✨ Miscellaneous Notices
1364
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 39
The Mining Amendment Act, 1914.—Mining Privileges to be struck off the Registers.
Office of the Mining Registrar for Coromandel, 1st May, 1922.
IN pursuance of the provisions of section 30 (3) of the Mining Amendment Act, 1914, notice is hereby given that, unless cause to the contrary is shown within three months from the date hereof, each of the privileges mentioned in the Schedule hereto will be struck off the Registers kept by me.
H. R. BUSH, Mining Registrar.
SCHEDULE.
| No. | Date. | Nature of Privilege. | Locality. | Registered Holder. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| 115 | 10/9/1902 | Special site .. | Tokatea .. | Royal Oak Gold-mining Company. |
| 117 | 10/9/1902 | " .. | " .. | Charles McC. Dunstan. |
| 128 | 16/10/1902 | Water-race .. | Coromandel .. | Harry Johnson. |
| 117 | 15/7/1903 | Special site .. | Cabbage Bay .. | Royal Oak Gold-mining Company. |
| 126 | 12/8/1903 | Water-race .. | " .. | " |
| 92 | 13/7/1904 | " .. | Coromandel .. | " |
| 94 | 13/7/1904 | " .. | " .. | " |
| 96 | 13/7/1904 | Special site .. | Kennedy Bay .. | Robert Cathcart. |
| 79 | 16/4/1901 | Residence-site .. | Kuaotunu .. | Mountain King Gold-mining Company. |
| 99 | 14/7/1908 | Special site .. | " .. | New Waitaia Gold-mining Company. |
| 173 | 8/12/1908 | Certificate of easement .. | " .. | " |
| 329 | 11/11/1909 | " .. | " .. | Mount Welcome Gold-mining Company. |
| 330 | 11/11/1909 | Road .. | " .. | " |
| 777 | 10/6/1913 | Special site .. | Coromandel .. | Alfred Porter. |
| 801 | 7/8/1913 | Water-race .. | " .. | " |
| 1017 | 26/1/1915 | Special site .. | Kuaotunu .. | Frederick Bostlemann. |
| 1080 | 25/8/1915 | Residence-site .. | Coromandel .. | Frederick Jeune. |
| 530 | 14/3/1911 | "Braga" special quartz claim | " .. | " |
Appointing the Time and Place for the First Meeting of the Tararua Electric-power Board.
IN pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred by section 4 of the Electric-power Boards Amendment Act, 1920, I, Joseph Gordon Coates, Minister of Public Works, do hereby appoint Thursday, the 25th day of May, 1922, at 2 o’clock p.m., as the time, and the Eketahuna Council Chambers, Bengston Street, Eketahuna, as the place, for holding the first meeting of the Tararua Electric-power Board.
Dated at Wellington this 18th day of May, 1922.
J. G. COATES, Minister of Public Works.
Special Books in Languages and Literature for the Teachers’ Class C Certificate Examination, August, 1922, 1923, and 1924.
Education Department,
Wellington, 22nd April, 1922.
IN pursuance of regulations under the Education Act, 1914, notice is hereby given that at the Teachers’ Class C Certificate Examination of August, 1922, 1923, and 1924, respectively, the special books of which a knowledge will be required will be as follows :—
(a.) August, 1922.
ENGLISH.—Shakespeare, “Romeo and Juliet,” “Hamlet”; Macaulay, “Essay on Milton”; Milton, “Samson Agonistes,” “L’Allegro,” “Il Penseroso,” “Lycidas.” In addition, a knowledge of the period of literature 1625 to 1688 will be required. Special attention must be paid to Milton, Dryden, Herrick, Butler, Taylor, Bunyan, and Browne; but the other authors of the period are not to be neglected. The literary movements and their leaders, the current types and forms of literature and their representatives, as well as the influence of the ancient classics and of the leading Continental literatures on the English literature of the period must also be examined. Candidates must have some acquaintance with the general outlines of English literature, including a knowledge and appreciation of the thought and style of standard English authors from Shakespeare to Tennyson.
LATIN.—Caesar, “De Bello Gallico VII”; Horace, “Epistles I.”
FRENCH.—Taine, “Voyage aux Pyrénées”; Corneille, “Le Cid”; Molière, “L’Avare.”
(b.) August, 1923.
ENGLISH.—Shakespeare, “Henry IV” (Parts I and II), “Henry V”; Pope, “Essay on Criticism”; Swift, “Battle of the Books”; Steele and Addison, “The Spectator.” The Club papers as follows: 1, 2, 12, 34, 105, 106, 108, 110, 112, 115, 117, 122, 123, 125, 126, 130, 131, 269, 295, 329, 335, 383, 517, 530, 549, 550. The Vision of Mirzah, 159. In addition, a knowledge of the period of literature 1688 to 1744 will be required. Special attention must be paid to Defoe, Steele, Addison, Swift, Pope, and Thomson; but the other authors of the period are not to be neglected. The literary movements and their leaders, the current types and forms of literature and their representatives, as well as the influence of the ancient classics and of the leading Continental literatures on the English literature of the period must also be examined. Candidates must have some acquaintance with the general outlines of English literature, including a knowledge and appreciation of the thought and style of standard English authors from Shakespeare to Tennyson.
LATIN.—Sallust, “Catiline”; Tibullus (Postgate).
FRENCH.—Rosseau, “Le Contrat Social”; Corneille, “Polyeucte”; A. Daudet, “Tartarin de Tarascon.”
(c.) August, 1924.
ENGLISH.—Shakespeare, “Merchant of Venice,” “Julius Caesar”; Gray, Poems; Goldsmith, “Deserted Village”; Johnson, “Life of Swift”; Gibbon, Autobiography. In addition, a knowledge of the period of literature 1744 to 1798 will be required. Special attention must be paid to Johnson, Burke, Gibbon, Goldsmith, Collins, Gray, Crabbe, Burns, and Cowper; but the other authors of the period are not to be neglected. The literary movements and their leaders, the current types and forms of literature and their representatives, as well as the influence of the ancient classics and of the leading Continental literatures on the English literature of the period must also be examined. Candidates must have some acquaintance with the general outlines of English literature, including a knowledge and appreciation of the thought and style of standard English authors from Shakespeare to Tennyson.
LATIN.—Cicero, “Pro Milone”; Horace, “Odes I and II.”
FRENCH.—Hugo, “Quatre-vingt-treize”; Rostand, “L’Aiglon”; Molière, “Le Misanthrope.”
JNO. CAUGHLEY, Director of Education.
CROWN LANDS NOTICES.
Land in the Otago Land District forfeited.
Department of Lands and Survey,
Wellington, 16th May, 1922.
NOTICE is hereby given that the lease of the under-mentioned land having been declared forfeited by resolution of the Otago Land Board, the said land has thereby reverted to the Crown, under the provisions of the Land Act, 1908.
SCHEDULE.
OTAGO LAND DISTRICT.
SECTION 2s, Melville Park Settlement. Tenure: Special Tenure Lease (Sett.) No. 79. Formerly held by Charles Best Heazlewood. Reason for forfeiture: Non-payment of rent and non-compliance with conditions of lease.
W. FRASER, for Minister of Lands.
Next Page →
Online Sources for this page:
VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1922, No 39
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1922, No 39
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🌾 Mining Privileges to be Struck Off the Registers
🌾 Primary Industries & Resources1 May 1922
Mining, Privileges, Registers, Coromandel
6 names identified
- Charles McC. Dunstan, Holder of mining privilege
- Harry Johnson, Holder of mining privilege
- Robert Cathcart, Holder of mining privilege
- Alfred Porter, Holder of mining privilege
- Frederick Bostlemann, Holder of mining privilege
- Frederick Jeune, Holder of mining privilege
- H. R. Bush, Mining Registrar
🏗️ First Meeting of the Tararua Electric-power Board
🏗️ Infrastructure & Public Works18 May 1922
Electric-power Board, Meeting, Tararua, Eketahuna
- Joseph Gordon Coates, Minister of Public Works
🎓 Special Books for Teachers’ Class C Certificate Examination
🎓 Education, Culture & Science22 April 1922
Teachers, Examination, Literature, Languages, Education Department
- Jno. Caughley, Director of Education
🗺️ Land Forfeited in Otago Land District
🗺️ Lands, Settlement & Survey16 May 1922
Land, Forfeiture, Otago, Lease, Crown Lands
- Charles Best Heazlewood, Former leaseholder of forfeited land
- W. Fraser, for Minister of Lands