Education and Legal Notices




APRIL 23.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 1117

LATIN.—Livy V; Virgil, “Aeneid IV.”
FRENCH.— de Tocqueville, “L’Ancien Régime”; R. Bazin, “La Terre qui Meurt”; Molière, “Tartuffe.”

(b.) August, 1926.

ENGLISH.—Shakespeare, “Macbeth,” “The Tempest”; Spenser, “Faery Queen,” Book I; Bacon, Essays; George Eliot, “Romola.” In addition, a special knowledge of the period of literature 1579 to 1625 will be required. Special attention must be paid to Marlowe, Shakespeare, Spenser, Sidney, Bacon, and Jonson, 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 Murena”; Virgil, “Aeneid VI.”
FRENCH.—La Bruyère, “Les Caractères”; A. Daudet, “Le Petit Chose”; Racine, “Athalie.”

(c.) August, 1927.

ENGLISH.—Shakespeare, “Romeo and Juliet,” “Hamlet”; Macaulay, “Essay on Milton”; Milton, “Samson Agonistes,” “L’Allegro,” “Il Penseroso,” “Lycidas.” In addition, a special 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.—A. France, “Le Crime de Sylvestre Bonnard”; Voltaire, “Zaïre”; Molière, “Le Bourgeois Gentilhomme.”

J. CAUGHLEY, Director of Education.

———

Sitting of the Native Land Court at Te Kuiti on the 28th May, 1925.

Registrar’s Office,
Auckland, 15th April, 1925.

NOTICE is hereby given that the matters mentioned in the Schedule hereunder written will be heard by the Native Land Court sitting at Te Kuiti on the 28th May, 1925, or as soon thereafter as the business of the Court will allow.

E. P. EARLE, Registrar.

[Waikato—Maniapoto, 1925-5.]

———

SCHEDULE.

APPLICATIONS FOR COMPENSATION.

No. 83. Applicant: Waitomo County Council. Name of land: Aorangi B 2 part. Nature of application: Assessment of compensation for land taken for a quarry.

No. 84. Applicant: Under-Secretary for Public Works. Name of land: Te Mango Section 10, Block I, Awakino Survey District. Nature of application: Assessment of compensation for land taken for a road.

No. 85. Applicant: Waitomo County Council. Name of land: Kinohaku East 1r 23 part. Nature of application: Assessment fo compensation for land taken for a quarry.

No. 86. Applicant: Waitomo County Council. Name of land: Kinohaku East 4b 3 part. Nature of application: Assessment of compensation for land taken for a quarry.

No. 87. Applicant: Waitomo County Council. Name of land: Kinohaku East 5e 2b part. Nature of application: Assessment of compensation for limestone taken.

No. 88. Applicant: Under-Secretary for Public Works. Name of land: Mahoenui 4b part. Nature of application: Assessment of compensation for land taken for a gravel-pit.

No. 89. Applicant: Under-Secretary for Public Works. Name of land: Mangaora 1, 4, 3; Kawhia B 2b, C 4 Section 2b; Hauturu West 2a 1, 2a 4, 2a 3, 2b 4c; Kinohaku West 12b 2b, 11d 3b 2, 11d 3a. Nature of application: Assessment of compensation for land taken for scenic purposes.

D

Fruit Control Act, 1924.—Fixing Date after which Levy shall be paid on Fruit intended for Export under Part I of the Act.—Notice No. Ag. 2492.

———

CHARLES FERGUSSON, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government Buildings at Wellington, this 23rd day of April, 1925.

Present:

THE HONOURABLE SIR FRANCIS BELL PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.

WHEREAS by subsection one of section twenty-three of the Fruit Control Act, 1924, it is enacted that the Governor-General in Council may fix a date for the purposes therein provided relating to Part I and Part II of the said Act:

And whereas Part II of the said Act has not yet been declared to be in operation in any provincial district:

Now, therefore, in pursuance and exercise of the power and authority conferred upon him by subsection one of section twenty-three of 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 fix the twenty-third day of April, one thousand nine hundred and twenty-five, as the date after which there shall be payable by the producers by way of levy on all fruit produced in a district in which Part I of the said Act is in operation and intended for export such charges as may from time to time be prescribed by regulations under the said Act.

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

———

Regulations under the Fruit Control Act, 1924.—Notice No. Ag. 2493

———

CHARLES FERGUSSON, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.

At the Government Buildings at Wellington this 23rd day of April, 1925.

Present:

THE HONOURABLE SIR FRANCIS BELL, PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.

IN pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred on him by the Fruit Control Act, 1924 (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 regulations for the purposes of the said Act.

———

REGULATIONS.

  1. THE maximum fees payable to members of the New Zealand Fruit-export Control Board, constituted under Part I of the said Act, shall be as follows:—

Chairman .. .. £50 per annum.
Other members .. .. £25 per annum.

Provided that when the Chairman or any other member is engaged on the business of the Board in the Dominion, other than that connected with ordinary Board meetings, the following additional fees shall be payable:—

Chairman .. .. £2 2s. per diem.
Other members .. .. £1 1s. per diem.

  1. The maximum rate of travelling-allowance payable to members of the said Board shall be £1 per diem, plus actual locomotion expenses.

  2. The charge payable by way of levy on all fruit produced in a district in which Part I of the said Act is for the time being in operation and intended for export, shall be as under:—

Capacity of Case. Levy per Case.
Half-bushel and under .. .. 0½d.
Exceeding half-bushel but not greater than one bushel .. .. 1d.

  1. Any moneys payable under clause 3 hereof shall be paid to the Board immediately upon the shipment of the fruit from the Dominion.

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



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF NZ Gazette 1925, No 26


NZLII PDF NZ Gazette 1925, No 26





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🎓 Special Books for Teachers' Class C Certificate Examinations (continued from previous page)

🎓 Education, Culture & Science
9 April 1925
Teachers' Certificate, Examination, Literature, English, Latin, French
  • J. Caughley, Director of Education

🪶 Native Land Court Sitting at Te Kuiti

🪶 Māori Affairs
15 April 1925
Land Court, Compensation, Te Kuiti, Waikato-Maniapoto
  • E. P. Earle, Registrar

🌾 Fruit Control Act, 1924 - Fixing Date for Levy on Exported Fruit

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
23 April 1925
Fruit Control Act, Levy, Fruit Export, Regulations
  • Charles Fergusson, Governor-General
  • F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council

🌾 Regulations under the Fruit Control Act, 1924

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
23 April 1925
Fruit Control Act, Regulations, Export Fees, Travel Allowances
  • Charles Fergusson, Governor-General
  • F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council