14
497
Mr. Smith "who
wever
recupy
the Convent
complained of its cxistence.
Of course they did not complain to the Government,
but for
tue
as it was not for them
to make the complaint.
I have taken notice of
Every year
I made
the inconvenience
my pastoral visit to the Convent; but judging by the disregard with which we were
treated in other and similar matters
in
I thought it was better to suffer paticuce and even at the cost and inconvenience of the Establishment
W. Smith gree on
saying
"It was
U
no annoyance to them and hat
it been, I have it from themselves
"
they could have requested that the examination inight have been
could
"conducted elsewhere." They have requented but my experience of the past
that their request
shows
would not have been complied with
and we thought it better to bear with patience than to be repulsed
we were in other similar cases.
If
the Government of Hong Kous had
for
the
arry proper consideration inmates never to have put the examination
the Convent they ought
7
room for prostitutes opposite to the Convent and schools. "That it was "no annoyance to them," a man
2-5-9/
f