Directory_and_Chronicle_1921 — Page 470

Directories & Chronicles 香港指南 All

416

HONGKONG POSTAL GUIDE

(c) The fee for insurance is in addition to postage and fee for registration. (d) Insurance to'an amount greater than the real value of the contents of a

letter is prohibited.

(e) The infringement of the above rule with intent to defraud deprives the

sender of any. right to compensation.

(ƒ) It is forbidden to enclose in insured letter:-(1) Coin; (2) Articles subject to Customs duty, except paper money; (3) Articles of gold or silver, precious stones, jewellery, and other articles of a similar nature.

(g) The sender of a letter containing insured articles receives gratis at the time

of posting a summary receipt for his letter.

(h) The sender of a letter containing insured articles can have sent to him an acknowledgment of the delivery of the packet to the addressee, or can, subsequent to posting of the letter, ask for information as to its disposal, under the same conditions as for registered articles (see paragraph 123).

(i) An application for an indemnity for loss of an insured letter is only enter-

tained if made within a year of the posting of the insured letter. (j) Letters containing insured articles can only be accepted if enclosed in a strong envelope fastened by means of seals in fine wax, with spaces be- tween, reproducing a private mark, and affixed in sufficient number to hold down all the folds of the envelope. The employment of envelopes with coloured borders is forbidden.

(k) The condition of every letter must be such that its contents cannot be got

at without external and visible damage to the envelope or the seals. (1) Space must be left between the postage stamps used for the prepayment, so that they cannot serve to hide injuries to the envelope. They must not be folded over the two sides of the envelope so as to cover the edge. (m) Articles addressed to initials or directed in pencil are not accepted

for insurance.

(n) The amount of the value insured must be expressed in francs and centimes, and must be written by the sender on the cover of the packet in words and in figures, without erasure or correction, even if certified. (0) The sender's name and address must be written on the left-hand lower

corner on the face of the cover.

(p) Except in cases beyond control (e., fire, tempest, earthquake, war, shipwreck, etc.), when an insured letter has been lost or damaged or its contents abstracted, the sender, or at his request the addressee, is entitled to an indemnity corresponding with the actual amount of the loss, damage or abstraction unless the damage has been caused by the fault or negligence of the sender or arises from the nature of the article, and provided that this indemnity may not exceed in any case the sum for which the letter has been insured.

(9) In case of loss the sender is also entitled to return of the expenses of

transmission.

(7) The seals on an ordinary envelope should be placed as shown below :—

(A

(A)

A

(s) All the seals on an insured letter must be of the same kind of wax, and must bear distinct impressions of the same private device. Coins must not be used for sealing; and the device must not consist merely of straight, crossed, or curved lines which could readily be imitated.

PARCEL POST

General

141. For rates of postage, maximum dimensions and weight, prohibited articles, etc., see Appendix IV.

142.--No packet can be accepted by an officer of the Department for transmission by Parcel Post unless the postage at the above rates is paid. The postage stamps should be affixed by the sender to the cover of the parcel at the right-hand upper corner on the face.

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.