โœจ Diseased Cattle Proclamation




201

lector of Customs, or if there be no
Inspector or Collector of Customs,
then from the Police Magistrate, or
from two Justices of the Peace, at the
Port or place where such Cattle were
last shipped, to the effect that the
District wherein such port or place is
situated, was to the best of his or
their knowledge and belief, free from
infectious disease at the time of
shipment, and that the Cattle shipped were clean and free from such
disease. And in case the master of
any such vessel shall have neglected
to procure or be unable to produce
such a certificate, the Inspector of
Diseased Cattle for the Port or place
where it is desired to land such
Cattle, shall not proceed to inspect
the said cattle, nor grant a certificate
of cleanness, nor a quarantine
certificate, until such master shall
have paid to the Provincial Treasurer a fee of Twenty pounds if the
number of Cattle to be inspected
shall not exceed twenty, or one
pound per head if the number
shall exceed twenty, nor until such
master shall have made declaration in the usual statutory form of
the cleanness of the said Cattle, and
of the District from which they were
last shipped.

J. P. Robinson,
Superintendent.

Attested,
J. C. Richmond,
Provincial Secretary.

Printed under the authority of the Government
of the Province of Wellington, by Thomas Mโ€™Kee
and James Muir, Printers for the time being to such Government.



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Online Sources for this page:

VUW Te Waharoa PDF Wellington Provincial Gazette 1863, No 44





โœจ LLM interpretation of page content

๐ŸŒพ Revised Diseased Cattle Proclamation (continued from previous page)

๐ŸŒพ Primary Industries & Resources
11 August 1863
Livestock, Disease, Proclamation, Nelson, Quarantine, Certification, Inspection
  • J. P. Robinson, Superintendent
  • J. C. Richmond, Provincial Secretary