DAYLIGHT SAVING
ENDS SUNDAY WEEK EXTENSION ADVOCATED Summer time will end on Sunday, March 15, and all clocks will be put back half an hour, Unless Parliament decides otherwise. In view of the vast amount of work to be done in the devastated Hawke's Bay uistrict, it has been suggested that summer time might well be extended to the end of April or thereabouts. Four years ago the sUihmfr time scheme was first inaugurated. A full hour was observed in the first year, and there has been half an hour in the three succeeding years. The period of the middle of October to the middle of March. It became a permanent measure by the Act of 1929. , . It was over 'GO years ago that New Zealand's present standard time was adopted on the suggestion of Dr. Hector, in the early days there was no need for Very exact time, but with the increase in telegraphic and railway facilities and the introduction of steam navigation, some change was necessitated and in the early 'sixties it was realised that a uniform system of time reckoning was needed. The country's mean longTlude, 172 degrees 30 minutes east, was selected as the basis for calculating a standard time.
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Bibliographic details
Stratford Evening Post, Volume I, Issue 74, 6 March 1931, Page 3
Word Count
204DAYLIGHT SAVING Stratford Evening Post, Volume I, Issue 74, 6 March 1931, Page 3
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