Summary
LABELS.—Inscriptions on bottles, boxes, &c., describing their contents.
LARCENY ADVERTISEMENT ACT.—An Act 33 & 34 Vic., c. 65) has been passed to amend the law relating to advertisements respecting stolen goods. Under the Act 24 & 25 Vic., c. 96, any person who prints or publishes advertisements for the return of stolen goods without questions being asked, forfeits the sum of fifty pounds to any person who will sue for the same by action of debt (Sec. 102). This provision having given occasion to many vexatious proceedings at the instance of common informers against printers and publishers of newspapers, it was thought expedient to pass a new Act, which stayed proceedings in actions brought before its passing; and provides that:—
Every action against the printer or publisher of a newspaper to recover a forfeiture under section one hundred and two of The Larceny Act, 1868, shall be brought six months after the forfeiture is incurred, and no such action against the printer and publisher of a newspaper shall be brought unless the assent in writing of Her Majesty's Attorney-General for England, if the action is brought in England, or for Ireland, if the action is brought in Ireland, has been first obtained to the bringing of such action.—Sec. 3.
LAWS RELATING TO PRINTERS.—A great number of laws have been enacted at different times with the view either of repressing the power of the Press or of exercising a censorship over its utterances. In addition to these, various acts have been passed imposing duties for fiscal purposes, either on the material upon which newspapers are printed, upon portions of their contents, or upon their transmission at home and abroad.
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- Dictionary of Typography and its Accessory Arts , pp. 63 - 80Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2010First published in: 1875