✨ Government Orders and Authorizations
1480
THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE.
[No. 44
Setting apart Native Land as a Native Reservation.
C. L. N. NEWALL, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government Buildings at Wellington, this 21st day of May, 1941.
Present:
THE HON. W. NASH PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.
PURSUANT to section five of the Native Purposes Act, 1937, His Excellency the Governor-General, acting by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council, doth hereby set apart and reserve the Native freehold land described in the Schedule hereto as a Native reservation as a site for a meeting-place, recreation-ground, sports-ground, and building-site for the benefit of the Natives who are residents of Arowhenua.
SCHEDULE.
Block. Area. Survey District.
A. R. P.
Arowhenua Village, 1 0 1 Block II, Arowhenua.
Section 12A
T. R. AICKIN,
Acting Clerk of the Executive Council.
(N.D. 21/4/53.)
Suspending the Operations of certain Statutes in connection with the New Zealand Industries Fair.
C. L. N. NEWALL, Governor-General.
ORDER IN COUNCIL.
At the Government Buildings at Wellington, this 21st day of May, 1941.
Present:
THE HON. W. NASH PRESIDING IN COUNCIL.
IN pursuance and exercise of the powers conferred upon him by the Exhibitions Act, 1910 (hereinafter called “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 authorize the holding of a public exhibition of works of industry and art, to be conducted by the Canterbury Manufacturers’ Association in the Dalgety Buildings, Christchurch, from the ninth day to the twenty-third day of August inclusive, one thousand nine hundred and forty-one, and to be known as the New Zealand Industries Fair; and doth hereby declare the said exhibition to be an exhibition within the meaning of the said Act, and doth hereby suspend, subject, however, to the conditions set out in the Schedule hereto, all the provisions of the Shops and Offices Act, 1921-22, the Factories Act, 1921-22, and the Industrial Conciliation and Arbitration Act, 1925, and of all awards and industrial agreements in force under the last-named Act, in so far as such provisions relate to the hours of commencing or ceasing work or to the issue of permits for overtime or extended hours, or to holidays or half-holidays, or to the closing of shops to any person, and so far as such provisions relate to hours of work done or business conducted or service carried out in or upon the premises aforesaid during the period aforesaid by or on behalf of the bodies conducting the said exhibition, or by or on behalf of any exhibitor of works of industry or art at the said exhibition, or by any person employed in or about the said exhibition.
SCHEDULE.
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Eight hours shall constitute a day’s work in or about the exhibition, and, with the exception set out in clause 2 hereof, such hours shall be worked consecutively.
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No person shall be employed in or about the exhibition for more than four hours without an interval of at least three-quarters of an hour for a meal.
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Any person employed during any day in or about the exhibition who is employed on such day in excess of eight hours, or before the hour of 8 a.m. or after the hour of 10.30 p.m. (whether such excess employment is in or about the exhibition or otherwise), shall be paid for such excess employment at not less than one-half as much again as the ordinary rate for the first two hours and at not less than twice the ordinary rate thereafter, and any person employed in or about the exhibition on any day that would, but for the provisions of this Order in Council, have been a whole holiday for such person by virtue of any Act or of any award or industrial agreement, shall be paid for all work done on such day at not less than twice the ordinary rate, whether such work is performed wholly in or about the exhibition or otherwise.
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No male under eighteen years of age and no female shall be employed in or about the exhibition after the hour of 10.30 p.m.
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For the purposes of the enforcement of an award or industrial agreement, any provision of which has been suspended by this Order in Council, any officer of the industrial union or association concerned who is authorized in writing in that behalf by such union or association shall be entitled to interview at his place of employment any person employed in or about the exhibition under that award or industrial agreement at such time or times as may be agreed upon by and between such officer and the employer of such persons, and for this purpose any such officer shall be entitled at any reasonable time to have access to the Register of Passes issued by the Canterbury Manufacturers’ Association.
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Nothing in this Order in Council shall be deemed to affect any provisions in an award or industrial agreement requiring workers subject to such award or industrial agreement to be members of a union.
T. R. AICKIN,
Acting Clerk of the Executive Council.
Officers authorized to take and receive Statutory Declarations.
C. L. N. NEWALL, Governor-General.
PURSUANT to the authority conferred upon me by the three-hundred-and-first section of the Justices of the Peace Act, 1927, I, Cyril Louis Norton Newall, the Governor-General of the Dominion of New Zealand, do hereby notify and declare that the persons whose names are set out in the Schedule hereto, being officers in the service of the Crown holding the offices stated opposite their names respectively in the said Schedule, are authorized to take and receive statutory declarations under the three-hundred-and-first section of the Justices of the Peace Act, 1927.
SCHEDULE.
Lionel Gladstone Wood, Postmaster, Devonport.
Frank Mairs, Postmaster, Marton.
Eric Wilfred Boundy, Accountant, Nelson.
Stanley Walter Hills, Postmaster, Patea.
George Alexander Miller, Postmaster and Telephonist, Tuapeka Mouth.
William Henry Hulse, Accountant, Invercargill.
As witness the hand of His Excellency the Governor-General, this 22nd day of May, 1941.
H. G. R. MASON, Minister of Justice.
Officers authorized to attest Signatures of Natives to Instruments under Chattels Transfer Act, 1924.
C. L. N. NEWALL, Governor-General.
PURSUANT to section five hundred and forty-seven of the Native Land Act, 1931, I, Cyril Louis Norton Newall, the Governor-General of the Dominion of New Zealand, do hereby notify and declare that the persons whose names are set out in the Schedule hereto, being officers in the service of the Crown holding the offices set out after their respective names, are authorized to attest, in accordance with the provisions of the said section five hundred and forty-seven, the signatures of Natives to instruments by way of security within the meaning of the Chattels Transfer Act, 1924.
SCHEDULE.
Hoeroa Marumaru, Field Supervisor, Wanganui.
Kahutia te Hau, Acting Maori Welfare Officer, Gisborne.
Wiremu Kaipuke, Assistant Field Supervisor, Wairoa.
As witness the hand of His Excellency the Governor-General, this 17th day of May, 1941.
FRANK LANGSTONE, Native Minister.
Officers authorized to attest Signatures of Natives to Instruments of Alienation.
C. L. N. NEWALL, Governor-General.
PURSUANT to section two hundred and sixty-eight of the Native Land Act, 1931, I, Cyril Louis Norton Newall, the Governor-General of the Dominion of New Zealand, do hereby notify and declare that the persons whose names are set out in the Schedule hereto, being officers in the service of the Crown holding the offices set out after their respective names, are authorized to attest, in accordance with the provisions of the said section two hundred and sixty-eight, the signatures of Natives to instruments of alienation of Native land.
SCHEDULE.
Hoeroa Marumaru, Field Supervisor, Wanganui.
Kahutia te Hau, Acting Maori Welfare Officer, Gisborne.
Wiremu Kaipuke, Assistant Field Supervisor, Wairoa.
As witness the hand of His Excellency the Governor-General, this 17th day of May, 1941.
FRANK LANGSTONE, Native Minister.
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VUW Te Waharoa —
NZ Gazette 1941, No 44
NZLII —
NZ Gazette 1941, No 44
✨ LLM interpretation of page content
🪶 Setting apart Native Land as a Native Reservation
🪶 Māori Affairs21 May 1941
Native Reservation, Meeting-place, Recreation-ground, Arowhenua
- C. L. N. Newall, Governor-General
- T. R. Aickin, Acting Clerk of the Executive Council
🏭 Suspending the Operations of certain Statutes in connection with the New Zealand Industries Fair
🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry21 May 1941
Exhibition, Statutory Suspension, Industrial Fair, Christchurch
- C. L. N. Newall, Governor-General
- T. R. Aickin, Acting Clerk of the Executive Council
⚖️ Officers authorized to take and receive Statutory Declarations
⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement22 May 1941
Statutory Declarations, Postmasters, Accountants
6 names identified
- Lionel Gladstone Wood, Authorized to take statutory declarations
- Frank Mairs, Authorized to take statutory declarations
- Eric Wilfred Boundy, Authorized to take statutory declarations
- Stanley Walter Hills, Authorized to take statutory declarations
- George Alexander Miller, Authorized to take statutory declarations
- William Henry Hulse, Authorized to take statutory declarations
- C. L. N. Newall, Governor-General
- H. G. R. Mason, Minister of Justice
🪶 Officers authorized to attest Signatures of Natives to Instruments under Chattels Transfer Act, 1924
🪶 Māori Affairs17 May 1941
Chattels Transfer Act, Native Signatures, Maori Welfare
- Hoeroa Marumaru, Authorized to attest signatures
- Kahutia te Hau, Authorized to attest signatures
- Wiremu Kaipuke, Authorized to attest signatures
- C. L. N. Newall, Governor-General
- Frank Langstone, Native Minister
🪶 Officers authorized to attest Signatures of Natives to Instruments of Alienation
🪶 Māori Affairs17 May 1941
Native Land Act, Alienation, Maori Welfare
- Hoeroa Marumaru, Authorized to attest signatures
- Kahutia te Hau, Authorized to attest signatures
- Wiremu Kaipuke, Authorized to attest signatures
- C. L. N. Newall, Governor-General
- Frank Langstone, Native Minister