The Gazette 1958-61

lands specified in the said Schedule, which original Certificates, it is alleged, have been lost or in advertently destroyed. A duplicate Certificate will be issued in each case, except a case in respect of which notification is received in this Registry within 28 days from the publication of this notice, that the Certificate of Title is still in existence, and in the custody of some person other than the registered owner. Any such notification should state the grounds on which such Certificate is being held. Dated this loth day of May, 1959. D. L. McALLISTER, Registrar of Titles. SCHEDULE. 1. Registered Owner, Peter Fay. Folio number, 2822. County Cavan. Lands of Coragh in the Barony of Loughtee Lower, containing 393. 3r. 24p. 2. Registered Owner, Patrick J. Lynch. Folio number, 4ooL. City of Dublin. The leasehold estate in the dwelling-house and premises known as No. 171 Griffith Avenue situate on the north side of the said Avenue in Drumcondra Parish of Clonturk and City of Dublin measuring in front to the said Avenue 34 feet 8 inches in the rere 35 feet and in depth from front to rere on the east 197 feet i inch and on the west 197 feet 4 inches and shown as Plan 4ooL edged green on the Registry Map (O.S. XVIII—8 City of Dublin.) SOME RECENT STATUTORY INSTRUMENTS THE Exchange Control Regulations 1959—S.I. No. 44 of 1959— consolidate the Exchange Control Regulations 1955 to 1958, and amend them as follows :— (1) By widening the scope of the statutory exemptions covering the purchase of goods originating in the U.S. Dollar Area and Canada ; (2) By altering the prescribed manners of payment for goods exported to countries outside the Sterling Area; (3) By simplifying the procedure to be followed by persons exporting goods to or importing goods from outside the Sterling Area ; and (4) By reducing the number of specified currencies which must be offered for sale to an Authorised Dealer, i.e. American and Canadian dollars, all Western European and Scandinavian currencies (except Spanish pesetas..) Copies may be obtained from the Stationery Office for i/- The Office 'Premises Act 1958 (Commencement Order 1959 —S.I. No. 29 of 1959—brought the Act into operation on ist April, 1959. Arising from this fact, many orders listed below have been made, which will all come into force on the ist September, 1959. The provisions of the Act only Central Office, Land Registry, Chancery Street, DUBLIN.

apply to offices employing more than five clerical workers ; " clerical work" is defined as " including book-keeping, sorting and filing, typing, document reproduction, machine calculating, drawing, the handling of mail, telephone and telegraph operating and the handling of money." The Regulations at present issued are as follows :— (1) The Office Premises (Overcrowding) Regulations 1959— S.I. No. 30 of 1959—prescribe that 50 square feet shall be the minimum amount of floor space allowed for every person employed in any room. (2) The Office Premises (Minimum Temperature in Work rooms and Cloakrooms) Regulations 1959—S.I. No. 31 of 1959— prescribe that the temperature for every room in which persons are employed or a cloakroom shall be not less than 63 Degrees Fahrenheit, and that such temperature must be attained within one hour after the commencement of work. (3) The Office Premises (Sanitary Conveniences') Regulations 1959—S.I. No. 32 of 1959—prescribes detailed standards of sanitary conveniences in offices, and regulates the ventilation and lighting. (4) The Office Premises (Washing Facilities) Regulations 1959—S.I. No. 33 of 1959—prescribe the standard of separate washing facilities for male and female em ployees at one wash-hand basin per 20 persons, and the provision of soap and clean towels. (5) The Office Premises (Clothing Accommodation) Reg ulations 1959—S.I. No. 34 of 1959—prescribes adequate and suitable accommodation for clothing not worn during office hours, comprising at least one peg and hook per person, such pegs or hooks to be not less than 12 inches apart. The Copyright (Foreign Countries) Order 1959—S.I. No. 50 of 1959—extends the benefit of copyright to all countries of the Berne Union and the Universal Copyright Convention, as listed in the First Schedule. It provides that works first published in any of these countries and the published works of subjects or citizens of these countries shall be protected in the same way as if they were works first published in the Republic of Ireland. Unpublished works of authors who are subjects or citizens of, or resident in, any of these countries, shall be protected as if the authors were citizens of the Irish Republic, or resident in it. The order applies to works first published in countries of the Universal Copyright Convention signed at Geneva on 6th September 1952 only on or after the 2oth January 1959. Works of subjects or citizens of these countries or of countries signatories of the Berne Union of 1886 (as subsequently amended at Paris in 1896, Berlin in 1908, Rome in 1928, and Brussels in 1948), which are first published outside the Scheduled Territories on or after the 2oth January 1959 are similarly protected. The Order does not apply to a work first published in a Berne Union country before that country became a member of the Berne Union. All previous orders granting reciprocal copyright facilities to specified countries are henceforth revoked. Copies of this order may be obtained from the Government Publications Sale Office, The Arcade, Henry Street, Dublin, at gd. each. THE REGISTRY Register A QUALIFIED assistant desired for country office. County Cork. Partnership prospects for suitable applicant. Please furnish particulars of previous experience and salary expected. Box No. A 179. REQUIRED by Dublin Solicitors in general practice, qualified or unqualified assistant. £500 p.a. Box No. A 180. 107

Made with