Rules for Correspondents.
1. Sign your genuine signature and state your address.
2. Write legibly on one side of the paper only,
3. Prepay the postage, or drop communications into the Editor's Box.
4. Do not mix up business matters with letters addressed to the Editor, but address all business communications, money-orders, bank notes, cheques, or postage stamps to The Manager, Observer. When remitting stamps do not fasten thsm to the letter in any manner whatever.
5. Write to the point, and avoid vulgarity, scurrility, low inuendoes, and vagueness. Remember that wit is not coarseness ; trenchant writing,abusej nor mere spying, criticism.
.6 Notes and queries on literary, scientific, artistic, and domestic subjects are gratuitously inserted and answered, except those relating to legal, medical, and surgical topics.
7. We cannot insert matters of business which fairly belong to the advertising department. Hence we do not publish in the news columns offers or requests to hire, to sell, let, lend, borrow, give, or purchase.
8. The Editor does not undertake to answer private inquiries, except in very special cases relating to his own department.
9. Communications which do not conform to the above rules are destroyed, and no rejected manuscript is returned.
Dok't Die iir the House. — "Bough on Bats," clears out rats, mice, beetles, roaches, bed-busrs, fles, ants, insects, moles, jack-rabbits,gophers. The N.Z. Drug Co., General Agents.
For Invalids. — The oldest European wines «- Tawny Port, Pale Dry Sherry, Old French Burgundy. The finest Australian wines — Chasselas, Muscadine, Shiraz, and Burgundy. The purest beverages of other descriptions for invalids' use or for entertainment are supplied by John Reid & Co., at their bottling department, 26, Queen-street.,
The Maoris who paddled their canoe through the bole in the Triumph's bottom, as she lay in Mechanic's Bay, the ether day interviewed Mr Fraser, and wanted him to stand something handsome for the daring intrepidity they had shown in the adventure. The owner laughed at the novelty of the idea, and wanted utu for their taking possession of the lower hold so unceremoniously, and tfieu mountiag the deck to secure their prize. After some argument pro and con, the astute native invader consented to accept a small present for the chief of their hapu, and, on being pressed to name it, at once said a suit of Moses' beat New Zealand tweed, which can bo obtained for sb. a price defying competition.
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https://paperspast.natlib.govt.nz/newspapers/TO18850328.2.36
Bibliographic details
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Observer, Volume 7, Issue 237, 28 March 1885, Page 14
Word count
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396Rules for Correspondents. Observer, Volume 7, Issue 237, 28 March 1885, Page 14
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