Liquor Licensing Act 1997—Notices
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
Government Gazette
No. 80 3145 THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT GAZETTE PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY ALL PUBLIC ACTS appearing in this GAZETTE are to be considered official, and obeyed as such ADELAIDE, THURSDAY, 24 JUNE 1999 CONTENTS Page Page Accident Towing Roster Scheme Regulations 1984— Public Sector Management Act 1995—Notices..................................................................3215 Notice...............................................................................................................................3159 Real Property Act 1886—Notice.........................................................................................3217 Acts Assented To...................................................................................................................3146 REGULATIONS Appointments, Resignations, Etc...........................................................................................3156 Evidence Act 1929—(No. 120 of 1999).........................................................................3272 Corporations and District Councils—Notices.......................................................................3285 Explosives Act 1936—(No. 121 of 1999).......................................................................3273 Crown Lands Act 1929—Notices.........................................................................................3157 Criminal Law (Sentencing) Act 1988— Dairy Industry Act 1992—Notice........................................................................................3183 (No. 122 of 1999)..........................................................................................................3274 -
{Num}1. to Don Bernardo Fusari at Rovereto
1. To Don Bernardo Fusari at Rovereto Stresa, 3 January 1847 . This evening I find myself shut in by the snow in the Casa Bolongaro, and I want to write a few lines to my beloved Don Bernardo. Do not think that you are idle while you find yourself there at Rovereto relieved of the care of the college; for you are doing very much - indeed you are doing everything that matters in this world - as long as you are doing the most loveable and holy will of God. It is certain that divine wisdom always has its reasons for whatever it does or allows. Sometimes we are unable to see those reasons, because of our defective sight; but God’s reasoning is in reality both brilliant light and life-giving pure fire. So be happy! Keep up a holy cheerfulness, and give thanks without ceasing. Remember our dear Don Giulio [Todeschi], ever with ‘Deo Gratias’ [Thanks be to God] on his lips. Our beloved and faithful Don Angeli has gone before us to his heavenly dwelling; he will pray for us, and we for him. It may be that before long we shall meet, since the Verona foundation will call me there. The imperial decree for it has come. I commend this work to your prayers and those of Don Antonio Gasperini - whom I ask you to greet for me. I wish you both every blessing in this New Year. Your affectionate servant and friend, A. ROSMINI p. 2. To Don Pietro Bertetti atTortona Stresa, 2 January 1847 My dear brother in Christ, I approve of your idea of waiting until the coming holidays, and then detaching yourself from everything. -
The Good Shepherd in Jn 10
VfRBUM Catholic Biblical Federation ■ SHTZ: J "Ut Verbum Dei currat" Three New Saints Seek. And Find The Year of the Bible F r o m t h e F i e l d The Good Shepherd in Jn 10 N° 68/69 English Edition 3-4/2003 CATHOLIC BIBLICAL FEDERATION BULLETIN DEI VERBUM \s a quarterly publica tion in English, French, German and Spanish. Editors Alexander M. Schweitzer Claudio EttI Assistant to the Editors Dorothee Knabe Production and Layout media_projekt, 70499 Stuttgart A subscription for one year consists of four issues beginning the quarter payment is received. Please indicate in which language you wish to receive the BULLETIN DEI Feature Articles VERBUM. Subscription rates Pioneers of Universal Mission - Three New Saints a Ordinary subscription: US $ 20 / € 20 " U t V e r b u m D e i c u r r a t " - " O m n i b u s o m n i a f a c t u s s u m " Supporting subscription: US $ 34 / € 34 o Third World countries: US$ 14 / € 14 L u d g e r F e l d k a m p e r 4 -i Students: US $ 14 / € 14 Saving Africa through Africa Air mail delivery: US$ 7 / € 7 extra J o s e f B a y e r 8 in order to cover production costs we recom mend a supporting subscription. For mem Seek. And Find - The Year of the Bible ... bers of the Catholic Biblical Federation the subscription fee is included in the annual . i n G e r m a n y 1 1 membership fee. -
1985 to 1989
HOUSE OF ASSEMBLY Fourth Session, Forty—fifth Parliament INDEX TO l'APERS AND BILLS 1985 *These papers have not yet been referred to a Printing Committee. Paper House Number Number Abortions Notified in South Australia, Committee Appointed to Examine and Report on-Report, 1984 90 23 Adelaide Festival Centre Trust-Auditor-General's Report on 1984-85 Advisory Committee on Soil Conservation-Report, 1983-84 126 25 Ageing, Commissioner for the-Report, 1984-85 Agricultural Council, Australian- Resolutions of 120th Meeting, Canberra, 27 September, 1984. Resolutions of 121st Meeting, Melbourne, 11 February 1985 Resolutions of 122nd Meeting, Darwin, 21 July 1985 Architects Act-By-lam No. 38-Promotion of Services Auditor-General- Adelaide Festival Centre Trust-Report on, 1984-85 Pipelines Authority of South Australia-Report on, 1904-58 Racecourses Development Board-Report on, 1984-85 Report, 1984-85 4 16 State Government Insurance Commission-Report on 1984-85 State Opera of South Australia-Report on, 1984-85 State Theatre Company of South Australia-Report on, 1984-85 Australian Mineral Development Laboratories-Report, 1984-85 127 41 Betting Control Board-Report, 1984-85 60 19 Builders Licensing Board-Report, 1983-84 74 30 Charitable Funds, Commissioner of-Report, 1984-85 50 42 Citrus Board of South Australia-Report for Year Ended 30 April 1985 16 43 Clothing Corporation, State-Report, 1984-85 120 44 College of Advanced Education, South Australian- Report, 1984 107 45 Statute Amendment Committees- Estimates Committee A- Report Minutes of Proceedings -
Place Names of South Australia: W
W Some of our names have apparently been given to the places by drunken bushmen andfrom our scrupulosity in interfering with the liberty of the subject, an inflection of no light character has to be borne by those who come after them. SheaoakLog ispassable... as it has an interesting historical association connectedwith it. But what shall we say for Skillogolee Creek? Are we ever to be reminded of thin gruel days at Dotheboy’s Hall or the parish poor house. (Register, 7 October 1861, page 3c) Wabricoola - A property North -East of Black Rock; see pastoral lease no. 1634. Waddikee - A town, 32 km South-West of Kimba, proclaimed on 14 July 1927, took its name from the adjacent well and rock called wadiki where J.C. Darke was killed by Aborigines on 24 October 1844. Waddikee School opened in 1942 and closed in 1945. Aboriginal for ‘wattle’. ( See Darke Peak, Pugatharri & Koongawa, Hundred of) Waddington Bluff - On section 98, Hundred of Waroonee, probably recalls James Waddington, described as an ‘overseer of Waukaringa’. Wadella - A school near Tumby Bay in the Hundred of Hutchison opened on 1 July 1914 by Jessie Ormiston; it closed in 1926. Wadjalawi - A tea tree swamp in the Hundred of Coonarie, west of Point Davenport; an Aboriginal word meaning ‘bull ant water’. Wadmore - G.W. Goyder named Wadmore Hill, near Lyndhurst, after George Wadmore, a survey employee who was born in Plymouth, England, arrived in the John Woodall in 1849 and died at Woodside on 7 August 1918. W.R. Wadmore, Mayor of Campbelltown, was honoured in 1972 when his name was given to Wadmore Park in Maryvale Road, Campbelltown. -
L'osservatore Romano
Spedizione in abbonamento postale Roma, conto corrente postale n. 649004 Copia €1,00 Copia arretrata €2,00 L’OSSERVATORE ROMANO GIORNALE QUOTIDIANO POLITICO RELIGIOSO Unicuique suum Non praevalebunt Anno CLIII n. 250 (46.494) Città del Vaticano giovedì 31 ottobre 2013 . All’udienza generale Papa Francesco invita a pregare per la fine delle violenze nel Paese Riconciliazione e stabilità per l’Iraq E ai fedeli ricorda che la comunione dei santi crea una grande famiglia fra cielo e terra Riconciliazione, pace, unità e stabilità cialmente nei momenti difficili. Se noi volte si fa fatica a chiedere l’aiuto spiri- piccola confessione: «Tutti, anch’io». «per la cara nazione irachena, purtrop- siamo uniti la fede diventa forte. Quan- tuale di quanti condividono con noi Ma «tutto ciò — ha puntualizzato — po colpita quotidianamente da tragici to è bello sostenerci gli uni gli altri l’esperienza cristiana». In proposito il non deve stupirci, perché siamo esseri episodi di violenza»: le ha invocate Pa- nell’avventura meravigliosa della fede», Papa si è chiesto: «Chi di noi tutti non umani, segnati da fragilità e limiti; tutti pa Francesco, all’udienza generale di ha commentato. Del resto «la tendenza ha sperimentato insicurezze, smarri- siamo fragili, tutti abbiamo limiti». stamattina, mercoledì 30 ottobre, al ter- a chiudersi nel privato ha influenzato menti e perfino dubbi nel cammino mine della quale, nell’auletta dell’Aula anche l’ambito religioso, così che molte della fede?». E la risposta è stata una PAGINA 8 Paolo VI, ha salutato alcuni esponenti religiosi del Paese. Presentata al Ponte- fice dal cardinale Jean-Louis Tauran, presidente del Pontificio Consiglio per il Dialogo Interreligioso, la delegazione era composta da rappresentanti delle sovrintendenze irachene sciita e sunni- ta, cristiana, yazidita e sabita. -
Victorib Reginb. A.D
ANNO QUADRAGESIMO Q'UINTO ET QUADRAGESIMO SEXTO VICTORIB REGINB. A.D. 1882. ****f**********f****SI**CCI***~*d*****rk*f*~********C*** No. 278. An Act to amend '' The Constitution Act," "The Consti- tution Act Further Amendment Act, 1881," and an Act, No. 27 of 1872, and to define the Electoral Districts for the Election of Mcmbers to serve in the Parliament of South Australia, and for other purposes. [Reserved, Nove$&er 17th~1882.1 HEREAS it is expedient to amend "The Constitution Act," Preamble. W "The Constitution Act Further Amendment Act, 1881," and an Act, No. 27 of 1872, and to increase the number of members of thc Ilousc of Assembly of the Province of South Australia to fifty-two, and to define the Electoral Districts for the election of members to serve in the Parliament of' South Australia, and for other purposes-Be it therefore Enacted by the Governor of the Province of South Australia, with the advice and consent of thc Legislative Council and House of Assembly of the said province, in this present Parliament assembled, as follows : 1, This Act may be cited for all purposes as " The Constitution short titlu. Act Further Amendment Act, 1883." 2, Thk Act shall be incorporated with, and, so far as is consistent Incorporation. with the tenor thereof, shall be construed as one with The Consti- tution Act," and with any Acts amending the same. 3, This Act shall, subject t~ the provision of the ninth Commencement of section, come into operation from and after a day to be fixed by the 278 Governor 45' & 46' VICTOKIJE, No. -
Vadhalinha Von Doussa
V Many of the changes that have already taken place show that, despite early or local associations, improvements are commonly welcomed and gradually prevail. (Advertiser, 17 September 1900, page 4d) Vadhalinha Gorge - East of Beltana; Aboriginal for ‘like a grub’. Vailima Court - A subdivision of part section 256, Hundred of Adelaide, by Carl H.W. Nitschke, licensed victualler, in 1918; now included in Hackney. The original plan shows ‘Elm Court’. Vale Park - Takes its name from ‘Vale House’, purchased by Philip Levi in November 1856. In November 1947 the last surviving member of the family, Constance Levi, offered the house and ten acres of land to the Walkerville Corporation for the purpose of a public park, known, today, as ‘Levi Park’. In 1838, at the age of sixteen years, Phillip Levi arrived in Australia from Surrey in the Eden. His first job was taken with the Customs Department, but he soon combined pastoral activities with mercantile pursuits. He opened the commercial house of Philip Levi & Co. at the corner of King William and Grenfell Streets, Adelaide, where the old Imperial Hotel stood. That locality was known for many years as ‘Levi’s Corner’. For more than half a century Philip Levi, who in his early youth devoted much time and work to opening up the north, was one of the most familiar figures in Adelaide. Grazing his first flock of sheep over the now thickly populated suburbs of Prospect and Walkerville, Levi… acquired ‘Dust Holes’ near Truro. A man of remarkable energy and financial ability, with a daring speculative spirit, tempered with sound judgement, Levi, most of whose ventures were brought to a successful issue, speedily made a large fortune. -
Paul Hoolihan
Speech by PAUL HOOLIHAN MEMBER FOR KEPPEL Hansard 18 March 2004 FIRST SPEECH Mr HOOLIHAN (Keppel—ALP) (12.26 p.m.), who was received with government 'Hear, hears!', said: It is an honour and pleasure that I be given the opportunity to move— That the following address be presented to the Governor in reply to the speech delivered by Her Excellency in opening this, the First Session of the 51st Parliament of Queensland— May it please Your Excellency— 'We, the Members of the Legislative Assembly of Queensland, wish to assure Your Excellency of our continued respect for the Crown and loyalty to the system of government in this State and to tender our thanks for the speech with which you opened the First Session. The various measures to which Your Excellency referred, and all other matters that may be brought before us, will receive our careful consideration, and we shall strive to deal with them so that our endeavours may contribute to the advancement and prosperity of the people of this State.' It is a great personal pleasure to have been accorded the honour of responding to the Governor's speech. The people of Queensland have endorsed the Beattie Labor government by returning them for an historic third term. The positive policies of the government during its first two terms, and concerns for the citizens of this great state, have been recognised as promoting and improving their quality of life, and they have responded with their support. As part of that recognition, I have been honoured by the voters of Keppel in bringing that electorate back to the Labor fold, and I will strive to live up to that honour. -
'To Fight Against the Horrible Evil of Communism': Catholics, Community and the Movement in Rockhampton, 1943-1957 Barbara Webst
'To fight against the horrible evil of Communism': Catholics, Community and the Movement in Rockhampton, 1943-1957 Barbara Webster* During the 1940s and 1950s, Rockhampton had the reputation of being one of the 1 foremost centres of organised anti-communist activity undertaken predominantly by the Catholic Church and its clandestine industrial organisation, the Movement. Historians have not explained this particular phenomenon nor have they undertaken much research into the post-World War II anti-communist hysteria in regional Australia in general. This article aims to redress this omission in Australian labour historiography by exploring the origin, organisation and operation of the Movement in Rockhampton. It locates the roots of Rockhampton's reputation as a 'hotbed' of Movement activity in the particular socio-economic, political, demographic and cultural characteristics of the city in general and of the Catholic community in particular. It demonstrates the role of 'community', both subjectively and structurally, in mobilising Catholics against communism and the significance of 'place' in the production of community identity and maintenance of authority. On 3 October 1956, the front page of the Morning Bulletin informed the citizens of the Central Queensland city of Rockhampton: Police were summoned to the Rockhampton Trades Hall last night when, marching in a body down the centre of the hall, left wing industrial union delegates took over control of a Trades and Labour Council meeting to climax the most amazing scenes in the council's history.1 In the six months following that dramatic night in Trades Hall, the local union movement found itself in the absurd position of possessing two peak industrial bodies – the 'Old' Rockhampton Trades and Labour Council (RTLC) which had originally formed in 1938 and the 'New' RTLC. -
2003 048.Pdf
No. 48 1999 THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT GAZETTE PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY ALL PUBLIC ACTS appearing in this GAZETTE are to be considered official, and obeyed as such ADELAIDE, THURSDAY, 22 MAY 2003 CONTENTS Page Page Act Assented To ......................................................................2000 Private Advertisements............................................................ 2038 Appointments, Resignations, Etc.............................................2000 Public Trustee Office—Administration of Estates .................. 2037 Boxing and Martial Arts Act 2000—Notice............................2000 Petroleum Act 2000—Notice .................................................. 2011 Corporations and District Councils—Notices .........................2034 Crown Lands Act 1929—Notices............................................2000 REGULATIONS Development Act 1993—Notice .............................................2001 Children’s Services (Baby Sitting Agencies) Variation Environment Protection Authority—Notice ............................2001 Regulations 2003 (No. 48 of 2003).................................. 2024 Geographical Names Act 1991—Notice .................................2001 Liquor Licensing (Dry Areas—Long Term) Variation Land Acquisition Act 1969—Notice.......................................2002 Regulations 2003— Legislative Council Resolution Disallowances........................2002 (No. 49 of 2003)........................................................... 2025 Liquor Licensing Act 1997—Notices......................................2002 -
Government Gazette
No. 107 655 THE SOUTH AUSTRALIAN GOVERNMENT GAZETTE PUBLISHED BY AUTHORITY ALL PUBLIC ACTS appearing in this GAZETTE are to be considered official, and obeyed as such ADELAIDE, THURSDAY, 5 AUGUST 1999 CONTENTS Page Acts Assented To....................................................................656 Corporations and District Councils—Notices ..........................703 Crown Lands Act 1929—Notices............................................656 Fisheries Act 1982—Notices...................................................656 Gaming Machines Act 1992—Notice......................................657 Geographical Names Act 1991¾Notice..................................657 Housing Improvement Act 1940—Erratum ............................657 Liquor Licensing Act 1997—Notices ......................................657 Mining Act 1971—Notices.....................................................660 Petroleum Act 1940¾Notices................................................661 Police Act 1998¾Notices ......................................................663 Private Advertisements...........................................................708 Public Trustee Office—Administration of Estates...................708 Real Property Act 1886—Notice............................................665 Renmark Irrigation Trust, The—Notice..................................665 Roads (Opening and Closing) Act 1991—Notices....................665 South Australian Local Government Grants Commission Act 1992—Notice...............................................................660