,510 Appendix. 



Institute shall be a sufficient discharge to the Public Trustee : And in 

 no case shall the Public Trustee be concerned to inquire into the adminis- 

 tration of the said moneys by the Governors of the said Institute. 



As witness the seals of the said parties hereto, the day and year first 

 hereinbefore written, 



ICules and Regulations made by the Governors of the New Zealand 

 Institute in relation to the Hector Memorial Research Fund. 



1. The funds placed in the hands of the Board by the Wellington 

 Hector Memorial Committee be called " The Hector Memorial Reseaich 

 Fund," in memory of the late Sir James Hector, K.C.M.G., F.R.S. 

 ITie object of such fund shall be the encouragement of scientific research 

 in New Zealand, and such fund shall consist of the moneys subscribed 

 and granted for the purpose of the memorial and all other funds which 

 may be given or granted for the same purpose. 



2. The funds shall be vested in the Institute. The Board of Go- 

 vernors of the Institute shall have the control of the said moneys, and 

 may invest the same upon any securities proper for trust-moneys. 



3. A sum not exceeding one hundred pounds (£100) shall be expended 

 in procuring a bronze medal, to be known as the Hector Memorial Medal. 



' 4. The fund, or such jDart thereof as shall not be used as aforesaid, 

 shall be invested in such securities as may be approved by the Board 

 of Governors, and the interest arising from such investment shall be 

 used for the furtherance of the objects of the fund by providing thereout 

 a j)rize for the encouragement of such scientific research in New Zealand 

 of such amount as the Board of Governors shall from time to time 

 determine. 



5. The Hector Memorial Medal and Prize shall be awarded annually 

 by the Board of Governors. 



6. The prize and medal shall be awarded by rotation for the follow- 

 ing subjects, namely: — (1) Botany, (2) chemistry, (3) ethnology, (4) geo- 

 logy, (5) physics (including mathematics and astronomy), (6) zoology 

 (including animal physiology). . ♦ 



In each year the medal and prize shall be awarded to that investi- 

 gator who, working within the Dominion of New Zealand, shall in the 

 opinion of the Board of Governors have done most towards the advance- 

 ment of that branch of science to which the medal and prize are in such 

 year allotted. 



7. Whenever possible the medal shall be presented in some public 

 manner. 



Award of the Hector Memorial Research Fund. 



1912. L. Cockayne, Ph.D., F.L.S., F.R.S.— For researches in New 



Zealand botanv. 



1913. T. H. Easterfield, M.A., Ph.D. — For researches in chemistry. 



1914. Elsdon Best — For researches in New Zealand ethnology. 



1915. P. Marshall, M.A., D.Sc, F.G.S.— For researches in New 



Zealand geology. 



1916. Sir Ernest Rutherford, F.R.S. — For researches in physics. 



1917. Charles Chilton, M. A. ,D.Sc.,F.L.S.,C.M.Z.S.— For researches 



in zoology. 



1918. T. F. Cheeseman, F.L.S., F.Z.S.— For researches in New 



Zealand systematic botany. 



1919. P. W. Robertson — For reseai-ches in chemistry. 



1920. S. Percy Smith — For researches in New Zealand ethnology. 



