Postal, Telegraphic and Telephone Regulations (Amendment) (Cth)
STATUTORY RULES.
REGULATION UNDER THE POST AND TELEGRAPH ACT 1901–1912.
(Issued provisionally as Statutory Rules 1913, No. 255.)
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
Telegraphic Regulations,
to come into operation on the 3rd day of January, 1914.
Dated this
tenth day of December, One thousand nine hundred and thirteen
DENMAN,
Governor-General.
by His Excellency’s Command,
AGAR WYNNE.
––––––
Telegraphic Regulations.
The Regulation under this head (
Gazette No. 26 of 5thJune, 1902, page 259, as amended by Statutory Rules 1911, No. 127) is repealed, and the following regulation is inserted in its stead:—
A telegram may, on the written request of the addressee or his agent, be re-directed and re-transmitted from one office to another within the Commonwealth; such telegram shall, on re-transmission, be charged half rate, with a minimum of 6d., which must be paid before delivery.
A telegram addressed to a hotel or house at which lodgers are received, may, if the addressee has left such hotel or house, be returned, if unopened, to the office from which it was delivered, with as indorsement on the cover containing instructions as to its further transmission; such instruction must be signed and dated by the proprietor of such hotel or house, or his servant, who, for the purpose of this regulation, shall be deemed to be the agent of the addressee of such telegram.
C.16925.—Price 3d.
A telegram intended for delivery from an office within the metropolitan area of a capital city, and wrongly addressed to the capital city instead of to the office of intended delivery, and any re-directed telegram, the original and second addresses of which are within a radius of three miles from a General Post Office, may be re-directed and delivered or re-transmitted and delivered without additional charge.
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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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