Code of Alabama

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22-17-11
Section 22-17-11 Use of shop or parlor as dormitory. No person shall use a barbershop or beauty
parlor as a dormitory, nor shall any operator of a barber shop or beauty parlor permit said
establishment to be so used. (Acts 1919, No. 658, p. 909; Code 1923, §1130; Acts 1935, No.
444, p. 926; Code 1940, T. 22, §68.)...
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45-2-40.05
Section 45-2-40.05 Use of massage parlor as dormitory or place of sleep. No massage parlor
shall be used as and for a dormitory or place of sleep, nor shall any licensee under this
article permit any massage parlor to be so used. (Act 80-498, p. 772, §6.)...
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45-49-42.05
Section 45-49-42.05 Use of massage parlor as dormitory or place of sleep. No massage parlor
shall be used as and for dormitory or place of sleep, nor shall any licensee under this part
permit any massage parlor to be so used. (Act 81-132, p. 152, § 6.)...
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11-43-3
Section 11-43-3 Election, etc., of treasurer, clerk, etc., in cities having more than 6,000
inhabitants; consolidation or abolishment of offices. (a) In cities having a population of
more than 6,000, there shall be elected by the council, at its first regular meeting or as
soon thereafter as practicable, a city treasurer and a city clerk, who shall hold office until
the next general election and until their successors are elected and qualified, and such council
may elect an auditor, and any officers whose election is required by ordinance, and, except
as otherwise provided, the council shall have authority to fix the terms of office, prescribe
their duties, and fix the salaries of the officers. The council may, by ordinance, require
the city treasurer and the city clerk to be residents of the city. Except as provided in subsection
(b), the council, by a two-thirds vote of the members elected, by and with the consent of
the mayor, may consolidate two or more of the offices and may...
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34-6-3
Section 34-6-3 Authority of municipalities. The governing bodies of incorporated cities or
towns where billiard rooms are operated may fix a license fee for the operation of such billiard
rooms and may make such additional regulations governing the operation of such billiard rooms
as they may deem proper, but no city or town shall have power to license or authorize the
doing of any act or thing prohibited by this chapter. (Acts 1923, No. 230, p. 224, §6; Code
1923, §4261; Code 1940, T. 14, §243.)...
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34-6-8
Section 34-6-8 Keeping or operating pool or billiard tables outside incorporated cities or
towns. Any person who keeps, operates, or exhibits a pool or billiard table on which the public
can play, whether for pay or not, outside of an incorporated city or town having a police
force shall, on conviction, be fined not less than $50 nor more than $100 for each table and
may also be sentenced to hard labor for the county for not less than 30 days nor more than
50 days. This section shall not apply to clubs conducted by companies which provide welfare
work for their employees; nor shall it apply to pool or billiard tables kept or operated at
any military camp of the United States or within one fourth of a mile of such military camp,
nor to pool or billiard tables kept and operated at any nitrate plant or on any land acquired
and held by the United States. (Acts 1919, No. 203, p. 196, §1; Code 1923, §4275; Code 1940,
T. 14, §257.)...
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40-12-107
Section 40-12-107 Glass. Each person whose principal business is the selling of plate glass
or other glass shall pay the following license tax: In cities of 100,000 inhabitants or more,
$50; in cities or towns of more than 30,000 and under 100,000 inhabitants, $35; in cities
or towns of more than 7,000 and under 30,000 inhabitants, $20; in all other places, $10. (Acts
1935, No. 194, p. 256; Code 1940, T. 51, §532.)...
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40-12-133
Section 40-12-133 Moving picture shows - Permanent operators. Every person engaging or continuing
in the business of operating a moving picture show, or show of like character, to which admission
is charged shall pay the following license tax: In cities of 35,000 inhabitants and over,
$200; in cities and towns of less than 35,000 and not less than 7,000 inhabitants, $50; in
all other places, $15; provided that, in cities of 35,000 inhabitants or over in which the
theater is one mile or more from the city hall, the license shall be $60 per annum. Moving
picture shows under this section shall be held to mean a show, the principal featuring of
which is moving pictures and for which is required an annual privilege license in Alabama
and shall be conducted within a building arranged or constructed for such purpose, and no
additional license shall be required if other features of entertainment, including vaudeville
acts, are given during any period for which an admission is charged. Any...
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40-12-59
Section 40-12-59 Baseball parks. Each owner or lessee of a baseball park where admission fees
are charged shall pay the following license taxes: In cities or towns of less than 10,000
inhabitants, or within five miles thereof, $10; in cities or towns of 10,000 and less than
25,000 inhabitants, or within five miles thereof, $25; in cities and towns of 25,000 inhabitants
and less than 50,000 inhabitants, or within five miles thereof, $50; in cities and towns of
50,000 inhabitants or more, or within five miles of any such city or town, $100; provided,
that when baseball is allowed by law to be played in any city or town on Sunday, the license
tax therefor in such city or town shall be double the amount hereinbefore named. This section
shall not apply to baseball parks owned or maintained in good faith by educational institutions
located in this state. The provisions of this title permitting the payment of a half-year
license after April 1 shall not apply to this section. (Acts 1935, No....
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40-12-69
Section 40-12-69 Cereal beverages, carbonated or other soft drinks - Retailers. (a) Each person
engaged in the business of selling at retail cereal beverages, carbonated or other soft drinks
in bottles, cans, or other sealed containers shall pay an annual license tax of $2.50. (b)
Each person engaged in the retail business of selling soft drinks in whatever form, by means
of taps or other dispensing devices, shall pay annually the following license taxes: In unincorporated
places, and towns and cities of not over 5,000 inhabitants, $10; in cities and towns of over
5,000 and not over 15,000 inhabitants, $15; in cities of over 15,000 and not over 25,000 inhabitants,
$20; in cities of more than 25,000 inhabitants, $25. A person licensed under this subsection
shall be thereby also licensed to sell at retail cereal beverages, carbonated or other soft
drinks in bottles, cans, or other sealed containers without the payment of the license imposed
in subsection (a) of this section. (Acts 1935,...
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