✨ Trade Regulations and Legal Notices
460
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 8
Class X: Metals—
Iron, galvanized or plain black—viz., rod, bolt, bar,
angle, tee, channel, and rolled girders.
Iron, plain sheet, plain plate, and hoop (less than 6 in.
in width), whether black, polished, enamelled, plated,
tinned, galvanized, or otherwise coated with metal,
n.e.i.; rolled chequered iron plates, plain black.
Rails for railways and tramways, including layouts,
points, and crossings for the same; rail-fastenings—
viz., fishplates, creep-clips, tie-irons, bearing-brackets,
bed-plates, cast-iron chocks, bored iron bars.
Class XI: Vehicles—
Bicycles, tricycles, and the like vehicles, including
motor-cycles, also hubs, spindles, and other finished,
partly finished, or machined parts of the same, n.e.i.;
side-cars for motor-cycles.
Motor-vehicles and parts thereof—viz., motor-vehicles,
n.e.i., including tractors driven by gas, oil, or electricity,
suited for use in warehouses or upon wharves and
pavements.
SECOND SCHEDULE.
FORM OF INVOICE.
[Here insert usual particulars, including place and date, name
and address of supplier, &c.]
| Country of Origin. | Marks and Nos. on Packages. | Quantity and Description of Goods. | * Current Domestic Values in Currency of Exporting Country. (See pars. 3 and 4 of Certificate.) | Selling-price to Purchaser. |
|---|---|---|---|---|
| @ | Amount. | |||
| @ | Amount. |
Enumerate the following charges, and state whether each
amount has been included in or excluded from the above
current domestic value :—
| Amount in Currency of Exporting Country. | * State if included in above Current Domestic Values. | |
|---|---|---|
| (1.) Cartage to rail and [or] to docks | ||
| (2.) Inland freight (rail or canal) and other charges to the dock area, including inland insurance | ||
| (3.) Labour in packing the goods into outside packages | ||
| (4.) Value of outside packages | ||
| (5.) If the goods are subject to any charge by way of royalties. State full particulars of royalties below :— |
- With respect to goods imported directly from Germany,
Austria, or Hungary, it is desired that the information re-
quired in these columns should, if possible, be shown, but
until further notice it will not be insisted upon.
CERTIFICATE OF VALUE TO BE WRITTEN OR PRINTED ON
INVOICES OF GOODS FOR EXPORTATION TO NEW ZEALAND.
I, [Manager, Chief Clerk, or as the case may be], of [Name of
firm or company], of [Name of city or country], manufacturer
[supplier] of the goods enumerated in this invoice amounting
to , hereby declare that I [(These words should be
omitted where the manufacturer or supplier himself signs the
certificate) have the authority to make and sign this certificate
on behalf of the aforesaid manufacturer (supplier), and that I]
have the means of knowing and do hereby certify as follows :—
- That this invoice is in all respects correct, and contains
a true and full statement of the price actually paid or to be
paid for the said goods, and the actual quantity thereof. - That no different invoice of the goods mentioned in
the said invoice has been or will be furnished to any one ;
and that no arrangement or understanding affecting the
purchase-price of the said goods has been or will be made
or entered into between the exporter and purchaser or by
any one on behalf of either of them, either by way of discount,
rebate, compensation, or in any manner whatever, other than
as fully shown on this invoice, or as follows : [Particulars of
any special arrangement.]
-
- That the domestic values shown in the column headed
“ Current Domestic values ” are those at which the above-
mentioned firm or company would be prepared to supply to
any purchaser for home consumption in the country of ex-
portation, and at the date of exportation, identically similar
goods in equal quantities, at [Warehouse, factory, or port of
shipment], subject to per cent. cash discount, and
that such values include [exclude] the cost of outside packages
(if any) in which the goods are sold in such country for domestic
consumption.
- That the domestic values shown in the column headed
-
- That the said domestic value includes any duty leviable
in respect of the goods before they are delivered for home
consumption, and that on exportation a drawback or remis-
sion of duty amounting to has been [will be] allowed
by the revenue authorities in the country of exportation.
Dated at this day of , 192 .
Witness : [Signature.]
- That the said domestic value includes any duty leviable
- With respect to goods imported directly from Germany,
Austria, or Hungary, it is desired that the information re-
quired by these paragraphs should, if possible, be supplied,
but until further notice it will not be insisted upon.
The Maintenance Orders (Facilities for Enforcement) Act,
1923 (New South Wales).—Declaring New Zealand to be
a Reciprocating State for the Purposes of above Act.
Department of Justice,
Wellington, 6th February, 1924.
THE following extract from the New South Wales
Government Gazette No. 140 of 16th November, 1923,
declaring New Zealand to be a reciprocating State for the
purposes of the Maintenance Orders (Facilities for Enforce-
ment) Act, 1923 (New South Wales), is published for general
information.
C. J. PARR, Minister of Justice.
“ PROCLAMATION.
“ MAINTENANCE ORDERS (FACILITIES FOR ENFORCEMENT)
ACT, 1923.
[L.S.] “ W. P. CULLEN, Lieutenant-Governor.
“ I, Sir William Portus Cullen, the Lieutenant-Governor of
the State of New South Wales and its Dependencies, in the
Commonwealth of Australia, in pursuance of the provisions
of the Maintenance Orders (Facilities for Enforcement) Act,
1923, and with the advice of the Executive Council, do, by
this my Proclamation, declare the Dominion of New Zealand
to be a reciprocating State for the purposes of the said Act,
the Legislature of the said Dominion having made reciprocal
provisions for the enforcement therein of maintenance orders
made by Courts within New South Wales.
“ Signed and sealed at Sydney, this 13th day of November,
1923.
“ By His Excellency’s command,
“ THOS. J. LEY.
“ GOD SAVE THE KING ! ”
The Reciprocal Enforcement of Maintenance Orders Act, 1921
(Western Australia).—New Zealand declared to be a
Reciprocating State for the Purposes of above Act.
Department of Justice,
Wellington, 6th February, 1924.
I T is hereby notified for general information that pursuant
to the provisions of subsection (2) of section 14 of the
Reciprocal Enforcement of Maintenance Orders Act, 1921
(Western Australia), all the provisions of that Act apply to
and in respect of the Dominion of New Zealand.
C. J. PARR, Minister of Justice.
Officiating Ministers for 1924.—Notice No. 3.
Registrar-General’s Office,
Wellington, 5th February, 1924.
PURSUANT to the provisions of the Marriage Act, 1908,
the following names of officiating ministers within the
meaning of the said Act are published for general informa-
tion :—
The Presbyterian Church of New Zealand.
The Reverend Henry Bloomfield.
Mr. James Hall Boyd.
The Reverend Charles Matear.
Mr. John Wylie.
W. W. COOK, Registrar-General.
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🏭
Customs Regulations for German, Austrian, and Hungarian Goods
(continued from previous page)
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry6 February 1924
Customs duty, Depreciated-currency duty, Import regulations, Valuation, German goods, Austrian goods, Hungarian goods
⚖️ Declaration of New Zealand as a Reciprocating State under the Maintenance Orders (Facilities for Enforcement) Act, 1923 (New South Wales)
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement6 February 1924
Maintenance Orders, Reciprocating State, New South Wales, Legal Declaration
- C. J. Parr, Minister of Justice
⚖️ Declaration of New Zealand as a Reciprocating State under the Reciprocal Enforcement of Maintenance Orders Act, 1921 (Western Australia)
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement6 February 1924
Maintenance Orders, Reciprocating State, Western Australia, Legal Declaration
- C. J. Parr, Minister of Justice
⚖️ List of Officiating Ministers for 1924
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement5 February 1924
Marriage Act, Officiating Ministers, Presbyterian Church
- Henry Bloomfield (Reverend), Officiating minister
- James Hall Boyd (Mr), Officiating minister
- Charles Matear (Reverend), Officiating minister
- John Wylie (Mr), Officiating minister
- W. W. Cook, Registrar-General
NZ Gazette 1924, No 8