Miscellaneous Notices




[Page 140]

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of ground, and access thereto, be subject in every respect to such Rules and Regulations as the Trustees of the said Cemetery may from time to time make; and shall not be entitled to exercise the right to bury or inter therein, except on payment of such charges as shall from time to time be established by the said Trustees.

Dated this day of 186__.

[Signatures of Managers]

SCHEDULE C.—FORM OF INSTRUCTIONS FOR GRAVES.

Answers to be written opposite to the following questions at the time of giving orders.

  1. What denomination?
  2. Name of the deceased?
  3. Late place of residence of deceased?
  4. Rank of deceased?
  5. Age of deceased.
  6. Where born?
  7. Minister to officiate?
  8. Day of funeral?
  9. What hour?
  10. Number of grave on plan issued.
  11. If a public grave?
  12. If special land for private graves, what width?
  13. If a family vault or brick grave, what width?
  14. What depth?
  15. If first or second interment?
  16. Nature of disease, or supposed cause of death?

Signature of
Representative (or undertaker).

Orders received this day of 186__, at ___ o’clock.

[Signatures of Managers.]

In the Supreme Court of New Zealand,
Otago and Southland District.

NOTICE is hereby given, that a Sitting of the said Court in its Insolvency Jurisdiction will be held at the Court House, Dunedin, on Monday, the 16th day of July next, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, for the transaction of all business arising under the provisions of the “Debtors and Creditors Act, 1862 and 1865.”

ROBERT CHAPMAN,
Registrar.

Supreme Court Office,
Dunedin, 28th June, 1866.

(From New Zealand Gazette, June 23, 1866, No. 37.)

Governor’s Order, No. 73.

G. Grey, Governor.

TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME,

GREETING:

WHEREAS by a Governor’s Order, dated the seventh day of May, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-six, the Port of Molyneux, in the Province of Otago, was declared to be no longer a Port for the purposes of “The Customs Regulation Act, 1858:” And whereas it has become expedient to annul the said Order, and to reappoint the Port of Molyneux to be a Port for the purposes of the abovementioned Act: Now therefore I, Sir George Grey, the Governor of the Colony of New Zealand, in exercise of the power in me for this purpose vested by “The Customs Regulation Act, 1858,” do hereby appoint, that on and from the date hereof, there shall be within the Province of Otago, a Port to be called

THE PORT OF MOLYNEUX,

the limits whereof shall be as follows,—extending from the mouth of the Puerua River, along the Clutha River and the ocean beach as far as the boundary between sections 6 and 7 of block VII. South Molyneux, and including the spaces reserved for the Township of Molyneux.

Given under the hand of His Excellency Sir George Grey, Knight Commander of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath, Governor and Commander-in-Chief in and over Her Majesty’s Colony of New Zealand and its Dependencies, at the Government House, at Wellington, this fifteenth day of June, in the year of our Lord one thousand eight hundred and sixty-six.

E. W. STAFFORD.

Sheep and Cattle Inspector’s Department,

Dunedin, 27th June, 1866.

SIR—I have the honor to forward List of Returns received under the “Cattle Ordinance, 1864,” for the year ending 28th February, 1866, representing a total of twenty-three thousand three hundred and twenty-nine (23,329) head of cattle.

This is considerably under the number depastured within the Province, the 15th clause of the Ordinance being inoperative when cattle are kept on enclosed land, thus raising a great obstacle to its utility as a statistical medium.

The number of cattle landed at Port Chalmers from 30th September, 1865, was one thousand eight hundred and eighty-one (1881).

The number killed during the year will amount to near twelve thousand (12,000).

The condition of the cattle in most districts of the Province is on the whole satisfactory, but fat cattle are still scarce.

I have the honor to be, Sir,
Your most obedient servant,
GEORGE THOMSON,
Chief Inspector of Sheep and Cattle.

His Honor
The Superintendent of Otago.

IMPOUNDED on the 24th day of June, 1866, by Constable Bergin, one black Mare, white star on forehead, and white on nose, branded like IT on near shoulder, owner unknown, for trespassing on public street; and in default of being released, the above mare will be sold at the Public Pound at South Dunedin, on Friday, the 27th day of July, 1866, at 12 o’clock noon.

JOHN BARR,
Poundkeeper of the South Dunedin Pound.

Printed under the Authority of the Provincial Government of Otago, by DANIEL CAMPBELL, of Dunedin, Otago, New Zealand, Printer to the said Provincial Government for the time being.

RIGHT COLUMN

In the Supreme Court of New Zealand,
Otago and Southland District.

NOTICE is hereby given, that a Sitting of the said Court in its Insolvency Jurisdiction will be held at the Court House, Dunedin, on Monday, the 16th day of July next, at 10 o’clock in the forenoon, for the transaction of all business arising under the provisions of the “Debtors and Creditors Act, 1862 and 1865.”

ROBERT CHAPMAN,
Registrar.

Supreme Court Office,
Dunedin, 28th June, 1866.

(From New Zealand Gazette, June 23, 1866, No. 37.)

Governor’s Order, No. 73.

G. Grey, Governor.

TO ALL TO WHOM THESE PRESENTS SHALL COME,

GREETING:

WHEREAS by a Governor’s Order, dated the seventh day of May, one thousand eight hundred and sixty-six, the Port of Molyneux, in the Province of Otago, was declared to be no longer a Port for the purposes of “The Customs Regulation Act, 1858:” And whereas it has become expedient to annul the said Order, and to reappoint the Port of Molyneux to be a Port for the purposes of the abovementioned Act: Now therefore I, Sir George Grey, Knight Commander of the Most Honorable Order of the Bath, Governor and Commander-in-Chief in and over Her Majesty’s Colony of New Zealand and its Dependencies, at the Government House at Wellington, do hereby appoint that on and from the date hereof, there shall be within the Province of Otago, a Port to be called

THE PORT OF MOLYNEUX,
the limits whereof shall be as follows: extending from the mouth of the Puerua River, along the Clutha River and the ocean beach as far as the boundary between sections 6 and 7 of block VII. South Molyneux, and including the spaces reserved for the Township of Molyneux.

H. J. MILLER,
Provincial Secretary.

SUBSCRIPTIONS

Subscriptions will be at the rate of £1 per annum, or 5s. per quarter, payable in advance to the Publisher. Single copies of the Gazette not to exceed 6d. Subscriptions can commence at any time, but must terminate not later than 31st December, 1866.

Private Advertisements will be charged at the rate of 6d. per line. Late Advertisements and table matter, 1s. per line first insertion.

The Gazette (with Supplement) is published every Wednesday morning, and Notices for Insertion must be received at the Publisher’s Office not later than 2 o’clock p.m. on the Tuesday preceding. Advertisements received after that hour will be charged 1s. per line. Any irregularity in the receipt of those Gazettes which are given gratis by the Government should be reported at once to the Provincial Secretary.




Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF Otago Provincial Gazette 1866, No 427





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🏘️ Clyde Cemetery Rules and Regulations (continued from previous page)

🏘️ Provincial & Local Government
Cemetery, Rules, Regulations, Clyde, Trustees, Burial, Fees
  • Signatures of Managers

⚖️ Insolvency Jurisdiction Sitting Notice

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
28 June 1866
Insolvency, Court Sitting, Dunedin, Debtors and Creditors Act
  • ROBERT CHAPMAN, Registrar

🏭 Governor's Order Reappointing Port of Molyneux

🏭 Trade, Customs & Industry
15 June 1866
Port, Customs, Molyneux, Otago
  • E. W. STAFFORD

🌾 Sheep and Cattle Inspector's Report

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
27 June 1866
Cattle, Statistics, Otago, Agriculture
  • GEORGE THOMSON, Chief Inspector of Sheep and Cattle

⚖️ Impounded Mare Notice

⚖️ Justice & Law Enforcement
24 June 1866
Impoundment, Horse, Trespass, South Dunedin
  • JOHN BARR, Poundkeeper of the South Dunedin Pound