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Pages 1-20 of 127

Pages 1-20 of 127

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Pages 1-20 of 127

Pages 1-20 of 127

E.—l.

1898. NEW ZEALAND.

EDUCATION: TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MINISTER OF EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-1, Sess. II., 1897.]

Presented to both Houses of the General Assembly by Command of His Excellency.

GOZSTTHHSTTS. REPORT. Public Schools — Public Schools— continued. Page Attendance .. .. .. .. i Scholarships .. .. .. x Attendance of Children of Native E ;e .. iii Railway-fares of School-children .. .. x Age and Sex of Pupils.. .. .. iii Education Reserves .. .. .. x Standards .. .. .. .. iii Native Schools .. .. .. .. xi Examination Statistics .. .. iv Industrial Schools .. .. .. xii Subjects of Instruction .. .. v School for Deaf-mutes .. .. .. xiv Number of Schools .. .. .. vi Institute for the Blind .. .. xiv Number of Teachers .. .. .. vii Technical Instruction .. .. xiv Salaries of Teachers .. .. .. ■ vii Secondary Schools .. .. .. xvi Classification of Teachers .. .. viii University and Colleges .. .. .. xvii Finances of Boards .. .. .. viii " Colonial University" Reserves .. .. xviii School-buildings Requirements .. .. ix Civil Service Examinations .. .. xviii APPENDIX. Statistics Statements of Accounts of Boards— continued. Age and Sex of Scholars (Table No. 1) .. 1 Wanganui .. .. .. .. 68 Standards, Scholars classified according to Wellington .. .. .. .. 70 (Table No. 2) .. .. .. 2 Hawke's Bay .. .. .. .. 71 Summary of Boards' Income and Expenditure Marlborough .. .. .. .. 73 for Twenty-one Years (Table No. 3) .. 3 Nelson .. .. .. .. .. 74 Income of Boards for 1897 (Table No. 4) .. 4 Grey .. .. .. .. .. 75 Expenditure of Boards for 1897 (Table No. 5) 5 Westland .. .. .. .. .. 76 Officers of Boards (Table No. 6) .. ..6,7 North Canterbury .. .. .. .. 80 Education Department, Expenditure under South Canterbury .. .. .. .. 82 (Table No. 7) .. .. ..7,8 Otago .. .. .. .. .. 87 Schools, Expenditure on each, and Names and Southland .. .. .. .. 96 Salaries of Teachers (Table No. 8) .. 9-62 Reports and Accounts of School Commissioners — Reports of Boards— Auckland • .. .. .. .. 96 Auckland .. .. .. 63 Taranaki .. .. .. .. .. 98 Taranaki .. .. .. 64 Wellington .. .. .. .. 99 Wanganui .. .. .. 66 Hawke's Bay .. . .. .. 100 Wellington .. .. .. 68 Marlborough .. .. .. 102 Hawke's Bay .. .. ..70 Nelson .. .. .. .. 102 Marlborough .. .. 72 Westland .. .. .. .. 103 Nelson .. .. .. 73 Canterbury .. .. .. 104 Grey .. .. .. ..74 Otago .. .. .. .. ..105 Westland .. .. .. 75 North Canterbury .. .. .. 77 Reports on District High SchoolsSouth Canterbury .. .. ..81 Westland.. .. .. .. .. 76 Otago .. .. .. 84 South Canterbury .. .. .. .. 83 Southland .. .. .. ... 92 Otago .. .. .. .. -. 88 Statements of Accounts of Boards— Reports on Normal SchoolsAuckland .. .. .. 64 North Canterbury .. .. .. .. 81 Taranaki .. .. .. ..66 Otago .. .. .. .. .. 91

I

1898. NEW ZEALAND.

Presented to both Houses of the General Assembly by Command of His Excellency.

Office of the Department of Education, My Lord,— Wellington, 4th July, 1898. I have the honour, in accordance with the provisions of " The Education Act 1877," to submit to your Excellency the following report upon the progress and' condition of public education in New Zealand during the year ending the 31st day of December, 1897. I have, &c, W. C. WALKEE. His Excellency the Right Hon. the Earl of Eanfurly, G-overnor of New Zealand.

REPORT. In this Report and its proper Appendix, in the Inspector-General's Report (E -1a) on the certificate examinations, and in the Reports of the Inspectors of Schools (E -1b), is contained all the information that is of public interest with respect to the administration of " The Education Act, 1877," and " The Education Reserves Act, 1877," and also all the principal statistics relating to matters which are more fully treated of in separate papers, as follows:—E.-2, Native Schools- E.-3, Industrial Schools; E.-3a, Costley Training Institution; E.-4, School for Deaf-mutes; E.-5, Manual and Technical Instruction; E.-6, New Zealand University; E.-7, University of Otago; E-8 Canterbury College; E.-9, Canterbury Agricultural College; E.-10, Auckland University College; E.-11, Secondary Schools. Public School Pupils. For the year 1897 the estimated average daily attendance of pupils at the primary schools-the "working average," which determines the amount of the canitation grants—was 112,000; the actual returns for the year give 112,328, which number is larger by 1,811 than the corresponding number for the previous year The "strict average" for 1897 is 110,993, exceeding the corresponding number for 1896 by 2,017. In Table A the progress of attendance during the twenty years of the operation of the Education Act is exhibited, E.—l,

EDUCATION: TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MINISTER OF EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-1., Sess. 11., 1897.]

E.—l.

TABLE A.—School Attendance and Yearly Increase from 1877 to 1897.

The average number of pupils on the rolls of the schools in 1897, taking one week with another, was 133,961, and the strict average attendance for the year was 110,993, so that 82 - 9 per cent, represents the degree of the regularity of attendance. On reference to the sixth column of Table Ait will be seen that this is the highest degree of regularity which has yet been attained. Table B shows that in five districts—Hawke's Bay, Westland, North Canterbury, South Canterbury, and Otago—the degree of regularity is above the average.

TABLE B. —School Attendance for 1897.

There are only three districts in which there is a decline in the attendance both for the fourth quarter of 1897 and for the whole of the year —viz., Nelson, Westland, and Otago. The Maori children included in the foregoing enumerations of attendance continue to increase. At the end of 1896 the number of such children on the rolls was 2,023 ; during the year it rose to 2,260. This is altogether independent of the number of pupils on the books of the Native schools (2,864), and the number attending boarding-schools for Natives at Government expense (73).

ii

Sek. >ol Attendance. Yearly Im α-ease on Year. ifll IBs JO J2 a H Average A1 jtendance. Hi! till S oft ° > I »S C3 O o so w> g'Sag sg.StS t3 a H Sirs o Average Ati tendance. Fourth Quarter. Whole Year. Fourth Quarter. Whole Year. 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 50,849 59,707 68,124 74,359 76,309 79,416 84,883 90,670 - 95,377 99,206 103,534 104,919 108,158 110,665 112,279 114,305 116,819 119,900 122,425 123,533 55,688 65,040 75,566 82,401 83,560 87,179 92,476 97,238 102,407 106,328 110,919 112,685 115,456 117,912 119,523 122,620 124,686 127,300 129,856 131,037 132,197 49,435 57,301 62,946 63,009 66,426 70,077 74,650 80,183 83,361 87,386 90,849 94,308 96,670 96,264 100,917 99,872 106,151 107,222 109,253 110,523 45,521 53,067 60,625 61,822 63,709 67,373 72,657 78,327 80,737 85,637 90,108 93,374 94,632 97,058 99,070 98,615 103,490 106,622 108,976 110,993 73-8 74-6 74-2 73-6 74-0 75-1 76-6 76-1 77-0 79-3 80-3 79-9 80-3 80-6 78-5 80-6 81-4 82-1 82-9 8,858 8,417 6,235 1,950 3,107 5,467 5,787 4,707 3,829 4,328 1,385 3,239 2,507 1,614 2,026 2,514 3,081 2,525 1,108 9,352 10,526 6,835 1,159 3,619 5,297 4,762 5,169 3,921 4,591 1,766 2,771 2,456 1,611 3,097 2,066 2,614 2,556 1,181 1,160 7,866 5,645 63 3,417 3,651 4,573 5,533 3,178 4,025 3,463 3,459 2,362 [-406] 4,653 [-1,045] 6,279 1,071 2,031 1,270 7,546 7,558 1,197 1,887 3,664 5,284 5,670 2,410 4,900 4,471 3,266 1,258 2,426 2,012 [-455] 4,875 3,132 2,354 2,017

Education Districts. Pupils at Beginning of Year. Eoll-ni imbers. Average Dail; j Attendi wice. Si*O c3 i_i >h <D ► ft S° !h O 53 $ <o 5«t* > -. i Admitted during the Year. Left during the ' Year. belonging - at End of Year. Fourth Quai rter. Boys. Girls. Whole Year. Total. 1897. 1896. Auckland Taranaki .. ... Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay .. Marlborough Nelson 24,789 3,606 9,370 12,458 7,007 2,069 5,723 1,561 1,488 20,364 5,076 20,905 9,117 12,311 1,503 4,092 6,427 3,458 735 1,845 445 346 6,434 1,493 6,476 3,191 9,417 1,264 3,272 4,854 2,886 624 1,625 308 372 5,970 1,358 5,594 2,548 27,683 3,845 10,190 14,031 7,579 2,180 5,943 1,698 1,462 20,828 5,211 21,787 9,760 11,821 1,581 4,319 6,045 3,384 939 2,515 704 630 9,145 2,367 9,897 4,157 10,792 1,437 4,033 5,602 3,012 884 2,285 719 633 8,443 2,181 9,231 3,767 22,613 3,018 8,352 11,647 6,396 1,823 4,800 1,423 1,263 17,588 4,548 19,128 7,924 22,643 3,047 8,257 11,659 6,389 1,804 4,895 1,385 1,294 17,753 4,564 19,360 7,943 810 77-8 80-4 82'2 84-1 82-7 80-5 82-7 85-3 83-5 86-1 87-4 80-7 81-7 776 79-8 80-3 83-3 80-8 80-5 80-9 86'5 81-1 84-7 86-5 80-7 Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland Totals for 1897 Totals for 1896 123,533 122,425 48,756 48,729 40,092 40,117 132,197 131,037 57,504 56,826 53,019 52,427 110,523 109,253 110,993 108,976 82-9 82'1 82-1 Increase in year 1,108 27 - 25 1,160 678 592 1,270 2,017 0-8

E.—l.

Table C, derived from Table No. 1 (Appendix, p. 1), shows that the boys attending the public primary schools outnumber the girls in the usual proportion of about 51-8 to 48-2. The number below the age of ten is to the number above that age as 51 - 6 to 48 - 4, but this ratio seems to be slightly declining. The ages at which the attendance is proportionately most numerous are the years between nine and ten and between ten and eleven, in the order in which they are here stated ; and after the age of thirteen (or probably before that age) a rapid decline sets in, which, however, seems not to begin quite so early as it did some years ago.

TABLE C. —Age and Sex of Pupils, December, 1897.

The statement of the classification of pupils in standard classes is given in detail in Table No. 2 (Appendix, p. 2), and condensed into a shorter statement in Table D.

TABLE D.—Classification by Standards, December, 1897.

It will be observed that in all the classes above that preparing for Standard IV. the proportional number of pupils is constantly increasing, that in the

111

Education Districts. ire Maoris. HalJ-Ci ,stes living as Maoris. Half-castes 1: among European iving is. Total. No. of Schools in which there were Native Children. Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. I i I Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. i Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay.. Marlborough .. Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland 257 24 98 56 179 1 10 182 11 57 46 104 2 2 439 35 155 102 283 3 12 39 2 14 12 6 37 ; 1 3 10 14 76 3 17 22 20 321 8 23 28 56 18 256 10 19 19 49 8 2 577 18 42 47 105 26 2 617 34 135 96 241 19 10 475 22 79 75 167 10 4 1,092 56 214 171 408 29 14 148 15 34 21 27 5 7 11 8 6 13 7 7 4 16 18 15 10 29 3 11 1 31 48 2 8 1 25 55 5 19 2 56 103 14 19 7 47 55 9 15 5 41 64 23 34 12 88 119 4 10 3 12 18 "3 7 9 "3 16 Totals for 1897 Totals for 1896 663 590 438 358 1,101 948 83 77 74 61 I 157 138 548 503 454 434 1,002 937 1,294 1,170 966 853 2,260 2,023 304 283 Difference 80 153 6 13 19 45 20 65 73 124 113 237 21

Ages. Boys. Girls. Total. Peroentai ;es for Five Tears. Five and under six years Six and under seven years Seven and under eight years Eight and under nine years Nine and under ten years Ten and under eleven years Eleven and under twelve years Twelve and under thirteen years Thirteen and under fourteen years .. Fourteen and under fifteen years Over fifteen years 5,249 6,886 7,684 7,738 7,919 7,763 7,694 7,320 I 5,695 I 3,133 1,378 68,459 4,812 6,358 7,144 7,077 7,453 7,506 6,965 6,779 5,256 2,871 1,517 63,738 10,061 13,244 14,828 14,815 15,372 15,269 14,659 14,099 10,951 6,004 2,895 1897. 7-6 10-0 11-2 11-2 11-6 11-5 11-1 10-7 , 8-3 4-5 2-8 1896. 7-4 99 11-2 11-6 11-6 11-5 11-3 10-6 8-1 4-5 2-3 1895. 7-4 9-8 11-6 11-5 11-6 11-6 11-4 10-5 7-9 4-4 2-3 1894. 7-4 10-2 11-5 11-5 11-6 11-9 11-1 10-1 7-8 4-6 2-3 1893. 7-6 10-2 11-5 11-7 11-8 11-7 11-0 10-0 7-9 g 2-2 Totals 132,197 100-0 100-0 100-0 lOO'O 100-0

Standards. Boys. Girls. Totals. Percent! iges for Five Years. 'reparatory classes 'lass for Standard 1. IIHI. IV. v. VI. 'assed Standard VI. 17,361 8,437 8,786 9,796 9,514 7,185 4,934 2,446 15,134 7,818 8,196 9,108 9,124 7,224 4,667 2,467 32,495 16,255 16,982 18,904 18,638 14,409 9,601 4,913 1897. 24-58 12-30 12-85 14-30 14-10 10-90 7-26 3-71 1896. 24-91 12-68 13-13 14-46 14-11 10-53 6-75 3-43 1895. 24-94 13-01 13-41 14-80 13-90 10-35 6-27 3-32 1894. 24-96 13-34 13-92 15-09 13-65 9-70 6-20 3-14 1893. 25-37 14-14 14-04 14-79 13-18 9-62 . 2-77^ Totals.. 68,459 132,197 100-00 100-00 100-00 100-00 63,738 100-00

c—i.

classes preparing for Standards 111. and IV. the change in this respect is intermittent, and in all the lower classes the proportional number of pupils is diminishing. All this, of course, is quite satisfactory, assuming, as may be fairly assumed, that the standard of examination is maintained, if not advanced. The three classes proper to pupils who have passed at least the Fourth Standard constitute only 20*71 per cent, of the whole number of pupils, while the next three classes below contain 41-7, and those who have not yet passed any standard constitute 37"59 of the total. Table E, which gives for each standard in each district the average age at which the pupils pass, exhibits little variation from year to year. The mean of the several " standard ages " for the colony is the same —eleven years and seven months—as it was last year, and has been the same since 1893, when it was eleven years and eight months. As usual the most conspicuous differences are those which come to light in comparing district with district.

TABLE E.—Average Age of Pupils at Standard Examinations in 1897.

The rolls of the different schools on their days of inspection amounted to 132,318 in 1897, this number being smaller by 1,643 than the average of the weekly roll. This number is accounted for thus: 40,741 were in preparatory classes and not ready for standard examination ; 2,324 had already passed the Sixth Standard, and were therefore not subject to standard examination ; 73,392 was the total of all who passed one of the six standards; 13,268 failed; and 2,593 was the number absent from examination. The passes as related to the number on the roll amount to 55 - 5 per cent.; the failures as related to the number examined for standards amount to 15 - 32. In 1896 the percentages reckoned in the same way were 54 - 45 and 15-55, so that what difference there is is in the way of progress.

TABLE F.—Inspection Statistics.

iv

Education Districts. Avei :age Ages for Standi brds. Mean >i Ages. Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay .. .. .. ... Marlborough Nelson I, Yrs. mos. 9 0 9 6 9 1 8 8 8 11 8 9 8 5 8 10 9 0 8 6 8 6 8 8 8 8 II. Yra. mos. 10 2 10 9 10 5 9 9 9 11 9 11 9 8 10 3 9 10 9 8 9 7 9 9 9 11 III. Yrs. mos. 11 3 11 9 11 7 10 11 11 1 11 1 10 10 11 5 11 7 10 10 10 10 11 2 10 11 IV. Yrs. mos. 12 5 13 0 VI 7 11 11 12 4 12 9 12 1 12 4 12 3 12 0 12 0 12 0 12 1 V. Yrs. mos. 13 2 13 10 13 9 12 10 13 2 13 6 13 0 13 4 13 2 12 11 12 11 12 10 13 0 VI. Yrs. mos. 14 2 14 2 14 6 13 10 14 1 14 2 14 1 14 3 14 4 13 9 13 8 13 10 13 10 1897. Yrs. mos. 11 8 12 2 12 0 11 3 11 7 11 8 11 4 11 8 11 8 11 3 11 3 11 4 11 5 1896. Yrs. mos. 11 9 12 1 12 0 11 4 11 7 11 6 11 3 11 9 11 8 11 4 11 5 11 5 11 6 Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland Mean Range (difference between highest and lowest) 8 10 10 0 11 2 12 3 13 2 14 1 11 7 11 7 1 1 1 2 0 11 1 1 1 0 0 10 0 9 0 10 Mean in 1896 Eange in 1896 8 11 1 4 10 1 0 0 11 1 2 3 12 4 0 10 13 0 2 9 14 0 0 10 11 7 0 10

Education Districts. Bolls on Days of Inspection. Preparatory Classes. Pupils above Sixth Standard. Present in Standard Classes. Passed. Auckland Taranaki .. Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland 28,026 3,846 9,827 14,194 7,297 2,130 6,054 1,698 1,461 21,028 5,239 21,960 9,558 9,433 1,294 3,095 4,290 2,624 596 1,635 565 425 5,893 1,475 6,550 2,866 234 18 83 392 32 68 138 48 76 298 109 651 177 17,657 2,416 6,427 9,313 4,559 1,412 4,179 1,041 958 14,339 3,568 14,440 6,351 14,790 1,634 5,288 8,107 3,797 1,181 3,358 898 863 12,003 3,055 12,886 5,532 For the colony.. 132,318 40,741 2,324 86,660 73,392 In 1896 131,171 40,460 2,222 85,795 71,422

E.—l

V

In the following Table (Gr) the passes and failures for each separate standard in each district are set out. The passes expressed as percentages of the number examined in each standard are as follows: —Standard. 1., 95 - 8; 11., 92.7; 111., 82; IV., 74-5 ; V., 77-6 ; VI., 88-7. These results are in every case better than those of the previous year, and in the case of the Sixth Standard remarkably better. Eegarded as percentages of the number of pupils on the roll, the passes in the several standards are as follows : —Standard 1., 11 - 3 ; 11., 11 "7 ; 111., 11*2 ; IV., 9-4; V., 7-1; VI., 4-8.

TABLE G.—Passes.

The information contained in Table H is given according to custom, and is not without its value.

TABLE H.—Number of Pupils instructed in each Subject.

It is necessary to guard against a misapprehension which might arise from a cursory inspection of Table B, where the number of pupils entering in 1897 is stated at 48,756, and the number that have left at 40,092, and where it appears also that 7,504 left between the closing of the schools in 1896 and the reopening in 1897. It is, however, impossible to suppose that nearly 50,000 old scholars left and nearly 50,000 new ones entered in the year. These high numbers result from frequent removals from one school to another, and from long absences which lead to the temporary striking-off of names. The number 1,160, which is the difference between arrivals and departures, is probably really to be accounted for by the admission of about 16,000 new pupils and the departure of about 15,000. The census tables show that the country could not keep up an annual supply of more than about 17,000 new pupils, and an investigation of

Education Districts. I. Ps II. Passes in Standards. 'asses in E III. Standards. IV. V. VI. 1 I. II. III. IV. V. I Present at Examination. VI. Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland .. 3,141 492 .. 1,172 .. 1,639 898 210 641 167 151 .. ! 2,293 574 .. 2,474 .. 1,085 3,146 414 1,258 1,684 859 259 711 205 172 2,393 673 2,567 1,150 3,086 328 1,153 1,588 796 270 621 182 140 2,461 608 2,477 1,037 2,498 222 864 1,407 570 189 582 157 153 2,121 532 2,157 1,029 1,813 122 556 1,080 404 178 466 113 141 1,568 396 1,813 732 1,106 56 285 709 270 75 337 74 106 1,167 272 1,398 499 3,251 603 1,253 1,682 1,009 218 680 178 165 2,344 582 2,508 1,105 3,421 546 1,377 1,814 965 273 805 210 185 2,571 695 2,654 1,196 3,727 516 1,469 1,901 968 341 822 219 159 3,059 727 2,829 1,254 3,513 440 1,216 1,728 754 253 805 197 172 2,878 741 2,710 1,351 2,360 229! 739 1,337 544 235 638 150 162 2,096 499 2,204 898 1385 82 373 851 319 92 429 87 115 1391 324 1535 177 For the colony In 1896 .. .. 14,937 .. 15,093 I 15,491 15,405 14,747 14,667 12,481 12,152 9,382 8,526 !6,354 15,579 15,578 15,861 16,712 16,775 17,991 18,177 16,758 16,395 12,091 11,590 7160 6997

Education Districts. S MO) i|8 l<5 "3 a no H be a 3 ! 111 H ls Q o ■a i o 0J C5 Q s -*3 u a a Q Q s d I I I o a> '3 o o > Is 2 CD O a Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland 27,683 3,845 10,190 14,031 7,579 2,180 5,943 1,698 1,462 20,828 5,211 21,787 9,760 27,683 3,845 10,190 14,031 7,579 2,180 5,943 1,698 1,462 20,828 5,211 21,787 9,760 27,683 3,845 10,189 14,031 7,579 2,180 5,943 1,698 1,462 20,828 5,211 21,787 9,743 27,683 3,845 10,190 14,031 7,579 2, ISO 5,943! 1,644 1,462 20,828 5,211 21,787 9,682 14,238 1,642 5,042 7,472 3,381 1,200 ! 3,487 828 851 11,110 2,820 11,419 4,925 17,155 2,203 6,486 8,976 4,386 1,418 4,159 1,385 1,017 13,692 3,455 14,179 6,139 13,109 1,608 4,748 7,367 3,242 1,151 3,280 634 805 11,086 2,821 11,146 4,718 9,759 1,106 3,723 5,366 2,616 695 2,456 401 569 6,548 2,146 8,340 3,445 47,170 45,968 27,555 3,811 8,847 13,790 7,546 2,087 . 5,177 1,517 1,203 20,229 5,013 20,627 9,329 126,731 125,944 18,123 1,710 6,133 9,263 5,221 1,358 3,733 1,143 802 12,405 3,057 12,769 6,083 81,805 84,159 22,193 2,700 4,262 13,208 6,772 1,252 3,359 935 956 18,411 4,767 19,736 8,705 11,826 1,730 3,242 6,180 3,045 946 2,302 622 562 9,605 2,193 8,936 3,456 1,235 2 150 1,250 20 224 80 11 a 1,952 4 632 305 Totals for 1897 Totals for 1896 132,197 131,037 132,197 131,037 132,179! 131,037 !l32,065 130,929 68,415 68,668 84,650 84,598 65,715 64,567 107,256 107,830 -574 54,645 54,088 5,909 5,622 287 Difference I 1,202 787 -2,354 557 1,160 1,160 1,142 1,136 -253 52 1,148

E.—l

VI

this year's Table C, compared with the similar table of last year, proves (so far as the accuracy of these tables can be relied on) that at least 15,842 really new pupils were admitted, and 14,682 retired. A similar investigation of Tables D and. G for the two years show at least 14,764 admitted, and 13,604 retired. The details are as follows :— Entered between the ages of 5 and 6 ... ... ... 10,061 6 „ 7 ... ... ... 3,536 7 „ 8* ... ... ... 1,853 8 „ 9 ... ... ... 143 9 „ 10 160 10 „ 11 ... .. ... 89 15,842 Left between the ages of 11 and 12 ... ... ... 460 12 „ 13 ... ... ... 748 13 „ 14 ... ... ... 2,974 14 ~ 15 ... ... ... 4,533 Left, being over 15 years old ... ... ... ... 5,967 14,682 Gain ... ... 1,160 The result obtained by comparing Table D for 1896 with Tables D and Gr for 1897 is not very different:— New pupils in preparatory and First Standard classes ... 14,436 „ class preparing for Standard 11. ... ... 328 14,764 Losses from „ „ 111. ... ... 793 IV 2,121 V 2,487 VI. ... ... 2,274 „ class above Standard VI. ... ... ... 5,929 13,604 Gain ... ... 1,160 It seems fair to conclude from these statements that about 43 - 6 per cent, remain in the schools for a while after they have passed out of the Sixth Standard class, that 16-7 and 183 per cent, leave after passing the Fifth and Fourth Standards respectively, and 21 - 4 without passing the Fourth; and that 40 - 6 per cent, of those that leave are above the age of fifteen on leaving, while only 8 - 2 per cent, are under the age of thirteen. Public Schools and Teachees. Table J shows that the number of schools increased during the year from 1,533 to 1,585, and that the number of schools is growing faster than the number of pupils, there being on an average less than 70 pupils to each school. The number of schools with less than 25 pupils each was increased during the year by 55. The number of half-time schools remains about the same as it was last year.

TABLE J. —Number of Schools, December, 1897. (In this enumeration every couple of half-time schools is reckoned as one school, except in the column for number of such schools.)

Education Districts, i I CO 8 I IS »s © a o §i a> c> § JL i\u: iber 0: I 3 .§0 Sohc )ols in whi( for the Qui p if >h the Ave] irter was— I a* I 8 CD . :age Attem Q . II fance •a * . I 3 £ Ph Pi J a t> I i u ■ 02 S .0 a 1 .s 1 .2 0 A to Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson .. Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland 338 60 127 131 68 61 116 29 33 198 65 220 139 22,613 3,018 8,352 11,647 6,396 1,823 4,800 1,423 1,263 17,588 4,548 19,128 7,924 66-9 50'3 65-8 88-9 94-1 29-9 41-4 49-1 38-3 88'8 70-0 86-9 57-0 44 7 10 20 9 36 28 9 15 21 4 27 11 42 4 9 15 4 4 17 4 6 17 1 20 17 56 11 19 13 6 4 18 2 25 11 23 22 104 23 39 35 19 7 24 5 4 59 26 61 48 30 7 21 18 7 4 13 5 2 24 10 33 15 13 2 3 7 7 3 6 1 1 14 3 19 9 14 3 13 9 5 18 2 9 8 6 2 6 1 2 12 3 9 8 9 1 4 4 2 1 8 '*7 3 42 as 21 20 2 19 15 7 39 38 6 6 2 4 "l 1 12 1 9 7 5 1 7 ■ 2 2asl 3asl 22 16 16 3 28 - 2 3 12 .. 'i 2 12 as 6 Totals for 1897 .. Totals for 1896 .. 1,585 1,533 110,523 109,253 69-7 71'3 241 208 160 171 213 180 456 454 184 195 88 80 78 85 86 82 46 44 33 34 59 as 29 57 as 28 225 208 19 14 Difference .. 2 8 -7 4 2 -1 2asl 17 5 52 1,270 -1-6 33 -11 33 -11

E.—l.

The number of teachers and pupil-teachers was increased by 113 during the year, and the number of pupils to one teacher has been reduced from 311 to 30 - 5. The number of women teachers increased both actually and relatively.

TABLE X.—School Staff, December, 1897.

The total amount distributed in salaries to teachers, pupil-teachers, and sewing-mistresses in the last quarter of the year was .£359,412, which sum divided by 3,810 gives an average salary of j£94 6s. Bd., or about £1 less than the similar average of last year.

TABLE L.—Salaries of Teachers, December, 1897.

The number of teachers holding rank which properly requires a certificate (that is, all excepting pupil-teachers and sewing-mistresses) was 2,549 at the end of the year, and of these 2,244 actually held certificates; and 22 others had completed the examination for certificates, but had not fulfilled a sufficient term of service, or had not had marks awarded to them by inspectors. The remainder is made up as follows: —92 in whose favour "partial pass" was recorded, 45 who had failed at examination, and 146 who had never been examined by the department. Of these uncertificated teachers 14 held a license to teach,

vii

Education Districts. Principal. Head of School. Head of Department. Sole Teachers. Assistant Teachers. Pupil- j teachers. Total. if |i §>- a ! sew 1 I a i M. F. M. F. M. F. M. F. M. F. M. F. M. F. All. Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Maryborough Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Ofcago Southland 'i 2 i 133 21 •54 51 28 8 t32 9 9 75 30 94 32 9 3 7 11 8 3 10 3 2 4 2 1 i 2 'i 98| 14 41 ! 18j 8; 12 15 2 *4 46 9 48 56 98 21 25 i 51 ! 22 38 59 14 18 46 20 78 33 38 5 12 30 13 2 8 3 3 II 57 12 153 12 26 59 31 12 25 12 11 133 32 156 17 51 I 5 i 32 20 14 1 9 3 2 *38 13 28 10 212 24 75 151 72 11 40 14 12 98 21 70 50 320 46 *139 119 66 23 t64 18 . *18 *222 67 227 127 472 61 133 272 135 64 134 44 43 313 79 304 118 7921 107 *272 391 201 87 fl98 62 *61 *535 146 531 245 22,613 3,018 8,352 11,647 6,396 1,823 4,800 1,423 1,263 17,588 4,548 19,128 7,924 28-6 28-2 30-7 29-8 31-8 21'0 24-2 23-0 20-7 32-9 31'2 36-0 32-3 64 26 9 'a 2 27 4 i 32 4 1 86 14 29 17 i 17 Totals for 1897 Totals for 1896 52 50 576 552 63 63 2 3 57 55 371 383 523 J484 229 217 679 665 226 219 850 824 1,456 1,424 2,172 2,091 3,628 3,515 110,523 109,253 30-5 31-1 183 191 Difference 2 24 2 I 39 12 14 7 .. -1 -12: 26 3a 81 113 1,270 -0-6 -8 *Incl ludes one r acan< >yI Inclu< Lea one hei .dmai iter m leav< without pa;

Under £100. lucation lisi irioi ;s. Pupil- Other teachers. Teachers. £100 and under £200. £200 and under £300. £300 and under £400. £400 and upwards (Maximum, £496). Number of Teachers. Total of Bates of Salary, December, 1897. Sewingmistresses. Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Grey Wostland North Canterbury .. South Canterbury .. Otago Southland 64 26 9 "a 2 263 29 107 171 86 12 49 17 14 136* 34 98 60 223 33 40 ■ 93 30 54 84 25 33* 156 36 146 27 254 42 100 77 64 17 57 17 12 201 65 213 145 37 3 23* 41 16 4 6 3 1 28 8 56 12 18 2 9 4 1 2 1 856 133 272* 400 201 89 199 62 62* 571* 160 560 245 £ s. d. 72,159 0 0 9,943 1 0 28,227 17 0 36,147 15 0 20,212 1 0 5,843 18 2 15,625 0 0 5,080 0 0 4,612 2 4 55,603 13 0 15,194 2 0 64,026 2 7 26,737 5 0 1 36 14 29 1 13 3 15 1 1 3 Totals for 1897 183 1,076 930 1,264 238 62 7 3,810 359,411 17 1 Totals for 1896 2,239 2,153 1,243 243 61 6 3,706 353,408 19 3 Difference .. 86 21 -5 104 6,002 17 10 * Includes one 'acancy.

E.—l.

TABLE M.—Teachers Certificated and Uncertificated, 31st December, 1897. (Numbers in brackets represent licensed teachers included in other numbers.)

If the results of examination of January, 1898, were taken into account, it would be necessary to revise Table M, to make it show 2,334 qualified by examination, and 215 unqualified, as follows: —" partial pass," 41; failed, 54; not examined, 120. At the examination of January, 1898, sixty-eight of the unqualified teachers satisfied the examiners. If these are added to the numbers in the first three columns they raise the number of teachers qualified by examination to 2,334. In a similar way the numbers in the other three columns after the examination would be as follows : —Partial pass, 41 ; failed, 54; not examined, 120. Education Boards. The annual reports and accounts of the Boards are given at length in the Appendix (pp. 63-87), and an abstract of their accounts in the same Appendix (pp. 4 and 5). Table Nis the summary statement of this abstract. TABLE N.—Absteact of Receipts and Expenditure of Boards. Dr. £ s. d. Or. £ s. d. To Balance, Ist January, 1897.. .. 12,005 13 3 By Boards'administration .. ... 12,536 14 11 Government grants — Inspection and examination .. 12,614 18 5 Maintenance .. .. .. 393,358 14 3 Teachers'salaries and allowances, and ; Buildings .. .. .. 57,527 1 3 training .. .. .. 362,985 11 7 Technical .. .. .. 1,153 9 0 Incidental expenses of schools .. 36,918 410 Reserves revenues .. .. .. 38,857 1 9 Scholarships .. .. .. 7,883 3 5 Local receipts— Interest .. .. .. .. 205 5 7 Pees, donations, &c. .. .. 3,859 0 3 Buildings, sites, plans, &c. .. .. 60,485 18 7 Rents, sales, &o. .. .. 859 14 4 Refunds and sundries .. .. 234 16 10 Interest.. .. .. .. 175 2 8 Balances.. .. .. .. 14,317 17 3 Refunds, deposits, &c. .. .. 386 14 8 £508,182 11 5 £508,182 11 5 Owing to the lateness of the second session of 1897 the greater part of the year's building vote was not distributed to the Boards until the new year, and this accounts for the smallness of the sum entered under the head of "Balances "on the credit side of Table M. In Table O this part of the building vote is included in the assets. Tables O and P show what was the financial position of each Board at the beginning of 1898.

viii

Education Districts. . SI o 43 u fa 3. <nr3 CO p>, o .a a ft a»a CO Bβ s Sag, go 3 Pupil-teachers having Certificates, not included in Column headed " Certificated Teachers." Auckland Taranaki .. :.. Wanganui Wellington Hawke'a Bay i.. Marlborough Nelson .. Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland 493 69 140 184 100 32 95 27 26 373 103 430 172 1 5 1 1 4 1 1 17 2[1] 8[1] 6 8 3 9[1] 4[1] 4 18 7 2 4[1] 6 2[1] 4[1] 2 13 [2] 5 2[1] 3 8[1] 4 12 24 7 [2] 36 27 8 13 4 529 78 164 220 115 75 148 45 46 399 112 433 185 50 11 23 3 1 7 3 1 1 1 1 2 1 4 2[1] 3 9 Total for 1897 Total for 1896 Total for 1895 Total for 1894 Total for 1893 Total for 1892 Total for 1891 Total for 1890 2,244 2,179 2,084 1,984 1,914 1,826 1,753 1,674 2 i 6 5 i 0 7 5 20 17 24 24 a2 19 17 21 92 [5] 96 [15] 90114] 85 88 94 107 142 45 [6] 42 [5] 36 [4] 42 48 54 58 57 146 [3] 134 [5] 127 [5] 120 125 131 132 139 2,549 2,469 2,366 2,260 2,201 2,130 2,074 2,038 111 106

£.—1

TABLE O.— Money Assets (and Deficits), December, 1897.

TABLE P.—Money Liabilities (and Balances), December, 1897.

On their General Account, as distinguished from their Building Account, the balances of eleven of the Boards amounted to .£18,768 13s. Id., and only two Boards —Grey and North Canterbury —showed a deficit in this respect. Seven Boards showed deficits amounting to £11,043 12s. Bd. for building purposes, and there were only six Boards that could show balances available on that account, such balances amounting altogether to £4,019 ss. 3d. Taking both the Building Account and the General Account into consideration, the Boards whose assets are outweighed by their liabilities are Grey, North Canterbury, and Otago, the adverse balances being very small in each case (Grey, £74; North Canterbury, £375; and Otago, £80). The vote for school buildings in special settlements has not'yet been allotted, but the Boards have been invited to make known their wants in this respect, and distribution will shortly be made. Table Q shows that even in the case of schools already in operation the full number of schoolhouses and masters' dwellings is still far from being provided for, and that there are some overcrowded schools.

TABLE Q.- Deficiency of School Buildings.

ii—E. 1.

ix

Due from ici; on .ccoum Education Districts. Cash. Government. Other Sources. Buildings. Other Purposes. Totals. Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay .. Marlborough Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland £ a. d. 3,419 7 10 1,311 4 10 1,311 15 11 1,001 1 6 4,355 13 11 35 15 2 1,968 3 9 £ s. d. 4,200 0 0 1,600 0 0 1,900 0 0 5,000 0 0 2,500 0 0 375 0 0 1,000 0 0 525 0 0 750 0 0 £, s. d. 17 0 0 7 10 0 £ s. d. 771 10 6 '& s. d. £ s. d." 8,407 18 4 2,918 14 10 3,314 18 3 8,374 16 8 6,855 13 11 1,442 9 10 2,968 3 9 704 2 3 852 19 4 6,406 17 1 2,384 4 0 6,941 1 4 6,546 0 10 103 io 0 103' 2 4 2,270 5 2 1,03114 8 15 0 0 12 0 0 5 12 0 131 17 10 107 13 11 164 2 3 90 19 4 5,907 11 6 1,143 5 0 750 0 0 2,161 6 7 2,000 0 0 359 1 2 4,672 0 10 1,835 18 0 493 13 7 2,710 2 10 Totals.. 23,255 1 7 22,761 6 7 400 3 9 11,043 12 8 657 15 10 58,118 0 5

Education Districts. Liabi Buildings. Liabilities for ilities for Other Purposes. Bala Buildings. Balances for ances for Other Purposes. Totals. Auckland .. Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson £ s. a. 3,333 7 6 350 0 0 744 8 10 7,373 15 2 2,235 2 0 £ s. d. 2,293 17 4 953 18 10 381 0 6 662 9 0 1,596 5 7 £ s. d. 1,591 9 11 £ s. d. 2,780 13 6 23 6 1 2,189 8 11 338 12 . .6 2,275 8 5 1,442 9 10 1,008 7 4 & s. d. 8,407 18 1 2,918 14 10 3,314 18 3 8,374 16 8 6,855 13 11 1,442 9 10 2,968 3 9 704 2 3 852 19 i 6,406 17 1 2,384 i 0 6,941 1 i 6,546 0 10 748 17 11 Grey Westland North Canterbury .. South Canterbury .. Otago Southland.. 128 8 3 434 14 4 60 0 0 3,175 18 5 1,060 10 0 179 2 3 35 14 0 3,112 5 10 1,252 5 11 163 0 0 645 11 8 770 18 2 90 5 8 699 0 9 118 12 10 58* 4 7 2,185 18 9 2,972 7 11 1,131 18 1 4,592 2 7 2,928 1 3 Totals 22,994 1 2 12,336 0 11 4,019 5 3 18,768 13 1 58,118 0 5

Education Districts. Schools in Operation (omitting those with less than Ten Pupils each). Schools not belonging to Boards. Schools without Residences. Schools with less than 10 sq. ft. for each Child (but not less than 8 sq. ft.). Schools with less than 8 sq. It. for each Child. Available in 189S for Buildings. (Tables 0 and P.) Auckland Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Grey Westland North Canterbury South Canterbury Otago Southland 343 58 126 119 66 32 98 23 22 178 66 214 139 42 3 7 12 10 2 15 116 18 48 74 25 8 48 11 6 32 16 10 25 9 2 2 8 1 1 3 1 2 1 1 1 5 1 1 £ s. dT 771 10 6 1,591 9 11 103 2 4 2,270 5 2 748 17 11 1,031 14 8 770 18 2 90 5 8 699 0 9 118 12 10 359 1 2 4,672 0 10 1,835 18 0 4 12 4 4 10 4 8 " Totals lot } 897 .. Totals for 1896 .. 1,484 1,458 125 123 137 391 41 50 10 10 Net 7,024 7 5 » 5,991 12 3

E.—l.

The ordinary school buildings vote for 1897 was distributed as follows :— Auckland, £9,200; Taranaki, £1,600 ; Wanganui, £3,900 ; Wellington, £5,000 ; Hawke's Bay. £2,500; Marlborough, £875; Nelson, £2,050; Grey, £775; Westland, £750; North Canterbury, £6,000; South Canterbury, £1,750; Otago, £6,000; Southland, £3,300 : total, £43,700. The payments made by the department to the Boards in 1897 on account of scholarships amounted to £7,580 165., and their expenditure on the same account to £7,769 ss. sd. Particulars are given in Table B. The only institutions for the training of teachers are in North Canterbury and Otago. These two institutions have received grants-in-aid of £300 each.

TABLE E.—Scholarships.

Eailway Passes fob Pupils op Public and Private Schools. The amount paid by the Education Department to the Department of Railways for passes of pupils in 1897 was £2,963. Education Beseeves. The various bodies of School Commissioners have sent in reports and accounts, which are printed in the Appendix (p. 96,etseqq.). Their accounts are summarised in the following table (S).

TABLE S.—Summary of School Commissioners' Accounts.

X

Education Districts. Number held in Dec, 1897. Boys. Girls. Period ol Tenure. Boards' Expenditure on Scholarships in 1897. Annual Value, *e. Auckland.. Taranaki Wanganui Wellington Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Grey Westland.. 77 6 13 38 28 3 6 8 8 47 5 10 21 17 1 3 5 6 30 1 3 17 11 2 3 3 2 Years. 3 2 Varies. 2 2 2 2 3 2 £ s. d. 1,707 18 7 213 6 3 523 17 11 731 1 3 547 14 0 120 0 0 334 12 0 100 0 0 113 10 0 9 at £30; 15 at £25 ; 22 at £20; 31 at £15. 3 at £35 ; 3 at £10. 10 at £40; 1 at £20 : 2 at £15. 9 at £30 ; 29 at £15. 10 at £30 4s. ; 18 at £10 4s. £40. £52 12s. 4 at £25 and tuition ;■ 4 tuition only. 2 at £23; 1 each at £15 10s., £12, £5 10t.; 3 at £8. 12 at £40; 22 at £20. 6 at £34; 2 at £28; 1 at £17; 1 at £14; 1 at £9 ; 11 at £4. 10 at £40 ; 5 at £35 ; 1 at £24 ; 3 at £22 17 at £20; 1 at £17 ; 19 at £15. 9 at £35 ; 11 at £20. North Canterbury.. South Canterbury.. 34 22 21 11 13 11 2 2 1,042 3 7 404 12 9 Otago 56 36 20 Varies. 1,375 10 9 Southland 20 16 i Varies. 554 18 4 Totals, 1897.. Totals, 1896.. 319 305 199 189 120 116 7,769 5 5 7,665 9 11

Income lor the Year 1897. Provincial Districts. Balances Eeceipts during Year. Arrears of Eent due on 31st December, 1897. Liabilities or Engagements on 31st December, 1897. 1st January, 1897. PrimaryReserves. Secondary Reserves. xoiai Income. Auckland Taranaki Wellington .. Hawke's Bay Marlborough Nelson Westland Canterbury Otago £ s. d. 395 3 2 1,223 18 2 582 12 11 2,630 12 6 235 15 0 663 17 9 142 8 2 818 9 7 8,220 16 7 £ s. d. 2,199 8 10 2,134 10 11 3,208 2 5 2,778 16 0 165 0 0 655 13 3 16 14 0 15,782 13 10 18,881 3 11 £ s. d. 625 10 6 404 17 10 111 2 5 804 12 6 39 8 7 249 2 3 102 14 0 £ s. d. 3,220 2 6 3,763 6 11 3,901 17 9 6,214 1 0 440 3 7 1,568 13 3 261 16 2 16,601 3 5 27,805 7 11 £ a. d. 1,201 3 7 1,324 3 8 83 3 10 791 17 9 85 14 6 174 11 9 6 14 0 2,023 8 8 6,642 8 2 £ s. d. 20 14 0 389 4 9 70 18 6 83 12 1 5 0 0 208 3 5 6 5 0 703 - 7 5 Totals for 1897.. Totals for 1896.. 14,913 13 10 11,086 6 8 45,822 3 2 46,606 5 1 3,040 15 6 3,604 12 0 63,776 12 6 61,297 3 9 12,333 5 11 11,944 0 10 783 17 9 1,268 8 9

E.—l.

TABLE S.—Summary of Sohool Commissionrs' Accounts — continued.

The sums paid by the Commissioners to Education Boards in 1897 amounted to £38,522 15s. 9d. An equal sum has been deducted by the Treasury from the capitation grants due to Boards. Native Schools. The number of Native village schools was the same (74) at the end of the year as at the beginning. The number of children on the roll at the end of 1897 was 2,864, greater by only 2 than the corresponding number for the previous year. The mean of the weekly returns of pupils on the roll was 2,955, greater by 81 than at the end of the preceding year ; and the strict average attendance was 2,291, showing an increase of 71 in the year. The average daily attendance for the year was equal to 77£ per cent, of the roll-number for the time being. Four schools were finally closed in 1897, and one was transferred to the care of an Education Board; four new schools were opened, and one school was reopened after having been closed for some years. The closing of the school at Maketu is to be attributed to the apathy of the people, and of that at Rangiahua to decline of Native population. In the case of Waitapu both causes were operative, and at Mangakahia, though the population is a scattered one, the schaol might have been maintained if the people had shown a proper interest in it. The school at Colac Bay, transferred to the Southland Education Board, had for years contained a preponderating number of European pupils and the Maori people had long lived in European fashion. The old school that has been reopened is at Pamapuria, Mangonui. The four new schools are at Utakura, Hokianga; Manaia, in the Coromandel Peninsula; Baorao, on the shores of the Aotea Harbour ; and Kokako, near Waikaremoana and on the Wairoa Boad. The aggregate attendance at these five schools for the first quarter of 1898 is 137. Since the beginning of this year new schools have been opened at the following places: Whakarara, near Whangaroa; Opureora, near Tauranga; Te Kuiti, on the main line of railway from Auckland; Karioi, between Taupo and Wanganui; and Koriniti, on the Wanganui Biver. A subsidy, at the capitation rate of £3 155., has been granted to a movement instituted in Nelson for the establishment of a small school at Croiselles Harbour. A new school is at present in process of erection at Nuhaka, near the Mahia Peninsula ; an old school at Peria, Mangonui, is to be reopened, and probably the old school at Otamatea, Kaipara, will also be reopened. There are many applications for new schools, and it is most likely that on further inquiry eight or nine of these applications will be found to be well grounded. The four boarding-schools for Maoris had at the end of the year 236 pupils, of whom 73 were Government scholars. There were 10 boys holding industrial scholarships apprenticed as follows : —3 to farmers, 3 to saddlers, 2 to carpenters, Ito a blacksmith, and Ito a printer. Scholarships for £40 a year each were enjoyed by two young men studying, one at the University College, Auckland, and the other at Canterbury College, Christchurch.

xi

Expenditure for the Year 1897. Provincial Districts. j,™" Paid for Paid lor Investments Expenses Expenses p rimary Secondary and Salaries. Management Education. Education. Eefunds. Balances on 31st December, 1897. Total. luokland 'aranaki .. .. Vellington lawke's Bay larlborough vfelson .. Vestland 'anterbury >tago £ s. a. 125 6 10 77 7 9 382 i 0 108 11 0 25 0 0 50 13 2 12 18 0 558 14 10 833 5 4 £ s. a. 330 14 11 243 8 6 601 7 1 53 11 6 2 6 7 39 8 2 11 11 8 4 14 6 1,431 1 10 £ s. a. 1,900 0 0 2,200 0 0 2,400 0 0 2,650 0 0 100 0 0 1,000 0 0 £ a. a. £ a. d. 680 0 2 72 6 0 600 0 0 15 0 1 100 0 0 5 2 0 553 3 0 312 10 • 0! 120 0 0 21 6 8 661 9 2 100 0 0 £ a. a. Ill 14 7 627 10 7 413 4 8 2,848 15 6 312 17 0 166 1 11 117 6 6 666 7 5 11,856 15 10 £ s. d. 3,220 2 6 3,763 6 11 3,901 17 9 6,214 1 0 440 3 7 1,568 13 3 261 16 2 16,601 3 5 27,805 7 11 15,350 0 0 12,922 15 9 Totals for 1897 .. Totals for 1896 .. 2,174 0 111 2,116 8 0 : 12,718 4 9 2,346 15 1 38,522 15 9 37,159 18 11 3,027 2 4 l 213 14 9 2,852 12 31,907 15 8 ! I 17,120 14 0 14,913 13 10 63,776 12 61,297 3

E.—l.

The 74 schools were under the charge of 60 masters and 14 mistresses, whose salaries range between £74 and £233; and there were 60 assistants and 14 sewing-mistresses, with salaries between £7 and £50. The expenditure on Native schools for 1897 was as follows:—Teachers' salaries and allowances, £12,565 lis. Id.; books and school requisites, £517 45.; repairs and small works, £474 lis. 7d.; inspection, £885 10s. 4d.; boardingschools and scholarships, £1,857 6s. lid.; buildings, fencing, furniture, &c, £4,335 6s. 2d.; sundries, £107 os. 3d.: total, £20,742 10s. 4d. Fuller details, together with the Inspector's report, will be found in another paper (Native Schools, E.-2). Mr. Pope's report shows that the numbers of children who passed the several standards in Native schools in 1897 were as follows:—Standard 1., 470; 11., 339; 111, 249; IV, 128; V, 23; VI, 5: total, 1,214. Industrial Schools. The number of inmates on the books of the industrial schools increased from 1,559 to 1,588 during the year : 150 have been discharged, and 179 admitted. The-increase in Government schools was 12; in private schools, 17. Of the whole number of 1,588 inmates, 589 though under the control of the institutions were not dependent on them for maintenance, 119 being licensed to reside with their friends, 439 placed at service, 3 in hospital, 3 in lunatic asylums, 1 in blind asylum, 2 on probation at the Costley Training Institution, 2 in prison, and 20 absent without leave (8 from places of service and 12 from the schools). Those who were dependent on the schools for maintenance number 999, divided as follows:—581 resident inmates of the schools, 396 boarded out, and 22 girls whose maintenance was paid for in several appropriate institutions. Of the resident inmates 199 were in Government and 382 in private schools; and of the children boarded out 385 were from Government schools and 11 from private schools. Great care is taken to avoid an undue commingling of different classes of children in the Government schools, so that, although there are 1,099 nominal inmates of these schools, the number actually resident is only 199 —only 18 per cent.; the rest are accounted for as follows :—385 are boarded out, 85 are living with their friends, 371 are in service, 41 in institutions better suited to their condition, and 18 absent without leave.

TABLE T.—Inmates, 1896 and 1897.

Of the 150 discharged during the year, 125 were discharged by warrant, 16 attained the age of 21 years, 6 died, 2 were transferred to the Costley Training Institution, and one was married with the consent of the Manager, who was her guardian. The causes of the 6 deaths are recorded as follows: —A young woman, aged 19, on the books of the Caversham School, died of tubercular meningitis ; a young man of 18, licensed to service from the Caversham School, was drowned while bathing; a girl of 17 died in the Auckland Industrial School of sarcoma and wasting; a girl from Burnham, aged 12J, died in the hospital from chronic inflammation of the ear; a little girl of 10, belonging to St. Joseph's School, Wellington, died of abscess of the liver; and a very delicate boy, aged I\, belonging to Caversham, died of enteritis and pneumonia,

xii

loarded oui ISC! ;iden< :o. Service, ;o. Toti LlS. o It P M P 8 p o h-1 a P r4 d a ft o 9 d a a p QJ I © p i a rovernment Schools — Auckland Burnham Caversham 'rivate Schools — St. Mary's, Auckland St. Joseph's, Wellington St. Mary's, Nelson 30 176 211 11 21 30 165 190 10 105 76 1 12 16 5 11 100 88 62 62 258 41 243 195 20 10 66 21 19 4 3 37 264 214 17 12 67 81 524 482 66 80 326 5 10 13 3 78 529 492 79 78 332 "J 4 7 46 66 253 e 4 2 1 "6 2 Totals .. 428 32 396 556 34 9 581 575 43 7 611 1,559 34 5 ' 1 1,588

E.—l

The precedent condition of inmates admitted during 1897 may be stated as follows : —54 destitute, 20 vagrant, 33 living in disreputable places, 8 uncontrollable, 64 guilty of punishable offences. The number of new inmates belonging to the Church of England is 88 ; 53 are Koman Catholic ; 27 are Presbyterian ; 10 Methodist; and 1 Congregational. A list is here given of the several Stipendiary Magistrates' Courts from which the 179 new inmates were sent to the schools, and of the number sent in each case : —Auckland, 31; Thames, 2; Hamilton, 1; Ngaruawahia, 4; Hunterville, 5; New Plymouth, 2; Palmerston North, 3; Wanganui, 1; Pahiatua, 5; Marton, 1; Wellington, 44; Blenheim, 1 ; Nelson, 2 ; Eeefton, 1; Greyrnouth, 2 ; Christchurch, 24; Lyttelton, 4; Ashburton, 1; Timaru, 4; Waimate, 3; Oamaru, 5; Dunedin, 24; Port Chalmers, 2; Invercargill, 6; Eiverton, 1 : total, 179. The information from which Table U is compiled is somewhat meagre, but probably the following results derived from it are not very far from being true: —In 72 cases the character of both parents appears to be satisfactory; in 12 cases there is not sufficient knowledge of this matter ; in 31 cases the father is of bad character; in 34 cases the mother ; and in 30 cases both.

TABLE U.—Admissions, classified according to Parents' Circumstances and Character, 1897.

The balance in the Post-Office Savings-Bank at the end of 1897 on account of wages of inmates belonging to the Government schools was £9,986 10s. lid., and on account of inmates in private schools, £633 4s. 2d. The amounts withdrawn during the year for inmates of Government schools was £1,617 19s. 7d., and for inmates of private schools, £74 12s. 4d. Table W is the statement of the expenditure on the Government schools, and of the amount recovered from charitable institutions, from parents, from sale of farm produce, &c.

TABLE W.—Cost of Government Schools, 1897.

The next table supplies similar information with regard to the private schools, except that the recoveries do not include contributions from Charitable Aid Boards, because the payments are made directly by the Boards to the managers of these schools,

xiii

Mothers Lescribed as Children of Dead. Sick, Lunatic, Disabled, &c. Of Good Character (or Poor). Not known or not stated. Characfer. *»°*«»- Total. 'athers described as— Dead Sick, lunatic, disabled, &c. Of good character (or poor) Not known or not stated Of bad character Deserters 9 10 2 9 5 1 "l 2 18 3 24 i 9 7 1 3 2 16 11 27 3 5 30 3 63 22 45 16 i Totals 35 11 65 59 179

School. Gross Cost of School. Cost of boarding out. (Included in preceding Column.) Beeoveries. Net Cost. £ s. a. Auckland .. .. .. 1,119 9 9 3urnhain .. .. .. 7,524 7 4 Daversham .. .. .. 7,115 3 1 Totals .. .. 15,759 0 2 Salary and expenses of Visiting Officer Inmates maintained at other institutions contingencies £ 4 2,8 3,5 6,8 £ s. d. 493 2 0 2,847 15 9 3,505 11 5 £ s. i 193 2 347 15 505 11 346 9 £ s. a. 242 19 9 2,642 18 2 3,948 13 5 £ s. d. 876 10 0 4,881 9 2 3,166 9 8 6,846 9 2 6,834.11 4 8,924 8 10 398 8 10 346 4 3 11 6 0 Total £9,680 7 11

E.—l

TABLE X. —Government Expenditure on Private Schools, 1897.

School fob Deaf-mutes. The well-known school at Sumner, where even congenital deaf-mutes are taught actually to speak and to understand the vocal speech of others, continues its beneficent operations with little variation and with few incidents fitted to give rise to any comment. Three boys and 5 girls left at the end of 1896 and 4 boys and 3 girls were admitted in 1897. The attendance at the end of the year was 27 boys and 20 girls. The director in his work of instruction has the assistance of 5 teachers; the household arrangements are supervised by a steward and matron. The expenditure for the year was £3,277 Bs. 3d., made up of the following items : —Salaries of director and teachers, £1,349 6s. 7d. ; steward, matron, and servants, £478 55.; rent, £470 ; housekeeping, £684 7s. lOd.; travelling-expenses, £124 17s. 6d.; school material, £15 7s. 2d.; repairs and works, £47 17s. 4d.; clothing, £22 7s. lid. ; medical attendance and medicine, £12 ss. lid. ; water-supply, £11 9s. Bd. ; sanitary precautions, £16 6s. Bd. The amount contributed by parents is £155 Bs. Further details are given in a separate paper, E.-4. Institute fob the Blind. The Jubilee Institute for the Blind receives some pupils for whose tuition the Education Department is responsible. The number of such pupils declined in the year 1897 from 19 to 14. The payments made by the department on their behalf to the Institute amounted to £461 9s. 2d., towards which a sum of £40 9s. lid. was contributed by parents. The department also pays £30 ss. a year for a railway-ticket for the use of an agent of the Institute. No account is given here of grants made to the Institute by the department in charge of hospitals and charitable aid. Manual Teaining and Technical Instbuction. The annual reports of the several Education Boards afford no reason to believe that any great activity is being manifested in the development of that kind of elementary manual training which, under the operation of the Act of 1895, is now recognised as being part of the proper educative work of the primary schools, and which, while including kindergarten occupations and " sloyd," is capable of wide development in cardboard-work, and in the construction of models in wood and metal as illustrations of many subjects of scientific instruction. Development in this direction does not necessarily come under the notice of the department, as it lies within the province of the Education Boards. With respect to another form of manual instruction, a form in which it constitutes, through the handling of tools and materials, a more direct preparation for manual trades, the Act of 1895 contemplates a measure of co-operation between the department and the Boards, since any serious treatment of the subject from this point of view seems to require a workshop and some expenditure on tools, and to have its proper place outside of the time properly devoted to such mental development and equipment as is generally comprehended under the word " schooling." It has been deemed a great gain to have secured in our time this " schooling " for the children of all classes, and it ought not to be proposed now to encroach upon its hours in the interests of that kind of serious preparation for a trade or a business which naturally begins when school-days are over. For manual instruction out of school-hours the Boards receive subsidy at the same rate as for any classes they may institute

xiv

School. Payments. Becoveries. Net Expenditure by Government. It. Mary's, Ponsonby (Auckland) It. Joseph's, Wellington It. Mary's, Nelson Totals £ s. a. 548 2 0 495 1 9 2,333 11 8 3,376 15 5 £ a. d. 24 5 4 55 13 0 353 2 8 £ a. a. 523 16 8 439 8 9 1,980 9 0 3,376 15 5 433 1 0 2,943 U 5

E.—l

XV

outside of the schools for technical training. During 1897 the Auckland Education Board received 15s. sd. for manual classes at Devonport, and £5 ss. for a similar class at Eemuera. The Wellington Board received similar aid for three classes, as follows : —Paraparaumu, £4 19s. 6d.; Cross Creek, £2 os. 6d. ; Mauriceville West, £14 14s. 4d. The Grey Education Board, for a class in the Greymouth District High School, received £11 14s. 7d., beside a grant of £25 for equipment; the Westland Education Board, for a class at the Kuntara School, £5 16s. 10d. as subsidy, and £70 for equipment. The Otago Education Board received a subsidy of £12 16s. 4d. for Balclutha District High School, and £9 16s. lid. for a similar school at Tokomairiro. With respect to classes for technical instruction as distinguished from manual instruction, the Education Board of Wanganui received £52 Is. 4d. as subsidy on classes at Wanganui, and £13 17s. lid. for classes at Palmerston North, and a special grant of £200 in aid of its Technical School at Wanganui. The Wellington Board received £396 17s. Id. as capitation on classes at its Technical School, and a special grant of £100 in aid of the same institution. The Otago Education Board received £58 10s. as capitation for classes attending its School of Art. The North Canterbury Board has classes in Christchurch and Leeston, partly to prepare teachers for imparting manual instruction and partly for the manual instruction of the older school-boys. This Board received a capitation grant of £41 7s. 6d. for its Christchurch work, and a grant of £172 10s. for workshop installation; for the Leeston class it received £1 6s. 3d. as capitation, and £25 as a grant-in-aid. The total payments to Education Boards for capitation amount to £641 19s 6d., and the special grants amount to £592 10s. In allowing capitation grants to technical classes it has been deemed better to err rather on the side of a too liberal interpretation of terms than on that of undue strictness, and —after the example of the Science and Art Department in London —to recognise such subjects as shorthand and bookkeeping, and even classes that might fairly be considered as answering the purposes of a continuation school; but classes for primary school work have not been so recognised, nor classes for the instruction of pupil-teachers. Special grants have been made to Technical Classes Associations as follows : —Auckland, £100 ; Gisborne, £30; Dunedin, £450; and Invercargill, £50 ; and a grant of £80 to the Christchurch School of Domestic Instruction. The capitation grants to these and other institutions are as follows:—Auckland Technical Classes Association, £40 3s. 4d.; Ashburton Technical Classes Association, £9 14s. 7d.; Balclutha Technical Classes Association, £40 17s. 10d.; Canterbury College School of Art, £162 4s. 10d.; Christchurch School of Domestic Instruction, £99 2s. Id.; Christchurch Young Men's Christian Association, £17 2s. lid..; Christchurch Boys' Gordon Hall, 14s. 7d.; Dunedin Technical Classes Association, £82 2s. Bd.; Gisborne Technical Classes Association, £42 ss. 4d.; Invercargill Technical Classes Association, £33 14s. 4d.; Kaitangata Technical Classes Association, £8 16s. 9d.; Masterton Technical Classes Association, £9 12s. Id.; Napier Junior Club, £3 4s. 7d.; Tuanaroa Technical Classes Association, £10 16s. 6d.; Westport Technical Classes Association, £11 7s. 3d.; Waiwera Technical Classes Association, £8 16s. 4d.; Warepa Technical Classes Association, £7 18s. sd. To the teachers of what may be called private adventure classes capitation payments have been made as follows: —Messrs. Bickerton Brothers, Christchurch, £15 3s. 7d.; Miss A. M. Carr, Christchurch, £109 10s.; Mr. C. H. Gilby, Christchurch, £34 16s. 6d. ; Misses Hardie and Manning, Napier, £12 7s. Id. ; Mr. W. I. Eobinson, Auckland, £42 9s. 9d.; Mr. J. M. Telford, Christchurch, £2 11s. 3d. The total of capitation grants to individual teachers is £805 12s. 7d., and of capitation and special grants to associations, £710. The other items of expenditure for 1897 on account of technical instruction are as follows: Expenses of Science and Art. Department examinations, £62 lls. 7d. ; expenses of City and Guilds of London Institute examinations, £33 10s. 9d.; part of cost of railway travelling of students and teachers, £68 9s. Id ; preparation of drawings of woodwork exercises, £15 9s. 3d.; publications purchased, Bs. 4d.; freight on loan collection from Science and Art Department, £1 ss. 7d.

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The following table shows the number of papers worked at the English examinations held in the colony, and the number of successes : —

TABLE Y.—London Technical and Art Examinations, 1897.

A separate paper, E.-5, contains fuller details of operations under the Manual and Technical Elementary Instruction Act, and in the reports of the Otago University (E.-7), Canterbury College (E.-9), and Canterbury Agricultural College (E.-10), will be found statements of the instruction provided by those institutions in medicine and surgery, and in mining (at Dunedin), in engineering (at Christchurch), and in agricultural science (Lincoln). The annual report (C.-3) on the Goldfields of New Zealand contains information respecting the mining schools under the direction of the Department of Mines, and the annual report of the Department of Agriculture gives particulars of technical instruction imparted in connection with agricultural experimental stations, fruit farms, and dairy schools. Secondaey Schools. The reports of the secondary schools are given in a separate paper (E.-ll). Their current income for 1897 from school fees, not including fees for boarders, was £23,770; from rents and interest, £24,462; and from endowments administered by School Commissioners, £2,303. The pupils on the rolls in the last quarter of the year were 2,709, of whom only 166, or 6 per cent., were under twelve years of age. Table Z contains some of the principal statistics relating to these schools.

XVI

Auckland. Wanganui. Wellington. Wellington* Sub-centres. Nelson. Christchurch. Dunedin. Subjects of Examination. %&': F^*Candi- p..,,-.. dates. iasses ' Sk-ses. i Candi- p...., dates. -™ sses - C d a a?et|^es. ( Candi- p dates. aesee - Science and Art Department. ArtDrawing in light and shade (elementary) Drawing in light and shade (advanced) Perspective (elementary) „ (advanced) Model drawing (elementary) „ (advanced) Freehand drawing of ornament (elementary) Freehand drawing of ornament (advanced) Geometrioal drawing (art) Design (elementary) „ (advanced) Painting from still life Drawing from the life .. „ „ antique Painting ornament in monochrome Principles of ornament (elementary) Students' works Science— Practical plane and solid geometry Mathematics, stages 1, 2, 3 Magnetism and electricity Machine construction and drawing Building construction Practical inorganic chemistry .. Inorganio chemistry (theory) Applied mechanics 3 2 1 2 2 10 4 2 2 1 1 2 1 8 2 2 8 7 4 13 4 42 12 1 8 7 7 3 5 3 35 9 1 42 23 16 62 16 66 11 3 2 6 4 10 30 23 14 41 16 46 11 1 '2 3 1 5 1 i 8 26 3 5 16 5 5 5 5 5 2 3 5 12 5 11 39 4 42 6 9 3 4 12 5 8 26 1 34 G 6 3 3 32 17 2 1 56 12 78 19 22 1 24 17 1 1 41 12 51 19 20 i 2 2 1 1 1 1 17 "l 1 28 1 11 I ' * 1 7 1 1 10 11 1 2 6 1 7 1 5 2 7 2 16 1 9 3 *3 15 7 9 3 8 11 7 9 •• 7 11 1 1 3 6 8 1 3 City and Guilds of London Institute. Painters' and decorators' work .. Telegraphy Mechanical engineering Plumbing (preliminary) „ (written) „ (practical) 1 2 3 1 2 2 3 i i i i i 1 12 7 12 7 s 4 5 4 Totals 59 42 112 78 352 25 I 25 17 142 301 251 46 109 229 Ti I otal of papers, 1,037; total if passi is, 751. * Pabiatua, Masterton, Featherston, Levin, and Westport

__.—!.

TABLE Z.—Staff, Attendance, Fees, and Salaries at Secondary Schools.

Univebsity and Colleges. The report of the Chancellor of the University of New Zealand is a separate paper (E.-6). The number of graduates admitted on examination now amounts to 603. Of this number, 160 have the degree of M.A. alone ; 315, that of B.A. alone; 13, that of B.Sc. alone; 15, LL.B. alone; 23, M.B. and CM. alone; 1, D.Sc. alone ; 3, LL.D. alone ; and 4, M.D. alone. The graduates upon whom degrees in two or more faculties have been conferred are : LL.D. and M.A., 2 ; D.Sc. and M.A., 2; LL.B. and M.A., 13 ; LL.B. and 8.A., 19 ; M.B. and M.A., 2 ; M.B. and B.Sc, 18 ; M.8., 8.A., and B.Sc, 2; M.B. and 8.A., 4; B.A. and B.Sc, 7. The number of degrees conferred after the examination of 1897 was 66: 8.A., 48; B.Sc, 4; LL.B., 4; M.8., 5 ; M.A., 5. The number of candidates iii—E. 1.

xvii

Schools. Sta) Attendance for Li Quarter of st Te: l897. :m or o fl a> a > 0 ■"« 5-i o I X o 53 3 a 'A Annual Kates of Fees. For For Board, Ordinary exclusive of Day-school Day-school Course. Tuition. Salaries at Ri End of btes paid at S"ear. p CO (!) in od co • il Kegular Staff. Visiting Teachers. £ s. d. I 10 10 0 t 8 8 0 £ s. d. £ s. d. £ a. d. Luckland College and j Grammar School j 16 22 141 178 11 (6184 i 19168 1(6.15 19-4.2 i I 6.29 l<7.22 (6.38 l<7.24 I 332 J 25 I « 1 58 1 - 3,695 0 0 110 0 0 Vhangarei High School 2 2 16 8 1 8 8 0 233 14 0 dairies High School .. 22 20 (880 17 7 0 I - "700 0 0 lew Plymouth High 1 School J Vanganui Collegiate 1 School j Vanganui (Girls') High ) School I 2 26 34 6 6 0 "775 0 0 Pees. I Vellington College 10 6 7 14 58 25 68 108 44 147 10 4 2lj 182 80 I 250 179 73 240 142 30 69 (12 0 0 \ 9 0 0 f 10 10 0 J880 ( 13 4 0 ( 10 12 0 (13 4 0 1 10 12 0 (990 1 8 8 0 I 45 0 0 I 40 0 0 1 42 0 0 i 40 0 0 "I,625 0 0 °730 0 0 2,125 0 0 f 160 0 0 land fees. Vellington Girls' High 1 School J 6 9 27 80 8 124 113 1,125 0 0 Tapier Boys' High School 4 14 37 1 56 54 20 < ! 790 0 0 Napier Girls' High School 5 29 33 71 66 15 9 9 0 40 0 0 "740 0 0 146 8 0 kelson College 5 7 16 57 89 86 20 12 12 0 40 0 0 f l,230 0 0 Telson Girls' College .. 9 17 63 94 89 28 12 12 0 40 0 0 '705 0 0 Jhrist's College Gram- ) mar School J Jhristchurch Boys'High 1 School ) Jhristohuroh Girls' High \ School J 10 68 G3 177 247 173 237 55 ( 14 3 6 11 0 6 I 7 17 6 (990 16 6 0 f 12 12 0 19 9 0 } 52 10 0 42 0 0 J s 2,590 0 0 3,530 0 0 226 7 6 285 0 0 1-2 9 125 109 7 10 50 69 133 115 1,100 0 0 217 16 0 langiora High School .. 2 12 5 (6.16 \\g- 3 I „ 9 9 0 40 0 0 220 0 0 No salary. ikaroa High School Lshburton High School.. "imaru High School Yaitaki High SchoolsBoys' 4 20 46 22 22 47 20 9 3 : ( 6.11 \\g- -i I 6.28 1 gr.14 (6.54 1-7-46 43 1 » 1 - [ 96 40 7 ( 10 10 0 ! 9 9 0 1(880 (990 16 6 0 (10 0 0 (800 | h 10 10 0 18 8 0 I >'8 0 0 16 0 0 j 12 0 0 1 10 0 0 j 12 0 0 1 10 0 0 1" } ■■ I £3 10 o! }. - I 43 10 0 I 40 0 0 215 15 0 610 0 0 1,483 0 0 740 0 0 56 0 0 12 0 0 Girls' 3 13 36 2 51 48 ■ 410 0 0 31 0 0 )tago Boys' High School ilO 1 67 133 9 210 200 10 2,611 7 1 )tago Girls' High School J-9 8 43 78 20 144 137 11 1,625 6 0 Fees. Southland High School.. 5 25 57 5 (6.57 lg.30 61686 gl023 I 84 2,565 10 0 0 1,175 0 0 Totals ■11 957 1457 129 407 143 166 30,784 2 1 1244 11 0 a Headmaster has residen house, and the teachers resid has house. f Principal res: who have passed Standard IV ice. e at tin ides at J. i 1 liHe; e sch< echo Fwo n .dmaster re )0l. <1 H. ol. g Hei tasters teac iceivi eadn' idrna ;h in es no si 3aster ] ister a: both si ilary; se ias housi id five o1 jhools. iven n e; ass thers nasters resid sistant mast< have houses. lo at the school. e The pr: er has residence. e The 1 i. h £4 10s. for pupil of prii incipal has a leadmis tress nary schools

E.—l.

at the entrance examination for 1897 was 730. 316 sat at examinations for degrees, and 152 for professional qualifications not academical, making a total of 1,198. The number of students at affiliated colleges in 1897 was 660, of whom 200 were women. Of these students, 435 were matriculated at the University of New Zealand. The numbers in attendance at the several colleges are as follows : —University of Otago, 177 men and 46 women matriculated, and 27 men not matriculated; at Canterbury College, 95 men and 49 women matriculated, and 27 men and 27 women not matriculated; and at Auckland University College, 54 men and 14 women matriculated, and 73 men and 64 women not matriculated. The reports of these colleges are papers E.-7, E.-8, and E.-10 respectively, and E.-9 is the report of Canterbury Agricultural College, which is no longer under the control of the Governors of Canterbury College. " The Univebsity Endowment Act, 1868." The income accrued under this Act, and applicable to purposes of higher education yet to be determined by Parliament, amounted, at the end of 1897, to £3,857 2s. lid., as follows : —Canterbury Beserves, £1,472 4s. 4d. ; Westland, £224 12s. 6d. ; Taranaki, £2,160 6s. Id. Civil Sebvice Examinations. As usual the Civil Service examinations were conducted this year (in January) by the Education Department simultaneously with the examination for teachers' certificates. There were 451 candidates for the Junior Civil Service examination, and the names of 328 were published in order of merit in the Gazette of the 24th February. For the Senior Civil Service examination there were 95 candidates, of whom 32 passed—four of them with distinction. Further particulars are given in the report of the examination (E.-1a).

xviii

I—E. 1

E.—l.

Table No. 1. Age and Sex of the Pupils on the School Rolls in the several Education Districts at the End of 1897.

APPENDIX.

1

5 and under 6 Years. 6 and under 7. 7 and under 8 8 and under 9. 9 and under 10. 10 and under 11. 11 and under 12. 12 and under 13. .3 and under 14. 14 and under 15. Over 15 Years. Totals of all Ages. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Boys. Girls. Totals. Auckland 1,109 971 1,467 1,270 1,620 1,482 1,655 ! 1,513 1,672 1,558 1,629 1,573 1,593 1,451 1,566 1,428 1,115 1,141 661 633 241 335 14,328 13,355 27,683 Taranaki 104 118 207 183 212! 207 264 195 217 219 264 230 221 200 223 213 157 155 89 80 42 45 2,000 1,845 3,845 Wanganui 347 333 530 514 586 563 621 545 612 590 597 557 575 565 553 533 435 370 264 227 141 132 5,261 4,929 10,190 Wellington 539 515 712 701 890 802 805 745 854 801 827 779 834 733 709 690 639 553 340 322 107 134 7,256 6,775 14,031 Hawke's Bay 283 I 275 435 358 496 373 i 499 455 465 450 480 437 444 352 375 330 296 302 162 154 79 79 4,014 3,565 7,579 Marlborough 82 i 53 i 113 97 113 106 126 117 121 109 117 133 138 107 116 110 119 106 48 57 38 54 1,131 1,049 2,180 Nelson 240 I 238 1 296 269 ' 343 302 i 328 273 373 i 328 339J 320 309 313 329 296 303 276 172 156 69 71 3,101 2,842 5,943 Orey 96 i 102 I 77 67 69 97 76 80 91 87 86 89 97 98 96 79 70 65 52 58 29 37 839 859 1,698 Westland 53 i 40 ) 59 i 64 76 70 I 67 73 74 90 82 89 78 76 72 69 70 70 52 42 49 47 732 730 1,462 North Canterbury 866 > 817 ' 1,081 1,049 1 1,216 1,170 ) 1,236 1,122 1,211 . 1,111 1,244 1,210 1,287 1,081 1,182 1,111 891 828 420 366 155 174 10,789 10,039 20,828 South Canterbury 215 i 187 306 260 I 327 260 I 284 270 334 ; 328 289 305 302 288 292 248 200| 189 115 116 47 49 2,711 2,500 5,211 Otago 894 800 ) 1,095 i 1,030 I 1,168 i 1,166 ; 1,219 1,188 1,294 : 1,240 1,246 1,210 1,254 1,208 1,261 1,187 963 845 540 442 2S4 253 11,218 10,569 21,787 Southland 421 363 ! 508 i 496 i 568 i 546 ; 558 501 601 542 563 574 562 493 546 485 437 356 218 218 97 107 5,079 4,681 9,760 Totals for 1897 .. 5,249 ) 4,812 ! 6,886 i 6,358 I 7,684 : 7,144 : 7,738 7,077 7,919 1 7,453 7,763 7,506 7,694 6,965 7,320 6,779 5,695 5,256 3,133 2,871 1,378 1,517 68,459 63,738 132,197 Totals for 1896 .. 4,992 257 ! 4,716 96 > 6,699 i 6,276 i 7,573 i 7,099 I 7,770 7,442 7,852 ! 7,328 125 7,944 -181 7,175 7,687 7 7,160 -195 7,152 168 6,773 5,640 4,897 3,066 2,784 1,409 1,603 67,784 :63,253 131,037 Difference 187 82 HI 45 67 331 6 55 359 67 87 ! -86 j 675 485 1,160 -32 -365 -81

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2

Table No. 2 Standard Classes of all Pupils on School Rolls at the End of 1897.

Pupils preparing lor Standard Classes. Pu] tils that have passe< Standard YI. iiducation Districts. I. II. III. IV. V. VI. i _ . Boys. Girls. 3,360 : Total. 7,387 Boys. 1,874 Girls. I I 1,711 Total. Boys. I I Girls. Total. J Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. 1,893 ! 3,914 Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. Boys. Girls. Total. Auckland 4,027 3,585 1,867 1,706 3,573 1,984 1,903 3,887 2,021 1,370 1,463 2,833 940 914 1,854 245 405 650 Taranaki 615 507 1,122 276 252 528 317 287 604 324 284 608 241 265 ! 506 144 174 318 67 61 128 16 j 15 31 Wanganui ... 1,383 1,250 2,633 713 673 1,386 726 J i ! 669 1,395 848 I 722 1,570 748 765 J 1,513 477 492 969 252 . 269 521 114 89 203 Wellington ... 1,850 1,652 J I 3,502 791 806 1,597 . 913 888 1,801 1,076 J 972 2,048 958 905 J 1,863 747 778 1,525 554 512 1,066 367 j 262 629 Hawke's Bay 1,179 993 2,172 607 494 1,101 I I 562 493 1,055 541 \ 504 1,045 504 458 J 962 343 327 670 203 [ 224 427 75 72 147 Marlborough 304 240 544 116 104 220 126 118 244 179 167 346 159 164 323 128 132 260 71 77 148 48 47 95 Nelson 649 543 1,192 361 299 660 404 I 363 767 470 434 904 429 405 834 343 385 728 276 266 542 169 147 316 Grey 259 306 565 99 84 183 ; M 109 220 110 J 116 226 92 117 209 90 65 155 57 35 92 21 27 48 Westland ... 155 142 297 76 81 157 92 75 167 88 110 198 75 94 169 99 76 175 72 76 148 75 76 I 151 North Canterbury 2,427 2,187 4,614 1,331 1,207 2,538 1,320 1,273 2,593 1,577 1,463 3,040 1,623 1,578 3,201 1,268 1,190 2,458 869 791 1,660 374 350 724 South Canterbury 638 498 1,136 320 295 615 321 318 639 416 379 795 400 357 757 304 312 616 211 223 434 101 118 219 Otago 2,556 2,323 J 4,879 h>281 1,235 2,516 1,412 1,278 2,690 1,457 1,430 2,887 1,544 1,465 3,009 1,268 1,279 2,547 1,016 914 i ! 1,930 684 J 645 1,329 Southland ... 1,319 17,361 1,133 2,452 592 577 1,169 16,255 615 619 1,234 16,982 726 624 1,350 720 658 1,378 9,124 18,638 604 551 1,155 346 305 651 157 I 214 I 371 Totals for 1897 15,134 32,495 8,437 7,818 8,786 8,196 9,796 9,108 18,904 9,514 7,185 7,224 14,409 4,934 4,667 ! 9,601 1 2,446 2,467 4,913 Totals for 1896 17,335 15,306 , ; 32,611 ; 8,610 8,000 16,610 -355 8,931 8,277 17,208 9,838 9,115 18,953 9,315 9,178 18,493 -54 145 7,051 6,746 13,797 4,531 4,316 8,847 J 2,173 2,315 4,488 Difference 26 -172 -146 I -173 —182 -145 -81 -226 199 478 612 403 351 754 273 -42 -7 -49 134 152 425

E.— 1.

Summary of Boards' Expenditure for Twenty-one Years.

Table No. 3. Summary of Boards' Income for Twenty-one Years.

3

Year. Parli! Balances, 1st January. Maintenance. Parliamentary Grants. Lamentary Grai Buildings. .nts. Technical. Education Reserves. Local I School Fees, &c. Local Receipts. Deposits, .Refunds, &c. Public Libraries. Secondary Schools. Totals. Bents, &c. 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 £ s. d. 32,490 7 6 23,323 0 9 58,173 3 11 42,437 1 6 32,419 10 9 37,400 15 9 11,532 15 4 13,007 11 8 19,553 12 3 21,589 9 1 21,157 5 10 25,US 3 0 47,715 1 2 31,125 9 6 27,690 2 5 65,610 4 3 51,098 17 6 50,709 13 7 42,396 18 8 53,240 6 3 12,005 13 3 £ s. d. 157,392 15 10 216,666 4 0 217,876 2 0 241,555 14 0 233,587 0 9 250,853 10 9 266,967 12 11 287,503 17 5 306,572 2 3 318,018 5 5 332,605 3 8 318,273 0 3 326,341 3 S 330,423 13 3 342,244 10 0 340,918 19 1 350,465 13 11 362,388 10 8 379,610 16 10 388,702 0 8 393,358 14 3 £ s. d. 46,812 7 6 101,257 2 11 150,581 4 7 104,436 16 8 64,318 0 0 45,265 10 9 83,322 10 9 50,475 0 0 59,008 15 0 60,170 14 6 55,451 2 9 46,783 10 0 11,578 18 3 26,235 9 9 66,737 10 3 31.602 9 4 47,273 0 0 45,079 5 10 44.603 -1 4 §4,957 1 8 57,527 1 3 £ s. d. £ s. d. 16.604 4 3 8,862 3 9 21,330 7 1 19,749 0 4 23,533 6 7 21,258 13 4 24,714 18 9 29,511 1 4 29,761 11 2 29.605 1 9 27.372 9 3 31,882 3 1 31,646 0 8 33,772 4 9 34,741 11 1 37.373 11 9 37,169 11 0 34,761 17 5 39,828 11 1 37,196 6 7 1,153 9 0 38,857 1 9 £ s. d. "41,955 11 4 3,005 0 6 1,799 5 9 924 8 6 1,415 8 5 2,354 13 6 1,221 13 6 1,207 11 3 1,188 2 10 1,801 2 7 1,434 1 2 1,805 6 3 1,978 10 10 1,529 3 2 1,866 2 0 2,391 19 6 2,349 6 11 2,271 14 3 2,369 2 3 3,042 5 9 3,859 0 3 £ s. d. 1,190 7 1 1,284 14 3 1,231 7 9 1,965 12 3 599 1 2 1,411 10 0 2,155 1 2 652 11 3 855 14 3 637 11 4 236 8 11 220 1 2 233 13 5 1,474 1 11 241 14 0 294 14 2 552 6 10 522 11 3 856 11 11 580 4 11 859 14 4 £ s. d. 3,048 17 2 1,739 5 0 380 0 0 439 3 5 858 4 0 810 15 8 674 2 2 648 8 5 529 9 2 378 17 2 258 18 10 335 0 4 613 15 11 698 4 4 487 18 9 563 5 7 348 8 0 148 12 2 175 2 8 £ s. d. 2,798 10 11 6 361 1 4 2,708 13 10 2,893 9 5 2,269 8 11 5,425 11 9 2,886 13 5 1,388 2 10 1,633 3 1 761 13 3 252 13 4 802 1 6 610 8 5 737 1 0 232 15 11 224 8 2 1,014 14 6 352 12 0 326 14 4 163 18 9 386 14 8 £ s. d. {6,179 2 1 4,945 8 0 453 10 9 258 13 5 230 10 9 £ s. d. t9,025 7 5 £ s. d. 308,269 11 10 360,759 7 6 462,928 4 2 420,646 15 8 358,975 7 4 364,668 2 8 393,890 0 7 384,556 11 5 419,247 3 0 433,232 6 4 439,038 14 1 425,263 2 5 420,362 15 3 425,632 3 8 474,368 1 7 479,114 10 7 490,411 9 5 496,649 10 7 510,340 4 5 488,030 16 9 508,182 11 5 * Including sums raised by School Committees and expended on education without going through the Boards' books, as follows: New Plymouth, £750 Is.; Hawke's Bay, £814 4s. 5d.; Otago, £20,828 3s. 2d. f The Auckland College and Grammar School and the Otago High School were under the charge of the Education Boards during the year 1877. t Including balances excluded from summaries of former years. § The greater part of the vote was not paid until after the end of the year. :i]

Year. Management by Boards. Inspection and Examination. Maintenance of Schools.* School-buildings. Interest. Refunds and Advances. Public Libraries. Secondary Schools. Balances, + 31st December. Totals. 1877 1878 1879 1880 1881 1882 1883 1884 1885 1886 1887 1888 1889 1890 1891 1892 1893 1894 1895 1896 1897 £ b. a. • 10,484 14 10 i 10,225 12 2 11,109 8 10 ! 10,033 6 8 i 8,109 6 9 i 8,458 16 10 I 9,662 12 9 9,447 14 3 10,551 0 7 10,695 0 8 9,893 7 10 9,566 11 10 9,683 19 8 9,696 19 0 10,549 19 5 11,017 3 9 11,360 10 11 11,425 4 8 11,481 19 3 12,032 13 2 12,536 14 11 £ s. a. 5,606 19 7 ! 6,142 14 5 7,735 4 0 8,273 13 9 8,387 15 4 9,115 16 7 9,866 11 8 10,441 4 0 10,039 14 4 10,241 1 10 10,731 8 9 10,147 10 5 10,197 14 1 10,725 0 0 11,143 10 6 11,685 7 8 11,882 10 3 12,692 5 8 13,127 5 10 13,037 4 7 12,614 18 5 £ s. d. 173,726 9 7 192,736 19 7 221,053 4 0 247,121 3 5 243,257 3 6 258,683 3 0 272,269 17 2 293,552 10 2 310,761 0 7 325,472 2 1 340,349 17 1 327,085 3 8 328,099 16 6 336,670 6 6 343,880 3 5 355,254 4 0 371,205 1 0 382,154 5 6 382,506 5 2 395,831 16 4 407,786 19 10 £ s. a. 80,351 16 9 89,255 3 7 I 172,867 14 3 i 117,410 1 10 58,254 12 6 71,852 4 9 86,748 13 0 49,679 1 4 64,821 15 4 65,007 14 4 52,621 9 11 ! 30,354 13 9 j 41,123 11 11 i 39,225 7 3 j 42,150 17 4 J 49,088 18 4 j 44,387 2 4 j 44,851 19 7 ! 45,251 0 2 53,533 15 6 60,485 18 7 £ s. a. 256 12 6 252 4 11 225 18 4 4 16 10 150 14 3 148 4 4 214 12 1 195 12 11 225 9 4 125 2 0 57 4 10 61 7 0 25 7 9 37 3 10 318 1 3 286 10 2 207 9 0 333 1 4 82 7 3 230 3 11 205 5 7 £ s. a. 3,353 15 10 3,973 8 11 1,425 12 8 726 1 0 1,861 1 7 4,853 0 5 2,077 9 9 1,686 16 6 1,258 13 9 533 19 7 267 2 8 332 14 7 106 15 10 1,587 4 8 715 5 5 683 9 2 659 2 4 2,795 15 2 . 4,651 0 6 1,359 10 0 234 16 10 £ s. a. 6,074 0 7 4,658 1 5 1,553 17 8 24 1 5 42 12 6 £ s. a. 11,166 2 0 £ s. a. 23,323 0 9 58,173 3 11 42,437 1 6 32,419 10 9 37,400 15 9 11,532 15 4 13,007 11 8 19,553 12 3 21,589 9 1 21,157 5 10 25,118 3 0 47,715 1 2 31,125 9 6 27,690 2 5 65,610 4 3 51,098 17 6 50,709 13 7 42,396 18 8 53,240 6 3 12,005 13 3 14,317 17 3 £ s. a. 308,269 11 10 360,759 7 6 462,928 4 2 420,646 15 8 358,975 7 4 364,668 2 8 393,890 0 7 384,556 11 5 419,247 3 0 433,232 6 4 439,038 14 1 425,263 2 5 420,362 15 3 425,632 3 8 474,368 1 v 479,114 10 7 490,411 9 5 496,649 10 7 510,340 4 5 488,030 16 9 508,182 11 5 * Maintenance includes teachers' salaries and allowances, grants to Committees and schools, scholarships, and training. + Deducting overdrafts.

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Table No. 4. Income of the several Education Boards for the Year 1897. (Compiled from the Statements of Accounts attached to the Boards' Reports.)

4

From Government. From Local Sources. Education Districts. Balances, 1st January, 1897. For Maintenance, Inspection, Training, and Scholarships. For Buildings and Playgrounds. For Manual and Total from Technical Government. Instruction. Fees for Dis- Donations, Rents trictHigh Subscriptions, Saleof( 5 ld Total from KSS££ Interest B Sources. Training, &e. on Bequest. From Education Reserves. Interest. Refunds, Deposits, &c. Overdrafts, 31st December, 1897. Total. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d.j £ s. a. £ s. d.l £ s. a. £ s. a. £ s. d. £ 8. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d.j £ s. d. £ s. d. Auckland 2,940 12 1 86,143 1 11 12,591 8 0 16 0 5 98,750 10 4 30 0 0 168 7 5 198 7 5 1,788 4 8 16 16 9 103,694 11 3 Taranaki 1,042 7 1 11,366 19 2 1,940 0 0 13,306 19 2 9 2 6 49 6 0 58 8 6 1,362 14 11 0 6 11 15,770 16 7 Wanganui 1,586 0 0 30,403 13 2 4,268 13 3 265 19 3 34,938 5 8 92 14 0 467 U 8 I 142 4 9 702 10 5 1,810 7 10 8 0 0 3 12 0 39,048 15 11 Wellington ... 43,035 16 2 6,060 0 0 435 0 11 49,530 17 1 906 11 9 62 0 9 152 17 7 1,121 10 1 1,426 17 4 118 8 1 5,242 4 11 57,439 17 6 Hawke's Bay 4,083 19 0 21,885 7 2 3,060 0 0 24,945 7 2 383 14 6j 48 4 2 3 0 0 434 18 8i 2,717 13 0 32,181 17 10 Marlborough ... 241 7 4 6,996 5 0 1,430 0 0 8,426 5 0 8 10 2 11 0 10 12 0 100 0 0 3 7 0 8,781 11 4 Nelson ... 1,264 16 2 18,598 7 1 2,050 0 0 ... 20,648 7 1 9 10 8 9 10 8 856 10 0 22 0 0 6 6 6 22,807 10 5 Grey ... 5,474 1 2 1,120 0 0 36 14 7 6,630 15 9 1 82 0 0 *60 0 0 142 0 0 110 0 0 513 16 7 7,396 12 4 Westland 5,221 17 0 750 0 0 75 16 10 6,047 13 10 249 6 9 *72 10 0 3 0 0 324 16 9j 4 0 0 3 12 6 6,380 3 1 North Canterbury 3,620 18 9 57,148 3 8 8,780 0 0 242 13 9 66,170 17 5 ! 97 16 0 227 15 0 69 4 0 394 15 0 12,470 19 3 45 10 6 I 82,703 0 11 South Canterbury 720 19 9 15,113 7 2 1,686 0 0 ... 16,799 7 2 187 15 0 31 12 6 156 1 6 375 9 0 2,912 10 9 176 13 1 20,984 19 9 Otago ... ... r i 76 9 i 61,710 3 9 9,320 0 0 81 3 3 74,111 7 0 567 7 1 242 6 7 42 13 8 852 7 4j 9,461 1 3 32 8 3 16 0 2,102 11 1 86,637 10 4 Southland 1,921 8 11 27,261 11 10 4,471 0 0 31,732 11 10 i 32 11 0! 60 17 9 93 8 9 3,836 2 9 108 15 0 14 14 9 37,707 2 0 Totals for 1897 , i 17,498 18 6 57,527 1 3 452,039 4 6 2,567 5 1 I 1,291 15 2 : 859 14 4 ! 4,718 14 7 38,857 1 9 175 2 8 386 14 8 7,858 12 7 521,534 9 393,358 14 3 1,153 9 0 Totals for 1896 ; 53,851 15 3 388,702 0 8 4,957 1 8 393,H59 2 4 2,097 11 2 944 14 7 580 4 11 3,622 10 8 37,196 6 7 148 12 2 160 3 9 5,497 0 3 494,135 11 i . I Difference ... • -36,352 16 9 4,656 13 7 52,569 19 7j 1,153 9 Oi 58,380 2 2 ! 469 13 11 347 0 7 279 9 5 1,096 3 11> 1,660 15 2 26 10 6 226 10 11 2,361 12 4 27,398 18 * Grant from High School Board.

5

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Table No. 5. Expenditure of the several Education Boards for the Year 1897.

Maintenance. Buildings. Inspection Education Districts. Overdrafts, 1st January, 1897. Office Expenses — Staff, Members' Travelling, Printing, &c. expenses, and Examination of Pupilteachers. , Teachers" Salaries I Incidental and ! Expenses of Allowances, Schools and ! and Classes. Training. Total Scholarships. | for ■ Maintenance. Interest and Exchange. Refunds, and Sundries. Balances, 31st Decemher, 1897. Totals. Buildings, .Furniture, Sites, and Fencing. Plans, Conveyances, Sec. Total for Buildings. £ s. d. £ s. a. e s. a. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 1 £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Auckland 2,152 14 3 2,707 2 4 71,033 9 9 9,032 5 5 1,707 18 7 81,773 13 9 13,125 7 1 516 6 0 13,641 13 1 3,419 7 10 103,694 11 3 Taranaki 377 5 1 447 10 7 9,907 19 3 1,285 17 2 213 6 3 11,407 2 8, 2,21- 19 2 85 4 6 2,305 3 8 1,233 14 7 15,770 16 7 Wanganui * 991 0 1 1,048 14 7! 28,059 15 4 1,593 18 10 I 533 17 11: 30,187 12 1 5,274 12 11 169 15 4 5,444 8 3 65 5 0 1,311 15 11 39,048 15 11 Wellington 4,923 19 10 1,418 11 4 1,225 6 0 37,384 1 3 4,097 13 5 731 1 31 42,212 15 11 7,504 15 8 7,504 15 8 134 0 9 20 8 0 57,439 17 6 Hawke'a Bay 649 7 1 768 10 3 20,061 5 3 2,221 8 5 547 14 0| 22,830 7 8 3,303 10 5 246 5 0 3,549 15 5 28 3 6 4,355 13 11 32,181 17 10 Marlborough 597 11 0 5,813 2 1 466 11 10 120 0 0J 6,399 13 11 1,547 8 9 55 19 6 1,603 8 3 145 3 0 35 15 2 8,781 11 4 Nelson ■■' 695 6 2 755 0 a 15,500 19 9 2,006 9 4 334 12 0 17,842 1 1 1,544 8 5 1,544 8 5 2 11 0 1,968 3 9 22,807 10 5 Grey ... 483 4 7 429 11 4 200 0 0 5,118 2 3 119 14 1 100 0 0 5,337 lfi 4 904 16 6 41 3 7 946 0 1 7,396 12 4 • 449 16 9 100 17 6 180 3 7 113 10 0 683 6 6 8 15 6 692 2 0 0 3 10 90 19 4 6,380 3 1 Westland 86 0 10i 4,666 9 3 4,960 2 10; North Canterbury 1,376 10 7 1,684 17 0 57,671 15 7 7,0*2 13 11 1,146 1 7 65,850 11 1 7,332 6 11 525 11 0 7,857 17 11 25 12 10 5,907 11 6 82,703 0 11 South Canterbury 618 3 9 662 12 3 15,416 7 8 1,323 14 9 404 12 9 17,144 15 2 1,329- 1 1 87 2 6 1,416 3 7 1,143 5 0 20,984 19 9 Otago 1,798 5 3 2,097 7 6^ 65,781 1 4 5,725 19 1 1,375 10 9 72,882 11 2 9,250 13 10 607 6 7 9,858 0 5 16 0' 86,637 10 4 Southland ... 982 12 3 917 0 5 26,571 2 10 1,831 15 (i 554 18 4 28,957 16 2 3,840 1 10 282 0 0 4,122 1 10 17 8 6 2,710 2 io! 37,707 2 0 Totals for 1897 5,493 5 3 12,536 14 11 12,61418 5 362,985 11 7 36,9 IS 4 10 7,883 3 5 407,786 19 10 57,860 9 1 2,625 9 6 60,485 18 7 205 5 7 234 16 10 22,176 9 10 521,534 9 Totals for 1896 611 9 0, 12,032 13 2 13,037 4 7 353,404 17 6 34,761 8 11 7,665 9 ll! 395,831 16 4 51,036 13 2 2,497 2 4 53,533 15 6 230 3 11 1,359 10 0 17,498 18 6 494,135 11 Difference 4,881 16 3! 504 1 9 -422 6 2 217 13 6 11,955 3 6 6,823 15 11 128 7 2 6,952 3 1 -24 18 4 -1,124 13 2 27,398 18 9,580 14 1 2,156 15 11 4,677 11 4|

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6

Table No. 6. Return of Salaries of Officers of Education Boards not included in Table No. 8, as at 31st December, 1897.

Officers. Salaries. Remarks. AUCKLAND : — Secretary and Treasurer Clerk Clerk and Accountant Clerk Office Assistant Chief Inspector of Schools Inspector of Schools £ s. d. 500 0 0 275 0 0 250 0 0 150 0 0 104 0 0 550 0 0 400 0 0 350 0 0 350 0 0 300 0 0 400 0 0 [And 15s. a day travelling expenses beyond a certain radius. Actual travelling expenses, cost of stationery, and half office rent. Private practice allowed. £10 for travelling. Architect Truant Officer Takanaki : — Secretary and Treasurer 120 0 0 175 0 0 Also Secretary to High School Board and to Board of School Commissioners. Including £100 travelling expenses. Inspector of Schools ... Architect... ■•• ... Wanganui : — Secretary ... ... Clerk Messenger Inspector of Schools 450 0 0 70 0 0 280 0 0 155 0 0 35 0 0 400 0 0 300 0 0 Also Secretary to High School Board. Also £20 a year from High School Board. ») ••* ••• Architect ... And £150 travelling allowance. And £120 travelling allowance. Paid upon a sliding scale, which amounts to about 5 per cent, on an average, besides actual travelling expenses. Wellington : — Secretary ■•• Clerk Clerk Truant Officer Messenger Inspector of Schools 425 0 0 175 0 0 25 0 0 150 0 0 125 0 0 550 0 0 375 0 0 School of ArtDirector Instructor, Painting Class ... ,, Art Class 500 0 0 180 0 0 163 0 0 150 0 0 75 0 0 75 0 0 40 0 0 36 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 100 0 0 i And £1 Iβ. a day when travelling. , Mechanical Class „ Architectural Class „ Plumbing Art Assistant And £1 Is. for each monthly visit to Masterton. 5 per cent, on amount of contracts, and actual travelling expenses. 10s. a day, and expenses when away from home. Registrar Teacher of Singing ... Architect ... Carpenter... Hawke's Bay : — Secretary and Treasurer Inspector Clerk and Messenger Mablbobotjgh : — Secretary and Inspector 250 0 0 520 0 0 90 0 0 And £175 travelling allowance. 381 5 9 Including travelling. Also Secretary to Board of School Commissioners. Clerk Nelson : — Secretary ... Inspector of Schools 60 0 0 275 0 0 300 0 0 250 0 0 With privilege of following his profession of architect. And £100 for travelling expenses. And £100 for travelling expenses. >> G-KEY : — Secretary ... Inspector ... Westland : — Secretary and Inspector 175 0 0 200 0 0 Also Secretary to High School Board. 300 0 0 And travelling allowance of 10a. a day, and actual horse and carriage hire, and forage. Clerk NoBTH CaNTEBBUBY :— Secretary ... Treasurer Clerk Messenger Inspector of Schools 52 0 0 >) 300 0 0 250 0 0 160 0 0 90 0 0 450 0 0 450 0 0 400 0 0 400 0 0 100 0 0 120 0 0 250 0 0 100 0 0 > And actual travelling expenses. Normal School Principal Normal School, Part-time Lecturer Truant Officer Clerk of Works Assistant Clerk of Works South Cantebbuey : — Secretary ... Inspector of Schools Architect ... Otago :— Secretary and Treasurer Clerk 300 0 0 610 0 0 And actual travelling expenses. Also Secretary to High School Board. Including travelling expenses. 10 per cent, on contracts. 450 0 0 250 0 0 170 0 0 100 0 0 SO 0 0 ,, ... ,, ... ,, ...

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Table No. 6— continued. Return of Salaries of Officers, &c.— continued.

Table No. 7. Statement of Expenditure and Recoveries in respect of all Services under the Control or Supervision of the Minister of Education during the Year ending 31st March, 1898.

7

Officers. Salaries. Bemarks. )taqo— continued. Messenger Inspector of Schools £ s. d. 78 0 0 475 0 0 450 0 0 250 0 0 250 0 0 324 0 0 190 0 0 75 0 0 150 0 0 ,, ... ... J, Architect Clerk of "Works Truant Officer Teacher of G-y mnastics Training College— Principal Vice-Principal Matron... Teacher of Singing School of Art and Design — Principal Assistant |-And £150 each travelling expenses, j f-And actual travelling expenses. J 75 0 0 300 0 0 75 0 0 40 0 0 Also headmaster, Normal School. y> •■■ • ■ ■ ■•• Teacher of Building Construction ... „ , Machine Construction ... Southland : — Secretary ... Clerk Inspector of Schools 400 0 0 160 0 0 15 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 f-And actual travelling expenses. 325 0 0 135 10 0 375 0 0 325 0 0 150 0 0 200 0 0 Drill Instructor Inspector of Worts

Head Office (Vote No. 44). Secretary and Inspector-General Clerks and clerical assistance Travelling expenses Contingencies £ a. a. 600 0 0 1,825 15 0 35 19 2 35 12 11 £ s. d. 2,497 7 1 Public Schools (Votes Nos. 45 and 62, Consolidated Fund; 101 and 102, Public Works Fund). Grants to Education Boards— Capitation allowance .. .. .. .. .. £421,252 10 0 Less revenue from reserves .. .. .. 38,522 15 9 382,729 14 3 7,600 18 9 4,000 0 0 600 0 0 43,700 0 0 503 3 3 Capitation allowance, at Is. 6d., for scholarships.. Subsidies for inspection Training of teachers Grants for school buildings (Votes Nos. 62, 101, and 102) Grants for rebuilding schools destroyed by fire Miscellaneous Expenditure— Schools at Chatham Islands Teachers' and Civil Service examinations Railway-fares of school children Preparation of arithmetic papers for Standards III., IV., V., and VI. Grant to Educational Institute for travelling expenses 223 7 4 856 8 5 3,050 10 0 20 0 0 70 0 0 Less recoveries (examination fees) 443,354 2 0 1,017 12 6 Native Schools (Votes Nos. 46 and 62). 442,336 9 6 Salary of Inspector Salaries and allowances of teachers Higher education and apprenticeship Books, school requisites, sewing material, &c. Travelling (including removals of teachers) .. Buildings (Vote No. 62) Repairs Visits of Public School Inspectors (subsidy to Auckland Education Board) General contingencies School organs 450 0 0 12,435 12 2 1,845 8 11 630 5 4 602 5 1 5,204 15 8 390 13 5 150 0 0 118 13 10 39 15 3 Less recoveries Total (£87 2s. Id. charged to Native Reserves Funds, and £1,000 to Civil List, Native Purposes) 21,867 9 8 29 5 9 21,838 3 11 Industbial Schools (Votes Nos. 47, 61, and 101). Auckland— Salaries .. .. .. .. .. .. £141 0 0 General maintenance .. .. .. .. .. 585 6 6 Boarding out— Board of children .. .. .. .. .. 451 15 6 Medical attendance .. .. .. .. 7 4 6 £1,185 6 6 Less recoveries .. .. .. .. £273 15 7 911 10 11 Carried forward .. 911 10 11 466,672 0 6

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8

Table No. 7 — continued. Statement of Expenditure and Recoveries— continued.

& s. d. & s. d. 911 10 11 & s. d. 466,672 0 6 Brought forward Industrial Schools (Votes Nos. 47, 61, and 101) — continued. Burnham— Salaries .. .. .. .. .. .. 936 18 7 General maintenance .. .. .. .. .. 3,606 10 4 Additions and alterations to buildings (Votes Nos. 61 and 101) 202 14 10 Boarding out — Board of children .. .. .. .. .. 2,587 10 0 Salary of Official Correspondent .. .. .. 100 0 0 Medical attendance and sundries .. .. .. 39 10 5 7,473 4 2 Less recoveries .. .. .. .. 2,257 12 5 5,215 11 9 Caversham — Salaries .. .. .. .. .. .. 880 14 5 General maintenance .. .. .. .. .. 2,314 15 10 Improved fire and water service (Vote No, 101) .. .. 504 12 0 Boarding out— Board of children .. .... .. .. 3,087 4 0 Salary of Official Correspondent .. .. .. 125 0 0 Medical attendance and sundries .. .. .. 70 17 0 6,983 3 3 Less recoveries .. .. .. .. 4,535 13 8 General Contingencies— Salary of Visiting Officer .. .. .. .. 156 0 0 Travelling expenses of Visiting Officer .. .. .. 254 10 5 Sundries .. .. .. .. .. ■• 445 Inmates maintained at other institutions .. .. 274 4 0 2,447 9 7 12,303 1 11 688 18 10 Private Schools— St. Mary's, Auckland— Maintenance .. .. .. .. .. 585 10 0 Less recoveries .. .. .. .. 34 2 10 551 7 2 St. Joseph's, Wellington— Maintenance .. .. .. .. .. 492 15 9 Less recoveries .. .. .. .. 44 14 3 448 1 6 St. Mary's, Nelson — Maintenance .. .. .. .. .. 2,308 0 0 Passages and sundries .. .. .. .. 3 16 0 2,811 16 0 Less recoveries .. .. .. .. 271 13 10 2,040 2 2 Institution foe Deaf-mutes (Votes Nos. 48 and 61). Director .. .. .. .. .. .. .. 450 0 0 Assistants .. .. .. .. .. •• 829 7 11 Steward and Matron .. .. .. .. .. 200 0 0 Servants .. .. .. .. .. .. •• 279 10 0 1,279 7 11 Instruction in drawing .. Separate instruction of two pupils Technical instruction Rent, repairs, alterations, and improved drainage (Votes Nos. 48 and 61) Travelling General maintenance 479 10 0 34 0 0 31 13 4 11 12 0 593 14 3 124 13 7 860 2 11 Less recoveries 3,414 14 0 178 19 6 3,235 14 6 Institution fob Blind (Vote No. 49). Charges for pupils at Jubilee Institute, Auckland Agent's railway-pass 448 19 2 2 18 0 Less recoveries 451 17 2 36 i 11 415 12 3 Technical Instruction (Vote No. 50). Examinations — Science and Art Department, South Kensington City and Guilds of London Institute .. .. .. .. Grants in aid of technical classes Sundries .. .. 66 0 3 26 17 7 1,998 13 4 74 15 4 2,166 6 6 Miscellaneous (Vote No. 51). Victoria University College.. • Statutory Grants. 4,000 0 0 3,000 0 0 Auckland University College University of New Zealand 7,000 0 0 Total (including £87 2s. Id. charged to Native Reserves Funds, and £1,000 to Civil List, Native Purposes) 491,792 15 8

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9

Table No. 8. List of Public Schools in the several Education Districts, with the Expenditure for the Year 1897, and the Names, Classification, Status, and Emoluments of the Teachers as in December, 1897.

(i) Aided. (a) Reopened in January. 2—E. 1.

de; ak Note 1.—Every couple of 1 Note 2.—In the column f< partments, with a head-tea ine), sole teacher ; " A," assi Note 3. —In the column foj lalf-t: 31 "1 stant r"01i ime schools is bracketed, and is reckoned as one school in the consecutive numbering. ■osition in the School" "M" and "F" distinguish sex; "Pr" means Principal of a school having for a department; "D," head of a department; " H," head of a school; "M" or "F" (standing teacher; " P," pupil-teacher; and " S," sewing-teacher, assification," an asterisk signifies that the certificate is provisional. AUCKLAND. 0-r» 6.3 ££ © m •IS §1 ® 2 fflHH a " oto Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. +3 £ 8 ® Mainti Expe: iditure for the Ye»r. nance. _ Buildings, — Sites, Other Fur a n nd Ure ' -nance. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. © I s . tj .So 2 a° » Son a m 6 & Annual Salary and Allowance at the Kate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. O 5 a u OpC ** S3 3 Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Mangonui— Hohoura .. Waihopo .. Awanui £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 100 0 0 5 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 100 0 0 60 0 0 70 0 0 135 0 0 5 0 0 80 0 0 5 0 0 50 0 0 175 0 0 70 0 0 76 0 0 5 0 0 1 2 3 4 5 Kaitaia Takahue Oruru Victoria Valley 1 2 3 i 5 6 101 5 0 168 15 0 101 1 8 58 15 0 70 0 4 130 18 6 10 9 10 9 15 0 8 15 1 4 10 0 7 19 6 8 0 0 11 8 0 14 0 o io o (A. F. T. Ansley .. \ Mrs.F.M.Hutchings John H. Hudson .. •Emily M. Morris .. Kate Calvert Minnie Muir Eva H. Carr Samuel Harris Mrs. Thompson Henry H. Thompson Mrs. John McKay .. Frank Mangham .. Alfred 0. Ballance .. Martha Boden Joseph Albert Maria Miss S. Foster D3 D2 E4 D4 D3 D4 M S HM FP F F F M S M S M HM AF M S 17 18 29 20 13 15 25 6 Fairburn's Road .. 7 85 0 0 13 0 0 3 2 0 9 7 8 Fern Flat Mangonui 8 9 43 10 0 244 4 4 3 10 0 20 0 0 2 15 9 E2 E4 8 60 Oruaiti p) .. 10 80 1 8 12 2 12 9 0 19 Whangaroa— Totara 11 210 8 4 18 9 6 2 16 9 John Campbell Margaret F. Lane .. Bertha L. Lane W. J. Wernham May Christie John McElroy J. T. Meiklejohn .. Fred. W. Hare Mrs. Halliday J. Hartley Roberts.. Mrs. Roberts Dl HM FP FP M S M HM MP S M S 175 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 135 0 0 5 0 0 36 0 0 150 0 0 40 0 0 5 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 60 10 Whangaroa North .. 12 140 0 0 14 0 0 0 13 2 D2 37 Woodside (!) ( 2 ) Kaeo 13 14 40 0 0 195 17 0 41 2 11 12 13 8 19 14 1 B3 9 46 11 Te Moan 117 10 0 7 5 0 0 10 0 E2 22 15 Hokianga— Herekino 115 0 0 10 0 0 8 0 0 Peter Murray Miss S. Gardiner .. W. H. Lorking Mrs. L. de Thierry .. (F. R. Byles | Mrs. Hodson Edward A. Power .. Mary Lowe J. H. Rudall Mrs. Bowring James Elliot Florence B. Dunn .. I James Vuglar (Mrs. Chapman Arthur D. Bear Janet G. Jones E3 M S M S M S M S M S HM AF M S HM FP 110 0 0 5 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 150 0 0 5 0 0 140 0 0 5 0 0 80 0 0 5 0 0 175 0 0 70 0 0 150 0 0 5 0 0 135 0 0 20 0 0 11 12 16 13 Rawene 17 117 10 0 7 5 0 E3 21 14 15 16 Pakia .. ) Waiotemarama j Waimamaku Valley 18 169 9 6 17 15 0 10 15 1 E3 22 13 24 19 129 6 8 9 19 1 17 5 E3 17 Motukaraka 20 85 0 0 7 0 0 16 18 Kohukohu 21 243 14 6 25 0 6 16 6 6 CI D4 E3 61 Rawhia Umawera .. j Punakitere 22 155 3 4 10 15 0 14 13 9 22 10 17 23 148 6 8 8 15 0 0 5 8 E3 19 Bay of Islands — Pungaere .. ) Inumea .. } Waikare (') Okaihau No. 1 24 137 5 10 4 6 3 0 9 9 TheodoreH.A. Walker M 120 0 0 f 20 1 11 13 26 20 25 26 60 0' 0 135 8 4 6 4 0 15 0 0 0 19 0 Donald A. McKay .. Thomas Read Mrs. D. M. Anderson E3 M M S 60 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 21 Okaihau No. 2 ) Upper Waihou j Utakura Valley Kaikohe Waimate .. 27 28 29 30 100 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 107 10 0 15 10 0 16 10 0 1 17 0 George Barber Mary E. Roberts .. Agnes A. Wrigley .. Charles Bishoprick.. Mrs. M. Hewitt George A. Davidson Elizabeth Kelly .. Jane C. Spence Edwin W. G. Hosking Florence M. Hewitt James H. Braithwaite A. J. McCracken .. Lilian A. Aubin E3 E2 Dl M F F M S HM AF F HM FP. M HM FP 100 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 5 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 80 0 0 150 0 0 50 0 0 ( 16 1 1* 13 15 18 22 7 0 0 23 Kawakawa 31 32 33 272 6 6 70 0 0 165 6 5 36 13 6 6 10 0 10 10 0 28 1 3 14 10 0 224 2 6 Dl E3 D2 D2 80 12 35 24 25 Pakaru Opua 26 Whangae Russell 34 35 77 10 0 205 16 8 6 13 6 15 5 0 9 0 11 D2 11 45 27 Ruapekapeka East ) Ruapekapeka West j Hukerenui North .. 36 141 19 0 9 0 0 Kenneth C. Maclaurin D3 M 140 0 0 {It 37 28 37 203 6 8 14 10 0 2 11 9 Richard J. Harris .. Sydney J. Elliott .. Mrs. M. Seed D3 HM MP S 150 0 0 50 0 0 5 0 0

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

(i) Aided. (2) Opened in February. (3) Opened in June. (4)Opened in May.

10

h « to l§ Schools, and the Counties oi Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. it Maintenance. Expenditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. § 3 © is jl I i i Annual ; § u Salary and ■§ S Allowance § JJ at the Rate , S 3 paid during <3 the Last , g/g Quarter of <a;3 the Year. &H < Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. 29 Whangarei— Hukerenui South .. 38 £ s. d. 114 19 1 £ s. a. 7 10 0 £ s. d. 8 3 4 J. W. Lee Mrs. I. Hill E. C. G. Downard .. John Boyle Mrs. Murray John T. Giffney Mrs. Giffney Thomas Eodgers M S F M S M S M £ s. d. 100 0 0 5 0 0 56 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 135 0 0 5 0 0 90 0 0 18 30 31 Hukerenui West Whananaki 39 40 61 15 0 120 0 0 8 2 0 11 3 10 1 18 2 A3 14 27 32 Ngunguru 41 140 0 0 21 4 11 20 17 6 E2 30 Kiripaka Otonga .. 1 Kaimamaku Opuawhanga Hikurangi d2 90 16 6 10 8 0 E4 22 t 13 I 17 14 94 33 43 145 0 0 11 15 0 Harry J. Durham .. D3 M 150 0 0 34 35 44 45 77 10 0 275 1 0 6 8 6 22 10 0 153 0 9 Eliza A. Harper Joseph Wooller Florence M. Pitwood J. T. Teasdale Henry P. Andrew .. Laura L. Ross L. G. Marshall Mrs. Spenoe Eva M. Harper Edward Millington.. Maud Philips Edith J. R. Downard W. J. Connell Mabel Jowitt Albert Murdoch Alvira M. Matthews E2 D3 E3 F HM AF MP HM FP M S F HM FP FP HM AF MP FP 70 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 20 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 70 0 0 175 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 200 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 36 Otonga East 4G 137 17 4 8 10 0 10 0 0 D3 37 37 Huanui .. 47 120 0 0 7 10 0 ; . E2 22 38 39 Ngararatunua Kamo 48 49 70 19 1 248 7 10 9 11 7 21 5 0 5 8 1 E4 D2 17 73 40 Whangarei [B] 50 355 16 8 51 16 4 5 4 6 El E3 116 Whangarei— Horahora 270 16 8 21 5 0 81 41 42 Whangarei Heads .. Parua Bay No. 1 .. Taraunui Owhiwa Parua Bay No. 2 ■ ■ ) Grahamstown Maunu Otaika .. Maungatapere 51 52 53 54 55 132 10 0 100 19 6 100 0 0 71 14 10 10 2 8 7 0 0 7 0 0 10 6 8 0 9 9 1 16 4 Frank Higginson .. Jessie A. Fraser Alexander M. Rust Mary McDonald .. Arundel M. Beale .. Clara A. Edmiston.. Mary Fraser Viofet Kingsford Dl E3 D2 C2 E2 E4 HM AF M S F F F 190 0 0 70 0 0 135 0 0 5 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 31 19 24 17 I 12 1 17 23 20 24 5 *2 8 43 56 135 3 3 9 5 0 11 5 10 E3 F 120 0 0 44 45 46 57 58 59 100 0 0 100 0 0 135 8 4 7 15 0 7 17 6 11 14 0. 1 17 10 Barbara C. Anderson Elizabeth Davis Harry Carse Mrs. Carse Mary A. Field E. M. Goldsworthy Louisa Vincent Louisa A. Hawkes .. Humphrey Heward Edgar F. Snell A. J. Murdoch Mrs. Fagan J Wesley Lee { Miss Graham Miss Lee J James N. Marsdon I Mrs. Marsdon Albert Gerring Henry W. C. Philips Gwlady3 R. Jones .. Francis B. Lowe .. Mrs. M. McAuley .. Edward H. Mackay Hannah E. Carter.. E2 E2 D2 F F M S F F F F HM MP M S M S S M S M HM FP M S M F 100 0 0 100 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 100 0 0 70" 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 160 0 0 20 0 0 60 0 0 5 0 0 150 0 0 5 0 0 5 0 0 150 0 0 10 0 0 120 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 47 48 Kaitara Rnatangata West .. Ruatangata East .. Purua Maungakaramea 60 61 62 63 64 111 11 8 70 0 0 132 7 9 8 6 8 203 5 0 12 0 0 6 10 0 10 5 0 15 0 15 5 0 7 2 1 2 13 0 D3 E3 E5 E5 Dl 23 16 10 11 49 49 50 51 Mata 65 56 5 0 5 0 0 1 10 0 10 Mangapai No. 1 ) Mangapai No. 2 J 66 157 1 8 10 6 3 15 0 0 D2 18 21 52 Waikiekie East ) Waikiekie West } Waipu North River Waipu Central 161 1 4 13 0 0 0 18 0 E2 16 25 22 36 67 53 54 68 69 114 0 10 172 1 0 8 14 6 11 10 0 E2 Dl 55 Waipu Upper 70 125 0 0 8 0 0 E2 23 56 Waipu Cove Bream Tail (') ( 2 ) .. 71 72 78 0 4 48 0 0 6 0 0 6 10 4 13 10 57 Hobson— Tangiteroria ) Tangihua Awatuna ( s ) i Katui ( s ) .. } Opanake ( 4 ) 7.3 74 150 19 0 80 14 8 0 15 0 6 10 0 6 17 11 371 18 1 Samuel H. Macky .. Thomas R. Jones .. D4 E3 M M 150 0 0 135 0 0 f 23 1 20 f 25 1 20 39 7S 104 2 7 1 19 9 29 19 6 Alfred E. Trays Percy J. Hook Mrs. S. A. Larkin .. Frank P. Burton .. Ada E. Carruth Margaret Stewart .. Joseph J, A. James.. Katherine Dudding Joseph E. Elliott .. Elizth. M. McCowan Henry B. Wilson .. Grace J. Croker Mary H. Taylor E3 HM MP S HM AF AF MP FP HM FP HM AF AF 135 0 0 30 0 0 5 0 0 220 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 200 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 58 Dargaville 76 372 19 3 33 5 0 2 7 5 Bl D3 E4 152 59 Aoroa 186 5 4 16 0 0 187 1 9 1)2 54 77 60 Aratapu .. 78 335 0 0 26 0 8 C2 E3 E4 105

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

m Opened in October. («) Aided. (») Opened in March. (*) Opened in May and July respectively. (5) Opened in April. (6) Itinerant.

11

6.2 ■55 go » S 2& Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [Bj) in which situate. 6§ g<8 v$ u 5 Sg. oco Expenditure lor thi Maintenance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. 6 I Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. 8 II < Teachers' ' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. 61 Hobson — continued. Te Kopuru 79 & s. d. 386 13 4 £ s. d. 28 18 3 & s. d. 159 2 0 Jos. R. Whitaker .. Eveline M. Holloway Margaret M. Worth Jane Stewart Edward Perkins Mrs. A. E. Copedo .. Frederick R. Koller Charles Wilson Dl E3 E4 E4 E3 HM AF FP FP M S M M £ a. d. 200 0 0 70 0 0 55 0 0 55 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 121 Red Hill .. 121 13 4 10 15 0 0 14 11 80 24 Tatarariki Tangaihi f 1 ) Otamatea— Arapohue 81 82 77 10 0 23 12 6 7 0 0 133 ii 10 E4 19 83 183 17 10 9 10 0 1 19 3 Colin R. Munro Clarissa A. Hutton.. A. H. W.Thomson.. Mrs. E. Melville .. William E. Johns .. George Wilson Mary A. Adlington.. Ada Gallie D3 HM FP M S M HM FP F 135 0 0 30 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 100 0 0 135 0 0 40 0 0 48 0 0 34 62 63 Tokatoka No. 1 84 134 0 0 8 5 0 D4 22 Tokatoka No. 2 Matakohe 85 86 105 0 0 184 3 2 7 0 0 12 8 9 40 0 0 2 12 5 E3 D2 17 30 64 Omaru ( 2 ) ( s ) Hukatere ( 4 ) ) Kowhai (<) f Mareretu Paparoa Homestead Paparoa .. 87 41 13 4 4 3 4 10 f 21 1 13 18 12 36 88 78 13 0 3 3 6 151 8 5 Norman H. S. Law.. D4* M 120 0 0 65 66 89 90 91 92 10 0 70 0 0 198 16 11 7 0 0 6 10 0 13 9 9 0 10 0 35 10 0 2 18 Miriam V. Barlow .. Ethel M. Potter .. Thomas Archey Daisy I. P. Farrell.. Robert McPherson.. Jane Johnson Herbert E. Porde .. Mrs. Collier Jane A. Cameron .. Caroline J. Elatt .. Catherine Shannon Amelia Fisher William N. Ingram.. Mrs. H. G. Gray .. Ellen Millington .. E3 E3 E2 F F HM FP HM FP M S F F F F M S F 100 0 0 70 0 0 150 0 0 50 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 24 0 0 100 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 70 0 0 Maungaturoto 92 155 0 0 9 16 6 18 2 D2 34 67 68 Kaiwaka .. 93 126 5 0 17 19 0 25 4 6 D2 20 69 Tara Road Mangawai Beach .. Te Arai f) («) Te Pahi No. 1 Te Pahi No. 2 94 95 96 97 98 100 0 0 107 10 0 18 0 0 92 10 0 130 0 0 7 5 0 7 0 6 11 18 7 2 0 4 E2 E3 20 20 6 19 21 70 7 0 0 9 4 9 0 10 6 E2 t>3 Albertland North .. Rodney— Port Albert 99 85 0 0 7 0 0 0 10 0 D3 15 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 Wharehine Wellsford Wayby Hoteo North Tauhoa MaDgakura Araparara.. 100 101 102 103 104 105 106 107 250 14 4 101 15 6 92 10 0 119 11 11 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 122 10 0 20 0 0 9 17 7 6 0 8 5 0 9 8 0 8 12 6 7 0 0 15 0 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 0 10 0 9 16 8 George B. Reid Jane E. Hefford .. Louisa F. Walker .. Adelaide Latimer .. Blanche Carnachan M. L. Buchanan Emma M. Coad Josephine Hamilton James Miller Mrs. Ellen Jones .. Herbert Bates Arthur Mabbett Mrs. Mabbett El E3 D3 E3 E2 E3 1)2 E3 E4* HM AF F F F F F F M S M M S 175 0 0 60 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 120 0 0 100 0 0 5 0 0 59 22 20 29 21 23 20 21 3 17 9 78 0 10 0 Great Barrier ( 6 ) Tryphena 108 109 118 15 0 105 0 0 13 i 8 2 i 10 E2 21 21 79 80 81 Haratonga (6) ) Mangate ( 6 ) j Pakiri Dacre's .. \ Ti Point .. J Omaha, Little Whangaripo (2) Matakana.. 110 111 112 43 0 0 85 0 0 157 18 4 0 13 7 13 10 0 10 7 6 0 9 9 161 3 11 0 18 0 John Hanson Lily Gubb (Albert L. Sheppard (Rose Ashton Sarah K. Niccol C. T. Smyth Peter Moores Ethel A. W. Power George H. Smith .. (W.J.Moore 1 Miss McBrierty .. (Mrs. Algie Charles Gribble Miss McBrierty Alfred A. Turner .. William H. Worsley Elizabeth Lewis Annie L. Gibbons .. D3 E3 E4 D2 ! M F M S F M ' HM PP MP M S S M s; M HM AF F 44 0 0 70 0 0 150 0 0 10 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 175 0 0 50 0 0 20 0 0 130 0 0 5 0 0, 5 0 0 80 0 0 5 0 0 120 0 0 175 0 0 70 0 0 80 0 0 11 19 17 16 19 14 57 82 113 114 115 100 0 0 80 11 0 238 6 8 17 1 3 47 9 5 83 19 0 0 2 18 10 Mullet Point \ Mahurangi Heads J 150 0 0 12 10 0 D3 84 116 10 11 Mahurangi Heads W. 117 95 15 0 7 0 .0 0 16 10 El 12 85 86 Kaipara Plats Warkworth 118 119 112 3 4 245 0 0 7 15 0 20 0 0 0 10 0 8 6 10 D4 Dl E3 E3 24 68 87 88 Dome Valley Ahuroa No. 1 ) Ahuroa No. 2 J Puhoi 120 87 19 10 7 5 0 0 10 0 13 f 9 1 10 43 121 136 11 10 7 10 0 4 0 0 William F. Collis .. D3 M 130 0 0 89 122 222 10 0 47 13 3 5 10 3 John H. Gillies Annie Keaney D2 E3 HM AF. 150 0 0 70 0 0 Waitemata — Waiwera 128 0 0 8 15 0 4 4 6 Elizabeth C. Quinn Bertha Cragg Ann E. Brook Mary F. Honan Franoes Longmore.. Florence F. Hardy E2 HF PP F P HP FP 108 0 0 30 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 108 0 0 50 0 0 90 123 34 91 92 Waiwera Springs .. Wainui Wade 124 125 126 86 1 0 95 12 7 154 13 i 7 0 0 7 15 0 9 9 0 1 '<3 10 31 0 10 D4 E2 El E4 20 27 30

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

P) Aided,

12

V EC ■55 H a Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. If 3d Mainti Expei mance. tditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. g i 1 3 03 .a •S-3 o "3 Annual Salary and Allowance at the Kate paid during the Last Quarter of the Tear. r Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Waitemata— contd. Makarau ( 2 ) Kaukapakapa 12' 12: £ s. d. 70 15 8 269 11 8 £ s. d. 20 7 6 £ s. d. 0 10 0 55 2 2 Florence Maxwell .. George W. Murray.. Alice Maud Murray J. Hugh Hill Mary Hoe Daniel D. Metge .. Janet S. Broun Lilian M. Browne .. Constance M. Upton R. E. A. Baird-Jones G. F. C. Hosking .. Helen Cameron Thomas A. Jones .. E. N. I. M. Chapman Kate A. Kelly L. S. A. Meiklejohn H. H. C. Tidmarsh.. Ellen M. Piggott .. Thomas D. Rice Florence M. Green E4 El E4 F HM FP MP P HM AF AF FP FP HM FP HM FP F M HM FP HM FP £ s. d. 70 0 0 175 0 0 45 0 0 20 0 0 100 0 0 220 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 55 0 0 30 0 0 135 0 0 40 0 0 160 0 0 40 0 0 70 0 0 64 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 120 0 0 50 0 0 17 72 93 94 95 Parkhurst.. Helensville 129 130 100 0 0 432 10 0 7 0 0 35 12 6 0 9 0 2 6 1 E3 Dl E3 E3 D4 19 155 Tβ Pua .. 169 14 4 9 10 0 2 3 6 E2 131 40 96 Wooahill .. 132 194 3 4 15 11 8 22 6 7 D2 49 Waikoukou ( 2 ) Muriwai ( 2 ) Taupaki 133 134 135 68 15 0 57 7 1 148 9 5 9 0 0 14 14 7 E3 E3 12 16 39 97 98 Hobsonville 136 181 5 0 9 18 9 D2 29 99 Pukeatua Horse-shoe Bush J Lucas' Creek Greenhithe Birkenhead [B] — Northoote 137 150 0 0 13 0 0 Alfred N. Bowden .. D4 M 150 0.0 f 23 I 17 23 14 .00 138 139 101 12 4 69 11 8 16 12 9 7 0 0 291 3 10 Kate Truseott Annie Newbegin E2 E3 F F 100 0 0 70 0 0 L01 140 362 10 0 62 4 6 7 14 6 Alfred Taylor Margaret S. Newman Kate A. Taylor G. T. M. C. Hodson Alice M. Wernham Rosanna Bowen Ada H. Andrews Margaret Johnston Dl D2 E2 HM AF AF FP FP HF FP FP 220 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 140 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 171 Birkdale 193 6 8 18 5 0 9 15 9 Dl .02 141 62 Waitemata— Mayfleld .. 163 7 4 8 18 6 0 19 0 John M. Warn Nellie W. Fisher .. Luther Hames Lilian Vellenoweth Jessie V. Evans D2 HM FP HM AF FP 135 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 .08 142 37 .04 Lake 143 300 0 0 26 19 0 8 15 8 Dl E4 81 Devonport [B] — Devonport 1,099 18 4 119 8 5 51 2 11 .05 144 James Armstrong .. Caspar A. Semadeni Margaret A. Smith Jane H. Hume Harriett H. Burgess Sarah M. Dunne .. Mrs. E. J. Wildman Rose L. Gavey Marion E. Lambert Mary J. Mander .. Albert E. Jackson .. Susannah K. Bowles Dl D2 El E2 E2 E2 E2 HM AM AF AF AF AF AF AF FP FP ■MP FP 345 0 0 160 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 30 0 0 55 0 0 55 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 502 E4 E4 .06 Waitemata— Swanson .. 145 161 5 0 16 10 0 George N. Phillips .. Mrs. M. Seymour .. William L. Cox Laura M. Kelly C. H. Hougham Inez G. Udy Arabella C. Ryan .. Georgina C. Harper Nora L. Francis .. Elizabeth Keary D2 M S HM FP F F HF FP F F 150 0 0 5 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 120 0 0 40 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 26 .07 Henderson 146 150 17 4 9 0 0 3 8 8 D2 35 08 .09 .10 New Lynn Titirangi .. Waikomiti 147 148 149 110 0 0 85 0 0 156 18 10 14 2 9 7 0 0 12 0 0 2 9 0 2 12 0 Dl E3 E2 21 24 40 .11 Brooklyn .. Huia Auckland [B] — Richmond Road 150 151 70 0 0 98 6 6 7 10 0 7 0 0 8 15 4 0 10 0 D3 E2 13 20 .12 152 953 8 4 90 0 0 412 19 6 Howard J. S. Ellis .. George H. Plummer Helena T. Shortt .. Laura Bell Fiora Mackenzie John C. Mill Alice M. Booth Florence G. Aickin .. Edith M. Newton .. Mary J. Lane Lydia B. Maxwell .. Henry C. Jafirey .. Rose M. Malion Benjamin Bailey .. R. J. Hamilton D. R. Flavell Dl D2 E2 D2 E2 D4* HM AM AF AF AF AM FP FP FP FP FP MP FP HM AM AM 336 0 0 140 0 0 70 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 45 0 0 45 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 411 0 0 200 0 0 130 0 0 471 E4 D4 E4 PonEonby .. 153 1,535 10 0 164 1 2 52 2 0 Si D2 723

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

13

o S II I" Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. s< S3 o ffl Maintenance. „, _. Buildings, Sites, Teachers' Other Fur "' t d Ure ' Salaries and Ordinary Annnmtns Allowance!. Expenditure. Apparatus. Maintenance. for the Year. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. § 5 O>-« ° a ° 1 p 5 (g Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. o P f Auckland [B] — contd. Ponsonby— continued £ s. d. £ s. d. £ a. d. £ s. d. 80 0 0 120 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 45 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 220 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 45 0 0 50 0 0 420 0 0 200 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 120 0 0 100 0 0 95 0 0 60 0 0 60 0 0 55 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 387 0 0 200 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 30 0 0 390 0 0 190 0 0 90 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 55 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 339 0 0 150 0 0 90 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 13 Bayfield Wellesley Street .. Beresford Street 154 155 156 403 9 8 1,696 0 5 1,382 0 0 88 16 11 164 5 0 245 16 8 745 16 11 159 9 9 34 17 11 J. H. Johnston Mrs. M. Galdwell .. Jane E. MoLeod .. L. Mary Hill Marion Maxwell Maud H. Burfoot .. Plorenoe M. Harris Susanna Johnston .. Margaret G. Rees .. Hector K. Burns .. Lydia Peglar C. K. D. Dinneen .. Mabel Crabtree Eleanor G. Kendon Annie E. Lysaght .. James Christie F. E. Thompson .. Alice M. Galdwell .. Dora Ponsford Jane Brown Ralph D. Stewart .. W. R. C. Walker :. William Kay S. H. Ferguson E. Louisa Dunning Jessie H. Edmiston E. Shrewsbury Ellen M.S.McGibbon E. F. Hawkins F. E. A. Graham .. Ethel J. Mcllhone.. Grace A. Twiname.. Mazey A. O'Meagher Elizabeth C. You .. Ada B. Hodgson F. K. Robinson John S. Doull William C. Wilson.. Edwin T. Hart Frederick J. Ohlson D. R. F. Campbell.. Mary C. Howard .. Mary J. Mcllhone .. Jessie Weston Flora A. Mclnnes .. Matilda L. Patterson Rose G. Crisp Margaret A. Quaid.. Annie Jane Ebenezer Wilson .. Rose Poland Agnes M. O'Meara .. Harriette M. Allen.. Emily L. de Montalk Evelyn L. Brett Charles M. Carter .. Edward N. Ormiston David W. Dunlop .. Annie Barton Maria Edwards Elizabeth J. Tring .. Emma J. Larritt .. Annie A. Butters .. Ulia A. M. Jury .. Sarah G. Jones Bertram M. Green.. Annie S. Cumming.. Isabella R. Runciman Jane E. Collins Emily Cullens Arthur E. Day B. Cronin Robert H. Paterson Margaret Coghill .. Edith M. Chapman E. V. Edenborough Sarah A. Johnston.. Margaret J. Guiniven D3 El Dl E2 E2 D3 E3 D4 Dl E2 D3 D4 Dl CI D3 D4 El El Al D3 E2 E4 E4* E4* Dl Dl D2 El El E2 E2 E2 E3 E4 AM AF AF AF AF AF FP FP FP MP FP FP FP FP FP HM AF AF FP FP HM AM AM AM AF AF AF AF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP FP MP MP HM AM AM AF AF AF AF AF AF FP FP MP FP FP FP FP FP HM AM AM AF AF AF AF AF FP FP MP FP FP FP FP MP HM AM AF AF AF AF FP 171 755 636 Napier Street 157 1,243 0 0 148 0 6 67 1 2 Dl Dl D3 El E2 E2 E3 D3 E5* E4* 657 Nelson Street 158 952 17 5 112 10 6 4 18 8 Bl D2 El E2 D3 E3 482

B.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

14

O -t5 o.2 g.2 go o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. Mainti Expei iditure for thi inance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Tear. § g o o a-s Jl .■£oQ o o Annual § x' Salary and *g -S Allowance § S at the Rate . £ a paid during <1™ the Last ®'g Quarter of d 2 the Year. & H i -H Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Auckland [B] — contd. Nelson Street — contd. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Violet P. G. Graham Adelaide Emson W. H. Chappell .. Laura L. Hall Millicent Spargo .. William H. Draffin Dorcas E. Cleveland Margaret Henry .. Florence T. Eastgate Donald Molnnes Eobert G. Hutton .. Ethel R. Kelly FP FP MP FP FP HM AF AF PP MP MP PP £ s. d. 50 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 240 0 0 90 0 0 100 0 0 45 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 Chapel Street 117 15 6 517 13 4 159 593 9 2 Dl E2 El E4 202 Parnell [B] — Parnell .. 594 .14 160 1,188 2 5 153 8 4 627 16 6 John L. Scott William Collins George Brown Ellen Astley Janet Wilson Ada Pascoe Effie M. Revitt Isabella M. K. Darby Edith A. Hill Eva Gregory Elizabeth Sutton .. Voilet F. Cooke Donald S. B. Squire John P. Roberts .. Alice M. Angove Dl D2 D4 El Dl E3 D4 E4 E4 E4 HM AM AM AF AP AF AF AP AP FP PP PP MP MP FP 372 0 0 180 0 0 90 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 55 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 15 Eden— Remuera .. 161 865 11 8 153 3 3 66 19 9 R. B. Heriot N. R. McKenzie Janet McGee Eleanor Wilson Estelle A. Tisdall .. Eva K. M. Ingall .. Estelle R. Wilson .. Ellen E. Sinclair .. Robert H. Walton .. Florence E. Gillman David L. Smart Lydia E. G. Thorpe Evan R. Lillington.. M. E. Gillibrand .. Florence M. Smith.. Harriett D.Thorpe.. P. H. G. Richardson Thomas L. May Elsie D. Grant Jessie Vellenoweth.. Dl D3 El E2 D3 D4 E4 HM AM AF AP AF AF PP PP MP PP HM PP HM AP AP PP PP HM AP FP 311 0 0 140 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 60 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 150 0 0 40 0 0 210 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 397 Tamaki West 43 162 191 1 8 18 15 0 110 D2 no 17 Ellerslie .. 163 400 0 8 35 6 11 Dl D2 E4 131 Panmure .. 164 295 16 8 54 18 9 1 11 6 D2 D3 99 18 Auckland [B] — Grafton 1,079 3 4 154 13 8 604 16 4 William W. Hill .. Alfred F. Burton .. Edward J. Darby .. Mary E. Hopper Euphemia Simpson Adah Y. Martyn .. E. Hilda Keane P. S. Hutchinson .. Ethel M.Reynolds.. Blanche B. Hosking Ethel E. Tills M. G. Rickerby .. Maggie Tilly Harold J. Wooller .. 530 19 165 Dl Dl D3 El E2 E3 C3 E3 HM AM AM AP AF AF AF AP PP PP FP PP FP MP 354 0 0 175 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 65 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 Newton [B] — Newton East 166 1,405 8 4 183 2 5 6 IS 3 Rev. R. Ooates Arthur Short Arthur J. Hill Lydia Wright Sarah B. Arey Hilda M. E. Kissling Jane D. Grant Lilian L. Greatbatch Edith R. Clarke .. Kate E. Roberts .. Mildred M. Eastgate Elizabeth H. Floyd Janet C. Brown E. M. Halliwell .. Bl Dl D3 El E2 E3 B2 E2 E3 E5 E3 HM AM AM AF AF AP AF AF AP FP FP FP FP PP 396 0 0 180 0 0 100 0 0 110 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 60 0 0 55 0 0 45 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 673 E5 D4*

15

E.-l

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

(i) Itinerant. ( 2 ) Aided. (3) Opened in February.

h SBI £•£ ■I 5 II I* Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. o _; oj > Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. § IS l.s-3 3 | Annual , § u Salary and -a g Allowance § % at the Rate S3 paid during the Last g"g Quarter of S3 the Year. gg t> <i Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Newton [B] — contd. Newton East— contd. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Ethel W. B. Davis.. Harriet Reid Dorothy R. Ingram Rosie A. Sandford .. Alfred S. Webber .. B. K. Mulgan Aimee D. Bright W. J. Gatenby Eva P. Cato Jessie A. Burns Joann Mathieson .. Augusta Penzholz .. Eleanor E. Ball .. Florence J. Beedell Arthur J. Shepherd Mabel Eastwood Armstrong R. Miller FP FP FP FP HM AM AF AM AF AF AF FP FP FP MP FP MP £ s. d. 30 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 366 0 0 170 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 60 0 0 55 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 Newton West 1,127 18 4 34 15 4 CI Al El B3 E2 E2 E2 E4 E4 167 10 4 6 572 f .21 Newmarket [B] —■ Newmarket 168 597 10 0 66 9 8 Charles A. Bruford.. Norman D. McKay Sarah J. Purdie Ruth B. Jones Elizabeth Cardno .. Anne B. Fraser Dl D2 01 D4 HM AM AF FP FP FP 250 0 0 140 0 0 100 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 230 22 EdenEpsom 169 471 18 4 40 0 0 612 9 4 George Thwaites Annie Udy M. K. Edenborough Jessie C. French Theodosia M, Cooper C. E. O'H. Tobin .. Alfred Hosking Daniel C. Brown .. Mary Lovatt Elizabeth A. Nixon Caroline G. Daniels Eleanor K. E. Aickin Evelyn M. Robertson Elizabeth P. Duffus William Lowrie Frances A. Willis .. Emma M. Short .. Sarah L. Stewart .. Nora Richards Robert 0. Whitham Maud Nicholson Florence Willerton Robert T. Reid E. A. Robinson H. M. Hutchinson.. Robert Jones-Parry Jessie J. Bayly Ghrissie S. Paterson William Birss James Hogwood Hannah J. Priestley Kate Duncan Josephine Ray John Read Violet F. Boswell .. Denis O'Donoghue.. Hugh J. J. Campbell Myra Barnes Dl E2 E3 E4* E5* HM AF AF FP FP AM HM AM AF AF AF AF AF AF MP FP FP FP FP HM AF AF MP FP FP HM AF FP MP HM AF AF FP MP FP HM AM FP 220 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 45 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 351 0 0 160 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 60 0 0 30 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 240 0 0 100 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 210 0 0 70 0 0 55 0 0 50 0 0 240 0 0 95 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 200 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 172 .23 Mount Eden 170 1,051 3 4 141 13 9 561 3 9 Dl D2 E2 D2 E3 E3 E4 , 520 222 .24 Mount Albert 171 489 18 4 76 18 6 114 12 3 Dl Dl D3 Point Chevalier 372 18 4 30 0 0 Dl D2 E3 127 .25 172 .26 Avondale .. 173 504 11 8 54 18 0 4 19 10 Dl Dl E3 193 Mount Roskill 303 5 4 23 15 0 6i E4 .27 174 97 28 Onehunga [B] — Onehunga.. 175 900 1 8 161 9 4 72 9 1 William N. Mclntosh James Robb Effie S. Bull Helen Robb Agnes S. French .. Jessie Bower Charles E. Hodge .. Margaret E. Carson Helena M. Taylor .. Mary G. Kirkbride.. Flora M. James Dl D2 Dl D2 E2 E3 HM AM AF AF AF AF MP FP FP FP FP 324 0 0 150 0 0 90 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 435 D4 .29 Manukau — Waiheke Island ( 2 ) .. Waiheke (*) ( 3 ) Pakuranga .. 176 177 178 69 3 4 80 12 6 234 3 4 8 0 0 0 16 6 1 19 0 17 4 Jane E. Boxall William G. Graham William Green E3 F M HM 70 0 0 80 0 0 175 0 0 11 17 77 29 17 6 D2

E.-l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

(l) Keopened in April. (2) George A. Worsley, absent on leave; George Lippiatt, relieving.

16

h *j£ Schools, and the >g Counties or Boroughs 3~ (the latter marked [B]) o g in which situate. II SOB o 68 3d Maintenance. _ .,,. Buildings, Sites, Teachers' Other Furmture, Salaries and Ordinary Anrmratua Allowances. Expenditure. a PP ar * cus - Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Tear. ! m 3 n » Annual S >j 3 Salary and ■§ S fl~ Allowance ! § £ o§ at the Rate I S» o-S paid during "i^ Hμ the Last »"g 5 Quarter of «;H (S the Year. Seh JS__ Manukau — continued. Pakuranga— contd. Howiok £ s. a. 191 13 4 £ s. d. £ s. d. 0 19 9 Alice M. Lindsay .. Albert W. B. Davis Maud M. Crawford Bernard Bedford .. Mrs. Bedford Sarah Stewart Annie B. C. Krippner Mary B. Jackson .. Prank Jameson Dolina Hoe Catherine A. Browne James Mellsop Alice G. Plumley .. Mrs. L. Woodward Eva Bower Alice R. Phipps Tom Wilson Marion A. Robb Hilda K. Gibbons .. C. S. Hutchinson .. Thomas F. Warren John W. Sumner .. Mary E. Wallis Lily H. Braithwaite Robert Campbell .. Alberta W. Lambert Robert Hogwood .. Helen McGee Charles W. Clark .. Sarah E. Brown .. Thomas R. Wilson.. Herbert J. Jones .. Kate Middleton Miss M. Grattan .. D. W. Jones Miss M. Grattan .. Joseph Calvert Helen J. Walter .. Mary C. Tregear .. Harry Hockin Amy M. McClune .. Mary E. Herbert ..' Agnes Usher Florence L. Mellsop Maxwell McGee Eunice A. Gledhill.. Annie I. McKay .. Elizabeth Sinclair .. N. A. Winter Catherine Keogh .. Richard T. Talbot .. Miss L. Talbot George E. Large .. Susannah M.Garland George W. Rapson.. Mrs. F. Binns Arthur J. B. Goulter Alice J. Sloane Margaret Hunter .. Harriett E. Escott.. J. D. McNaughton Miss L. A. Walker .. James Graham Miss M. Findlay .. Julian Brook Annie Fulton Joseph Glenny Mrs. M. MoCabe .. Frederick Elmsly .. Gertrude B. Holder Margaret C. Young William H. Nicholson Charlotte M. Gaze .. E. C. Purdie Kate Keesing Maud E. Bluck George A. Worsley.. George Lippiatt May Parker E3 D4 AP HM PP M S P P P HM PP F HM PP HP PP PP HM AP AP FP MP HM AP PP HM PP HM AP HM PP M HM FP S M S HM AF P HM FP P P P F F F F HM FP M S HM FP M S HM PP F F M S M S HM PP M S HM FP P HM PP HM AF FP HM AM FP £ s. d. 60 0 0 120 0 0 50 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 150 0 0 50 0 0 100 0 0 160 0 0 50 0 0 140 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 220 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 55 0 0 50 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 135 0 0 50 0 0 160 0 0 70 0 0 135 0 0 45 0 0 25 0 0 120 0 0 20 0 0 5 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 175 0 0 60 0 0 100 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 135 0 0 20 0 0 80 0 0 5 0 0 150 0 0 50 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 135 0 0 40 0 0 108 0 0 100 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 160 0 0 40 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 135 0 0 40 0 0 50 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 0 80 0 0 30 0 0 150 0 0 120 0 0 40 0 0 131 179 9 0 0 37 132 Turanga Creek 180 123 18 11 10 5 0 4 12 9 E2 25 .33 .34 Turanga Creek, No. 2 Maraetai Ness Valley Clevedon.. 181 182 183 184 100 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 203 2 0 7 0 0 5 0 0 7 9 2 15 5 0 40 14 0 0 5 0 0 10 0 10 11 0 E2 E3 E3 D2 23 9 11 45 .85 .36 Wairoa South Mangere 185 186 104 0 0 235 0 0 8 10 0 22 10 6 D2 El 29 55 Mangere Bridge 187 212 1 8 20 0 0 7 7 5 El 65 37 Otahuhu 188 460 0 0 47 2 0 50 9 0 Dl E3 E3 E4* 161 Papatoitoi 288 6 8 24 19 6 2 3 6 D2 E3 86 .38 189 .39 Plat Bush 190 175 16 8 15 15 6 14 11 0 D3 31 .40 41 East Tamaki Woodside 191 192 241 5 0 183 10 0 19 0 0 16 3 8 2 9 1 E2 E2 D2 E4* D3 E3 58 35 .41 Weymouth PapakuraValley, No.2 193 194 30 0 0 141 5 0 3 15 0 8 10 0 125 0 0 5 23 Papakura Valley, No.l 125 0 0 7 15 0 0 9 0 Dl 23 195 .43 .44 45 Papakura 196 197 198 242 10 0 100 0 0 216 5 0 22 10 0 7 5 0 17 0 0 0 10 0 23 18 6 El E3 E2 Dl 76 19 53 Ardmore Drury .46 .47 Earaka Waiau .. Manakau Heads Orua Bay Awhitu Awhitu, No. 2 Pollok Waipipi .. 199 200 201 202 203 204 205 206 77 10 0 70 13 4 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 110 0 0 174 11 8 7 0 0 7 0 0 6 0 0 7 0 0 11 10 0 6 0 0 11 15 0 0 10 0 oio o D3 E4 E3 E4 E2 E4 D2 B3 17 10 14 9 16 15 23 38 .48 .49 2 7 9 4 9 7 Kohekohe 207 92 10 0 9 0 0 3 2 3 E2 16 Waiuku 208 198 6 8 16 6 9 3 9 0 D2 47 .50 Kariaotahi 209 115 0 0 7 0 0 4 16 1 D2 15 Otaua 210 172 18 4 9 19 0 0 10 0 D3 34 Waitangi Brookside Mauku West 211 212 213 108 0 0 100 0 0 122 10 0 9 10 0 14 2 0 7 15 0 5 12 3 0 10 0 El Dl D2 31 20 22 151 152 Patumahoe 214 115 0 0 7 0 0 73 2 0 D3 21 153 Puni 215 200 0 0 17 18 6 2 15 6 D2 50 154 Ararimu 216 115 0 0 7 0 0 D2 20 155 Hunua 217 181 13 4 17 0 0 5 2 6 E2 33 Hunua No. 2 f 1 ) Maketu 218 219 40 17 10 211 19 5 2 10 0 16 8 6 32 13 9 6 8 6 E5 El 10 50 .66 .67 Bombay 220 300 0 0 22 10 0 5 3 3 Dl E2 89 Paparata ( 2 ) 199 3 4 13 8 6 4 12 6 1)2 A2 38 .58 221

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. AUCKLAND — continued.

(1) Aided. ( 2 ) Opened in August. 3—E. 1.

17

o.S C in |S 1° Schools, and tbe Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B |) in which situate. o,_; 68 it 9 S , Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. .diture for the Year. J Annua] j g^ Teachers'Names, .| _j *,. l! nance. .... including all Teachers g -So A ]1 2* Buildings, and Pupil-teachers £ ; §_§ SjaWdurniB <& Sites, on the Staff at the End ~- -2| p ft? a j"? g «,s Other Fu ™d UIe, of the Year. § S* ! II Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Manukau — continued. Pukekohe East 222 £ s. d. 140 0 0 £ s. d. 17 15 6 £ s. d. David Russell Emily Morgan John Fisher AletheaS.O. Hamlin Theodora E. Piggott Alfred E. Hill Amy E. A. Copeland Arthur M. Perry Miss E. Johnston .. Francis Warren Lilian G. McKay .. Francis H. Brown .. Louisa M. Nutsford James K. Waygood Eva J. Sheffield .. Agnes J. Ballantine D2 M S HM AF FP HM FP M S HM FP HM FP HM FP F £ s. d. 135 0 0 5 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 135 0 0 30 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 150 0 0 40 0 0 160 0 0 50 0 0 150 0 0 45 0 0 70 0 0 20 59 Dl E3 00 Pukekohe West 223 300 9 8 23 2 6 10 19 9 97 Harrisville 157 10 0 8 15 0 0 2 6 D2 .61 224 D2 02 Buckland 225 125 0 0 11 2 4 10 8 9 26 .63 Tuakau 226 191 13 4 13 15 0 10 0 0 Dl 48 04 .65 Whangarata Pokeno 227 228 210 0 0 194 10 11 16 0 0 10 0 0 6 15 0 60 3 11 Dl E4* D2 D4 D3 54 44 MaungatawhiriValley Coromandel — Cabbage Bay 229 85 0 0 7 9 0 73 2 8 17 230 137 10 0 9 0 0 0 3 6 Robert E. Jarnieson Mrs. Inglis Henry T. Gibson .. Mrs. A. Smith Alfred J. Litten .. Harry A. Darrow .. Frederic Harris Mary F. Egan Margaretta McGregor Albert J. Long Elizabeth Graham.. Alice McGnire Henry R. Hyatt .. Alexander Macgregor Gertrude E. Barlow George Tooman Sylvia E. Hall William 0. Lamb .. John La Prelle Alice M. Arey Leonard W. Totrnan Francis Murphy Annie M. Devin Emilie G. Rayner .. William Masson .. Maud L. Green Joshua E. Robinson E3 M S M S HM AM AM AF AF MP FP FP HM AM AF MP FP M HM AF MP HM AF AF MP FP M 135 0 0 5 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 270 0 0 120 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 220 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 110 0 0 200 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 220 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 120 0 0 29 .66 E4 .67 Whangapoua 231 92 6 2 14 9 5 18 9 24 .08 Coromandel 232 610 12 4 82 1 5 508 14 11 Dl D3 E4 E3 E3 268 .69 Driving Creek 233 428 5 0 35 0 0 4 16 Dl E4* E3 154 Kennedy Bay (*) Kuaotunu.. 234 235 87 10 0 325 10 0 25 0 0 1 10 6 397 19 4 E3 Dl E3 19 104 70 Mercury Bay 412 19 4 47 8 0 288 12 6 Dl E2 E2 157 71 236 Gumtown Thames — Tairua 120 0 0 8 0 0 0 5 0 E4 72 237 25 73 238 220 0 0 21 5 0 Michael F. Daly .. Rosina V. Collins .. James R. McClune Francis J. Mullins.. Joseph L. Innes Mary C. Kelly Florence I. Baston.. D2 HM FP MP M HM FP F 175 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 80 0 0 120 0 0 40 0 0 70 0 0 06 Tairua Block (») Hastings 239 240 36 0 2 117 9 10 3 10 0 8 0 0 138 0 6 0 10 0 E4 D2 18 27 .74 Otakeo Thames [B] — Tararu 241 78 10 0 5 10 0 E4 12 75 7G Waiotahi Creek Waiokaraka Kauaeranga Boys' .. 242 243 244 421 13 4 260. 0 0 835 16 6 38 5 0 29 10 0 157 14 6 12 16 0 0 12 7 William H. Newton Sarah Gott Elizabeth E. Harris Bessie M. Nolan Elsie G. Ashby W. H. V. Hall Kate S. M. Shroff .. Thomas Isemonger Thomas Day Mrs. M. A. F. Macky Elizabeth M. Gibson Emily E. Rae Fanny Masefield .. Harriett L. Gillman Edith E. Herrich .. Alice M. Paltridge .. Horatio Phillips T.W. G.H.Hammond Mrs. Mary Phillips Kate P. Mulvany .. Mary E. Renshaw .. Eva M. Ashman W. J. Gahill Clara E. Casey Maud E. Driver Edith A. McRae .. Miriam Cummings.. Dl Lie. E3 D2 D2 El E2 E2 E3 E4 E3 E3 E4 HM AF AF FP FP HM AF HM AM AF AF AF . AF FP FP FP HM AM AF AF AF AF MP FP FP FP FP 220 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 295 0 0 150 0 0 90 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 60 0 0 55 0 0 55 0 0 30 0 0 327 0 0 150 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 150 88 355 77 245 876 3 10 152 4 6 101 1 6 Dl D2 El E2 D3 E4 445

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. AUCKLAND — continued.

(!) Aided. Opened in July. ("■>) Itinerant. ( s ) Closed, August to October.

18

o.2 15 go So o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. dS II p Maintenance. Expenditure lor thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a .2 d c 5 to a s-i o Annual Salary and Allowance at the Kate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. O a . nE IS £■2 Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Thames [B] — contd. Kauaeranga Girls' .. 246 £ s. d. 494 19 4 £ s. d. 115 0 3 £ s. d. 52 8 0 Frances I. Haselden Alfred J. C. Hall .. Annie E. Holloway Laura V. Plant Mary B. Peat Lydia E. Kitching.. W. J. May Florence L. Hall .. Ada M. Patterson .. James G. Catran .. CI D2 D3 E4* HF AM AF FP FP FP HM AF FP MP £ s. d. 184 0 0 150 0 0 00 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 210 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 20 0 0 195 Parawai 367 12 2 37 15 0 D2 E3 139 .78 247 Thames — KiriKiri .. 251 5 0 22 8 6 18 13 11 James B. Murray .. Charlotte Murrish .. A. H. Shrofi Emma Gillibrand .. Sophia Wilson James A. Vos Gertrude Palmer .. Mark H. Moon Miss Durbin E. J. Walters Edith I. Lamb Walter Sullivan William M. Gelling Sylvia G. Smith .. Minnie Shaw Ethel A. McAndrew Maud C. Benner Adina McCallum .. Augustus N. Scott.. Christopher Ingram Catherine Dunstan Isabella Dette William R. Gillespie Miss M. Cummings William Simmonds Louisa M. Stevens.. Frances H. Fawcett Alfred Benge D. W. McNaughton Helen L. Mandeno.. Laura A. Roberts .. Robert J. Corbett Evelyn C. Vos Marion W. Gibbons Dl E2 B3 HM AF HM FP F HM FP M S HM FP HM AM AF AF FP FP FP HM AM FP FP M S HM AF FP HM AM AF AP MP FP FP 175 0 0 80 0 0 160 0 0 50 0 0 100 0 0 150 0 0 50 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 150 0 0 50 0 0 240 0 0 120 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 200 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 20 0 0 135 0 0 5 0 0 175 0 0 70 0 0 30 0 0 260 0 0 120 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 65 0 0 50 0 0 20 0 0 60 179 248 180 Turua 249 223 2 10 17 0 0 9 8 0 58 Netherton Puriri 250 251 100 0 0 192 10 0 7 5 0 11 0 0 0 16 3 E3 El 21 40 181 Omahu 252 106 6 8 7 0 0 0 18 2 E4 22 182 Hikutaia Paeroa 253 254 223 13 8 514 17 9 13 15 0 58 16 0 7 18 8 16 18 1 D3 E5 El D3 E2 E3 50 217 Karangahake Dl 115 183 255 321 16 6 30 16 2 22 0 2 Owharoa 123 15 0 7 15 0 2 12 7 E3 32 256 184 Waitekauri 257 249 18 6 20 0 0 155 17 8 E3 E3 69 185 Waihi 258 598 14 2 50 6 0 1,084 2 11 Dl D4 E3 E3 E5* 259 Raglan— Onewhero Pukekawa.. Churchill Sarah E. M. Algie .. Mary McEnteer H. H. D. Wily Mrs. R. l>. Bell Janie Hueston Annie E. Hawkes .. E3 E3 D3 F F M 3 F F 100 0 0 100 0 0 130 0 0 5 0 0 70 0 0 48 0 0 25 24 12 186 259 200 261 100 0 0 100 0 0 140 0 0 8 4 0 4 8 9 9 10 0 4 15 0 0 10 0 2 0 0 187 188 Glen Murray Pepepe (l) .. Te Akatea and } Waingaroa ( a ) ) '" Karamu 262 263 85 19 4 25 11 8 6 0 0 15 13 9 2 0 1 E4 14 8 264 80 13 7 4 0 0 0 19 9 Nelson T. Lambourne D4* M 80 0 0 15 189 265> 85 0 0 7 0 0 David Jenkins Mrs. Jenkins James La Trobe Mrs. La Trobe Edmund O. Ewart.. Ethel M. Harper .. C. K. Cornforth Mrs. Jerome Margaret A. I. G. Dean M S M S M F M S F 80 0 0 5 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 50 0 0 60 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 45 0 0 16 190 Raglan 266 117 10 0 21 16 2 0 10 0 El 22 191 192 193 Ruapuke ( 3 ) Waitetuna Te Mata .. 267 268 269 35 15 0 58 15 0 115 0 0 8 4 4 5 10 0 7 0 0 0 5 0 2 10 6 E2 11 19 194 195 Te Kirikiri Kaiawa .. | Miranda .. f Maramarua North ) Maramarua South / Waikato — Meroer 270; 44 13 9 11 10 0 9 f 4 1 9 1 6 271 53 6 8 6 0 0 Mary M. Findlay .. F 50 0 0 196 272 95 0 0 7 10 0 Alex. T. A. Miller .. E4 M 100 0 0 197 273 212 10 0 16 4 6 Charles T. Edwards Caroline White Dl E4 HM FP 100 0 0 55 0 0 53 198 199 Whangamarino Wairanga 274 113 19 4 7 0 0 James Boswell Miss Draper E3 M S 110 6 0 5 0 0 9 21 200 201 202 203 Matahuru, No. 1 I Matahuru, No. 2 j Rangiiiri .. Ohinewai Huntly 275 276 277 278 135 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 465 0 0 9 0 0 7 5 0 8 19 0 31 5 0 19 8 0 9 0 Alfred J. T. Judkins Elizabeth A. Russell Kate A. Fletcher .. Arthur Edwards Annie M. Bottrill .. E4 E3 E2 Dl E3 M F F HM AF 140 0 o 100 0 0 100 0 0 220 0 0 70 0 0 27 25 156

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. AUCKLAND— continued.

(1) Opened in August. ( 2 ) Opened in October.

19

62 <D en ■go II a d O Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 68 B 9 Mainti Expei jnance. iditure Jor the Year. nance. .... Buildings, ' Sites, Other Fm £T e ' Ordinary , h . Expenditure. Apparatus. a st Teachers'Names, -2 including all Teachers a — o and l'upil-tcachers £ g^ on the Staff at the End e b « of the Year. g -^ 3 & o5" o Annual § 6 Salary and 'g-S Allowance § 5a at the Hate S3 paid during '*3 C? the Last g"g Quarter of ce'S the Year. '3 eh 5, 3 d 8 j≤ Teachers' a g< Salaries and Offl Allowances. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Mary A. de Montalk James Sutton Dorothy I. Gresham Maurice Priestley .. Elizabeth Byrne .. Annie Gillett Magdalen L. Eussell Evelyn Wilson Percy E. Stevens .. Amelia M. Nixon .. Ada M. Griokett .. Arthur A. Kenny .. Margaret J. Allely .. Margaret J. Elliott Alice S. Hyatt Jane P. Sinclair .. D3 E5* AP MP PP M HF FP P F HM AP PP MP HP PP P P £ s. d. 70 0 0 65 0 0 50 0 0 110 0 0 128 0 0 30 0 0 108 0 0 100 0 0 200 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 120 0 0 40 0 0 108 0 0 100 0 0 Waikato — continued. Kimihia ( x ) Taupiri 279 280 39 19 2 164 10 2 2 10 0 14 10 0 194 3 5 135 18 6 E4* El 11 52 »04 E3 E3 Dl D2 !05 !06 iO7 Hukanui Kirikiriroa Hamilton East 281 282 283 106 0 0 100 0 0 350 16 8 8 15 0 7 5 0 25 0 0 12 7 34 22 122 4 5 6 Marsh Meadows 159 3 4 15 0 0 9 0 7 El 41 S08 284 S09 iiO Tamahere.. Hautapu .. Cambridge [B] — Cambridge 285 286 111 10 7 100 0 0 14 18 1 7 15 0 6 2 8 E2 El 29 30 ill 287 471 17 8 43 14 3 2 9 0 Robert C. Dyer Kate Reynolds Maud C. Mandeno .. Harold B. Lusk Ellen Kingsford Lily P. Smale Dl E3 E3 D4* HM AP AF MP PP FP 230 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 65 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 196 112 Waikato — Tawhare Wai pa— Ngaruawahia 288 52 0 0 5 0 0 Agnes G. Kerr P 56 0 0 13 118 114 IIS Pukete Te Kowhai 289 290 291 232 13 4 77 10 0 132 18 1 25 0 0 7 0 0 6 10 0 113 4 11 5 Tom U. Wells Elizabeth Masefield Marcus N. Skelton.. Cath. E. Gillespie .. John Murray Mrs. Murray Wm. A. Pilkington.. Miss P. Iwerson Bl E3 E2 E2 HM AF MP F M S M S 200 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 5 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 105 21 15 Hβ Whatawhata 292 125 0 0 8 0 0 E3 28 117 Hamilton [B] — Hamilton West 293 458 12 11 34 3 8 30 5 0 John M. Murray .. Hessey M. Scandrett William F. Dean .. Sarah A. Harwood.. El E3 HM AF MP FP 210 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 133 Waipa— Ngahinepouri Te Rore 72 14 3 136 5 0 5 0 0 8 15 0 0 10 0 A. J. Cunningham .. John A. Pell Miss G. Bruce John S. Colhoun Marian C. Holder .. Jessie P. P. Davis .. James Dean Mrs. Mary Bruce .. Agnes Kay George Blackett Annie O'Meara E. W. Stephenson .. Ella Wills.. Euphemia Macky .. Emily E. Tidd John Bees Marion G.P.Mitchell Mary T. Papesch .. John S. Phillips .. Emma Mainwaring Thomas H. Chapman Jessie Morison William P. Johns .. E3 D2 F M S HM PP F HM AF PP HM PP M F P P HM AF PP HM PP HM AP MP 70 0 0 135 0 0 5 0 0 160 0 0 55 0 0 70 0 0 175 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 150 0 0 40 0 0 80 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 190 0 0 70 0 0 30 0 0 150 0 0 50 0 0 175 0 0 70 0 0 30 0 0 13 80 !18 119 294 295 !20 !21 i22 Ohaupo Pukerimu Cambridge West 296 297 298 212 10 0 75 15 6 275 0 0 15 5 0 22 7 6 20 18 6 0 10 3 3 5 8 D2 E5 E3 D2 E2 47 18 71 Te Rahu 299 189 3 4 20.18 5 44 9 7 D2 40 !23 !24 !25 S26 !27 Te Rau-a-moa Alexandra.. Paterangi Mangapiko Te Awamutu 300 301 302 303 304 20 0 0 100 0 0 96 1 8 100 0 0 307 1 8 9 0 0 7 5 0 7 0 0 22 10 0 205 5 3 E4* E3 D2 E3 D2 D3 ( 2 ) 23 23 24 94 3 15 8 Rangiaohia 305 198 6 8 20 10 3 D2 43 128 Dl D3 129 Kihikihi .. 306 263 19 8 20 12 6 77 Piako— Te Aroha West 117 6 0 8 0 0 0 10 0 Francis D. Woods .. Miss C. A. Eeynolds Herbert G. Cousins William A. Joll Ethel M. Hill W. H. P. Marsdon.. Mary S. Slater Clara G. Goldsworthy Mary S. Lavery Griffith R. Jones .. Hilda Armstrong .. J. W. Rennick Emily M. Maingay.. Eliza M. Jennings .. E3 M S HM MP FP HM AF AF FP MP PP HM FP FP 120 0 0 5 0 0 175 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 230 0 0 70 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 26 130 307 131 Waihou 308 258 15 2 20 6 4 10 5 8 T)2 60 Te Aroha Goldfleld.. 433 13 4 46 10 0 635 9 11 Dl E2 E3 179 132 309 Waiorongomai 202 1 8 28 15 0 E2 310 2 8 2 59 !33

E.-i.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued AUCKLAND—continued.

(1) Aided. (2) Opened in August. (8) Opened in May.

20

o!i „ ~ Schools, and the >g Counties or Boroughs '§_! (the latter marked LiSJ) § o in which situate. §1 is Maintenance. Expenditure for th Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. ! OJ El : fii Tea,chera' Names. .2 l^. including all Teachers i≤ ■ ■^'o and Pupil-teachers ,2 f a 2 on the Staff at the End ■£ -2o of the Year. § |» O Annual § u Salary and , g Allowance J § § at the Kate £ a paid during <l^ ? the Last j g'g Quarter of ; c≤^ the Year. ®fy 1 <l Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. 234 Waipa— continued. Gordon 311 £ s. d. 11 117 10 0 I. £ s. d. £ s. d. ) 7 5 0 1 1 9 F. G. J. Orookes .. Mrs. Sarah Newsome 3 17 5 8 .. Isabella M. Roberts Margaret Butcher .. ) 10 0 0 0 9 6 Johnson Selby Bessie B. Broadfoot ) 10 4 8 14 0 Elizabeth M. Fielder ) 10 6 6 2 10 10 M. Gertrude Ramson ) 7 0 0 .. Mary M. Cossey S I 12 ly 0 7 17 10 J. H. Boyd ) J 5 10 0 2 7 6 Isabella F. R. Kelis E2 M S HP * fp HM FP F F F M F £ s. d. 120 0 0 5 0 0 ? 128 0 0 ' 55 0 0 1 150 0 0 ' 55 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 135 0 0 68 0 0 } 26 1 235 236 Morrinsville Waharoa .. Mangawhata f 1 ) Walton (!).. Oxford Okoroire Liehfield Tauranga— Katikati, No. 2 312 313 314 315 316 317 318 12 178 10 0 13 191 5 0 L4 77 10 0 15 70 0 0 16 85 0 0 17 133 6 8 18 52 0 0 El E5* D2 E4 E3 E3 E3 D4 j ) 57 1 j ) 40 1 ) ) 18 ) 15 ) 15 ) 32 ) 17 237 238 239 240 319 .9 189 13 4 [ 16 0 0 11 15 9 A. Carson Dunning Louisa Wilson I 5 10 0 .. Margaret Broun I 7 15 0 24 3 2 Mary J. Johnston .. I 8 0 0 187 1 2 Frances A. Somerville D2 HM FP F F F [ 160 0 0 30 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 ) 52 1 241 242 243 Katikati, No. 3 - Te Puna Otumoetai Tauranga [B] — Tauranga, No. 1 320 321 322 10 70 0 0 !1 100 0 0 !2 102 0 0 E3 E3 E2 ) ) 13 I 25 1 28 244 Tauranga, No. 2 323 324 13 210 13 4 •A 357 4 0 16 5 0 15 9 Walter W. Madden.. Isabella Lockington 1 27 10 0 0 15 8 T. B. Tanner Beatrice M. Angove Spenceley Walker .. Elizabeth Nabbs .. D2 E4 Dl E2 HM FP HM AF MP FP [ 150 0 0 55 0 0 : 210 0 0 70 0 0 ' 50 0 0 30 0 0 1 48 1 1 ' 131 1 Tauranga— Te Puko 5 239 11 8 23 10 0 0 14 2 James T. G. Gox .. Eleanor E. Brain .. Winifred Scott 13 0 0 180 2 0 John J. Keaney .. 5 0 0 .. AlexaudrinaM. Irwin 11 14 9 .. W. J. Connor Miss Garrett Lilian A. J. Ainsworth D2 HM FP FP M F M S F : 150 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 110 0 0 70 0 0 120 0 0 5 0 0 70 0 0 60 245 325 246 247 Tβ Puke, No. 2 Greerton Pongakawa 326 327! 328 6 110 0 0 7 70 0 0 8 132 10 0 D3 E5 D2 20 11 27 Maketu (E. G.) ( l ) .. Whakatane— Whakatane 329 9 74 3 4 E4 11 248 33OJ 0} 246 15 0 22 8 3 67 8 7 Frederick Booth .. Celia E. Hobbs 193 13 2 George A. Soraerville 23 4 11 G. H. Pocock 38 15 0 3 19 0 diaries Cooper Emma Skudder Jessie Finlayson Alice J. Brain Arthur Bush 7 15 0 2 2 0 William Ghappell .. El E2 D4 D3 Dl E2 HM AF M M HM AF AF FP MP M 175 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 110 0 0 230 0 0 70 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 120 0 0 57 249 Opouriao North ( 2 ) .. Opouriao South ( s ) .. Opotiki 331 332 333 1 29 3 4 2 82 12 3 3 438 3 4 28 22 171 Waiotahi .. Rotorua— Rotorua 334 1 117 10 0 D4 24 335| 5 291 13 4 22 10 0 I 8 13 4 Joseph W.Webber.. Mary R. Selby Charles F. Cross .. D2 E4 HM AF MP 175 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 73 !60 !61 Bast Taupo— Taupo Kawhia— Otorohanga 88i ) 92 17 6 7 0 0 140 5 6 Edith B. Browne .. D4 F 70 0 0 16 !52 83' f 197 10 0 12 5 8 84 14 10 Harold Blackman .. Ada B. Finch I 11 16 1 i 74 12 0 Elizabeth M. Ryan D2 HM FP F 135 0 0 50 0 0 80 0 0 35 !53 Mokau 331 ! 80 0 0 i 20 Kaurihohore Long Bay Oropi Riverhead Ruth's Island Taotaoroa Expenditure ) 35 0 0 ; j 18 0 0 s on Schools not opened in December, 1897. 1.46-0 .. 2 0 0.. 3 5 6 2 '6 0 .. .. 16 13 4 3 11 8 26 13 i Plans and supervision Furniture (unclassified) Painting school buildings Audit of School Fund Accounts Furniture (unclassified) Expenditure not classified. 516 6 0 52 3 5 1,784 9 4 1 30 0 0 .. • .. 5 13 3 70,964 13 6 9 9,032 5 5 13,641 13 1 72,159 0 0 2 22952

21

B.—l

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. TARANAKI.

o . 6 = ?• a _ ■- Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. Oh || It Maintenance. „ .,... Buildings, ; Sites, „ . ,1 A ,. Furniture, Teachers' Other an( j Salaries and Ordinary Apparatus. Allowances. Expenditure. ,, - Maintenance. Expenditure lor the Year. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachors on the Staff at the End of the Year. § 3 o3 hi 3 £ © Annual § u Salary fuid Allowance § a at the Kate gs paid during the Last ! g'g Quarter of a^ the Year. S h i Taranaki — Eltham Road Opunake £ s. d. 96 19 8 234 13 8 £ s. d. 13 1 8 25 8 7 £ s. a. £ s. d. 99 10 0 163 10 0 71 5 0 104 0 0 10 0 0 126 10 0 25 0 0 10 0 0 52 10 0 99 10 0 93 0 0 10 0 0 153 0 0 45 0 0 10 0 0 90 0 0 69 0 0 10 0 0 79 10 0 10 0 0 116 0 0 10 0 0 91 10 0 145 10 0 45 0 0 10 0 0 1 2 1 2 Violet E. Gayne George G. Heenan .. Mary Dickinson Charles William Field A. S. Tyrrell Henry Kitcbingman Harold White A. S. Tyrrell Sarah M. M. Hill .. Agnes Sadler W. L. F. Chambers Mrs. Chambers Ernest Henry Clark Matilda Shaw Jane Roebuck Oney E. Hitchcox .. Arthur C. Moor C. Penwarden Isaac Moody West.. Jane Putt Orlanno L. Allan .. C. Penwarden E. A. J. Witherow .. Ambler Woodhead.. Edith M. Tuck Kate Woodhead E4 D3 E2 C5 F HM AF M S HM MP S F. F M S HM FP S F M S M S M S F HM FP S 31 9' 3 Oaonui 3 127 15 10 14 12 10 130 10 0 81 4 Rahotu 4 153 18 4 18 0 6 104 1 6 02 3! 5 Ngariki Pungarehu Warea 5 6 7 51 12 9 101 7 6 100 12 0 2 16 4 20 9 2 18 1 6 9 0 0 E4 E4 I2! 21 6 7 Okato 194 10 0 27 13 1 3 18 8 D2 6: 8 9 Tataraimaka Oakura 9 10 93 5 4 83 13 0 9 15 8 10 3 0 7 0 0 16 3 5 D4 Lie. 16 16 Koru 11 89 17 6 9 10 2 9 3 6 E4 19 Omata 12 123 0 10 14 15 7 D3 33 10 E4 E3 11 12 Hurford Road Frankley Road 13 14 89 2 6 191 14 7 10 19 6 19 14 7 96 13 11 19 58 New Plymouth [B] — Central 1,208 10 1 187 15 10 131 10 6 Hector Dempsey .. Oscar Johnson Alfred Gray Amy W. Arrow Alice Evans Mary Dowling Daisy Taylor Sarah Logan Hately Fanny Smith Nellie Strauchon .. Mary Free Nellie Hepworth .. LydiaE. Shaw Laura E. Mynott .. Gertrude Pearce CI D2 D4 E2 D3 Dl PM AM AM DF AF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP HF AF FP 280 11 0 217 10 0 165 0 0 151 5 0 126 5 0 120 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 141 15 0 72 10 0 40 0 0 48i 13 15 West Infants' .. 1C 261 16 1 43 11 10 19 0 0 El E5 113 Taranaki— Fitzroy 226 10 7 21 11 4 29 17 0 John Young Mrs. G. E. Martin .. Sarah Ellis Florence M. Lever .. Edith M. Reeve Jorgine M. Andersen Minnie I. Taylor .. Annie H. Henderson Eliza B. Dewhirst .. Jennie F. Luck George W. Potts .. Gertrude Richardson Harriet Hoby Isabel M. Richardson Alice May Andrews Harriet Hoby Herbert Mason Alice Edwards Frances Geldart .. Richard Morgan .. Emily Stockman .. John T. Campbell .. Jeannie Wright Catherine Campbell J. M. French Nelly Kelly J. Mackinder Henry F. Penlington Isabella Andrews .. D2 E3 HM AF F F F F F F HF FP HM FP S F F S HM AF FP M S HM FP S HM FP S M S 159 2 0 70 0 0 26 5 0 72 0 0 90 10 0 105 5 0 77 0 0 94 0 0 100 10 0 25 0 0 146 0 0 25 0 0 10 0 0 86 10 0 72 0 0 10 0 0 192 0 0 75 0 0 40 0 0 90 0 0 10 0 0 149 0 0 30 0 0 10 0 0 143 0 0 40 0 0 10 0 0 104 0 0 10 0 0 14 17 71 15 16 17 Lower Mangorei Upper Mangorei Carrington Road Lower Kent Road .. Upper Kent Road .. Albert Road Egmont Village 18 1!) 20 21 22 23 24 31 11 6 83 1 8 91 17 6 99 11 6 72 15 10 95 2 6 128 9 7 17 3 0 7 11 8 12 1 6 12 10 8 10 0 4 11 10 6 22 1 7 8 0 0 8 12 3 E5 D3 E5 E3 E3 7 13 23 31 13 22 42 7 10 0 9 0 0 Bell Blook 25 183 3 4 19 15 4 Dl 53 18 80 10 0 105 10 0 12 12 0 12 7 0 1 16 0 E5 Lie. 28 21 Egmont Road Upland Road 26 27 19 Waitara 28 301 6 10 31 0 8 100 15 0 Bl D4 124 Waihi 109 7 6 23 18 1 10 5 0 m 18 20 29 21 Lepperton .. 30 189 12 6 18 15 10 m 50 Waiongona 31 169 0 10 18 16 2 11 5 0 A2 51 22 Huirangi .. .. 32 112 17 6 13 13 7 D4 23 Clifton— Tikorangi 33 189 7 6 20 11 1 Frederick W. Young A. S. Hicks Alice Faull . .. Henry E. Vaughan.. Elsie Pearce Emily Telf ar C2 HM MP S HM FP S 152 0 0 30 0 0 10 0 0 115 10 0 25 0 0 10 0 0 Urenui 130 6 8 21 0 0 E4 24 34

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. TARANAKI — continued.

22

o . . +=> 6.3 -g Schools, and the >g Counties or Boroughs 'g|j (the latter marked [B]) § g in which situate. ® 2 a ° u *g . Expenditure for the oi Go? Maintenance. •43 © © S Teachers' I Other a g< Salaries and ' Ordinary °cc Allowances, j Expenditure. Maintenance. Expenditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. O eS o s '3 n G © rg .a 3 .a-S ."Son xn o rU Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. © o Ijj a £ © d Jh^ 3 OH t<1 25 26 27 Clifton — continued. Pukearuhe Tongaporutu Taranaki — Inglewood.. 35 36 37 £ s. d. 50 0 0 55 5 0 470 10 11 £ s. d. 18 17 4 11 11 8 50 12 1 £ s. d. 279 14 6 312 1 0 Constance A. Rundle Alexander Spalding James Grant William J. Evans .. Eveline C. Riley .. David Evans Marion Morgan Robert George Surrey Mary Duke Mary A. Surrey Annie C. Middlemass Thomas B. Winfield Jessie Higgins Dugald B. Lattey .. Annie Smythe E. M. Morgan Eleanor F. Riley .. Albert H. Amooie .. E. M. Morgan E.F.H. Hemmingway Mrs. Moody Bl D2 C5 F M HM AM AF MP FP HM FP S F HM AF HM PP S F M S M S £ s. d. 50 0 0 62 0 0 192 18 0 107 10 0 85 0 0 40 0 0 35 0 0 129 0 0 30 0 0 10 0 0 88 0 0 150 0 0 71 5 0 117 10 0 25 0 0 10 0 0 80 10 0 82 10 0 10 0 0 50 0 0 10 0 0 7 7 167 Dudley Road 170 8 4 19 10 5 V.'i 42 38 Wortley Road Norfolk Road 39 40 89 0 0 227 0 2 16 3 9 21 16 4 3 11 9 137 9 6 E3 E2 D3 D3 27 65 28 Kaimata 41 177 11 6 21 8 3 37 29 30 Tarata Ratapiko 42 43 78 5 0 91 17 6 11 15 8 12 8 10 D4 21 24 81 Purangi 44 30 16 8 5 7 8 11 Stratford — Midhirst 243 6 1 31 0 10 35 13 6 Henry James Reaks Laura Reed Harry A. Eason Dorothea Meyenberg Louisa F. Cameron Minnie Morton Florence A. R. Tyrer Donald Poison Susan Hogg Alice M. Dent Reginald W. Hill .. Annie Jordan Richard E. Thomas William R. Moore .. William M. Sanders Mrs. Denham Clara A. King Dora Maxwell Margaret Maxwell .. Margaret Irvine W. A. J. Daveney .. Lucy Wilson Miss Mapp Fred Mills Isabella Barron Jeanie Beedie George Everiss Violet Smith Helen Everiss Reginald Dixon Mrs. Drake Richard E. Dowling W. Brooking Samuel M. Scott .. Miss Foster Mary E. Piggford .. E3 E4 D2 HM AF HM FP F F HM AM AF AF AM FP MP MP M S HF FP F F HM FP S HM AF FP HM FP S M S M S M S F 156 16 0 68 15 0 150 0 0 25 0 0 103 10 0 101 0 0 220 12 0 137 10 0 106 5 0 96 5 0 100 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 111 10 0 10 0 0 105 0 0 25 0 0 85 10 0 86 0 0 131 0 0 25 0 0 10 0 0 169 12 0 75 0 0 30 0 0 141 0 0 25 0 0 10 0 0 105 10 0 10 0 0 108 10 0 10 0 0 107 0 0 10 0 0 102 0 0 75 32 45 33 Tariki 46 189 7 7 20 10 4 57 34 35 36 Salisbury Road Stanley Road Stratford 47 48 49 88 18 4 101 0 0 703 7 6 12 18 0 13 9 0 73 8 3 28 0 0 D4 D4 El D2 E2 D3 D5* 30 28 267 Palmer Road 27 37 50 119 5 0 12 16 2 B5 38 Toko 51 105 18 11 14 15 11 E4 38 39 40 41 Huiroa Mangaere Pembroke Road 52 53 54 64 17 6 84 12 6 139 0 10 10 11 10 10 15 10 15 5 9 255 0 0 E4 E5 D3 18 21 41 42 Ngaire 55 286 10 1 45 1 1 27 10 0 D2 E4 106 43 Cardiff 56 177 1 10 25 4 9 01 49 44 Bird Road 57 121 19 2 12 12 6 04 27 45 Rowan Road 58 121 17 6 11 6 10 Dl 21 46 Denbigh Road 59 118 8 4 10 14 0 Dl 18 47 Kaiauai Whangamomona Plans and supervision Furniture and apparatus 60 58 0 0 16 11 3 5 12 8 171 10 9 25 6 3 70 0 0 245 4 8 E3 29 1,285 17 2 2,305 3 8 9,943 1 0 3,049 9,766 19 3 WA1 GANUI. Hawera — 1 Pihama .. 2 : Awatuna .. 1 2 224 4 8 155 4 5 11 0 0 11 0 0 26 9 9 12 1 0 James F. Thurston.. Leo. M. Espagne .. Jessie Mclntyre Eva M. Davy John Love Jacob Honore Evaline Ecclesfield 1)3 E3 HM MP HF FP M HM FP ! 165 0 0 60 0 0 123 15 0 38 0 0 125 0 0 183 0 0 38 0 0 44 44 29 68 3 Ratanui .. 4 Oiakeho .. 3 4 127 13 7 221 11 8 8 18 9 14 6 0 52 12 3 5 19 0 D4 E2 I

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. WANGANUI — continued.

(1) Opened fourth quarter.

23

°*5 6.2 U 01 •S3 = o a> ° n ° Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. ■g ■ Expenditure for the Year. 08 fc-a e ,S Maintenance. _ Bβ Buildings, £f Sites, SS Teachers' Other Fu Tn*, Ure ' g g< Salaries and Ordinary A im»rntns o$ Allowances. Expenditure. A PP aratus - Expenditure for the Year. Maintenance. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. I <s o S Eβ 5 o> S-3 a ° Ji o £4 Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. S S3 • ££ a h •5 Hawera — continued. Manaia £ s. d. 413 7 4 £ s. a. 20 18 0 £ s. d. 15 1 3 James K. Law Jane Ewing Charlotte Crowhurst Mary Bourke Prances J. Davis .. Una W. Powle Charles Maclean .. Johannah King Prank Baikes Thomas A. Harris .. Mary A. Hunger Robert Francis Poster Patrick O'Dea Florence McL. Dowie Annie Laird Mary Mantle Taliesin Thomas .. Esther Ecclesfield .. Marian Gane Nellie Pitness John Harre Mary R. Shortall .. Henry Law Julia Caldwell Richard P. Clarkson E. C. Ballantine .. Frederick A. Bates.. Conrad A. Strack .. Charles H. Warden Alexander Mclntosh Amy P. Brunette .. Marion H. McDonogh Henry Lyall Charlotte Synnott .. Fred Gabites D2 E3 HM AF FP PP HP FP HM PP MP HM FP MP HM FP HP PP HM AP PP PP M F HM FP HM AP MP HM AM AM AF PP MP FP MP £ s. a. 227 0 0 99 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 143 15 0 65 0 0 193 0 0 40 0 0 39 0 0 200 0 0 55 0 0 52 0 0 193 0 0 30 0 0 156 5 0 38 0 0 224 0 0 102 15 0 65 0 0 47 0 0 150 0 0 95 0 0 157 10 0 47 0 0 205 0 0 99 0 0 55 0 0 286 0 0 185 0 0 150 0 0 109 0 0 65 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 35 0 0 134 Kapuni 203 17 4 14 6 0 92 4 4 Dl 66 6 6 7 Kaponga 7 262 11 8 16 15 6 21 3 10 E3 71 Okaiawa 299 10 0 16 15 6 12 0 D2 81 9 Matapu 9 219 5 0 12 13 0 i5 2 3 C3 57 10 Mangatoki 10 190 1 7 14 6 0 9 8 0 D3 59 11 Eltham 11 397 15 10 23 2 0 11 0 6 El E2 147 Anderson Road Mangawhero Te Roti 12 13 14 7 18 8 89 1 3 207 0 8 3 4 8 14 6 0 128 19 4 14 19 6 6 5 0 D2 E5 E4 23 58 12 13 Normanby 15 363 2 3 20 18 0 4 6 9 C3 E3 121 Hawera [B] 863 8 2 44 13 1 97 11 0 Dl D3 01 E3 E5* 320 14 16 Hawera — Meremere Whakamara Patea — Manutahi Alton Hurleyville 17 18 123 8 3 75 6 3 7 7 2 2 10 10 110 16 6 Elizabeth Burr Eleanor C. Chappie E4 E5 F P 95 0 0 60 0 0 22 16 15 1G 17 18 19 20 21 119 11 8 120 0 0 205 11 4 8 5 0 5 18 3 11 0 0 6 17 0 17 6 1 Percy G. Jackson .. Harold R. Bowater James Matthews .. Esther Wallace Henry M. Payne .. Amy Richardson .. William Adams Jemima Cheyne Catherine Lavery .. Elsie Black D4 E3 M M HM PP HM PP HM AP FP FP 120 0 0 120 0 0 175 0 0 38 0 0 165 0 0 47 0 0 233 0 0 113 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 27 21 43 19 Kakaramea 22 210 3 4 11 16 6 9 10 11 D2 50 20 Patea [B] .. 23 476 9 10 25 6 0 6 12 4 D2 E3 167 Patea— Whenuakura 195 18 6 10 6 3 6 4 3 William H. McLean Charles J. McLean Frederick W. Mason [Vacant] William J. W. Muir Emma McMeckin .. W. A. Swinbourn .. Maud Cleary William Corry Florence Howie W. H. A. Worsop .. Agnes H. P. McEwen D3 HM MP M HM AM FP MP PP HM PP HM FP 155 0 0 43 0 0 117 10 0 253 0 0 115 0 0 65 0 0 45 0 0 40 0 0 163 0 0 34 0 0 188 0 0 65 0 0 37 21 24 22 23 Kohi Waverley 25 26 117 10 0 524 12 10 8 5 0 25 6 0 25 '6 9 m 26 178 D4 E4 Momohaki 189 0 1 11 0 0 5 8 10 08 42 24 27 25 Waitotara 28 246 5 0 14 6 0 12 2 3 Dl E5* 69 Waitotara — Maxwell 219 10 9 14 6 0 58 10 11 Alfred Goldsbury .. John C. Clayton Duncan H. Mackay William C. Smith .. Emma P. Laird Grace Parkes Ellen Ewing William Smith E2 HM MP M M HF FP P M 168 0 0 60 0 0 140 0 0 117 10 0 147 10 0 34 0 0 127 10 0 155 0 0 59 26 29 27 28 Kai-iwi Brunswick Westmere 30 31 32 107 10 0 116 5 0 173 5 0 16 2 8 18 9 12 13 0 213 18 2 15 8 16 2 2 D4 C5 E3 0 33 49 29 80 Mosston .. Castleolifl Wanganui [B] — Wanganui Boys' 33 34 167 1 8 157 10 0 9 12 6 9 12 6 9 4 11 E2 D3 35 33 81 86 971 4 11 128 8 2 18 3 10 James Aitken William L. Maule .. Jtitchings Grant Thomas R. Cresswell Leonard J. Watkin William Gordon Louis W. Bassett .. Bl El D2 A4 D3 HM AM AM AM AM MP MP 326 0 0 180 0 0 155 0 0 125 0 0 125 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 282

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.—continued. WANGANUI— continued.

24

o.g .£5 II I* Schools, and the "?« Counties or Boroughs s>^ (the latter marked [B]) B g in which situate. o £ 1 a g» Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Tear. § 3 Cβ -So o a o 1 i> 5 g a o Annual § 6 Salary and "g S Allowance § 3 at the Bate S3 paid during ■"! the Last i »'g Quarter of <e 3 the Year. 8h i i ■< Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Wanganui [B] — contd. Wanganui Girls' 80 £ s. d. 777 17 8 £ s. d. £ s. d. 247 19 0 Sarah F. R. Blyth .. Isabella McDonald Margaretta Field .. Elizabeth A. McNeill Marian A. T. Small Ethel E. Bell Annie McNab E. Blennerhassefct .. Jemima N. Hoey .. Elizabeth M. Hicks Bertha M. Taylor .. Lilian M. Hare Lily MeKenna Kate Spurdle Kathleen Gordon .. Eliza Brown Annie M. Carson .. Dl E2 El E3 HFJ AF AFj AFi FP^ FP FP| FP HF FP FP FP FP FP FP HF FP £ s. d. 264 10 0 138 15 0 116 10 0 95 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 155 0 0 65 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 120 0 0 55 0 0 294 Wanganui Infants'.. 37 413 1 10 37 6 0 Lie. E5* 217 St. John's E3 38 173 10 2 4 12 6 96 Waitotara — Aramoho 482 10 11 25 6 0 75 10 6 Charles H. W. Lock Jessie McCaul Norman G. Armstrong Florence McCaul .. Thomas A. Blyth .. El B3 D5* HM AF MP FP MP 233 0 0 113 0 0 65 0 0 50 0 0 45 0 0 176 32 39 88 Wanganui— Upokongaro Parapara Ohakune Eaetihi Kaukatea Okoia Mars Hill Matarawa.. Warrengate 40 41 42 48 44 45 46 47 48 122 10 0 61 5 0 45 0 0 119 7 6 70 0 0 71 10 3 88 8 0 88 15 0 196 11 4 8 5 0 4 '2 6 1 12 3 Samuel D. McCosh J. K. Manning Sarah Broadbelt William E. Hird .. Howard Matthews .. Letitia G. MoGonagle Margaret Miller Edward M. Menzies H. H. Richardson .. Elizabeth Christie .. William E. Sarjeant A. MoOurraoh Julia 0. Slattery .. Mary Stedman E4 Dl E4 D4 E4 M M F M M F F M HM FP M M F F 122 10 0 60 0 0 48 15 0 142 10 0 60 0 0 67 10 0 71 5 0 85 0 0 148 0 0 50 0 0 90 0 0 90 0 0 95 0 0 71 5 0 33 10 12 28 10 18 20 15 52 1 *5 8 34 85 36 37 2 8 2 11 16 6 D4 38 39 40 41 Denlair Riverton .. Mangamahu Millbnrn .. Rangitikei— Turakina 49 50 51 52 77 10 2 88 15 0 95 0 0 69 7 6 4 5 6 04 E4 19 17 19 18 42 58 207 10 0 13 9 6 7 14 0 Robert H. Rockel .. Sybil E. Baker E. V. Jones Thomas Stagpoole .. Sarah Mounsey Emma D. Maunder Edwin Mossman .. Fred. D. Strombom Alison McDonald .. Annie E. Beaven .. Ivie D. Watt Mabel Billens Kathleen Alcorn .. A. Owen Buchler .. James Smith Norman J. Crabbe.. Zenobia Meads Percy Kime M. B. Jenkinson Patrick H. Roache.. Thomas B. Insoll .. Mary M. Staflan .. Leila L. Mossman .. Clara Gower Annie G. Hogg Annie Silby George P. Purnell .. Gertrude Lock John H. Brooks Olive E. Aldridge .. Tom Mayo Ernest W. Tompkins Ethel M. George .. Maria M. Gordon .. Ernest H. Jarvis .. Martha M. Fare .. John J. O'Reilly .. Hugh Goldsbury .. William McOreedy Mabel Harrison ,. C3 HM FP M M F F HM AM AF FP FP FP FP M M HM FP HM FP M HM AF FP F F F HM FP HM FP MP HM FP FP MP F M M HM FP 160 0 0 50 0 0 75 0 0 60 0 0 91 5 0 41 5 0 275 0 0 170 0 0 112 15 0 65 0 0 55 0 0 40 0 0 38 0 0 115 0 0 70 0 0 155 0 0 34 0 0 195 0 0 52 10 0 127 10 0 206 0 0 102 15 0 55 0 0 30 0 0 52 10 0 95 0 0 170 0 0 38 0 0 179 0 0 40 0 0 35 0 0 190 0 0 65 0 0 50 0 0 43 0 0 111 5 0 85 0 0 120 0 0 178 0 0 40 0 0 55 43 44 45 46 47 Turakina Valley Glen Nevis South Makirikiri .. West Rangitikei Marton 54 55 56 57 58 68 1 4 18 17 5 110 1 1 43 2 6 726 11 8 16 7 5 9 27 17 8 2 14 0 325 3 9 E4 E2 CI E3 E2 24 13 261 33 6 2 E5 Porewa Mount View Upper Tutaenui 59 60 61 112 18 4 71 5 0 198 5 6 8 18 9 16 8 2 E5 CI D3 23 14 42 48 49 50 11 0 0 4 8 6 51 Rata .. . < 62 244 4 9 12 13 0 3 12 0 A2 54 52 58 Silverhope Hunterville 63 64 127 10 0 356 1 6 10 6 3 24 1 9 201 9 5 E4 D2 D3 118 Ongo Road Maungahoe Poukiore .. Mangaonoho 19 7 6 33 2 1 99 5 2 198 9 11 0 3 4 5 14 21 14 65 66 G7 68 5 19 7 11 16 6 182 4 2 E5 D4 54 Ohingaiti 69 265 1 2 17 12 0 21 3 4 95 Mangaweka 70 277 18 1 15 2 6 214 5 7 r>2 E4 73 53 56 Utiku Taihape Moawhango Crofton 71 72 73 74 105 7 3 107 3 9 101 7 5 229 15 0 6 3 9 3 1 10 27 10 1 19 19 6 17 12 7 4 12 3 E4 E5 E3 30 24 24 68 57 14 6 0

E.—l.

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. WANGANUI— continued.

4—E. 1.

25

oH hj r *j-g Schools, and the t> q Counties or Boroughs '■*=" (the latter marked [B]) 50 in which situate. a> 2 a id a o 6 M «4 68 II Mainti Expel iditure (or thi mance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. © a .a Teachers' Names, -S . including all Teachers es ■S'o and Pupil-teachers £ s £ on the Staff at the End -g -2 o of the Year. % *g= 0 p> ° ! « Annual § m Salary and -a S Allowance § a at the Kate S a paid during "4™ the Last «'g Quarter of a ;g the Year. fh > <d Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 58 59 Rangitikei— continued. Greatford Bulls 75 76 & s. d. 135 0 0 347 18 0 & s. d. 9 12 6 18 8 6 £ s. d. 31 5 6 Sheridan 0. Hall .. Arthur J. Gifford .. Elizabeth D. Low .. C. McConnachie .. D3 A2 E3 B5 M HM AF M S. p. d. 135 0 0 216 0 0 99 0 0 100 0 0 36 99 60 Parawanui Oroua — Halcombe 77 98 15 0 3 11 6 0 17 6 27 61 Stanway 78 388 9 0 203 14 6 20 18 0 12 13 0 22 0 9 4 18 7 Samuel Strachan .. Helen J. Spurdle .. Florence Staite Frederick Clapham Dugald Matheson .. Meta Revell E2 E5 HM AF FP MP HM FP 220 0 0 87 15 0 40 0 0 25 0 0 165 0 0 30 0 0 135 D3 56 02 79 63 64 Kiwitea— Waituna West Waitapu . Rewa ' Waipuru Kawatau Beaconsfield Oroua— Makino Road 80 81 82 83 84 85 53 5 0 150 0 0 98 2 4 90 0 0 131 0 10 79 1 3 8 's 0 4 12 2 7 8 6 5 19 9 47 17 0 10 0 0 57 19 10 4 10 10 Mary Voltz James Galland Annie McDougall .. Andrew Dawaon Claude Holden Margaret H. Phyii .. D3 E3 Lie. D5 E4 F M F M M F 52 10 0 150 0 0 95 0 0 90 0 0 131 5 0 75 0 0 14 28 22 18 24 23 65 66 86 212 10 0 13 9 6 Samuel Wyllie 0. J. Cunningham .. John D. C. Hill .. Harry C. Stewart .. Grace Barr Aimee M. McDonogh Ada L. Watts Minnie H. Stevens.. Samuel Campbell .. James Watts Gertrude Watts D3 HM FP HM AM AF AF FP FP MP MP FP 155 0 0 55 0 0 291 0 0 185 0 0 103 8 0 88 8 0 65 0 0 55 0 0 45 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 55 Peilding [B] 87 848 4 7 47 13 0 288 18 1 CI D3 E4 E4 E4 355 67 Kiwitea— Cheltenham 68 69 70 Kiwitea Birmingham 88 89 90 197 14 4 130 0 0 244 8 4 6 6 6 9 12 6 15 2 6 128 7 0 169 0 10 Harry Coventry Arthur Haybiitle .. Richard 0. French.. Hugh Mclntyre Margaret Stevenson Thomas B. Slipper.. Janet H. Peat Arthur W. Rule .. Peter Matheson E3 D3 HM MP M HM FP MP F M M 155 0 0 35 0 0 130 0 0 183 0 0 55 0 0 35 0 0 107 10 0 120 0 0 130 0 0 46 35 74 71 72 73 Mangarimu Rangiwahia Ruahine Pohangina— Apiti 91 92 93 115 19 9 121 5 0 92 10 0 8 5 0 7 5 10 5 19 43 10 0 16 0 0 198 15 3 E5 E5 '2d 22 27 74 94 223 16 0 13 9 6 122 5 3 E. L. Ironmonger .. Thorsten F. Relling George S. Clapham.. James M. Murdoch.. James Nairn Hugh P. Smith .. Frances E. Carter .. El HM MP M M HM MP F 165 0 0 60 0 0 137 10 0 120 0 0 150 0 0 60 0 0 52 10 0 56 75 Nikau Awahou Pohangina 95 96 97 137 10 0 118 15 0 201 1 4 7 16 9 4 13 6 11 0 0 140 '6 7 11 11 0 E4 25 21 49 76 D3 77 Komako Oroua — Aratika Pukeroa Colyton 98 17 10 0 18 1 10 14 78 79 80 99 100 101 90 15 0 98 15 0 240 18 8 2 19 2 15 19 0 1 15 0 Elizabeth A. Howie Daniel P. Thurston.. Joseph Tamblyn .. Annie Carter Rebecca Mitchell .. Thomas Innes George H. Espiner.. Edith Mowbray George A. Lyall Alexander Matheson Florence Standen .. Herbert Woodham.. George W. McCaul.. Fred Lyall William J. Andrew Marion Mellish Alicia Prendcrgast.. Fernly C. Campbell E2 F M HM FP FP M HM AF MP HM FP M HM MP HM AF FP MP 75 0 0 100 0 0 180 10 0 55 0 0 20 0 0 140 0 0 214 0 0 93 8 0 60 0 0 190 0 0 38 0 0 148 0 0 153 0 0 35 0 0 232 0 0 102 15 0 65 0 0 52 0 0 23 23 68 22 11 5 C4 81 82 Upper Taonui Bunnythorpe 102 103 140 0 0 367 18 0 11 0 0 20 18 0 12 11 2 9 19 5 D3 Dl E4 38 125 Kelvin Grove 243 4 6 12 13 0 12 13 8 D3 64 104 83 84 Stoney Creek Hiwinui 105 106 172 0 0 185 10 0 11 0 0 11 0 0 0 17 10 53 13 2 El D4 36 43 85 Ashurst 107 457 14 3 22 0 0 10 15 9 Dl E2 E4 154 8G PalmerstonN'th[B] — Terrace End 108 679 15 2 30 16 0 13 16 3 T. F.-Fairbrother .. Albert H. Powell .. Harriet Curtis Alice G. BartleU .. Amelia Dora Reed .. Eleanor M. Anderson Nellie Oakley George Grant Nils A. Friberg Maude F. Meads .. Nellie C. Innes Dl D3 D4 HM AM AF FP FP FP FP HM AM AF AF 281 0 0 145 0 0 101 5 0 55 0 0 55 0 0 50 0 0 30 0 0 281 0 0 180 0 0 109 0 0 90 0 0 217 College Street 87 109 771 18 11 37 12 11 12 6 Dl C3 E3 B3 273

B.—l

26

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. WANGANUI— continued.

(1) Aided.

•r. O . °S •So II a © otn O Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. a d ® S g a H a, Maintenance. _ Buildings, Sites, Teachers' Other Fu ™ it fl Ure ' Salaries and Ordinary Atroaratus Allowances. Expenditure. A PP alara s. Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a" o HH C3 O s 'tfl CPJ 5 © o 5 Annual § u 53 Salary and « S OrA Allowance © £i 'Jo at the Rate £3 eg paid during ■<& £w the Last ©« g Quarter of sg fin the Year. ©eh 5 Palmerston North [B] — continued. College Street — contd. Campbell Street £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 65 0 0 50 0 0 319 0 0 205 0 0 130 0 0 116 15 0 104 10 0 50 0 0 38 0 0 38 0 0 30 0 0 Eleanor Watts Edith Innes 39 6 11 Francis E. Watson George W. Mitchell Jessie Knapp Agnes McLeod Sarah F. Hanna Mary Scott Gertrude Mowbray Maude Gatton Barbara Mayo E4 FP FP HM AM AF AF AF FP FP FP FP 1,038 11 4 50 9 3 39 6 11 Dl C2 B2 E2 El 88 110 379 Oroua— Fitzherbert East .. Tiritea Linton Longburn Ellen Prendergast .. Joseph O. Lilly 0 4 6 Albert H. Evans .. 3 14 0 F. S M. Hankin .. George H. Marshall Flossie Clapham .. John R. Nairn 6 4 3 Donald Martin Roderick Matheson 131 13 5 Henry E. Astbury .. Lucy O. Mowbray .. El F M M HM MP FP M HM MP HM FP 131 15 0 125 0 0 130 0 0 217 0 0 43 0 0 38 0 0 120 0 0 145 0 0 45 0 0 175 0 0 38 0 0 89 90 91 92 111 112 113 114 139 6 0 131 5 5 130 0 0 311 15 11 8 5 0 8 5 0 8 18 9 17 12 0 0 4 6 3 14 0 E3 Dl 29 28 35 92 93 94 Jaokeytown Kairanga 115 116 119 11 8 163 6 8 8 5 0 14 6 0 6 4 3 D4 27 57 95 Taonui 117 209 5 0 14 6 0 131 13 5 D2 55 Manawatu— Awahuri 200 5 2 13 9 6 19 7 5 Edward H. Rogers.. Grace Robertson .. 25 10 0 David W. Low Eliza M. McEwen .. George Walter Gibbs 3 12 8 Elsie M. Greenaway 85 13 1 C. H. T. Bbwater .. Edith F. Hill Francis Dudley Opie Ernest Edwards 119 18 8 William F. Stansell 139 14 4 Annie E. Goodland 1 5 0 ! George Nye 11 14 9 ; W. S. Stewart Lucy M. O'Brien .. Mary K. W. Sisley.. John T. Robson Hedevig F. M. West Leonard J. Furrie .. 19 7 5 E2 HM FP HM AF MP F HM AF MP MP M F M HM AF FP MP FP MP 165 0 0 40 0 0 225 0 0 87 15 0 35 0 0 41 5 0 227 0 0 93 8 0 52 0 0 25 0 0 142 10 0 121 5 0 158 0 0 260 0 0 118 15 0 55 0 0 60 0 0 30 0 0 25 0 0 55 90 118 97 Sandon 119 348 11 9 20 1 6 25 10 0 ci E5 117 98 Waitohi Rongotea 120 121 39 7 6 395 3 1_ 20 18 0 3 12 8 85 13 1 E2 E4 11 137 99 00 01 02 Taikorea Carnarvon Oroua Bridge Foxton [B] 122 123 124 125 138 17 4 115 18 9 157 0 0 555 9 4 12 4 0 10 6 3 8 5 0 28 1 0 119 18 8 139 14 4 15 0 11 14 9 E4 D4 E2 Bl E2 D5 26 39 30 193 .08 Manawatu — Montoa Paiaka Orangipongo Raumai 126 127 96 5 0 30 0 0 3 12 11 4 5 0 James Banks 6 15 2 Alice G. Gibson .. 4 8 3 0 9 6 D4 M F 100 0 0 30 0 0 21 7 Plans and inspection Office improvements School requisites Repairs Expenses of school sites Expenditurt e not apportioned. 147 14 4 13 4 6 32 7 0 77 13 1 4 19 0 4,846 10 11 27,729 4 11 1,484 16 7 28,227 17 0 8,317 WELLINGTON. I 2 3 Pahiatua — Coonoor (') Pungaroa Makairo Village Settlement ( J ) Mangatainoka 1 2 3 4 5 13 *6 8 75 0 0 45 17 3 3 10 6 8 0 0 27 3 9 30 14 4 130 8 1 74 8 0 122 19 5 9 7 0 3 19 7 Charles C. Hubbard Mary McOann Fanny Forrest Elizabeth Bland .. Henry Wilson George A. Jones Margaret Stewart .. Alice Petrie Mabel H. Sicely .. Violet Nixon Andrew Anderson .. Mary Murphy . .. Rosanna Birnie Laura Hall Olive M. Dorset E2 M F F F HM AM AF FP FP FP HM FP F HF FP 15 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 46 5 0 265 0 0 150 0 0 80 0 0 20 0 0 42 0 0 20 0 0 215 0 0 32 0 0 70 0 0 123 15 0 25 0 0 4 18 14 165 4 608 k 4 Bl D4 E2 29S 15 4 14 0 0 129 13 8 D2 5 Ballance 6 53 6 7 Mangahao Scarborough 7 8 70 0 0 141 5 0 20 2 0 45 5 9 162 3 10 260 12 8 E4 E2 23 43

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. WELLlNGTON— continued.

(1) Aided.

27

h y> B •£(3 II a o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [Bj) in which situate. «1 oo g£ Expenditure for thi Maintenance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. g V g s I Si CD 8 Annual § h Salary and "g S Allowance § a at the Kate £ P paid during ™ the Last g/g Quarter of a '3 the Year. Sg •5 Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Pahiatua— continued. Makomako Pahiatua [B] — Pahiatua .. 9 £ s. a. 60 19 4 672 1 4 £ s. d. 6 13 4 £ s. d. 15 14 0 James S. Webb E3 M £ s. d. 80 0 0 21 !) 10 35 0 0 23 16 0 Joseph Thomas Francis P. Wilson .. Plora Petrie Helen Birnie William H. Philip .. Ethel Black Minnie P. Warren.. Henry J. Nightingale Henry T. Cooper .. Emmeline Knox Mary J. Swan Florence M. Marryatt Catherine Tuely Richard Abbott Wigo Anderson Walter Britland .. Annie Gregg Thomas R. Bowden CI D2 D2 E5 HM AM AF AF MP FP PP M HM PP P P P M M HM PP M 285 0 0 150 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 45 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 80 0 0 215 0 0 20 0 0 48 15 0 70 0 0 41 0 0 45 0 0 100 0 0 215 0 0 25 0 0 56 5 0 213 Ngaturi .. Kaitawa .. D3 D2 10 11 11 12 80 0 0 224 13 4 8 0 0 12 0 0 21 13 8 2 14 8 24 50 Te Aupapa f 1 ) Makuri Tane Tiraumea ( x ) Hukanui Makakahi 13 14 15 16 17 18 70 0 0 46 17 6 17 3 0 17 19 0 48 15 0 5 14 4 14 0 0 2 0 0 157 11 7 162 10 0 39 16 11 161 12 0 E2* D4 13 14 12 13 11 25 59 14 15 71 2 2 241 5 4 1)2 16 Nikau Wairarapa North— Sherwood (*) Pen ton (*) .. Rakaunui (*) Whakataki 19 15 16 1 44 0 0 14 17 18 20 21 22 23 18 15 0 4 13 9 59 1 3 8 0 0 Jessie Roberts [Vacant]. Arthur Benn Prank G. Mangnuson Mary Mangnuson .. Howard N. Baker .. John McKenzie Alice Bell Fanny Ahradsen .. Annie Mousley Helena C. Killery .. George W. Chatwin Balfour Kean Ida K. Baird John B. Hopkirk .. Catherine Stewart.. P. Annie Black Mary McLauchlan.. Mary M. Wright .. Mary Groves Kate A. Hardwick .. Kate M. Nelson Floronce P. Higgins G. S. M. McDermid Maria H. Toohill .. Vivian Higgins Gertrude M. Toohill Walter N. Dempsey Kate M. Mackay .. Sarah E. Batt Edith M. King Charles R. Joplin .. Hinemoa P. Bray .. John Kay Caroline Gray E. E. R. Hutchens Alice Jessup Thomas D. Wardlaw Violet Boddington .. [Closed]. Henrietta M. Evans Lois M. Peist Joseph J. Guest Annie W. Kean Fanny Evans Elizabeth C. Whelan Frederick Gover Edith M. Sage Gwendolyn Powell.. P 18 15 0 5 19 105 0 0 2 10 6 14 0 M M S M M S P P P HM MP S HM PP P P P P P HP PP HM AP MP PP HM PP P P HM PP HM PP P P HM PP 56 5 0 100 0 0 5 0 0 30 0 0 175 0 0 5 0 0 70 0 0 41 5 0 80 0 0 175 0 0 45 0 0 5 0 0 225 0 0 25 0 0 70 0 0 143 15 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 80 0 0 143 15 0 20 0 0 235 0 0 80 0 0 38 0 0 36 0 0 225 0 0 52 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 195 0 0 20 0 0 225 0 0 20 0 0 70 0 0 45 0 0 215 0 0 32 0 0 10 20 20 Te Mai ( J ).. Te Nui 24 25 202 17 6 29 1 3 10 0 0 17 10 0 CI 8 32 Ngapopotu P) Blairlogie .. Bideford Taueru 2fi 27 28 29 35 0 0 75 '6 0 235 0 0 49 17 11 37 10 0 8 0 0 12 6 6 3 13 6 24 5 4 12 12 17 49 2] 22 145 '6 0 ci Hamua 30 253 9 4 16 4 6 Dl 58 23 Konini Rongomai.. Mangaone Alfredton .. Nereaha Newman .. 31 32 83 34 35 36 11 13 4 136 5 0 98 8 9 70 0 0 60 17 6 172 1 8 4 0 0 10 0 0 10 3 9 12 0 0 5 6 6 12 0 0 12 15 6 E2 E3 E2 E5 E2 24 26 26 27 28 6 16 0 92 15 9 9 14 5 36 24 ]6 21 47 2!) Eketahuna 37 429 7 2 25 0 0 20 5 6 C2 124 Hastwell .. 282 0 0 16 0 0 162 18 0 Dl 80 38 62 31 82 33 Mangamahoe Kaipororo Maurioeville 89 40 41 100 0 0 115 7 8 213 10 10 26 3 4 17 17 6 13 14 0 217 6 1 154 15 2 27 11 11 E2 E2 El 'A'.) 17 51 34 Maurioeville East .. 42 268 6 8 12 0 0 Dl 49 85 Dreyer's Rock Wairere Dreyerton 43 44 45 60 19 2 6 0 0 36 11 3 12 0 0 80 10 1 126 0 4 179 14 0 E3 15 12 46 30 241 '3 4 D2 37 38 Ditton Rangitumau Wangaehu Te Oreore Mikimiki Opaki Kaituna Fernridge 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 116 5 0 100 0 0 65 11 3 78 15 0 131 5 0 70 0 0 326 0 0 8 8 9 10 18 9 8 0 0 5 0 0 5 14 0 10 0 0 8 0 0 18 0 0 23 11 10 173 3 6 183 17 5 E2 E2 D4 D3 Dl E3 El E3 P F M P P P HM AM PP 123 15 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 123 15 0 70 0 0 205 0 0 80 0 0 36 0 0 35 21 28 23 25 22 74 39 dO 41 2 5 0 Masterton [B] — Masterton.. 1,245 2 5 61 11 8 32 4 3 William H. Jackson Andrew N. Bum3 .. Robert Darroch Nelson D'A. Bunting Isabella Munro Lois McGregor Elizabeth Bunting.. William Johnston .. Dl B2 D2 E2 El D3 E3 HM AM AM AM AF AP AP MP 345 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 50 0 0 <12 54 513

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. WELLINGTON— continued.

(1) Aided.

28

d.2 <D to P O o Schools, and the Counties oi- Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. °1 ?3 If Maintenance. Expenditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Kames, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. d .2 I o at & Annual Salary and Allowance at the Kate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. § ii II <<<y DC *■* •5 Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Masterton [B] — contd. Masterton — contd. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Masterton Infants'.. Margaret Smith Helen M. Kean John W. Bennett .. Nellie Arnold Eleanor M. Johnston Laura L. Keeling .. Catherine Easthope Eliza Wallis FP FP MP FP FP HF FP FP 42 0 0 42 0 0 38 0 0 36 0 0 36 0 0 125 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 El 78 55 183 16 8 19 0 0 43 44 45 Wairarapa South — Te Whiti Waingawa Gladstone 56 57 58 66 16 0 70 0 0 131 9 10 8 0 0 8 0 0 10 10 0 Marcolla Lamb Jamessina Gray Annie Duncan Olive MoParlane .. Emily A. Nofct Thomas Browne Jane E. Davis Ada L. Bairstow .. Francis Bennett .. John E. Thwaites .. Mary Jones Winnifred Armstrong Martha J. Ussher .. Janet Moncriefi L. B. Braithwaite .. Charlotte Keir E3 F F HF FP F HM AF FP HM AM AF FP FP FP FP FP 70 0 0 70 0 0 123 15 0 20 0 0 80 0 0 215 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 275 0 0 150 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 20 0 0 15 13 34 4 14 0 E2 46 47 Taratahi West Clareville 59 00 88 19 9 324 10 0 8 14 4 20 0 0 13 10 0 16 12 0 D3 Dl E2 15 88 Carterton [B] 720 5 0 38 0 0 18 10 9 Dl 04 265 48 61 D3 E4 Wairarapa South — Belvedere 62 225 0 0 12 0 0 Henry McParlane .. Esther J. Miller .. James M. Beechey.. Mary A. Broadbent Mary Chester Herbert Hart (acting) Robert Drummond Agnes C. Telford .. William Waite Mary Moncriefi E. J. Rutherford .. E. L. Stuart-Forbes F. H. Bakewell John G. Bee Mary York Isobel A. Burnett .. Helen 0. Brunton .. Annie Gallagher .. El HM FP HM AF FP MP HM FP M S F F HM AM FP AF FP FP 195 0 0 25 0 0 205 0 0 80 0 0 36 0 0 25 0 0 185 0 0 20 0 0 155 0 0 5 0 0 70 0 0 116 5 0 285 0 0 150 0 0 60 0 0 80 0 0 42 0 0 32 0 0 44 49 50 Dalefield 03 351 4 2 17 0 0 5 16 2 El E3 82 Park Vale 212 0 0 12 0 0 12 12 6 Dl 46 51 G4 52 Waihakeke 05 146 13 4 10 12 0 Bl 30 53 54 55 Ponatahi Matarawa Greytown [B] 66 67 65 70 0 0 112 10 0 656 12 10 10 13 6 10 14 9 33 9 6 119 10 6 961 10 9 E3 El Bl D3 15 28 209 E3 Wairarapa South — Kaitara 69 225 0 0 12 8 0 0 10 6 P. G. A. Stuckey .. Mina McKenzie Clement W. Lee Mary Jane Badland Mary Kennedy [Closed]. Beatrice Mason Marion A. Rainie .. Florrie Price Effie McDougall .. [Not open]. Robert J. Pope Rebecca Fellingham Lillias E. E. Heaney Thomas Porritt John Williamson .. Agnes Sage M. W. Fellingham.. Samuel TurMngton Martha C. Allen .. Julia Turkington .. 03 HM FP HM FP FP 185 0 0 30 0 0 195 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 35 56 57 Waihinga 70 274 2 0 18 5 8 El 75 Clifton Grove (i) Bush Gully (*) Pahaua(') Ngakonui (') Pirinoa Kahautara Kaiwaiwai 71 72 73 74 75 76 77 4 13 9 5 12 6 19 13 9 12 3 9 6 0 0 F F F F 11 5 0 18 15 0 18 15 0 70 0 0 3 5 5 13 70 '6 0 132 "i 10 7 9 6 58 59 223 4 0 12 '6 0 D3 HM FP F HM AM AF FP HM FP S 175 0 0 37 0 0 100 0 0 255 0 0 150 0 0 80 0 0 36 0 0 165 0 0 20 0 0 5 0 0 44 00 61 Tauherenikau Featherston 78 79 100 0 0 527 3 0 23 19 10 28 0 0 50 0 8 14 3 0 E3 Dl 02 E3 23 168 02 Cross Creek 80 181 13 4 14 7 6 31G 1 11 E2 43 G3 04 65 66 67 08 Hutt— Kaitoke Wallace Mungaroa.. Whiteman's Valley.. Akatarawa Upper Hutt 81 82 83 84 85 86 101 5 0 100 0 0 131 5 0 95 0 0 8 0 0 9 0 0 10 0 0 8 0 0 68 10 6 24 0 0 17 16 5 13 15 3 21 10 6 Dorothea Hamilton Sarah Elkin Eliza H. Evans Emily Sloan Edward Ingpen Frederick W. Connell Bertha C. Aldrich .. Ellen Paul Amy Evans Mary A. Williams .. E4 El El F F F F M HM AF FP FP F 101 5 0 100 0 0 131 5 0 70 0 0 45 0 0 225 0 0 80 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 100 0 0 13 26 30 16 12 110 353 7 6 3 8 9 El Stoke's Valley 100 0 0 8 0 0 E2 69 87 22

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued, WELLlNGTON— continued.

(i) Aided.

29

o.S fa H Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 62 || P Main t< Bxpei iditure for thi mance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a si 2 * a .So o a o s !■§ Annual Salary and Allowance at the Kate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. <D o a . II u Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 70 Hutt— continued. Taita £ s. d. 354 11 8 £ s. d. 33 3 3 & s. d. 279 12 9 A. W. Williamson .. Ellen A. Meager .. Leonard Price David Barry William C. Davies .. Rosabel Wolff Mary S. Braithwaite Clara Meager William H. Gould .. Bl D3 HM AP MP HM AM AF AP FP MP £ s. a. 250 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 295 0 0 150 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 42 0 0 45 0 0 63 71 Hutt [B] .. 89 708 19 11 33 0 0 1 13 0 Dl D3 E2 D3 217 Hutt— Pencarrow(') Muratai (') Wainuiomata Petone [B] 90 91 92 93 17 16 3 39 11 3 11 18 3 76 10 9 Bee O'Sullivan Blenor E. Dorizao .. Sara Letham James Home Graham S. Pringle.. Edward J. Look Emma J. Chappie .. Alice M. Manning .. Jemima Slater Alice E, Ryder Elsie Carter Harriet A. Cooper .. Mabel E. J. Collett John C, Burns Esther Atkinson .. John McKibbon P F P HM AM AM AP AP AF AP PP FP PP MP PP MP 11 5 0 30 0 0 123 15 0 345 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 32 0 0 38 0 0 20 0 0 25 0 0 3 8 32 564 116 'k 0 1,245 17 0 0 18 0 20 1 4 3 11 6 E2 Dl Dl D4 D2 E3 D2 72 17 73 Hutt— Korokoro .. Horowhenua — Shannon .. 94 70 0 0 8 0 0 16 6 Margaret Nairn P 70 0 0 74 95 341 10 0 19 0 0 5 10 William Voysey Prances Townsend.. Emma Newton Frederick W. Gregory Ellen Gregory Frances A. Chatwin James Mclntyre Isabella Eennie Margaret Dunlop .. Charles Staff William P. Cole .. Margaret Howan .. Robert S. Collie .. Mary Dynan William H. L. Foster Ada P. Banks William D. Bennett Dunoan M. Yeats .. Matilda E. Bannister William H. Clark .. Alexander McBain.. Jane A. Catley Reginald J. Poss .. Dl HM AP FP M S P HM AP PP MP HM PP HM PP HM AP MP HM AF MP M S M 215 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 185 0 0 5 0 0 123 15 0 235 0 0 80 0 0 36 0 0 32 0 0 205 0 0 30 0 0 215 0 0 20 0 0 205 0 0 80 0 0 38 0 0 235 0 0 80 0 0 45 0 0 173 0 0 5 0 0 165 0 0 75 Tokomaru.. 96 180 0 0 10 17 6 D4 32 75 76 77 Kereru Levin 97 98 123 15 0 382 18 0 10 0 0 26 9 2 15 12 6 172 10 10 E2 Dl 26 111 State Farm 245 0 0 12 15 0 Di 39 99 78 Ohau 100 256 10 0 15 0 0 15 0 0 69 79 Manakau .. 101 290 16 8 15 0 0 6 10 6 Dl D3 73 80 Otaki 102 375 6 8 21 0 2 Dl E3 88 Te Horo .. 103 179 11 8 11 16 0 El 27 81 82 Waikanae.. Hutt— Reikiorangi Paraparaumu 104 178 0 4 22 12 3 45 6 5 D4 25 83 84 105 106 90 0 0 200 0 0 10 16 0 12 10 1 37 1 5 Janet Richards John A. Smith Emily McKeown .. D. S. Bedingfield .. Mary Dobson Ellen Townsend Margaret L. Graham A. A. Dowdeswell .. John J. Pilkington.. Vara P. Cowles Herbert Sanson Minnie A. Whitcombe Mary E. Hopwood .. William B. Smith .. Wilfred L. Beech .. Kate Anderson Finlay Bethune Mary Parmar Ada H. Evans Alice Mary Willis .. E5 Dl P HM PP M S F F F HM PP HM PP P HM MP S HM AP AF PP 100 0 0 175 0 0 20 0 0 155 0 0 5 0 0 70 0 0 136 5 0 128 15 0 215 0 0 42 0 0 175 0 0 32 0 0 70 0 0 175 0 0 45 0 0 5 0 0 255 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 28 42 85 Paikakariki 107 160 0 0 10 0 0 D2 30 86 87 88 89 Horokiwi .. Judgeford .. Pahautanui Porirua 108 109 110 111 70 0 0 136 5 0 146 5 0 264 0 3 8 0 0 10 0 0 22 0 0 15 0 0 7 11 7 24 6 9 El Dl CI 16 26 32 56 90 Tawa Plat 112 211 13 4 12 0 0 D2 41 Takapu Ohariu 113 114 35 0 0 229 0 0 19 19 8 13 2 6 11 16 6 24 7 5 E3 D2 15 45 91 92 Johnsonville 115 464 0 5 24 0 0 18 11 10 Dl D3 E4 121 Onslow [B] — Khandallah Kaiwarra .. 203 0 0 459 14 4 10 17 0 51 0 0 15 0 0 David H. Jenkins .. Robert Johnston .. Nita Johnston Annie Dickson Florence Roberts .. D2 CI E2 M HM AF PP PP 175 0 0 290 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 36 0 0 32 108 93 94 116 117

E.—l.

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. WELLINGTON— continued.

30

z£ 2-3 go © © OCQ O Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. og ■■§■8 §9 Main t< Expe: iditure for tb< inance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teacbers on the Staff at the End of the Year. O •1 u si I-a o Ph 5 Annual § h Salary and Allowance ! § & at the Rate j £ 3 paid during i the Last ; g'g Quarter of i d^ the Year. q h <! Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 95 96 Hutt— Makara .. Kaiori 118 119 £ s. d. 184 0 0 422 13 4 £ s. d. 14 3 6 29 10 0 £ s. d. 6 12 9 5 0 0 Mary Ballingall Phcebe Prendeville Henry H. Dyer Annie J. Lockett .. Jane M. Donald Minnie Young William P. Ford .. Amelia A. Cook Alice Cook D2 CI E2 E5 HF FP HM AF AF FP HM AF PP £ s. d. 151 5 0 20 0 0 245 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 20 0 0 245 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 34 135 Wadestown 120 367 0 0 20 0 0 m E2 83 98 Wellington [B] — Thorndon .. 1,212 0 5 5C 18 0 24 1 10 William Mowbray .. James 0. Webb Frederick C. Everton Annie Davies Bessie Riddick Jessie M. Bichardson Mary Williams Mary W. Plunkett.. Martha Myers E. E. S. Benzoni .. Florence E. Rose .. Phcebe Jacobs Margaret Page Mabel Dix Florence Stormont Nellie Sinnet Florence Watson .. Margaret H. Jacob George Macmorran Albert Erskine Francis Mason George W. Kirk .. Caroline C. Watson Sara Fraser Elizabeth L. Benbow Catherine M. Stan ton Maude Beavis Mary Parker Annie K. Goldsmith Mabel E. Oswin .. Edith M. Evans .. William T. Grundy John McPhail E. W. Beaglehole .. Elizabeth McGowan Alexander B. Charters Alice Eobinson R. F. M. Zohrab .. Eliza Scott John J. Mead Adeline S. Banks .. Elizabeth A. Stanton Albert E. Wetherilt Elizabeth Woodward Mary Hannay Charles W. Dallaston Jessie L. Davidson.. Kate E. Broome Margaret C. Walton Emily Oliver Clement Watson .. Henry A. Parkinson Jabez A. Cowles Alice M. Bright Amy G. Davis Lucy J. Leighton .. Clara N. Firth Janet Mitchell Annie P. Ranwell .. Laura E. Baird Ada M. Cook Isabella A. Merlet.. Lucy Colwell Georgina E. Chatwin Phoabe Watson Winifred L. Stevens Helen Anderson May E. Tonks Ada Howden Annie Shine Edith Robinson CI B2 C2 HM AM AM AF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP FP HF FP FP FP FP FP HM AM AM AM AF AF PP FP PP FP FP FP FP HM AM AM AF AM AF FP AF MP PP FP MP FP FP MP FP FP FP FP HM AM AM AF AF AF AF AF FP FP FP FP FP HF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP 370 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 60 0 0 36 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 125 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 32 0 0 36 0 0 32 0 0 360 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 360 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 125 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 38 0 0 20 0 0 32 0 0 38 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 20 0 0 370 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 36 0 0 32 0 0 175 0 0 80 0 0 42 0 0 20 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 25 0 0 121 390 99 D3 E3 E2 Thorndon Infants' .. Dl 174 122 256 2 1 27 0 0 Terrace 1,339 10 0 53 3 3 Dl Dl C3 D3 Dl El D3 T)i 00 123 65 0 0 528 B4 Dl 734 .01 Clyde Quay 124 1,610 4 0 205 0 0 22 10 4 C2 El 03 E3 E3 E2 r>4 D4 02 Te Aro 125 1,405 0 0 249 0 0 Bl CI D3 Dl El Dl E3 E3 D2 D3 511 Te Aro Infants' 126 431 0 1 <J8 0 0 Dl El 210

31

E.—l

Table No. 8.-List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. WELLINGTON— continued.

°*5 o.s Q Tβ if o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 08 <■> 3 If Maintenance. Buildings, Sites, Teachers' Other Pur a n n t a Ure ' Salaries and Ordinary Antmrarua Allowances. Expenditure. a PP araraa - I Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. Teachers' Names. -2 including all Teachers ce and l'upil-teachers on the Staff at the End "g of the Year. g 5 g j> Annual § h ■3 Salary and « S c]~ Allowance 5 ■p o at the Kate S3 o-g paid during 2ffl the Last oj'g g Quarter of es -J3 the Year. s> £ Wellington [B] — con. Mount Cook Boys' .. £ s. d. 1,490 13 4 £ s. d. 66 0 0 £ s. d. 105 5 6 £ s. d. 370 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 50 0 0 258 15 0 150 0 0 110 0 0 90 0 0 90 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 32 0 0 240 0 0 125 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 360 0 0 220 0 0 150 0 0 100 0 0 125 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 50 0 0 80 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 32 0 0 45 0 0 32 0 0 42 0 0 20 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 345 0 0 150 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 42 0 0 38 0 0 .03 Mount Cook Girls .. Mount Cook Infants' 127 128 129 1,232 4 10 699 10 9 65 4 0 62 0 0 34 16 1 37 1 0 Charles J. Hardy .. William W. Bird .. William J. Lewis .. F. A. Hempleman .. E. B. Flannagan .. Alice Louise Hall .. Elizabeth Robinson Eleanor N. Cook .. Emily M. Cooper .. Ernest H. Ballaohey Helen Anderson Clara Liez Ethel Annie Meek.. Charles N. Haslam Margaret Lorimer .. Elizabeth Helyer .. Harriet McGowan .. Mary Kate Lawson Ellen Wallace Annie Rothenberg .. Mabel P. Young .. Kate Williams Sara Rothenberg .. Florence Mary Hall Emily B. Lawson .. H. G. Thompson .. Hilda Mills Catherine A. Francis Maggie H. Craig Ethel Williams Jessie E. Howden .. Edith Seagar Nellie Gallagher .. Bessie Paterson Isabella Osborn May G. Whelan .. Edith Carroll Ethel Hall Laura Ibbetson Enid Williams Violet Harton Mabel Roberts Charles Hulke Charles Bary William Berry Percival S. G. Ellis Mary E. Jordan Maud H. Ryder Jessie K. Hutchen.. Margaret R. Nimmo Theresa Alexander.. Annie A. Holm Florence B. Collins.. Florence R. Bird .. Kate Dempsey Lyna Thompson .. Henry M. Christie .. Jessie Shine Lucy Hayes Catherine Armit .. Isabel Halley Enid MoCaull Margaret Scott Thirza Caverhill .. George Flux Alexander McKenzie W. W. Rountree .. Ida G. Kenny Ella Reith Ellen E. Riddick .. Mary P. Player Helen Wiltshire Marjory F. Hutchen Edgar 0. Feltbam .. Bl B2 D3 D4 D2 Dl El E3 D3 D4 A2 Dl El Dl Dl E2 D4 E3 E2 E5 El Dl HM AM AM AM AF AF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP MP HF AF AF AF AF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP FP HF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP HM AM AM AM AF AF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP FP MP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP HM AM AM AF AF FP FP FP FP MP 521 460 440 Newtown .. .04 130 1,759 1 6 93 10 0 Dl Dl D4 B2 E2 Dl E2 E3 E2 786 E5 105 Rintoul Street 131 907 15 10 103 19 0 58 8 9 Dl D2 D2 S3 D3 388 Melrose [B] — Vogeltown 121 106 132 368 5 0 25 0 0 6 11 6 Emily M. Browne .. Elizabeth E. Ramsay Jessie H. Fitchett .. Gertrude Legg Dl E3 D3 HF AF FP FP 196 5 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 42 0 0

B.—l

32

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. WELLINGTON— continued.

si © pa |8 §1 OirO a o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B] ) in which situate. "5 J ©§ gin ■rt ® o £ © «! §.§• Mainti Expei mance. iditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. 6 o c3 O S 'm m o3 O © -a HH> a-i .21 ."SCO m O © © Annual § u Salary and -2 Allowance © § at the Rate : :£ a paid during "^^ the Last »'g Quarter of the Year. is n > <_ Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. .07 .08 Melrose LB]— contd. Mitcheltown Kilbirnie 134 133 £ s. d. 289 5 0 372 10 0 £ s. d. 20 0 0 21 11 5 £ s. d. 67 3 8 1 6 11 Christina McKenzie Elizabeth M. Fleming Constance M. Weston Joseph H. Worboys Henrietta Boulcott.. R. G. M. McDermid Jessie Robertson .. Annie L. Banks Dl Dl E2 HF FP FP HM AF FP FP F £ s. d. 181 5 0 50 0 0 42 0 0 215 0 0 80 0 0 35 0 0 36 0 0 70 0 0 89 92 Worser Bay Roseneath Technical Science Visiting 40 0 0 7 14 245 17 6 140 11 6 68 5 1 6 2 7 Dl 21 135 136 1,368*3 11 646 16 8 47 19 8 109 9 0 37,366 5 3 4,097 13 5 6,505 5 8 36,147 15 0 11660 HA' r KE'S BAY. 1 2 Cook— Waipiro .. Tolaga Bay 1 2 105 6 8 180 0 0 12 17 6 23 2 0 38 i 3 Rose E. Lindsay .. John M. Nelson Emily Nelson James L. Power Ernest H. Ingpen .. Walter Junius King Mary Eliza Baker .. Minnie King N. E. Sidebottom .. William D. McClure Agnes McClure Edwin C. Bolton .. Elizabeth E. Baty .. John Marshall Mary F. Webb Louisa J. Stephenson John C. Woodward Hilda M. Pettersen Daisy Ferguson Alexander Crawford Edith H. Faram .. Margaret J. U'Ren M. F. Richardson .. John Henry Bull .. Andrew Cuthbert .. Robert Cole Edward H. Mann .. F. 0. R. Matheson .. Emma J. Evans .. Ethel M. Murray .. Lydia L. Witty Florence K. Adams Berkely Clarke Grace Evans Lulu Morgan Ada Hansen Nellie Baker Bertie Quigley E2 F HM FP M M HM AF FP M HM FP HM FP HM AF FP HM AF FP HM AF FP F PrM AM AM DM DF AF AF AF FP MP FP FP FP FP MP 103 0 0 152 0 0 29 0 0 65 10 0 109 0 0 197 13 0 85 15 0 44 0 0 92 0 0 165 8 0 53 0 0 183 6 2 50 0 0 179 8 0 92 0 0 47 0 0 210 7 6 90 1 0 20 0 0 169 9 0 90 5 0 20 0 0 60 0 0 380 18 0 253 18 0 156 16 0 275 0 0 168 18 0 142 18 0 98 14 0 83 0 0 47 10 0 43 10 0 26 0 0 26 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 25 47 3 4 5 Motu Te Karaka Ormond .. 3 4 5 46 2 6 111 19 8 321 15 3 7 12 6 11 10 0 36 3 0 26 0 0 10 10 0 D5 15 22 84 Dl D3 Mangatu .. Waerenga-a-hika 6 7 90 6 8 216 11 0 12 2 6 37 8 0 13 0 0 E3 Dl 13 77 6 7 8 Makauri .. 8 238 15 4 33 5 6 12 0 0 E2 74 Matawhero 9 330 5 11 37 1 6 31 0 0 D2 D2 87 Patutahi .. 341 15 3 40 2 3 E2 91 10 Te Arai 11 232 5 7 34 1 0 42 8 0 B3 E4 86 10 Waimata Valley Gisborne [B] 12 13 40 0 0 1,772 5 4 3 7 6 126 13 0 14 14 6 281 3 0 Dl CI D3 B2 E2 D2 D3 E4 8 576 11 12 33 21 13 14 Cook— Maraetaha Tiniroto .. Wairoa — Portland Island Frazertown 14 15 141 10 0 90 2 6 16 12 6 9 15 0 13 12 6 Frederick T. Faram John Cook E3 D4 M M 142 0 0 97 5 0 15 16 16 17 80 0 0 189 4 2 6 12 6 20 9 6 Edith Hodgkinson.. Louisa Gosnell Victoria Goldstone Robert Neill Letitia C. King Beth Ferguson Ernest Mayo Rebecca Black Esther Wright Alfred W. Croft .. A5 El F HF FP HM AF FP MP FP F M 80 0 0 170 18 6 20 0 0 233 8 0 112 7 0 40 10 0 42 10 0 20 0 0 96 0 0 45 0 0 13 47 17 Wairoa 18 426 8 3 57 10 0 65 7 0 D2 188 Mohaka .. Pohui Hawke's Bay— Petane 93 10 0 41 12 6 22 2 6 3 12 6 14 0 0 19 10 18 19 19 20 20 21 167 18 11 21 7 6 39 7 1 Elizabeth T. Bogle Albert Garry E2 HF MP 147 10 0 20 0 0 44

£.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. HAWKE'S BAY—continued.

(1) Opened in December quarter. 5—E. 1.

33

6 ° • s H Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. S3 Maintt Expej inance. iditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. o d o 1 5 I Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. P II α-p r Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Hawke's Bay— contd. Puketapu Pukititiri Napier [B] — Port Ahuriri £ b. d. 103 5 4 89 15 3 £ s. d. li io b 10 0 0 £ s. A. 8 0 0 Fanny Oliver Amelia E. Bayly .. E2* E2 F F £ s. d. 97 5 0 93 7 6 20 19 21 22 22 23 23 24 998 19 0 115 11 0 8 0 0 John Wolstenholme John H. Trimmer .. Helen Anderson Marion Moore M. M. Robertson .. Lizzie Lindsay Athena M. Seymour Glace E. Head Alice Mahon Ella McCarthy Annie Magill Thomas Morgan James Hislop John Caughley Jessie 0. Brown Emily D. Barnett .. Mary Palmer Helen B. Andrews .. Mary Magill David Ernest Leslie James P. Brown .. Kathleen Cantle Ethel G. Dugleby .. Charlotte Gilberd .. Leonard Bioheno .. Hetty Samson William Irwin Maggie Greenaway.. Alice Orosse Rachel Cangbley .. Enid Dugleby Jane E. Goulding .. Mary E. Ferguson .. Elisabeth Reid EllaM. McVay .. Minnie M. Parkinson Nellie MoVay Dl E2 El D4 HM AM AF AF FP FP FP FP FP FP F PrM AM AM AF DF AF AF AF AM AM FP FP FP MP FP MP FP FP FP FP HF AF AF FP FP FP 312 11 0 210 13 0 140 9 0 111 5 0 47 0 0 41 0 0 41 0 0 41 0 0 26 0 0 20 0 0 83 10 0 496 16 0 301 10 0 207 10 0 184 0 0 171 0 0 111 0 0 111 0 0 111 0 0 147 0 0 126 0 0 47 10 0 47 10 0 41 10 0 30 0 0 26 0 0 30 0 0 26 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 132 10 0 86 0 0 64 10 0 47 0 0 26 0 0 26 0 0 347 Western Spit Napior 873 24 25 26 16 16 8 2,305 7 4 3 0 0 271 10 6 652 8 0 104 6 2 D3 Dl D2 02 Dl El El D2 D3 E3 D5* 240 Hastings Street 27 379 10 0 El E3 E3 Hawke's Bay — Olive 95 7 6 Edward Bissell John Bissell A. E. Montgomery.. Bertha Neagle Edward Bissell, jun. James H. Taylor .. Margaret A. Balfour Daniel Gray Alice E. A. Neal .. Richard Goulding .. Phoebe Ferguson .. E. A. McCutcheon.. Annie B. Morrison.. Janet Morrison Mary Miller John Alfred Smith.. William G. Martin John Bowie Hannah I. Percy .. Annie Disher Grace L. Roaeh Florence R. George Esther E. Pickering I. M. Robertson Edith Hartshorn .. William H. Wilson Martha Stables Maude Cooper El D3 E3 HM AM AF FP MP MP F HM FP HM AF MP FP FP F HM AM AM AF AF AF FP FP FP FP MP FP FP 228 19 0 136 0 0 113 12 0 41 0 0 43 0 0 43 0 0 146 0 0 157 0 0 40 10 0 222 12 0 111 4 0 63 0 0 35 0 0 20 0 0 100 0 0 359 11 0 244 0 0 161 8 0 163 12 0 139 4 0 95 9 0 47 10 0 41 10 0 47 10 0 26 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 172 25 28 615 2 3 60 4 0 Papakura .. Meeanee .. 14 17 6 6 0 0 D3 D3 38 44 26 27 29 30 147 11 8 195 10 0 18 0 0 22 16 0 28 Taradale .. 31 447 11 6 54 15 6 4 0 0 Dl E3 164 Maraekakaho Hastings [B] 100 0 0 1,389 0 1 10 2 6 113 16 8 19 18 0 779 3 0 E3 Bl Dl 03 Lie. D3 20 524 29 30 32 33 31 Hawke's Bay— Havelock .. 3d 354 1 0 44 11 3 18 4 0 Robert Boyd Holmes Edith Helen Garry Donald McDonald .. Hubert Speight Mabel Smith Dl E3 E5* D3 HM AF MP HM FP 200 17 0 99 15 0 53 0 0 152 0 0 20 0 0 118 Pukahu .. 35 172 17 6 20 3 6 146 15 0 41 Patangata— Te Aute .. Kaikora North 3G 37 143 5 0 391 1 6 17 7 6 49 8 9 12 4 0 Christina J. Oaughley James Noble Dodds Frances E. E. Baker E3 Bl D4 F HM AF 145 0 0 211 10 0 105 4 0 37 135 32

E.—l

34

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. HAWKE'S BAY— continued.

o . d.2 © DD II Sec Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. OX, 08 +3 ® o £ « a 9 a) 6 m Maintenance. Expenditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a' o C3 O <o in 5 © -a +=■ a-i .So 1 PC o 2 o Annual § >; Salary and -& S Allowance © £ at the Rate +j? a paid during -3^ the Last ©"g Quarter of «2 the Year. I 6 & 5 Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Patangata— continued. Kaikora North — con. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Maggie T. Gray Phcebe Ingleton Harriet G. Burdett.. Agnes G. Stewart .. Katie McLean Catherine Glass Robert E. Rudman Kate Rudman Kester Kettell Donella Sutherland Louis John Plank .. Mabel T. Gallien .. FP FP F F F F HM FP M HF MP F £ s. d. 47 10 0 35 10 0 118 0 0 80 12 6 80 0 0 83 15 0 163 0 0 26 0 0 102 0 0 143 0 0 20 0 0 122 18 0 33 34 35 36 37 Tamumu Patangata Wanstead Wallingford Porongahau 38 39 40 41 42 117 0 0 87 17 6 89 16 4 83 15 0 184 5 0 22 7 6 9 5 0 7 17 6 6 17 6 23 16 0 20 0 0 6 0 0 7 10 0 20 9 0 D3 D4 29 17 13 11 53 E3 D3 38 39 Wainui Weber 43 44 99 10 0 145 4 8 12 5 0 19 19 6 14 '6 0 Lie. D4 26 48 40 Wimbledon Waipawa— Waipukurau 45 102 10 0 12 12 6 16 0 0 E4 20 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 48 49 Waipawa Hampden Ongaonga Blackburn Wakarara Makaretu Makaretu South Ashley-Clinton Takapau Ormondville 46 47 48 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 371 8 3 573 14 6 214 16 8 132 10 8 74 5 0 69 13 4 186 5 0 74 5 0 162 5 0 220 9 2 310 3 8 49 17 6 59 14 0 32 0 0 18 2 6 8 2 6 8 10 0 24 18 0 8 7 6 18 2 0 29 0 0 41 8 6 46 3 4 47 10 0 69 7 6 110 18 0 38 0 0 1 12 9 152 15 6 205 0 0 62 15 0 23 10 0 32 4 0 Charles John Cooke Lydia A. Swain Julia Frances Stubbs Rosina Huggins Arthur Jones Duncan McLennan Wilhelmina J. Rosie Ethel Barrie Carrie Tester Alice Court Frank Coe Faram .. Mabel Sadler Annie L. Grant Edmund A. King .. Annabella Wyllie .. Jane Doar Lilian Doar Christiana Fyers .. James A. Auld Ethel Ellen Martin Prank B. Curd Mary E. Tucker .. John C. Westall .. Helen Palmer Susan Fothergill .. Abel Webber Elizabeth D. Webb Ellen A. Anderson .. HildaA.Olsen Amy Siddells William H. Johnston Anna E. Friberg Mary Brabazon Clara King Katie King Ada Alice Carter Ethel Waugh Richard P. Soundy George Harvey Isabella A. Miller .. Ellen A. Roythorne Louise M. Marsh .. B. E. E. Tansley .. Arthur Soundy Mary E. GuyCI E3 Dl D4 El D3 Dl D2 D3 Bl E3 HM AF FP FP HM AM AF FP FP FP HM FP F M F HF FP F HM FP HM FP HM AF FP HM AF FP FP FP HM AF FP HF FP HF FP HM AM AF FP FP FP MP FP 205 16 0 103 6 0 46 10 0 26 0 0 238 15 0 142 10 0 116 4 0 35 10 0 35 10 0 20 0 0 170 10 0 53 10 0 143 15 0 81 0 0 80 0 0 149 0 0 20 0 0 72 0 0 148 0 0 26 0 0 158 16 10 35 0 0 176 0 0 91 10 0 20 0 0 218 19 0 104 5 0 41 0 0 41 0 0 35 0 0 186 13 0 97 8 0 26 0 0 168 13 6 20 0 0 140 0 0 20 0 0 293 18 0 199 15 0 133 17 0 47 0 0 41 0 0 41 0 0 43 0 0 26 0 0 140 180 74 39 17 11 45 16 39 67 95 50 Norsewood 57 465 14 6 53 7 9 12 10 0 Dl E4 D5 132 Makotuku 309 3 0 42 18 9 37 10 0 04 E3 102 51 58 52 Matamau 59 180 13 1 21 2 0 E3 43 53 Umuaturoa 60 152 3 6 20 12 0 29 15 7 03 40 Dannevirke [B| 61 820 12 0 83 8 3 67 15 0 El D3 E3 302 Waipawa— Kumeroa 55 54 55 56 57 Heretaunga Mangaatua Woodville [BJ 62 63 64 65 188 17 6 124 15 0 211 11 6 894 12 9 27 10 0 14 15 0 26 14 0 98 18 3 24 0 0 9 17 3 24 0 0 Louisa H. Burden .. Emily Gregory Miriam Kuhtze Edmund Jardine .. Eleanor Ohadwick Andrew Stevenson .. Benjamin Bagley .. Ruth Seymour Ella Mabel Moore .. E. E. Barkwith Margaret R. Westoby Milton Grant Mabel H. Monteith Caroline M. Nicholls E2 E3 D3 D2 D3 D2 E3 E5 D4* HF FP F HM FP HM AM AF AF FP FP MP FP FP 167 0 0 20 0 0 137 5 0 167 4 0 32 0 0 291 16 0 199 5 0 134 0 0 99 0 0 47 0 0 35 0 0 43 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 29 50 309 Waipawa— Woodlands Maharahara East .. Maharahara West .. 29 32 15 58 59 66 07 08 106 0 0 120 15 0 79 2 6 14 i 6 8 6 6 Lilian Sarah Cole .. M. M. E. Flesher .. Isabel Smith E3 D4 E3 F F F 106 0 0 140 0 0 76 17 6 20,061 5 3 2,221 8 5 3,549 15 5 20,212 1 0 6,448

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. MARLBOROUGH.

(1) Closed before third quarter. ( 2 ) Aided school. ( s ) School opened ;after third quarter.

35

§5 Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. O rA 6§ '43 « Maint. Expe: iditure for th< mance. Tear. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff %t the End of the Year. § I 9 aa §.§ s it 3 pS o Annual § u Salary and <v $ Allowance § jj at the Kate £ p paid during the Last g> "g Quarter of d^ the Year. & B j4 Teachers' Salariei and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Marlborough— Kekerangu Cape Campbell Blind River Starborough Awatere Blenheim [B] — Blenheim Boys £ s. d. 54 15 0 18 5 0 69 1 6 41 5 0 5 10 0 & s. d. £ s. d. 11 0 0 £ s. d. 54 0 0 10 0 0 78 8 0 57 0 0 1 2 3 4 0 "i 0 3 7 0 265 15 6 6 10 0 Mary F. Sumner .. Gelia Gill .. W. F. Wood A. B. Craig P F M F 13 2 23 14 Blenheim Girls 1,219 8 9 108 2 6 102 4 9 C David A. Sturrock Charles Simson .. H. J. Robinson Mary M. Brown .. Edith A. Keys RhodaO. Barnett.. Annie M. Harris .. -j Grace Cribb Clara Farmer Arthur Wanden .. Margaret Morgan.. Mary Linton Florence M. Harris Lucie C. Carter .. (_ Annie Healy Dl E2 E2 r>2 HM AM AM AF FP FP FP FP FP MP HF AF FP FP FP 261 10 0 150 0 0 84 0 0 115 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 200 0 0 90 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 16 0 0 345 152 m E2 Marlborough— Springlands Harry J. Howard .. Emily H. Millington Mabel G. Nicoll .. Harry Ladley Gladys Prichard Ada B. E. Ladley .. Louisa Hiley Mary 0. Williams .. Daisy Kinsey David H. Wilmot .. S. N. Peake George E. Wilmot .. Mary O. Huddleston Charles C. Howard.. Mary J. Hay Katie Thompson Rosalie G. Williams D2 D3 HM AF FP HM AF FP F F S HM AF HM AF HM AF AF FP 173 14 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 180 0 0 80 0 0 40 0 0 99 16 8 115 13 0 12 0 0 144 4 6 75 0 0 170 0 0 67 10 0 200 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 248 0 8 31 3 7 7 0 0 87 Grovetown 300 0 0 34 12 4 0 15 6 Dl D2 104 5 6 Marlborough Town.. Marshlands 10 11 90 11 6 123 12 9 11 12 2 13 15 8 3 16 0 D2 31 30 7 Tuamarina 12 219 8 6 21 17 9 106 10 11 60 8 Waitohi 13 237 10 0 19 17 7 3 11 0 Dl 55 9 Picton [B] .. 14 420 0 0 46 10 6 18 6 01 E2 E3 D4» 159 10 11 12 Marlborough— The Grove Cullensville Havelock .. 15 16 17 49 10 0 91 13 4 275 0 0 14 14 3 27 4 3 48 10 0 5 10 8 44 1 6 L. E. G. Beauchamp Herbert A. Stratford Jacob H. Reynolds.. Mary J. Matthews .. Eugenie M. Douslin Ruth M. D. Mclntyre Alfred W. Blake .. F. E. Anderson Laura Matthews .. Ada G. M. Ingall .. E. W. Wanden Ellen M. Tosswill .. Kate H. Robinson .. Florence Pritchard Charles A. Ogilvie .. Margaret Paynter .. Joseph Ward William Tissiman .. A. M. R. Williams .. Lily M. Logan : Laura Jefiries Bertha Wadswarth.. Myra Keys Gertrude Fisher E2 El D2 D3 F M HM AF HF AF M F F HF AF F F F M S M HM AF F F F F F 48 0 0 100 0 0 200 0 0 75 0 0 128 10 0 75 0 0 74 10 0 25 0 0 115 13 0 126 11 0 75 0 0 90 0 0 37 0 0 110 18 6 140 0 0 12 0 0 62 10 0 190 0 0 80 0 0 111 12 0 67 10 0 33 0 0 15 0 0 11 24 76 13 Canvastown 18 204 12 9 21 5 3 118 3 0 59 14 15 16 Deep Greek Rai Valley (») Haveloek Suburban Okaramio 19 20 21 22 68 5 10 28 0 0 115 15 3 201 10 0 2 14 0 14 "l 0 20 5 0 31 13 6 26 15 0 31 11 6 B2 E2* D2 D2 21 5 38 52 17 Kaituna Waikakaho ( 2 ) Spring Greek Fairhall 23 24 25 2G 90 0 0 40 0 0 100 18 6 152 0 0 5 4 0 5 18 9 E2 24 8 31 34 18 19 11 16 1 14 1 4 15 0 D2 El 20 21 Omaka Renwick 27 28 56 2 6 265 16 8 27 9 6 222 12 4 469 13 6 Dl E3 E2 E2 16 86 22 23 24 Onamalutu Wairau Valley Fabian's Valley ( 2 ) .. North Bank ( 2 ) Birch Hill f>) Sounds — Port Underwood ( 2 ).. Oyster Bay ( 2 ) Robin Hood Bay ( a ) East Bay ( 2 ) Peach Bay ( 2 ) Scarborough Run ( 2 ) Tβ Awaite ( 2 ) Te Weka ( a ) Opua Bay ( 2 ) Tahuahua ( 2 ) Watamonga ( 2 ) Lochmara (') 29 80 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 111 5 3 65 0 0 34 0 0 17 10 0 42 0 0 12 10 0 36 0 0 14 10 0 3 15 0 18 15 0 66 5 0 27 0 0 20 0 0 19 15 0 16 5 0 17 10 0 11 18 1 3 0 0 1 10 0 3 0 0 Lottie M. Brewer .. William Graham .. E3 F M 37 0 0 37 '6 0 31 18 8 3 ( 8 ) 8 (1) 8 0 15 0 Agnes Williams Clark Rampling H. Baxter M. P. Johnston F F M M F 15 0 0 15 0 0 70 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 (,) 3 3 19 5 5 N. R. McCormick .. Clarissa Gullery F F 20 0 0 20 0 0 f 1 ) 4 4

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. MARLBOROUGH— continued.

(i) Aided school. ( 2 ) Temporary.

36

o'.H as HCrQ O ° Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in whioh situate. *o,-; og © c3 5 « Maintenance. Expenditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. © 3 a O -^ "■HP flr-i « d o •1 !•§ 3 £ i ® o Annual I § u Salary and -a S Allowance © & at the Rate £a paid during the Last g'g Quarter of =s^ the Year. © eh > -4 Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Sounds — continued. Fourfathom Bay (') 46 Nydia Bay (i) .. 47 Manaroa (!) .. 48 Waitaria Bay (') .. 49 Taradale (i) .. 50 The Head (*) .. 51 Portage (») .. 52 Broughton's Bay (*) 53 Skiddaw (') .. 54 Crail Bay (*) .. 55 Wilson's Bay I 1 ) .. 56 Brightlands (*) .. 57 Beatrix Bay (') .. 58 Laverique Bay (') .. 59 Ferndale (i) .. 60 Tuna Bay (i) .. 61 Wakaretu Bay (') .. 62 Elmslie Bay i 1 ) .. 63 Deep Bay (») .. 64 Tira Ora (') .. 65 Stephen's Island (») 66 £ s. d. 11 5 0 21 15 0 31 0 0 37 0 0 26 0 0 25 0 0 20 0 0 14 11 8 23 15 0 20 0 0 17 5 0 23 15 0 25 0 0 24 18 4 20 0 0 19 18 4 14 10 0 11 5 0 37 0 0 52 10 0 28 0 0 £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 45 0 0 25 0 0 29 0 0 33 0 0 29 0 0 25 0 0 20 0 0 25 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 29 0 0 20 0 0 25 0 0 29 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 29 0 0 15 0 0 37 0 0 45 0 0 25 3 3 0 Mary F. Gallagher.. E. Sutclifie Annie M. Dixon E. W. Henderson .. Ethel C. McMahon P. J. Burton Clara Godsiff H. M. M. Patrick .. Amy Rufiell Helen Pullman Alice Winchester .. William Andrews .. C. A. Leov W. H. Palmer Mary C. Best Maude Player Hilda Hutchinson .. Mary E. Moss Leila Hewitt Edith McMahon .. E8 F F F F P M P F F F F M M M F F F F F F 10 5 6 7 6 5 4 5 4 4 6 4 5 6 4 4 6 3 8 10 2 16 6 Expendituri i not apporti 55 19 6 9 10 14 6 4 ioned. Plans, supervision, &c. Offioe furniture District generally 5,813 2 1 466 11 10 1,603 8 3 5,843 18 2 1,801 ILSON. Nelson [B] — Boys' Central 1,002 13 4 355 19 6 3 17 6 F. G. Gibbs Frederic V. Knapp William F. Worley Henry C. Sigley William A. Rumbold Alfred T. White .. Thomas C. C. Scott Bernard R. Gapper Herbert Sanders Lucy H. Kitching .. Elizabeth M. Giblin Elizabeth Leach Annie Salmond Gwendoline Wright Georgiana F. Sun ley Elizabeth Shirtliff .. Rosa C. Scott Mary Anne Dement Mary E. Kitching .. Ada Bradley F. Stoddart Jane A. Bond Amy F. Johnson .. Margaret Hughes .. Eliza H. Sadd Ethel L. McEachen Beryl Moore Frances Hughes Janet McKenzie ( 2 ) A2 Dl Dl D3 D3 HM AM AM AM AM MP MP MP MP HF FP HF FP FP HF FP HP AF AF FP HF AF AF AF AF FP FP FP FP 300 0 0 200 0 0 185 0 0 120 0 0 96 0 0 30 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 18 0 0 100 0 0 30 0 0 100 0 0 30 0 0 18 0 0 100 0 0 24 0 0 180 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 24 0 0 175 0 0 100 0 0 72 0 0 72 0 0 60 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 18 0 0 292 Breok Street Tasman Street 2 3 122 14 8 148 0 0 37 4 0 E2 E2 E2 E4 78 130 Hampden Street 4 104 11 3 E2 81 Haven Road 5 384 13 4 35 0 0 El E2 E2 163 Toitoi Valley 571 12 6 19 6 0 B4 E2 C2 D2 E2 D4 251 Waimea— Clifton Terrace HillSide .. Happy Valley Cable Bay (i) Stoke D4 7 8 9 10 11 80 0 0 79 0 0 101 1 5 22 6 8 180 0 0 38 6 2 Pamela E. Bolton .. Ada Thompson Selina M. Warnock E2 D3 F F F 80 0 0 80 0 0 96 0 0 22 24 31 20 16 7 John Naylor Blanche I. Taylor .. Dl HM FP 150 0 0 30 0 0 47 Richmond [B] — Richmond Boys' 216 17 6 45 17 2 8 10 0 Edward Cowles Ernest J. Humphrey Edith E. Johnson .. Minnie J. Croucher Dl HM MP HF AF 200 0 0 18 0 0 120 0 0 60 0 0 12 54 Richmond Girls' 13 180 0 0 D2 E3 65

E.—l.

Table No. 8.-List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. NELSON— continued.

(1) Aided school. ( 2 ) Also free board and lodging. (3) On leave. (4) Temporary. (5) Miss Organ lives at home, and teaches her brother and sister.

37

d 2 .53 II I 1 Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 6§ gg Sg°«1 Maintenance. . Buildings, Teachers' Other Fur H™' Salaries and Ordinary Arninrutus Allowances. Expenditure. A PP aratus - Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. Teachers' Nampa, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the State at the End of the Year. § O a J 8 Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. v O a u Si's <8b I Waimea— Appleby 14 £ s. d. 148 0 0 £ s. d. 26 14 10 £ s. d. 3 15 3 George A. Robbie .. Ada J. Holyoake Martin C. R. A. von Gembitsky Bertha Black William A. Hall .. William H. Bryant Fanny S. Jordan .. Annie Hill Thornton Best Herbert Langford .. Bessie F. Johnson .. Harold L. Ellis Gertrude N. Baigent Frederick B. Peart Florence A. Franklyn Kate B. Bird D3 HM FP M £ s. d. 130 0 0 18 0 0 60 0 0 44 Redwood's Valley .. 15 60 0 0 15 6 Ranzau Hope Brightwater 16 17 IS 97 6 8 103 6 8 195 8 4 28 17 2 37 10 8 6 14 8 10 0 B4 D4 CI D3 D2 F M HM AF F M HM FP HM AF HM AF F 105 0 0 110 0 0 150 0 0 54 0 0 112 0 0 36 0 0 150 0 0 30 0 0 150 0 0 54 0 0 150 0 0 72 0 0 96 0 0 33 25 51 7 River Terrace Wairoa (*).. Waimea West 19 20 21 105 6 8 28 0 0 180 0 0 18 16 10 3 0 0 110 Dl D4 E2 E4 El E3 E2 41 8 44 8 9 Spring Grove 22 202 5 0 23 7 5 20 7 6 57 10 Lower Wakefield Boys' and .Tuniors' Lower Wakefield Girls' Pigeon Valley Eighty-eight Valley Upper Wakefield 23 218 1 8 45 13 7 51 12 6 59 24 86 0 0 27 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 Foxhill Gordon (*) Motueka Valley ( J ) .. Motupiko Upper Motupiko Hope Valley (*) Tadmor Sherry Wangapeka (') Baton (') .. Stanley Brook Churchill Win's Valley Dovedale Woodstock (!) Pokororo Ngatimoti Orinoco Neudorf Upper Moutere 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34 35 36 37 38 39 40 41 42 43 44 45 46 47 72 13 4 41 13 4 233 10 0 203 15 0 51 0 0 65 0 0 100 0 0 76 13 4 20 6 8 111 13 4 88 13 4 59 0 0 39 6 8 128 6 8 99 0 0 77 0 0 103 1 9 63 8 10 80 0 0 69 13 4 81 6 8 88 0 0 202 16 8 6 3 7 29 0 3 27 10 10 7 9 7 9 6 10 10 7 11 10 8 6 14 1 2 14 11 11 8 9 9 5 12 1 16 11 5 15 6 7 26 17 1 2 10 5 0 0 13 16 0 11 12 3 27 0 6 17 0 9 16 0 Sarah Alice Cowles Ellen H. Quinton .. Edward Edridge .. Martha J. Gilbert .. John T. Veysey Esther E. Gilbert .. Florence Smith Catherine M. McLean Harrison Evans Alice E. Bisley Ethel Ladley ( 2 ) .. Henry Collins Alice E. Fittall Caroline Wray Hollis J. Hill Frank Hedley Smith Ellen L. Cresswell .. Minnie Barber Annie E. Coleman .. R. Kenneth Cowles Lydia Mary Bradley Ellen G. Haycock .. Matilda Brereton .. Margaret Laird William H. Arnold Ada Desaunais Loekhart D.Easton Minnie C. Demment Olive E. 0. Oresswell E2 El E3 El D3 E4 El E2* E3 D3 D3 E4 E2 F F HM AF HM AF F F M F F M F F M M F F F M F F F F HM AF HM FP FP 72 0 0 56 0 0 170 0 0 72 0 0 160 0 0 48 0 0 56 0 0 68 0 0 100 0 0 72 0 0 24 0 0 120 0 0 96 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 135 0 0 100 0 0 76 0 0 104 0 0 64 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 88 0 0 88 0 0 130 0 0 72 0 0 155 0 0 18 0 0 18 0 0 17 12 85 83 14 17 21 18 6 26 31 15 10 42 32 19 34 16 22 20 24 27 39 18 19 20 9 12 7 11 11 0 22 18 8 5 '6 0 5 18 6 21 22 8 6 0 33 17 0 E2 E4 D3 D3 Dl 23 24 14 'a 5 18 1 3 25 Lower Moutere 48 197 17 3 33 14 4 174 7 5 01 62 Wills's Road Pangatotara Sandy Cove (!) Motueka 49 50 51 52 88 2 0 27 0 0 339 1 10 14 0 11 121 0 4 24 17 9 R. G. D. Deck ( 4 ) .. Hilda F. Ladley (2) T. G. Malcolm (») .. Arthur Malcolm ( 4 ) Frances E. Guy Frederick A. Bisley Ellen M. Haycock .. Frederick Neve Jessie Salmond Arthur Trevella Lina Drummond .. Rachel McLean ( 2 ) Mabel McLean F F HM AM AF MP FP HM AF HM FP F F 80 0 0 40 0 0 23 12 129 26 27 34 2 0 01 200 0 0 80 0 0 30 0 0 24 0 0 160 0 0 60 0 0 130 0 0 30 0 0 E2 D4* 34 Riwaka 210 11 8 B2 E3 D4 70 28 53 43 9 1 Brooklyn 54 150 16 8 37 Wratten's ( x ) Sandy Bay (*) Collingwood— Awaroa ( J ) Totaranui (*) Ligar Bay Q) Lower Takaka 55 56 34 1 0 5 17 9 32 6 0 8 29 30 31 32 38 Central Takaka Long Plain Anatoki Motupipi 57 58 59 60 61 62 63 64 35 0 0 9 0 0 6 0 0 202 18 4 148 1 8 80 0 0 73 13 4 131 13 4 5 0 6 23 18 8 18 3 4 11 3 2 10 9 11 17 13 10 6 12 0 Elizabeth A. Winter Lily Pike («) Maud Organ ( 5 ) William H. Boyes .. May Page Elizabeth A. Hey ward Thomas Lander Eleanor B. Symea .. Annie E. Dykes E. F. Ainsworth .. Marion C. Hood Annie K. Hood (') .. Annie 0. Frank Amy Barnett Lily M. Dykes F. M. B. Packard .. Annie McBride Dl E3 B4 B4 El F F F HM FP FP HM FP F F HF FP HF FP F F F 36 0 0 12 0 0 8 0 0 150 0 0 30 0 0 24 0 0 130 0 0 18 0 0 80 0 0 72 0 0 108 0 0 18 0 0 104 0 0 30 0 0 28 0 0 68 0 0 16 0 0 9 3 2 61 43 22 17 44 22 7 0 34 East Takaka 65 136 6 8 17 12 0 El 40 Sunnyside ( J ) Upper Takaka (') .. Gledhill's (i) 66 67 68 49 0 0 78 10 0 12 13 4 6 12 4 10 10 5 5 0 0 Lie. 7 17 4

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. NELSON — continued.

(1) Aided sohool. ( 2 ) Temporary. (S) Also free board and lodging.

38

O 4i y< a is Sα) Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the lattnr marked [B]) in which situate. O Cβ Main t< Expe: tditure for thi inance. Tear. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Namee, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Tear. ! 3 I O ft I 4) O Annual j § u Salary and j Allowance j § £ at the Rate j £3 paid during **l^ the Laat * "g Quarter of ta£ the Year. §3 & 5 Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 35 36 37 Collingwood— contd. Scott's (!) .. Waingaro C) Pariwhakaho Collingwood Rockville Bedstead (*) Kaituna Riverdale (') Pern Town Pakawau Westport [B] — Westport Boys' 69 70 71 72 78 14 75 76 77 78 £ s. d. 6 0 0 44 9 2 80 0 0 160 0 0 80 0 0 39 10 0 75 6 8 91 6 8 108 6 8 56 6 8 £ s. d. 7 12 5 11 18 9 17 16 2 11 13 8 6 3 6 12 6 8 11 5 0 13 4 7 8 0 11 £ s. d. 5 0 0 Kathleen Drummond Jessie Winter Rose E. Clifford .. J. W. Humphreys .. Mary Hunter Janette C. Manson Lilly Gertrude Riley Rose W. Dykes Prank D. Best Alice C. G. Murray Amelia M. S, Beuke EH E2 131 P P P HM PP P P P M P P £ s. d. 16 0 0 68 0 0 80 0 0 130 0 0 30 0 0 80 0 0 36 0 0 80 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 68 0 0 2 14 21 35 21 9 22 22 27 16 38 7 10 0 r>4 39 40 E2 4 0 0 41 79 555 0 0 121 4 0 60 0 6 David Oossgrove E. B. B. Boswell .. Donald E. Porsyth Thomas McCann .. Jean L. Maokay Mary E. Gothard .. Prances R. Jaoobsen Annie Martin Helen B. Rosa Amelia Marris ( 2 ) .. G. Ellen Josephson Mary Virtue Emma Brown Dl E2 HM AM AM MP PP PP HP AP AP PP PP HP PP 240 0 0 150 0 0 84 0 0 24 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 160 0 0 84 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 100 0 0 40 0 0 185 Westport Girls' 372 16 4 D2 E3 D3 140 80 Westport Juniors' .. 141 13 6 E2 107 81 Buller— Rochfort Terrace (*) Waimangaroa 82 88 76 13 4 276 0 0 11 1 11 29 9 11 5 0 0 Jane A. McElwee .. Thomas J. Griffin .. Isabel E. Wright ( 2 ) Mary Syron Wilhelm H. Dencker Mrs. Deneker ( 2 ) .. Marie J. Morris Mary Stephen Catherine Milligan ( 2 ) John A. Kennedy .. Ada Wardrope Kate Johnston Charles J. Hansard Robert E. Satohell.. Annie McCarthy .. Charles A. Eves Agnes Eves Arthur Douglas Martha Quinn Alice L. Williams .. Barbara M. Pettit .. Minnie W. Robb .. Catherine Curtayne Samuel W. Street .. John W. Maloney .. Bridget Molloy W. G. McDonald .. Emma Pox Louis Oliver Baigent Prancesca Horner .. E. A. McGavin Henry George Hill Frederica Ullmer ( 2 ) Catherine McCarthy D2 P HM AP PP HM AP AP PP PP HM PP PP M HM PP M S HM PP P P P P M HM PP HM AP HM AP P HM PP P 80 0 0 180 0 0 72 0 0 24 0 0 225 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 30 0 0 18 0 0 160 0 0 30 0 0 24 0 0 110 0 0 150 0 0 30 0 0 110 0 0 5 0 0 130 0 0 24 0 0 88 0 0 96 0 0 80 0 0 44 0 0 80 0 0 150 0 0 24 0 0 150 0 0 60 0 0 155 0 0 42 0 0 80 0 0 160 0 0 18 0 0 72 0 0 21 107 42 48 Denniston H'i 444 0 1 70 14 11 64 14 3 Dl 155 Burnett's Pace 195 18 4 4 19 11 D2 76 85 Griffiths' Mill (i) .. Granity Creek 86 87 110 0 0 203 1 4 14 11 9 23 15 1 0 18 0 11 4 8 E2Lie. 26 64 44 Summerlea (') 88 101 13 4 11 18 11 27 11 1 26 Coal Creek 89 162 15 0 20 8 0 20 10 6 D2 41 45 Lie. E2 46 47 Karamea Promised Land Land of Promise ( 7 ).. Little Wanganui (*).. Kongahu (') Addison's Plat 90 91 92 93 94 95 81 12 8 96 0 0 56 16 8 40 0 0 79 13 4 172 6 8 12 4 1 14 3 5 10 4 11 19 10 9 5 0 0 24 26 19 11 20 54 10 10 0 23 0 7 19 17 3 20 1 0 E4 D2 48 D3 49 Cape Poulwind 96 211 13 4 24 0 0 9 3 6 60 50 Charleston 97 199 19 4 37 11 3 4 0 6 D4 71 51 52 Brighton Lyell 98 99 74 12 8 208 16 6 10 10 8 21 0 8 El 20 43 Gibbs' Town (') Inangahua— Matairi (*) Pern Plat Murchison 100 16 10 0 2 10 6 84 18 10 15 16 24 68 54 101 102 103 58 6 8 66 13 4 100 0 0 8 6 9 9 6 11 12 17 4 18 6 5 4 0 10 0 0 Ellen Keen Lucy E. White H. B. Huddleston .. Jessie Watson Elizabeth Lynch .. M. L. Colthart ( 8 ) .. Andrew Salmond .. Annie Drummond ( s ) Louisa P. Brewer ( 8 ) William E. Poole .. Agnes Gannon B. P. P. Coleman .. Julia Slattery Henrietta Phair Elizabeth Walshe .. James H. Harkness William S. Austin .. Helen Galloway E2 P P M S P P M P P M P HM PP P P HM AM AP 60 0 0 68 0 0 100 0 0 5 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 44 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 100 0 0 Matakitaki (*) Lester's (') Glenroy ( l ) Maruia ( 1 ).. Owen Junction ( : ) .. Inangahua Junction 1 Inangahua Landing' Capleston 104 105 106 107 108 109 110 111 37 13 4 24 0 0 40 16 8 20 0 0 11 0 0 100 0 0 13 13 4 176 15 0 5 6 5 6 3 8 10 0 0 8 6 11 5 11 0 8 1 11 7 39 0 3 7 '7 0 D4 20 ■4 62 259 14 7 D3 150 0 0 24 0 0 48 0 0 60 0 0 240 0 0 150 0 0 100 0 0 55 56 Cronadun Waitahu ( J ) Reefton 112 113 114 61 13 4 52 6 8 670 13 0 8 12 5 7 12 4 74 7 6 9 15 3 11 14 280 57 126 18 6 B2 E2 E2*

39

E.—l

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &a. — continued. NELSON— continued.

(1) Aided school. (2) Millerton school is in course of erection.

o . ol fa 3J mJS a a oco Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. o_; *>% £<n .S© a «s © 5 2 * a © ©60 o Maintenance. Expenditure for th< Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. © a O HH, 03 -ho H a ° "3 ohi 5 b5 *J CD I ©" I ° Annual | § u Salary and ; flJS Allowance ! © # at the Rate i £3 paid during ! *$& the Last ; Quarter of ! <&'£ the Tear. ] ££ I r> I o Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. 58 Inangahua— continued, Reefton— continued. Black's Point 115 £ s. d. 268 18 4 £ s. d. 27 15 10 £ s. d. Louisa H. Moller .. Isabel Garth Jane A. Molloy James F. Wilson .. Richard E. Green .. Euphemia J. Moore Margaret King Isabella Kenyon Amelia McLean Robert E. Wylde .. E'. J. Fitzgerald E3* El E3 AF FP FP MP HM AF FP F F HM MP £ s. d. 84 0 0 30 0 0 24 0 0 60 0 0 175 0 0 72 0 0 30 0 0 76 0 0 72 0 0 130 0 0 24 0 0 59 60 Progress ( J ) Merrijigs Little Grey 116 117 118 69 13 4 73 13 4 155 6 8 10 4 3 10 12 8 18 16 2 12 '6 3 45 3 3 D2 1! II 41 Millerton p) 119 6 12 6 Exchange on cheques Rents, not chargeable to particular schools Refund of contractors' deposits 5 0 6 Expenditw, 0 9 9 12 10 0 ■e not appoTi %oned. 15 0 0 15,625 0 0 5,01! 15,408 13 5 2,006 9 4 1,559 8 5 rREY. 1 2 Grey— Kynnersley Totara Flat 1 2 75 0 0 148 6 8 3 0 0 21 5 0 Jane Ryall Thomas Thomas Margaret Barnhill .. Edith Owens Jeanette K. Erickson William A. Bundle.. Elizabeth Turnbull Michael Malone Mabel Beresford Ada Harrison Emily Algie Duncan Corbett E. M. Robinson Dl F HM FP F F HM AF HM AF HF FP M F 75 0 0 135 0 0 20 0 0 75 0 0 60 0 0 142 10 0 80 0 0 140 0 0 60 0 0 106 0 0 40 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 10 37 Granville .. Orwell Creek Ahaura 3 4 5 75 0 0 60 0 0 224 7 6 6 10 0 13 0 0 25 1 4 Lie. 13 11 57 8 4 D2 E2 E5 5 Hatter's .. 6 201 3 1 18 18 3 49 6 Ngahere .. 7 146 0 0 14 8 3 El 36 7 8 Red Jack's No Town .. Brunner [B] — Taylorville 8 9 77 10 0 100 0 0 33 15 0 17 17 2 El 11 22 9 Dobson 10 555 1 10 27 2 0 61 11 3 Edward Askew Scott Elizabeth A. Scott.. John F. Williams .. Eliza J. Sweetman.. Agnes Hall Dorothy Dunn Elizabeth Griffiths.. Mary Watson Francis E. O'Flynn Emma Bishop Isabella Barnett Annie M. J. Crowley E. T. M. M. Barkley Dl El HM AF AM AF FP FP FP FP HM AF FP HF AF 220 0 0 95 0 0 60 0 0 55 0 0 50 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 10 0 0 175 0 0 80 0 0 15 0 0 117 0 0 60 0 0 211 10 11 266 5 0 26 4 0 D2 D4 11 Richardson 12 177 0 0 15 15 10 D3 12 GreyMaori Gully Kokiri 13 14 72 0 0 105 0 0 15 1 6 2 9 0 Elizabeth L. Crowley Alice White Annie McGuire Alice M. Kemple .. Annie McLaughlan John A. Bromley .. Jane Sotheran Allan A. Adams Harry Smith John H. Malcolm .. Bessie Batchelor .. Christina Blair W. C. Skoglund .. Edith Easson Arthur John Wickes Sarah J. Bradshaw.. Annie E. West Rachel Garland Edwina Roche William J, Jamieson Leonard de Berry .. E4 El F HF FP F F HM AF PM AM AM DF AF AF AF MP FP FP FP FP MP MP 72 0 0 100 0 0 10 0 0 100 0 0 60 0 0 185 0 0 80 0 0 250 0 0 200 0 0 170 0 0 120 0 0 100 0 0 75 0 0 75 0 0 55 0 0 50 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 35 0 0 10 0 0 a 13 14 15 Dunganville Marsden .. Cobden 15 16 17 106 13 4 60 0 0 265 0 0 7 13 0 10 8 5 19 19 0 El Dl E2 Dl Bl Dl El D2 E3 E2 E3 E3* E4* 2: 51 16 Greymouth [B] 18 1,241 13 7 77 2 1 295 4 5 421

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. GREY — continued.

(1) Aided school. ( 2 ) Household school.

40

o.S la II a « o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. ox 68 *3 gen '"5-2 a d o ™ © 03 Sft a © o ffi Mainti Expenditure for th inance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. © a a O -P eg «rt o 'I 2« m o Annual § Salary and 'g-S Allowance © «j at the Rate 1 S a paid during | ■< & the Last s'g Quarter of <sl the Year. © b > < Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 17 18 19 Grey— Paroa Westbrook Greenstone Teremakau Twelve-mile Moonlight.. Moana Blackball .. 20 21 22 23 24 25 2G 19 £ s. d. 247 10 0 95 0 0 155 0 0 50 0 0 50 0 0 90 0 0 202 10 0 75 0 0 £ s. d. 3 0 0 3 10 0 3 0 0 £ s. d. 30 9 3 91 5 3 10 8 4 6 16 4 10 0 3 15 0 25 3 2 John Frederick Gloy Frances M. Kemple Katy Byrne Naomi H. Billett .. Charles J. Patriok .. Violet Patrick Elizabeth Firmin .. Alice C. Anderson .. Mildred McDonald John Walsh Henry Harrison Arabella Smith Ellen Quinn Helena Devereux .. Janie McKenney .. D2 El El HM AF FP F HM FP F F F M HM AF F F F £ s. d. 142 10 0 80 0 0 25 0 0 95 0 0 135 0 0 20 0 0 50 0 0 80 0 0 50 0 0 100 0 0 145 0 0 60 0 0 75 0 0 35 0 0 50 0 0 56 25 28 9 16 8 16 50 20 21 22 23 E2 24 25 26 Tekinga Upper Moonlight .. Nobles 27 28 29 35 0 0 50 0 0 57 6 8 3 0 0 1 10 0 1 10 0 10 0 0 39 4 4 75 18 3 14 8 11 Expenditun not apporti 41 3 7 ioned. Plans, supervision, and fees •• I I •• I 5,080 0 0 1,390 5,063 7 8 119 14 1 946 0 1 WESTLAND. Westland — Arahura Road 242 9 3 5 3 10 34 10 6 John J. Henderson Margaret Henderson Maud McKinnon .. Honora M. Crowley Margaret Ritchie .. Adelaide McNicol .. Margaret Sullivan .. William Ward C. M. McCarthy .. Mary M. Sullivan .. Thomas Henry Gill George K. Sinclair Annie E. B. Batten Esther Ward Marion Bain Jack .. Annie E. Orr May L. Macfarlane Alice May Greville Dorothy Moore D2 HM AF FP F F F F HM AF F HM AM AF AF AF FP FP FP FP 128 16 2 67 10 0 40 0 0 64 16 9 42 15 0 23 15 0 42 15 0 132 16 1 75 0 0 75 0 0 312 7 6 185 0 0 120 6 3 90 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 15 0 0 41 Blue Spur (i) Bruce Bay f 1 ) Five mile Beach ( 2 ) Gillespie's ( l ) Goldsborough 2 8 4 5 6 76 9 0 47 10 0 21 7 6 42 7 1 207 18 3 1 19 9 18 5 9 20 0 E5* 14 9 5 9 49 3 4 8 17 11 9 8 0 5 16 0 CI E4* D3 Bl Dl El Dl Dl Callaghan's ( x ) Hokitika [B] 7 8 84 10 0 875 11 3 34 14 8 7 16 0 95 13 2 19 272 Westland — Humphreys ( x ) Inter-Wanganui (*) Jackson Cecilia K. Smith .. George S. Robertson Williamina I. Aitken Kate Aitken Mary Sale Mary J. Potts Margaret C. Mcintosh Wilhelmina S. Potts Ellen Coady Nora L. Wells Eva Benjamin E4 F M HF Mon. HF AF F F F F F 72 10 4 47 10 0 124 8 5 12 0 0 126 18 2 75 0 0 23 15 0 60 4 2 60 4 2 57 0 0 92 0 0 9 10 11 78 19 2 47 10 0 136 16 3 1 16 3 10 3 10 17 0 0 11 8 9 E2 17 10 35 Kanieri 12 207 17 9 5 8 3 28 5 6 El D2 54 Karangarua ( 2 ) Kawhaka (*) Koitirangi ( J ) Kokatahi (Upper) (*) Kokatahi (Lower) .. Kumara [B] — Kumara 13 14 15 16 17 22 11 3 61 14 6 57 16 0 60 4 3 96 10 0 1 14 6 7 15 0 2 17 6 3 19 7 12 17 6 5 13 13 12 22 17 0 3 9 0 18 822 1 9 36 0 6 180 13 9 Thomas A. Walker David A. Strachan.. Mary J. Forster Albert H. Seebeck .. Mary M. Moore Annie Mcintosh George F. Rudkin .. Amy F. Jamieson .. Amanda G. Preston Robert J. Brown .. Dl A3 Dl D4 D2 E4 HM AM AF AM AF FP MP FP HF MP 268 13 5 170 0 0 120 6 3 110 0 0 70 0 0 40 0 0 35 0 0 15 0 0 85 0 0 25 0 0 254 Dillman's 19 110 6 0 8 17 6 10 50 10 11 Westland— Mahitahi ( 2 ) Okarito f 1 ) Okuru and Haast (*) Otira (Lower) ( J ) Otira (Upper) ( 5 ) .. Rangiriri (') ._^ 20 21 22 23 24 25 16 1 11 65 3 0 72 16 3 2 10 0 I 0 15 9 10 7 6 13 8 8 79 17 6 Ellen Condon James 0. Wilson .. James Hutchinson Joanna Moore Hannah Fitzgerald Ada J. Dwyer Lie. E4 F M M F F F 23 15 0 52 5 0 76 15 8 75 0 0 23 15 0 42 15 0 5 11 18 18 5 9 | 85 1 4 3 10 0 42 15 0

__.— l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. WESTLAND— continued.

- 1 ) Household school. ( 2 ) Aided school. {») Teacher died on 2nd December. 6—E. 1.

41

o . 0.8 *? ■§ Schools, and the t>2 Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) © S in which situate. © 2 a © oin o . o ?,* © © ol Sft a a ocn Mainti Expei tditure for th. mance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. ! © g 5 Teachers'Names, .J 0r _. including all Teachers ca .^o and Pupil-teachers ,§ a° on the Staff at the End « -rt © of the Year. £ -% m 3 & Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. © © a Hi ■2-2 a u © 03 £ a <<? ©TJ ex n £3 ©Eh i* Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 12 Ross [B] — Ross 20 £ s. d. 310 13 6 £ s. d. 13 15 7 £ s. d. 71 8 2 William Winchester Mary E. Osmers .. Sarah Hodgson Rose Ford Robert Foster M. Evans 01 E3 HM AF FP FP HM S £ s. d. 168 6 5 81 16 3 40 0 0 15 0 0 98 0 0 12 0 0 95 25 Donoghue's (Side) .. 110 13 6 2 3 3 27 Westland — Stafford 28 237 12 6 7 10 24 1 6 Henry Williams .. Margaret A. Wilson Norah Hannan [Closed on April 30]. Mary Carroll Elizath Wallace Mabel Wallace ( 8 ) William D. Mackay Ida O. Mackay Elizabeth Irwin D2 D3 Dl El HM AF FP F F F HM AF FP 156 15 10 75 0 0 15 0 0 73 13 Taipo (!) .. Waiatoto (!) Waiho( 2 ) .. Waikukupa (') Waitangi ( 2 ) Woodstock 29 80 31 32 33 34 9 10 0 10 13 9 38 0 0 23 15 0 60 11 8 276 15 9 1 18 0 14 5 0 38 0 0 23 15 0 64 16 9 161 17 6 81 16 3 15 0 0 3 8 5 14 84 1 18 3 9 12 0 1 19 0 36 0 0 14 School furniture School requisites Expenditw, not apport 7 18 ioned. 21 12 8 i . 4,660 12 5 180 3 7 692 2 0 4,612 2 4 1,276 NORTH IANTERB RY. Kaikoura — Clarence Bridge ( 2 ).. Kaikoura Saburban 1 2 38 15 0 247 7 6 33 17 0 11 '5 6 Charles F. Bowley .. Henry A. Grant J. G. McLauchlan .. James B. Borthwick Eliza M. A. Sandford Annie L. Reeve E2 D2 E2 Dl El D4* M HM AF PrM DF AF 40 0 0 157 5 0 76 10 0 192 10 0 98 0 0 60 0 0 7 52 1 104 2 Kaikoura Town 3 372 18 1 49 7 11 Amuri— Conway Flat ( 2 ) Hanmer Plains ( 2 ) .. Waiau 4 5 6 4 4 4 48 15 0 212 7 3 13 10 0 6 0 0 [Closed Mar. quarter.] Johanna McKenzie Thomas M. Marr .. Lucy E. Pickering.. Joseph Jackson Helen Scott Rosa M. Metherell.. F HM AF M S F 50 0 0 140 15 0 65 10 0 127 0 0 8 0 0 70 0 0 10 37 3 25 19- 1 D2 D4 D4 30 4 Rotherham 7 150 15 0 21 15 0 12 10 0 Gulverden ( 2 ) Cheviot — Spotswood Leamington ( 2 ) Mackenzie 8 55 0 0 5 0 8 14 9 10 11 140 2 6 67 10 0 318 17 1 18 12 6 3 13 2 3 3 0 Jane McRae C. M. Armstrong .. William Balch Claudia Watson Agnes H. McPherson Jane A. Anderson .. Mary Wallace E4 F F HM AF FP F F 139 10 0 70 0 0 213 10 0 92 10 0 20 0 0 140 5 0 132 0 0 25 14 90 5 02 D3 0 58 8 3 Domett Port Robinson Ashley — Waitohi Medbury 12 13 143 2 0 133 5 0 20 10 0 17 10 0 0 7 2 E3 29 23 7 8 9 10 14 15 130 2 6 134 14 3 18 2 11 20 15 5 10 0 Margaret J. Little .. Joseph Stewart Sarah J. Stewart .. Aaron Hyde Sarah E. Hyde Janet Campbell Thomas Stout Kate McMeekan .. Herbert H. James .. M. A. Carpenter [Closed Sept. quarter] Peter McFarlane .. Annie Robson William G. Maber .. Annie E. Crampton Rev. Wm. McGregor Margaret McGregor Alice L. Milner Thomas Blain Arthur Thomas Annie W. Riordan ... George Anderson .. Georgina Roberts .. Hugh Thomson Elizabeth A. Thomson E4 E2* F M S M S F HM AF MP F 127 0 0 133 19 0 8 0 0 92 0 0 8 0 0 144 0 0 178 5 0 82 10 0 20 0 0 97 0 0 22 30 11 Hurunui 16 107 10 0 17 2 6 4 9 10 E2 19 12 13 Mason's Flat Waikari 17 18 142 10 0 277 9 1 21 7 6 35 13 1 11 7 5 2 9 7 E2 D2 E4 32 68 14 Greta Valley Happy Valley ( 2 ) .. Montserrat ( 2 ) Dalbeg ( 2 ) .. Broomfield 19 20 21 22 23 103 5 0 11 5 0 25 0 0 70 8 4 123 6 6 16 0 0 1 10 6 3 18 3 D4 M F M S HM AF FP MP HM AF HM AF HM AF 30 0 0 75 0 0 114 10 0 8 0 0 212 0 0 98 15 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 143 15 0 67 10 0 155 15 0 75 10 0 169 5 0 84 10 0 17 4 6 15 24 0 10 6 17 15 0 8 0 8 2 15 1)4* E2 15 C2 E2 117 10 Amberley 24 360 16 7 46 0 9 77 10 10 Balcairn 218 2 6 28 4 7 18 12 6 D3 D5 D3 E3 D3 E2 41 25 17 57 18 Leithfield 20 230 18 9 30 0 6 27 248 2 6 34 3 0 0 11 9 75 19 Sefton

E.—l.

Table No. 8.-List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. NORTH CANTERBURY— continued.

(1) Aided school.

42

o.S If 6 M Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [Bj) in which situate. Si II p.ai Maint* Expe: ;nance. iditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. TeaoherB' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Stall at the End of the Year. a o B d o S 3 5 Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. i 11 r Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Ashley— continued. Mount Grey Downs 28 £ s. d. 141 7 6 £ s. d. 20 7 6 £ s. a. 11 9 7 James E. Glanville Hannah E. Boyce .. Elizabeth Lorimer.. John S. Dalby M. M. Callaghan .. Herbert H. Allison.. Marina Brock Jo harm Voss Annie J. Turner Thomas Hills Mary A. Cradook .. May A. U. Hurse .. Robert Mounsey Agnes Parlane Lancelot Watson .. Elsie E. Mounsey .. James Harbidge Helen Craighead .. Albert J. Harding .. Robert B. Ryder .. Margaret Buchanan Lena R. Smith Alice Wright Frank S. Horn William Stirling Martha Stephens .. George H. White .. Mary Gardner David Arnott Richard J. Twose .. Jeannie Menzies Jean Lorimer Edgar de V. Ivens .. Mary L. Spence C. J. Ladbrooke Amy J. Alley F. J. Oumberworth Fanny Dick Sidney G. Smith .. Mary Taylor Ethel Thompson .. Isabella M. Blackett Edith F. M. Rogers Jane Howie Olliver N. Gillespie D3 M S F HM AF HM AF HM AF M F F M S HM AF HM AF MP PrM DF AF FP MP M S HM AF M HM AF F HM AF F F PrM DF AM AF AF FP FP FP MP £ s. d. 127 0 0 8 0 0 65 0 0 143 0 0 67 0 0 146 0 0 69 0 0 149 0 0 71 0 0 117 0 0 122 0 0 127 0 0 107 0 0 8 0 0 142 5 0 63 4 0 195 0 0 93 5 0 24 0 0 238 2 0 112 0 0 80 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 6 141 0 0 8 0 0 169 5 0 84 10 0 100 0 0 159 10 0 78 0 0 90 0 0 153 10 0 74 0 0 95 0 0 144 0 0 314 5 0 127 0 0 155 0- 0 105 0 0 80 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 27 20 21 22 23 Okuku (') .. Loburn North Loburn Ashley 29 30 31 32 36 14 11 212 10 0 214 7 6 221 11 3 0 18 9 25 11 0 26-1 0 28 10 6 19 17 9 3 6 0 D3 D2 D4 D3 E4 D2 D4 D4 D4 D4 r>4 13 39 43 48 24 25 26 27 Saltwater Greek Woodstock Kirikiri View Hill.. 33 34 35 3G 120 6 0 127 0 0 115 15 0 111 5 0 17 12 6 17 10 0 16 15 0 17 10 0 7 12 6 0 6 4 10 0 26 22 23 22 28 Woodside 37 206 13 6 24 18 0 7 10 4 D2 39 29 Oxford West 38 313 10 8 42 11 3 6 15 1 r>2 D3 93 Oxford East 476 1 i 60 13 2 5 16 4 01 D2 D3 179 30 39 Oarleton 189 18 7 21 15 0 D2 31 40 31 32 33 34 35 30 Oust Summerhill | Eyre ton West : .. Stoke Fernside 41 42 43 44 45 255 12 6 114 12 5 231 5 0 91 5 0 232 10 0 35 19 0 18 1 3 30 17 10 16 0 0 30 7 0 140 2 6 10 1 0 14 0 C2 D3 D4 r>1 E3 D4 D2 E2 D3 E3 Dl E2 D2 El D3 75 19 62 18 53 37 38 39 Mandeville Plains .. Eyreton .. Rangiora [B] 46 47 4S 95 15 0 145 10 0 887 9 2 16 16 1 22 0 0 104 15 2 49 13 0 98 6 1 74 0 8 19 33 375 Ashley— Southbrook 141 19 10 William D. Bean .. Kate E. Bay ley Christina France .. John H. Wells Henry Bussell Kate M. Bussell .. Sara F. Hiatt Thomas E. Tomlinson Helen Fear William C. Armitage Eliza N. Leversedge Emily M. Parkin .. Robert J. Alexander Annie J. Menzies .. Michael Lynskey .. Francis Pegler Ruth Gilmour C. E. Blaekwell Annie Lynskey F. W. Mathews Harry Oram Dora Hempleman .. Edith S. Evans CI E2 HM AF FP MP HM AF F M S HM AF FP PrM DF AM AM AF AF FP MP MP FP FP 221 14 0 107 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 162 10 0 80 0 0 100 0 0 147 0 0 8 0 0 205 10 0 98 10 0 40 0 0 335 0 0 133 0 0 180 0 0 120 0 0 115 0 0 90 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 40 49 376 2 0 55 1 11 138 Flaxton (Main) 246 9 2 51 9 4 7 7 4 E2 D4 E2 02 41 50 66 Flaxton (Side) Waikuku 51 52 96 13 4 151 5 0 21 *7 6 28 34 42 43 Wood end 53 343 3 4 46 10 11 28 12 5 6i D3 116 Kaiapoi [BJ | . 1,095 10 1 126 19 0 7 18 2 Dl D3 D2 04 r>3 D3 459 44 54 45 Ashley— Clarkville 55 247 10 0 34 0 0 8 15 0 William H. Herbert Fanny C. Hiatt .. John McGillivray .. Mary K. McGillivray A3 D3 D4 HM AF M S 165 10 0 82 0 0 117 0 0 8 0 0 70 4(i Kaiapoi Island 56 123 15 0 18 0 0 26 Lyttelton [B] — Lyttelton .. 1,351 3 2 171 2 7 86 8 11 Emile TJ. Just Margaret L. England John Ross David Jack Dl D2 01 B2 PrM DF AM AM 330 0 0 139 0 0 215 0 0 145 0 0 575 47 57

E.—l.

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. NORTH CANTERBURY— continued.

(1) Aided school.

43

o 2 a! II □ o O Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. Oh oj gl ■-S S g CO Maintenance. _ .,,. Buildings, Teachers' Other Fu ™A" re, Salaries and Ordinary Annantns Allowances. Expenditure. A PP aralus - Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. d Teachers' Names, -2 including all Teachers a and Pupil-teachers £ on the Staff at the End % of the Year. 3 ffl" 2 Annual § %> "+J Salary and , : *& 3 Allowance j § '2 o at the Ratio | S g paid during ■ £m the Last | SJ^ g Quarter of d£ Ph the Year. &£-( >■ - Lyfctslton [B] — contcl. Lyttelton— continued. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Mary E. Oliver Francis D. Waller .. Lydia Lewis Jeannie Ross Emma E. Hewett .. Maude O'Brien Nellie M. Curtis .. Jessie Wilson Harriet B. Lanyon.. John W. McGregor Franoesca A. Pilliet Blanche Joyce Jeannie Jory Charlotte E. Wardle D3 B3 B4 E4 AF AM AF AF FP FP FP FP FP PrM DF AF FP FP £ s. d. 125 0 0 100 0 0 75 0 0 65 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 284 10 0 112 0 0 80 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 48 Lyfctelton West 58 553 16 4 62 12 3 7 10 0 01 D3 D4 195 Akaroa — Governor's Bay 155 15 0 22 12 6 27 16 0 B3 M S 49 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 f>7 58 59 60 Charteris Bay .. Teddington Gebbie's Valley Babbit Island Kaituna (*) Port Levy.. Little River (Main) Little River (Side) .. Pigeon Bay (Main) .. Pigeon Bay (Side) .. Barry's Bay French Farm Wainui Little Akaloa (Main) Little Akaloa (Side) Duvauchelle's Bay.. O'Kain's Bay 59 00 61 02 68 64 65 60 67 68 69 70 71 72 73 74 75 76 105 19 7 133 6 5 55 0 0 80 0 0 316 12 10 138 17 6 88 15 0 129 3 4 125 0 0 117 10 0 117 10 0 101 5 0 106 19 8 80 0 0 226 5 0 16 0 0 1 18 4 21 2 5 16 "i 11 60 14 4 3-1 14 5 18 12 6 17 10 0 17 12 6 48 1 7 2 17 0 3 6 11 18 0 119 2 2 4 5 19 5 0 4 3 31 19 3 George E. Budd .. Elizabeth Macready [School closed]. Arthur Cooper Clara Cooper [School closed]. Thomas E. Cutler .. Marion J. Sorensen Kate M. Martin George Gilling Jeannie A. Morrow Percy J. Sefton Elizabeth A. Wallace Elizabeth M. Rowley Benjamin Penlington Sarah White Robert Bruce Ann Wilson Matilda Bell Constance M. Peach Alice J. Forsyth Agnes Duncan Edith A. Shrimpton John H. Baird Elizabeth Rosewarne Wilfred T. Chaplin Mary A. Popple Sarah M. Craig Henry J. Ryde Grace Brown William N. Taylor .. Margaret Taylor Rev. A. Scholes Alfred Nicholls Alice J. Cook Isabella Webster .. Dora Nicholls D2 D4* D4 E2 D2 D3 E4 03 E2 E2 E3 E3 D3 D4 D4 D2 D3 D3 , D4 D3 D3 D3 D3* M S M F F HM AF MP F F M S M S F F F F F HM AF HM AF F HM AF M S M PrM DF AF FP 147 0 0 8 0 0 87 0 0 8 0 0 139 10 0 60 0 0 80 0 0 196 0 0 93 15 0 24 0 0 137 0 0 80 0 0 97 0 0 8 0 0 102 0 0 8 0 0 110 0 0 115 0 0 100 0 0 107 0 0 80 0 0 150 10 0 72 0 0 143 0 0 67 0 0 80 0 0 145 5 0 68 10 0 92 3 0 8 0 0 40 0 0 220 2 0 107 0 0 60 0 0 20 0 0 33 25 16 20 21 22 22 20 18 18 49 19 26 12 6 95 01 02 16 0 0 28 18 0 0 3 0 13 18 4 63 Le Bon's Bay 77 199 17 10 24 13 6 5 3 6 34 64 05 Robinson's Bay German Bay (Main) 78 79 80 0 0 222 0 9 16 8 8 45 8 6 4 6 7 11 42 German Bay (Side).. 80 106 4 9 20 Gough's Bay (') Akaroa [B] HI 82 38 15 0 404 6 0 55 16 5 3 3 8 Dl E3 D3 8 146 66 07 Akaroa — Onuku Selwyn— Cass .. ) Mount White I (*)' Craigieburn ) Porter's Pass f 1 ) Kowai Bush Kowai Pass 83 80 0 0 31 13 6 16 0 0 Norman W. Pavitt.. John McNair M M 80 0 0 40 0 0 12 12 84 85 86 87 70 9 2 122 10 0 240 19 3 0 10 0 17 12 6 33 8 0 33 14 8 60 18 6 Margaret A. Guiney Harriet Savill Frederick J. Alley .. Julia O'Shaughnessy Walter Thomas Eliza Roycroft Thomas L. P. Pole.. Annie M. Jenkins .. Elizabeth Charles .. James Dawe Edith M. Brown .. Ernest H. Brown .. Fanny A. Webb Charles H. A. T. Opie Emily M. Osborn .. George Quartermain Kitty Menzies William J. Sloane .. Jane Sloane Charles W. Withe] 1 Jeannie Reese B8 Dl 01 F F HM AF M S HM AF FP HM AF M F HM AF HM AF M S HM AF 65 0 0 122 10 0 158 15 0 73 13 0 97 0 0 8 0 0 191 0 0 91 0 0 32 0 0 143 0 0 67 0 0 90 0 0 159 0 0 149 0 0 71 0 0 151 5 0 72 10 0 141 0 0 8 0 0 168 10 0 84 0 0 1!! 25 61 68 69 70 Russell's Plat 88 126 1 2 18 4 0 4 0 0 D5 19 71 Malvern 89 312 15 10 39 5 6 4 19 10 1)2 E3 88 72 Annat 90 215 0 0 26 18 7 10 0 m E4 D8 l>4 Dl D4 1)2 1)4 D2 40 73 74 75 South Malvern Coalgate Glentunnel 91 02 93 128 5 11 156 13 9 225 0 0 46 0 0 22 15 0 22 18 0 36 3 6 4 17 53 4 6 18 34 48 70 Hororata 94 224 7 6 28 8 0 26 7 1 50 77 Glenroy 96 205 8 3 22 10 9 0 8 0 32 78 Darfield 96 250 18 9 34 16 6 0 11 8 D3 1)3 74

E.—l

44

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. NORTH CANTERBURY— continued.

0.2 a a go II Schools, ana the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. » 3 8™ Maintenance. Expenditure lor thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. I O q=1 1 3 I ."£02 o Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. a? o Jj II or *-" Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Selwyn— continued. Kimberley £ s. d. 125 18 6 £ s. d. 18 7 6 £ s. d. 5 6 4 Frederick J. Hayman Margaret A. Hayman Joseph H. Wilson .. Emma P. Wilson .. Agnes Mathews Charles J. Morland Emily E. Wilson .. James Stewart M. J. Leversedge .. Alice M. Shailer .. John H. Newlyn .. Ella Armstrong Arthur V. Sims Jeannie Croskell .. David Sinclair Marion K. Gibson .. Frederick H. Bowler Martha Jackson Arthur Cookson Kate S. Woodford .. John Kain Harriet Kain B. O'Shaughnessy .. Margaret B. Menzies C. H. E. Graham .. Julia A. Graham .. R. H. Ferguson, jun. Elizabeth McKee .. H. R. Wilkinson .. Ada Hodgson Evelyn M. Wilkinson Richard H. Ferguson Margaret E. Morland Mary J. Sword E. A. Longman Emma Moore Janet Dick Andrew Malcolm .. Edith E. Ryan Sarah Morton Charles W. Garrard Martha Douds William J. Boyce .. Adele Hodgson Mabel E. Hodgson.. Samuel Bullock Catherine M. Tulley Florence Durose Emma W. Hewinson Lilian R. Rawson .. Helen Hepburn Henry English Kate Wilkinson Agnes A. Bishop .. Ellen S. Grogan Constance M. Lowe Andrew Dunnett .. Fanny Durey James Mahoney Eliza J. Ritchie Edith M. Leversedge Karl Kippenberger.. Dora B. Ormandy .. William A. Banks .. Sophia Haughton .. Robert J. Thompson Samuel McOullough Jeannie B. Menzies Thomas A. Nicoll .. Robert A. Malcolm Henrietta Kime Arthur Bramley Emily C. Howard .. Samuel Carleton .. Martha L. Bishop .. Margaret Forbes .. William E.Foster .. Frances Foster E4 M S HM AF F M S HM AF F HM AF M S HM AF HM AF HM AF M S HM AF M S HM AF HM AF FP PrM DF AF FP FP F HM AF FP PrM DF AM AF FP PrM DF AF FP FP FP PrM DF AF FP FP HM AF HM AF FP HM AF HM AF MP HM AF MP HM AF HM AF HM AF FP HM AF £ s. d. 124 10 0 8 0 0 152 0 0 73 0 0 127 0 0 114 10 0 8 0 0 142 5 0 66 10 0 115 0 0 143 15 0 67 10 0 112 0 0 8 0 0 147 10 0 70 0 0 153 10 0 74 0 0 162 10 0 80 0 0 107 0 0 8 0 0 148 5 0 70 10 0 72 0 0 8 0 0 140 0 0 65 0 0 193 0 0 92 5 0 40 0 0 256 2 0 116 0 0 90 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 92 0 0 197 0 0 94 5 0 40 0 0 251 6 0 116 0 0 90 0 0 65 0 0 20 0 0 259 6 0 112 0 0 80 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 32 0 0 233 14 0 107 0 0 80 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 162 10 0 80 0 0 194 10 0 93 0 0 40 0 0 144 10 0 68 0 0 195 10 0 93 10 0 24 0 0 198 0 0 94 15 0 24 0 0 152 0 0 65 0 0 161 0 0 79 0 0 194 0 0 92 15 0 32 0 0 178 5 0 90 10 0 29 79 80 Greendale (Main) .. 224 1 3 45 10 0 2 4 0 B2 D2 E3 D4 51 98 Greendale (Side) Charing Croas 99 100 122 0 0 122 10 0 17 15 0 23 24 81 82 Kirwee 101 214 2 0 26 4 7 E2 D4 E2 E2 E3 D3 39 83 84 Courtenay Halkett 102 103 120 12 6 214 1 3 17 17 6 25 19 6 10 0 5 6 1 22 41 85 Aylesbury 104 120 0 0 17 12 6 23 86 West Melton 105 219 1 3 27 3 6 27 8 0 E2 E3 D3 D3 D2 E3 D4 43 87 Yaldhurst 106 239 13 9 33 5 5 86 12 9 53 88 Templeton 107 256 7 11 34 19 6 66 89 Weedon 108 111 5 0 17 5 0 23 90 Rolleston -.. 109 216 11 3 26 11 6 D3 D4 47 91 Burnham 110 89 17 0 16 7 6 15 92 Broadfield 111 206 11 3 24 5 0 18 3 D4 D3 D3 E3 36 93 Harewood Road 112 326 10 8 41 10 0 0 3 10 91 Belfast (Main) 525 2 8 84 14 2 194 2 3 D2 D2 B3 224 94 113 Belfast (Side) Marshland 114 115 92 0 0 318 0 5 38 17 6 46 19 10 E2 El E3 13 99 95 Papanui .. 553 18 6 72 9 5 210 10 0 C2 D3 D4 D4 227 96 116 97 Fendalton 117 557 15 5 69 4 2 1 3 10 Dl E2 D3 21' Riecarton 118 449 18 2 60 3 11 155 18 8 El C3 E3 167 98 Hornby 235 6 3 31 0 6 6 0 10 El E2 Dl D3 99 119 G4 00 Prebbleton 120 321 1 3 40 7 6 100 6 0 94 Ladbrooke's 212 3 9 25 10 6 0 2 9 C3 E4 Dl Dl 4! 01 121 .02 Lincoln .. 122 328 9 3 41 17 1 91 .08 Springston (Main) .. 123 324 5 10 62 0 11 464 5 6 D2 D3 101 Springston (Side) .. 89 1 4 D4 D4 D2 D4 D2 E2 36 124 Greenpark 125 245 18 9 34 9 7 27 10 11 62 .04 05 Tai Tapu 126 316 10 3 40 9 0 51 18 2 93 Hal swell 266 11 3 38 11 6 20 4 10 r>i E2 .00 127 83

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. NORTH CANTERBURY— continued.

(1) Temporary.

45

°*5 © IB o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. p 2 P. Ji Mainti Bxpe: mance. iditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of tho Year. 0 1 a-s o a o s §.§ SS 2 to 3 £ " i" Annual § u Salary and "3 -£ Allowance § £j at the Rate i £3 paid during ; "^°^ the Last g'g Quarter of ee 2 the Tear. Sβ Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 07 Selwyn— continued. Spreydon 128 £ s. d. 480 15 0 £ s. d. 60 12 0 £ s. d. 200 7 9 F. W. Hunnibell .. Mary M. Stephens .. Mildred E. Mayo .. John G. Poison Martha J. Morland William N. Seay .. Mary S. Shirteliffe .. Hang Kennedy Elizabeth Beck Arabella Dynes Janet A. Finlayson Mary A. Turnbull .. Bessie E. Bowden .. William G. Burns .. Elizabeth A. Bisset Dl E2 D2 PrM DF AF MP FP PrM DF AM AF AF FP FP FP MP FP £ s. d. 234 2 0 107 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 375 0 0 130 0 0 165 0 0 110 0 0 85 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 168 Addington 997 8 5 115 5 7 3 14 10 Dl E2 D3 D2 D3 129 406 08 Christchurch [B] — Christchurch West .09 Normal School 130 131 2,252 2 4 2,067 18 2 189 3 11 246 6 8 197 0 2 152 8 0 Thomas S. Poster .. Thomas W. Ambrose Bethia Jack Mary A. Grant Francis J. Rowley .. Peter Menzies Wolsey Kain James Irwin Margaret Menzies .. Catherine G. Edkins M. P. Morrison Christina R. Kirk .. Marie A. Pavitt (*) .. Fanny E. Schneider Sarah A. MoGorman George H. Jupp Walter C. Colee Elizabeth M. Adams Mary J. Martin Agnes Menzies Alice M. Hughes .. Harry Robson Lilian Hannam Isabella Irwin Jonathan C. Adams Christopher Aschman Francis T. Evans .. John R. Sinclair .. Eliza Kitchingman Kate Baldwin Julia W. Bullock .. Jane M. H. Meadows Henrietta A. Guise C. A. McHaffie Ellen Grand Mabel Smith James Sutherland .. John G. L. Scott .. Sydney C. Owan .. Mary V. Gibson Harriet E. Starkiss John S. Kennedy .. Walter G. Oookson.. Arnold W. Shrimpton James E. R. Smith Jessie W. Wagstaff.. Susannah M. Burr.. Ida Lezard Mary I. Taylor Katrina Simpson .. Laura M. Banks .. Dorothy E. Hall .. Guy N. Ormandy .. Amelia G. Hudson .. Emily Gibbs Ellen McRae Emily M. Lake Irene M. Hare Helen Lamb Kate V. Kiver John S. Wauehop .. Neptune R. Mulville Ethel B. Seaton .. Al B2 Bl El B2 B3 D3 D3 D2 D3 D3 Bl Dl D2 D3 01 Dl El D2 D2 D3 D3 D3 Bl Bl B2 Bl Dl D2 D3 A3 C3 D2 D2 D3 E3 D4 PrM AM DF DF AM AM AM AM AF AF AF AF AF FP FP MP MP FP FP FP FP MP FP FP DM AM AM AM DF AF DF AF AF AF AF AF M PrM AM DF DF AM AM AM AM AF AF AF AF AF FP FP MP FP FP FP FP FP FP FP MP MP FP 373 0 0 256 0 0 200 0 0 160 0 0 175 0 0 120 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 130 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 65 0 0 65 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 395 0 0 240 0 0 175 0 0 120 0 0 220 0 0 138 0 0 160 0 0 100 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 180 0 0 431 0 0 240 0 0 240 0 0 160 0 0 175 0 0 120 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 130 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 65 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 897 819 110 Model School Gloucester Street .. 132 2,448 13 4 315 11 6 82 5 9 1,034

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. NORTH CANTERBURY— continued.

46

£.2 II a ° O Schools, and the Counties oi Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. It It If 1° Mainti Expel inance. iditure for th< Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a I a 3 ID s •S-3 II o (l< i ® V Annual ; § £ Salary and I Allowance j § at the Rate £3 paid during <1™ the Last gjj'g Quarter of d^ the Year. g^ p<i Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Christcliurch [B] — ctd. South Town Belt .. 18: £ b. d. 238 5 0 £ s. d. £ s. d. Jane Boberts Julia Gilling Annie W. Northey .. E2 E3 HF AF FP £ s. d. 110 0 0 75 0 0 32 0 0 105 Linwood [B] — Phillipstown 134 306 6 8 Sarah L. Robinson Emily H. Glanville Elizabeth B. Steeds Alice L. Partridge .. Helen M. Kent Herbert W. King .. D2 E4 HF AF FP FP FP MP 130 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 186 Sydenham [B] — Sydenham 111 135 2,275 6 4 224 11 9 616 10 8 John Baldwin Thomas G. McGallan Martha Dynes Mary Hall William M. West .. Winter A. Hall James M. Waddell.. William E. Burley Mary Maginness Eobena Duncan Nellie Harrison Ada Baldwin Mary J. Morrison .. Margaret R. Watson Jessie M. Picken .. Elizabeth Steele .. Emily M. Simpson.. Catherine 0. Peppier George Maginness .. Ruth J. Hodgson .. Henry J. Denham .. Caroline McLean .. Florence Pearson .. Alice G. Noall Thomas Hughes .. Annie D. King John J. Adams Catherine A. Bower Blanche W. Seaton Grace M. Wraight .. Alice F. M. Joll .. Alexander Gow Edith J. Hughes .. Violet E. Scott CI D2 D2 El D3 D3 D5 D3* D2 D2 D2 C2 D3 E4 PrM AM DF DF AM AM AM AM AF AF AF AF AF AF FP FP FP FP MP FP MP FP FP FP PrM DF AM AF AF FP FP MP FP FP 385 0 0 240 0 0 200 0 0 160 0 0 175 0 0 120 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 130 0 0 100 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 65 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 ;52 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 375 0 0 130 0 0 165 0 0 110 0 0 85 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 966 11! Waltham 136 990 0 0 116 11 5 259 17 8 Bl El C2 D2 D3 427 St. Alban'a [B] — St. Alban's (Main) .. 169 8 5 113 137 1,128 0 0 405 0 6 James B. Mayne .. Jessie Menzies Charles Hall Alfred C. Bowbyes .. Grace Lawrence Emily A. Chaplin .. Henry J. Chapman Thomas F. Chambers Fanny E. Morrow .. Mildred T. Sweet .. Jessie P. Greenup .. Sarah E. Smith Elizabeth Newell .. Walter A. Cheesman Bl E2 C3 D3 D2 02 PrM DF AM AM AF AF MP MP FP FP FP HP AF MP 335 0 0 133 0 0 180 0 0 120 0 0 115 0 0 90 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 115 0 0 66 10 0 20 0 0 454 E2 105 St. Alban's (Side) .. 138 201 10 0 Christchurch [B] — Richmond 1,082 13 4 126 0 3 302 11 3 Charles S. Howard.. E. J. McGregor Annie W. Spence .. George Schneider .. Alexander Gray Lucy A. Howard Henry Bell Ethel Sorensen Herbert Chapman .. Edith M. Lawrence Robert G. Coates .. Dl E2 Dl C2 A3 D3 PrM DF AF AM AM AF MP FP MP FP MP 335 0 0 133 0 0 162 0 0 120 0 0 115 0 0 90 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 20 0 0 139 464 114 Selwyn— Burwood 115 New Brighton [B] .. 140 341 2 4 471 2 8 40 9 0 62 0 3 150 5.4 17 15 7 George Davidson .. Edith E. F. Stanton Mabel Wills George W, Bishop .. Elizabeth Gardiner E. M. Glanville .. Dl E2 D2 E2 D4 HM AF FP PrM DF AF 218 0 0 92 5 0 40 0 0 239 6 0 112 0 0 80 0 0 91 182 116 141

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. NORTH CANTERBURY— continued.

(i) Aided school. (2) Temporary.

47

•M o.S <Q CD if OOrd a « OCG O Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 08 ■s$ CD cd 9 » Mainti Expe: iditure for thi inance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a o Cβ o a 5 CD .9-3 is I Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. © a> II d> Cβ £ s I 1 Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. New Brighton [B]-cM. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Richard W. Morgan Bertha D. Norris .. MP FP & s. d. 32 0 0 20 0 0 Selwyn— Bromley 224 1 3 28 7 6 1 15 10 George Crockett Andrina J. Stewart Archibald Binnie .. Anne E. Barker William A. Kennedy Thomas Douds Gertrude M. Glanville Mahala C. Mills .. Minnie E. Pratt Christina McNeil .. Lucy Manifold Mabel E. Offwood .. Jessie H. McKinnon Dl D3 CI El 02 r>2 C3 B4 D3 E5* HM AF PrM DF AM AM AF AF AF FP FP FP FP 149 15 0 71 10 0 333 0 0 133 0 0 180 0 0 120 0 0 115 0 0 90 0 0 60 0 0 40 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 17 142 49 ,18 Woolston [B] 143 1,166 6 5 140 6 3 35 0 0 484 19 Selwyn— Opawa 144 493 9 10 64 18 8 8 18 0 George Petrie Mary Duncan Charlotte M. Banks [Vacant] Clara J, Pavitt P. W. Smith-Anstea Sarah E. Dyson John McLeod Amy H. Budden .. 01 D2 D2 PrM DF AF MP FP HM AF HM AF 244 2 0 112 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 158 0 0 77 0 0 162 10 0 76 0 0 192 Heathcote Valley .. 236 17 6 31 9 0 D2 D3 Dl 20 145 60 ,21 Sumner [B] 146 250 4 9 35 15 9 15 14 5 66 Selwyn— Selwyn 144 15 0 20 11 6 18 6 9 Thomas Irvine M. MeLaughlin .. Prank Benjamin ( 2 ) M. E. Simpson John H. Simpson .. Samuel P. Guiney .. Edith Verran Walter Tipler Emily M. Mclnman Rees Williams William J. Smith .. Dora llevell Trevethan Burns .. Jessie Stewart Prances 0. J. Rigby John Anderson Eliza E. Guise Alice M. Parkin Edith M. Blackler .. Thomas A. Gates .. Elizabeth Taylor .. Elizabeth Tulloch .. Thomas A. Gates, jun. Caroline Sloan Alice E. Mellraith.. Charles Hicks Elizabeth Hicks George Whitelaw .. Robert H. Charles .. Honoria Luddy George M. Pilkington Edith M. Harvey .. D3 M S HM AF MP HM AF HM AF M HM AF HM AF FP HM AF FP FP PrM DF AF MP FP FP M S HM MP S HM AF 127 0 0 8 0 0 182 15 0 85 10 0 40 0 0 151 5 0 72 10 0 140 15 0 62 5 0 90 0 0 144 10 0 68 0 0 222 10 0 94 0 0 32 0 0 224 18 0 107 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 247 6 0 112 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 144 0 0 8 0 0 146 10 0 40 0 0 8 0 0 140 15 0 65 10 0 .22 147 30 .23 Dunsandel 148 319 18 11 36 6 6 30 0 0 D4 El 77 24 Brookside .. 149 219 6 6 27 18 6 D2 50 25 Killinchy .. 150 209 3 7 24 2 6 D2 36 Kllesmere (') Irwell 151 152 69 19 3 224 10 8 26 'i 6 16 4 10 18 4 11 D3 D4 Dl D2 18 41 26 .27 Doyleston 153 341 11 3 42 8 5 98 Leesfcon .. .. 385 4 0 51 8 9 17 12 9 ci E2 146 28 154 .29 Southbridge 155 512 8 7 64 13 4 89 19 6 Dl E2 D4 187 Lakeside 17 9 3 ci 130 156 160 5 0 21 2 6 32 131 Sedgemere 157 196 9 3 20 12 6 2 8 3 D3 31 132 Rakaia, Little 158 205 12 6 23 0 0 43 0 0 D3 D4 37 Ashburton— Mount Somers 158 12 6 21 16 2 Matthew J. Kerr .. Harriet Buckley .. Samuel Baird Caroline V. Anderson William H. Moses .. Elizabeth H. Cutler Alfred J. Gillman .. H. A. W. Gillman .. Emma Gillman May Sayers Joseph W. A. Walker Dora S. O'Callaghan Rebecca L. Satchell Robert Stout Matilda Leggett .. James Gillanders .. Eliza M. Willis Lucy Duff D3 M S HM AF HM AF HM MP S F HM AF F M S HM AF FP 124 10 0 8 0 0 158 0 0 77 0 0 155 0 0 67 0 0 151 0 0 40 0 0 8 0 0 85 0 0 146 15 0 69 10 0 92 0 0 123 2 0 8 0 0 187 5 0 88 10 0 20 0 0 133 159 23 134 135 Springburn Bushside 160 161 232 17 9 227 0 0 32 15 8 26 4 0 28 8 10 3 2 6 D3 D4 D3 D4 E3 57 39 136 Alford Forest 162 197 13 2 21 16 6 26 4 8 26 137 138 Barrhill Lauriston.. 163 164 86 5 0 218 14 2 16 0 0 27 9 0 3 17 6 4 16 9 D5 D2 D4 E4 17 43 139 140 Lyndhurst Highbank 165 166 92 0 0 69 15 4 16 7 11 19 10 8 460 19 9 14 31 141 Methven 167 304 12 1 39 17 6 0 4 6 D2 E2 83

E.—i.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.—continued. NORTH CANTERBURY— continued.

(1) Aided school.

48

a> w a o O Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 6§ *■§ ■JH © is Expenditure for the Year. Mainti snanco. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. § g 3 u ® Annual § n' ** Salary and -2 a« Allowance §§ ■£ o at the Bate Ss of) paid during <J°^ the Last g^ ™ Quarter of <e 2 £ the Year. Sβ J5_ Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. .42 48 Ashburton — continued. Rakaia South Rokeby 168 169 170 £ s. d. 461 5 10 101 3 10 £ s. a. 61 14 1 16 0 0 31 0 8 £ s. fd. 19 14 10 1 16 9 James Thompson .. Annie Ansley Rose M. Smith Peter Harvey May Stanley Philip E. Laraman Sarah Hinds David T. Toda Isabel M. Todd Gertrude E. Tulley Clara A. M. Smith.. Alfred C. Maxwell .. Jane E. Maxwell .. Annie E. Moore [School closed.] Jane A. Hempleman Margaret Thompson James R. Connor .. Alice J. Lusk Kate Doherty Evelyn E. H. Cordery George Cromie Annie G. Robertson Dl D2 D4 E4 D2 PrM| DF AF MP FP M S HM AF F F HM FP S £ s. d. 236 10 0 112 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 20 0 0 84 0 0 8 0 0 152 15 0 69 17 0 12C 0 0 65 0 0 158 10 0 40 0 0 8 0 0 175 14 53 .44 Ohertsey 223 16 3 .45 Overdale Awaroa (').. Dromore 171 172 173 121 17 6 62 15 2 200 1 0 19 6 8 7 0 0 14 3 3 70 4 3 E3 24 13 42 .40 25 6 0 D3 .47 .48 .49 .50 Pendarves Kyle Dorie Greenstreet 174 175 176 177 106 16 3 150 15 0 210 18 9 17 2 11 20 12 6 25 15 3 41 4 9 13 5 11 5 8 2 D3 D2 E4 E3 D3 C3 F F HM AF F F M S 112 15 0 147 0 0 146 0 0 69 0 0 137 0 0 90 0 0 129 0 0 8 0 0 15 29 44 .51 .52 .53 Ashburton Forks .. Westerfield Winchmore 178 179 180 144 0 0 95 0 0 137 12 6 19 7 6 16 7 6 18 5 0 12 7 26 17 24 .54 Ashburton [B] — Ashburton (Main) .. 181 931 3 5 119 8 4 692 1 2 Charles D. Hardie .. Effie Willis David Grant Hannah Curd Mabel Trezise Edith A. Bell Frederick A. Silcpck Ada Tucker Catherine J. Breeze Elizabeth Forrester Ronald A. Douglas.. Bl E2* D3 D3 PrM DF AM AF AF FP MP FP FP HF MP 320 0 0 120 13 0 155 0 0 105 0 0 76 0 0 40 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 110 0 0 40 0 0 390 Ashburton (Side) 47 E3 182 65 0 0 55 Ashburton— Hampstead 183 874 2 11 101 5 11 327 5 6 William Brock Lucy Fawcett Robert Frizzell M. A. Williamson .. Amelia Lusk Alice G. Orr Emily C. Leggett . : Catherine Porter .. Annie G. McDonald Susan A. Buck Jessie Feckney William Dickie Charlotte J. Hill .. Matilda E. Harvey.. John E. Purchase .. Agnes Amos Arthur Hunnibell .. Lucy Chapman George Culverhouse Maria Douds R. Bonnington William Stout Sarah J. Wakeham Mary Newell Joseph Watson Sarah E. Watson .. Henry Henderson .. Mary W. Rutledge .. John Watson Elspeth G. Reid .. Hugh A. Livingstone Thomas Mitchell .. Alice G. Banks Annie Sawle James C. Sheldon .. Sarah J. Durey Edward Smith Charles Bourke Jane Brennan Henry H. Rayner .. Flora Rayner John Brown Maggie Robertson .. 01 D2 D2 03 D3 PrM DF AM AF AF FP FP FP FP F F HM AF F M S HM AF PrM DF AF M S F M S HM AF HM AF M HM AF F HM AF M M S M S M S 308 5 0 127 0 0 155 0 0 105 0 0 80 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 24 0 0 20 0 0 110 0 0 95 0 0 141 10 0 66 0 0 80 0 0 119 10 0 8 0 0 143 0 0 67 0 0 197 0 0 100 5 0 60 0 0 150 0 0 8 0 0 112 0 0 127 0 0 8 0 0 143 15 0 67 10 0 145 2 0 73 10 0 80 0 0 145 5 0 68 10 0 110 0 0 156 10 0 76 0 0 75 0 0 147 0 0 8 0 0 72 0 0 8 0 0 94 0 0 8 0 0 351 Newland .. Seafield Wakanui (Main) E2 D2 D2 E4 D5* D4 22 19 38 .56 .57 .58 184 185 186 101 10 6 96 5 0 211 1 3 16 15 0 16 7 11 40 2 6 71 12 7 Wakanui (Side) Riverside 187 188 99 10 0 123 15 0 18 2 6 19 9 14 27 159 160 161 Elgin Tinwald 189 190 212 3 0 356 13 9 26 14 3 48 17 6 57 15 7 1 15 3 D2 E4 01 E3 D4 D3 40 123 Winslow 149 7 6 21 10 0 36 162 191 163 164 Huntingdon Willowby 192 193 111 17 6 130 17 6 16 7 6 19 16 3 E2 20 30 165 166 167 168 Flemington Longbeach Eiflelton .. Ashton 194 195 196 197 225 11 4 215 17 9 80 0 0 235 7 5 26 11 6 28 4 6 16 0 0 26 10 0 0 3 9 0 0 6 10 5 0 0 3 9 El D3 D2* E4 D3 E2 B4 E3 E3 E3 41 53 16 43 169 170 Ealing Hinds 198 199 108 15 0 239 14 5 17 10 0 31 6 0 6 10 9 20 58 171 172 Lismore ( x ) Mayfield .. 200 201 60 19 1 150 2 6 1 16 8 21 15 0 34 5 9 108 5 5 D2 14 33 173 Ruapuna 202 84 10 0 16 0 0 12 171 Lowcliffe 203 98 9 7 16 15 0 D4* 18

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c,— continued. NORTH CANTERBURY-continued.

I 1) New district. 7—E. 1.

49

o .. °2 *z* i-p £ Schools, and the >X Counties or Boroughs £ r- (the latter marked [Bj, © 2 in which situate. © 2 a © o:n Q . o o o %m '-§2 gg s * a © 8™ Maintt Expe: snance. iditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a o 03 © 9 «i 5 © a-i .2-3 Stn 00 O 111 © O Annual § u Salary and »g5 Allowance § at the Bate '$>% paid during ™ the Last & 'g Quarter of <& £ the Year. ©b -5 Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Expenditure £ s. d. 30 0 0 not apportii med. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Auditing School Committees' accounts(not included in the above) Plans and supervision (not included in the above) 484 17 9 55,736 4 3 7,032 13 11 7,857 17 11 55,603 13 0 17593 SOUTH IANTERB "BY. Geraldine — Scotsburn 181 16 6 15 14 4 10 11 4 Charles G. Roskruge Eva Fraser Elizabeth Whitton.. E2 HM FP S 142 0 0 27 0 0 12 0 0 40 Mackenzie— Silverstream 140 11 0 12 12 6 10 0 Montague P. Cooke Marie Spens-Blacke Alfred Ernest Werry James Cartwright .. Elizabeth J. Annis.. John Robert Wallace M. E. Kernahan .. Maude Bowcher William M. Yates .. Hannah I. Kernahan D4 M S HM MP S HM AF FP M F 133 0 0 12 0 0 143 10 0 32 0 0 12 0 0 181 10 0 90 0 0 37 0 0 127 0 0 117 0 0 2 2 37 3 Burke's Pass 3 182 1 0 15 11 9 30 19 0 D4 41 Fairlie 284 0 6 25 0 0 78 0 0 B4 E4 115 5 6 Ashwick Flat , Albury Cricklewood (*) Te Ngawai f 1 ) Geraldine — Opihi Hazelburn 5 6 132 6 0 115 7 6 13 1 0 15 3 0 1 11 10 1 12 10 3 10 0 3 0 0 D2 E2 29 33 7 8 7 8 115 17 0 193 2 1 11 10 0 15 12 6 0 19 6 4 10 0 Maud J. Cartwright Charles Meredith .. Lizzie Avison Annie E. Oxby Martha E. Connal .. William J. Glanville Violet A. Taylor Elizabeth Glanville Eva Meredith Arthur E. Jones Elizabeth Jones Robert Irwin Mary Wharton Elizabeth Irwin William Corbet Margaret Smart Leonard Ellis John McLeod Margaret A. Riordan Amy E. Fifield Rebecca McBeth .. C. F. Schmedes Mary Kate Lawlor.. Ellen Began J. R. Montgomery .. Mia Owen Pearson.. William J. R. Gore.. James Riordan Ethel E. Hooper .. Mary Caroline Oxby Edgar Huie Burn .. Ellen Smith Eliza Newnham William Ronton Archibald Mahan .. James Millar Izett.. Annie Leslie Hugh.McIntyre Mary Halley Arthur Ernest Talbot Clara A. C. Sibly .. George Steven Amelia Aimers James P. Kalaugher Annie Beattie R. N. N. Hawkes .. Annie M. Pye D3 D5 E4 D4 E5 E3 F HM AF F F HM FP S F M S HM FP S HM AF MP HM AF F F HM FP S PrM DF AM MP FP F HM AF F M M HM AF HM S HM AF HM AF HM AF HM AF 114 0 0 139 0 0 57 0 0 130 0 0 68 0 0 147 10 0 27 0 0 12 0 0 114 0 0 130 0 0 12 0 0 143 10 0 27 0 0 12 0 0 169 10 0 80 0 0 27 0 0 150 0 0 70 0 0 92 16 0 134 0 0 143 10 0 27 0 0 12 0 0 222 0 0 110 0 0 76 0 0 32 0 0 17 0 0 124 0 0 144 0 0 60 0 0 87 0 0 119 0 0 84 10 0 139 0 0 57 10 0 130 0 0 12 0 0 156 0 0 57 10 0 150 0 0 70 0 0 162 0 0 80 0 0 139 0 0 57 10 0 28 45 9 10 11 Totara Valley Rangitata Island .. Belfield 9 10 11 126 3 7 77 2 6 186 6 0 13 8 7 0 10 0 14 10 0 0 11 3 18 6 0 5 0 24 12 45 12 13 Arundel Orton 12 13 136 13 0 133 1 0 13 5 2 100 2 0 0 5 0 3 5 0 D2 C4 26 32 14 Rangitata Station .. 14 181 11 0 14 10 0 2 5 0 E4 41 15 South Orari 15 283 11 0 24 18 0 4 2 9 D2 94 Woodbury 225 11 0 18 5 0 30 6 6 D4 E5 D4 E3 D2 65 16 16 17 18 19 Orari Gorge Te Moana Orari Bridge 17 18 19 99 2 6 134 18 0 183 11 0 6 17 0 18 9 10 14 2 6 0 5 0 0 17 6 15 0 13 27 44 20 Geraldine 20 467 7 11 38 7 0 6 9 6 B2 E2 200 Gapes's Valley Hilton 129 15 0 200 17 8 7 19 6 16 12 6 0 10 0 5 3 0 E4 D5 22 55 21 22 21 22 23 24 25 26 Kakahu Bush Pleasant Valley Geraldine Flat Waitohi Flat 23 24 25 26 93 6 6 127 6 0 86 0 2 199 18 6 6 4 11 12 13 1 0 10 0 15 12 6 0 5 0 3 9 0 0 5 0 60 14 0 Dl D2 E2 D4 E4 D2 17 23 14 54 27 Waitohi, Upper 27 156 16 10 13 0 0 15 1 10 31 28 29 Rangatira Valley .. Winchester 28 29 214 17 8 217 11 0 15 12 6 19 0 0 3 5 0 1 15 0 D4 E4 D2 E4 D2 E4 D3 47 71 30 Seadown 30 270 17 8 20 10 0 273 0 0 89 31 Milford 31 198 6 0 16 6 0 14 6 6 58

E.—l.

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. SOUTH CANTERBURY -continued.

50

6.2 O to •S3 go Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. » Cβ 8" Mainti Expenditure for thi mance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. (0 2 S a .§•§ « s<» 3 I Annual § J Salary and « £ Allowance § § at the Bate S = paid during the Last »'g Quarter of d £ the Year. o B 5_ Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Geraldine— continued. Temuka £ s. d. 948 2 8 £ s. d. 56 16 0 £ s. d. 1 15 0 D. Ferguson Theophilus B. Strong Leonora M. Phillips Eustace King Emma G. Campbell Marion McOaskill .. Donald McCaskill .. Emma Copper Gilbert Dalglish .. Amy Emma Haskell William H. N. Amos James White Edith H. Sunaway.. Amy E. Jones Janet MoLeod N. L. P. Miiller .. Sarah Isabella Mahan Flora Luoretia Black Joseph Greaves Evelyn Fyfe Florence Townsend John Wood Robert Taylor Wood Elizabeth M. Kowley Gertrude Alice Brown Eliza Campbell Leslie O'Oallaghan Thomas L. Wood .. Kaja Ziesler Bl G3 El D3 D4 E4* D4* PrM AM DF AM AF AF MP FP HM AF AM MP F F F HM AF F HM AF FP HM AM AF AF AF MP MP FP £ s. d. 350 10 0 200 0 0 127 0 0 110 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 47 0 0 17 0 0 202 10 0 105 0 0 75 0 0. 32 0 0 92 0 0 114 0 0 114 0 0 150 0 0 70 0 0 117 0 0 163 10 0 80 0 0 27 0 0 288 10 0 145 0 0 127 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 32 0 0 22 0 0 27 0 0 328 32 m Pleasant Point B2 E2 D4 158 33 33 414 8 6 32 0 6 38 11 4 34 35 36 37 Canningten Gave Sutherland's Washdyke 34 35 36 37 96 7 0 115 6 6 119 19 2 221 11 0 6 6 10 11 10 0 13 4 6 18 12 0 0 5 0 0 5 0 2 6 6 7 6 4 E5 E4 E4 E2 E3 D3 Dl D4 13 26 26 65 38 89 Claremont Wai-iti 38 89 112 6 0 263 6 0 8 4 0 19 13 6 2 7 6 44 13 6 32 79 40 Waimataitai 40 800 17 8 60 4 9 17 17 0 Dl D4* E2 D3 B4 321 Timaru [B] — Timaru 611 109 13 6 John A. Johnson Mary G. Grahame .. Alexander C. Blake George Crawshaw .. Martha Avison Agnes A. Pearson .. JohnBaragwanath.. Clara I. Shirtclifle .. Annie Logan Mollroy Frances Grandi Hugh Montgomery Jessie Elizabeth Dorm Isabella Cullman .. Kath. M. Montgomery William Boys Murdoch McLeod .. Jane G. Rowley Winifred S. Cotter .. Thora C. Harris .. Helen Byers Bl Dl D2 D4 El D2 D3 E3 D3 PrM AF AM AM DF AF AM AF AF FP MP FP FP FP MP HM AF AF FP FP 312 0 0 200 0 0 200 0 0 135 0 0 139 0 0 105 0 0 105 0 0 80 0 0 60 0 0 37 0 0 37 0 0 27 0 0 24 0 0 24 0 0 22 0 0 222 10 0 110 0 0 70 0 0 24 0 0 22 0 0 41 41 1,548 8 4 81 11 0 42 Timaru South 42 455 16 9 43 10 0 15 6 6 B2 E2 E4 205 Geraldine — Fairview .. 157 8 0 31 43 43 13 0 0 13 11 6 Christian Ritchie .. James Ritchie Robert Stewart G. M. Alexander .. A. McFarlane Donn Elizabeth J. Williams Frederick Smith .. Hannah Hutton Florence Miller William Browne .. Annie M. Ritchie .. Barbara Strachan .. John Lake Cooke .. Elizabeth C. Keddie Mary Cooke Elizabeth Bruce Ida L. G. Gardner .. Alexander Goodall .. Isabella Goodall Alice Childs Elizabeth E. Bevin Emma Hawkes El HF MP HM AF HF AF HM FP S HM AF F HM FP S F F HM FP S F F 124 10 0 22 0 0 144 0 0 57 10 0 149 0 0 57 0 0 143 10 0 22 0 0 12 0 0 159 0 0 57 10 0 115 0 0 151 10 0 22 0 0 12 0 0 119 16 0 104 0 0 136 0 0 27 0 0 12 0 0 114 6 0 87 0 0 44 Kingsdown 44 205 15 0 24 3 8 4 14 6 D2 57 45 Adair 45 208 5 0 16 7 6 20 10 4 Dl 56 46 Pareora 46 175 16 0 15 9 6 28 14 0 r>3 43 Springbrook 47 211 8 6 20 16 4 3 6 0 D2 46 47 48 49 Southburn St. Andrew's 48 49 116 11 0 184 14 4 10 8 6 15 12 6 1 15 7 15 8 0 E4 El 20 56 50 51 52 Otaio, Upper Otaio Makikihi .. 50 5:i 52 119 4 6 113 7 0 179 2 8 13 0 0 11 3 5 13 15 0 7 4 6 20 11 4 0 12 6 D2 E3 D2 35 22 40 53 54 Hunter's .. Hook Waimate — Waituna Creek 53 54 114 16 0 95 18 4 11 7 0 6 16 10 0 5 0 5 8 6 D3 D4 25 17 55 56 Waimate [B] 55 50 198 1 0 1,353 16 0 15 12 6 70 19 0 9 5 0 370 16 3 John Menzies Amy E. Evans George Pitcaithly .. Hugh G. Wake Charles J. Goldstone Mary H. Crawford .. E2 E4 B] B2 C3 Dl HM AF PrM AM AM DF 139 0 0 57 10 0 360 0 0 210 0 0 165 0 0 131 0 0 52 425

51

E.—l

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. SOUTH CANTERBURY— continued.

(l) Temporary. (2) New district. ( 3 ) Aided school.

6.2 © CD sea a © otn o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [Bj) in which situate. d8 *% gen ■sg a <s © f-p © o3 a © o m Maintt Expen iditure for th, inance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. TeacherB' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a o HH © s 'til tit <a 8 © a-i a2 .2-S Son m O Ph Annual §»; Salary and S Allowance I © oj at the Rate £a paid during "^^ the Last ©"g Quarter of <e 3 the Year. Seh rTeachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other j Ordinary Expenditure. Waimate [B] — contd. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Sarah C. Bruce Anne Bruce Charles F. Collins .. George Wilson William Thomas .. Mary J. Kirkcaldy .. Robert Goldstone .. Helen Smith E2 D4 D4 AF AF AM MP MP FP MP FP £ a. d. 100 0 0 80 0 0 75 0 0 32 0 0 32 0 0 27 0 0 22 0 0 17 0 0 Waimate — Waihao 57 57 195 0 0 17 11 6 40 9 4 James Scott Annie Scott James Walsh M. F. Freeman (') .. Mary Hinch Henry E. Goodeve .. Alice Goodeve John Thomas Smart Mary Wilson James Colbert James Robertson .. Alice R. Smart Margaret McCarthy James Lowe Jessie Fyfe Charlotte A. Bates.. Bl D4 1)3 HM AF HM AF S M S M S M HM FP S M F F 136 0 0 54 0 0 157 10 0 70 0 0 12 0 0 130 0 0 12 0 0 156 0 0 12 0 0 139 0 0 170 10 0 37 0 0 12 0 0 150 0 0 111 0 0 78 0 0 44 58 Hannaton.. 58 202 9 4 17 17 6 75 5 6 69 59 Redclifl .. 59 125 1 0 19 0 7 0 5 0 ci 32 60 Hakataramea GO 172 1 10 25 7 6 10 5 0 E4 41 61 62 Hakataramea Valley . Glenavy 01 62 146 11 0 221 1 0 11 7 9 13 0 2 0 5 0 2 15 6 E4 D2 24 36 63 64 65 Waitaki Kapua Station Creek Geraldine— Salisbury (a) (13 04 05 150 16 0 113 8 6 83 13 0 12 5 0 9 17 2 8 11 7 10 5 6 0 6 5 0 8 6 1)2 E4 30 18 11 1 12 10 15,416 7 8 1,323 14 9 1,416 3 7 15,194 2 0 4,555 OTAGO. 1 Waitaki — Wharekuri Awakino ( 8 ) Kurow 1 2 3 70 0 0 51 11 3 345 4 0 9 0 0 31 6 0 3 18 9 Eva Mary Ash Isabella Gillanders.. John Kelly Margaret Ford Margaret Steel Gerald Morris C. Livingston Annie Boyd William Phillipps .. Rosetta R. King William Hay Rennie Elizabeth J. M. Reid James Moir Annie Darton D4 D4 Dl D3 D2 D2 E2 D3 D3 E2 D2 E4 Dl E2 F F HM AF F HM AF F HM AF HM AF HM AF 70 0 0 70 0 0 202 0 0 110 0 0 90 0 0 204 0 0 105 0 0 105 0 0 166 0 0 85 0 0 170 0 0 80 0 0 187 0 0 105 0 0 12 14 86 2 3 4 Otiake Duntroon .. 4 5 92 10 0 309 0 0 12 0 0 31 0 0 26 "i 0 23 99 5 6 Kokoamo .. Awamoko.. 6 7 103 15 0 255 1 0 12 0 0 23 0 6 14 0 7 12 11 0 32 51 7 Papakaio .. 8 250 16 8 22 5 0 2 0 0 58 8 Pukeuri .. 9 291 10 0 31 0 0 69 9 1 83 Oamaru [Bj — Oamaru (North) 10 1,019 2 8 83 5 0 281 9 3 James Lindsay Alicia M. Thompson Oscar D. Flamank .. Margaret H.Thomson John Pringle Ada Helena Downes Eliza Jane Gardiner Jane Hood Edwin Thomas Earl Mary King , .. Alexander Bell Mary Jane Wilding John Brunton Emilie Sophia Geddes E. S. E. de Lambert Ida B. McKenzie .. John Harkness Rice William McDonald Jean Laird Cooke .. G. C. S. McNaught Louis Henry Murray Marion Thompson .. Emma C. Tempero.. Tanzie H. Brownlee George W. Cockroft Dl D2 D2 D2 B3 D3 D3 HM AF AM AF AM AF AF FP HM AF AM AF AM AF FP FP HM AM AF AF AM AF FP FP MP 283 10 0 119 0 0 194 0 0 105 0 0 114 0 0 80 0 0 80 0 0 25 0 0 284 10 0 129 0 0 170 0 0 102 10 0 110 0 0 95 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 307 10 0 215 0 0 139 0 0 110 0 0 110 0 0 80 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 400 Oamaru (Middle) 11 934 15 2 64 0 0 44 17 10 Bl D2 A3 E2 C4 E2 308 10 Oamaru (South) 442 11 12 1,055 0 0 85 0 0 4 3 0 CI Dl D2 D3 D3 D3 Waitaki — Maerewhenua James Nelson Eliza Nelson D3 M S 150 0 0 20 0 0 13 164 11 11 17 0 0 20 5 9 3-1 12

E.-l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued OTAGO — continued.

(i) Relieving, ( 2 ) Monitor.

52

°*5 o ° O to II q o Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. n Maintenance. „ .,,. Buildings, : Sites, Teachers' Other Vu ™^ ie ' Salaries and Ordinary Apparatus. Allowances. Expenditure. , ' Maintenance. Expenditure for the Year. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. § I e3 -it o O ri O 1 si 5 (2 Annual Salary and AHowa-nce at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. q> Cβ f 13 14 15 Waitaki — continued. Livingstone Island Cliff Ngapara 14 15 16 £ s. d. 90 0 0 100 0 0 266 12 1 £ s. d. 12 0 0 12 0 0 27 10 0 £ s. d. 21 6 0 21 0 7 19 1 5 Mary D. Carson A. S.F.de L.Graham John Bobertson Grace E. Maogregor Robina L. McGill .. Francis Golding Annie M. Alexander William E. Bastings Fanny L. Andrew .. Robert Huie Margaret MaeKenzie Thomas C. Harrison Catherine J. Faulds John Black Grant .. Agnes Ross Agnes Thompson .. Duncan R. Matheson Mary Gemmell G. W. C. Macdonald Isabella Orr Cooper Jeanie M. Lothian.. Robert Blair Jessie Isabel Given.. John Watt Margaret Watt Allanetta P. McLeod D4 D4 B2 D3 D3 D2 E3 D2 D2 Dl D3 El D2 Dl D3 F F HM AF F HM AF HM AF HM AF HM AF HM AF FP M S HM AF FP HM AF HM AF AF £ s. d. 90 0 0 100 0 0 185 0 0 105 0 0 100 0 0 200 0 0 105 0 0 182 0 0 80 0 0 174 0 0 85 0 0 197 0 0 80 0 0 221 16 8 105 0 0 20 0 0 140 0 0 17 0 0 221 16 8 110 0 0 20 0 0 169 10 0 85 0 0 230 0 0 116 10 0 85 0 0 23 29 80 16 17 Windsor Teaneraki 17 18 90 18 6 306 0 0 11 5 0 31 0 0 7 16 11 12 11 9 29 81 18 Waiareka 19 268 0 0 27 10 0 803 12 10 75 19 Totara 20 274 18 8 24 0 0 49 12 2 61 20 Kakanui 21 283 0 0 25 15 0 125 0 0 72 21 Maheno 22 344 15 0 32 0 0 61 10 9 106 Incholme 155 10 0 13 5 0 4 4 6 D4 35 22 23 02 D3 23 Otepopo 24 348 11 9 31 0 0 30 1 10 106 Waianakarua 253 5 0 17 0 0 E2 D3 CI El D3 48 24 25 Hampden [B] 26 455 12 2 34 0 0 7 10 0 144 25 Waitaki— Moeraki 252 8 2 24 0 0 18 8 0 Cecil F. J. Bell Kate Andrew Margaret Dippie .. Howard Randle Janet Fleming James McLaren John Harper Moir (!) C. D. Robertson James Grant A. H. Williamson .. Jessie Russell Nelson Jessie F. L. Cameron Harry H. Pattle .. Helen T. Barclay .. D3 D3 E2 D2 El B2 B2 D2 C2 D3 D3 HM AF F HM AF HM AM AF AM AM AF FP MP FP 162 0 0 80 0 0 100 0 0 189 0 0 112 10 0 371 5 10 240 0 0 144 0 0 206 15 10 116 15 10 85 0 0 25 0 0 35 0 0 20 0 0 48 20 27 27 28 Kartigi Pukeiwitahi 28 29 107 9 0 301 0 0 12 0 0 31 0 0 4 8 0 27 10 6 27 92 Palmerston [B] 30 1,021 15 8 55 0 0 12 17 11 256 29 Waihemo — Inch Valley Dunback 9 0 0 17 0 0 30 31 32 88 34 35 36 Stoneburn Waihemo Macrae's Moonlight Goodwood.. Waikouaiti — Nenthorn Flag Swamp 31 32 33 34 85 86 37 70 7 2 179 1 8 70 0 0 70 0 0 80 0 0 149 0 0 156 15 0 9 0 0 9 0 0 11 5 0 14 10 0 12 0 0 14 14 2 10 15 5 2 10 8 34 12 5 2 10 3 14 0 8 Margaret Kay John Mills Ruth Cockerill Jane Morris Young Maggie Rose Ross .. Catherine I. Trayes James Borthwiek .. Philip Bremner E4 E2 D4 D3 D4 E2 D2 F M ( 2 ) F F F M M 70 0 0 152 0 0 30 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 148 0 0 150 10 0 13 36 9 17 21 31 26 37 88 38 39 70 0 0 297 5 0 9 0 0 27 10 0 14 16 11 Katharine White .. James R. Pollok .. Helen Malcolm D4 CI D3 F HM AF 70 0 0 207 10 0 110 0 0 12 80 89 Hawksbury [B] — Waikouaiti 40 525 5 0 48 0 0 12 7 6 Samuel Moore Christiana E. Kirby Janet Paterson Mary A. Strachan .. Dl D2 B3 E2 HM AF AF AF 233 10 0 114 0 0 95 0 0 85 0 0 192 Waikouaiti — Merton 155 15 0 18 5 0 William Cron Ada Hatnmond John Williamson .. Louisa M. Aitchison Hugh Marshall Alice G. Rochfort .. William Davidson .. E. Farquharson Alexander M. Ross.. Cecilia Johnstone .. Andrew Davidson .. Grace Davidson James Rennie Mary Sinclair James Henry Gray.. J. G. M. MacLymont Hannah B. Murray Parker McKinlay .. Amelia Bott C3 M S HM AF M S HM AF HM AF M S HM AF AM AM AF AM AF 140 0 0 15 0 0 177 0 0 80 0 0 157 0 0 20 0 0 213 10 0 112 10 0 181 10 0 80 0 0 140 0 0 12 0 0 404 10 0 163 0 0 280 0 0 200 0 0 107 10 0 110 0 0 95 0 0 40 41 37 41 Seacliff 42 259 0 0 22 6 0 0 18 6 D2 E3 D3 46 42 Evansdale 43 172 5 0 17 0 0 10 17 6 42 43 Waitati 44 826 0 0 31 0 0 1 12 6 Dl E2 El E2 D3 100 Pucakanui 45 261 10 0 24 0 0 51 15 2 60 Lower Harbour 46 158 10 0 14 10 0 2 10 29 15 Bl El Bl D2 E2 A3 E2 4G Port Chalmers [BJ .. 47 1,605 16 8 100 0 0 7 17 1 501

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. OTAGO— continued.

53

I! ■So ii o tfl Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. o§ Maintenance. Expenditure lor the Year. nance. _ Buildings, Sites, Other Fu ™ n t d ure, e:sl Aw-*-* Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a o V c6 O 5 6 to .s-s a o Sf Sod o ft Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. a> f< U * ■4 Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Port Chalmers [B] — ctd £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 80 0 0 45 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 40 0 0 Maria M. McCallum Thomas A. Hunter .. Agnes Sinclair Sarah Dale Peter P. S. Finlayson D3 AF MP FP FP MP Waikouaiti— Mount Gargill Upper Junction Elizabeth J. Gunn .. James M. Simmers Lotta M. Turner .. D2 C3 D3 F HM AF 90 0 0 170 0 0 85 0 0 47 48 .48 49 90 0 0 256 0 0 12 0 0 24 5 0 8 14 10 27 14 10 22 60 West Harbour [B] — Sawyers' Bay 311 10 0 31 0 0 13 12 9 Edward Pinder Emma Hayes Joseph Southwiok .. Louise A. N. DowneB John Reid Caroline E. Little .. Ellen H. Palmer .. Ada Hoffmann William Rodger Al E2 Dl B3 CI D2 D2 HM AF HM AF HM AF AF FP MP 200 0 0 110 0 0 188 10 0 80 0 0 248 10 0 114 0 0 95 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 82 l<) 50 50 St. Leonards 51 271 10 0 24 0 0 9 17 6 55 51 Ravensbourne 52 520 10 0 47 9 6 59 6 1 197 Waikouaiti — Pine Hill 170 0 0 36 53 17 0 0 Robert Landreth .. Elizabeth Landreth David Murray John A. Fitzgerald.. Rebecca Gordon George F. Booth .. Alice G. Bowling .. Lois Annie Whinam Helen L. McLeod .. Thomas J. Begg Mary D. Alexander Mary A. Neville B2 M S HM AM AF AM AF AF AF MP FP FP 150 0 0 20 0 0 302 0 0 225 0 0 143 0 0 170 0 0 110 0 0 95 0 0 85 0 0 45 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 52 53 North East Valley [B] 54 1,246 5 0 90 0 0 131 16 1 Dl D2 Dl D2 D2 D3 D3 452 Dunedin City [B] — George Street 54 55 1,750 0 0 156 13 0 4 18 5 David A. McNicoll.. Alexander McLean John H. A. McPhee Isabella Turnbull .. Verona H. D.Campbell Robert G. Tubman.. Eliza Grant Sherriff William F. Browne Jane H. Thomson .. Marion B. Thomson Florence F. Bressey Jane K. Brown Thomas Paterson .. Victoria K. Hopcraft W. L. Harrison Alexander Stewart.. Leonard Arthur Line Alfred Mathews Christina White Agnes Walker Rodger John Dagger Jessie Maxwell Mary Jane Barclay Elizabeth Duthie .. Florence Shearer .. Alfred A. S. Hintz .. John L. Ferguson .. Catherine Haig William Thomson .. John A. McNickle .. Lillias A. Fowler .. Andrew Spence Mary S. McMillan .. Annie Hendry Isabella Mclntyre .. Mary H. Mathewson Logan Donald George T. Palmer .. Myrtle Emily Platts David R. White .. Emma Stevens Owen J. Hodge Marjory Seaton Huie Angus Marshall Jessie Low William Gibson Dl 02 02 Dl E2 D3 D2 D3 D3 HM AM AM AF AF AM AF AM AF FP FP FP MP FP MP HM AM AM AF AF AM AF FP FP FP MP HM AF AM AM AF AM AF AF AF FP MP MP FP HM AF AM AF AM AF AM 349 10 0 242 10 0 200 0 0 165 10 0 109 0 0 138 0 0 110 0 0 114 0 0 80 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 35 0 0 25 0 0 30 0 0 321 10 0 253 10 0 185 0 0 148 0 0 100 0 0 114 0 0 95 0 0 35 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 30 0 0 402 0 0 165 10 0 242 10 0 200 0 0 116 10 0 138 0 0 102 10 0 95 0 0 80 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 445 10 0 165 10 0 240 0 0 136 10 0 170 0 0 95 0 0 110 0 0 673 55 Union Street C6 1,335 13 4 120 8 0 257 9 0 01 Al D2 El D2 D2 B2 508 Albany Street 677 56 57 1,660 13 4 141 3 0 955 3 8 01 Dl 02 A2 E2 02 El D2 D3 Al Dl 01 Dl 02 D2 D4 643 Normal School 58 1,590 18 11 202 16 7 105 6 0

E.—l

54

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. OTAGO — continued.

o.S ■jj-g Schools, and the t> q Counties or Boroughs *=„ (the latter marked [B]) 5 ° iu which situate. a o O03 o d§ IS It Maintenance. Expenditure (or the Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. TeacherB' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. crj O 1 3 .S<3 II I i Annual § * Salary and ! "3 2 Allowance i § a at the Bate ! S o paid during < °^ the Last £° Quarter ol : <a;a the Year. \ gjn Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. DunedinCityfB]— ctd. Normal School — ctd. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Charles Albert Smith Ellen Jane Chalmers Lilian Frances Jones M. A. P. Waugh .. Christina MoCulloch Florence Alice Jones Elizabeth Grey Aris John Edward Perry John H. Chapman .. Isabella Rennie Hay Richard J. Barrett .. Peter G. Stewart .. Hughina I. McLeod A. G. Robertson Isabella McLandress William R. Cook .. Mary Ann White .. Harriet C. Meikle .. Daisy Mary Orkney James Waddell Smith Annie C. Anderson .. John S. Tennant .. John A. Robertson .. Jessie Cairns James Robertson .. E. S. Beveridge Alice Mary Andrew Sarah Cameron E. W. Saunders Harry R. Urquhart C. T. O'Connell Ivy Muriel Croft .. 03 AM FP FP FP FP FP FP MP HM AF AM AM AF AM AF MP FP FP FP HM AF AM AM AF AM AF AF FP FP MP FP FP £ s. d. 85 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 30 0 0 322 10 0 140 10 0 231 0 0 185 0 0 115 0 0 114 0 0 80 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 25 0 0 25 0 0 335 10 0 158 0 0 220 0 0 215 0 0 112 10 0 133 0 0 85 0 0 80 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 40 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 57 Arthur Street 59 1,324 1 8 127 13 0 147 17 2 Dl E2* Dl D2 D2 D2 B3 547 High Street 58 00 1,497 18 3 118 0 0 148 19 3 CI El B2 Dl E2 D2 D3 D3 612 1 Peninsula — Anderson's Bay 195 11 8 James Jeflery Janet J. Walden .. Edith Wilson James Niven Alexander Pirie Elizabeth Pirie John Whyte Annie H. Barnett .. John Francis Botting James Barton Catherine G. Weir .. James William Hardy Mrs. Hardy Constance E. Jones James Alexander Jack Marion Ross George Balsille Clara Ellen Ohalmer Dl D2 HM AF FP M M S HM AF M HM AF M S F M S HM AF 228 10 0 109 0 0 20 0 0 70 0 0 158 0 0 14 0 0 180 0 0 85 0 0 124 0 0 185 0 0 80 0 0 140 0 0 16 0 0 90 0 0 148 0 0 18 0 0 181 0 0 80 0 0 123 59 61 357 10 0 35 0 0 60 61 Tomahawk North-east Harbour 62 63 69 19 8 170 15 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 14 6 C4 D2 13 29 62 63 64 Higholiff .. Broad Bay Portobello.. 61 65 66 265 0 0 134 10 0 265 0 0 24 0 0 11 5 0 24 0 0 5 10 0 6 2 0 D2 D2 D2 El D3 D2 50 25 57 63 Ofcakou 67 158 5 0 13 5 0 8 10 0 34 66 67 Taiaroa Head Hooper's Inlet 68 69 90 2 0 168 5 0 11 5 0 14 10 0 4 10 D4 D2 19 32 68 Sandymount 70 266 0 0 24 0 0 88 10 1 02 D3 53 69 Taieri — Leith Valley 71 207 0 0 18 15 0 20 12 4 Charles G. Smeaton Ellen Lumb Jessie Mitchell Dl M S Mon. 177 0 0 20 0 0 10 0 0 19 Boslyn [B] — Wakari 336 0 0 81 0 0 18 4 8 William A. Paterson Jessie C. Christie .. Jeannie Falconer .. William C. Allnutt.. Mary McEwan James M. E. Garrow Henry P. Kelk Jane Wilson Mary Callender Horace R. Fisher .. Jane Campbell Mary Alexander Joseph-Hunter Jane Pilkington Beatrice Barr Esther May Ferry .. William A. Armour George H. Uttley .. Jessie Paterson Alexander Kyle Janet Mclntosh William George Don Thomas R. W. Coutts D2 D2 HM AF FP HM AF AM AM AF AF AM AF AF MP FP FP FP MP MP FP HM AF AM AM 212 6 8 105 0 0 20 0 0 358 10 0 150 10 0 242 10 0 207 10 0 116 10 0 105 0 0 124 0 0 95 0 0 80 0 0 45 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 30 0 0 20 0 0 303 0 0 135 10 0 210 0 0 171 0 0 97 70 72 Kaikorai .. 1,688 13 4 128 0 0 66 6 8 Dl E2 B2 El E2 E2 E3 D2 D3 714 71 78 t 90 0 0 Dl E2 D2 B2 Mornington [B] 74 1,173 10 5 50 9 5 £6! 72

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. OTAGO — continued.

55

a> w g = □ ° Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. if !« Main t< Bxpe: iditure for thi >nance. Tear. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Tear. a •I O s s-i s Ph O Annual § £ Salary and ! -2 Allowance | § at the Kate : S o paid during ! the Last «>'g Quarter of <■ - a the Year. gg Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other 0rdinary Expenditure. 73 Mornington [B] — ctd. Caversham [B] 75 £ s. d. 1,362 16 5 £ s. a. 100 0 0 £ s. a. 5 15 0 Mary Cameron Donella Little Eva Marion Orkney Haroia E. Jeffreys .. Gertruae H. Provo.. Olive Mercer William Milne Elizabeth L. Donala Charles Young John R. Rutherfora Jessie H. Rutherfora William Fulton Abel Caroline S. Yorston Antoinette Renz Grace Olulee Clarissa M. Mitchell James Morlana Isabella McGregor .. Langley Pope D. V. Marchbanks .. William John Moore Jane Dunlop Hooper Walter Euaey Sarah E. Albert John Melville D. J. Wilkinson Lily Sullivan Jane P. Hartley E2 r>3 03 Bl El 01 B2 A3 D4 D2 AF AF AF MP FP FP HM AF AM AM AF AM AF FP FP FP MP FP HM AF HM AF AM AF AM FP FP FP £ s. a. 100 0 0 85 0 0 85 0 0 40 0 0 25 0 0 20 0 0 332 10 0 r nfi 148 0 0 506 238 10 0 170 0 0 100 0 0 110 0 0 85 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 45 0 0 30 0 0 209 10 0 Q S 105 0 0 88 323 10 0 oq fi 129 0 0 336 203 10 0 100 0 0 110 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 506 74 75 St. Clair [Bl Kensington [B] 76 77 315 0 0 972 15 0 31 0 0 70 0 0 156 15 0 54 3 11 01 D2 Dl Dl 02 E2 D4 88 336 76 Caversham [B] — Macanarew Road .. 78 1,148 16 8 85 0 0 82 6 8 William Bennett .. Agnes Forsyth John R. MacDonaia William James Strong Flora Faulks Mary Maria Walker Helen Don Ann C. Alexanaer .. Jessie Campbell Dl El 01 D2 D2 E2 D3 HM AF AM AM AF AF AF FP FP 286 10 0 Aon 139 0 0 230 0 0 167 0 0 110 0 0 95 0 0 85 0 0 25 0 0 20 0 0 42i South Duneain [B] — Forbury 77 Green Islana [B] 79 1,229 5 5 90 0 0 68 18 6 Richara G. Wbetter Jane Barr Mackie .. Walter B. Graham.. Dora Smith Lawrence William S. Maxwell Margaret R. Sherrifi Elizabeth J. Wilkinson Mary Ann Daviason Olivia M. Barkman William R. Mechaelis Ebenezer Piper Ellen Jane Home .. Robert Wilson Mary Wilson Mills.. Janet Highet Wilhelmina Torrance Robert Hugh Stables Annie P. Tomlinson Bl Dl 02 E2 D3 D2 D3 HM AF AM AF AM AF AF FP FP MP HM AF AM AF AF AF MP FP 314 0 0 m 128 0 0 232 10 0 110 0 0 124 0 0 95 0 0 85 0 0 35 0 0 25 0 0 40 0 0 290 0 0 360 134 0 0 194 0 0 112 10 0 95 0 0 85 0 0 40 0 0 20 0 0 475 78 80 1,036 16 10 76 0 0 219 2 11 Dl El D2 E2 D3 D2 360 Taieri— Walton .. 79 81 32 17 9 Davia Sinclair Mason Jessie Gibson Mills Sarah Wilson Marion Dent Steel .. Margaret D. Dickie John Menzies Elizabeth M. CaWer Frederick S. Aldrea Elizabeth McKay .. James N. Waddell.. Annie Gray Shand.. Alice M. M. Davis .. Donald MacLeod .. Mary Scott Alexanaer Marshall Margaret E. K. Taylor Annie Murray Ross Douglas W. Kenneay D2 El 03 B2 D4 B2 D4 Dl E2 B2 E2 HM AF F F F HM AF HM AF HM AF FP HM AF AM AF AF MP 178 0 0 66 87 10 0 90 0 0 23 105 0 0 45 70 0 0 u 187 0 0 41 80 0 0 207 10 0 77 105 0 0 202 6 8 U5 116 10 0 20 0 0 256 0 0 279 114 0 0 162 0 0 85 0 0 85 0 0 45 0 0 273 10 0 25 15 0 66 80 81 82 83 Saaaie Hill Brighton .. Kuri Bush Otokaia 82 83 84 85 88 4 10 105 0 0 69 7 5 265 15 0 12 0 0 18 15 0 9 0 0 17 0 0 23 45 14 41 84 Allanton 86 313 0 0 31 0 0 82 3 6 77 8,'i East Taieri 87 336 0 0 35 0 0 81 12 7 115 Mosgiel [B] 751 2 5 62 0 0 D2 D2 02 D2 D2 279 86 88 Taieri— Wylie's Crossing .. 87 88 North Taieri 89 90 130 0 0 201 0 0 17 0 0 17 0 0 28 8 6 Jane S. Anaerson .. M. A. S. Walton .. George B. Anderson GeorginaB. Anderson E2 CI F FP M S 113 6 8 46 20 0 0 178 0 0 3 S 20 0 0 46 35

E.—l.

Table No. 8. —List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. OTAGO — continued.

(!) Relieving.

56

d.2 ® Eβ Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which Bituate. h S3 si §• Mainti Expei iditure for thi mance. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. § 1 5 i 8 f S Annual § u 5 Salary and -gS O~ Allowance § a qo at the Bate I £s paid during I ■<& £k the Last i g-g g Quarter of ' a 2 Ph the Year. Sg _ <_ Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 89 90 91 Taieri— continued. Tahora Lee Stream Strath Taieri 91 92 93 £ s. d. 138 5 0 70 0 0 293 10 0 £ s. a. 12 0 0 9 0 0 31 0 0 £ s. d. Samuel J. Harrison George P. Graham.. John Matheson Evelyn M. McAdam Annie Cecilia Dow .. Eliz. M. Harrison .. John White Selina Jane Dale .. Gertrude Williams.. Thomas C. Praser .. Herbert C. Jones (») Martha Kirkland .. James Methven Jessie J. Allan Robert Fergus Effie M. P. Morgan William Ferguson .. Margaret E. Sinclair D3 03 'E2 D3 D4 D2 D2 E2 D3 B2 D2 E2 B2 D3 D2 D3 E2 M M HM AF P P HM AP AF HM AM AP HM AP HM AP M S £ s. d. 124 0 0 70 0 0 189 0 0 105 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 198 0 0 116 10 0 80 0 0 182 0 0 175 0 0 85 0 0 200 0 0 85 0 0 185 0 0 85 0 0 152 0 0 20 0 0 21 12 99 34 7 4 92 93 94 Hukinga Whare Plat Outram 94 95 96 70 0 0 70 0 0 •396 0 0 9 0 0 9 0 0 37 0 0 9 7 3 5 17 6 96 2 2 13 12 133 95 West Taieri 97 269 15 6 24 0 0 2 17 6 72 96 Maungatua 98 I 283 0 0 24 0 0 34 18 0 58 97 Henley 99 254 7 7 24 0 0 30 7 8 58 98 Waipori Lake 100 168 5 0 13 5 0 2 10 0 38 Bruce— Taieri Perry 196 10 0 12 0 0 5 9 10 Robert Peattie Mrs. Peattie John L. Bonnin Mary Anne J. Wall Francis Hilgendorf E. J. Roberts James Smith Marjory T. Scott .. Mabel Ashley Green Bl M S HM AF M S HM AF P 180 10 0 14 0 0 159 10 0 80 0 0 148 0 0 15 0 0 166 0 0 85 0 0 90 0 0 28 99 101 .00 Waihola 102 239 10 0 17 0 0 E2 D3 D2 38 .01 Taieri Beach 103 164 15 0 13 5 0 32 .02 Milburn 104 211 16 8 20 10 0 0 9 0 D2 D4 D3 53 .03 .04 Circle Hill Milton [B] — Tokomairiro 105 106 92 10 0 1,029 9 1 12 0 0 59 10 0 16 16 8 5 0 0 James Reid Mary McLaren William P. Watters Helen C. Gibb Andrew Parlane Lilias Oswald Taylor Annie Louisa Grant John Kerr Edie 01 El B2 D3 D3 HM AF AM AF AM PP FP MP 381 9 6 144 0 0 216 9 7 85 0 0 110 0 0 35 0 0 30 0 0 35 0 0 22 282 Bruce— Fairfax .05 106 .07 .08 .09 Akatore Glenledi .. Southbridge Glenore 107 108 109 110 111 317 10 0 75 0 0 64 3 4 105 0 0 147 15 0 31 0 0 10 10 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 34 6 0 4 3 0 10 17 7 Cornelius Mahoney Mary Ann Ferguson Grace M. Farnie ■ .. Eliza P. M. H. Paul Mary Ann Sinclair.. John Anderson Gray Mrs. Gray.. Alice Mary Gunn .. Ethel A. P. Jordan.. Mary Ralston Wilhelmina R. Reid Neil Pollock Margaret Dunlop .. Jemima Kinder Elizabeth Budd Wilhelmina Harlow John Nicholson Jane Paterson William McLaren .. Margaret Sinclair .. John Reid Mary Simson Charles J. Roseveare Francis Tubman .. Jane Robertson D2 E2 D4 D4 B3 E2 HM AF F F F M S P F P F HM AF F P F HM AF AM AF AM FP MP MP FP 210 0 0 105 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 105 0 0 131 10 0 12 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 166 0 0 85 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 290 10 0 126 10 0 194 0 0 105 0 0 110 0 0 35 0 0 45 0 0 45 0 0 25 0 0 87 18 11 33 25 L10 HI 112 L13 L14 LIB L16 LIT 18 Table Hill.. Round Hill Manuka Creek Adam's Plat Lovell's Plat Stoney Greek Hillend Pukepito .. Kaitangata [B] 112 113 114 115 116 117 118 119 120 70 0 0 70 0 0 98 15 0 70 0 0 245 13 11 70 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 982 11 8 9 0 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 9 0 0 18 15 0 9 0 0 9 0 0 8 5 0 78 0 0 12 7 1 12 15 10 4 18 0 21 0 0 27 10 5 8 13 182 0 6 206 17 11 D4 D4 D3 D4 D3 D3 D3 D5 D4 02 E2 D2 D3 03 16 11 26 9 51 18 17 22 354 Bruce— Wangaloa.. Stirling 19 115 19 20 121 122 67 7 5 355 16 9 9 15 0 35 0 0 Janet Panton Grigor Charles Robert Smith Mary Tregoning Elizabeth McDonald Alexander Grigor .. William McElrea .. Mary Kinloch Allan James A. Valentine Sarah E. MaoKellar Jessie R. A. Paterson William H. Johnston Jane S. B. Graham D4 Dl E2 P HM AP FP M HM AF AM AP FP MP FP 70 0 0 224 16 8 116 10 0 20 0 0 146 10 0 364 8 9 121 10 0 214 8 9 85 0 0 30 0 0 35 0 0 20 0 0 21 .22 Matau Balclutha [B] 123 124 160 15 0 882 7 8 12 0 0 51 10 0 16 0 2 02 Bl E2 B2 D3 24 241 Clutha— Tβ Houka Waitapeka 16 26 23 .24 125 126 80 0 0 155 12 6 9 0 0 13 5 0 11 3 1 Jessie M. Riddell .. Joseph Davidson .. D3 D4 F M 80 0 0 143 0 0

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. OTAGO— continued.

B—E. 1.

57

q go CD I s Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 08 sss Main t< Bxpei inance. iditure for the Year. nance. _ .... Buildings, Sites, Other Fnr a' t a ure, Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. § s I a-i 5 fi Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. !!■§ <D C8 ■5 Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. L26 -26 .27 .28 .29 .30 181 .32 .88 34 .35 .36 .37 38 .39 L40 .41 i'A .43 44 .45 .46 .47 Olutha — continued. Kakapuaka Warepa Kaihiku Waiwera Ashley Downs Waiwera Township Purua Port Molyneux Reomoana Ahuriri Katea Romareka Owaka Catlin'a Owaka Valley Ratanui Honipapa Tahakopa Kahuika .. Chasland'a Tahatika Purekireki Clinton 127 128 129 130 131 132 133 134 135 136 137 138 139 140 141 142 143 144 145 146 147 148 149 £ s. d. 92 1 8 247 10 0 139 0 0 70 0 0 88 2 6 254 10 0 184 15 0 131 10 0 70 0 0 167 10 0 102 10 0 23 16 8 298 10 0 75 0 0 90 0 0 157 5 0 90 0 0 68 10 0 47 0 0 147 15 0 105 0 0 102 12 10 342 15 4 £ s. a. 12 0 0 22 5 0 9 15 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 24 0 0 17 0 0 9 0 0 9 0 0 13 5 0 12 0 0 4 10 0 31 0 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 6 15 0 6 5 0 14 10 0 14 10 0 10 10 0 33 0 0 £ s. d. 14 16 0 8 0 0 4 0 0 4 15 0 3 7 4 3 15 0 275 6 8 22 0 0 6 *5 10 26 3 4 199 7 0 264 2 4 6 2 9 10 7 0 13 16 5 35 19 5 Elizabeth S. Paterson John Wilson Janet Law Hopcraft George Menzies Prances M. S. Fegans Jessie Imlah Reid .. George B. Clark Mary Thomson Shore James Arthur Rix .. Mrs. Rix James MoNeur Mario Carrick William McClelland Mrs. McClelland .. Annie Jane Smith .. Kate P. Haydon .. James T. Bryant .. Jessie Henderson .. Grace McLean Catherine B. Duncan Edward Davis Emily Carlton Mary Loudon Magnus Thomson .. Prank G. Murphy .. Andrew Chesney Mary R. Plamank .. Margaret Gow John Neil Stewart.. Joanna H. Paterson Major George Irwin Jemima McDougall Alexander Gow Mary Gow Jeannie MoL. McKay Thomas A. Patterson Elizabeth M. Gunn George W. Carrington Mrs. A. Phillips William W. Mackie Annabella Broome.. Lydia Neil James Kerr Menzies \ Christina McLaren.. ! Jessie Connell Howat D4 D2 D4 D2 D4 D4 El D2 Dl E2 E3 D2 D4 D4 E2 D2 D3 D3 D3 D3 D4 D4 D2 E2 E3 D2 C3 P HM AP M P P HM AP M S M P M S P P HM AP P P M S P M M M P P HM AP MP P M S P HM AP M S HM AP P HM AP AP £ s. d. 90 0 0 166 0 0 85 0 0 139 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 173 10 0 80 0 0 167 0 0 18 0 0 131 10 0 70 0 0 150 10 0 13 0 0 100 0 0 70 0 0 192 10 0 105 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 140 0 0 15 0 0 90 0 0 90 0 0 90 0 0 143 0 0 105 0 0 90 0 0 214 6 8 105 0 0 30 0 0 70 0 0 150 0 0 16 0 0 70 0 0 166 0 0 80 0 0 172 0 0 18 0 0 180 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 224 10 0 110 0 0 80 0 0 23 52 18 11 23 55 37 15 18 30 28 11 76 15 21 28 19 14 16 28 37 19 107 48 49 Kuriwao Wairuna 150 151 70 0 0 166 5 0 9 0 0 17 0 0 10 0 23 18 0 E4 D3 13 40 50 51 Pomahaka Downs .. Waipahi .. 152 153 64 6 2 248 0 0 9 0 0 24 0 0 E4 B2 E3 D2 53 .52 Arthflrton 154 188 5 0 17 0 0 7 16 6 40 53 Waikoikoi 155 260 0 0 24 0 0 5 10 0 D3 E2 D3 Dl D3 E3 54 54 .55 Merino Downs Tapanui [B] 156 157 70 0 0 414 11 5 9 0 0 43 0 0 11 5 9 19 18 0 16 158 Tuapeka— Glenkenioh Kelso 158 159 102 12 6 279 10 0 12 0 0 25 15 0 16 19 2 Eliza White Alexander S. Malcolm Margaret Harland .. George Poster Isabella M. Poster .. Johanna Praser William A.Ballantyne Catherine B. Keam.. David Percy Mary J. Edmeades.. Catherine P. Main .. Lionel E. Ellisson .. Elizabeth Smith .. Ellen Hay Bell Jessie P. McGregor.. Elizabeth M. Harlow Jane Ann McNab .. John Hunter Patrick Margaret Nicoll Abraham M. Barnett Louisa Anne Heckler Charles K. Kerr .. Mary Loudon Wilhelmina Smyth Arthur W. Tindall .. Jane G. Ralston D3 C2 E2 Dl F HM AF M 8 P HM AP M S F M S P F P F HM AP HM AF HM AF F HM AF 100 0 0 196 10 0 80 0 0 157 0 0 20 0 0 105 0 0 180 0 0 85 0 0 148 0 0 18 0 0 90 0 0 148 0 0 18 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 90 0 0 70 0 0 178 0 0 80 0 0 177 0 0 80 0 0 181 0 0 80 0 0 90 0 0 207 10 0 105 0 0 30 63 56 .57 .58 Heriot 160 173 5 0 17 0 0 7 5 0 41 59 .60 Crookston Dunrobin 161 162 103 15 0 257 10 0 12 0 0 22 5 0 47 "i 6 E3 C3 D3 D2 32 54 .61 Tuapeka Mouth 163 167 10 0 12 0 0 31 .62 .63 Eongahere Tuapeka West 164 165 90 0 0 169 10 0 12 0 0 15 15 0 23 0 8 D3 Dl 24 33 .64 .65 .06 .67 .68 Tuapeka Plat Waitahuna West .. Mount Stuart Clark's Flat Waitahuna 166 167 168 169 170 70 0 0 92 10 0 90 0 0 70 0 0 260 0 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 9 0 0 24 0 0 10 10 0 E3 E3 D3 D4 E2 E3 D2 E3 D2 E2 E3 C2 E3 16 24 21 12 68 49 ii 0 .69 Waitahuna Gully .. 171 258 0 0 22 5 0 60 14 9 47 .70 Waipori 172 263 0 0 24 0 0 7 6 9 55 71 .72 Wetherstone Bluespur 173 174 92 10 0 313 10 0 12 0 0 31 0 0 31 6 0 30 14 6 23 83 Lawrence [B] — Lawrence Dist. High 960 2 6 . 53 5 0 40 1 8 John Stenhouse Jane Beatrice Powler Henry L. Darton .. Bessie Bushell Christina Stenhouse Jessie M. J. Pope .. Sarah Jane Hogg .. CI El Dl E2 HM AF AM AP "PP 'PP FP 382 6 3 144 0 0 233 16 3 102 10 0 35 0 0 35 0 0 20 0 0 230 73 175

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. OTAGO — continued.

t 1 ) Aided school.

58

■2-8 ii Schools, and the Counties oi Boroughs (the latter marked [B}) in which situate. S3 3" Hainti Bxpe: jnanco. iditure lor thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. d -2 I 5 5 s a <2 Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. s"' aw Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 174 175 176 177 Tuapeka— Evans Flat . i Beaumont Rae's Junction Miller's Flat 17( 17' 171 17! £ s. d. 117 12 8 90 0 0 100 0 0 282 5 0 £ s. d. 15 15 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 27 10 0 £ s. d. 14 7 5 3 17 3 Agnes G. Donald .. Annie Birch Susan J. H. Williams Ewen Piiling Violet Rutherford .. Amelia Frances Peters William A. Eeilly .. Jane Clark James Christie D2 D3 E3 El D4 D4 Bl D4 P F F HM AF F HM AF MP £ s. d. 105 0 0 90 0 0 100 0 0 192 10 0 110 0 0 90 0 0 243 16 8 110 0 0 30 0 0 36 25 26 73 11 17 0 178 179 Moa Flat Roxburgh [B] 18i 18: 96 1 8 382 4 4 11 5 0 35 0 0 1 11 3 0 14 0 15 132 Tuapeka— Coal Creek 165 0 0 15 15 0 William W. Turner Margaret Turner .. 03 M S 148 0 0 14 0 0 34 180 182 Vincent — Bald Hill 165 0 4 14 10 0 James Harvey Annie Butler James G. Closs Susan Black Paul .. E3 M S HM AF 148 0 0 18 0 0 192 10 0 110 0 0 35 181 183 182 Alexandra [B] 184 291 0 10 29 5 0 D2 E3 80 Vinoent — Springvale (') Moutere (*) Earnscleugh Clyde 185 186 187 188 51 11 3 35 12 6 105 2 3 324 0 0 12 0 0 31 0 0 10 0 0 2 5.0 Lily Evans Henrietta Cormack Kate MoMillan .. Joseph E. Stevens .. Dora S. Stevens Abel Warburton Elizabeth Waddell.. E4 E3 Dl E2 D2 D2 F F F HM AF HM AF 70 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 207 10 0 112 10 0 187 0 0 105 0 0 16 8 20 79 .83 .84 .85 Cromwell [B] 189 293 0 0 31 0 0 7 2 6 84 Vincent — Bannockburn 252 0 0 24 0 0 12 5 3 James Fleming Annie R. Truman .. Jemima E. Masters Maria Selina Pretsch David Stewart Lilias I. Thomson .. Janet Ann White .. Mary Trainor Norman L. MoKenzie James McLay Alice Annett Catherine Cameron John B. Grant John Beattie Margaret Anderson Edward Smith Bithia L. C. Hodges Emma K. Church .. Julia Burke D2 D2 D4 D4 D2 D4 D3 D4 D4 C4 E2 r>4 D3 D2 D4 D3 D4 HM AF F F HM AF F F M M F F M HM AF HM AF F F 174 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 70 0 0 170 0 0 85 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 90 0 0 70 0 0 80 0 0 185 0 0 80 0 0 170 0 0 80 0 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 62 186 190 187 188 189 Nevis Kawarau Lowburn 191 192 193 70 0 0 70 0 0 238 8 9 9 0 0 9 0 0 24 9 6 206 17 6 11 7 58 190 191 192 193 194 195 196 197 Wanaka Road Luggate Wanaka Makarora Hawea Tarras Bendigo .. Matakanui 194 195 196 197 198 199 200 201 70 0 0 88 6 8 60 1 8 100 0 0 90 0 0 70 0 0 70 13 4 266 0 0 9 0 0 10 10 0 6 15 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 9 0 0 6 15 0 24 0 0 7 0 0 4 3 9 2 9 5 11 21 13 13 24 14 13 57 26 '3 9 198 Black's 202 231 12 5 22 5 0 52 17 3 51 199 Moa Creek Ida Valley 203 204 70 0 0 100 0 0 9 0 0 13 16 0 9 2 3 D3 14 30 201 202 Maniototo — Lauder Cambrian's 205 206 70 0 0 171 10 0 9 0 0 15 15 0 11 15 6 10 16 6 Elizabeth G. Christie William B. Appleby Amelia Williams .. Robert Cowan Alice M. M. Baron.. Margaret J. Falconer Charles C. Rawlinson Annie L. Rawlinson Victoria W. Eagan.. James P. F. Malcolm Blanche Luscombe.. Mary A. R. McCarthy D4 E3 F M S HM AF F M S F HM AF AF 70 0 0 157 0 0 20 0 0 181 0 0 85 0 0 90 0 0 160 0 0 19 0 0 90 0 0 226 10 0 109 0 0 95 0 0 17 40 203 St. Bathan's Blackstone Rough Ridge 207 208 209 260 4 2 83 6 8 174 15 0 24 0 0 12 0 0 17 4 5 6 0 7 14 0 8 34 18 6 D2 B4 r>3 D3 51 20 39 204 205 206 207 Maruimato Naseby [B] 210 211 97 10 0 432 0 0 12 0 0 43 0 0 15 13 10 35 6 6 E3 Dl D3 D2 24 164 208 209 210 211 212 213 214 Maniototo — Kyeburn Diggings .. Kyebum Eweburn Gimmerburn Waipiata Patearoa Hamilton 212 213 214 215 216 217 218 75 0 0 98 13 i 90 0 0 163 8 2 70 0 0 90 0 0 160 19 0 9 15 0 13 5 0 12 0 0 17 0 0 9 0 0 12 0 0 12 0 0 6 5 9 25 12 1 8 8 9 9 19 2 5 6 0 8 5 4 22 16 6 Annie L. G. Smith.. William Bannerman Grace C. McArthur Hugh McMillan .. Ada Maria Cross Isabella MacLeod .. James Cusack Elizabeth North .. [Closed 31 Mar., 1897] Thomas A. Finlay .. Marion McKay John Dufty Burnard Maud Byre Dawson r>3 C4 m l>3 1)3 E3 F M F M F F M S 70 0 0 140 0 0 90 0 0 152 0 0 70 0 0 90 0 0 143 0 0 16 0 0 16 33 21 35 15 22 28 Capburn Kokonga 219 220 31 0 0 115 8 10 4 4 6 17 11 0 38 ii 8 r>2 M S HM AF 150 0 0 20 0 0 162 0 0 80 0 0 44 215 216 Hyde 221 245 0 0 20 10 0 27 10 10 r>3 m 47

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. OTAGO— continued.

59

°hj! o.S ££ Is xnX a © OCfi O Schools, and the Counties' or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. 4~i 68 *-§ gtn Sg a a © ta a& Maintenance. Expenditure for thi Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. a o '■Q B 5 a 8 © Mi ."Sec o P4 Annual Salary and Allowance at the Rate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. ' ©" o •a S at. © d ©H3 ©H ■ > Teachers' Other Salaries and Ordinary Allowances. Expenditure. Expenditun £ s. d. e not qpporti £ s. d. med. £ s. d. £ s. a. 58 14 7 Teaohers' salaries .. Committee incidentals School buildings, not chargeable to any particular school Preparation of plans, and supervision of buildings School appliances 37 15 1 234 10 3 607 6 7 134 12 1 63,792 7 2 5,725 19 1 8,231 14 4 64,026 2 7 19218 SOUTHLAND. 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 Southland — Lumsden Garston Athol Mossburn Caroline Dipton Riverside Fernhills South Hillend Limehills 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 333 2 5 131 5 0 100 0 0 123 13 6 87 13 4 273 2 6 66 13 4 135 8 4 143 2 8 271 8 0 23 9 3 10 0 7 10 0 0 10 18 0 7 6 3 17 13 8 4 5 0 10 11 10 11 14 4 17 2 6 50 0 0 38 10 0 9 12 6 6 7 1 21 6 6 15 0 15 7 6 W. H. Clarke E. A. M. Mclvor .. John A. McKenzie .. William S. Lea Mary Robinson Christina Wraytt .. Janet A. Hamilton.. John Gray Jane M. Scott Jean C. Christie David D. Steadman Henry Shepard Thomas G. Shand .. Jane Sutherland .. Alexander L. Wyllie Mary S.H. McKenzie James H. Baird Jane B. Young Hewan Archdall .. Bl E3 E3 E3 E3 D4 Dl E3 E4 D4 E3 D2 E2 01 D3 PrM DF MP M F F F HM AF F M M HM AF PrM DF AM FP MP 196 12 0 110 0 0 35 0 0 136 0 0 100 0 0 125 2 0 76 0 0 172 6 0 100 0 0 64 0 0 140 0 0 144 0 0 171 17 0 100 0 0 224 17 O 115 0 0 130 0 0 37 10 0 50 0 0 138 31 21 31 19 84 16 33 40 83 11 Winton [B] 11 560 0 4 32 3 8 38 8 7 208 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 Southland— North Forest Hill .. Hokonui Springhills Elderslie South Forest Hill .. Ryal Bush Makarewa 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 134 6 8 87 0 0 118 8 4 140 19 4 41 13 4 141 5 0 270 1 10 10 11 2 8 10 0 10 4 11 11 8 8 2 11 3 11 6 9 16 19 11 4 7 9 25 0 4 16 0 0 Alexander Clark .. Margaret Macpherson D. L. McLauchlan David S. McKillop.. Jessie Cameron John Officer Eric K. F. Mackay Elizabeth Murray .. George H. Macan .. S. M. M. Macdonald William A. Rowe .. Mary E. Johnston .. Francis R. Blue Thomas G. Stockwell Annie S. Boyd Jessie S. Morton .. Mary McCallum .. John F.C. Hiddleston Minnie L. Hanning Thomas Merrie James Orr Mary A. MoLeod .. E4 E3 E2 E3 M F M M F M HM AF HM FP HM FP MP HM FP F F HM AF M HM AF 136 0 0 76 0 0 76 0 0 144 0 0 44 0 0 143 4 0 167 12 0 100 0 0 155 5 0 42 10 0 166 19 0 42 10 0 55 0 0 155 5 0 37 10 0 117 0 0 118 16 0 171 8 0 100 0 0 153 19 0 178 12 0 100 0 0 29 17 18 38 11 39 72 4 17 8 38 9 0 El Dl E3 El 19 Wallaoetown 19 202 7 5 13 13 0 10 7 6 55 20 Waianiwa 20 272 15 8 17 5 0 3 12 0 Dl 72 Waianiwa Village .. 171 11 1 9 11 2 15 11 0 D4 E3 21 21 55 22 23 24 Spar Bush Springbank West Plains 22 23 24 118 14 6 107 7 8 269 9 0 10 6 9 10 0 0 16 9 11 28 5 0 3 10 0 27 10 0 E3 E4 Dl E4 E2 Dl E4 24 25 82 25 26 Otatara Bush Waikiwi 25 26 147 4 6 274 5 5 11 18 1 18 12 5 499 14 11 50 98 Gladstone [B] — Waihopai 338 18 0 21 18 0 77 2 11 Duncan McNeil Jane Fairweather .. Elizabeth Jamieson George Hardie Mary Hard ie Robert Gibb Christina Ridland .. Bl E2 E5 Dl E2 Lie PrM DF FP PrM DF MP FP 185 7 0 110 0 0 42 10 0 205 4 0 110 0 0 55 0 0 42 10 0 110 27 27 North Invercargill [B] 424 18 0 27 12 5 24 0 6 158 28 28 Invercargill [B] — Invercargill Park .. 588 18 10 35 6 2 126 4 4 James Hain Isabella Dryburgh .. Robert Hendry Aline Joyce Margaret French .. Jane Rogers Dl E2 D4 E4 PrM DF AM FP FP FP 244 0 0 120 0 0 165 0 0 42 10 0 42 10 0 87 10 0 265 29 29

B.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. SOUTHLAND— continued.

60

oto Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. Mainti Expei mance. iditure for th. Year. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. ! 3 I &i i& o P-< Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. II r Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 30 31 Invercargill [B] — ctd. Invercargill Middle Invercargill South .. 30 31 £ s. d. 1,480 2 7 1,551 11 9 £ s. d. 79 19 4 89 11 9 £ s. d. 83 12 4 49 14 0 William G. Mehaffey Helen L. Birsa Charles W. G. Selby Alexander Lindsay.. Henry E. Murray .. Annie Thomson Agness Pratt Margaret Cumming Margaret S. Pasley.. Jessie Ann Dundas.. Williamina A. Ramsay Amy Anderson Caroline Brown Edmund Webber .. Caroline MoLeod .. John Porteous William H. Sebo .. Lucy J. Joyce Alfred P. Grenfell .. Margaret B. Adamson Bertha Joyoe Minnie R. Morton .. Margaret Eeid Bessie Spence Minnie Henderson.. Peter Donnelly Nellie McKay Alice Black Dl Dl Dl Dl D3 E2 E4 D4 01 B2 B2 El El D2 C3 PrM DP AM AM AM AP AP PP PP PP PP PP PP PrM DP AM AM AP AM AP PP PP PP PP PP MP PP PP £ s. d. 296 3 0 145 0 0 230 0 0 197 0 0 145 0 0 105 0 0 100 0 0 42 10 0 42 10 0 42 10 0 42 10 0 37 10 0 22 10 0 308 0 0 145 0 0 230 0 0 206 0 0 110 0 0 140 0 0 100 0 0 42 10 0 42 10 0 42 10 0 37 10 0 27 10 0 40 0 0 22 10 0 22 10 0 551 620 32 33 34 35 Southland — Tisbifry Clifton Seaward Moss Bluff [B] — 32 33 34 35 241 0 6 273 12 8 79 5 0 560 17 5 17 8 0 17 14 3 6 13 33 9 3 2 0 0 2 0 0 79 4 6 Martha Hamilton .. Alice B. Rout Jessie Nicoll James Murdooh Margaret M. Sangster Aaron Y. Smith Andrew Young Edith M. Townsend Alexander Greig Henry C. Hewlett .. Margaret Gifford .. D2 D4 E2 D2 02 El E2 03 D4 HP PP PP HM AP M PrM DP AM MP PP 157 2 0 42 10 0 37 10 0 174 11 0 100 0 0 76 0 0 229 8 0 115 0 0 130 0 0 55 0 0 27 10 0 83 19 224 85 Southland — Greenhills Waikaia 3C 37 Harry T. Taylor .. James B. Hutohinson Jane L. H. Brown .. William A. Sproat.. James Milne P. R. H. Sutherland John McPadden Donald Munro Jane King Marjorie E. Cameron Robert P. Meek .. Ada M. Meek.. Robert Learmonth.. Maria Baldey Artherton L. Puller William Smith William R. Overton John G. Pullarton .. Patience Purvis John McKinnon Janet 0. McKinnon Agnes Gray James R. Gilchrist.. John W. McLeod .. Frederick C. McClure Marianne Grant Eliza Cumming Mary E. White James W. Mail Margaret Mail D3 02 D3 M PrM DP MP M M M HM AP P HM PP HM PP M M M HM PP HM PP P M M M P P P HM PP 135 0 0 188 1 0 110 0 0 50 0 0 139 0 0 142 8 0 72 0 0 175 0 0 100 0 0 125 2 0 146 8 0 42 10 0 160 9 0 42 10 0 60 0 0 140 0 0 145 12 0 156 11 0 42 10 0 150 8 0 42 10 0 68 0 0 115 0 0 134 0 0 115 0 0 100 0 0 129 12 0 117 18 0 153 6 0 27 10 0 36 37 133 0 0 341 11 4 10 7 5 21 16 9 118 '5 0 29 119 38 39 40 41 Wendonside Wendon Waipounamu Riversdale as 39 40 41 141 10 4 155 0 4 84 15 0 273 16 0 11 12 5 13 0 6 8 13 9 17 13 8 22 15 0 2 12 7 0 0 36 19 6 El D2 E5 B2 D3 Lie. E3 Lie. D2 Lie. El* D3 E2 04 32 36 18 90 42 43 Pyramid Siding Longridge Village .. 42 43 122 11 0 205 0 8 10 13 8 12 9 4 95 10 0 3 4 0 34 42 44 Balfour 44 208 15 3 14 19 3 11 0 0 63 45 4G 47 48 Longridge.. Ardlussa Mandeville Otama 45 40 47 48 83 6 8 136 10 0 144 18 8 210 1 9 7 3 9 10 13 8 11 19 11 13 14 4 18 9 6 5 18 9 5 0 0 33 0 0 13 33 42 57 49 Knapdale .. .. 49 208 12 7 13 1 10 41 8 6 D2 48 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 Chatton Eoad Chatton Waikaka Wendon Valley .. Greenvale Waikaka Valley Maitland Village .. Pukerau 50 51 52 53 54 55 56 57 70 13 4 115 0 0 135 7 8 123 13 9 85 0 0 130 10 1 97 14 9 189 3 0 5 13 9 10 0 0 10 16 10 10 1 2 6 0 0 12 4 4 7 10 7 13 1 9 12 '9 6 0 16 4 15 1 6 5 5 1 37 17 6 2 15 0 E4 E4* E2 Lie. D3 E2 D3 D3 E4 17 21 29 22 20 40 26 51 Gore [B] — East Gore 400 9 8 28 7 5 17 6 William Gilchrist .. Margaret MoLean .. Rosann a Morgan .. Agnes R. G. Christie Dl E4 PrM DP PP PP 214 14 0 115 0 0 42 10 0 22 10 0 57 58 179

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c.— continued. SOUTHLAND— continued.

(l) Town District. ( 2 ) Not opened third quarter.

61

h a; re !i ocfi Schools, and the Counties or Boroughs (the latter marked [B]) in which situate. ?! 6" Main ti Expel snance. iditure for thi Tear. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. Teachers' Names, including all Teachers and Pupil-teachers on the Staff at the End of the Year. I I s 3 M 8 Annual Salary and Allowance at the Bate paid during the Last Quarter of the Year. Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. 58 Gore [B] — continued. ■ Gore 59 £ s. d. 557 7 6 £ s. d. 32 14 11 £ s. d. 431 1 4 Jonathan Golding .. Mary Anna T. Traoey James A. Cowie Ellen E. Rodger .. Elizabeth M. Wilson B2 D2 B4 PrM DF AM FP FP £ s. d. 228 7 0 115 0 0 130 0 0 42 10 0 42 10 0 217 Southland — Croydon Siding Croydon Charlton Waimumu Mataura [B] E4 33 21 33 24 206 59 60 61 62 68 60 61 62 63 64 133 8 4 109 0 0 138 15 0 114 17 6 563 6 10 10 5 7 8 13 9 11 1 9 10 0 0 32 12 5 0 5 7 4 4 8 3 10 0 1 9 10 Robert Fraser Hugh Clark John C. M. Evison.. Albert G. Lea William Maoandrew Lillian E. Fowler .. William Burnside .. E. A. L. F. Maoandrew William Park D4 D3 D3 E4 Dl Dl A2 M M M M PrM DF AM FP MP 138 0 0 115 0 0 139 0 0 115 0 0 223 2 0 115 0 0 130 0 0 42 10 0 35 0 0 64 05 f>6 67 Southland — Ferndale Kaiwera .. ) Slopedown J Tuturau .. (Wairekiki.. ) (Waikana .. J Mimihau Kedan Mokoreta Wyndham [B] (>) 65 86 0 0 7 3 9 (569 ( 5 6 9 11 14 3 15 0 0 Thomas B. Hamilton r>4 M 76 0 0 18 I 22 47 I 21 1 1* 17 11 20 144 GG 136 0 0 I 4 1 0 0 16 William A. Diaok .. D3 M 137 0 0 67 144 12 0 William J. Williams E2 M 151 4 0 68 68 143 0 0 11 15 6 Alfred Howorth D2 M F F M PrM DF MP 141 12 0 69 70 71 72 69 70 71 72 96 0 0 46 6 8 111 10 0 355 5 5 10 0 0 2 18 9 10 0 7 24 6 9 2 0 0 Mary A. E. Campbell Matilda Taylor Alexander Matheson Jabez Golding Margaret E. Hamilton James Pow E3 76 O 0 48 0 0 107 10 0 199 6 0 110 0 0 40 0 0 13 18 6 D2 E2 73 74 75 7G Southland — Wyndham South .. Mataura Island Pine Bush Portroae 73 74 75 76 78 0 0 128 0 9 128 6 8 209 5 6 5 16 3 11 12 5 10 2 5 13 12 4 5 0 0 27 5 8 1 10 6 5 3 10 Elizabeth A. Adams Martha Lind George C. Maodonald Arthur J. Millard .. Cecilia Hannan Jeanette Fraser Alfred McClure John Lyttle E4 E4 D2 E2 F F M HM FP F M M 68 0 0 126 14 5 115 0 0 153 19 0 42 10 0 127 18 0 126 10 0 131 0 0 14 36 23 53 77 78 79 80 81 82 83 84 Tokonui Otara Haldane Quarry Hills Waikawa Valley J" Waikawa Niagara Edendale 77 78 79 131 15 10 126 0 0 69 17 2 10 5 7 10 9 10 2 11 10 (503 |503 8 11 3 10 1 3 16 9 4 E3 26 27 22 I 16 4 20 18 77 175 3 1 J 3 15 0 E2 80 122 15 0 William O. Duthie.. Dl M 115 0 0 81 82 83 102 4 5 120 3 4 267 15 3 146 '6 0 37 15 3 Emily Street Esau Fisher Thomas Monteath .. Maude M. Turner .. Elizabeth McLean.. Charles McKinnon.. Isabella H. Watson Elizabeth W.Bellamy Jessie Wilson Arch. H. Hiddleston Margaret C. Perrin.. Alexander Stott Agnes Diokie Thomas E. Gazzard Mary Lea Joseph H. Gray James Miller .. Dugald Cameron .. Andrew Macdonald A. E. Featherstone.. John S. Andrews .. Ebenezer C. Hewat Rachel W. Porteous George E. Robertson Bertha Clapp Bertha E. Stevenson D3 E2 El D3 D3 E4 F M HM AF F M F F F HM AF HM FP HM AF M M M M M M PrM DF AM FP FP 100 0 0 115 0 0 169 12 0 100 0 0 117 0 0 130 0 0 76 0 0 127 8 10 100 0 0 168 5 0 70 0 0 150 8 0 37 10 0 161 15 0 70 0 0 140 16 0 149 12 0 32 0 0 44 0 0 142 8 0 64 0 0 225 11 0 115 0 0 130 0 0 42 10 0 37 10 0 85 86 87 m 89 90 Seaward Downs Oteramika Gorge .. Kapuka Oteramika Waituna Woodlands 84 85 86 87 88 89 119 0 C 131 8 4 95 5 11 104 5 0 234 15 8 10 6 9 10 4 4 7 9 4 10 0 0 15 8 8 11 0 0 6 *3 6 D4 E4 E4 C4 C2 25 23 ( 2 ) 37 19 73 3 6 10 91 Longbush .. 90 190 1 3 13 1 9 46 92 93 94 95 9G 97 98 99 Rimu Kennington Myross Bush Roslyn Bush Grove Bush Mabel Hedgehope Eiverton [B] 91 92 93 94 95 96 97 98 247 9 1 142 6 8 141 2 0 43 13 4 49 13 4 143 13 4 92 15 0 584 0 0 15 6 10 11 13 1 11 14 4 3 13 3 3 9 11 18 1 8 8 9 35 6 2 25 0 0 Dl D3 E2 E3 D2 D2 D2 E3 Bl D2 D2 62 34 46 7 10 37 15 213 17 15 10 3 10 0 Wallace — Centre Island Oraki Oolao Bay 99 100 101 8 6 8 180 4 7 90 4 0 C. A. Colley Herbert A. Wild .. Angus McNeil Mary G. McKay Alice Reid F. W. Hoddinott .. Henry P. Young .. Mary A. McWilliam Conrad Fortune M. F. MoLauohlan.. D2 A3 E4 E4 C3 Dl E2 F M HM AF F M PrM DF MP F 20 0 0 152 8 0 168 14 0 70 0 0 100 0 0 138 0 0 191 15 0 110 0 0 40 0 0 100 0 0 ( 2 ) 37 76 100 101 102 12 6 2 2 6 2 129 18 9 103 104 105 Round Hill Pahia Orepuki 102 103 104 136 16 0 349 0 11 10 18 8 21 13 0 7 9 2 10 11 3 2 0 0 0 31 126 Koromiko.. 80 0 0 4 15 0 E3 22 106 105

E.—l.

Table No. 8.—List of the Public Schools, the Expenditure, Staff, &c. — continued. SOUTHLAND— continued.

(1) Town District. ( 2 ) Not opened third quarter.

62

h Schools, ana the >'{Z Counties or Boroughs S Jj (the latter m arked [B]) So in which situate. P "8~ 68 || IS 6 m Maintenance. Expenditure for thi Tear. Buildings, Sites, Furniture, and Apparatus. a .a Teachers' Names, -S •* . Including all Teachers ee -""o and Pupil-teachers <2 cs J| on the Staff at the End s ° « of the Year. g -g 50 3 & O Annual § u Salary and -gS Allowance | § & at the Kate S o paid during < 3 I^ > the Last j gL'g Quarter of ea-2 the Year. S in <i Teachers' Salaries and Allowances. Other Ordinary Expenditure. Wallace— continued. Thornbury £ s. d. £ s. d. 228 8 1 13 11 2 £ s. d. 40 15 6 Alexander Inglis .. Caroline Nixon Duncan MoKenzie.. Ellen B. Fallow .. Donald MoKenzie .. Elsie M. Jackson .. Thomas Kelly James Soar Jessie M. Camahan James Lumsden Grace McArthur .. Thomas Horan John Macrae Mary G. Greenslade Mary G. Swap D2 E3 El E4 E4 D3 E2 D3 E3 E2 HM AF HM FP M F M M F HM FP M PrM DF FP £ s. d. 152 0 0 70 0 0 155 18 0 42 10 0 132 0 0 127 8 10 130 0 0 142 8 0 64 0 0 165 0 0 37 10 0 135 0 0 188 19 0 110 0 0 42 10 0 50 .07 106 08 Waimatuku 107 204 5 4 14 2 5 3 0 0 55 .09 .10 .11 .12 .18 .14 Wild Bush Gummie's Bush Fairfax Limestone Plains .. Flint's Bush Drummond 108 109 110 111 112 113 130 3 i 10 3 0 127 6 8 11 10 7 122 10 0 10 0 0 136 13 8 10 14 >3 66 6 8 4 3 9 209 0 8 14 19 11 16 3 6 28 10 0 93 0 0 26 35 25 37 15 67 28 *3 0 15 .16 Oreti Plains Otautau [B] ( l ) 114 115 137 10 0 10 19 11 352 11 20 19 4 3 0 0 13 IS 9 E2 B2 D3 27 121 .17 .18 Wallace— Aparima Scott's Gap (Eastern Bush 1 jFeldwick .. J Clifden Wairio 116 117 36 15 4 111 10 0 10 1 10 148 19 6 136 8 6 Jeannie W. Saunders Edward H. Ward .. E4 E4 M 120 12 0 135 0 0 29 30 f 25 I 12 22 72 .19 118 138 6 4 10 19 3 10 12 3 A. E. Barrowclough A4 M 142 8 0 .20 21 119 120 101 13 4 7 6 3 224 0 9 15 14 3 42 10 0 54 0 0 John L. Field Alfred Heathcote .. Christina McDonald William Millar Johanna Gosgrifl .. James Donald Agnes McAllister .. Joseph MeLaucblan Kate Glynn George M. Hassing.. John Mehafiey Ida E.Keith Alice M. Reid CI E2 M HM FP HM FP HM FP HM FP M PrM DF FP 115 0 0 168 14 0 .22 Nightcaps.. 121 203 18 4 15 4 11 25 2 9 E2* 166 6 0 27 10 0 148 16 0 22 10 0 147 4 0 37 10 0 132 0 0 184 18 0 110 0 0 37 10 0 71 .28 Opio 122 174 0 2 12 13 8 D3 45 .24 Wrey's Bush 123 170 0 10 12 4 11 3 15 3 C3 42 .25 20 Heddon Bush Queenstown [B] 124 125 125 16 8 10 1 2 337 17 0 21 1 2 2 5 0 107 16 6 E2 Dl* E4 26 108 .27 .28 .29 .30 .31 LakeKingston Glenorchy Arthur's Point MiHer's Flat Lower Shotover 126 127 128 129 130 39 15 11 3 13 115 16 1 10 2 5 100 0 0 10 0 0 49 13 4 3 13 205 9 1 13 4 4 12 0 0 Catherine Cameron Robert Brownlie Janet Dewar Lena McDonnell .. Walter J. Rogers .. Ellen Southberg .. El F M F F HM FP 44 0 0 135 0 0 100 0 0 48 0 0 155 18 0 42 10 0 11 30 23 12 54 E3 .82 .33 .34 Upper Shotover ) Skipper's Reefs j Arrow [B] .. 131 j 92 9 2 4 0 0 I 14 0 0 3 3 9 273 3 3 17 10 6 4 ii 3 Lewis Sangster E3 M 131 0 0 ! 9 I 16 88 132 David M. Greig B. M. McDonnell .. C3 E3 HM AF 174 2 0 100 0 0 83 .36 .87 .38 Lake — Crown Terrace Gibbston Macetown Cardrona 133 134 135 136 64 0 0 4 0 0 142 4 0 11 11 9 137 14 8 II 15 6 202 10 8 12 10 6 0 "i 2 Gertrude M. Wilkins Alexander F. McNab Joseph Kilburn Frank Foote Florence G. Healey A. G. Thomson Caroline J. Thomson E4 C3 E2 D4 F M M HM FP HM FP 68 0 0 140 16 0 144 0 0 144 16 0 42 10 0 148 0 0 42 10 0 17 36 39 41 39 Pembroke 137 205 7 4 12 9 11 11 15 0 E2 45 .40 .41 Stewart Island— Half-moon Bay Fiord — j Te Oneroa .. } I Cromarty .. } 138 139 140 5 0 10 4 11 7 10 0 8 0 0 15 1 6 William Peterson .. Thomas J. Gilfedder E2 M M 142 0 0 60 0 0 27 ( 2 ) Furniture and appliances School sites Plans, supervision and fees Advertising tenders .. Expenditure not apportit 119 4 1 rued. 39 2 6 282 0 0 26,571 2 10 1,831 15 0 21 17 6 4,143 19 4 26,737 5 0 8,095

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EEPOETS OF EDUCATION BOARDS.

AUCKLAND. In compliance with section 102 of " The Education Act, 1877," the Board presents the following report of its proceedings during the year 1897 : — Board. —At the beginning of 1897 the Board consisted of the following~members : The Rev. Canon Bates, Messrs. T. Cooper, A. E. Harris, W. Lambe, S. Luke, J. Muir, E. Udy, W. Woodward, and J. H. Wright. Canon Bates and Mr. Lambe retired from office in March, and were succeeded by Mr. E. Hobbs and Mr. J. E. Eeed. Mr. Woodward died in June, and Mr. L. J. Bagnall was elected to fill the vacancy. At the annual election, held this month, Mr. Bagnall and Mr. Luke were re-elected. Mr. Harris (who did not seek re-election) will be succeeded by Mr. E. Farrell. Mr. Muir was Chairman of the Board until April, 1897; Mr. Luke has been Chairman since that month. Twenty-six meetings of the Board were held during the year, with an average attendance of seven members. Thirty-eight committee meetings were also held during the year. Schools. —Three hundred and sixty-three schools were in operation during the year. The number of schools open at the end of the year was 359, of which number forty-two were halftime. New schools were opened at Waiheke (itinerant), Bream-tail, Omaru, Te Arai, Opanake, Opouriao South, Opouriao North, Awatuna, Katui, Hukatere, Kowhai, Pepepe, Tairua Block, Kimihia, Te Eau-a-moa, Tangaihi; and schools were reopened at Woodside (Kaeo) and at Hunua (No. 2). The following schools were closed during the year: Euth's Island, Pukekaroro, Eiverhead, Bothwell, Kaurihohore, Long Bay, Taotaoroa. The buildings at Kaurihohore, Long Bay, and Taotaoroa are the property of the Board. The last-named building is about to be removed to another site. The teacher's residence at Kaurihohore is to be removed to Hikurangi for use there. The number of small schools is steadily increasing. No fewer than eighty-six full-time schools have an average attendance of less than twenty scholars. The Board grants a capitation of £5 a year to certificated teachers in charge of schools where the average is under fifteen, and a further grant is made to cover the cost of school stationery and other incidental expenses. It is estimated that four-fifths of the total number of the schools in this district fail to earn sufficient capitationgrant to cover the cost of their maintenance. Teachees. —The number of teachers employed at the end of the year was 856, classified as follows: Head teachers, 338; assistant teachers, 191; pupil-teachers, 263; sewing-teachers, 64; the total comprising 320 males and 536 females. All teachers above the rank of pupil-teacher are certificated except thirteen, of whom eight have obtained partial classification in Class E or D. The scale of salaries for assistant teachers was revised and increased during the year. The pupilteachers are classified as follows: First year, 86; second year, 41; third year, 45; ex-pupil-teachers, 91 : total, 263. Classes for the instruction of pupil-teachers are held at Auckland every Saturday by specially appointed teachers of Latin, French, mathematics, and science. The first examination of pupil-teachers and candidates under the new regulations will be held in June next. Nearly all the candidates who qualified at the examination in June, 1897, have received employment, after a term of probation spent by them at some school under the direction of a head teacher. Attendance. —The roll-number of scholars has increased from 26,607 to 27,683, with an increase of 627 in the (strict) average attendance. The work of the Truant Officer has had a distinctly beneficial effect in and around Auckland. Greater stringency in administering the provisions of the School Attendance Act seems to be required in many country districts, where there is evidence of a growing tendency to disregard the law in this matter. There still seems to be an impression that the enforcement of " compulsory attendance " at school rests at the option of the School Committee of the district. Scholarships.—The number of district scholarships held at the end of the year was seventyseven—viz., twenty-six senior and fifty-one junior. Good reports continue to be received of the diligence and progress of the scholars. The programme of examination has been revised, and the conditions of award of the scholarships are now under revision. Technical. —The Board is prepared to take control of technical and manual instruction if sufficient funds shall be provided by the State for the purpose. Until that condition shall be fulfilled it is not likely that the scheme of technical and manual education set forth in the Act of 1895 can be extended beyond present limits. Classes in manual instruction are held at the Devonport and Eemuera Schools; and an offer of instruction in agricultural chemistry at the Otahuhu School has lately been made and accepted. A recommendation for the establishment of eyening continuation schools has been forwarded to the Minister by the Board. A proposal to build a training college and technical school is under consideration, but some difficulty is experienced in procuring a suitable site. Finance.—The income from all sources during the year was £100,753 19s. 2d., and the expenditure was £100,275 3s. sd. The statutory capitation grant of £3 15s. per head was applied (approximately) as follows : Teachers' salaries, £3 2s. 4d. per head; grants to School Committees (including the painting and repair of school buildings), 7s. lid. per head; inspection and examination, Is. lOd. per head; cost of Board's management, Is. 9d. per head; unexpended, Is. 2d. per head: total, £3 15s. A net saving of £1,178 Is. 6d. accrued on Maintenance Account during the

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year; and at the end of the year this account showed a credit balance of £2,780 13s. 6d. after providing for all liabilities thereon. For school buildings the sum of £12,450 was received from Government, and the expenditure amounted to £13,641 13s. Id. A balance of £1,655 3s. was owing from Building Account to Maintenance Account at the end of the year. The liabilities on Building Account at the end of the year amounted to £4,971 10s. 6d. a further sum of about £4,000 being required to complete all the works then authorised but not begun. Against these liabilities there is the balance of the building grant yet to be received for the current financial year. Buildings.—Many important works, such as the building of new schools and the improvement of existing schools, have to be postponed for lack of funds. Teachers' residences are needed in many districts in which the accommodation is both insufficient and inconvenient. Large demands are constantly arising for the repair and renewal of old buildings. Sites require clearing and fencing. Shelter-sheds and other outbuildings have to be erected or enlarged. A change of population or settlement necessitates the removal of the school to some other site. The Board is therefore compelled to ask that the funds for these purposes may be increased, not curtailed. A permanent staff of two foremen carpenters and two foremen painters is employed (under direction of the architect) to make necessary improvements and repairs. The demand for their services is increasing so greatly as to cause unavoidable delay in attending to some of the many and varied requirements. It is clear that the wants of 359 schools (scattered over a wide area) cannot be adequately met unless School Committees will continue to exercise close and vigilant supervision over the school properties in their districts. Where such local supervision is exercised many minor repairs and wants are duly supplied without waiting for the visit of the foreman, and the school premises are kept in a creditable state of repair. Where this is neglected, habits of untidiness are engendered, together with a spirit of carelessness and indifference, which may ultimately result in acts of abuse or even wilful and wanton damage to the school premises and apparatus. It bejioves those for whose benefit these buildings exist to guard them jealously against acts of vandalism and destruction, and to do all in their power to promote a loyal regard for the care of public property. Jubilee. —The Queen's Diamond Jubilee was celebrated by the observance of a week's holiday in all the schools. A special lesson setting forth the leading events and the progress of the Empire during the past sixty years was printed and circulated for use in the schools. A congratulatory address to Her Majesty was signed by 25,445 scholars of the schools throughout the education district, and was forwarded to His Excellency the Governor for presentation to the Queen. Her Majesty has expressed her great admiration of the artistic manner in which the address was illuminated and bound, and her cordial thanks to the scholars for their kind and touching expressions of loyalty. A duplicate of the address, with the signatures, and Her Majesty's reply, is to be deposited in the Auckland Free Library. Samuel Luke, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ a. A. To Balance— £ a. A. By Office staff—salaries .. .. 1,239 11 6 On General Account 3,743 19 11 Clerical assistance .. .. .. 89 16 0 Dr. Building Account 803 7 10 Departmental contingencies .. 693 6 9 2,940 12 1 Inspectors'salaries .. .. 1,941 13 4 Government grant for buildings .. 12,450 0 0 Inspectors'travelling-expenses .. 721 0 0 Subscriptions and donations for build- Examination of pupil-teachers .. 44 9 0 ings .. .. .. .. 30 0 0 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inOther receipts for buildings— eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. 70,964 13 6 Government grant for rebuilding Incidental expenses of schools .. 9,032 5 5 Lucas Creek School .. .. 141 8 0 Training of teachers. .. .. 52 15 10 Proceeds of sale of Hobsonville Scholarships— teacher's house .. .. 125 0 0 Paid to scholars .. .. .. 1,607 10 0 Proceeds of sale of sample stores, Examination expenses .. .. 100 8 7 tanks, &o. .. .. .. 20 11 5 School buildings— Refund, overcharge by Kauri Timber New buildings .. .. .. 3,119 16 4 Company .. .. .. 12 6 Improvements of buildings .. 7,494 10 8 Punakitere School Committee, sale Furniture and appliances .. .. 1,486 810 of wire -.. .. .. 016 0 Sites .. .. .. .. 1,024 11 3 Rents of reserves, &c. .. .. 21 0 0 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 516 6 0 Government statutory capitation .. 83,844 19 3 Truant officer .. .. ... 130 0 0 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 1,648 2 8 Manual instruction classes .. .. 16 0 5 Inspection subsidy— Balance—■ £ a. A. Ordinary .. .. .. 500 0 0 On General Account 5,074 10 10 Native schools .. .. .. 150 0 0 Dr. Building Account 1,655 3 0 Grants in aid of manual instruction 3,419 7 10 classes .. .. .. 16 0 5 Payments by School Commissioners .. 1,788 4 8 Dacres' Committee—sale of closet .. 10 0 Refund from Ruakaka School Fund .. 15 14 3 £103,694 11 3 £103,694 11 3 Samuel Luke, Chairman. Vincent Eice, Secretary. Examined and found correct —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

TAEANAKI. Sir,— New Plymouth, 4th March, 1898. In accordance with the provisions of section 102 of "The Education Act, 1877," I have the honour to submit the following report of the Board's proceedings for the year ending the 31st December, 1897: —

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The Board.—The retiring members for the year were Messrs. W. Ambury, H. Faull, and J. Mackay. Messrs. Faull and Mackay were re-elected, and Mr. W. Cutfield was elected to fill the vacancy caused by the retirement of Mr. Ambury, who did not seek re-election. Mr. E. G. Bauchope was re-elected Chairman. The Board for the year, therefore, consisted of the following: Mr. Bauchope (Chairman), Miss Hey wood, Messrs. Adlam, Allsworth, Cutfield, Faull, Hill, Mackay, and Wade. Mr. Hill resigned in November, and Mr. D. McAllum was elected to fill the vacancy in January of the current year. The Board held twenty-four ordinary and two special meetings during the year, at which has been as follows: Miss Hey wood, 26; Mr. Bauchope, 26; Mr. Adlam, 25 ; Mr. Allsworth, 26; Mr. Cutfield (who was elected in March, and who had the misfortune to meet with a serious accident shortly after his election), 11; Mr. Faull, 26 ; Mr. Hill, 22; Mr. Mackay, 25; and Mr. Wade, 26. In addition to these meetings the members have all been called upon to serve on various committees, established from time to time to cope with the work of the Board. Schools.—The Huiroa, Tongaporutu, and Kaiauai Schools, contracts for which were let at the end of 1896, were opened early in the year, bringing the number of schools in operation up to sixty. The Whangamomona School will be opened almost immediately, and the Board has in contemplation the erection of a school at Uruti, to supply the pressing needs of outlying settlers in that neighbourhood. Before considering applications for the establishment of new schools, the Board now sets up a committee to visit the locality, to interview the applicants with a view to ascertain if the settlement is likely to be of a permanent nature, to ascertain the distance from the nearest school, the formation of the country, and the state of the roads. With this information before it, the Board is in a position to deal with the application. Even with the greatest care it is impossible to avoid adding to the number of small schools, as the Board feels it would be neglecting its duty if it did not provide the means of education for the children of pioneer settlers. Teachers.—The number of teachers in the Board's service at the end of the year was 133, as against 126 at the end of 1896. Changes have been frequent during the year, and in order to reduce the number, and the consequent temporary disorganization of schools, the Board brought a regulation into force in April, to the effect that no application for transfer would be considered unless the applicant had been in the Board's service twelve months. The Board has also revised its pupil-teachers' regulations, and made provision for the employment of a small number of expupil teachers and cadets. The result of last year's examination of pupil-teachers was very unsatisfactory, seeing that out of twenty-two who were examined ten failed to pass into the next higher grade. The Board intimated to the teachers interested, and to the pupil-teachers who failed, that it expects a better result this year. Attendance. —The total number on the roll at the end of last year was 3,845, as against 3,827 at the end of 1896. The increase would have been greater but for the enlargement and reorganization of the Eoman Catholic School at Stratford. It was opened with a new staff of teachers in January, 1897, and has, for the present, affected the attendance at the schools in that neighbourhood. The average attendance still continues to improve, and has now reached 78 per cent., the highest percentage yet reached in this district. The Board has decided to appoint three Truant Inspectors, with the hope of improving the attendance in those parts of the district where there is still great room for improvement. Buildings.—New schools have been erected at Whangamomona and Kaiauai, and additions made to the Frankley Eoad School. New residences have been built at Inglewood and Oaonui, and additions made at Eahotu. The question of residences has become one of great urgency, no fewer than twenty-five of our schools being without them. The teachers are granted a rentallowance in lieu of a residence, but it is difficult for them to get accommodation near to the schools in bush districts, the majority of the settlers, when first going on the land, only building houses with sufficient accommodation for their own families. The Board finds that each year the buildings now in use, some of which have been built for many years, absorb a larger amount of the building fund more than one-third of the total grant was spent in painting and improving old buildings last year. Stratford District High School.—Seeing that the population of the district has largely increased, more especially in the south-eastern part, and that the advantages of the New Plymouth High School have not been utilised in a corresponding degree, as is apparent from the fact that the attendance has only increased by five since it was opened in January, 1882, the Board gladly acceded to the request of the Stratford Committee, and applied to the Hon. the Minister of Education for his sancciun to convert the Stratford School into a District High School. His consent having been obtained, the school was opened as a District High School after the Christmas holidays, with Mr. John Boyle, M.A., as first assistant-master. The result so far has justified the Board's action, as there are now twenty-one pupils taking advantage of the opportunity thus given them. Scholarships.—As a result of the December examination, scholarships have been awarded to four boys and five girls. The Board was able to increase the number of awards this year, owing to five of the candidates being able to attend the Stratford District High School, thus dispensing with the travelling-allowances hitherto granted to scholarship holders who live in that neighbourhood. Committees. —There are now forty-eight school districts and School Committees, an increase of six as compared with the previous year. The Committees continue to show an increasing interest in performing the duties devolving upon them, and the Board is. pleased to be again able to state that it continues to work harmoniously with them. Finance. —The income of the Board from all sources, including £1,042 7s. Id., balance on 31st December, 1896, was £15,770 16s. 7d., and the expenditure £14,537 25., leaving a credit balance of £1,233 14s. 7d. Against this balance are liabilities which fully cover the same. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. Eobert G. Bauchope, Chairman. 9—E. 1.

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General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ s. d. To Balance — By Office staff—salaries .. .. 175 0 0 On Building Account .. .. 675 17 3 Clerical assistance.. .. .. 810 0 Scholarship Account .. .. 3 11 8 . Departmental contingencies .. .. 193 15 1 On General Aocount .. .. 355 19 10 Inspector's salary .. .. .. 350 0 0 Land Account .. .. .. 5 16 8 Inspector's travelling-expenses .. 91 13 4 Cash in hand .. .. .. 118 Examination of pupil-teachers .. 517 3 Government grant for buildings .. 1,940 0 0 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inGovernment statutory capitation .. 10,955 14 11 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. .. 9,766 19 3 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 211 4 3 Incidental expenses of schools .. 1,285 17 2 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 200 0 0 Training of teachers .. .. 141 0 0 Payments by School Commissioners .. 1,362 14 11 Scholarships— Rents of school sites .. .. 28 6 0 Paid to scholars.. .. .. 206 5 0 Sale of old buildings.. .. .. 21 0 0 Examination expenses .. .. 7 13 Interest on Land Fund .. .. 0 6 11 School buildingsPayments by Committees .. .. 9 2 6 New buildings .. .. .. 1,272 3 3 Improvements of buildings .. .. 696 15 7 Furniture and appliances .. .. 220 14 1 Sites .. .. .. .. 30 6 3 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 70 0 0 Advertising, &c. .. .. .. 15 4 6 Balance— £ a. A. Building Account .. 341 9 11 Scholarship Account 19 8 General Account .. 961 1 8 Land Account .. 6 2 10 Gash in hand .. 10 9 1,311 4 10 Less outstanding cheques 77 10 3 1,233 14 7 £15,770 16 7 £15,770 16 7 Eobert G. Bauchope, Chairman. G. Veale, Secretary. Examined and found correct —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

WANGANUI. Sir, — Wanganui, March, 1898. I have the honour to present the annual report of the proceedings oFthis Board for the year ending 31st December, 1897. Board. —The members who retired by rotation in March last were Messrs. Henry Sanson, James W. Baker, and George A. Hurley. Messrs. Baker and Hurley were re-elected, and Mr. F. M. Spurdle, of Wanganui, was elected in place of Mr. Sanson. During the year Mr. Gilbert Carson, Chairman of the Board, resigned, and Mr. G. S. Bridge'was elected to the vacant seat. Upon the resignation of Mr. Carson, Mr. J. W. Baker was elected Chairman for the current year. The Board is therefore now composed of the following gentlemen: Mr. James W. Baker, Warrengate, Chairman ; Mr. George S. Bridge, Wanganui; Mr. B. C. Bobbins, Hawera; Eev. John Boss, Turakina; Mr. F. M. Spurdle, Wanganui; Mr. J. H. Fry, Makino ; Mr. Frank Y. Lethbridge, M.H.E., Feilding ; Mr. Fred. Pirani, M.H.E., Palmerston North; and Mr. George A. Hurley, Manaia. Schools. —The number of schools in operation in this district at the close of 1896 was 124, and at the close of 1897 it was 127. The new schools opened are : Anderson Eoad, Utiku, and Moawhango. The average weekly roll-number for the quarter ending 31st December was 10,283. The working average, upon which the Board receives the capitation grant, was 8,459, and the strict average attendance was 8,352. The percentage of strict average attendance to the rollnumber for the four quarters was as follows: First quarter, 78-34; second quarter, 80-79 j'third quarter, 81-29 ; and fourth quarter, 81-22. The average for the year is 80-41. These figuresshow a steady rise until we come to the last quarter, when there is a slight fall. This, however, is usually the case at the end of the year. The schools are divided as follows : Twelve are aided schools, with an average attendance under 15 pupils ; seven are aided, with an average of 15 and under 20; nineteen have an average of over 20 and under 25 ; thirty-nine have an average of over 25 and under 50; twenty-one have an average of over 50 and under 75; three have an average of over 75 and under 100; thirteen have an average of over 100 and under 150 ; nine have an average of over*ls0 e and under .300; and four have an average of over 300 and under 500. Only the nineteen schools firstnamed, with an average of under 20, are aided schools. A change has been made in the names of four schools, namely : Karereis now called Longburn ; Paraekaretu, Silverhope ; Kaitoke, Millburn; and Goat Valley, Kai-Iwi. Buildings.—The principal contracts undertaken during, the year were for new schools at Mangaonoho, Euahine, Anderson Eoad, and Kai-Iwi; additions to schools at Maxwell, Feilding, Aramoho, and Mangaweka; new residences at Apiti and Birmingham, and additions to the Hunterville residence. The timber for the Kawatau School was cut and stacked in April, but was washed away by the floods, A second lot "has been cut, and a contract for the erection of the school has subsequently been let. The old Goat Valley School and site were sold, and a fresh site, free of cost, was acquired at Kai-Iwi in a more desirable situation, upon which a new school has been erected. Besides .the above, works, fences, drains, and outhouses have been attended to as far as funds would admit. The Board's carpenter has also been fully occupied upon the erection of new schools at Awahou and Whakamara. Extensive repairs, alterations, or additions have been made to the

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schools at Hiwinui, Taonui, Hurleyville, Pihama, Matapu, Kapuni, Sanson, Upper Taonui, Wanganui Girls', Wanganui Infants', Wanganui Boys', Ashurst, Otakeo, Waitotara, Beaconsfield, Bunnythorpe, Halcombe, Foxton, Terrace End, West Eangitikei, and Porewa; a new residence has been built at Eatanui; and repairs and additions made to the residences at Taonui, Kapcfnga, Upper Taonui, Bulls, Kapuni, Eltham, Kakaramea, South Makirikiri, Bunnythorpe, Colyton, Halcombe, and Pohangina. It may be noticed that the outlay for repairs is large in comparison with the amount spent in the erection of new buildings. This is to be accounted for by the fact that the whole of the Board's buildings are of wood, necessitating constant attention and overhaul. Considering the scattered nature of this district, the large number of perishable buildings to look after, and the limited amount of the building grant annually allocated to this Board, it is a matter of considerable difficulty to meet the demands made by the several School Committees, and applications for new schools in outlying districts. It will, however, be seen from the above statement that the Board has endeavoured to distribute the work over the whole district in a fair and equitable manner. Technical School. —With a view of extending the usefulness of this institution, the Board has considerably enlarged the building and made important additions to the furniture, casts, and scientific apparatus, all of which has been accomplished without encroaching in any way upon the Government grants for primary education. Several new classes have been established, including carpentry, wood-carving, bench-work, modelling in clay, needlework, &c, the details of which will be found in the report of the Art master. Teachers. — The Board has now 271 teachers in its employ, of which 138 are males and 133 females. There are also forty cadets, who do not receive any pay. The above teachers are classed as follows : Fifty-three head male teachers and seven head female teachers, forty-one sole male teachers in charge, twenty-five sole female teachers in charge, twelve assistant males, twentysix assistant females, thirty-two male pupil-teachers, and seventy-five female pupil-teachers. School Committees. —New Committees have been elected at Utiku and Taihape. The Marton Committee resigned, and Messrs. E. E. Beckett and E. H. Humphrey kindly undertook the duties of School Commissioners, and were elected to that position by the Board. The majority of the Eatanui Committee resigned, and fresh committeemen were elected in their stead. School Districts. —New school districts have been formed at Mangamahu, Eewa, Waipuru, Euahine, Utiku, Poukiore, Taihape, Bluff Eoad, and Koinako; and the school districts of Wanganui, Millbnrn, Mosston, and Castlecliff have been readjusted, and the whole of them gazetted. Truancy.—ln May last the Board appointed a committee of its members to consider the subject of truancy. The committee finally recommended that the several schools should be grouped within easy distance, and each group be placed in charge of a truant officer; that one of the Committees in each group should be asked, for the purpose of complying with section 12 of the School Attendance Act, to be the Committee at whose instance any necessary prosecutions should be instituted ; and that the fines recovered should be handed to the Board, to be ultimately paid over to the truant officer as a supplement to his salary. In June a circular embodying these suggestions was sent to all the School Committees, who virtually complied with the arrangement. Ultimately groups of schools were formed, with Wanganui, Palmerston North, Marton, Hawera, Patea, Foxton, and Feilding as centres. The Board will ascertain in due course whether the result has justified the means which they have adopted. Its efforts at present must be looked upon as a tentative attempt to increase the average attendance—although it is already manifest, from the number of persons who have been fined, that some action was necessary. Pupil-teachers.—The annual examination of pupil-teachers was held in June. Eighty-one candidates in all classes presented themselves, viz. : Twenty-four for the first class, twenty-six for the second class, and thirty-one for the third class. In the first class,, seventeen candidates passed and seven failed; in the second class, fourteen passed and twelve failed ; in the third class, twenty passed and eleven failed. In the first or senior class a girl of the Wanganui Girls' School headed the list; in the second class, a boy from the Waverley School was at the head; and in the third class, a girl of the Marton School stood first. Of the candidates in the first class, fourteen were boys and ten were girls ; in the second class, six were boys and twenty were girls; in the third class, fifteen were boys and sixteen were girls. Scholarships.—ln the month of December the usual competitive examination for scholarships was held. Twenty-nine candidates presented themselves for the senior examination and thirtyeight for the junior. Of the senior, thirteen were girls and sixteen were boys. In this division a girl headed the list. Four scholarships were awarded, viz., three to girls and one to a boy. Five girls and five boys also qualified. Fifteen competitors failed to make the requisite percentage ; of these five were girls and ten were boys. Of the juniors, a boy headed the list; and scholarships were awarded to two boys and two girls. Five girls and eight boys also qualified. All who have qualified for scholarships but do not participate in the awards are entitled to free education either at the Collegiate School or the Girls' High School. In the junior class twenty-five candidates failed to qualify, some of whom were manifestly totally unprepared for such an examination, and were evidently wrongly advised in presenting themselves at all. In connection with the scholarships, the Board has raised the age limitation by six months. The age, therefore, for junior scholarship competitors is thirteen years and six months, and for seniors fifteen years and six months. The examinations are now held simultaneously at Wanganui, Hawera, and Palmerston North, provided that not less than seven candidates present themselves at the two latter places. This has necessitated eliminating reading from the regulations. Finance.—The General Account shows a credit balance of £2,570 9s. 5d., with liabilities amounting to £381 Os. 6d. The Building Account shows a debit of £1,258 13s. 6d. and liabilities of £744 Bs. lOd. In the Building Account, however, the Board has received £2,000 in advance of this year's grant, and this, added to the liabilities, places it in a most unsatisfactory financial position. The Board is entirely at a loss to devise any plan for complying with the building

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requirements of this district, unless Government makes some special provision to meet the liabilities already incurred and to satisfy the many pressing demands which are daily received. The Inspectors' report, which is forwarded for your information, will give of the progress of education in this district. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. Jas. W. Baker, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ a. d. To Balance — £ s. d. . By Office staff—Salaries .. • .. 453 15 0 On Technical School .. 43 11 8 Members' expenses .. .. 150 19 2 On General Account .. 2,293 611 Departmental contingencies .. 235 13 6 Inspectors' salaries .. .. 700 0 0 2,336 18 7 Inspectors'travelling-expenses .. 270 0 0 Dr. Building Account 750 18 7 Examination of pupil-teachers .. 78 14 7 1,586 0 0 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inGovernment grant for buildings .. 4,268 13 3 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. .. 27,729 411 Other receipts for buildings— Incidental expenses of schools .. 1,484 16 7 Old materials sold .. .. 5 4 0 Training of teachers .. .. 101 15 5 Buildings and sites sold .. .. 110 0 0 Standard examination expenses .. 57 13 9 Sites leased .. .. .. 27 0 9 Scholarships— Government statutory capitation .. 29,578 18 7 Paid to scholars .. .. .. 446 13 4 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 524 14 7 Examination expenses .. .. 77 4 7 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 300 0 0 School buildings— Training of teachers, fees received .. 24 19 0 New buildings .. .. .. 1,895 911 Payments by School Commissioners .. 1,810 7 10 Improvements of buildings .. 2,078 14 8 Truant inspection fines .. .. 3 12 0 Furniture and appliances.. .. 467 19 7 Contractors' deposits .. ... 87 15 9 Sites .. .. .. .. 238 811 Technical School — Plans, supervision, and fees .. 147 14 4 Government grant, special .. 200 0 0 Office additions .. .. .. 13 4 6 , general .. 65 19 3 Expenses of sites .. .. .. 419 0 School fees, Education Board .. 86 0 0 Contractors' deposits .. .. 159 17 9 „ General .. .. 67 15 0 Truant inspection .. .. .. 92 18 8 Contractors! deposits .. .. 34 7 0 Technical School— Interest on fixed deposit .. .. 8 0 0 Teachers' salaries .. .. 228 15 0 Rees Bequest .. .. .. 467 11 8 Fees paid by Board .. .. 86 0 0 Furniture .. .. .. 87 8 4 Scholarships .. .. .. 10 0 0 Building.. .. .. .. 488 8 0 Plans and supervision .. .. 22 1 0 General expenses .. .. .. 109 2 3 Contractors' deposits .. .. 27 10 0 Balance— £ a. A. On General Account 2,570 9 5 Less Building Account, Dr. .. .. 1,258 13 6 1,311 15 11 £39,256 18 8 £39,256 18 8 A. A. Browne, Secretary. Examined and found correct—J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

WELLINGTON. Sir,— Wellington, 31st March, 1898. In accordance with the provisions of " The Education Act, 1877," I have the honour to submit the following report of this Board for the year ended 31st December last. Board.—The members who retired on the 31st March last were Mr. Fitzherbert, Mr. Young, and the Eev. J. Paterson. The election to fill the vacancies thereby constituted resulted in the return of two retiring members, Mr. Young and the Eev. J. Paterson, and the election of Mr. A. W. Hogg, M.H.E. Mr. Fitzherbert did not offer himself for election. The Board, therefore, consisted of Messrs. J. E. Blair, W. C. Buchanan, M.H.E., F. Bradey, A. W. Hogg, M.H.E., W. W. McCardle, J. Eobertson, J. Young, Dr. Newman, and the Eev. J. Paterson. During the year the Board has held twelve regular meetings and one adjourned meeting; the attendance of the different members being: J. E. Blair, 11; W. C. Buchanan, 10; F. Bradey, 12; W. A. Fitzherbert, 1 (retired 31st March); A. W. Hogg, 9 (elected in April); W. W. McCardle, 10; Dr. Newman, 1 (absent from the colony during most of the year); Eev. J. Paterson, 9; J. Eobertson, 12 ; and J. Young, 12. The Finance Committee has met regularly each month previous to the meeting of the Board, when the accounts have been carefully examined previous to submission to the Board for authority for the expenditure required. The Committee appointed to deal with all matters affecting the Technical School have generally met previous to each Board meeting, and have done their utmost, on all occasions, to advance the welfare of that institution. Schools. —At the close of the year there were 131 schools under the control of the Board, of which number fifteen were carried on with the help of the special grant in aid given to enable advantage to be taken of the existing system of education in sparsely populated centres where the attendance would not justify the Board in providing school buildings. The classification of the schools on the basis of average attendance shows that eighteen had an average of less than 15 pupils ; fourteen, of between 15 and 20 pupils; fifteen, of between 20 and 25 pupils ; thirty-four, of between 25 and 50 pupils; fifteen, of between 50 and 75 pupils; seven, of between 75 and 100 pupils; nine, of between 100 and 150 pupils; eight, of between 150 and 300 pupils; four, of between 300 and 500 pupils; and seven over 500 pupils. New schools were opened at Hukanui, Wairere, Tane, Makairo Village Settlement, Konini, Pongaroa, Mikimiki, Bush Gully, Takapu, and Worser's Bay.

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Teachers.—The classification of teachers in the Board's service, according to the usual table, gives : Head of school—sl males, 11 females; sole teacher—lB males, 51 females ; assistant—3o males, 59 females; pupil-teachers—2o males, 151 females : total, 119 males, 272 females. Sewingteachers, 9. Attendance.—At the close of the year there were 14,031 children on the books of the different 5ch0015—7,256 males and 6,775 females; an increase of 159 males and 279 females as compared with last year. The working average for the different quarters was: 11,692 in March, 11,839 in June, 11,818 in September, and 11,785 in December. Buildings.—The Board has been seriously hampered in its efforts to meet the demands of the rapidly increasing population in the City, and in the new settlements springing up in the Pahiatua and Wairarapa North Counties. A very large portion of the annual building grant is needed to keep pace with the growing population. Many of the schools have had to be enlarged, and there can be no doubt that increased accommodation will have to be provided in many of the special-settlement centres; while the yearly needs for maintenance of existing buildings in no way decrease. The principal items of expenditure for the past year are for new schools at Makairo, Pongaroa, Coonoor, Mangahao, Scarborough, Makuri, Mangamahoe, Kaiparoro, Wairere, Dreyers Eock, Mikimiki, Greytown, Kahautara, Tauherenikau, Taita (to replace the old school which was burnt), Worser's Bay, Hukanui, and Tane, and in the purchase of a site for a school at Eoseneath. Considerable improvements have been made to the schools at Ngaturi, Tiraumea, Waikanae, Eikiorangi, Ohariu, Terrace, Mount Cook Boys', and Mitchelltown, and additions have been provided at Ballance, Taueru, Nireaha, Hastwell, and Levin. The Opaki School and residence had to be removed to a more central position near the railway-station. The total expenditure amounted to £6,505 ss. Bd., made up as follows : New buildings, £3,101 Bs. 2d.; improvements of buildings, £2,445 10s. sd. ; furniture and appliances, £520 45.; sites, £205 16s. Bd.; plans, supervision, and fees, £232 6s. sd. In addition to which contracts were let for several works, the payments for which will be made during the first months of the current year. The payment of the balance due to the contractors for the erection of the Board's office and Technical School will relieve the Board of the amount which has had to be provided annually to meet the charge for interest on account of this contract. In addition to the grant for school buildings, amounting to £5,300, the Board received special grants of £360 for schools in new districts, £200 for schools in farm settlements, and the sum of £131 14s. 6d. on account of the sale of the old school property at Petone, and sale of timber on education reserve. Maori Children.—The number of Maori and half-caste children attending the schools were : Maori—s6 males, 46 females; half-castes living as members of a Native tribe—l 2 males, 10 females; half-castes living among Europeans—2B males, 19 females. In twenty one schools there were Maori or half-caste children on the rolls. Pupil-teachers.—The annual examination of pupil-teachers was held in December last. Of the thirty-four senior pupil-teachers who presented themselves three failed to obtain higher classification. Of the junior, eleven out of thirty-eight failed to obtain promotion. There are now 172 pupil-teachers in the Board's service, sixty-two of whom have passed all their examinations, and are classed as ex-pupil-teachers; fifteen are in the fifth year, thirty-one in the fourth year, seventeen in the third year, twenty-one in the second year, and twenty-six in the first year. Scholarships.—For the purpose of having a more equitable competition for the scholarships among the different schools, the Board decided to distribute the special grant into classes according to the average attendance of the schools. It was felt that pupils from the smaller schools were placed at a disadvantage when competing with those in the larger schools, whose teachers of the higher standards were not called upon to devote so much of their time to other work of the school, and more especially in those schools where the teachers have been able to devote a large amount of special attention to scholarship work. With a view to equalization of the claims of the different schools, the following was the basis agreed upon as best calculated to bring about the desired result: (1.) Twelve scholarships of the annual value of £15, open to all children attending schools within the City of Wellington; (2) three scholarships of the annual value of £35, open to all children attending schools beyond the boundaries of the City of Wellington, where the average, for the quarter preceding the date of the examination, shall exceed 200; (3) two scholarships of the annual value of £35, open to all children attending schools where the average attendance for the quarter preceding the date of examination shall exceed 100 and not exceed 200 ; (4) three scholarships of the annual value of £35, open to all children attending schools where the average attendance for the quarter preceding the date of the examination shall not exceed 100. Should any winner of a scholarship under clauses (2), (3), or (4), be able to reach the College or the Girls' High School by daily train or coach, or if such winner reside within a radius of four miles from the Post Office, or in Vogeltown or Kilbirnie, the scholarship shall be of the annual value of £15, with an allowance to cover train or coach fares. The result of the first examination held under these conditions fully bears out the justice of the arrangement. The total number of candidates in all classes was 166, representing forty-four schools, distributed as follows: For the twelve scholarships in Class A, ninety-five candidates from eight schools presented themselves for examination, and of these thirty-nine obtained half marks in English and arithmetic. For the three scholarships in Class B, there were thirty-two candidates, from six schools, and of these fourteen obtained half marks in English and arithmetic. For the two scholarships in Class C, there were only seven candidates, from three schools. For the three scholarships in Class D, there were thirty-two candidates, from nineteen schools. Of these, fifteen qualified for a place. Of the total number of candidates in all classes, seventy-five obtained the necessary number of marks in English and arithmetic to qualify for a place on the list. The work done is highly spoken of by the examiners in their report.

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Truancy.—The appointment of a truant officer, and the energetic and satisfactory manner in which Mr. Varnham has carried out his duties, has resulted in a marked improvement in the attendance of the children. Absentees and irregular attenders are now promptly looked up, and means taken to insure their attendance at school. It was found necessary-to take legal proceedings under the School Attendance Act in only fourteen instances. As a matter of fact, it has often been difficult to find room in the city schools for a large number of children who have been brought within the reach of education through the efforts of the truant officer. The cordial co-operation of School Committees has materially assisted the Board in its administration of the provisions of the School Attendance Act. School Districts.—By the constitution of new school districts at Mikimiki, Tane, Eoseneath, and Worser's Bay, the number has been increased to 105. Technical School.—The director of the Technical School, in his annual report, deals exhaustively with this branch of the education system. The year's work fully maintains its former excellent standard, and clearly shows that the school is well able to hold its own in competition with kindred institutions at the South Kensington examinations. Singing.—The Board has decided to have an annual examination of teachers in music, on the lines of the English certificate examination, on the tonic sol-fa and staff notations. Those who have regularly attended the Saturday classes desire to have some certificate of their fitness to give class instruction in this subject. These classes have been held by Mr. Parker on Saturday mornings, every fourth Saturday being set apart for instruction at Masterton, where the teachers from the country schools are able to attend. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. J. E. Blair, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ a. A. To Government grant for buildings .. 6,060 0 0 By Balance at beginning of year .. 4,923 19 10 Other receipts for buildings— Office staff —Salaries .. .. 900 0 0 Refund .. .. .. .. 107 10 3 Departmental contingencies.. .. 518 11 4 Rents of reserves .. .. 30 18 6 Inspectors' salaries.. .. .. 925 0 0 Sale of reserves .. .. .. 91 16 0 Inspectors' travelling-expenses .. 298 4 0 Sale of timber .. .. .. 9 0 0 Examination of pupil-teachers .. 2 2 0 Government statutory capitation .. 42,214 14 0 Teachers'salaries and allowances .. 37,366 5 3 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 521 2 2 Incidental expenses of schools .. 4,097 13 5 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 300 0 0 Manual instruction, grants paid to Payments by School Commissioners ... 1,426 17 4 schools .. .. .. 17 16 0 Refund of unclaimed cheque .. 5 8 4 ScholarshipsTechnical School — Paid to scholars .. .. .. 697 2 2 Fees .. .. .. .. 874 11 9 Examination expenses .. .. 33 19 1 Sale of old lead .. .. .. 21 3 1 School buildings— Refund, fees overpaid to Instructors 5 9 6 New buildings .. .. .. 3,101 8 2 Examination fees .. .. 32 0 0 Improvement of buildings.. .. 2,445 10 5 Grant from Corporation .. .. 62 0 9 Furniture and appliances .. .. 520 4 0 Government grant .. .. 100 0 0 Sites .. .. .. .. 205 16 8 Grants to manual and teohnical Plans, supervision, and fees .. 232 6 5 classes .. .. .. 335 0 11 Balance contract, Office and Technical Balance— £ s. d. School .. .. .. 999 10 0 Dr. Building's .. 6,243 6 5 Interest on ditto .. .. .. 69 19 3 Cr. Maintenance.. 1,001 1 6 Interest on Bank overdraft .. .. 64 1 6 5,242 4 11 Insurance.. .. .. .. 20 8 0 £57,439 17 6 £57,439 17 6 J. E. Blair, Chairman. A. Dorset, Secretary. Examined and found correct—J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

HAWKE'S BAY. Sir, — Education Office, Napier, 31st January, 1898. I have the honour to forward the following report of the proceedings of the Hawke's Bay Education Board for the year 1897. The Board consists of the following members, viz.: The Hon. J. D. Ormond, M.L.C. (Chairman), J. W. Carlile, Esq., C. A. Fitzroy, Esq., J. G. Gilberd, Esq., Captain W. E. Bussell, M.H.E., Eev. J. Sidey, D.D., F. Sutton, Esq., T. Tanner, Esq., and F. W. Williams, Esq. School Attendance. —The following return shows a comparative statement of the children on the roll, and the average attendance in the schools under the Board, from 1878 to date : —

Averagi Weekly Number on the Bol 11. Average Attendai ice. ear. March. June. Sept. Dec. Average for Four Quarters. Percentage Increase Previous Year. March. June. Sept. Deo. Average for Pour Quarters. Percentage Increase Previous Year. .878 .888 .896 .897 1,520 5,902 7,629 7,604 1,797 5,968 7,501 7,618 1,854 5,841 7,467 7,582 1,985 5,758 7,415 7,593 1,789 5,867-25 7,503 7,599-25 6-4 1-7 1-27 1,259 4,686 6,353 6,331 1,612 4,733 6,139 6,381 1,580 4,673 6,270 6,448 1,649 4,627 6,251 6,396 1,525 4,679-75 6,253-25 6,389 8-3 4-0 2-1

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Schools.—Four new schools have been opened during 1897, viz.: Wakfetrara, Western Spit, Pohui, and Waimate Valley. The last two are aided schools, in which the parents have to provide the buildings and guarantee a salary of £80 a year, while the Board furnishes the apparatus, and gives a capitation allowance of £4 10s. per head per annum on average attendance. Two new schools, with residences, will be opened shortly at Whetekura and Elsthorpe, two special settlements recently established. Towards the cost of these two school buildings the Government granted, from funds set apart by Parliament for this purpose, the sum of £110, while the Board paid from its ordinary funds the sum of £933. In addition to these buildings, a teacher's residence has been erected at Takapau and Wairoa, and additions have been made to the following schools :_ Te Arai, Wairoa, Weber, Ormondville, and Porangahau ; also, alterations have been carried out in Hampden and Woodville. School Committees.—As in former years, the relations between the Board and the School Committees have been of the most cordial character. There have been no complaints of any importance during the year from the School Committees to the Board; while the Board has duly considered every request made by the Committees, and, as far as necessity called for and the Board funds allowed, have carried out their requests. It is with special gratification that the Board calls attention to the care taken of the school buildings by many of the Committees during the recent bush fires. It was entirely owing to their exertions that serious loss has not occurred. Scholarships.—ln the year 1897 there were forty-two scholarship holders from the public schools attending the Napier High Schools and the Gisborne District High School. Four of the scholarships were of the value of £50 per annum each, nine of £30 45., eight of £12 45., and twenty-one of £10 4s. The sum allowed, is dependent on the place of the pupil's residence. The larger sums are given to children from the country districts. The whole sum expended was £783 12s. A portion of this amount is provided by the School Commissioners. Very few of the scholarship holders have surrendered their scholarships during the year as compared with former years. This may be accounted for by the fact that fewer eligible openings have presented themselves than formerly for the pupils. Sewing.—The Board has much pleasure in reporting that sewing has been very carefully taught in all the schools during the year. The ladies of the district, who have for many years given their time and attention to this branch of school work, have reported most favourably on the results for the year. The examination by these ladies has the advantage of stirring up a healthy rivalry among both pupils and teachers. Technical Education.—Nothing has been done in this direction during the past year, chiefly because the Board has had no funds for the purpose. The Board has provided £1,430 17s. Id. out of the school fund for school buildings and repairs, and has considered such claims to have a prior claim, as without this contribution the schools started in the out-districts could not have been provided for. As settlement progresses, the claims for small isolated districts increase, and are a rowing charge on the school fund. Pupil-teachers.—The reversion to the old regulations has been found to work satisfactorily. It is worthy of note that a number of third- and fourth-year pupil-teachers, and even a few secondyear, have gone up for certificate examination, and in most cases have obtained their certificates or a partial pass. The account of the Board's income and expenditure for the year, duly audited by the Government Auditor, is appended hereto. The amount paid for teachers' salaries, bonuses on results, and instruction of pupil-teachers, was £20,061 ss. 3d. ; the amount paid to School Committees, £2,221 Bs. 5d.; and the amount expended on school buildings, repairs, &c, £3,549 15s. sd. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. J. D. Ormond, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. Expenditure. £ s. d. To Balance— £ s. d. £ s. d. By Office staff—Salaries .. .. 360 0 0 Dr. On Building Account 469 1 9 Departmental contingencies .. .. 289 7 1 Cr. On General Account 4,553 0 9 Inspector's salary .. .. .. 520 0 0 4,083 19 0 Inspector's travelling-expenses .. 175 0 0 Government grant for buildings .. 3,060 0 0 Examination of pupil-teachers .. 73 10 3 Subscriptions and donations for build- Teachers' salaries and allowances (inings .. .. .. .. 12 0 0 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. .. 20,061 5 3 Other receipts for buildings—Transfer Incidental expenses of schools .. 2,221 8 5 from School Fund .. .. 1,430 17 1 ScholarshipsGovernment statutory capitation .. 21,064 2 0 Paid to scholars.. .. .. 511 2 0 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 521 5 2 Examination expenses ... .. 36 12 0 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 300 0 0 School buildings— Payments by School Commissioners .. 2,717 13 0 New buildings .. .. .. 1,960 2 1 District High School fees .. .. 383 14 6 Improvements of buildings .. 935 11 1 Contribution, teacher's salary .. 36 4 2 Furniture and appliances .. 407 17 3 Rent of reserve .. .. .. 3 0 0 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 246 5 0 Transfer to Building Fund .. .. 1,430 17 1 Exchange on cheques .. .. 28 3 6 Balance — On Building Account .. .. 483 19 11 On General Account .. .. 3,871 14 0 £33,612 14 11 £33,612 14 11 E. T. Fannin, Treasurer and Secretary. Examined and found correct—J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

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MAELBOEOUGH. Sir,— Blenheim, March, 1898. I have the honour to forward the following report of the proceedings of the Marlborough Education Board for the year ending 31st December, 1897. At the commencement of the year the Board consisted of the following persons: The Hon. William Douglas Hall Baillie, M.L.C., Thomas Lindsay Buick, Thomas Carter, John Clervaux Chaytor, John Duncan, Charles Houghton Mills, M.H.E., William Benoni Parker, Joseph Henry Eedwood, and Arthur Penrose Seymour. The members retiring by rotation in March were Messrs. Duncan, Chaytor, and W. B. Parker. Messrs. Duncan and Chaytor were re-elected, and Mr. Eichard McCallum was elected in place of Mr. Parker, who did not offer himself for re-election. An extraordinary vacancy caused by the absence of Mr. T. L. Buick, for three months, was filled by the election of Mr. Harry Fleetwood Thompson. Twelve meetings were held during the year, and the average attendance of members was 5-7. The individual attendance was as follows: Hon. Captain Baillie, 4; Mr. Carter, 11; Mr. Chaytor, 5 ; Mr. Duncan, 11; Mr. McCallum, 8; Mr. Mills, 6 ; Mr. Eedwood, 9 ; Mr. Seymour, 8; Mr. Thompson, 6. Schools.—Sixty-four schools have been in operation during the year, an increase of four since last report. All but twenty-one of these are either small aided schools or household schools, principally the latter. The absolute necessity for the existence of these schools can be readily understood by those who have visited and explored the Sounds County. It may be sufficient here to say that scattered round a coast-line of about five hundred miles inside the heads of Queen Charlotte and Pelorus Sounds there are twenty-eight schools, communication with which is only possible by water, and generally in open boats, and even this is liable to constant interruption through violent or contrary winds; and it frequently happens that the inspection and examination of these schools are thus interrupted or entirely prevented. This year several schools were not examined, through being unable to reach the appointed rendezvous. The average weekly roll-number for the year was 2,182, and the working average attendance was 1,819, or about 83 per cent. Thus, although the average roll is nearly 73 less than last year, the working average is only 13 less, so that the percentage of attendance is slightly higher. This percentage was exceeded last year in only four of the Education Districts. The Board has tried the effect of employing truant officers in several of the larger school districts, but the result does not seem to justify a continuation of this effort to secure a fuller attendance. It may be supposed that as Marlborough occupies the fifth place as regards regularity of attendance there is not much ground for complaint on this score ; but it may be noted that at twenty-three of the small aided schools the attendance as shown by the quarterly returns is absolutely perfect—the irregularity being chiefly noticeable in the larger schools. The attendance has been considerably affected by the prevalence of epidemics, which have necessitated the temporary closing of some of the schools. Buildings.—The new buildings at Eenwick, Omaka, and Blind Eiver, contracts for which were let at the beginning of the year, have been finished, supplied with furniture, and the sites have been securely fenced. A new school has been built at the Grove to replace a very old and dangerously dilapidated building—one of the earliest buildings in the district. The Board's expenditure on Building Account during the year has amounted to £1,603 Bs. 3d., of which amount £1,047 Is. 6d. was on account of the new buildings named above. Eepairs and improvements absorbed £283 lis. 4d.; fencing new sites at Omaka, Blind Eiver, and Eenwick, and renewal of fencing on others, £133 19s: Id.; addition to furniture and appliances, £82 16s. lOd.; plans and supervision of works, £55 19s. 6d. This expenditure left the Building Account in debt to the General Account to the extent of £1,406 14s. Bd., thus reducing the general balance to the small sum of £35 15s. 2d. The long-contemplated building of a teacher's residence at Springlands can be no longer postponed, as a new head-teacher has been appointed, to whom rent-allowance must be paid until a residence is provided. Several old schools in the district will require to be painted during the coming year to preserve them from decay ; and a small new school will also be required at Mahau Sound. The amount, therefore, of £875 allotted to this district out of the building vote for the (now) current financial year, will still leave the Building Account in debt to the General Account to the extent of £531, without making any provision'for the inevitable expenditure of the current year. Scholarships.—ln consequence of the repeated appeals to the Government for some adequate provision for secondary education in Marlborough having proved unavailing, the Board applied to the School Commissioners for assistance from the fund accruing from secondary reserves. The Commissioners responded to this application by undertaking to assist the Board to establish another scholarship annually for five years, by which time the funds at their disposal will be practically exhausted. The new scholarship has been named the " Eecord Eeign Scholarship," and at the suggestion of the Commissioners the upward limit of age for competitors has been fixed at fifteen years. The annual value is the same as that of the other Boards' scholarships, namely, £40 per annum. Of this amount £32 will be provided by the Commissioners, and £8 by the Board out of the statutory grant of Is. 6d. per head of average attendance. The annual value of these scholarships is fixed at £40, as owing to the absence of any secondary school in Marlborough the holders have to attend at Nelson College, the governors of which institution remit the tuition fees in such cases. Shorthand. —The Board has resolved to introduce the teaching of shorthand, under the provisions of " The Manual and Technical Instruction Act, 1895," and the preliminary steps are now being taken with this object in view. The name of the proposed teacher will shortly be submitted for your approval. School Districts. —The number of school districts within this Education District remains the same. In two cases—the largest and the smallest.in point of population—the householders refused or neglected to elect Committees, and the Board appointed Commissioners as required by the Act.

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The Board is pleased to report that its relations with the several Committees throughout the year have been of the most amicable nature, and desires to express its appreciation of the valuable service rendered by the Committees in the cause of education within the district. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. A. P. Seymour, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ a. A. To Balance— £ s. d. By Office Staff—Salaries .. .. 441 5 9 Dr. on Building Account 1,233 6 5 Departmental contingencies .. .. 156 5 3 Cr. on General Account 1,474 13 9 Capitation to aided schools .. _.. 1,277 12 4 241 7 4 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inGovernment grant for buildings ...1,430 0 0 eluding rent, bonus, &o.) .. .. 4,535 9 9 Government statutory capitation .. 6,706 5 0 Incidental expenses of schools .. 466 1110 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 90 0 0 Scholarships .. .. .. 120 0 0 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 200 0 0 School buildingsPayments by School Commissioners .. 100 0 0 New buildings .. .. .. 1,047 1 6 Books ', .. .. .. 304 12 7 Improvements of buildings .. 28S 11 4 rjpnosits 28 17 0 Furniture and appliances .. .. 82 16 10 Bents ' '.'. .'. .. • • 311 0 Sites 133 19 1 Refunds .. . • • ■ • • 37 0 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 55 19 6 School libraries '.'. .. ■■ 28 6 0 School libraries .. .. .. 20 5 0 Books .. .. .. .. 412 18 7 Deposits .. ..' • ■ • • 65 14 0 Refund of rent .. .. ■ ■ 10 0 Balance— £ a. d. Dr. on Building Account 1,406 14 8 Cr. on General Account 1,442 9 10 35 15 2 £9,136 5 11 £9,136 5 11 J. C. Chaytor, Acting-Chairman. John Smith, Secretary. Examined and found correct—J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

NELSON. Sib,— Education Office, Nelson, 28th March, 1898. I have the honour to lay before you a report of the proceedings of the Education Board of the District of Nelson for the year 1897. Members op the Board. —At the beginning of the year 1897 the Board was composed of the following persons, viz.: Messrs. Geo. Talbot, Wm. Norris Franklyn, Wm. Henry Phillips, junr., Geo. Bell Sinclair, Wm. Lock, Philip Best, Andrew Thos. Maginnity, James Colvin, and Eichmond Hur'sthouse. At the annual election in March, the retiring members, Messrs. Best, Lock, and Phillips, were re-elected. In July, Mr. Hursthouse resigned his seat on the Board, finding that other duties prevented his regular attendance at its meetings, and the seat of Mr. G. B. Sinclair was declared'vacant by reason of his continued absence from the Board's meetings without leave. At the election held to fill these vacancies, Messrs. Thos. John Baigent and John Deidrich Beuke were elected. During the year the Board has held twelve monthly, fifteen adjourned, and two special meetings; the average attendance at each meeting being 6-10. Schools.—At the end of the year 116 schools were at work, seventy-nine of them being in school districts, and thirty-seven aided and household schools outside the boundaries of school districts. New schools have been opened at Hope Valley, Sandy Cove, Wratten's, Ligar Bay, Scott's, and Gibbs Town, while schools at Cable Bay and Waiwero have been discontinued, leaving a net increase of four for the year. , . • , . School Districts. —One new school district has been constituted, viz., Anatoki, making, with those previously in existence, a total of sixty school districts in the Education District of Nelson. Attendance op Scholars —The number of children on the rolls of the schools under the jurisdiction of the Board was, at the end of the year 1897, 5,943, the strict average attendance being 4,800, and the working average attendance 4,904. The corresponding numbers at the end of the previous year were :On roll, 6,004 ; strict average attendance, 4,873; and working average attendance, 4,969; showing a slight decrease for the last quarter of the year. . Teaching Staff. —At the close of the year there were 64 male and 133 female teachers on the staff, making a total of 197 of all grades, being an increase of nine (three male and six female) teachers over the previous year. Buildings.—During the year the Board has removed and practically rebuilt the school and teacher's house at Capleston, has erected new schools at Will's Eoad and Gibbs Town, enlarged the Lower Moutere School, and also the teachers' houses at Eeefton and Lower Wakefield. _ The works at Capleston have been a great drain on the building fund, and the Board is still of opinion that it is entitled to have the amount expended thereon refunded by the Government. Proposed District High School for Westport.—ln June last the Westport School Committee renewed their application for the establishment of a District High School there, which was favourably entertained by the Board. A committee was appointed to visit Westport, to confer with the School Committee and make inquiries on the spot as to the needs of the district m the matter of higher education. The committee's report being entirely favourable, a scheme was drawn up, 10— E. 1,

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which, after being approved by the Westport School Committee, was forwarded to the department, with the request that the Board might be permitted to. constitute the Boys' School at Westport a District High School. Central School Site.—The sum of £1,300 is still owing on this property, and it is again urged that, as it is quite impossible for the Board, out of its small annual grants, to meet this liability, a special grant might reasonably be made by the Government for the purpose. Board's Funds. —The amount to credit of the Board's General Account at the beginning of the year was £965 3s. 7d., and at its close £1,136 15s. 7d. At the beginning of the year the balance to credit of Building Account was £299 12s. 7d., with liabilities £368 18s. 6d. At the end of the year the credit balance was £831 Bs. 2d., while the liabilities were £1,060 10s. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. • Geo. Talbot, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ a. A. To Balance— By Office staff—Salaries.." .. .. 285 0 0 On Building Account .. .. 299 12 7 Clerical assistance to treasurer .. 5 5 0 On General Account .. .. 965 3 7 Departmental contingencies .. .. 405 1 2 Government grant for buildings .. 2,050 0 0 Inspectors' salaries and travelling-ex-Other receipts for buildings— penses .. .. .. .. 755 0 0 Bank interest .. .. .. 21 5 0 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inContractors'deposits .. .. 19 19 0 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. .. 15,408 13 5 Government statutory capitation .. 17,950 13 9 Incidental expenses of schools .. 2,006 9 4 Government scholarship grant .. 347 13 4 Training of teachers .. .. .. 92 6 4 Government inspection subsidy .. 300 0 0 Scholarships— Payments by School Commissioners .. 856 10 0 Paid to scholars .. .. .. 330 12 0 Sale of school books .. .. .. 521 4 1 Examination expenses .. .. 4 0 0 Refund .. .. .. .. 17 6 School buildingsRents .. .. .. .. 6 15 0 New buildings .. .. .. 628 14 11 Bank interest .. .. .. 015 0 Improvements of buildings .. .. 840 15 11 Furniture and appliances .. ~ 73 16 7 Sites .. .. .. .. 110 Refund, contractors' deposits .. 15 0 0 Purchase of school books .. .. 518 8 5 Freight of works of art for exhibition .. 2 11 0 Balance— On Building Account .. .. 831 8 2 On General Account .. .. 1,136 15 7 £23,340 18 10 £23,340 18 10 George Talbot, Chairman. Stead Ellis, Secretary. Examined and found correct —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

GEEY. Sib, — Education Office, Greymouth, 3.lst March, 1898. In compliance with the provisions of section 102 of *' The Education Act, 1877," I have the honour to submit the following report of the Board's proceedings for the year ending the 31st December, 1897 : — The Board. —The membership of the Board has again suffered no change, the retiring members, Messrs. Kerr, Kettle, and White, being re-elected in March. At the first meeting held in April Mr. Eichard Nancarrow and Mr. Eobert Kettle were re-elected Chairman and Treasurer respectively. During the year the Board held eleven ordinary meetings and one special meeting, and the attendance of members was as follows : Mr. Petrie, 12 ; Mr. Kettle, 11; Mr. Byrne, 11; Mr. Harris, 11; Mr. Marshall, 11; Mr. Nancarrow, 10 ; Mr. White, 10 ; Mr. McGuire, 9 ; Mr. Kerr, 7. The Hon. Mr. Kerr was absent on leave for three months attending to his parliamentary duties. Schools. —There were twenty-nine schools in operation at the close of the year, being an increase of one on the previous year. The teachers in the employ of the Board comprised eighteen males and forty-four females, or a total of sixty-two. These were classified as follows: Principal teacher, 1 ; head of department, 1; head of school, 9 males and 3 females ; sole teacher, 2 males and 14 females ; assistants, 3 males and 13 females ; pupil-teachers, 3 males and 13 females. The annual examination of pupil-teachers was held in December. Eight pupil-teachers were examined, all of whom qualified for a higher grade. Scholarships.—The annual examination of candidates for scholarships was held in December. For the four scholarships, two town and two country, there were sixteen competitors—five from the Greymouth and Cobden Schools, and eleven from the country. Florence McMillan and George Anderson, of the Greymouth District High School, won the first and second town scholarships, and Tasman Turner and Isabella Coulthard, of the Moonlight and Taylorville Schools respectively, won the first and second country scholarships. Finance. —At the close of the year the Building Fund showed a debit balance of £334 14s. 4d. The amount expended during the year was £946 os. Id. The Board's General Account at the close of the year was also in an unsatisfactory position, the debit balance being £179 2s. 3d. This was owing in a great measure to the bad attendance during the year, and to the increased cost of maintaining many of the small schools in sparsely populated districts. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. Eichard Nancarrow, Chairman.

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General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ s. A. Expenditure. £ s. d. To Balance—On General Account .. 25 9 8 By Balance—Building Account .. .. 508 14 3 Government grant for buildings .. 1,120 0 0 Office staff—Salaries .. .. 175 0 0 Government statutory capitation .. 5,242 3 9 Departmental contingencies .. .. 22 13 4 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 106 17 5 Inspector's salary .. .. .. 200 0 0 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 125 0 0 Ttachers' salaries and allowances (inGrants in aid of technical class .. 36 14 7 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. .. 5,063 7 8 Payments by School Commissioners .. 110 0 0 Incidental expenses of schools .. 119 14 1 District High School fees .. .. 82 0 0 Training of teachers .. .. .. 18 0 0 Grant from Greymouth High School, Scholarships .. ... .. 100 0 0 Board .. .. .. .. 60 0 0 School buildings— Contractors' deposits received .. 3 0 0 New buildings .. .. .. 125 16 7 Balance— £ s. d. Improvements of buildings.. .. 543 17 4 Building Account .. 334 14 4 Furniture and appliances .. .. 183 0 7 General Account .. 87 0 11 Sites .. .. .. .. 52 2 0 Unpresented cheques .. 92 1 4 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 41 3 7 513 16 7 Printing .. .. .. .. 71 12 6 Advertising .. .. .. .. 36 12 6 Members'travelling-expenses.. .. 123 13 0 Technical class .. .. .. 36 14 7 Contractor's deposit refunded.. .. 3 0 0 £7,425 2 0 . £7,425 2 0 E. Nancarrow, Chairman. F. W. Eiemenschneider, Secretary. Examined and found correct —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

WESTLAND. Sir, — I have the honour to submit the report of the Westland Education Board for the year ending 31st December, 1897. The membership of the Board has again suffered no change, the retiring members, Messrs. Grimmond, Staines, and Cumming, being re-elected in March. At the first meeting in April the following re-appointments were made: Mr. McWhirter, Chairman; Mr. Chesney, Treasurer; Mr. Michel, representative on the Hokitika High School Board ; Mr. Grimmond, School Commissioner. During the year the Board has held twelve meetings, and the attendance of members was as follows : Mr. A. Cumming, 12 ; Mr. J. McWhirter, 11 ; Mr. J. Chesney, 11; Mr. E. Stennard, 11 ; Mr. J. L. Smith, 9; Mr. J. Staines, 9 ; Mr. H. L. Michel, 8; Mr. J. E. Hudson, 7 ; Mr. J. Grimmond, 3. Schools. —During the year thirt3 7 -five schools have been open. Of the twenty-two aided schools (having an average attendance below twenty) two are half-time. The Upper and Lower Otira Schools, owing to the increasd attendance in the latter, have been promoted to full time schools, a new building being erected for the larger school. A new household school has been established at Waiatoto. The classes devoted to secondary education in connection with the Hokitika and Kumara District High Schools presented at the Board's examination twenty-six and eleven scholars respectively, and the Inspector reports very favourably of the work done in each class. The temporary establishment of the Kumara District High School has been continued until the end of the year 1898. In July a class for manual instruction was established in connection with the Kumara School under the direction of the local School Committee. The number of pupils attending is thirty-five, and the course followed is that fixed by the Education Department. A special grant from the Minister of Education provided for a separate building, and the necessary timber and tools have been supplied by local effort. As the feasibility of initiating such instruction has thus been amply demonstrated, it is the hope of the Board that, in connection with other schools, advantage will be taken of the opportunity provided by the Act recently passed to bring this important branch of education within the reach of the scholars attending. Attendance. —The total roll number for the district on the 31st December was 1,462, a decrease of seventy-nine from that of the previous year. The average attendance for the year was 85-3 per cent, of the average roll-number. While this general result is satisfactory, there is need in several cases for the active interference of the local authorities for the purpose of securing more regular attendance. Teachers. —The number of teachers under the Board at the end of the year was sixty-three, including eleven head-teachers, twenty-three sole teachers, fourteen assistants, thirteen pupilteachers, one monitor, and one sewing-mistress. With the exception of the pupil-teachers and one assistant, all teachers in schools with an average attendance above fifteen possess certificates. Scholarships.—At the examination of candidates for scholarships a larger number (29) than usual presented themselves. Five scholarships of £8 each and one of £10, tenable for two years, have been granted. The number of Board's scholars will be increased from eight in 1897 to ten in 1898. Finance. —At the close of the year the Building Fund showed a credit balance of £9 os. 9d., but liabilities exist of £60. The amount expended during the year was £710 ss. 6d. In the Board's General Account the credit balance has increased to £81 18s. 7d. Owing to the ecrease in the attendance of scholars in the district the amount saved is not as satisfactory as the Board desires, in view of the reductions in teacher's salaries still in force. It is very evident that,

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owing to the large proportion of aided schools, this Board, and other Boards in charge of similar districts, are under a great disadvantage when endeavouring to make provision in the schools for adequate staffs and salaries. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. John McWhirter, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ a. A. To Balance on General Account .. 14 10 11 By Balance on Building Account .. 100 11 9 Government grant for buildings (includ- Office staff—Salaries.. .. .. 346 0 0 ing £70 for Technical Class) .. 820 0 o Departmental contingencies— Sale of Arawata School building .. 3 0 0 General Account .. .. .. 45 6 3 Government statutory capitation .. 4,947 3 9 Building Account.. .. .. 21 5 6 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 99 13 3 Inspector's travelling-expenses .. 93 8 6 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 175 0 0 Examination of pupil-teachers .. 7 9 0 Capitation on Kumara Technical Class 5 16 10 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inDistrict High School fees .. .. 249 6 9 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. .. 4,660 12 5 Interest on fixed deposits .. .. 312 6 Incidental expenses of schools .. 180 3 7 Rent of reserve .. .. .. 4 0 0 Scholarships— Deposits on tenders .. .. .. 22 0 0 Paid to scholars .. .. .. 103 0 0 Book sales .. .. .. .. 19 2 Examination expenses .. .. 10 10 0 High School Board subsidy .. .. 72 10 0 School buildings— New buildings .. .. .. 158 11 6 Improvements of buildings.. .. 393 14 2 Furniture and appliances .. .. 55 8 2 Sites .. .. .. .. 75 12 8 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 8 15 6 Members'travelling-expenses.. .. 37 5 0 Deposits returned .. .. .. 22 0 0 Books .. .. .. .. 1 13 0 Refund of grant in aid of Kumara Technical Class " .. .. .. 5 16 10 Balance— On Building Account .. .. 9 0 9 On General Account .. .. 81 18 7 £6,418 3 2 £6,418 3 2 John McWhirter, Chairman. A. J. Morton, Secretary. Examined and found correct —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

REPORTS ON DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOLS. Hokitika. During the examination there were present twenty-six pupils. Three were absent part of the time attending the matriculation examination. Consequently the pupils of the third and fourth years were tested briefly on the first day in the more important subjects, with very satisfactory results. The seven pupils of the second year had received instruction in all the compulsory subjects, and six obtained satisfactory marks, the following securing over 75 per cent, of the total: M. Houston, 88-3 per cent.; E. Benton, 85-3 per cent.; G. Shaw, 85-1 per cent. D. Sullivan, 778 per cent. Of the junior division three pupils have joined only recently, and their marks have not been recorded. Of the twelve remaining, four omitted Latin at the request of the parents. Each pupil obtained satisfactory marks, and of those taking the full course the following secured 75 per cent, of the total: D. Schramm, 84-6 per cent. ;L. Michel, 82-4 per cent. ; Edith Clarke, 75-6 per cent. The various subjects have throughout the class received even and thorough treatment; in none did more than two scholars show weakness; and in English and algebra none were deficient. In addition, the course set was prepared efficiently by one pupil in French, and by the large majority of the class in chemistry. The duties of the Eector have been further increased by the preparation of a fourth-year pupil for the University scholarship examination. It will be seen that while the work of the teacher has been very exacting, owing to the number attending and the extent of the course of studies, the year's work of the class has again been brought to a very satisfactory conclusion. A. J. Morton, Inspector. Kumara. This class was formed in August, 1896, and, with the exception of one, the pupils commenced work in secondary subjects since that date. Two pupils, A. Owens and E. Stark, who required to attend the matriculation examination were tested more briefly on the first day. Both secured high marks (over 90 per cent.) in Latin and were very successful in other subjects, in which marks were not recorded in their case. Of the remaining nine pupils two were weak, obtaining an average percentage below 50. The remainder obtained satisfactory results, and the following have secured a good position. The marks of the first on the list are exceptionally good, and there is every reason to suppose that the two already mentioned would have secured equally good results : E. Mcintosh, 93-6 per cent. ; W. Lamason, 86 per cent.; G. Andrews, 85-3 per cent.; M. Jamieson, 83-6 per cent. The instruction in the subjects of the course has been given by the head master and the first assistant master: to the former being allotted Euclid, algebra, arithmetic, and geography; and to the latter, English, Latin, and chemistry, with French in the case of one pupil. With the exception

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of one scholar, who omitted Euclid, all the pupils have taken a full course of seven subjects, in each of which the majority secured good marks, although the amount attempted by two pupils in Latin, and all but four in Euclid and algebra, was that of a two years' course. Both in amount and preparation the work done is especially commendable in Euclid, algebra, Latin, and English. A. J. Morton, Inspector.

NOETH CANTEEBUEY. Sir,— Christchurch, 9th March, 1898. I have the honour to present the following report of the proceedings of the Education Board of the District of North Canterbury for the year ending the 31st December, 1897 : — The Board.'—The three members who retired by rotation at the end of March were the Hon. Mr. Montgomery, Mr. Munnings, and Mr. Eennie. At a meeting on the 17th March the Board presented the Hon. Mr. Montgomery, who did not offer himself for re-election, with an address expressing its sincere regret at the loss sustained by his retirement from a position so long and so ably filled, as well as its high appreciation of the very valuable services rendered by him in the cause of education. Mr. Eennie, Mr. D. Buddo, and Mr. Munnings were returned to fill the three ordinary vacancies. On the 30th June, Mr. C. A. C. Hardy was elected to fill the extraordinary vacancy caused by the resignation of Mr. Sawle, which took place towards the end of April. During 1897 the Board held seventeen ordinary meetings and one special meeting, whilst the Buildings Committee met nineteen times, including one special meeting, the Appointments Committee fortytwo times, and the Normal School Committee nine times ; making in all eighty-eight meetings for the year. The Board's Eepresentatives.—At a meeting on the 24th February Mr. A. Orr and Mr. D. Williamson were re-elected as members of the Ashburton High School Board, and Mr. A. I. McGregor and Mr. W. Harrison were subsequently appointed members of the Akaroa and Eangiora High School Boards respectively. Mr. H. E. Webb continued to represent the Board as Commissioner of Education Eeserves. School Districts.—At the commencement of the year the localities lying around Overdale and Eabbit Island were formed into separate school districts ; and in August a new school district was established at Highbank, where the Government had previously set apart a school site. In December the formation of a new district for the Springston South locality was resolved upon. The number of school districts at the end of the year was 174 ; but in three of these—viz., Charteris Bay, Gebbie's Valley, and Pendarves —school work continued to remain in suspension. Schools and School Buildings.—During the year new schools were built at Allenton, Highbank, and Springston South, and additions made to the schools at Mayfield, Porter's Pass, and Hampstead, and to teachers' houses at Spreydon, Hampstead, and Tai Tapu. The number of schools in operation at the close of the year, including the practising department at the Normal School, was 200, of which sixteen were aided schools. Schools.of the latter type were opened at Awaroa, Ellesmere, Happy Valley, and Okuku, but in September the one at Happy Valley was closed owing to insufficient support. In March the school at Lismore, which had been closed for several weeks, was re-opened as an aided school, and in November a similar course was decided upon with regard to to the school at Port Levy, where the number of children attending was also not sufficient to warrant the Board in employing a teacher at the minimum salary fixed by the regulations. During 1897 a very heavy outlay was caused in connection with the re-roofing, painting, or repairing of school buildings at Glentunnel, Eyreton, St. Albans, Amberley, Kyle, Little Akaloa (main), Christchurch West, Sydenham, Papanui, Eakaia, Little Dunsandel, Southbridge, Mandeville Plains, Kowai Pass, Eichmond, Eiccarton, Yaldhurst, Belfast (main), Elgin, Southbrook, Wakanui (main), and Cust; whilst on many others where the need of repairs demanded the Board's prompt attention, amounts varying from a few pounds and upwards were expended. Towards the close of the year a new school at Hinds, teachers' houses at Burwood and Waltham, and addition to house at Dromore, were in course of erection, and a large number of works authorised, including additions to schools at New Brighton and Mackenzie, and extensive improvements at Eangiora. The need of houses in a number of country districts is badly felt, and in this direction alone, if due regard for the comfort and well-being of its teachers is to be shown, the Board is bound to incur a large expenditure in the immediate future. The total expenditure on buildings in 1897 was £7,857 17s. lid. Maintenance. —The expenditure on teachers' salaries and allowances during the year reached £55,736 4s. 3d., and the grants to School Committees with other incidental expenses, £7,032 13s. lid., making a total of £62,768 18s. 2d. The working average for the year was 17,893, but the average for the four quarters, commencing with the December quarter of 1896, on which payments were actually made, was 17,950. The cost per head of teachers' salaries was therefore £3 2s. ljd., and the total cost of maintenance, including all incidental expenditure, exactly £3 9s. 11-J-d. per head. The following table shows the expenditure in salaries and incidentals for each year from 1878, inclusive [not all reprinted] : — Year. Salaries. Incidentals. Totals. £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. 1878 ... ... 31,919 0 0 6,276 6 9 38,195 6 9 1888 ... ... 50,749 14 6 6,400 7 5 57,150 6 3 1896 ... . . 55,411 8 8 7,033 11 0 62,444 19 8 1897 ... ... 55,736 4 3 7,032 13 11 62,768 18 2

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The total number of teachers in the Board's service at the end of the year (exclusive of thirtysix sewing mistresses) was 535—viz., heads of schools or departments, or in sole charge, 149 males, 82 females; assistants, 35 males, 133 females. There were 136 pupil-teachers, 38 males and 98 females. A comparison of these figures with those of the previous year shows an increase of seven in the number of certificated teachers, and a reduction of nine as regards pupil-teachers. Pupil-teachers' Examination. —The annual examination of pupil-teachers was held on the 20th December, and following days. Of the 126 who presented themselves for examination, 114 passed and 12 failed. The following table gives the total number of children on the rolls, the number in average attendance, and the percentage of attendance at the close of each year since the Education Act came into force [not all reprinted]:— Quarter ended District Aided Total of On Roll Average p. rr , ra , R „. Dec. 31. Schools. Schools. Schools. Un aou - Attendance. percentage. 1878 ... 106 4 110 13,647 10,076 73-83 1888 ... 155 1 156 20,388 16,395 80-42 1896 ... 182 13 195 21,300 17,938 84-21 1897 ... 184 16 200 20,820 17,708 85-05 It will be noticed that, notwithstanding the increase in the number of new schools, the number of children on the rolls at the end of December, 1897, was nearly 500 less than at the close of the previous year. Inspection.—The Inspectors' report for the year has been forwarded. In addition to the usual statistical information, reference is made to several subjects of instruction. In reading, both as regards its treatment as a pass subject and in point of comprehension, an improvement is noted. With regard to arithmetic, it is satisfactory to know that the want of uniformity in the tests supplied by the department—a matter which last year formed the subject of some unfavourable comment — has almost disappeared. It is, however, not so reassuring to learn that, so far as the two highest standards are concerned, this subject has not been well done in quite a number of schools, and that sums of a similar type to those worked throughout the year have proved to be stumblingblocks. In view of the generally unsatisfactory progress made in grammar, as indicated in the examination reports, the Board requested its Inspectors to consider and report upon the matter. In their memorandum, already forwarded to the department, the Inspectors state that " The remedy is to be found, we think, in the re-union of grammar and composition as a subject in which individual proficiency is to be regarded as a condition of promotion, but the contemplated re-union should recognise, as the older syllabus did not, the strictly subordinate position of the first member of the partnership, and the programme of work proscribed in it should be so adjusted as to retain only those features which have the most intimate bearing on the teaching of composition. ... At the same time we are much opposed to any increase in the subjects of individual attainment of which the Inspector will expect evidence at the several stages of progress. Our views, on the contrary, are in favour of a reduction, and we cannot see how a reduction could be better made than by allowing geography as a whole to take the place of grammar among subjects of the class group." During the year the Inspectors drew attention to the omission of "Drill and exercises" from the subjects of instruction at several schools, and a circular has since been issued notifying the teachers concerned that the Board requires that this subject shall be included. In very small schools, with one teacher in charge, and where, perhaps, the infant department is strongly represented, beyond attention to the movements in connection with opening and dismissing school, full treatment of this subject can hardly be looked for ; but from schools having not less than two teachers the Board will expect it to be thoroughly and efficiently dealt with. Normal School.—The number of students admitted during the year was thirty-seven, twelve males and twenty-five females. In his report, which is appended, the Principal gives full information with regard to the work of the training department. The only change to record in the staff is the retirement of Mr. W. A. Eobinson, 8.A., from the position of part-time lecturer. During his engagement Mr. Eobinson discharged his duties with ability and zeal, and general regret was expressed when it became known that the Board would be unable to secure his services for a further period. At the close of the year, with the view of completing the necessary arrangements for 1898, the vacancy was filled by the appointment of Mr. F. J. Wilkes, 8.A., to whom the responsibility of lecturing on several subjects has now been entrusted. Scholarships.—At its meeting on the 21st July, after referring the matter to the Appointments Committee, who carefully considered the proposed alterations, the Board adopted- new regulations for scholarships. The chief changes were (1) the throwing open of the senior class to all children who have made the required attendance at a primary school, but restricting the competition to those who have not attended a secondary school for a longer period than two years; (2) altering the condition of attendance from one to two years. The annual examinations took place on the 20th December and following days. The number of competitors in the junior class was 133 (seventy-four boys and fifty-nine girls), being forty-three less than in 1896. This reduction was no doubt due to the fact that the Board had previously drawn the attention of Committees and headteachers to the Inspectors' remarks upon the advisableness of more discretion being used in sending up only those children who might be considered fairly prepared in the subjects of examination. For the senior class there were twenty-five entries, sixteen from boys and nine from girls, an increase of six compared with the previous year. Of the 133 competitors for junior scholarships, sixty-six entered from schools defined by the regulations as town schools, and sixty-seven from country schools. Four were won by candidates from schools of the former class, and eight by

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children attending country schools, but of the latter three did not require to take advantage of th additional year conceded by the Board's regulations. . The two " Gammack " scholarships offered by the Board at the close of 1896, on the results of the University Junior Scholarship Examination, were awarded to Mr. M. C. Keane and Mr. R. E. Hall. Mr. Keane, who distinguished himself by securing first place on the list for the whole of New Zealand, went through his primary course at Kowai Pass, from which school he gained one of the Board's junior scholarships in 1890, and was thus enabled to continue a scholastic career of great promise. Mr. Hall, also closely identified with one of the Board's schools (Sydenham), and an old scholarship winner, came out second among the candidates who gained credit. School - books. —The subject of school - books occupied the Board's attention on several occasions during the year, the necessity of making a change being generally recognised, since many of those prescribed for use in 1890 were long out of date. After a personal inspection of the new works submitted, and after careful consideration of the whole question, the Board decided on a fresh list, which was forwarded to Wellington for approval. So far, unfortunately, the official sanction has been withheld, which has caused much confusion and inconvenience, as many School Committees, on the strength of adoption by the Board, have authorised the purchase of the new books. The unusual delay in giving effect to the Board's application is attributable to the fact that the Minister is having the list of books for use in the whole colony revised; but as the books decided upon are in every way suitable for school use, and are also recommended by the Inspectors, the Board has represented to the Minister that authority to use them should not be withheld pending a general revision, which may take many months to complete. Jubilee Addbess.—At a meeting on the 30th June, recognising the enormous advance made in education during the last sixty years, owing in so great a measure to the many advantages that have been enjoyed under the beneficent rule of Her Most Gracious Majesty Queen Victoria, the Board adopted a resolution placing on record its entire sympathy with those spontaneous exhibitions of pleasure and gratitude which, on the occasion of " The Diamond Jubilee," the unequalled length of Her Majesty's reign evoked in every part of her far-reaching empire. The resolution, in the form of an illuminated address, was forwarded to the Queen through the then Acting-Governor, Sir James Prendergast, and Her Majesty has been pleased to cause her thanks to be conveyed to the Board for its expression of loyalty. Teuanct.—Early in the year, acting upon the recommendation of the Appointments Committee, to whom the matter was referred, the Board consented to engage a truant officer for the city and suburban districts, in which, from the number of children to be observed about the streets during school-hours, it felt that definite action could no longer be delayed. In adopting this course the Board has in no way accepted the entire responsibility of enforcing the provisions of " The School Attendance Act, 1894," as it considers that the duty of seeing that children within their own districts make the required attendance is one of which the School Committees will be unable to readily divest themselves. Although the appointment of Mr. Blank, who, the Board is convinced, has discharged his difficult duties in a praiseworthy manner, was made in February, it was not until the end of the following month that his work could be said to be well in hand. By the end of the year, therefore, the system had been on trial nine months. In endeavouring to ascertain what the results have been, unfortunately there are no means of knowing to what extent allowance has to be made for sickness. That the attendance during the spring and early summer months suffered very much from this cause is admitted, and probably if this important factor could have been accurately gauged and allowed for the figures recorded would have given more encouragement. For the nine months ending the 31st December, 1897, the average attendance at the eleven schools fully affected by the Truant Officer's work was 85-9 per cent, of the average weekly roll-number, whilst for the corresponding period of 1896, when the influence of the Committees and teachers was the sole persuading power, the percentage was 858 per cent. Judging from the reports submitted from time to time, there are many difficulties in the way of effectually carrying out the law ; and in this connection the Board desires to draw the Minister's attention to several defects disclosed by the practical working of the Act of 1894, in the hope that, should amendments be introduced, provision may be made for enforcing the attendance not only of those children to whom the present Act is intended to apply, but also of those who, under the existing exemptions, are allowed to absent themselves from school. As the law now stands, the onus of proving that a child is exempt is supposed to lie with the parent, but in actual practice instances have occurred where the presiding Justices of the Peace have contented themselves with accepting the parent's sworn statement that the absence from school has been due to sickness, whereas, after patient investigation, the Truant Officer had previously satisfied himself to the contrary. Again, before coming within the scope of the Act a child must have made less than six attendances in any week in the course of which the school has been open nine times, which means that unless the school has been open for four days and a half during the week the Act becomes inoperative. When it is remembered that a full week consists of five days only, and that the closing of school for one single day during the week reduces the possible weekly attendances to eight, it will be realised how often the measures taken to compel attendance must be interfered with. With regard to children over thirteen years of age, who do not at present come under the provisions of the Act, if, after leaving school, they were provided with suitable occupations there would be no serious objection to their release from school and its attendant discipline ; but when their liberty is devoted to idle wanderings in the streets, as is only too often the case, the gravest objection must be taken to the exempting clause. Unfortunately, too, " The Factories Act, 1894," in forbidding their entrance into factories till the age of fourteen has been reached, compels this class of children to pass a year in idleness before allowing them to enter upon what to so many proves to be. their life work. The following statement gives the number of cases, at their different stages, dealt with by the Truant Officer during the period mentioned : Notices delivered to parents or guardians, 1,621; sum-

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monses served, 68 ; fines imposed, 50 ; orders of the Court obtained, 8 ; dismissed, 10. The fines, amounting in all to £8 Bs., have been paid over to the Committees in respect of whose schools the cases were dealt with. Manual Instruction. —In April the Board completed arrangements for manual-training classes in woodwork at the Normal School, under the instruction of Mr. F. W. Sandford, whose qualifications had been proved to the satisfaction of the Minister. For the convenience of teachers resident in the country two of the classes, all of which were out of school-hours, have been held on Saturdays, the Board having recognised the importance of affording its teachers every opportunity of qualifying themselves to give the instruction in their own schools. The entrance-fee for teachers was fixed at ss. per quarter; that for boys, 2s. 6d. If free admission were granted to the boys' classes, no doubt the novelty of the instruction would for a time attract an even larger number than has hitherto attended, but the payment of a fee, even though a small one, is some guarantee of regular attendance; and, apart from this, besides providing some of the necessary funds, it helps to weed out those who have no real liking or aptitude for the work. The Instructor reports that, taking the work as a whole, it has been very satisfactory; that all classes have shown great aptitude in the use of tools, that the work done by the teachers is very good, in many cases excellent, and that the drawing of the boys was much better than he expected to find it. In response to the hope expressed by the department, a number of teachers attending the classes are preparing themselves for the City and Guilds of London Institute examination, to be held in June next, and. for which thirty-three entries have been received. A manual-training class, under the auspices of a local committee, with Mr. Sandford as instructor, has also been formed at Leeston. This class, which opened in July, has been attended by nine teachers and two boys, who have received three hours' instruction every Saturday evening for a period extending over ten weeks during each of the two quarters. An application has been made to the department for the funds required to fit up workshop and provide the necessary tools at Ashburton, where a local committee has been formed for the purpose of establishing similar classes. The following table shows the number of teachers and boys that attended at the Normal School, with the number of classes held during each quarter :—

I have, &c, T. W. Adams, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. Expenditure. To Balance— £ s. d. £ a. A. _ s , <3, Dr. on Building Account 246 12 4 By Office staff—Salaries .. .. 796 5 0 On General Account .. 3,867 11 1 Departmental contingencies .. 442 6 6 3,620 18 9 Inspectors'salaries .. .. .. 1,300 0 0 Government grant for buildings .. 8,780 0 0 Inspectors' travelling - expenses and Other receipts for buildings— stationery .. .. .. ' 300 3 4 Springston— Examination of pupil-teachers .. 84 13 8 Contribution towards purchase of Teachers'salaries and allowances .. 55,736 4 3 side-school site .. .. 23 5 0 Incidental expenses of schools .. 7,082 18 11 ■ Half-cost of fencing side-school .. 410 0 Training of teachers .. .. 1,626 0 9 Burwood —Sale of house .. .. 41 0 0 Scholarships— Richmond—Sale of cottage .. 5 0 0 Paid to scholars .. .. .. 928 10 8 Contractors' deposits .. .. 314 4 2 Examination expenses .. .. 113 12 11 Government statutory capitation .. 55,247 12 1 School buildings— Scholarship grant .. .. .. 1,100 11 7 New buildings .. .. .. 2,542 12 4 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 500 0 0 Improvements of buildings .. 4,063 4 8 Grant for training of teachers .. 300 0 0 Furniture and appliances .. 288 3 2 Payments by School Commissioners .. 12,470 19 8 I Sites .. .. .. .. 438 6 9 Other receipts— Plans, supervision, and fees .. 525 11 0 Charteris Bay—Rent of house .. 7 16 Other expenses— Mandeville Plains—Rent of site .. 6 0 0 Contractors' deposits .. .. 268 17 8 Little Akaloa—Rent of side-school Exchange on cheques .. .. 2512 10 site .. .. .. .. 3 0 0 Gammack scholarships .. .. 103 18 0 Rent of Reserve 777 .. .. 4 0 0 Manual-training School .. .. 309 10 7 Rent of Reserve 3059 .. .. 2 12 6 Truancy Office .. .. 137 3 7 Normal School—Hire of room .. 010 0 Reserve 777, advertising .. .. 015 6 Fees for lectures to partially certifi- Balance— ' cated teachers .. .. .. 17 18 6 On Building Account .. .. 794 11 3 Manual-training School .. .. 322 11 3 On General Account .. .. 5,113 0 3 Truancy Office—Court-fees .. 0 4 0 Gammack scholarships .. .. 200 0 0 £82,971 18 7 £82,971 18 7 T. W. Adams, Chairman. H. C. Lane, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

Roll-n imber. Quarter commencing— Number of Classes. Total Roll-number. Teachers. Boys. ird April 2th July :th October 10 11 9 72 57 30 130 150 125 202 207 155

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REPORT ON NORMAL SCHOOL. Sir, — Normal School, Christchurch, 28th February, 1898. I have the honour to report as follows on the work of the Normal School for 1897 :— We commenced the year with thirty-seven students, of whom twelve were males and twentyfive females. Of these, two withdrew during the year—one to take up missionary work abroad, and one from ill-health. At the examinations twenty-five sat for matriculation, of whom twenty-two passed ; and thirtyone sat for the departmental certificate examination (or part of it), of whom twenty-nine have passed wholly or in part. Mr. W. A. Eobinson, 8.A., B.Sc, the part-time lecturer, left us at the end of the year, and Mr. F. J. Wilkes, 8.A., was appointed to take his place. I should here like to place on record my very high appreciation of the efficiency and zeal with which Mr. Eobinson discharged his duty. With one or two exceptions, the male students attended for two quarters a class in manual training, and, as attendance at this class took up nearly the whole of one evening per week, it must of necessity have affected somewhat the preparation of other subjects. We endeavoured this year to give the female students some practical knowledge of kindergarten work ; but here again the difficulty arose of how to find time for this valuable work without detriment to the subjects required for the certificate examination. As a matter of fact, we have not time enough at our disposal to cover a thorough course of work in the many subjects necessary or advisable in the Normal School course. The Inspectors' reports on the Boys', Girls', Infants', and Model Departments show that good work has again been done, though the staff in the past year has been smaller than in recent years. I have, &c, Edwin Watkins, 8.A., The Chairman of Normal School Committee. Principal of Normal School.

SOUTH CANTEEBUEY. Sir,— Education Office, Timaru, 31st March, 1898. I have the honour to submit herewith the report of the Education Board for the District of South Canterbury for the year ending with the 31st day of December, 1897. Board. —At the commencement of the year the Board consisted of the following members : Messrs. W. B. Howell, J.P., Chairman; John Talbot, J.P. ; John Jackson, J.P. ; Melville Gray, J.P.; Peter Keddie, J.P.; Major W. M. Moore, J.P.; W. J. Sahnond, LL.B.; the Eev. W. J. Comrie ; and the Eev. George Barclay, J.P. The three members retiring by rotation in March were Messrs. Talbot, Gray, and Moore. Six candidates were nominated by the School Committees to fill these vacancies : Messrs. Talbot, Gray, Moore, Keith, Bussell, and Manchester. Messrs. Talbot, Moore, a.nd Keith were elected. In April Mr. Salmond resigned his seat, and the following gentlemen were nominated to fill the vacancy : Messrs. In wood, Bussell, and Pielden. The election resulted in the return of Mr. Daniel Newman Inwood, J.P. Eighteen meetings of the Board were held during the year, the day of meeting for the ordinary monthly sitting being the second Wednesday in each month at 11.15 a.m.; the number present at each meeting being, on the average for the year, 7-6. The officers of the Board were the same as last year. Schools. —At the end of the year there were sixty-five full-time schools in operation, the classification of which was as follows : Under 25 pupils, sixteen schools ; under 50 pupils, twenty-seven schools ; under 75 pupils, eleven schools, under 100 pupils, three schools; under 150 pupils, one school; under 300 pupils, three schools ; under 500 pupils, three schools; over 500 pupils, one school. Number of aided schools included —sixteen. There were twelve Native or half-caste scholars attending at three schools : Geraldine Flat, Eangatira Valley, and Waihao. Attendance. —The accompanying table shows the number of scholars attending the Board's schools since the year 1888 : —

The working average for the four quarters gives 4,589 against the strict average of 4,570, whilst the average roll-number for the year is 5,275, against 5,366 in 1896. 11— E. 1.

Quarter ending I Number of Number of Number on Schools. I Teachers. Rolls. Strii Male. Strict Average Attendance. ict A Average At Female. Yearly Average. Total. 1888. 51st March 50th June SOfch September ... ilst December ... 49 49 50 50 119 120 123 125 4,704 4,689 4,714 4,703 1,895 1,921 1,832 1,964 1,785 1,784 1,660 1,857 3,680 3,705 3,492 3,821 I 3,674 1896. list March iOth June 10th September ... ilst December ... 65 65 65 65 163 151 150 149 5,429 5,373 5,341 5,322 2,286 2,399 2,336 2,402 2,171 2,225 2,154 2,257 4,457 4,624 4,490 4,659 ■ 4,559 1897. list March iOth June iOth September ... ilst December ... 65 65 65 65 149 149 146 147 5,334 5,283 5,274 5,211 2,319 2,389 2,365 2,379 2,207 2,239 2,190 2,194 4,526 4,628 4,555 4,573 ■ 4,570

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Finance.—The building grant of 1897 not having been received in time to be credited in the accounts for the year ending 31st December, 1897, the account shows a debit balance of £1,131 10s. Id., the amount due to maintenance being £1,358 19s. 10d., and credit in bank £244 18s. Bd. The Maintenance Account shows a credit of £1,131 18s. Id., being cash in bank, £893 6s. 4d.; due from aided schools, £131 17s. lOd. ; due by Building Account, £1,358 19s. lOd.; making a total of £2,384 45., from which has to be deducted £1,252 ss. lid., the amount due to reserves revenue. Buildings.—The principal operations of the Board were : Erecting additions to Fairlie, Hannaton, and Waitohi Flat, and building residences at Seadown and Waimate. Owing to the excessively dry season, the Board was put to very considerable expense in building tanks and supplying water generally to a large number of schools. The building at Adair was painted, and provided with a new tank. At Albury the residence was distempered. A grant was made to Ashwick Flat towards improving the site. A shelter-shed was erected at Burkes Pass; Claremont was provided with a filter ; Fairview was granted an underground tank, and repaired generally ; Geraldine was fitted with a water-supply ; the Hakataramea site was fenced; Hazelburn was granted a curtain to separate the school; Hook was granted the cost of repairing the fences ; Hilton was granted a new tank ; repairs were done at Kingsdown ; a wash-house built at Milford; Otaio was painted and repaired, and granted a filter ; Upper Otaio was repaired ; Pareora residence repaired and a new tank built; Pleasant Point was painted and supplied with new closets ; Pleasant Valley was fenced ; Eangitata Island had a new grate provided; Eangitata Station was repaired : a new window was put in the Eangatira Valley school; St. Andrews had its tank repaired and new closets built; the Scotsburn site was fenced. The Timaru Main School storeroom was burnt, towards which Government gave a separate grant to restore ; besides this, there were alterations made to the main building. The Timaru South site was drained ; a grant was made to Waihao in aid of the erection of a shelter-shed, and the buildings were repaired and painted; the residence at Wai-iti was repaired, and the buildings painted and fences restored ; a concrete tank was built at Waitohi Flat; the buildings at Upper Waitohi Flat were painted; new fences were erected at Waituna Creek, and the school was partitioned by a heavy curtain; the buildings at Washdyke were painted; new ceilings put in the Woodbury school ; and repairs executed at Waimataitai. Furniture and other material were supplied to a number of schools, and small grants made in aid of School Committees. The Board has to thank the School Committees generally for the interest and attention they have given to the work and welfare of education in their respective districts. Influenza, scarlet fever, and other causes of a like nature, necessitating the closing of schools temporarily, have had a marked effect upon the average attendance, and the scarcity of water may have had a very predisposing influence towards the general unhealthiness. The Board, however, can congratulate itself still on the cordial relations existing between the School Committees, the teachers, and the Board. Pupil-teachers.—The annual examination of pupil-teachers was held in the last week of June, when thirty pupil-teachers, together with eight candidates for employment, presented themselves for examination. Twenty-seven pupil-teachers passed, and three failed. All the candidates for employment passed. Nine pupil-teachers of the third and fourth year sat for certificates at the Education Department's examination ; three passed the D examination, two obtained a " partial " D, two passed the E, and two obtained a " partial" E. Eight others, whose term of apprenticeship expired during 1897, presented themselves : and of these, two passed the D examination, four the E, and two secured a full E certificate with " partial " D. District High Schools.—A special report of the secondary work of the District High Schools was submitted to the Board by the Inspector. From this report it appears that thirty-one scholars took part in the examination at Waimate, and eleven at Temuka. The subjects taken were English, Latin, French, Euclid, and algebra. The Waimate High School Board continues its annual grant towards the teaching of the higher subjects in the Waimate District High School, and encourages attendance by awarding scholarships and exhibitions to successful pupils. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. W. B. Howell, Chairman.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ s. A. Expenditure. £ a. A. To Balance— £ s. d. By Office staff—Salaries.. .. .. 358 6 6 Dr. On Building Account 1,533 0 1 Clerical assistance .. .. .. 5 0 0 Gr. On General Account 2,253 19 10 Departmental contingencies.. .. 254 17 3 720 19 9 Inspector's salary .. .. .. 599 0 0 Government grant for buildings .. 1,686 0 0 Examination of pupil teachers .. 63 12 3 Other receipts for buildings— Teachers' salaries and allowances (inSale of Geraldine residence .. 144 7 6 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. .. 15,416 7 8 Contribution, Burkes Pass .. 4 2 6 Incidental expenses of schools .. 1,323 14 9 Map .. .. .. .. 012 6 Scholarships— Government statutory capitation .. 14,468 17 11 Paid to scholars .. .. .. 322 11 11 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 344 9 3 Examination expenses .. .. 82 0 10 Inspection subsidy .. .. .. 300 0 0 School buildings— Donation to Fire Brigade .. .. 2 2 0 New buildings .. .. .. 866 0 6 Payments by School Commissioners .. 2,912 10 9 Improvements of buildings .. 363 710 District High School fees .. .. 187 15 0 Furniture and appliances .. .. 96 5 3 Contractors'deposits .. .. 30 0 0 Sites .. .. .. .. 3 7 6 Waimate subsidy .. .. .. ,150 0 0 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 87 2 6 Contributions, School Committees .. 27 10 0 Contractors'deposits .. .. 25 0 0 Rents .. .. .. .. 11 14 0 Balance — £ s. d. Refunds .. .. .. .. 18 18 7 Dr. Onßuilding Account 1,114 1 2 Or. On General Account 2,252 6 2 1,138 5 0 On deposit, Contract Account .. 5 0 0 £21,009 19 9 £21,009 19 9 Wm. B. Howell, Chairman. J. H. Bamfield, Secretary. Examined and found correct—J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General,

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REPORT ON DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOLS. Sir, — Education Office, Timaru, , 1898. I have the honour to submit the following report on the higher work of the District High Schools. Thirty-one scholars took part in the examination at Waimate, eleven of whom were examined in five subjects, fifteen in four subjects, and five in three subjects. Eleven scholars were examined at Teinuka : five in five subjects, four in four subjects, one in three subjects, and one in two subjects. In each school the subjects were English, Latin, French, Euclid, and algeba. The following tables show the subjects taught, the number of pupils examined, the marks gained by each class, and the amount of work done in each subject:—

Waimate District High School.

Temuka District High School.

Waimate. English. —-Ten of the papers were very good, eleven were good, six were tai and three were moderate. In viva voce work there was considerable improvement in the answering of questions on the language of the play, and, as usual, the scholars had a good knowledge of the characters and incidents.

Subject. Course. Number of Pupils. Average Marks per Gent. Amount of Work done. English ... Senior 17 69 (1) Grammar; (2) Higher Grade English, chaps. 1 to 8, 10, 13, 19 of Part I., and chaps. 3 and 4 of Part II. ; (3) Abbott's " How to Write Clearly " ; (4) Merchant of Venice, Acts I. to III. (1) Grammar ; (2) Merchant of Venice, Acts I. to III. Bue's Second French Book, to page 61; pages 151 to 165 ; Irregular Verbs. Chardenal's First French Course to page 71, with part of Appendix. Chardenal's First French Course to page 27, with Tables 10, 20, 21, 23 of Appendix. Virgil's iEneid, Book IV., 435 lines; Cicero's De Amicitia, chaps. 1 to 43 ; Bradley's Arnold, chaps. 1 to 20. Abbott's Via Latina, to page 142, with Appendix I. of Irregular Verbs. Abbott's Via Latina, to page 83. Abbott's Via Latina, to page 39. Quadratic equations, problems, evolution and surds. Fractions, equations of the first degree, and problems. Factors, H.C.F., L.C.M., and easy simple equations. Definitions, brackets, and four simple rules. Books III., IV. Book I. Book I., to prop. 24. Junior 13 62 French Second 1 94 First, Sec. II. 4 90 Sec. I. 9 98 Latin Advanced 1 79 Second 4 67 Algebra ... First, Sec. II. „ Sec. I. Third 12 11 3 70 80 100 Second 8 93 n • • • First, Sec. II. 7 99 Euclid „ Sec. I. Third First, Sec. II. „ Sec. I. 13 2 14 11 92 97 87 94 l> • • •

Subject. Course. Number of Pupils. Average Marks per Cent. Amount of Work done. English French Latin First, Sec. I. First, Sec. II. First, Sec. I. First, Sec. II. First, Sec. I. First, Sec. II. First, Sec. I. 9 5 7 3 7 4 7 4 52 5b 62 61 80 84 59 61 (1) Grammar; (2) 1st chapter of Chambers's "History of the English Language"; (3) Abbott's Exercises, 1 to 57; (4) " The Task," lines 1 to 300. Bute's First French Book, pages 1 to 66. Abbott's Via Latina, pages 1 to 83. Abbott's Via Latina, pages 1 to 39. Factors, H.G.F.,L.CM., and easy simple equations. Definitions, brackets, and four simple rules. Book I. Book I., to prop. 24. Algebra Euclid

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French. —In the highest class and in the lowest the scholars passed an excellent examination. In the middle class two passed an excellent examination, and two a very good one. Altogether, the work was of a most satisfactory character. Latin. — Four of the papers were excellent, eleven were very good, eight were good, and five were fair. Algebra.- --Twenty-four of the papers were excellent, five were very good, and two were good. Euclid. —Nineteen of the papers were excellent, three were very good, four were good, and one was fair. In respect of clearness of arrangement and accuracy of detail, the papers left nothing to be desired. Temuha. English. —Two papers were very good, two were good, one was fair, two were moderate, and two were poor. In oral work the answering of the class as a whole was fair. French. —One paper was very good, and four were fair. Latin. —Five papers were very good, two were good, and three were poor. Algebra. —Three papers were excellent, four were very good, three were good, and one was fair. Euclid. —One paper was excellent, two were very good, three were good, three were fair, and two were poor. I have, &c, Jas. Gibson Gow, M.A., Inspector. The Chairman, South Canterbury Board of Education.

OTAGO. Sir, — Education Office, Dunedin, 31st March, 1898. In accordance with the provisions of section 102 of "The Education Act, 1877," the Education Board of the District of Otago has the honour to submit the following report of its proceedings for the year 1897. Board. —At the beginning of the year the Board was composed of the following members: Messrs. Mark Cohen, John F. M. Fraser, John Macgregor, Henry Clark, Donald Borrie, Andrew McKerrow, John McEae Gallaway, John J. Eamsay, and the Eev. P. B. Fraser. Messrs. Cohen, J. F. M. Fraser, and Macgregor retired in terms of section 15 of the Education Act. Nine candidates were nominated by the School Committees for the vacancies, and the voting in February resulted in the re-election of Messrs. Macgregor and Fraser, and the election of Mr. William Snow. At the first meeting of the Board in April Mr. Donald Borrie was appointed Chairman. Mr. J. F. M. Fraser and Mr. J. M. Gallaway were appointed members of the Board of Governors of the Otago Boys' and Girls' High Schools, and Mr. Donald Borrie was reappointed the Board's representative on the Waitaki High Schools Board. Mr. J. Green continues to represent the Board as Education Eeserves Commissioner. The Board held twenty-seven meetings during the year. Number of Schools. —At the close of 1896 there were 218 schools in operation in the district. In the course of the year schools were opened at Kokonga, Tahakopa, Kahuika, and Eomareka. The schools at Capburn and Galloway were closed, owing to the removal of the children of school age from the district. In addition to the schools opened during the year, the Board has sanctioned the establishment of schools at Sutton, Akatore Coast, Woodlands Block VII., Purakauiti, and Clydevale. At the end of the year buildings were m course of erection at Sutton, Woodlands Block VII., Purakauiti, and Clydevale. The following shows the classification of the schools according to their average attendance : Under 15 pupils, twenty-six ; 15 and under 20 pupils, twenty-one ; 20 and under 25 pupils, twenty-three ; 25 and under 50 pupils, sixty-one ; 50 and under 75 pupils, thirtythree ; 75 and under 100 pupils, nineteen ; 100 and under 150 pupils, nine ; 150 and under 300 pupils, nine ; 300 and under 500 pupils, twelve; 500 and upwards, seven : total, 220. From the above it appears that nearly 32 per cent, of the whole are schools with an average attendance under twentyfive pupils. Teachers. —There were in the Board's service on the 31st December, 559 teachers, classed as under : Male head teachers, 95 ; male sole teachers, 48; female sole teachers, 78; male assistant teachers, 55; female assistant teachers, 156 ; male pupil-teachers, 28 ; female pupil teachers, 69 ; sewing teachers, 30 : total—male teachers, 226 ; female teachers, 333. The supply of both male and female teachers has been adequate for all requirements. Pupil-teachers.—There were ninety-seven pupil-teachers (twenty-eight male and sixty-nine female) in the Board's service at the end of the year. Owing to the date of the annual examination of pupil - teachers being altered from December to July, only pupil-teachers of the first class were examined during the year. Twenty-nine were examined, and twenty-eight passed the prescribed examination. In future .all pupil-teachers will be examined at midwinter. The examination of candidates for employment as pupil-teachers was held in December, when no fewer than 130 candidates (thirty-two boys and ninety-eight girls) presented themselves, Out of this number twenty-two boys and sixty-five girls passed the prescribed, tests, and ten boys and fourteen girls received appointments. The number of candidates (especially female) who are applying for admission to the ranks of the teaching profession is out of all proportion to the number of vacancies occurring. The disparity in the number of male and female candidates for employment as pupil-teachers is very noticeable. School Attendance.—The following is an abstract of the attendance at the public schools of this district, from the institution of the Otago education scheme in the year 1856 to the present time. At the beginning of 1878 the new Education District of Southland was created, and 37 schools were handed over to the newly formed Board [not all reprinted] : —

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The above table shows that, compared with the attendance returns for the previous year, there was a decrease for the year of 142 pupils on the average attendance, that 508 fewer pupils attended at all during the year, and that there were 304 fewer pupils in attendance at the close of the year. Scholarships.—Twenty-three scholarships (eleven junior and twelve senior) were awarded at the December examination. In all, 159 candidates competed : thirty-nine for the senior, and 120 for the junior scholarships. In addition to the scholarships awarded, thirty-six of the junior competitors and twelve of the senior competitors gained sufficient marks to qualify them for free education at the Otago Boys' and Girls' High Schools for two years and three years respectively. The amount expended on scholarships for the year was: Paid to scholarship-holders, £1,327 10s. ; examination expenses, £48 os.'9d. : total, £1,375 10s. 9d. There are at present fortyseven pupils receiving free education at the High Schools in Dunedin, in connection with the scholarship scheme. The scholarship holders continue to acquit themselves with credit, and during the year the quarterly reports on their conduct and progress at the schools they attended were quite satisfactory. Training College.—The report of the Principal of the Training College is appended. The attendance of students during the year was : —Eemainiug from 1896, seven females; admitted during 1897, eight males, thirty-one females; left during 1897 (left the service), one female ; on the books, December, 1897, eight males, thirty-seven females : total, forty-five. The cost of the institution for the year was: Salaries, £450 7s. 4d.; allowances to students, £571 13s. 4d.; incidentals, £16 19s. lOd.: total, £1,039 os. 6d. School op Art and Design.—The* total number of students who attended the school during the past session was 409, an increase of fifteen compared with the number for the preceding year. This total includes 103 teachers and pupil-teachers, 35 Training College students, 114 students who attended the day classes, and 157 who attended the evening classes. The fourth annual examination for the London Science and Art Department certificates was held in the month of July. The following is a summary of the results : —

Included in the science subjects above are five external students (four geometrical and one machine drawing).

Year. o O ja Ci CQ o w (D O Cβ 0) Number of Pupils who attended at alTin the Course of the Year. Average Daily Attendance for the Year. A at tlj ttendai: e Close Year. -03 of the I S d a O J-i jj "3 o EH a s Q 1 o EH id 1 1856-57 ... 1867 1877 1887 1895 1896 1897 ...! 5 ... 56 ...173 ... 183 ...214 ... 218 ...220 7 85 356 5111 550 554 559! 1,216 3,191 Iβ, 136 5,328 5,351 5,277 3,151 16,422 22,742 22,588 22,538 22,104 115 4,3671 897 19,613i2,176 28,878:4,148' 27,916|3,759 27,889'3,735 27,381j3,717 121 ! 236 ... 2,045 2,942| 919, 9,573 ! 11,749:2,585! 115,11019,2584,648! 15,848119,607 4,217 15,76719,502:4,085 15,643jl9,360'4,060 2,436 111, 943 118,032 18,512 18,006 17,727 3,355 14,528 22,680 22,729 22,091 21,787

Subject. Stage. Number Examined. Re, suit. Failed. Science Subjects — Practical plane and solid geometry Building construction Building construction Machine drawing Machine drawing Elementary Elementary Advanced Elementary Advanced 16 9 2 6 1 9 passed 6 „ 1 first class... 5 passed 1 first class... 6 fair 2 1 second class 1 1 "i Totals ... 34 2 first class... 20 passed 1 second class 8 fair Art Subjects — Geometrical drawing Perspective drawing Freehand drawing Model drawing Drawing in light and shade Principles of ornament ... Freehand drawing Model drawing Drawing in light and shade Elementary I! It 22 1 78 56 32 1 19 12 16 20 passed 25 first class... 11 9 1 13 8 „ ... 2 excellent... 11 first class... 1 second class 26 30 15 2 27 15 8 Advanced 6 second class 4 3 Drawing from the antique (the figure) 2 2 Totals ... 239 2 excellent 78 first class 20 passed 87 second class 52

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The cost of the school for the year was—Salaries, £702 10s.; incidental expenses, £70 7s. 3d. : £772 17s. 3d. Less fees (£338 os. 6d.) and Government grant under Manual and Technical Elementary Instruction Act (£5B 10s.), £446 10s. 6d. Net cost, £326 6s. 9d. Truancy.—From the following statement an estimate may be gained of the work undertaken during the year for the suppression of truancy : Cases investigated, 629 ; notices served on parents or guardians under section 5 of " The School Attendance Act, 1894," 334; summons served under section 5, 1; order of the Court obtained under section 5, 1; penalty summonses issued under section 7 (dealing with parents or guardians of children who had not attended school the number of times required by the Act), 84. Under the above eighty-four penalty summonses there were fifty-one convictions, twenty-nine cases were withdrawn on account of the production by the defendant of exemption certificates, and four cases were dismissed. The total of fines for the year was £6 3s. In accordance with section 7of the Act the fine inflicted in each case of conviction was 2s. To remove an impression that seems to prevail in some quarters that it is necessary for a Committee to formally appoint the Board's Truant Officer to act on its behalf, and that the Committee's sanction must be given before that officer can issue a notice or summons to a negligent parent, it may be stated that, to a Truant Officer appointed by the Board, section 9 of the Act gives power to lay informations, make complaints, conduct prosecutions, and take all other proceedings under the Act, without any express authority from the School Committee of the district. Instruction under the Manual and Technical Elementary Instruction Act. —In addition to the classes for technical instruction in connection with the School of Art, classes have been recognised at the Tokomairiro and Balclutha Schools. These classes have been carried on during a part of the year with considerable enthusiasm and succees. The following are the reports on the classes :— Tokomairiro. —Woodwork : During the second and third quarters of the year twenty-five boys were trained to the use of tools in the workshop. Of these, six made boxes for themselves to hold clothes; six, writing-desks; two, bookcases; three, dressing-tables; one, a music canterbury; one, a chiffonier; one, an octagon table ; three, whatnots ; one, a desk with stand ; and one, fretwork shelves. To make these articles the boys paid £10 ss. lOd. for material, in addition to a fee of 2s. 6d. per quarter to the instructor for instruction, the articles made being their own property. Agricultural Chemistry: Thirteen boys of the advanced class, during the same two quarters, made quantitative analyses of two kinds of superphosphates of Maiden Island and Peruvian guano; and of two specimens of bone-meal. Examination was made specially for the determination of moisture, organic matter, phosphate of lime, carbonate of lime, sand, and insoluble matter. Balclutha. —Woodwork : Carpentry classes were held during the quarters ending June and September. For the former quarter the average attendance was 20 ; for the latter, 28-2. Owing to the number of pupils, the classes were divided into sections taken at different hours. The boys showed great earnestness in their work, and pride in the result of their efforts, and credit is due to the instructor for his zeal and energy. The boys provided their own material, and, as the Balclutha Technical Classes Association kindly gave the use of their workshop and tools, there was no outlay save the instructor's fees, which were met by the Government subsidy. Finance. —A certified statement of the Board's income and expenditure for the year is appended hereunto. The sum expended in teachers' salaries (including bonuses for classification and bonuses for instructing papil-teachers) was £63,792 7s. 2d. ; the amount paid to School Committees for incidental expenses was £5,725 19s. Id. ; the amount expended in the erection, enlargement, and improvement of school buildings and the purchase of sites was £8,231 14s. 4d. Inspection.—The general report of the Inspectors shows that the percentage of passes in standards is the same as that for 1896—namely, 89; that of the classes (Standards 111. to VI.) for the passes of which the Inspectors are responsible being 84-5. From the point of view of standard passes these are very satisfactory results. It will, however, be seen from their report that this is not the point of view from which the Inspectors judge the efficiency of the teaching. In their report they give a pretty full explanation of the difference between their test and the standard test of efficiency, and show that the latter, though useful as showing the proportion of children that won promotion to a higher class, is very unreliable as a test of real efficiency in the work prescribed for the year. The following tables are quoted from their report. Table A shows the efficiency of the schools according to the standard test; Table B their efficiency according to the test whereby the Inspectors judge it.

Table A.

Glasses. Presented. Present at Examination. Passed. Average Age. Yrs. mos. "lass above Standard VI. itandard VI. V IV. III. II. 651 1,562 2,269 2/796 2,884 2,705 2,543 6,550 1,535 2,204 2,710 2,829 2,654 2,508 1,398 1,813 2,157 2,477 2,567 2,474 13 10 12 10 12 0 11 2 9 9 8 8 'reparatory Totals 21,960 14,440 12,886 11 H •Mi ian of average ages.

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Table B.

Table A shows the number of pupils presented, the number examined, and the number passed in all the standards. The percentage of passes in standards is 89. Table B shows the percentages of marks gained by the district in the pass-subjects. The mean of these percentages is 68. Both tables cover the same subjects, and contain the results of the same examinations. In A the results are expressed in terms of standard passes ; in B they are expressed in terms of percentages of marks actually attained in each subject. The latter is obviously the more accurate statement of the efficiency of the schools. The following table shows the proportions of children presented for examination in the several classes for the last four years. The proportions are expressed in percentages : —

The table shows a gradual increase in the proportion of children that pass through the three senior classes. In 1896, 2,361 passed Standard IV.; and in 1897, 2,269 were presented for examination in Standard V.; in 1896, 1,824 passed Standard V.; and in 1897, 1,562 were presented for examination in Standard VI. Hence, about 96 per cent, of the children that passed Standard IV. spent a year in Standard V., and about 85 per cent, of those that passed Standard V. a year in Standard VI., very gratifying evidence that the bulk of Otago parents are making pretty full use of the facilities provided for the education of their children. By order of the Board. The Hon. the Minister of Education. ' P. G. Pryde, Secretary.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. £ a. A. Expenditure. £ a. A. To Balance— £ a. A. By Office staff—Salaries .. .. 1,089 13 4 Gr. General Account £7,983 11 8 Departmental contingencies.. .. 429 3 3 Dr. Building Account 7,907 2 3 Inspectors'salaries .. .. .. 1,468 9 0 76 9 S Inspectors' travelling-expenses .. 600 0 0 Government grant for buildings .. 9,320 0 0 Examination of pupil-teachers .. 28 18 6 Local contributions for buildings .. 242 6 7 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inGovernment statutory capitation .. 62,519 19 9 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. 63,792 7 2 Scholarship grant .. .. .. 1,390 4 0 Incidental expenses of schools .. 5,725 19 1 Inspection subsidy.. .. .. 500 0 0 Training of teachers .. .. 1,039 0 6 Grant for training of teachers .. 300 0 0 Scholarships— Grant for technical and manual in- Paid to scholars .. .. .. 1,327 10 0 struction .. .. .. 22 13 3 Examination expenses .. .. 48 0 9 Payments by School Commissioners .. 9,461 1 3 School buildings— District High School fees .. .. 179 6 7 New buildings .. .. .. 3,529 510 School of Art and Design— Improvements of buildings .. 3,250 3 0 Pees .. .. .. .. 388 0 6 Furniture and appliances .. .. 526 2 8 Government grant .. .. 58 10 0 Sites .. .. .. .. 318 16 3 Interest .. .. .. .. 32 8 3 Plans, supervision, &c. .. .. 607 6 7 Bents of school-sites .. .. 19 18 8 Truant Officer .. .. .. 90 10 9 Sale of school-sites .. .. .. 22 15 0 Truancy fines paid to School ComTruancy fines .. .. .. 16 0 mittees .. .. .. .. 16 0 Balance— Gymnastic instruction .. .. 154 3 2 Dr. Building Account 6,576 10 0 Members'expenses .. .. .. 188 17 11 Or. General Account 4,473 18 11 School of Art and Design .. .. 772 17 3 Manual and technical instruction grant .. .. .. .. 22 13 3 2,102 11 1 Board's new offices .. .. .. 1,626 6 1 £86,637 10 4 £86,637 10 4 P. G. Pryde, Secretary and Treasurer. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

Beading. Spelling. Writing, Drawing. Arithmetic. Composition. Geography. An average 17 per cent. 1 ,.,, 70 per cent. 70 per cent. 64 per cent. 58 per cent. 66 per cent. 1 error per child r r r = 80 per cent.

1894. 1895. 1896. 1897. PreparatoryStandard I. II. III. „ IV. V. VI. Class above Standard VI. 31-71 12-30 13-34 13-59 12-05 9-03 5-79 2-18 31-10 11-67 12-80 13-71 • 12-68 9-33 6-06 2-62 30-35 11-61 12-37 13-23 13-16 9-91 6-75 2-60 29-82 11-58 12-31 13-13 12-73 10-33 7-11 2-96

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REPORT ON THE DISTRICT HIGH SCHOOLS. Sir,— We have the honour to submit the following report on the higher work of the District High Schools for the year 1897. The tabular statements show the subjects taught, the number of pupils examined, and the amount of work done in each subject.

Balclutha District High School.

English. —One of the papers was very good, four were good, five satisfactory, three fair, seven weak, and seven inferior. General result fair. French. —Class I. : One paper was fair, and the other inferior. Class II.: One paper was very good, one good, one satisfactory, and two were fair. Class 111. : One paper was good and the other fair. General result satisfactory. Latin. —Class I. : One paper was very good, one good, one satisfactory, and two were inferior. Class 11. : Four papers were fair and three inferior. Class III.: One paper was excellent, two were very good, two good, two satisfactory, five fair, and five inferior. General result fair. Algebra. —Class I.: One paper was good, one satisfactory, one fair, and three were inferior. Class 11. : One paper was good, four were fair, and two inferior. Class 111. : One paper was excellent, four were very good, one was good, four were satisfactory, and seven inferior. General result fair. Euclid. —Class I. : Two papers were good, one was satisfactory, and the remainder were weak. Class II.: One paper was good, one was satisfactory, and the remainder were weak. Class III.: Four papers were very good, six good, two satisfactory, two fair, and the remainder weak. General result satisfactory.

Lawrence District High School.

Subject. <*"; JS*. Work done. English Latin French I. I. II. III. I. II. III. 27 29 9 Macmillan's Beading-book, pages 137-280; Smith's English Grammar; Goyen's Composition. Principia Latina, Part II. ; Roman History, III.-IV.; Allen's Latin Grammar. Prinoipia Latina, Part I. Principia Latina, Part I., to Passive Voice, page 65. Chardenal, Part I., 113 pages; appendix, pages 135-156. Chardenal, Part I., 71 pages; appendix, pages 135-150. Chardenal, Part I., 40 pages ; appendix, pages 135-138, and the verbs avoir, etre. Hamblin Smith, 263 pages (Ed. 1895). Hamblin Smith, 168 pages (Ed. 1895). Hamblin Smith, 97 pages (Ed. 1895). Books I., II., III., IV., and deductions on Book I. Books I., II., and easy deductions on Book I. Book I. Algebra I. II. III. I. II. III. 30 Euclid • >• 29

Subject. Class. Pupils examined. Work done. Inglish I. 15 Tempest (Clarendon Press); Warren Hastings (Macaulay); Smith's English Grammar. Tempest (Clarendon Press); Smith's English Grammar. Chardenal's Second Course, exercises and extracts; Chardenal's Advanced Course, 60 exercises; Charles XII., Books I., II., III. Chardenal's Second French Course to page 158. Chardenal's First French Course, 100 exercises. Chardenal's First French Course, 50 exercises. Cassar, Book I.; Dr. Smith's Principia Latina, Part II.— Mythology and History, Books I. and II.; Allen's Latin Grammar. Dr. Smith's Principia Latina, Part I.; Dr. Smith's Principia Latina Part II. —Mythology and History, Book I. Dr. Smith's Principia Latina, Part I., 24 exercises. To end of quadratic equations. To end of simultaneous equations. To end of fractions (Hamblin Smith), 100 pages. Books I., II., and III. (Todhunter); deductions on Books I. and II. Books I. and II. (Todhunter); deductions on Book I. Book I., with easy deductions. 'rench II. I. 13 6 iatin II. •III. IV. I. 9 7 5 4 II. 12 lgebra III. I. II. III. I. 7 7 9 13 5 luclid II. III. 5 3

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English. —Three of the papers were excellent, three very, good, nine good, eight satisfactory, four fair, and one was inferior. General result good. French. —Class I. : Two of the papers were very good, two satisfactory, two fair. Class II.: One paper was excellent, one very good, one good, four were satisfactory, and one was fair. Class III.: One paper was excellent, four were very good, one was good, and one satisfactory. Class IV. : Two papers were excellent, one was satisfactory, one fair, and one weak. General result good. Latin. —Class I. : All the papers were of very good quality. Class 11. : Four of the papers were excellent, five very good, and three good. Class 111. : Two of the papers were very good, three good, and two satisfactory. General result very good. Algebra. —Class I. : Three of the papers were excellent, two very good, and two good. Class 11. : Three of the papers were excellent,, three very good, two satisfactory, and one was fair. Class 111. : Two of the papers were good, three satisfactory, one was fair, five were weak, and two inferior. General result good. Euclid. —Class I.: One paper was excellent, two were very good, and two satisfactory. Class II.: One paper was very good, one satisfactory, and three were weak. Class 111. : One paper was very good, and two were weak. General result satisfactory.

Palmerston District High School.

English. —One of the papers was very good, three were good, six satisfactory, seven fair, four weak, and three inferior. General result fair. French. —Class I.: Four papers were good, one was satisfactory, one fair, and four were weak. Class 11. : One paper was excellent, three were very good, three good, two satisfactory, two fair, and three weak. General result satisfactory. Latin. —Class I. : Two papers were very good, two good, one was satisfactory, one fair, and one weak. Class 11. : One paper was very good, two were good, and two satisfactory. General result satisfactory. Algebra. —Class I. : One paper was very good, one good, one satisfactory, one fair, and one inferior. Class 11. : Five papers were very good, four good, six satisfactory, four fair, and one was weak. Class III.: This pupil's paper was of very good quality. General result satisfactory. Euclid. —Class I. : One paper was excellent, two were good, three satisfactory, and five weak. Class 11. : Two papers were excellent, two good, two satisfactory, and six weak. General result fair. Quantity of work presented for examination insufficient, especially in English.

Port Chalmers District High School.

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Subject. Class. Pupils examined. Work done. Inglish 'rench I. I. 24 10 Hamlet, Eoyal School Series. Pages 1 to 40 of Lyon and Larpent's Primary French Translation Book. Macmillan's First French Course, exercises 1 to 30. Ceesar, Gallic War, Book I., Chapters 1 to 30. Smith's Principia Latina, Part I., to exercise 24. Hall and Knight to page 187. Hall and Knight to page 69. Hall and Knight to page 47. Books I., II., and III., with exercises on Book I. Book I., propositions 1 to 32, with exercises on propositions 1 to 16. jatin igebra II. I. II. I. II. III. I. II. 14 7 5 5 20 1 11 12 juolid

Subject. Glaas. Pupils examined. Work done. English French Latin I. II. ■ I. II. III. IV. I. II. III. 27 7 2 4 17 2 4 3 16 Mason's Word-former; Macaulay's Essay on Lord Olive; Chosen English ; Goyes's Principles of Composition. Mason's Word-former; Macaulay's Essay on Lord Clive; Chosen English, excepting " Character of Happy Warrior," Byron, stanzas 130 - 139, and Ode to the West Wind ; Goyen's Principles of Composition to page 123. Hachette's First French Eeader. Hachette's First French Eeader to page 133 ; Chardenal, Part II., to page 23. Chardenal, Part I., to page 95, extracts at end of same, except No. 2. Chardenal, Part L, to page 71. Cassar, Book I.; Allen's Latin Prose. Principia, Part II., Fables and Anecdotes. Principia, Part I., to end of Passive Voice ; Cassar's Invasion of Britain, 230 lines. Principia, Part I., 36 pages. Hall and Knight to page 255. Hall and Knight to page 187. Hall and Knight to page 69. Hall and Knight to page 45 ; also easy expansions and factors for III. and IV. Books I., II., III., IV., and exercises on Book I. Books I., II., and exercises on Book I. Book I,, and easy exercises up to I. 15. Book I., 26 propositions. Algebra IV. I. II. HI. IV. 1 2 5 12 8 Euclid I. II. III. IV. i 4 3 13 6

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English. —One of the papers was excellent, eight were very good, eleven satisfactory, five fair, and three poor. General result satisfactory. French. —Class I. : The two papers were satisfactory. Class II.: One paper was very good, one satisfactory, and two were fair. Class III.: Two papers were excellent, one was very good, three were good, one was satisfactory, four were fair, and six weak. Class IV.: One paper was good and one satisfactory. General result satisfactory. Latin. —Class I. : Two papers were excellent, one was very good, and one fair. Class II.: One paper was excellent and two were very good. Class III.: One paper was excellent, two were very good, one was good, four were satisfactory, five were fair, two weak, and one was inferior. Class IV. : This pupil's paper was of good quality. General result good. Algebra. —Class I.: Both papers were of good quality. Class II.: One paper was excellent, two were very good, and two inferior. Class 111. : Eight papers were satisfactory, two fair, and two inferior. Class IV. : One paper was good, three were satisfactory, two were fair, and two inferior. General result fair. Euclid. —Class I.: One paper was good, two were fair, and one was weak. Class II.: One was fair and two were weak. Class III.: Three were excellent, one was good, two were satisfactory, three fair, and four weak. Class IV.: Two were fair and four weak. General result fair.

Tokomairiro District High School.

English. —One paper was excellent, five were very good, five good, five satisfactory, seven fair, seven weak, seven inferior. General result satisfactory. French. —One paper was good, four were fair, and three weak. General result fair. Latin. —Class I. : One paper was excellent, two were very good, four good, two satisfactory, and two fair. Class 11. : Five of the papers were of good and one was of fair quality. Class lIL : Two of the papers were satisfactory and three were fair. Class IV. : Three papers were very good, one was good, two were satisfactory, four were fair, and one was very inferior. General result satisfactory. Algebra. —Class I.: One paper was of good and two were of satisfactory quality. Class II.: Five papers were excellent, two very good, and three satisfactory. Class III.: One paper was excellent, three were very good, five good, eight satisfactory, two fair, and two inferior. General result satisfactory. • , Euclid. —Class I.: One paper was excellent, one very good, one good, one satisfactory, and the remainder were weak. Class 11. : The work of the whole class was weak. Class 111. : One paper was very good, one good, three were satisfactory, one was fair, and the remainder were weak. General result fair. Trigonometry. —The work of the whole class was weak. P. Goyen, \ W. S. Fitzgerald, T C. E. Eichardson! Rectors. The Secretary, Otago Education Board, C. E. Bossence, j

Subject. Class. Pupils examined. Work done. English 37 Poetry in "Chosen English"; Macaulay's Essay on Clive (for style); Goyen's Composition. De Senectute; Gallic War, Book VII.; Bradley's Composition to page 175. Gallic War, Book I., 41 chapters; Via Latina to page 79. Via Latina to page 79. Via Latina to page 52. Maomillan's Second French Course to page 159; extracts from Percival's Junior French Eeading-book; first 6 pages of Picciola. Macmillan's Second French Course to page 129. Macmillan's First French Course to page 25. Books I. and IV., with exercises on Books I., II., and III. Books I., II., and III., with exercises on Book I. Book I. Hamblin Smith to end of surds, page 243. Hamblin Smith to the end of quadratics page, 196. Longmans' Simple Rules, Simple Equations, Simple Factors, H.C.F. and L.C.M., to page 86. Hamblin Smith to multiple and sub-multiple angles, page 111. Analysis of bone-dust, guano, and superphosphates. Latin I. 33 French II. III. IV. I. Euclid II. III. I. II. III. I. II. III. 8 34 Algebra 34 Trigonometry Agricultural chemistry 3 t

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TRAINING COLLEGE REPORT. Sir,— Normal School, Dunedin, 10th March, 1898. » I have much pleasure in presenting the annual report of the Training College for the year 1897. At the beginning of the year the Board appointed Mr. William Gray, M.A., Vice-Principal, in place of Dr. Don, and I am glad to be in a position to say that the class work and the results of the annual examination show that he has carried out his onerous duties with credit to himself and to the institution. The attendance at the classes has been very large this year, and this has entailed on me increased work and increased responsibility in connection with the general course of instruction, and in maintaining proper supervision and direction of their practical work. The attendance has been as follows: Second year's students, 7 females; first year's students, 8 males and 31 females; number left during the year, 1 female; number in attendance at the close of the session 1897, 8 males and 37 females. The class studies includes Latin, English, mathematics, science, the art and science of teaching, singing, drawing, gymnastics, history, and geography, and, in the case of females, sewing. The subjects enumerated cover a fairly wide field of work, and when it is borne in mind that in addition to these classes we have a practical course of lessons on all the technical subjects the Board will readily admit that both teachers and students have their time very fully occupied. The course of study in each of the classes has been on much the same lines as in former years. The class for English includes the study of historical and modern grammar, and a course of English composition supplemented by a course of reading prescribed at the beginning of the year. The reading course chosen last year was as follows : The Life of Nelson, Shakespeare's Eichard 11., Cook's Voyages, Morte d'Arthur, Lorna Doone, and Macaulay's Essay on Milton. I insist on every student reading the works selected, and writing an essay in class giving an outline of the substance and matter of the books prescribed for the year's reading. I hope that this kind of work will encourage a taste for good reading on the part of our young teachers, and at the same time make them familiar with the literary style and literary characteristics of some of our best English authors. lam convinced that if a teacher is not well read he will never be able to lead his pupils to become fond of reading, and if he has not studied the history, the significance, and the proper use of words he will never be able to teach the language-lessons of the School Eeaders in an intelligent and systematic way. I have been trying to arouse more interest in this branch of school work, and with this end in view have been giving practical lessons to the students exemplifying my methods of teaching language. In the school-method class I make two courses—a practical course and a theoretical one. In the latter I lecture on the principle and aims of education, the history of educational theories and great educators, on psychology as applied to the art of teaching, on school organization and discipline, on the qualifications of the teacher, and on the methods and definitions embodied in the practical lessons taken by students as shown in the following table :—

With regard to the singing classes, I have to report that Mr. Braik continues to carry them on with ability and enthusiasm. Singing is not always a popular lesson with young teachers—is, indeed, often looked upon as an irksome as well as unimportant kind of subject that may be crowded into an out-of-the-way half-hour in the time-table. One reason for this is that many students easily pass the departmental examination in singing, but still they have little or no practical skill in teaching the subject. To improve their opportunities for teaching singing, Mr. Braik has drawn up a course of graded practical lessons for Standards I. and 11. These lessons are given according to the methods recommended by Mr. Braik, and provide the kind of work the students require to fit them to teach singing with pleasure to themselves and with advantage to their pupils. As the table given above shows, twenty-eight students took part in these lessons in Standards I. and 11., and I hope that next year the course will be extended to the Third and Fourth Standards. With regard to the other subjects of instruction, I have to report that the result of the annual examination shows that twenty-eight students secured a D and seven a "partial " D certificate, whilst two got an E and five a "partial " E certificate. Twelve passed the matriculation examination. These figures indicate that in the technical branches of study the work of the year has been carried out in a satisfactory way. The Education Department offers three prizes annually for excellence in the D science examination. All three prizes fell to the Otago Training College this year, which shows that, in the opinion of the examiners, our students are receiving a good training in theoretical and practical science. The following students secured the prizes: Ist prize, Mr. W. A. Given; 2nd prize, Mr. E. J. Thompson; and 3rd prize, Mr. W. Benton. A number of

Subjects. Classes. Number of Lessons. Physical exercises Infant-school reading ... Beading Geography Grammar Arithmetic Standards I. to VI. ... Primers, Parts I. and II., and Infant Eeader Standards I. to V. Standards I., II., and III. Standards III. and IV. Preparatory classes, Standards I. to III. Standards I. to VI. ... Standards I. and II. ... 27 40 26 32 20 41 Writing Singing 24 28

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students were placed in the honours list, receiving special mention in the following subjects : Spience, English, history, arithmetic, and school management. The following classes were attended at the Otago University : Junior mathematics, junior Latin, senior Latin, senior English, senior French, and junior mental science. Mr. E. J. Thompson and Mr. E. C. Little sat for the Bachelor of Arts degree, and Miss I. M. McKellar and Miss V. M. Greig for the first section, but the results have not been announced. A larger number attended the University this year than last, but this work, though serviceable as a means of improving their education, does not in any way improve their classification as teachers. A second year's attendance must be made before they are eligible to sit for the first section of the B.A. degree, which entitles them to a C certificate. I wish again to urge the Board to grant a small bursary to students to enable them to keep a second year's terms. This would be a great boon to young teachers, especially to those who have to accept appointments in country schools. If, on leaving the Training College, a teacher has a C certificate —the first section of his degree —there would be no disinclination to accept positions in the smaller schools. The students have been sent out to the associated schools as formerly, and I have to thank the headmasters for the assistance they give the students in hearing and criticizing the prescribed lessons. We continue to employ the students in turn in managing the small school, which is kept open during the latter half of the year. The experience they get in this way should prove of service to all of them, but especially to those who have passed their pupil-teacher course in large schools. I have, &c, The Secretary, Otago Education Board. D. E. White, Principal.

SOUTHLAND. Sir, — Education Office, Invercargill, February, 1898. The Education Board of the District of Southland has the honour to submit the following report of its proceedings for the year ended 31st December, 1897 : — Board. —During the year just ended the personnel of the Board has undergone considerable change. In terms of section sof the Act, the retiring members of the Board were Messrs. George Lumsden, D. L. Matheson, and Eobert McNab. The first mentioned intimated to School Committees throughout the district his intention to retire from his position as a member of the Board. Mr. Lumsden had occupied a seat at the Board's table ever since its constitution in 1878, an unbroken period of nineteen years' faithful and honourable service rendered to the cause of education in the Southland District. The Board at its annual meeting held on the 24th March heartily and unanimously adopted a resolution expressive of its appreciation of Mr. Lumsden's long and valuable service as one of its members. To fill the vacancies thus occasioned seven candidates were nominated, and the voting, which took place in February, resulted in the re-election of Mr. D. L. Matheson, and the election of Messrs. John Cowie and William Macalister, 8.A., LL.B. At its regular meeting held in April last Mr. George McLeod was elected Chairman of the Board for the ensuing year. In the month of May an extraordinary vacancy was caused by the death of Mr. James Mackintosh, M.H.8., who had served on the Board for a considerable period, and had always shown a deep interest in all matters pertaining to the educational welfare of the community. The Board at its meeting held on the 4th June unanimously adopted the following resolution expressing the regret of its members at Mr. Mackintosh's death : " That this Board desires to place on record its deep regret at the removal by death since last meeting of Mr. James Mackintosh, M.H.8., who had been a member of the Board for many years, and who always took a warm and active interest in the cause of education." To fill this vacancy three nominations were received, and Mr. G. E. George was, by vote of the School Committees, elected as a member of the Board for the unexpired period of Mr. Mackintosh's term of office, ending 31st March, 1898. 'The Venerable Archdeacon Stockeif and Mr. F. Woodward were re-elected as the Board's representatives on the Southland High Schools Board, while Mr. J. W. Bain continued to act on behalf of the Board as a member of the Board of School Commissioners for the Otago and Southland Education Eeserves. Twelve ordinary meetings and one special meeting of the Board were held during the year, while the Executive Committee, which consists of all the members of the Board for the time being, met twenty-one times. The attendance of members at both Board and Executive Committee meetings was quite exemplary, the record being as follows: Mr. McLeod—Board 13, Executive Committee 20 ; Mr. Bain —Board 13, Executive Committee 20 ; Mr. Baldey—Board 13, Executive Committee 19; Mr. Froggatt —Board 12, Executive Committee 20; Mr. Matheson—Board 11, Executive Committee 18; Mr. McGibbon—Board 11, Executive Committee 16; Mr. Macalister— Board 9, Executive Committee 15; Mr. Cowie —Board 9, Executive Committee 9; Mr. George— Board 5, Executive Committee 7. The figures in the last three instances represent in the case of Messrs. Cowie and Macalister only nine months' and in the case of Mr. George only five months' attendance. Schools. —At the close of the previous year there were in existence 140 schools. During the year to which this report refers the Board established new schools in the districts of Haldane (Improved-farm Special Settlement), Aparima, Bound Hill, Kapuka, Te Oneroa, and Cromarty (on Preservation Inlet), the two last mentioned being half-time schools. The Native school at Colac Bay was, at the request of the Education Department, taken over by this Board and constituted a public school under the Education Act, In connection with the transfer of control of this institution it was feared that some little friction might arise. The Board is, however, greatly pleased to be able to report that not the slightest trouble has been experienced, those of the

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Native race still interested in the school falling in loyally with the new order of things, and all the former pupils are still in attendance. A new class-room has been added, and considerable improvements effected to the old and somewhat antiquated building. The attendance has materially increased, and, under the present staff of teachers, the school will doubtless continue its career of usefulness. During the year the small aided schools at Papatotara and Wendon, Block 111., were closed. There were therefore at the close of the year 145 schools in active operation. Of this number no less than twenty-eight schools registered an average attendance of less than twenty pupils, and these were in consequence classified by the Board's regulations as aided schools. Twenty-two others showed an average of twenty to twenty-five. In the interests of education in outlying and thinly populated districts, the existence of so many small schools is absolutely essential, and in their maintenance the Board has shown a desire to foster settlement in localities where, but for the means of educating their children, many worthy and deserving settlers would not dream of isolating themselves. The wide area over which this education district extends, and the fact that in many places large tracts of unoccupied country lie between the settled portions of the district, render it imperative that many weak schools should be established, and it is highly probable that a considerable percentage of the schools in this district will not be self-supporting for many years to come. In addition to this, there are but few of the schools under this Board chat afford a surplus of revenue over expenditure. This being so, it is only by the exercise of rigid economy and careful administration of its finance that the Board has been able to establish, and continue to support, so many small schools as are at present in operation. Attendance of Pupils.—The Board has continued the services of its Truant Inspector during the year. It is difficult to accurately gauge the benefits derived from the employment of this officer, but the Board believes that his influence for good has been felt in the school districts where he has received full authority to enforce the provisions of the School Attendance Act. In a considerable number of districts Committees are still firm in their refusal to permit the full exercise of the powers conferred on Truant Inspectors by the Act under which such officers are appointed. The reasons for such refusal are obvious. Not until the absolute control of measures to compel the attendance of irregular pupils is vested in Education Boards, and in Boards alone, will the benefits to be secured by regular attendance at , our public schools be universally felt and appreciated. The attendance of pupils has again shown a satisfactory increase. The average weekly roll-number and strict average attendance respectively for the previous year were 9,728 and 7,851. For the year 1897 the corresponding numbers were 9,846 and 7,943, showing an increase of 118 in roll-number and 92 in average attendance. The working average for the year was 8,260, an increase of 296; while the percentage of strict average attendance to roll-number remained approximately the same (806) as for the preceding year. Tbachees. —Some years ago the Board had occasion to fill many of the vacancies occurring from time to time by temporarily appointing thereto teachers of ascertained good character, but who did not at the time of appointment possess the necessary departmental certificate of efficiency. Such a course of action is not now necessary, as for even the most unremunerative position a duly qualified teacher may be obtained. This fact indicates that the supply of teachers is now adequate to present requirements. There were at the close of the year to which this report refers 245 teachers in the service of the Board, an increase of four over the number reported as employed at the end of the previous year. Of that number, 127 were males and 118 females. These teachers were, according to the positions occupied, classified as follows : Principal, 17 males; head of department, 17 females; head of school—32 males, 1 female ; sole teacher—s6 males, 33 females ; assistant—l 2 males, 17 females; pupil-teacher—lo males, 50 females: total—l 27 males, 118 females. Of the teaching staff as a whole it may safely be affirmed that they are actuated by a conscientious desire to discharge their important duties with zeal and fidelity. School Committees. —The interest manifested by most School Committees in the educational well-being of the district to which reference has frequently been made in previous reports does not appear to have relaxed during the year. These bodies still continue to render the Board substantial assistance in the conduct and supervision oi the educational affairs of the district, and in maintaining and improving the school properties. The system of auditing their accounts referred to in last year's report has been continued, with mutual benefit to the Board and Committees. No serious delinquincies were reported in connection with the audit carried out during the month of April last; indeed, a decided improvement in the methods adopted by many of the Committees in keeping their accounts was noticeable. This satisfactory feature was no doubt due in great part to the use of a uniform cash-book, which had been supplied by the Board, and brought into general use during the year. The following statement (omitting shillings and pence) is a classified summary of the income and expenditure of School Committees during the year ending 31st March, 1897 : —lncome : Balances on hand, £696 ; from Education Board grants (general), £1,712; from Education Board grants (special), £291; donations, subscriptions, &c, £289 ; receipts from other local sources, £465 : total, £3,453. The expenditure was as follows : Cleaning and fuel, £1,362 ; repairs of buildings, fences, &c, £320; books, maps, and furniture, £96 ; special grants from Board, £291; contributions towards teachers' salaries, £28 ; expenses of Committees, £364 ; on sundries (not specified), £328 ; balances in hand, £664 : total, £3,453. These figures, omitting all reference to balances, which were substantially the same at the beginning and end of the year respectively, show that a sum of about £2,750 was received and disbursed by School Committees throughout the district during the year. Of this amount the Board contributed £2,003, while from local sources a sum of £754 was received. For many extra works, such as the erection of shelter- and fuel-sheds, fencing, petty repairs to buildings, and such-like, the Board's practice is to contribute half actual cost; while for the execution of general repairs to buildings the whole responsibility is, as a rule, accepted by the Board.

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Scholarships.—The usual annual examination of candidates for scholarships was held on the 14th December last and following days, when eighty-four competitors (forty girls and forty-four boys) presented themselves. The examination was held simultaneously at four centres, seventy candidates presenting themselves at Invercargill, eight at Gore, three at Eiverton, and three at Queenstown. On this occasion, as in the year 1894, the scholarships examination was made the basis on which free education for a period of two years (with an additional year should the candidate prove worthy of such further concession) would be awarded by the High Schools Board of Governors to the first fifteen next in order of merit to the scholarship-winners. The sustained interest in the Board's scholarship scheme, and the extra inducement held out by the High Schools Board's concession, had the effect of evoking very keen competition. No less than thirty-two of the candidates made over 60 per cent, of the attainable marks. The highest percentages were gained by Eobert Mackay (83) and Ernest C. Lindsay (80), to each of whom was awarded a resident scholarship of the value of £20, tenable for three years ; -by Madeline Lind (81), Jane Kennedy (79), and Willie Scobie (78-J-), to each of whom a non-resident scholarship of the value of £35, also tenable for a period of three years, was awarded. In addition to the foregoing, six scholarships—three of the value of £35 each and three of the value of £20 each, but tenable for one year only—were awarded to the candidates next on the list. The average age (fifteen years being the maximum of the scholarship-takers) was—for resident candidates, fourteen years and seven months ; for non-resident candidates, thirteen years and six months; while the average for all who made over 60 per cent, of the maximum marks was fourteen years one month, and thirteen years eleven months for resident and non-resident candidates respectively. These facts would appear to indicate that our city young folks, with all their supposed advantages, do not more than hold their own in a test of scholarship with their country cousins. The matter of the revision of the scholarships regulations has occupied the Board's attention during the year. A special committee has been appointed to review the regulations and report to the Board. This committee has met several times, conferred with prominent members of the teaching profession —the Inspectors and others—and will furnish a report early in the now current year. The present regulations have been in operation for a period of eight years, and during that time the circumstances of this district have materially altered. The average attendance, on which depends the number and value of scholarships to be allocated each year, has greatly increased during the period referred to, and there is in consequence a much larger sum available for the maintenance of our scholarships scheme. The revised regulations will, if adopted by the Board, probably not come into operation till the year 1899. Teachers will thus have ample time to adapt their teaching and selection of candidates to the new conditions which may be imposed. Pupil-teachers.—The pupil-teacher staff at the close of the year consisted of ten boys and fifty girls. The usual annual examination was held simultaneously at Invercargill and Queenstown on the 17th June last and the two following days, when thirty-four candidates presented themselves. The following statement shows the result of the examination : — Present. Passed. Failed. Exempted. First Class ... ... ... ... 8 8 0 0 Second Class ... ... ... ... 8 6 0 2 Third Class ... ... ... ... 13 11 2 0 Fourth Class ... ... ... ... 5 5 0 0 34 30 2 2 The Inspectors reported that the results of the examination were on the whole satisfactory, the papers set having for the most part received intelligent and comprehensive treatment at the hands of the candidates, In very few cases was the style of the candidates' work with respect to neatness of execution and clearness of arrangement open to exception. Of the pupil-teachers actually employed, five entered the service too recently to be eligible for examination, and twenty-one had, prior to the month of June last, already passed all the prescribed examinations. Bespecting these latter it may be mentioned that, by tacit agreement, the Board does not seek to abruptly terminate their engagements immediately on the completion of their apprenticeship, as is the custom in many other districts. It is not thought desirable to insist on a too rigid compliance with the regulations in respect to the duration of a pupil-teacher's term of office. It is expected, however, that those who have served the prescribed period, and thus qualified themselves for a more responsible position, shall use all due diligence in seeking to obtain promotion in the service. There are several to whom the last paragraph has special reference—some who are for various reasons quite content to continue to occupy the subordinate position rather than accept a country appointment at a considerable increase' of salary. The large proportion of females employed by this Board in the capacity of pupil-teachers is doubtless in part due to the preference shown by Committees in country districts for one competent to impart instruction in needlework. -In making appointments of female pupil-teachers it is made a condition that sewing shall be taught, and a bonus at the rate of £5 per annum is allowed for such extra services on condition that satisfactory progress is shown by the pupils instructed. A sum of £98 15s. was paid during the year 1897 as sewing-bonuses. It is provided in the regulations that one hour each day, before or after school-hours, shall be set apart for the purposes of instruction of pupil-teachers by the head-teachers of the various schools in which such are employed. For this extra duty a bonus, dependent partly on the success or failure at the annual examination of the pupil-teachers interested, is paid. The aggregate amount of instruction-bonus paid for the year was £292 7s, Id. Where pupil-teachers are exempted from examination; as in the case of those who have passed the " E," " D," Matriculation, or Civil" Service examinations, no instruction-bonus is allowed.

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Board's Technical School.—The Saturday carpentry classes established in April, 1895, have been continued. The attendance of students shows a considerable falling-off as compared with last year, and this enabled the Board's Instructor to overtake the work of supervision unaided. The Instructor reports that the interest of the students has been well maintained throughout, and speaks in complimentary terms of their diligence and evident anxiety to do good work. The scheme of work set by the Education Department has been followed throughout the session. In connection with this subject, it may be of interest to note that a fully equipped Technical Classes Association has been established in Invercargill, and that classes for instruction in various subjects, including English, shorthand, needlework, mechanical drawing, &c, have been successfully carried on for the past two winters. These classes are held at convenient hours in the evening, and this Board has assisted the movement by placing its rooms and workshop at the disposal of the management, free of charge. Act Exhibition. —In November last the Board accepted, for exhibition in Invercargill, an offer made by the Education Department of a loan collection of art students' works illustrative of the various stages of art instruction under the Science and Art Department, South Kensington, London. The pictures and drawings were displayed to great advantage in the Board's rooms. The Exhibition was thrown open to the public free of charge, and the opportunity thus given was availed of by a very large number of citizens of the town and suburbs, and also by many country visitors. More than usual public interest was shown in the exhibition, and every facility was offered to those interested to visit and inspect the pictures every day and evening of the period— about three weeks—during which the collection remained. Inspection of Schools.—The work of the inspection and examination of the schools in the district was carried out during the year, as provided for by the department's regulations on the subject. For the third year the five Roman Catholic schools at work in this education district have also been subjected to the ordinary examination test. Buildings.—The demands for the erection of new school buildings, and for grants for the repairs and improvement of existing buildings, have been, as usual, numerous and pressing during the year just closed. The Board has not been able in all cases to satisfy these demands in full, but has striven to allocate the funds placed at its disposal to the best possible advantage of the district as a whole. The extra grant of £420 made to assist in meeting the claims arising from time to time for the establishment of schools in newly settled districts enabled the Board to proceed with the erection of schools in several districts where, but for this supplementary vote, the establishment of schools urgently required might have had to be postponed at least for some time. New schools have been erected during the year in the districts of Haldane and Aparima, while the erection of schools in five other districts was authorised. Additions to the school buildings at Waikaia and Colac Bay, and to the teacher's residence at Macetown, have also been made. Nearly the whole cost of the Colac Bay addition was contributed by the Native Schools Department as a condition of the Board taking over the charge of the Native school in that district. The negotiations entered into during the previous year for the purchase of a residence for the teacher at Waikiwi were completed at a cost of £250. The removal of the Limestone Plains School to a more central site in the township of Calcium has also been accomplished. The establishment of a new school at Flint's Bush, and the removal of the Groper's Bush School to Fairfax, rendered this work absolutely necessary in order to equally adjust the positions of the schools to the educational requirements of this portion of the district. The school at Scott's Gap, and the teacher's residence at Pyramid Siding, both of which were destroyed by fire during the preceding year, were re-erected. The Board's balance-sheet shows that the expenditure (omitting shillings and pence) on new buildings was £1,842 ; on repairs and improvements to existing buildings, £1,839; on furniture and appliances, £119; architect's salary and expenses, £282 ; advertising tenders, £22 : the grand total being £4,143 19s. 4d. The income from Government grants for buildings during the year amounted to £4,471. This amount was made up of special as well as ordinary grants for buildings, as follows : Ordinary building grant, £3,000; special grants in aid of the erection of school buildings in newly settled districts, £420 ; reinstatement of buildings destroyed by fire, £888 ; grant in aid of addition and repairs to Native-school building at Colac Bay, £163. This statement unexplained would indicate a surplus of receipts over expenditure of £328. It must, however, be pointed out that of the income set down in the Board's financial statement a sum of £640, being grant towards cost of reinstatement of the Gore school building, destroyed by fire during the previous year, was included, while a sum of £577, representing part of the expenditure on this work, was paid during the preceding year. The general result of the year's operations on the Building Account is that the debit balance of the previous year of £1,223 has been reduced to £863. Against this must, of course, be placed the fact that the liabilities due, or to fall due, under contracts, amount this year to £2,965. As the ordinary building grant promised for the year 1897-98 (£3,300) will do little more than provide for the fulfilment of pledges given, this Board would appeal strongly for a liberal proportion of the special vote of £25,000 made last session of Parliament in aid of the erection of schools in outlying and recently settled districts. While still regretting the inadequacy of the grants received from year to year for building purposes, this Board desires to record its grateful appreciation of the efforts made by the department during the past two years to meet the exigencies arising from the rapid extension of settlement in this part of the colony. Finance and Accounts.—From a perusal of the balance-sheet it will be seen that the Board's income, exclusive of credit balance at the beginning of the year, amounted to £35,785 13s. Id., the chief sources of revenue being as follows : Statutory capitation grants, £26,406 ; primary reserves rents, £3,836 ; scholarships, £554 ; inspection subsidy, £300; building grants, ordinary and special, £4,471. These, with several minor receipts, constituted the total income of the Board for the year. The disbursements aggregated £34,996 19s. 2d., the principal items of which were the following: Teachers' salaries and allowances, £26,571; School Committees' allowances, £1,831; Inspectors'

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salaries and expenses, £896; office-staff salaries, £454; scholarships, £554 ; building purposes, £4,143. After payment of these and other smaller amounts, as shown in the financial statement, there remained a net credit balance to the General Account on the 31st December of £2,710 2s. lOd. From this balance to credit must be deducted a sum of £645 lis. Bd. as due and payable to teachers, School Committees, and others, in respect of liabilities on the 31st December. By order of the Board, The Hon. the Minister of Education. Jno. Neill, Secretary.

General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. Receipts. Expenditure. To Balance— £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Dr. Building Account 1,223 1 9 By Office staff—Salaries .. .. 454 13 4 Gr. General Account 3,144 10 8 Truant Officer—Salary and expenses.. 190 14 9 1,921 8 11 Departmental contingencies .. 230 3 4 Subscriptions and donations for build- Inspectors'salaries .. .. 697 15 8 ings .. .. .. .. 32 11 0 Inspectors' travelling-expenses . .. 199 2 9 Government grant for buildings .. 4,471 0 0 Examination of pupil-teachers .. 20 2 0 Government statutory capitation .. 26,406 13 6 Teachers' salaries and allowances (inGovernment scholarship grant .. 554 18 4 eluding rent, bonus, &c.) .. 26,571 2 10 Government inspection subsidy .. 300 0 0 Incidendal expenses of schools .. 1,831 15 0 Payments by School Commissioners .. 3,836 2 9 Scholarships— Interest on fixed deposits .. .. 108 15 0 Paid to scholars .. .. 535 0 0 Rents of school-sites .. .. 60 17 9 Examination expenses .. .. 19 18 4 Refunds .. .. .. .. 14 14 9 School buildings— New buildings .. .. .. 1,842 10 4 Improvements of buildings .. 1,839 411 Furniture and appliances .. 119 4 1 Sites .. .. .. .. 39 2 6 Plans, supervision, and fees .. 282 0 0 Advertising tenders .. .. 21 17 6 Interest on overdraft .. .. 16 9 6 Exchange on cheques .. .. 019 0 Members' travelling-expenses .. 85 3 4 Balance— Dr. Building Account £863 10 1 Or. General Account 3,573 12 11 2,710 2 10 £37,707 2 0 £37,707 2 0 G. McLeod, Chairman. Jno. Neill, Secretary and Treasurer. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

EEPOETS OP SCHOOL CO'MMISSIONEKS.

AUCKLAND. Sir,-— Auckland, 6th May, 1898. I have the honour to forward the accompanying statement of the Commissioners' accounts for the year 1897, and to report as follows upon the administration of reserves in this district during that period: — The reserves let comprise: Twenty-seven sections of town and suburban lands, yielding £108 ss. 6d. per annum; twenty-six sections of rural lands, yielding £106 9s. per annum. The sum of £371 12s. has also been realised from the sale of timber for milling purposes, which amount is held on deposit for endowments in accordance with law. The Commissioners desire to point out that, in the event of the Government taking over Native lands to hold in trust for the Natives, and to lease to Europeans, as proposed by the Hon. Mr. Carroll, the necessity for setting apart adequate endowments for both primary and secondary education should not be lost sight of. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education, Wellington. E. Udy, Chairman.

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General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897. I.—General Account.

II.—Separate Account.

13— E. 1.

Primary. j Secondary. Total. Receipts. £ s. d. 395 3 2 £ s. d. £ s. d. 'o Balance at 31st December, 1896 Eevenues from reserves— Arrears of 1896 Due in 1897 Miscellaneous— Eefunds ... Tramway-rent Interest ... Insurance recovered Lease deposits 629 1 1,391 17 10 15 5 0 26 0 100 0 36 15 1 6 0 0 3 0 0 157 2 452 13 4 2 786 3 5 1,844 10 8 10 15 0 5 0 0 26 0 3 100 0 0 52 10 0 15 15 0 » Total receipts ... 3,220 2 6 Expenditure. py Commissioners' expenses Office salary Office expenses Legal expenses Crown-grant fees Expenses of leasing ... Expenditure on reserves Payments for primary education— Auckland Education Board ... Hawke's Bay Education Board Payments for secondary educationThames High School Whangarei High School Gisborne High School Lease deposits Balance at Bank of New Zealand £ s. d. 37 0 3 76 11 8 18 5 5 24 17 8 6 13 6 37 15 0 ... 180 13 10 ... 1,788 4 8 ... Ill 15 4 ... I 56"i4 0 £ s. 12 6 23 8 7 1 6 6 6 11 12 19 5 11 d. 9 4 5 0 5 0 6 £ s. d. 49 7 0 100 0 U 25 6 10 31 3 8 13 4 11 50 14 0 186 5 4 I J 1,900 0 0 175 0 175 0 330 0 15 12 0 0 ■ 2 0 I 680 0 2 72 6 0 111 14 7 Total expenditure 3,220 2 6

Primary. Secondary. Total. Beceipts. 'o Balance at 31st December, 1896 Beceipts for endowments £ s. 482 5 297 9 a. 0 6 £ s. 261 0 74 2 a. 0 6 £ s. d. 743 5 0 371 12 0 Total expenditure 1,114 17 0 Expenditun £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. Nil By Balances at 31st December, 1897 779 14 6 335 2 6 1,114 17 i *? Total expenditure 1,114 17 0

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III. —Assets and Liabilities.

31st March, 1898. H. N. Garland, Secretary.

TARANAKI. General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897.

Statement of Assets and Liabilities. Assets. £ s. A. Liabilities. £ s. A. To Balance .. .. .. .. 627 10 7 By Land Fund .. 389 4 9 Rents due and in arrear .. .. 1,324 3 8 Balance of assets .. .. .. 1,575 9 5 Interest accrued to 31st December, 1897 12 19 11 £1,964 14 2 £1,964 14 2 E. Parris, Chairman. E. Veale, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

I Primary. Secondary. Total. Assets. >ank balances as above ... 'ixed deposits as above ... tents of 1897 due lents of 1896 due lents of previous years due £ a. a. i ... i 60 19 8 ... 779 14 6 ... 810 1 10 ... 140 12 8 19 0 0 £ s. d. 50 14 11 335 2 6 223 14 0 6 5 1 1 10 0 £ s. d. Ill 14 7 1,114 17 0 1,033 15 10 146 17 9 20 10 0 Total assets ... 1,810 8 8 617 6 6 617 6 6 2,427 15 2 Liabilities. Deposits for leases £ 13 s. 7 a. 0 £ 7 s. 7 d. 0 £ s. 20 14 d. 0

Primary. Secondary. Total. Beceipts. 'o Balance on 31st December, 1896 Bents of reserves Transfer fees Land sales ... £ s. d. 2,120 7 7 5 10 0 8 13 4 £ s. d. 402 17 10 2 0 0 £ s. d. 1,223 18 2 2,523 5 5 7 10 0 8 13 4 Total receipts ... 3,763 6 11 Expenditure By Officer's salary Banger's salary Commission Banger —Valuations ... Bates Law charges Expenses of leasing ... Stationery, printing, &c. Members' expenses ... Purchase of site Expenses of reserves ... Taranaki Education Board Wanganui Education Board New Plymouth High School Board Wanganui High School Board Balance — On current account Savings-bank Fixed deposits £ s. d. 56 5 0 56 5 0 44 8 1 £ s. d. 18 15 0 18 15 0 4 13 3 9 9 0 £ s. d. 75 0 0 75 0 0 49 1 4 9 9 0 2 14 2 58 8 8 37 15 11 2 7 9 6 12 5 15 0 1 4 7 0 1,362 14 11 837 5 1 371 13 3 228 6 9 2 14 2 57 13 2 37 15 11 2 7 9 5 6 11 0 15 6 15 6 4 7 0 1,362 14 11 837 5 1 371 13 3 228 6 9 238 5 11 65 6 8 323 18 0 627 10 7 Total expenditure 3,763 6 11

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WELLINGTON. Sir,— Wellington, 7th February, 1898. I have the honour to forward herewith the nineteenth annual report and balance-sheet of the School Commissioners for the Wellington Provincial District, for the year ending the 31st December, 1897. The Commissioners still consist of Mr. J. E. Blair (Chairman), and Messrs. John Duthie, A. W. Hogg, M.H.E., F. Pirani, M.H.8., and J. W. A. Marchant, Commissioner of Lands. Sales of leases for periods of twenty-one years were held during the year at Wanganui, Marton, Palmerston North, Eketahuna, and Carterton, at which an area of 9,635 acres 1 rood and 7 perches was taken up, at an annual rental of £499 14s. 2d. A further area of 2,606 acres 3 roods 22 perches, at an annual rental of £95 175., has since been disposed of, making a total of 12,242 acres and 29 perches leased to seventy-two tenants, at an annual rental of £595 125., or an average of over lid. an acre. This must be considered a satisfactory return, when it is remembered that no compensation is paid at the end of the term for either bushfelling or grassing, and the lands for the most part comprise bush country in new and unroaded districts. Of the reserves unlet, the titles to a large number have not yet been received, and a considerable proportion of the remainder are of little value, several large sections having been offered unsuccessfully at rentals of from Id. to 3d. per acre. These reserves imply an actual loss to the Commissioners, owing to the expenditure necessitated in the construction and maintenance of boundary fences, and the destruction of rabbits. A number of the titles to sections gazetted in 1895, and mentioned in last year's report, have not yet been received. This has occasioned some inconvenience; but as the Eegistrar has now consented to accept leases for registration, in anticipation of the actual issue of the title, no further difficulty from this cause need be anticipated. Owing to the rooms in the Government Insurance Buildings occupied by the Commissioners being required for another department the Commissioners had to remove to other premises. One extension of lease has been granted during the year, and one surrender accepted, being respectively part of Section 1,580, Block IX., Kairanga, and Section 31, Block X., Pohangina; the latter section having been washed away by the river. Under the heading of printing, stationery, and office contingencies are included such items as insurance premium, office-cleaning, lighting, fuel, office rent, exchange, stamps, expenses in connection with printing and circulating notices of sales, and also the removal of the Commissioners' office. You will observe from the balance-sheet that the arrears of rents only amount to £83 3s. lOd. The smallness of the amount proves that the Commissioners have not acted unwisely in allowing their tenants a little latitude during the recent period of depression. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education. J. B. Blair, Chairman.

General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897.

Nature of Reoeipts. Primary. Secondary. Total. Beceipts. I p £ s. d. I 491 3 0 215 8 9 2,500 12 8 293 7 10 2 9 8 162 10 0 1 11 6 116 31 0 6 £ s. d. 91 9 11 0 0 9 111 1 8 £ 582 : 215 2,611 : 293 2 162 ; l : l 31 'o Balances, 1st January, 1897 ... Beceipts on account of previous years ... Beceipts on account of year 1897 Beceipts on account of year 1898 Interest on improvements Preparation and registration of leases ... Law Befund of grant fees from Treasury Beceipts on account of improvements ... £ s. d. 91 9 11 0 0 9 111 1 8 £ s. d. 582 12 11 215 9 6 2,611 14 4 293 7 10 2 9 8 162 10 0 1 11 6 116 31 0 6 Total receipts ... 3,699 5 5 202 12 4 3,901 17 9 Expenditure ly Payments to Boards— Wellington Education Board Wanganui Education Board... £ s. 1,426 17 973 - 2 d. 3 9 £ s. a. £ s. a. Wellington College . Wellington Girls' High School Wanganui Girls' High School 29 14 6 29 14 6 40 11 0 2,400 0 o Salaries of officers Printing, stationery, and office contingencies 263 11 102 15 0 4 11 9 0 4 8 8 100 275 107 0 0 4 0 0 0

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General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897 — continued.

Nat. J. Tone, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

HAWKE'S BAY. Sir,— Napier, 27th April, 1898. In compliance with your circular of the 3rd December last, I have the honour to report as follows for the past year : — An auction-sale of leases was held in September last, when four suburban and two rural lots were offered. The suburban lots had been previously held under lease, but the rural lots had not been offered before, being reserves recently gazetted. Only one of the rural lots was sold, the rental obtained being £27 15s. All the other lots were passed in. Since, the sale, however, the suburban land has been let for a short term, and it will be offered again when a suitable opportunity occurs. I have, &c, Eric C, Gold-Smith, Chairman, The Secretary for Education, Wellington,

Nature of Expenditure. Primary. Secondary. Total. Expenditure —coi tinued. Allowances to Commissioners — A. W. Hogg F. Pirani ... Commissions on sales of leases Advertising ... Fencing Law (including transfers, renewals, &c.) Preparation and registration of leases ... District Land Begistrar—grant fees, &c. ... Travelling-expenses of Secretary Masterton Town Lands Trust ... Carterton Borough Council Surveys Destruction of rabbits Befund to Owen Flanagan Bank balance ... £419 12 4 Unpresented cheques 15 13 1 £ s. d. £ s. d. £' s. d. 4 16 0 6 0 0 27 2 0 91 14 0 173 8 1 13 3 10 135 13 0 52 15 1 36 11 1 2 0 0 4 4 0 44 0 0 10 0 0 5 2 0 4 12 0 5 15 0 27 2 0 91 14 0 173 8 1 13 3 10 135 13 0 52 15 1 36 11 1 2 0 0 4 4 0 44 0 0 10 0 0 5 2 0 0 4 0 5 0 0 403 19 3 Cash in hand ... ... ...955 86 5 8 413 4 8 326 19 0 Total expenditure 3,699 5 5 202 12 4 3,901 17 ' 9 Assets. Salances on 31st December, 1897 .rrears of rents £ s. d. 326 19 0 83 3 10 £ s. 86 5 d. 8 £ s. d. 413 4 8 83 3 10 Total ... 410 2 10 86 5 8 496 1 8 6 Liabilities I iand Purchase Account (see clause 13, " Education Beserves Act Amendment Act, 1882 ") ... ... I £ s. d. 70 18 6 £ s. a. £ s. a. 70 18 6

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General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897.

Eric C. Gold-Smith, Chairman. E. P. A. Platpord, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

Primary. Secondary. Total. Beceipts. I £ s. d. £ s. d. 'o Credit balances on 1st January, 1897 ... ... j 708 13 9 1,921 18 9 Arrears of revenue for previous years, viz.,— Bents, issues, profits, or receipts from reserves 438 7 1 190 18 0 Interest on overdue rents ... ... ... : 18 12 11 1 18 10 Bevenues, viz.,— (1.) Bents, &c, of reserves for current year ... 2,306 12 5 j 575 15 8 (2.) Interest on deposits ... ...' ... 15 3 7 36 0 0 Total receipts ... ... ...3,487 9 9 2,726 11 3 £ s. 2,630 12 629 5 20 11 2,882 8 51 3 a. 6 1 9 1 7 6,214 1 0 Expenditure. ly Salaries and allowances to officers Printing, stationery, &c. Legal expenses Surveying, &c. Auctioneer's commission on sale of leases .\dvertising ... Bates ... .... Insurance ... Payments to Hawke's Bay Education Board Fees, board, and rail-fares of pupils attending Napier High Schools Credit balances, — Fixed deposits Current Account ... £ s. a. 77 10 9 6 12 7 17 10 6 0 16 3 14 5 8 17 4 18 2 10 2 0 0 2,650 0 0 £ s. d. 22 9 3 1 18 5 2 7 5 0 4 9 0 7 1 2 0 11 £ s. d. 100 0 0 8 11 0 19 17 11 110 1 11 6 10 18 3 18 2 10 2 0 0 2,650 0 0 553 3 0 553 3 0 506 6 0 198 9 1 1,700 0 0 444 0 5 2,206 6 0 642 9 6 Total expenditure 13,487 9 9 12,726 11 3 6,214 1 0 Assets. Balance of cash on 31st December, 1897 Arrears due 31st December, 1897, viz.,— (1.) Arrears of year 1894 (2.) Arrears of year 1895 (3.) Arrears of year 1896 (4.) Arrears of year 1897 £ s. 704 15 d. 1 £ s. 2,144 0 d. 5 £ s. d. 2,848 15 6 9 0 18 0 75 18 489 4 0 0 5 9 9 0 0 18 0 0 75 18 5 688 19 4 199 14 7 Total assets 1,296 18 3 i2,343 15 0 3,640 13 3 l__ Liabilities. Awaiting appropriation in purchase of land Accrued for secondary education ... Legal expenses ... Printing and advertising Surveying Total liabilities... £ s. a. £ s. a. ' £ s. d. 506 6 0 2,144 0 5 18 4 10 0 16 9 64 10 6 2,733 18 6 2,733 18 6

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MARLBOROUGH. General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897.

Liabilities. Nil. John Smith, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

NELSON. General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897.

Primary. Secondary. Total. Beceipts. To Balance on 31st December, 1896 Bents Interest on fixed deposits Total receipts ... £ s. a. 76 9 6 165 0 0 241 9 6 £ 159 36 3 s. 5 0 8 d. 6 0 7 £ s. d. 235 15 0 201 0 0 3 8 7 198 14 1 440 3 7 Expenditure ly Salary Advertising Postage Marlborough Education Board Balance, 31st December, 1897 £ 20 2 0 100 119 s. a. 0 o 5 0 1 7 0 0 2 11 £ s. d. 5 0 0 £ s. d. 25 0 0 2 5 0 0 17 100 0 0 312 17 0 193 "l4 1 Total expenditure 241 9 6 198 14 1 440 3 7 Assets. ialance at Current Account 'ixed deposits ... lutstanding rents £ s. a. 119 2 11 £ 41 152 10 s. d. 8 10 5 3 0 0 £ s. 160 11 152 5 85 14 d. 9 3 6 75 14 6 Total assets 194 17 5 203 14 1 398 11 6

Primary. Secondary. Total. Receipts. s s. a. £ s. a. £ s. a. 'o Balance, Union Bank of Australia, 1st January, 1897 Eents of reserves 553 4 11 655 13 3 110 12 10 249 2 3 663 17 904 15 9 6 Total receipts ... ... ... 1 1,208 18 L,208 18 2 2 359 15 1 1,568 13 3

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General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897 — continued.

Liabilities. Nil. Alfd. Thos. Jones, Secretary. Examined and found correct.—J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

WESTLAND. General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897.

Primary. Secondary. Total. Expenditure £ s. d. iy Nelson Education Board Grey Education Board North Canterbury Education Board Nelson College Commissioners' travelling- expenses Secretary's travelling-expenses Advertising and printing Examiners' fees Secretary's salary, exchange, &c. Balance Union Bank, 31st December, 1897 Less unpresented cheque £168 3 11 2 2 0 £ s. d. 856 10 0 110 0 0 33 10 0 5 8 9 9 19 6 5 3 10 312 10 1 16 4 19 7 16 4 4 16 15 0 0 8 5 0 6 £ s. a. 856 10 0 110 0 0 33 10 0 312 10 0 7 4 9 14 19 2 13 0 3 4 4 0 50 13 2 33 17 8 154 8 5 11 13 6 166 1 11 £166 1 11 Total expenditure 1,208 18 2 359 15 1 1,568 13 3 Assets. Balance, Union Bank of Australia, 31st December, 1897 Bents outstanding £ s. d. 154 8 5 110 19 3 £ 11 13 63 12 a. 6 6 £ s. d. 166 1 11 174 11 9 Total assets ... ... ... 265 7 8 75 6 0 340 13

Primary. Secondary. Total. Beceipts. 'o Credit balance on 1st January, 1897 Fees under Mining Act (Beserve 128) Boyalties on timber ... Bent of reserves Deposits on sales of sections ... £ s. a. 53 19 1 £ s. d. 88 9 1 27 2 0 17 4 6 26 17 6 31 10 0 £ s. 142 8 27 2 17 4 40 11 34 10 d. 2 0 6 6 0 13 14 0 3 0 0 Total receipts ... 70 13 1 191 3 1 261 16 2 Expenditure By Commission on royalties Hokitika High School Board ... Greymouth High School Board Commissioners' travelling-expenses Secretary's salary (part) Office expenditure Credit balance on 31st December, 1897 ... £ s. d. 5 5 0 5 0 0 7 18 0 52 10 1 £ s. 6 6 60 0 60 0 64 16 d. 8 0 0 5 £ s. 6 6 60 0 60 0 5 5 5 0 7 18 117 6 a. 8 0 0 0 0 0 6 Total expenditure 70 13 1 191 3 1 261 16 2

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General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897— continued.

Jas. A. Bonar, Chairman. A. J. Morton, Secretary. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

CANTEEBUEY. Sir, — Christchurch, sth January, 1898. In accordance with Order in Council of date 17th day of September, 1878, I have the honour to forward the report of the School Commissioners for the Canterbury Provincial District for the year ending the 31st December, 1897, together with a copy of its accounts duly audited. The total area of the primary education estate under lease on the 31st December, 1897, was 68,044J acres, producing an annual rental of £16,003 15s. 10d.; of this area, 24,200 acres is contained in Pastoral Eun No. 5, which was obtained from the Crown early in 1892 in exchange for agricultural land in the Waimate district. The fixed deposit of £163 3s. 5d., which matured on the 21st December, 1897 (and is onlyavailable for the purchase of land), has been renewed for one year. Only one reserve, a small one of 26 acres, has been dealt with during the year, and this was let by tender.for thirteen years and ten months from the Ist July, 1897. The Board during the year granted a slight reduction of rent from the Ist May to two tenants— to one for three years, and to the other until the expiry of his lease, the Ist November, 1901 ; and with respect to tenants who previously obtained a reduction of rent for three years, nine were granted an extension of the reduction for another three years from the Ist November, 1897, and seven an extension of the reduction until the expiry of their leases. I have, &c, The Hon. the Minister of Education, Wellington. H. E. Webb, Chairman.

General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897.

Primary. Secondary. Total. Assets. balance in bank, 31st December, 1897 ■rrears of rent at 31st December, 1897 Total assets £ s. d. £ Si d. £ s. d. 117 6 6 6 14 0 124 0 6 124 0 6 Liabilities. £ s. d. £ B. d. £ s. 5 0 119 0 d. 0 6 Secretary's salary (part) Jredit balance ... Total liabilities... 124 0 6

Primary Education Estate. Total. Receipts. 'o Balance brought down from 31st December, 1896 Arrears of 1896, from last account ... Moneys payable within the year 1897, and collected— On account of half-year's rent payable in advance on the 1st May, 1897 On account of half-year's rent payable in advance on the 1st November, 1897 £ 8. a. £ s. 818 9 1,803 13 a, 7 i 7,867 9 0 6,105 17 5 13,973 6 5 Other receipts— Bank of New Zealand — Interest on £163 3s. 5d. placed on deposit for one year (see statement of 31st December, 1896) 5 14 1 Total receipts ... ... .. 16,601 3 5

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General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure for the Year ending 31st December, 1897 — continued.

H. H. Pitman, H. E. Webb, Steward of Education Eeserves, Chairman of the School Commissioners, sth January, 1898. sth January, 1898. Examined and found correct—J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

OTAGO. Sir,— Dunedin, 26th May, 1898. In accordance with Order in Council of 17th December, 1878, and in compliance with circular from the Education Department, dated 3rd December last, I have the honour to forward the following report of the School Commissioners for the Otago Provincial District for the year -ended 31st December, 1897 :— 14— B. 1.

Primary Education Estate. Total. Expenditure. ly Office-expenses and management — Salary of steward (inclusive of all travelling-expenses) Stationery and postage ... Bank exchange on cheques School Commissioners, railage and expenses £ 540 9 0 9 s. d. 0 0 1 10 9 0 4 0 £ s. A 558 14 10 Expenses of leasing— Advertising and printing Expenditure in connection with reserves— Temuka Boad Board : School Commissioners' one-third share of cost of deepening drains ... C. Brosnahan : Grant made by School Commissioners towards cost of sinking well 11 6 8 4 14 6 L0 0 0 21 6 8 Payments to Education Boards — North Canterbury South Canterbury 12,437 9 2,912 10 3 9 584 16 15,350 0 0 0 Balance in Bank of New Zealand, 31st December, 1897 — At credit of Current Account On fixed deposit 503 4 0 163 3 5 15,934 16 0 666 7 5 Total expenditure 16,601 3 5 Assets. Cash in bank, as above Bents payable in advance, 1st May, 1897 —Proportion uncollected ... Bents payable in advance, 1st Nov., 1897—Proportion uncollected ... £ s. d. 127 8 2 1,896 0 6 £ 666 s. 7 a. 5 2,023 8 8 Total assets 2,689 61 1 Liabilities. Steward's salary, December, 1897 Awaiting appropriation in purchase of land £ s. d. £ 45 163 s. d. 0 0 3 5 Total liabilities 208 3 5

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The Commissioners held sixteen meetings during the year, at which a large amount of routine business was transacted. During the year the Commissioners leased thirty-one reserves for pastoral purposes, forty-four for agricultural purposes, and twenty-five township sections in various parts of Otago and Southland. The area of the pastoral land was 99,264 acres, leased to twenty-nine tenants, at an annual rent of £681 45., or 1-fd. per acre. The area of the agricultural land was 5,488 acres, leased to thirty-eight tenants at £761, or 2s. 7d. per acre. The township sections contain about 1 rood each, and were taken up by twenty-five tenants, at £28 18s. 6d. per annum. The total number of tenants on the Commissioners' rent-roll at the end of 1897 was 841. During the year the sum of £2,082 19s. lid. was received in repayment of loans, and £100 was advanced on mortgage. As the Commissioners have been unable as yet to find suitable security for the balance of the uninvested cash, it was placed in the Bank of New Zealand and National Bank of New Zealand on fixed deposit. During the year the Commissioners were compelled to incur a large expenditure in destroying rabbits on the Wendon, Otama, and Greenvale Euns, for which they were unable to obtain tenants until recently, notwithstanding the fact that the runs were repeatedly offered by auction and tender at low upsets. After the deduction of a block of 4,401 acres, the country referred to was ultimately subdivided into eight runs containing from 1,200 to 22,000 acres each, which were taken up by seven separate tenants, at an average rent of 15-16ths of a penny per acre. The block of 4,401 acres was subdivided into six sections, containing from 400 to 979 acres each, which were taken up by six tenants, at from sd. to lid. per acre. Of the amounts shown in the statement of receipts and expenditure as arrears of rent on 31st December, 1897, the sum of £3,321 16s. 7d. has since been collected, and as the tenants are now realising on their crops a large portion of the balance will shortly be paid. The rents are all payable half-yearly in advance, a number of them not falling due until near the end of the year, and as a rule these are not paid until after harvest. The Commissioners find that in the case of new blocks, the lessees often take up the land at high rents at auction, and that, unless they have capital (which is seldom the case), they find a difficulty in paying the rent. In the case of the tenants in settled districts, who in most cases have freeholds as well, the rents are fairly well paid. The amount of £1,587 Bs. 2d., shown under the head of expenditure in the statement of accounts, appears to be somewhat large, and in explanation I would like to say that £250 was paid for rabbiting; £116 19s. ss. was paid for improving the reserves by draining, road-making, and river-protection, &c. ; while £98 14s. was paid to tbe Government in. the shape of train-fares, stamps, and telegrams, &c. (£44 16s. lOd. being train-fares of country Commissioners in connection with their attendance at meetings). The sum of £27 10s. 6d. was collected for the preparation of leases by the office staff, and should bo deducted from the cost of management. If the foregoing figures are deducted, the actual cost of management would be £1,094 4s. 3d., or £5 lis. Bd. per cent, on the money collected during the year. I have, &c, J. P. Maitland, Chairman. The Hon. the Minister of Education, Wellington.

General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure of the School Commissioners of Otago for Year ending 31st December, 1897" (supplied in accordance with section 13 of "The Education Reserves Act, 1877").

3ee lircular No. 3 (June, 1880), with reference to dividing between primary and secondary education reserves any expenditure, such as office and any other expenditure which cannot clearly be separated.] Primary. Secondary. Total. Primary. j Secondary. Total. Beceipts. 'o Credit balances, 1st January, 1897 — Bank of New Zealand Bank of New Zealand, fixed deposits... National Bank of New Zealand, fixed deposits... Arrears of revenue for previous years, viz.,— Bents of reserves ... Interest on mortgages Bevenues, viz.,— Bent of reserves for current year Interest on mortgages Interest on fixed deposits Other receipts, viz.,— Net proceeds of land sales ... Bepayment of loans Costs received for preparing leases Valuation for improvements £ s. d. £ s. a. £ s. a. 220 16 7 2,300 0 0 5,700 0 0 5,077 16 8 285 16 3 161 19 9 5,2.39 16 5 285 16 3 7,835 9 4 1,157 4 2 260 5 0 541 7 8 8,376 17 0 1,157 4 2 260 5 0 1,596 11 7 2,082 19 11 27 10 6 557 10 6 1,596 11 7 2,082 19 11 27 10 6 557 10 6 Total receipts ... 27,805 7 11

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General Statement of Receipts and Expenditure of the School Commissioners of Otago for Year ending 31st December, 1897 — continued.

Primary. Secondary. Total. Expenditw ly Salaries and allowances to officers, viz.,— Secretary, £300; clerk, £120; agent at Invercargill, £225 ... School Commissioners' travelling-expenses at-' tending monthly meetings— J. Green, £15 17s. J. W. Bain, train-fares, £21 13s. ; hotel ex-1 penses, £23 10s. A. Baldey, train-fares, £23 3s. lOd.; hotel expenses, £23 10s. W. Dallas, hotel expenses, £16 Office-rent, cleaning, fuel, &c. ... Printing and stationery Incidentals, £11 15s. 4d.; stamps, £28 19s.; telegrams, £3 19s.; telephone, £7 Legal expenses Expenses of leasing : Auctioneer's commission and charges Advertising ... Inspection of reserves : Travelling-expenses and valuation-fees Expenditure on reserves — Protective works, draining, and road-making ... Surveying new block Insurance premiums ... Bates Destroying rabbits ... Payment for improvements to outgoing tenants ... Behind rent, paid in error to Beceiver Land Be venue Beturn of deposit to rabbit contractor ... Amount advanced on mortgage Payments towards primary education— Otago Education Board Southland Education Board Payments towards secondary education— Otago Boys' and Girls' High Schools Board Southland Boys' and Girls' High Schools Board Waitaki Boys' and Girls' High Schools Board... Credit balances on 31st December, 1897 £ s. d. £ s. d. £ s. d. r 645 0 0 123 13 10 96 9 5 40 2 6 51 13 5 45 8 9 1,537 19 11 49 8 3 28 16 1 117 0 6 45 12 9 116 19 5 12 12 0 13 14 6 0 5 0 250 0 0 667 0 0 667 0 0 4 19 4 19 100 0 6 6 0 4 19 6 4 19 6 100 0 0 9,461 1 3,461 14 3 1 6 J- 12,922 15 9 425 15 177 4 58 9 4 8 2 661 9 2 11,856 15 10 Total expenditure 27,805 7 11 Assets. .rrears on 31st December, 1897, viz.,— Arrears of rent due in and prior to 1894 ... 1895... 1896... Arrears of interest due in 1896 ... Arrears of rent due in 1897 Arrears of interest due in 1897 ... .mount due on fixed deposit mount of balance in bank .mount of money advanced on mortgage ... £ s. d. 90 1 9 120 14 10 627 18 3 45 16 0 5,429 11 8 183 18 5 £ s. a. £ s. d. 90 1 9 120 14 10 632 0 9 45 16 0 5,569 16 5 183 18 5 11,700 0 0 156 15 10 27,819 4 6 4 "2 6 140 4 9 Total assets 46,318 8 6 Liabilities. >ue to primary apportionment to Education Boards ,ents overpaid... £ s. £ s. d. I £ s. 121 16 6 5 d. 0 0 Total liabilities i 128 1 128 1 0 0

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General Statement of Eeceipts and Expenditure of the School Commissioners of Otago for Year ending 31st December, 1897 — continued. Balance Account. 1897. £ s. a. 1897. £ s. d. Jan. 1. Balances brought down— Jan. 1. Balances brought down— Capital Account .. .. 38,201 5 9 Pixea aeposits—Bank of New Deposits Accounts .. .. 26 19 6 Zealand .. .. .. 2,300 0 0 Primary : Rentx under appor- Fixed deposits—National Bank tioned .. .. .. 30 18 9 of New Zealand .. .. 5,700 0 0 Secondary: Rents under appor- Bank of New Zealand .. 220 16 7 tioned .. .. .. 7 10 0 Investments .. .. 29,819 19 5 Dec. 31. Balances carried forward— Dec. 31. Balances carried forward — Fixed deposits—Bank of New Capital Account .. .. 39,780 2 4 Zealand .. .. .. 5,000 0 0 Primary: Rents under apporFixed deposits—National Bank tioned .. .. .. 121 16 0 of New Zealand .. .. 6,700 0 0 Cash in Bank of New Zealand and in hand .. .. 156 15 10 Investments .. .. 27,819 4 6 £77,942 14 4 £77,942 14 4 J. P. Maitland, Chairman. C. Macandrew, Secretary and Treasurer. Examined and found correct. —J. K. Warburton, Controller and Auditor-General.

By Authority: John Mackay, Government Printer, Wellington.—lB9B. Price 2s.]

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Bibliographic details

EDUCATION: TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MINISTER OF EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-1, Sess. II., 1897.], Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1898 Session I, E-01

Word Count
107,135

EDUCATION: TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MINISTER OF EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-1, Sess. II., 1897.] Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1898 Session I, E-01

EDUCATION: TWENTY-FIRST ANNUAL REPORT OF THE MINISTER OF EDUCATION. [In continuation of E.-1, Sess. II., 1897.] Appendix to the Journals of the House of Representatives, 1898 Session I, E-01