Telephone Regulations (Amendment) (Provisional) (Cth)
STATUTORY RULES.
PROVISIONAL REGULATION UNDER THE POST AND TELEGRAPH ACT 1901-1913.
I, SIR ARTHUR STANLEY, Governor of the State ofVictoria and its Dependencies, in the Commonwealth of
Australia, acting as the Deputy ofthe Governor-General in accordance
with the provisions of the Constitution, acting with the Advice of the Federal
Executive Council, hereby certify that, on account of urgency, the
undermentioned amended Regulation under the
Dated this 29th day of January, One thousand nine hundred and fifteen.
A. L. STANLEY,
Deputy of the Governor-General.
By His Excellency’s Command,
W. G. SPENCE,
Postmaster-General.
Amendment of the Telephone Regulations, 1913.
(Statutory Rules 1913, No. 349, as amended by Statutory Rules 1914, No. 71.)
Regulation 47 is repealed, and the following Regulation is inserted in its stead:—
47. (1) Subject to this Regulation the fee for the use of a public telephone shall be uniformly One penny for a conversation of three minutes, or part of three minutes, whether the call be made by a subscriber or a non-subscriber.
(2) This fee covers only the conversation from the public telephone to any subscriber connected with the network of the Exchange to which that public telephone is connected. The network includes the main and branch Exchanges, but does not include trunk lines.
(3) If a person speak from one public telephone to a person at a second public telephone the fee for the use of each telephone must be paid.
(4) The fee prescribed in this Regulation shall be paid for the use of any public telephone situated within 10 miles radially from the Central Telephone Exchange in the case of telephone networks of cities or towns having a population of more than 10,000 resident within 10 miles radially from the Central Telephone Exchange, or situated within 5 miles in the case of other networks or Exchanges.
C.17593.—Price 3d.
(5) For the use of public telephones beyond these distances respectively the trunk line charges specified in Regulation 51 shall be paid; when a public telephone is used for the purpose of conversing over a trunk line, however, the fee for the use of the trunk line only is to be charged.
(6) Public telephones will not be opened unless the
estimated revenue to be derived annually is equal to the amount of (
(7) A public telephone will be provided at a cab rank, where required, on the understanding that if the minimum revenue of £5 per annum be not derived from the use of the telephone, the instrument wilt be removed. Any cab proprietor or driver using the cab rank so connected shall be entitled to use the telephone upon payment of the prescribed fee for each call he makes; and no preference, whether for inward or outward messages, shall be given to any cab proprietor or driver using that cab rank. This Regulation shall not apply to any telephone at a cab rank, the annual fee for which is paid by a municipal council.
Printed and Published for the Government
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