HINTS TO INVENTORS. Inventors cannot be too careful to whom they show' their inventions before obtaining protection. The patent, when obtained, may be rendered valueless if it be known to more than a very limited circle before application is made. It it; clear that a monopoly cannot be obtained as against the public, when the public are already in possession of the secret. Above all. if you desire a valid patent, do not sell the article before applying. The best thing, therefore, is tc keep the invention, secret until the application for patent iar made. The law’s protection begins the moment the papers) are deposited at the Government Patent Office. Further advice may 15e obtained from ’ Henry Hughes, Patent Agents, ot Queen’s Chambers. Wellington. 432
Twenty-tiro acres.of land are necessary to sustain one man on fresh meat. The same space of land, if devoted to wheat, would feed forty-two people.
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Bibliographic details
New Zealand Times, Volume XXVII, Issue 5729, 26 October 1905, Page 5
Word Count
150Page 5 Advertisements Column 7 New Zealand Times, Volume XXVII, Issue 5729, 26 October 1905, Page 5
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