Page:Epigraphia Indica vol 6.djvu/10

 THE Epigraphia Indica is the official organ for the publication of Indian inscriptions,—both such as are collected by the officers of the Archaeological Survey, and such as are contributed by others interested in the subject. Papers on inscriptions of which the Editor has no impressions at hand should be accompanied by mechanical copies {not tracings) of the original stone or copper-plates. The text of the inscriptions may be transcribed either in Roman or in Nagari characters. It is requested that all papers for the Epigraphia Indica be addressed to Dr. E. Hultzsch, Wartburg-Strasse 18, I., Dresden, Germany, who also invites the discoverers, owners, or trustees of copper-plate edicts (tamrasasana) to send these by Railway parcel, for examination and return, to M. R. Ry. V. Venkayya, M.A., First Assistant to the Government Epigraphist, Ootacamund.