96

because it is obviously important to identify samples carefully when sending them in support of complaints.

3.

We have caused these foolscap papers to be carefully examined by an expert independent of the Manufacturers and we are satisfied that they are not oversized, for reasons which will be given when dealing with the book paper, and we cannot detect in them the tendency to blot to which the first Audit Clerk refers. They are made of papers of good quality and excellent value at the price, but the chemical analysis which we have had made of them shows that they contain a larger proportion of China clay than those supplied in 1875. It

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