ite
A.
Ir Shelton Hooper:-
15-625-
A.
Mr Lau Chu Pak:-
26
1893.
* Clark 912
It does not go into that point at all.
It shows that one man must do it, because if a man 16.625′′
came to a house, he could not be without the warrant,
because they would kick him out.
There should be a separate warrant for each house.
It is I think a very important thing, where they are
exercising such stringent powers as to go into a man's
house at any hour of the night.
Do you ever visit in the morning to find out about 15.626.
overɑrowding?
A.
What time in the morning ↑
27
Q.
Between 5 and 9.
A.
The Chairman:-
45
152627
The people have gone to work. They bu out at 5 in
morning to work, the most of them. The warrants
executed shortly after sidnight.
15.628
Who do you consider is in charge in the office of all
correspondence ↑ Who do you look te, as reaping ♣
record of all the correspondence of the Sanitary
Department ↑
A.
29
Q.
I dont quite see the purport of the ɑuestion.
The purport is that it is nousă în a big office, - 1
157629
30
A.
not talking of a Government office, • to have all your
correspondence more or less concentrated in the
of one man ?
The person who would be in charge of all serraepombano e
iş the Secretary.
15.630
And the consequence is I presume that overy in supposed to go through the Secretary'shanda ?
PUBLIC RECORD OFFICE
Reference:-
537
AC
31
Int necessarily. No one man could doni with it.
That is another point. I quite understand that wher
you have an enormous number of netloss, it is quite
imponnible for the Beoretary to go through ten er twenty
thousandletters or notices in the course of a year.
15.631
OUT PERMISSION OF REPRODUCED PHOTOGRAPHICALLY WITH COPYRIGHT PHOTOGRAPH – NOT TO BE
F THE PUBLIC
36
RECORD OFFICE LONDON
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