Government Notice FEES CHARGEABLE UNDER THE LAND TRANSFER ACT. (Extract from New Zealand Gazette, No. 04, of 9th December, 1871.) For bringing Land under the provisions of the Act: — £ s. d. When the title consists of a grant dated on or subsequent to the 28th December, 1841, and none of the land included therein has been dealt with 0 2 0 When the title is of any other description, and the value exceeds £3OO 1 0 0 When the title is of any other description, and the value exceeds £2OO, and does not exceed £3OO 015 0 When the title is of any other description, and the value exceeds £IOO, and does not exceed £2OO 010 0 When the title is of any other description, and the value docs not exceed £IOO 0 5 0 Contributions to Assurance Fund upon first bringing land under this Act, and upon the registration of an estate of freehold in possession derived by settlement, will, or intestacy— In the pound sterling ... 0 0 A Other fees— For every application to bring land under the Act 0 5 0 For certificate of title where the same is issued in the name of any applicant grantee Nil For certificate of Title issued upon any memorandum of transfer where the consideration is under £lO and is not nominal 0 10 0 For every other certificate of title 10 0 Registering memorandum of transfer, mortgage, encumbrance or lease 0 10 0 Registering transfer or discharge of mortgage or of encumbrance, or the transferor surrender of a lease 0 5 0 Registering proprietor of any estate. or interest derived by settlement or transmission 0 10 0 For every power of attorney ... q 10 0 For every registration abstract ... I 0 0 For cancelling registration abstract 0 5 0 For every revocation order 0 10 0 Noting caveat .. .. .. 010 0 Cancelling or withdrawal of caveat, and service of notice to caveator or caveatee 0 5 0 Issuing order for foreclosure ... 1 0 0 For every search 0 2 0 For every general search . ...0 5 0 For every'map or plan deposited ... 0 5 0 Far every instrument declaratory of trusts, and for every will or other instrument deposited 0 10 0 For registering recovery by proceeding in law or equity, or re-entry by lessee 0 10 0 For registering vesting of lease in mortgage, consequent on refusal of trustee in bankruptcy to accept the same 0 10 0 For entering notice of marriage or death 0 10 0 For entering notice of writ or order of Supreme Court 0 10 0 Taking acknowledgment of married women 0 5 0 Taking declaration in case of lost grant or other instrument, or where production of duplicate is dispensed with 0 10 0 Taking allidavit or statutory declaration 0 5 0 For the exhibition or return of any' deposited instrument, or for exhibiting or returning deeds surrendered by applicant proprietor 0 5 0 For certified copy, first live folios, per folio of seventy-two words ... 0 5 0 For every folio or part folio after first live . ... 0 0 8 For every instrument drawn on parchment ... . ... ..020 When any instrument purports to deal with laud included in more than one grant or certificate, for each registration memorial after the first 0 2 G Lands purchased from the Crown since the coming into operation of the Land Transfer Act cannot be dealt with under the old system. W. S. MOOR HOUSE, 135 registrar-General of Land. Patent Medicine PARADOX !—TO SUFFERERS. NERVOUSNESS, ITS NAT UR E A N D C U RE. What is Nervousness ?—Various answers might ho given to this question, according to I the constitution and knowledge of the imlivi- | dual. Strong healthy persons, whether medically educated or not, generally regard nervousness as more or less an “ imaginary complaint” ; it is sometimes only believed to bo real when the patient is found to be dying' or dead. The best ansAver to the question, probably, is this, — Nervousness is an Unnaturae Condition of the Nervous System. Sometimes this unnatural state is accompanied with considerable bodily weakness, loss of flesh, and loss of strength ; but in most cases there is in the earlier stages of the disorder no outward sign of weakness. The sufferers are found in both sexes ; they often have the bloom of health upon the cheek ; they are surrounded by kind friends, yet existence to them has no charms, for they feel that they cannot enjoy it. 'Without intending it, they'annoy other people about the merest trilles ; if they encounter some person unexpectedly* they feel confused, afraid, and alarmed : the heart beats violently', the hand shakes when writing, and the whole frame at times experiences a conn dote > trcmulousness. The intellect also is sometimes
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Bibliographic details
Cromwell Argus, Volume III, Issue 130, 7 May 1872, Page 8
Word Count
792Page 8 Advertisements Column 2 Cromwell Argus, Volume III, Issue 130, 7 May 1872, Page 8
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