✨ Regulations and Licensing Notice
APRIL 8.] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE. 915
(f.) If a principal buyer’s license be cancelled under any of the
foregoing provisions of these regulations, all licenses issued
to such principal buyer under this clause shall be deemed to
be likewise cancelled, and shall forthwith be void and of no
effect, and shall be produced for surrender under clause 15
hereof.
(g.) No license shall be issued under the provisions of this clause,
except on production of the principal buyer’s license con-
cerned, and the person issuing any such license shall endorse
on the said principal buyer’s license a memorandum of the
issue of such license under the provisions of this clause.
- On application by the person to whom any license has been
issued and on proof to the satisfaction of the Resident Commissioner
or Resident Agent by statement in writing, statutory declaration, or
other evidence, that any license or copy of a license has been lost or
mutilated, or become illegible, and on payment of a fee of two shillings
and sixpence, the Resident Commissioner or Resident Agent may at
any time during the currency of the license issue to such person a
copy thereof, certified as being a true copy, and such copy shall be
available for all purposes in like manner as the original license.
PART III.—GROWING OF TOMATOES.
-
The regulations comprised in Part III hereof shall come into
force on the 1st day of October, 1926. -
For the purposes of the regulations comprised in Part III hereof
“Inspector” includes a local Fruit Inspector. -
All tomato-plants must be raised from the seed in boxes, and
all plants found to have been raised in beds may be destroyed, or
ordered to be destroyed, by an Inspector. -
As soon as the tomato-crop has been harvested the plants and
stakes shall be removed from the land upon which such crop was
grown, and the land shall be ploughed in order to prevent disease.
Unless this is done, the Inspector may forbid the use of the same land
for the growing of tomatoes during the next succeeding season. -
Unless plants removed from any land under the last preceding
clause have been thoroughly destroyed to the satisfaction of the
Inspector, the Inspector may forbid the use, for the growing of tomatoes
during the next succeeding season, of the land to which such plants
have been removed. -
All tomato-plants must be trained to stakes, or other suitable
support. -
No person shall raise, grow, or harvest tomatoes, or cause or
suffer tomatoes to be raised, grown, or harvested, otherwise than in
conformity with the provisions contained in Part III hereof.
F. D. THOMSON,
Clerk of the Executive Council.
Licensing Colin Campbell Crump, of Wellington, to occupy a Part of the Foreshore and Land below Low-water Mark at Kawau Island, Hauraki Gulf, for the Purpose of taking Shingle and Sand.
CHARLES FERGUSSON, Governor-General
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government Buildings at Wellington, this 30th day of March, 1926.
Present:
THE RIGHT HONOURABLE J. G. COATES, P.C., PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.
WHEREAS, there being no Harbour Board empowered to grant the license hereinafter mentioned, Colin Campbell Crump, of Wellington (who with his executors, administrators, and assigns is hereinafter called “the licensee”), has applied to the Governor-General in Council for a license under the Harbours Act, 1923, (hereinafter called “the said Act”), to use and occupy a part of the foreshore and land below low-water mark at Kawau Island, Hauraki Gulf, for the purpose of taking away the shingle and sand deposited thereon; and, in accordance with the provisions of the said Act, has deposited a plan in the office of the Marine Department at Wellington (marked M.D. 6141) showing the area of foreshore and land below low-water mark intended to be occupied for such purpose:
And whereas it is desirable to grant the license applied for:
Now, therefore, His Excellency the Governor-General of the Dominion of New Zealand, in pursuance and exercise of the power and authority vested in him by the said Act, and of all other powers and authorities enabling him in that behalf, and acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of the said Dominion, doth hereby approve of the purpose or object for which the said license is required by the licensee as aforesaid; and, in further pursuance and exercise of the said power and authority, and with the like advice and consent as aforesaid, doth hereby license and permit the licensee to use and occupy that part of the foreshore and land below low-water mark which is particularly shown and delineated within a red line on the plan so deposited as aforesaid, for the purpose of taking away the shingle and sand deposited thereon, such license to be held and enjoyed by the licensee upon and subject to the terms and conditions set forth in the Schedule hereto.
SCHEDULE.
- In these conditions the term—
“Foreshore” means such parts of the bed, shore, or banks of a tidal water as are covered and uncovered by the flow and ebb of the tide at ordinary spring tides:
“Low-water mark” means low-water mark at ordinary spring tides:
“Minister” means the Minister of Marine as defined by the Shipping and Seamen Act, 1908, and includes any officer, person, or authority acting by or under the direction of such Minister.
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VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1926, No 21
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1926, No 21
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🌏
Cook Islands Fruit Regulations Amendment, 1926
(continued from previous page)
🌏 External Affairs & Territories30 March 1926
Cook Islands, Fruit Regulations, Export, Licensing, Amendments
- F. D. Thomson, Clerk of the Executive Council
🏗️ License to Occupy Foreshore for Shingle and Sand Extraction
🏗️ Infrastructure & Public Works30 March 1926
Licensing, Foreshore, Shingle, Sand, Kawau Island, Hauraki Gulf
- Colin Campbell Crump, Licensed to occupy foreshore for shingle and sand extraction
- Charles Fergusson, Governor-General
- J. G. Coates, Presiding in Council