupon it shall not be lawful for any person to use the same during any period so notified.
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The permission and authority hereby granted and conferred shall be revocable at any time by His Excellency the Governor, whether for breach of any of the foregoing conditions or for any other reason which His Excellency thinks sufficient.
J. F. ANDREWS,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Regulations under the Labour Disputes Investigation Act, 1913.
LIVERPOOL, Governor.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government Buildings, at Wellington, this twenty-seventh day of April, 1914.
Present :
THE HONOURABLE W. H. HERRIES PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.
IN pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred on him by section 24 of the Labour Disputes Investigation Act, 1913 (hereinafter referred to as “the said Act”), His Excellency the Governor of the Dominion of New Zealand, acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said Dominion, doth hereby make the regulations hereinafter set forth, for the purpose of giving effect to the provisions of the said Act.
REGULATIONS.
- (1.) EVERY notice given to the Minister of Labour pursuant to section 4 or section 11 of the said Act, with reference to a dispute to which the said Act applies, shall be in the form No. L. 1 or the form No. L. 2 in the Schedule hereto, as the case may require, and in the case of a notice under section 4 shall be accompanied by a list of the names, occupations, and addresses of those members of the society of workers who are directly concerned in the matter of the dispute.
(2.) The said notice or the said notice and list, as the case may be, shall be forwarded or delivered to the Registrar of Industrial Unions at Wellington (hereinafter referred to as “the Registrar”), who shall forthwith transmit the same to the Minister of Labour. For the purposes of sections 7 and 12 of the said Act, the date of transmission by the Registrar as aforesaid shall be deemed to be the date of the delivery of the notice to the Minister.
REFERENCE OF DISPUTE TO CONCILIATION COMMISSIONER.
- (1.) On receipt of any such notice of a dispute the Minister shall, if he decides to refer the matter to a Conciliation Commissioner, refer the same by writing under his hand in the form No. L. 3 in the Schedule hereto, and shall transmit to the Commissioner the notice referred to in the last preceding regulation.
(2.) Notice that the matter has been so referred to a Conciliation Commissioner shall be given by the Minister to such of the parties as he thinks necessary, in the form No. L. 4 or No. L. 5. in the Schedule hereto.
REFERENCE OF DISPUTE TO LABOUR DISPUTE COMMITTEE.
- (1.) Where the matter of a dispute is referred to a Labour Dispute Committee, the Minister shall notify the parties by notice in the form No. L. 6 or No. L. 7 in the Schedule hereto, and shall in the said notice request the parties to appoint the required number of representatives to act on the said Committee.
(2.) Notice of the appointment of persons to act as members of a Labour Dispute Committee, in the form No. L. 8 in the Schedule hereto, shall forthwith after such appointment be forwarded or delivered to such person as the Minister specifies.
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Online Sources for this page:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1914, No 43
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1914, No 43
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🌾
Regulations for Deer-shooting in Auckland
(continued from previous page)
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources28 April 1914
Deer-shooting, Auckland, Licensing, Game regulations
- H. D. Bell, Minister of Internal Affairs
🎓 Establishment of Experimental Wireless Telegraph-station at Canterbury College
🎓 Education, Culture & Science24 April 1914
Wireless telegraph, Canterbury College, Scientific research
- J. F. Andrews, Clerk of the Executive Council
👷 Regulations under the Labour Disputes Investigation Act, 1913
👷 Labour & Employment27 April 1914
Labour disputes, Regulations, Conciliation, Industrial unions
- J. F. Andrews, Clerk of the Executive Council