Education and Livestock Notices




PROVINCIAL SCHOLARSHIPS

The following Regulations of the Education Board respecting Provincial Scholarships are published for general information. School teachers are requested to forward to me, before the 10th January, 1874, a list containing the names and ages of intending competitors belonging to their several schools.

By order of the Education Board,

JOHN SPERREY,
Secretary.

Regulations.

  1. Two Scholarships in connection with the Boys’ High School, and two in connection with the Girls’ High School, shall be open for competition on the 20th of January, 1874, to boys and girls respectively who shall have attended the public schools of Otago for at least one quarter during the current year (1873). One of the boys’ and one of the girls’ Scholarships shall be bestowed on a boy and a girl respectively from the High Schools or the Grammar Schools. The other two Scholarships shall be conferred on a boy and a girl respectively from the ordinary District Schools. Competitors must be under sixteen years of age at the date of the competition.

  2. The holders for the time being of the said Scholarships shall be called “Provincial Scholars,” and shall be entitled to the privileges and advantages hereinafter specified. A scholarship shall be tenable as long as the holder of it remains a pupil of the Boys’ or Girls’ High School, but not longer than three years. The Education Board may extend the period of tenure in the case of any Provincial Scholar who may have given highly satisfactory evidence of diligence and progress in study.

  3. The said Scholarships respectively shall be awarded to such candidates as shall have shown the greatest proficiency at a Competitive Examination, to be held at Dunedin on the day above specified; such Competitive Examination shall be by written papers, and shall embrace the following subjects:—

I. English Grammar, including Analysis of Sentences.

II. Geography—The Elements of Mathematical and Physical Geography; the chief Physical Features, Political Divisions, and Principal Towns of Europe and Australasia; the drawing from memory of an outline Map of a country in Europe or a colony in Australasia, to be named by the Examiners.

III. British History—The Tudor Period, 1485—1603; and the Reign of Queen Victoria.

IV. Arithmetic—Simple and Compound Rules, Practice, Simple and Compound Proportion, Vulgar and Decimal Fractions, Interest, Discount, Profit and Loss, Extraction of the Square Root, Square Measure and Duodecimals.

V. Algebra—For Common School competitors, the Four Elementary Rules; for High and Grammar School competitors, as far as Simple Equations, inclusive.

VI. Euclid—For Common School competitors, Book I, prop. 1—15; for High and Grammar School competitors, the whole of Book I.

VII. Writing from Dictation.

VIII. A simple Narrative, selected by the Examiners, to be read aloud to the competitors and reproduced by them.

IX. A short Essay on some familiar subject to be named by the Examiners.

X. Pennanship, as shown by the competitors’ papers under subjects VII, VIII, and IX. Preference will be given to a plain round hand.

XI. Latin—(High and Grammar School Boys). Grammar and Accidence; translation into English of a passage in Latin.

XII. French—(High and Grammar School Girls). Grammar; translation into English of a passage from a French author.

XIII. Marks will be given for the reading of Prose and Poetry, and for Recitation from memory.

  1. It shall not be necessary to award a scholarship to the best, or any other candidate, unless he or she shall have gained, in the aggregate, at least 70 per cent. of the number of marks attainable; and the Board shall be at liberty to suspend or terminate any scholarship on account of wilful misconduct or neglect of studies on the part of the holder.

  2. Each holder of a Provincial Scholarship shall receive free education at the High School and a payment of £30 per annum.

  3. Free education for terms of not less than two years nor more than four years may, at the discretion of the Board, be granted to the unsuccessful competitors for Scholarships who shall have gained a satisfactory percentage of the whole number of marks attainable; such Free Scholars may attend the High School, a Grammar School, or an approved Main District School, at their option.

  4. Certificates of Merit will be granted to those competitors who, though failing to gain Scholarships, distinguished themselves greatly.

  5. Teachers must forward to the Secretary of the Education Board, before the 10th January, 1874, the names of intending competitors belonging to their respective schools, together with a certificate of the age of every such scholar.

INSPECTOR OF SCHOOLS

THE Otago Educational Board invites Applications for the office of Inspector of Schools. None need apply but University men of high standing and considerable experience in Education. Salary, £500 per annum, exclusive of travelling allowances.

Applications, with testimonials and references, are to be lodged with me before the 1st November, 1873.

JOHN SPERREY,
Secretary.
Education Office, Dunedin.

NOTICE TO IMPORTERS OF SHEEP AND OTHERS.

THE following sections from the “Sheep Ordinance Amendment Ordinance 1873” are published for general information:—

  1. No sheep shall be imported into the Province of Otago by sea until such sheep shall have been inspected by an Inspector previous to their being landed and such Inspector shall have given permission to land such sheep. It shall be lawful for any Inspector to order and cause any such sheep to be well dipped or dressed by some reputed effective scab-destroying preparation prescribed by such Inspector. Such sheep to be so dipped or dressed within forty-eight hours of their being so landed at some convenient place not further than one mile from the place at which such sheep were so landed. All expenses and charges attending the dipping or dressing of such sheep so imported or landed shall be borne and paid by the owner thereof. Any person importing or landing any sheep contrary to the provisions of this Ordinance shall forfeit and pay for every such offence any sum not less than £50 nor more than £100. And every person so offending may be proceeded against for such offence upon the information of an Inspector or any other person.

  2. For every inspection of sheep made on board of any ship vessel or steamer a fee of £3 shall be charged by the Inspector making such inspection and no certificate or authority to land any sheep shall be given by such Inspector until the said fee of £3 shall have been paid to him by the owner of such sheep.

  3. All moneys received by any Inspector by way of head money or inspection fees together with all fines and penalties recovered under the provisions of this Ordinance shall be accounted for and paid to the Provincial Treasurer of the Province of Otago by the person or persons receiving or recovering the same.

WM. LOGIE,
Chief Inspector,
Sheep Inspector’s Office,
Dunedin, 21st October.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF Otago Provincial Gazette 1873, No 877





✨ LLM interpretation of page content

🎓 Regulations for Provincial Scholarships

🎓 Education, Culture & Science
Scholarships, Education Board, Otago, High School, Grammar School
  • JOHN SPERREY, Secretary

🎓 Application for Inspector of Schools

🎓 Education, Culture & Science
Inspector of Schools, Application, Otago Educational Board
  • JOHN SPERREY, Secretary

🌾 Notice to Importers of Sheep

🌾 Primary Industries & Resources
21 October 2026
Sheep importation, Inspection, Ordinance, Otago
  • WM. LOGIE, Chief Inspector