and Saint George, Lieutenant-Governor of our Province of Manitoba, at our Government House, in our City of Winnipeg, in our said Province of Manitoba, this twenty-ninth day of March, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and eleven, and in the first year of our reign. By command, J. H. HOWDEN, Provincial Secretary. [Manitoba Gazette, April 1, 1911.] 2. Bringing into force, in the Village of Beausejour, the provisions of "An Act respecting the Taxation of Personal Property in Incorporated Towns and Villages," being chapter 53 of 5 and 6 Edward VII. D. H. MCMILLAN, Lieutenant-Governor. CANADA-PROVINCE OF MANITOBA. GEORGE THE FIFTH, by the grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of the British Dominions beyond the Seas, King, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India. A PROCLAMATION. To all to whom these presents shall come-GREETING. COLIN H. CAMPBELL WHEREAS, by section 15 of chapter 53 Attorney-General. of 5 and 6 Edward VII, intituled "An Act respecting the taxation of personal property in incorporated towns and villages," it is provided that the provisions of the said Act shall come into force, as to any particular incorporated town or village in the Province of Manitoba, upon proclamation to that effect; And whereas the council of the Village of Beausejour has requested that the provisions of the said Act be brought into force in that municipality; And whereas it is deemed expedient to grant the request of the said council, Now know ye that, by and with the advice and consent of the Executive Council of our Province of Manitoba, and under and by virtue of the authority of said Act, and of any other power whatsoever in us vested in that behalf, we have ordered and declared, and do hereby proclaim, that on, from and after the fifteenth day of April, A.D. 1911, the provisions of the Act above mentioned shall come into force in the Village of Beausejour. In testimony whereof we have caused these our letters to be made patent, and the great seal of our Province of Manitoba to be hereunto affixed. Witness, His Honour SIR DANIEL HUNTER MCMILLAN, Knight Commander of our most distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Lieutenant-Governor of our Province of Manitoba, at our Government House, in our City of Winnipeg, in our said Province of Manitoba, this sixth day of April, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and eleven, and in the first year of our reign. By command, J. H. HOWDEN, [Manitoba Gazette, April 8, 1911.] Provincial Secretary. 3. Home of the Good Shepherd approved as a Reformatory and Industrial Home, pursuant to the provisions of section 7 of chapter 29 of 10 Edward VII. D. H. MCMILLAN, Lieutenant-Governor. CANADA-PROVINCE OF MANITOBA. GEORGE THE FIFTH, by the grace of God, of the United Kingdom of Great Britain and Ireland, and of the British Dominions beyond. the Seas, King, Defender of the Faith, Emperor of India. A PROCLAMATION. To all to whom these presents shall come-GREETING. COLIN H. CAMPBELL, WHEREAS it is provided by section 7 Attorney-General. S of chapter 29 of 10 Edward VII as follows: 7. In case of the establishment in this Province of any other industrial home or refuge for girls or women by the Salvation Army or by any church authority, the Lieutenant-Governor-in-Council may, upon being satisfied that such institution is under proper management and control, by proclamation approve of the same as a reformatory or industrial home, and authorize the confinement and detention therein of any girls or women lawfully sentenced to such imprisonment therein; and all the provisions of this Act, so far as they can be made applicable to such an institution, shall apply in all cases of sentences and imprisonment in the same after the issue of such proclamation; And whereas the Sisters of the Good Shepherd have established in the City of Winnipeg an institution called the "Home of the Good Shepherd"; And whereas it has been deemed expedient to give effect to said section, Now know ye, that in virtue of the provisions of the said Act, and of all other powers and authority in us vested, and by and with the advice of our Executive Council of our Province of Manitoba, we have approved of the said "Home of the Good Shepherd" as a reformatory and industrial home, and authorize the confinement and detention therein of any girls or women lawfully sentenced to imprisonment therein, and all the provisions of the said Act, so far as they can be made applicable to such institution, shall apply in cases of sentences and imprisonments in the same, after the issue of this proclamation. In testimony whereof we have caused these our letters to be made patent, and the great seal of our Province of Manitoba to be hereunto affixed. Witness, His Honour SIR DANIEL HUNTER MCMILLAN, Knight Commander of our most distinguished Order of Saint Michael and Saint George, Lieutenant-Governor of our said Province of Manitoba, at cur Government House, in our City of Winnipeg, this third day of May, in the year of our Lord one thousand nine hundred and eleven, and in the first year of our reign. By command, J. H. HOWDEN, [Manitoba Gazette, May 6, 1911.] Provincial Secretary. ORDERS-IN-COUNCIL. Under "The County Courts Act." REDUCING THE TERRITORY OF THE COUNTY COURT JUDICIAL DIVISION OF HAMIOTA AND INCREASING THE TERRITORY OF THE COUNTY COURT JUDICIAL DIVISION OF MINIOTA. Dated January 4, 1911. That the west half of township twelve, range twenty-five west of the first principal meridian be detached from the County Court Judicial Division of Hamiota and added to the territory comprising the County Court Judicial Division of Miniota for County Court purposes, and that said change go into force and operation on the first day of January, 1911. [Manitoba Gazette, January 14, 1911.] Under "The Vital Statistics Act." CLASSIFICATION OF CAUSES OF DEATH. Dated March 24, 1911. That it be ordered that the system of classification of causes of death used in compiling the mortality statistics of the Province be that of the International classification of causes of death, as decennially revised. That forms be also approved for the purposes mentioned in said section 37, and also additional forms to those prescribed in orderin-council No. 1335, dated the second day of November, A.D. 1883. [Manitoba Gazette, April 1, 1911.] Under "The King's Bench Act." ADDITIONAL RULES OF COURT OF APPEAL. By virtue of the powers contained in section 7 of chapter 18 of 5 and 6 Edward VII, as amended by section 11 of chapter 14 of 1 George v, the judges of the Court of Appeal have enacted the following additional rules: 13. The transaction of any business and the exercise of any authority and jurisdiction in respect of the same which may be done, transacted or exercised by a judge of the Court of Appeal in Chambers may be transacted and exercised by the registrar. 14. In case any matter shall appear to the said registrar to be proper for the decision of a judge, the registrar may refer the same to a judge, and the judge may either dispose of the matter or refer the same back to the registrar, with such directions as he may think fit. 15. Every order or decision made or given by the said registrar in chambers shall be as valid and binding on all parties concerned as if the same had been made or given by a judge sitting in chambers. 16. All orders made by the registrar sitting in chambers shall be signed by the registrar. 17. Any person affected by any order or decision of the registrar may appeal therefrom to a judge of the Court of Appeal. 18. All appeals from the registrar to a judge of the Court shall be by motion on notice setting forth the grounds of objection, and served within four days after the decision complained of and two clear days before the day fixed for the hearing the same, or served within such other time as may be allowed by a judge of the said Court or the registrar. 19. Appeals from the registrar to a judge of the Court shall be brought on for hearing on the first Monday after the expiry of the delays provided for by the next preceding rule, or so soon therafter as the same can be heard, and shall be set down not later than the preceding Saturday in a book kept for that purpose in the registrar's office. 20. For the transaction of business under these rules, the registrar, unless absent from the city or prevented by illness or other necessary cause, shall sit every judicial day except during the vacations of the Court at 10.30 a.m., or such other hour as he may specify from time to time by notice posted up in his office. 21. The registrar, in the foregoing rules 13 to 20, shall not include his deputy. [Manitoba Gazette, April 22, 1911.] |