Post and Telegraph Regulations 1913 (Amendment) (Cth)

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STATUTORY RULES.

1919. No. 247.

REGULATIONS UNDER THE POST AND TELEGRAPH ACT 1901-1916.

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 Regulations under the Post and Telegraph Act 1901-1916, to come into operation forthwith.

Dated this fifteenth day of October, 1919.

R. M. FERGUSON,

Governor-General.

By His Excellency’s Command,

WILLIAM WEBSTER,

Postmaster-General.

———

Amendment of the Post and Telegraph Regulations, 1913.

(Statutory Rules 1913, No. 348, as Amended to this Date.)

1. Regulation 360 is amended by inserting after the word “agent” the words “together with a written undertaking to pay the prescribed charges”.

2. Regulation 361 is repealed and the following regulation is inserted in its stead:—

361. A telegram addressed to a hotel or house at which lodgers are received may be redirected and retransmitted to another office within the Commonwealth, if the addressee has left such hotel or house, on the written request of the addressee or of the proprietor of such hotel or house, who for the purpose of this Regulation shall be deemed to be the agent of the addressee, together with a written undertaking to pay the charges for retransmission prescribed by regulation 360.

 

Printed and Published for the Government of the Commonwealth of Australia by Albert J. Mullett, Government Printer for the State of Victoria.

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