Regulations and Orders in Council




2780
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 74

right bank of the said Wanganui River to the point where it meets the south-eastern boundary-line of the Taranaki Land District; thence towards the south by a right line to the intersection of the Patea River with the south-eastern boundary-line of the Hawera County; thence towards the south-east by the said south-eastern boundary-line of the Hawera County to the sea; and thence towards the south-west, west, and north-west by the sea to the Mokau River aforesaid.

SECOND SCHEDULE.
INFECTED AREAS B.
No. 1 Infected Area B.

ALL that area in the Auckland and North Auckland Land Districts bounded by a line commencing at the mouth of the Tamaki River, and proceeding easterly along the shore of Tamaki Strait to the Firth of Thames; thence southerly and easterly along the shore of the said Firth to the Waiwhakau-runga Stream; thence up that stream to its source, and southerly along the main watershed passing through Trig. Stations 95, 94, 89, 86, and 65 to the south-eastern boundary of the Ohinemuri County as described in the Schedule to the Hauraki Plains County Act, 1919; thence south-westerly along that boundary to and along the eastern boundary of the Piako County as described in the above-mentioned Schedule; thence along the north-eastern and south-eastern boundaries of the Matamata County as described in the New Zealand Gazette, 1914, page 1333; thence in a right line to the mouth of the Waihora Stream in Lake Taupo; thence by a right line from the said Waihora Stream mouth to Trig. Station 1390 (Pureora); thence westerly along the southern boundary of the Waitomo County as described in the Schedule to the Waikato and King-country Counties Act, 1921–22, to the Mokau River; thence northerly along the old western boundary of Waitomo County as described in the Schedule to the Waitomo County Act, 1904, to Trig. Station Mahau-kura (this boundary now partially traverses Waitomo County, and is partially the western boundary of the present Otorohanga County); thence north-westerly along the old south-western boundary of the Raglan County as described in the New Zealand Gazette, 1883, page 1771, to the western watershed of the Waipa River; thence northerly along that watershed to the northern boundary of the Karamu Parish, and easterly along that boundary to the Waipa River; thence down that river and the Waikato River to the northern boundary of the Whangape Parish, and westerly along that boundary and the southern boundaries of Te Akau Nos. A 3 and A 6 Blocks to the sea-coast; thence northerly along the sea-coast and easterly, south-westerly, and north-westerly along the shores of the Manukau Harbour to the northern boundary of Manukau County; thence by the said boundary to the Tamaki River, and by that river to the place of commencement.

No. 2 Infected Area B.

All that area in the Taranaki Land District bounded towards the north-west generally by the south-eastern boundary of the Hawera County from the mouth of the Manawapou River to where the confiscation-line intersects the Patea River; thence towards the east generally by the said Patea River to the ocean; and thence towards the south-west by the ocean to the place of commencement.

F. D. THOMSON,
Clerk of the Executive Council.

Regulations under the Rabbit Nuisance Amendment Act, 1920, relating to the Destruction of Rabbits in the Hurunui Rabbit District.—Notice No. 2217.

JELLICOE, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government Buildings at Wellington, this 16th day of October, 1922.

Present:
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE W. F. MASSEY, P.C., PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.

IN pursuance and exercise of the powers and authorities conferred on him by the Rabbit Nuisance Amendment Act, 1920, His Excellency the Governor-General 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 following regulations relating to the destruction of rabbits in the district under the jurisdiction of the Hurunui Rabbit Board, and doth hereby declare that these regulations shall come into force on the first day of November, one thousand nine hundred and twenty-two.

REGULATIONS.

  1. NOTWITHSTANDING any other means adopted by him, every owner of land on whom a notice to destroy rabbits is served in terms of section 6 of the Rabbit Nuisance Act, 1908, shall adopt one or more of the following means of destroying rabbits—namely, the laying of poison, the fumigation of burrows, the filling-in of burrows:
    Provided that if an owner is of opinion that none of the principal means prescribed is the most suitable in his case, he may apply to the Board for permission to use some other means, and the decision of the Board shall be final as to the means to be adopted.

  2. Not later than seven days after the service of such notice on an owner of land all trapping on his land shall cease, and thereafter for a period of three months from the date of service of the notice the owner shall not, except with the written permission of the Board and subject to the conditions specified therein, trap rabbits or allow rabbits to be trapped on his land.

  3. Every person committing a breach of these regulations shall be liable to a fine not exceeding £10.

F. D. THOMSON,
Clerk of the Executive Council.

Regulation under the Public Expenditure Adjustment Act, 1921–22.

JELLICOE, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government Buildings at Wellington, this 16th day of October, 1922.

Present:
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE W. F. MASSEY, P.C., PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.

IN pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred on him by section fourteen of the Public Expenditure Adjustment Act, 1921–22 (hereinafter referred to as “the said Act”), His Excellency the Governor-General 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 following regulation for the purposes of the said Act.

REGULATION.
REGULATION re TECHNICAL SCHOOLS.

THE reduction to be made in the grants from the Consolidated Fund for the incidental expenses of any technical school in pursuance of the provisions of section 10 of the said Act shall be the amount by which such grant is reduced in consequence of the reduction prescribed by the Act and regulations in the salaries of the teachers of the school.

F. D. THOMSON,
Clerk of the Executive Council

Notifying and declaring that Crown Land or Settlement Land held on Lease or License under Section 4 of the Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act, 1915, shall be a Sufficient Security under the State Advances Act, 1913.

JELLICOE, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government Buildings at Wellington, this 16th day of October, 1922.

Present:
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE W. F. MASSEY, P.C., PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.

IN pursuance and exercise of the power and authority conferred on him by paragraph (s) of subsection one of section thirty-two of the State Advances Act, 1913 (hereinafter termed “the said Act”), His Excellency the Governor-General of the Dominion of New Zealand, acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said Dominion, doth hereby notify and declare that land held on lease or license as hereinafter specified shall be a sufficient security for a loan under Part II of the said Act, namely:—
Crown land or settlement land held on lease or license under section four of the Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act, 1915, and the regulations made thereunder; and the provisions of section forty-six of the said Act shall apply accordingly.

F. D. THOMSON,
Clerk of the Executive Council



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1922, No 74


NZLII PDF NZ Gazette 1922, No 74





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🌾 Amended Regulations under the Stock Act, 1908, for the Prevention of Blackleg amongst Cattle (continued from previous page)

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
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Stock Act, Blackleg, Cattle, Infected Areas, Taranaki, Wellington
  • F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council

🌾 Regulations under the Rabbit Nuisance Amendment Act, 1920, relating to the Destruction of Rabbits in the Hurunui Rabbit District

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16 October 1922
Rabbit Nuisance Act, Rabbit Destruction, Hurunui Rabbit District, Regulations
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16 October 1922
Public Expenditure Adjustment Act, Technical Schools, Grants, Salaries
  • F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council

🗺️ Notifying and declaring that Crown Land or Settlement Land held on Lease or License under Section 4 of the Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act, 1915, shall be a Sufficient Security under the State Advances Act, 1913

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State Advances Act, Discharged Soldiers Settlement Act, Crown Land, Settlement Land, Security
  • F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council