Post and Telegraph Regulations




894
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 23

SCHEDULE.

Class of News and Conditions. Hours. Charges.
50 Words or Fraction.
Evening Newspapers (i.e., Newspapers published after Noon). s. d.
5. (a.) Inland news. Evening newspapers on day of publication may receive telegrams amounting in the aggregate to 2,000 words at this rate; any excess, 1d. per word. On any day other than a day of publication telegrams shall be charged for separately at the rate of 1s. for 50 words or fraction and 1s. 6d. for each 100 words or fraction 8 a.m. to 5 p.m. ..
(b.) Inland sporting news for evening newspapers which publish special sporting editions on Saturday evening. Such messages lodged between 4 p.m. and 5 p.m. may be included in the scheduled Press referred to in class 5 (a), any messages in excess of the aggregate of 2,000 words to be charged for separately 4 p.m. to close of office 1 0

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


Amendments to the Regulations under the Post and Telegraph Department Act, 1918.

JELLICOE, Governor-General.

ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government House at Wellington, this 11th day of April, 1924.

Present:

HIS EXCELLENCY THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL IN COUNCIL.

IN pursuance and exercise of the power and authority conferred by the Post and Telegraph Department Act, 1918 (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 make the following amendments to the regulations made on the first day of July, one thousand nine hundred and nineteen, and gazetted on the second day of the same month, for the classification and regulation of the Post and Telegraph Department as amended by regulations made on the fourteenth day of March, one thousand nine hundred and twenty-two, and gazetted on the thirtieth day of the same month; and doth direct that the amendments hereby made shall be read with and form part of the said regulations, and that this Order in Council shall come into force from the date of its publication in the New Zealand Gazette.


SCHEDULE.

CLAUSE 2 of regulation 87 is hereby revoked, and the following clause substituted in lieu thereof:—

“ (2.) (a.) Temporary workmen with over two years’ continuous service may be granted twelve working-days’ annual leave. In addition, leave of absence with pay may be granted in respect of the statutory holidays referred to in regulation 97.

“ (b.) Temporary workmen with under two years’ service will not be granted annual leave, but those whose continuous service is over two months may be granted leave of absence with pay in respect of the statutory holidays referred to in regulation 97.”

Regulation 97 is hereby revoked, and the following regulation substituted in lieu thereof:—

“ 97. (1.) Subject to these regulations, the following days, or any days specially authorized by the Governor-General in Council instead thereof, shall be observed as holidays in the Department, namely: Christmas Day, Boxing Day, New Year’s Day, Good Friday, Easter Monday, the King’s Birthday, Labour Day, and Anzac Day; provided that in addition, when a holiday is observed in other Government offices throughout the Dominion and such holiday cannot be observed by the Post and Telegraph Department, a day’s leave may be added to the ordinary leave due to an officer under regulation 87.

“ (2.) Officers who cannot be granted the holidays specifically named in the preceding clause shall be allowed equivalent time off or paid overtime at rate and a half for all time worked.”

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


Prohibition of Money-order and Postal Correspondence for Frederick Romeib, Dresden, &c.

THE Postmaster-General of the Dominion of New Zealand having reasonable ground for supposing that the person and clubs whose names and addresses are shown in the Schedule hereunder are engaged in a fraudulent and immoral business, it is hereby ordered, under section 28 of the Post and Telegraph Act, 1908, that no money-order in favour of the said person, or either of the said clubs, or any officer of the said clubs, shall be issued, and that no postal packet addressed to the said person (either by his own or any fictitious or assumed name), or to either of the said clubs, or to any officer of either of the said clubs, or addressed to the address in the Schedule hereunder without a name, shall be either registered or forwarded by the Post Office of New Zealand.


SCHEDULE.

FREDERICK ROMEIB, President of the Spider Club, 26 I, Dornbluth Str., Dresden.
Frederick Romeib, Head of the Act-Studia-Club, 26 I, Dornbluth Str., Dresden.
Spider Club, Dresden.
Act-Studia-Club, Dresden.

Dated this 7th day of April, 1924.

J. G. COATES, Postmaster-General.


By Authority: W. A. G. SKINNER, Government Printer, Wellington.

Price, 6d.




Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1924, No 23


NZLII PDF NZ Gazette 1924, No 23





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🚂 Amendment to Press Telegram Regulations (continued from previous page)

🚂 Transport & Communications
11 April 1924
Press telegrams, regulations, amendment, Post and Telegraph Act
  • F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council

🚂 Amendments to the Regulations under the Post and Telegraph Department Act, 1918

🚂 Transport & Communications
11 April 1924
Regulations, amendments, Post and Telegraph Department Act, annual leave, holidays
  • JELLICOE, Governor-General
  • F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council

🚂 Prohibition of Money-order and Postal Correspondence for Frederick Romeib, Dresden

🚂 Transport & Communications
7 April 1924
Postal prohibition, fraudulent business, money-order, postal correspondence
  • Frederick Romeib, Prohibited from receiving money-orders and postal correspondence

  • J. G. Coates, Postmaster-General