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Khawas Khan, the Money Order clerk at Kowloon Post Office states that on the 10th. September, 1913, an Indian, whom he does not know and cannot recognize, came
to the Kowloon Office where he, (Khawas Khan) was loney Order clerk and made application for a Money Order for transmission to the Deputy Commissioner of the Hoshiar- -pur District of the sum of £113.93; and that he accept- -ed the application. In support of the statement of Muhamed Akbar, Mr. Dixon the Superintendent of the Money Order Office, produced before your Committee the whole of the foreign applications for Loney Orders presented for transmission abroad from the 13th. to the 24th.June, 1913, and amongst them dated with the office date stamp of the 14th. June appears an application, marked Blue "E" amongst the Exhibits, made at the ilongkong Post Office which is admitted by Mr. Alim Khan to be in his own handwriting for the transmission of $100 to the Deputy Commissioner of the Hoshiarpur District the transmitter's name being given as the Official Adminis- -trator, Hongkong. Hr. Dixon also states that there is no other record of any transmission to Hoshiarpur by Money Order between January, 1913, and 14th. June, 1913, the date of this application. In support of Mr. Khawas Khan's statement Mr. Dixon also produced, similarly, a Money Order application, marked Blue "I" amongst the Exhibits, dated with the office date stamp of the 10th. September, 1913, made at the Kowloon Branch of the Post Office for the transmission to the Deputy Commissioner, Hoshiarpur District of the sum of $113.93 the trans- raistis -mitter's name being given as the Official Administrator Hongkong but the application in this case being typewritten. In both these cases the application forms are duly numbered in consecutive enumeration in their respective bundles, and, so far as can be judged from their external appearance, there is nothing to
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