Post and Telegraph Regulations 1913 (Amendment) (Cth)
STATUTORY RULES.
REGULATION UNDER THE POST AND TELEGRAPH ACT 1901-1913.
I, THE GOVERNOR-GENERAL in
and over the Commonwealth of Australia, acting with the advice of the Federal
Executive Council, hereby make the undermentioned amended Regulation under the
Dated this twenty-first day of June, One thousand nine hundred and fifteen.
R. M. FERGUSON,
Governor-General.
By His Excellency’s Command,
W. G. SPENCE,
Postmaster-General.
Amendment of the Post and Telegraph Regulations, 1913.
(Statutory Rules 1913, No. 348.)
Regulation 396 is repealed, and the following Regulation is inserted in its stead:—
396. (1) Telegrams in plain language shall mean those of which the text is entirely written in language which offers an intelligible sense in one or more of the languages authorized for international telegraphic correspondence, viz., English, French, or Latin, or in any language notified by any Administration which is a party to the International Telegraph Union, as authorized for international telegraphic correspondence in plain language, when such language is that of the country of destination; and shall also include code addresses, commercial marks, exchange quotations, letters representing signals of the International code of signals employed in maritime telegrams, abbreviated expressions currently used in ordinary or commercial correspondence, as fob., cif., caf., svp., or any other analogous expression.
(2) The Postmaster-General may require the sender to produce such evidence as to the meaning and the admissibility of any word, and the ordinary usage of any language, and as to any other particular as will satisfy him that the Regulations in respect of plain language are duly observed.
Printed and Published for the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia by Albert J. Mullett, Government Printer for the State of Victoria.
C.4161.—Price 3d.
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