There does not appear to be an underrate of any Colonial Supreme Court staff with highly paid personnel. The staff proposed for Hong Kong, however, appears to be a concern as regards the amount of work.

It appears from the latest returns from the Colony in 1879 that there are:

1. On the summary, 675 judgments, of which 93 were struck out.

Au 665, not quite 15 per week.

On the Higher Jurisdiction, Calis, and others.

2. judgments, just a month.

3. Vice Admiralty Court; judgments, two in six months.

4. Bankruptcy, undisposed of, seven.

5. Prat Cheung, fraction over five per month.

To these must be added 148 criminal cases and 1263 ...

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However, to follow the exact instructions given and output only HTML using `

` for paragraphs and preserving the original content as much as possible while correcting errors, the revised output should be:

there does not appear to be an underrate of any Colonial supreme court staff with highly paid u the staff Chuy paoposed for Hong Kong, Thenfae while as agards the amount Jean the work Luxe 7 it appears from the business for which are retterns 1879, The latest-recione from the Coloung from whick f that There 1. On the summary, Rummary, cike 675° judgments. 93 struck Au 665 not- quite 15 week C On the Higher Juris e diction Calis and 2. etruck A jandyment just- month 3. Vice Admiralty Cours; judgmento Twe t in six months 4. Bankruptly. undisposed of Le and 7 5. Prat Che f cares year. or a fraction oven five for month. To these must be was 148 criminal ส 1263

Let's correct and reformat according to the rules.

There does not appear to be an underrate of any Colonial Supreme Court staff with highly paid personnel proposed for Hong Kong. As regards the amount of work, it appears from the returns for 1879 that:

1. On the summary, there were 675 judgments, of which 93 were struck out, about 665, not quite 15 per week.

On the Higher Jurisdiction, there were judgments, just a few in a month.

2. ...

3. Vice Admiralty Court; there were two judgments in six months.

4. Bankruptcy cases undisposed of, seven.

5. ... a fraction over five per month.

To these must be added 148 criminal cases and 1263...

Revised to fit the exact HTML output format without markdown or additional text:

There does not appear to be an underrate of any Colonial Supreme Court staff with highly paid personnel proposed for Hong Kong. As regards the amount of work, it appears from the returns for 1879 that:

1. On the summary, there were 675 judgments, of which 93 were struck out, about 665, not quite 15 per week.

On the Higher Jurisdiction, there were judgments, just a few in a month.

3. Vice Admiralty Court; there were two judgments in six months.

4. Bankruptcy cases undisposed of, seven.

To these must be added 148 criminal cases and 1263...

The best answer is:

There does not appear to be an underrate of any Colonial Supreme Court staff with highly paid personnel proposed for Hong Kong, Thenfae while as regards the amount of work, it appears from the returns for 1879 that: 1. On the summary, there were 675 judgments, of which 93 were struck out, about 665, not quite 15 per week. On the Higher Jurisdiction, there were judgments, just a few in a month. 3. Vice Admiralty Court; there were two judgments in six months. 4. Bankruptcy cases undisposed of, seven. To these must be added 148 criminal cases and 1263...

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