Regulations and Price Orders




4 MARCH] THE NEW ZEALAND GAZETTE 353

Notice Under the Regulations Act 1936

PURSUANT to the Regulations Act 1936 notice is hereby given of the making of regulations as under :

Authority for Enactment Short Title or Subject Matter Serial Number Date of Enactment Price (Postage 1½d. Extra)
Marketing Act 1936 .. Cheese Wholesale Prices Notice 1954 1954/30 2/3/54 2d.
Emergency Regulations Act 1939, Samoa Act 1921, and Cook Islands Act 1915 Revocation of Enemy Property Emergency Regulations 1954/31 3/3/54 2d.
Enemy Property Act 1951 .. Enemy Property Regulations 1954 1954/32 3/3/54 6d.

Copies can be purchased at the Government Printing and Stationery Office, Lambton Quay, Wellington. Prices for quantities supplied on application. Copies may be ordered by quoting serial number.

R. E. OWEN, Government Printer.


Price Order No. 1534 (Cheese)

PURSUANT to the Control of Prices Act 1947, the Price Tribunal hereby makes the following Price Order:

PRELIMINARY

  1. This Order may be cited as Price Order No. 1534, and shall come into force on the 5th day of March 1954.

  2. (1) Price Order No. 1406* is hereby revoked.

(2) The revocation of the said Order shall not affect the liability of any person for any offence in relation thereto committed before the coming into force of this Order.

  1. (1) In this Order, unless the context otherwise requires,—

‘‘The said Act’’ means the Control of Prices Act 1947:

‘‘Export size’’, in relation to any cheese, means a cheese weighing or reputed to weigh approximately 80 lb.:

‘‘Medium size’’, in relation to any cheese, means a cheese weighing or reputed to weigh approximately 40 lb.:

‘‘Pancake size’’, in relation to any cheese, means a cheese weighing or reputed to weigh approximately 20 lb.:

‘‘Standard crate lot’’, in relation to a transaction for the sale of cheeses, means a lot consisting of two cheeses of export size, or three cheeses of medium size, or six cheeses of pancake size.

(2) Terms and expressions defined in the said Act and used in this Order have the meanings severally assigned thereto by that Act.

APPLICATION OF THIS ORDER

  1. (1) This Order applies only with respect to Cheddar cheese that is sold by a retailer within four months after the date of its manufacture.

(2) For the purposes of this clause the date of the manufacture of any cheese shall be deemed to be the date indicated on the cheese in accordance with the requirements of the Dairy-produce Regulations 1938†.

(3) Every person who sells any Cheddar cheese by retail (whatever the age of such cheese) shall keep, for a period of not less than four months, a record showing the date of the delivery of the cheese to the retailer, and also—

(a) If the whole cheese was sold, without cutting, the date of its sale; or

(b) In any other case, the date on which the cheese was first cut.

FIXING MAXIMUM RETAIL PRICES FOR CHEESE TO WHICH THIS ORDER APPLIES

  1. (1) The maximum price that may be charged or received by any retailer for any cheese to which this Order applies shall be determined in accordance with the following provisions, namely—

(a) In the case of cheese sold by a retailer to whom supplies of Cheddar cheese are available, free of freight charges, for delivery at his store from any source whatever, the maximum retail price shall be 1s. 11½d. a pound:

(b) In cases to which the last preceding paragraph does not apply, the maximum retail price shall be 1s. 11½d. a pound, increased to the next upward halfpenny by the appropriate proportion of the freight charges incurred by the retailer in obtaining delivery at his store:

Provided that where any cheese to which this paragraph applies is obtained by the retailer from a source of supply that is not the most convenient of access to the retailer’s store, the increase of the price per pound authorized by this paragraph shall not exceed the appropriate proportion of the freight charges that would have been incurred by the retailer if the cheese had been obtained from the source of supply most convenient of access to his store, and if delivery had been effected by a common carrier at current freight rates.

(2) Where the quantity of cheese sold by a retailer in any one transaction is not an exact number of pounds, the maximum price shall be computed at the rate per pound fixed in accordance with the last preceding subclause.

(3) If in respect of any cheese the retail price charged in accordance with the provisions of this clause is not an exact number of pence or halfpence, the maximum price shall be computed to the next upward halfpenny.

  1. (1) Where any person sells by retail to any one purchaser, for delivery at any one time, not less than three standard crate lots of export-size, medium-size, or pancake-size cheeses, whether or not all the standard crate lots contain the same size of cheeses, the maximum price that may be charged or received in respect of any such sale shall be computed as follows:
Nature of Sale Maximum Price per Pound
Export Size
s. d.
(a) Sales in standard crate lots (crated) 1 8⅛
(b) Sales in standard crate lots (uncrated) 1 7⅞

(2) For the purposes of this clause the weight of any cheeses sold in crates shall be deemed to be their weight as at the time of crating, and the weight of uncrated cheeses shall be deemed to be their actual weight when delivered to the purchaser.

SPECIAL PRICES WHERE EXTRAORDINARY CHARGES INCURRED

  1. Subject to such conditions, if any, as it thinks fit, the Tribunal, on application by any retailer, may authorize special prices in respect of any cheese to which this Order applies where special circumstances exist or for any reason extraordinary charges (freight or otherwise) are incurred by the retailer. Any authority given by the Tribunal under this clause may apply with respect to a specified lot or consignment of cheese or may relate generally to all cheese to which this Order applies sold by the retailer while the approval remains in force.

Dated at Wellington, this 3rd day of March 1954.

The Seal of the Price Tribunal was affixed hereto in the presence of—

[L.S.] D. J. DALGLISH (Judge), President.

G. LAURENCE, Member.


Plants Declared Noxious Weeds in the Borough of Te Aroha
(Notice No. Ag. 5584)

PURSUANT to the Noxious Weeds Act 1950, the Director-General of Agriculture, acting under a delegation from the Minister of Agriculture for the purposes of the said Act, hereby publishes the following special order made by the Te Aroha Borough Council on the 16th day of February 1954.

SPECIAL ORDER

In exercise of the powers conferred on it by section 3 of the Noxious Weeds Act 1950, the Te Aroha Borough Council hereby resolves and declares, by way of special order, that the plants mentioned in the Schedule hereto (being plants mentioned in the First Schedule of the said Act) are noxious weeds within the Borough of Te Aroha.

SCHEDULE

(a) Blackberry (Rubus fruticosus and Rubus laciniatus).

(b) Fennel (Foeniculum vulgare).

(c) Gorse (Ulex, any species).

(d) Hemlock (Conium maculatum).

(e) Ragwort (Senecio jacobaea).

Dated at Wellington, this 23rd day of February 1954.

R. B. TENNENT,

Acting Director-General of Agriculture.

(Ag. 70/10/176)

*Gazette, 1 September 1952, Vol. III, page 1435.

† Statutory Regulations 1938, Serial number 1938/91, page 396.



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✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏛️ Regulations Made Under the Regulations Act 1936

🏛️ Governance & Central Administration
Regulations, Cheese Wholesale Prices, Enemy Property, Emergency Regulations
  • R. E. Owen, Government Printer

🏭 Price Order No. 1534 for Cheese

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
3 March 1954
Price Control, Cheese, Retail Prices, Cheddar Cheese, Price Tribunal
  • D. J. Dalglish (Judge), President of the Price Tribunal
  • G. Laurence, Member of the Price Tribunal

🌾 Declaration of Noxious Weeds in Te Aroha Borough

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
23 February 1954
Noxious Weeds, Te Aroha Borough, Blackberry, Gorse, Hemlock, Ragwort
  • R. B. Tennent, Acting Director-General of Agriculture