- Project Runeberg -  Sweden : historical and statistical handbook / Second part : industries /
636

(1914) [MARC] Author: Joseph Guinchard
Table of Contents / Innehåll | << Previous | Next >>
  Project Runeberg | Catalog | Recent Changes | Donate | Comments? |   

Full resolution (JPEG) - On this page / på denna sida - X. Internal Communications - 4. Post Service. By R. Lundgren

scanned image

<< prev. page << föreg. sida <<     >> nästa sida >> next page >>


Below is the raw OCR text from the above scanned image. Do you see an error? Proofread the page now!
Här nedan syns maskintolkade texten från faksimilbilden ovan. Ser du något fel? Korrekturläs sidan nu!

This page has never been proofread. / Denna sida har aldrig korrekturlästs.

636

x. internal communications.

official letters, came to an end, a great number of new postal lines and
post-offices being gradually established to replace this method of letter-carrying; in
1877 steps began to be taken to facilitate, by means of rural postmen, the
transmission and delivery of letters in country districts; and in 1882, the
delivery fee to postmen was abolished. It was during this period, too, (in
1875) that there was formed the Universal Postal Union, which has been of
such exceeding great importance for the development of the international postal
service, and by means of which the obstacles in the way this means of
communication were gradually removed.

Of the development of the Swedish post-office during the two decades that
closed the 19th and began the 20th centuries, it may be said that, on the
whole, it kept pace with the rapid progress made by Sweden in the fields of
commerce and industry. By taking part in the periodical congresses of the
Universal Postal Union, and by its continuous co-operation with the permanent
office of this Union, at Berne, the Central Postal Administration has stood in
unbroken connection with the work of reform in the postal service which is
now in progress over the entire world, and has, by this means, gained impulses
to improvements to which the consent of the Government has been obtained,
as far as regards the Swedish postal system. A brief mention will be made
of the most important of these improvements. By means of successive
reductions (1896 and 1905) in the postage for parcels sent by inland post, an
essential increase of this branch of business has been made possible, and by this
means the postal service has, to a certain degree, supplemented the work of
the railways, especially in those parts of the country at a some great distance
from railway communication. The money-order- and the C. O. D. businesses,
both of which are in process of vigorous development, have been facilitated and
extended by measures taken at different periods, the poundage-rates for smaller
amounts, up to 5 kronor, having been adjusted, and the maximum amounts of
postal orders and C. O. D. maximums having been increased, in addition to which,
the powers of the post-offices and of the letter-carriers in rural districts to deal
with such business have been considerably increased. From and including the
month of October, 1909, the weight of letters with the minimum postal charge
was increased from 15 grammes to 20 — a long-wished, for, and by no means
unimportant, reform. From the year 1909, inclusive, there has been employed,
in conformity with the custom abroad, a card of identity, to be employed to
show the identity of the persons who wish to have handed over to them letters
or parcels containing valuables, and postal money orders.*- From and including
the November of the year mentioned, the public are able to have their
receipted bills, bills of lading, current bills of promise, drafts, etc. cashed
within the Kingdom through the post-office, against payment of a small fee.
A long time before this date a similar money-collecting business with abroad
had been in existence. Mention should also be made of the reorganization
of the newspaper-delivery business of the Post Office, which took place in 1904
and has been employed since the beginning of 1905. The conditions for
subscription to the newspaper through the post-office were then altered in such a
way that the postal fees were divided into a requisition-fee and a delivery-fee,
the latter based partly on the periodicity of any particular journal, and partly
on the calculated total weight of the year’s issues. The spread of the
newspapers and journals for which the subscription was paid by the customer direct
to the publishers, was facilitated by the Post-Office allowing them to be sent
in the so-called publisher’s wrappers at a very low postal fee. In .connection
with these reforms, it was determined that a running newspaper-register should
be kept by the Post Office Board, in which there are entered printed periodicals
both of older and of newer date, which have to be removed from the list in the

<< prev. page << föreg. sida <<     >> nästa sida >> next page >>


Project Runeberg, Tue Dec 12 01:37:10 2023 (aronsson) (download) << Previous Next >>
https://runeberg.org/sweden14/2/0650.html

Valid HTML 4.0! All our files are DRM-free