AnnualReport-1920 — Page 22

Administrative Reports 行政報告書 All AI Reviewed

20

The Societies (No. 8)—The object of this Ordinance was to repeal the Societies Ordinance, 1911, which had not proved satisfactory in practice, and to substitute a simpler system based on the Triad and Unlawful Societies Ordinance, 1887.

The Plants (No. 11)—the object of which is to enable the Governor in Council to make regulations for protecting trees, shrubs, and other plants from destruction, injury or removal. Its primary object was to protect the plant known as "Azalea."

The Criminal Intimidation (No. 13).—This enactment was passed with a view to restrain a person from using threats of violence towards another person.

IV.—EDUCATION

No important changes have taken place in the Education Department during the year under review. The Staff has been depleted by causes due to the war, but the deficiency has been met in part by the appointment of Mistresses resident in the Colony.

The total number of pupils at schools in the Colony excluding the Police School and the uncontrolled schools in the New Territories are:

English Schools Vernacular Schools Total Government Schools, 2,929 2,929 Military Schools, 145 145 Excluded Private Schools, 121 26 147 Grant Schools, 2,330 3,409 5,739 Controlled Private Schools, 3,679 13,719 17,398 Controlled Private Schools, New Territories, 1,761 1,761 Technical Institute, 588 588 Total, 9,792 18,915 28,707

The most important schools, apart from the excluded schools, are Queen's College for Chinese, four District Schools its feeders, and the Belilios Public School for Chinese girls. There is an Indian School of growing importance now housed in a new building presented to the Colony by Sir Ellis Kadoorie. Kowloon School and Victoria School for children of British parentage have an average attendance of 124. There is also a school for the children of

Edit History

2026-05-06 21:14:10 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
20 The Societies (No. 8)—The object of this Ordinance was to repeal the Societies Ordinance, 1911, which had not proved satisfactory in practice, and to substitute a simpler system based on the Triad and Unlawful Societies Ordinance, 1887. The Plants (No. 11)—the object of which is to enable the Governor in Council to make regulations for protecting trees, shrubs, and other plants from destruction, injury or removal. Its primary object was to protect the plant known as "Azalea." The Criminal Intimidation (No. 13).—This enactment was passed with a view to restrain a person from using threats of violence towards another person. IV.—EDUCATION No important changes have taken place in the Education Department during the year under review. The Staff has been depleted by causes due to the war, but the deficiency has been met in part by the appointment of Mistresses resident in the Colony. The total number of pupils at schools in the Colony excluding the Police School and the uncontrolled schools in the New Territories are: English Schools Vernacular Schools Total Government Schools, 2,929 2,929 Military Schools, 145 145 Excluded Private Schools, 121 26 147 Grant Schools, 2,330 3,409 5,739 Controlled Private Schools, 3,679 13,719 17,398 Controlled Private Schools, New Territories, 1,761 1,761 Technical Institute, 588 588 Total, 9,792 18,915 28,707 The most important schools, apart from the excluded schools, are Queen's College for Chinese, four District Schools its feeders, and the Belilios Public School for Chinese girls. There is an Indian School of growing importance now housed in a new building presented to the Colony by Sir Ellis Kadoorie. Kowloon School and Victoria School for children of British parentage have an average attendance of 124. There is also a school for the children of
Baseline (Original)
20 The Societies (No. 8)-The object of this Ordinance was to repeal the Societies Ordinance, 1911, which had not proved satisfactory in practice, and to substitute a simpler system based on the Triad and Unlawful Societies Ordinance, 1887. The Plants (No. 11)-the object of which is to enable the Governor in Council to make regulations for protecting trees, shrubs, and other plants from destruction, injury or removal. Its primary object was to protect the plant known as "Azalea." The Criminal Intimidation (No. 13).-This enactment was passed with a view to restrain a person from using threats of violence towards another person. IV.—EDUCATION. No important changes have taken place in the Education Department during the year under review. The Staff has been depleted by causes due to the war, but the deficiency has been met in part by the appointment of Mistresses resident in the Colony. The total number of pupils at schools in the Colony excluding the Police School and the uncontrolled schools in the New Terri- tories are:- Number of Pupils. English Vernacular Total. Schools. Schools. Government Schools, 2,929 2,929 Military Schools, 145 145 ExcludedPrivateSchools, 121 26 147 Grant Schools, 2,330 3,409 5,739 Controlled Private Schools, 3,679 13,719 17,398 Controlled Private Schools, New Terri- tories, - 1,761 1,761 Technical Institute, - 588 588 Total, 9,792 18,915 28,707 The most important schools, apart from the excluded schools, are Queen's College for Chinese, four District Schools its feeders, and the Belilios Public School for Chinese girls. There is an Indian School of growing importance now housed in a new building pre- sented to the Colony by Sir Ellis Kadoorie. Kowloon School and Victoria School for children of British parentage have an average attendance of 124. There is also a school for the children of
2026-05-06 21:14:10 · Baseline
View content

20

The Societies (No. 8)-The object of this Ordinance was to repeal the Societies Ordinance, 1911, which had not proved satisfactory in practice, and to substitute a simpler system based on the Triad and Unlawful Societies Ordinance, 1887.

The Plants (No. 11)-the object of which is to enable the Governor in Council to make regulations for protecting trees, shrubs, and other plants from destruction, injury or removal. Its primary object was to protect the plant known as "Azalea."

The Criminal Intimidation (No. 13).-This enactment was passed with a view to restrain a person from using threats of violence towards another person.

IV.—EDUCATION.

No important changes have taken place in the Education Department during the year under review. The Staff has been depleted by causes due to the war, but the deficiency has been met in part by the appointment of Mistresses resident in the Colony.

The total number of pupils at schools in the Colony excluding the Police School and the uncontrolled schools in the New Terri- tories are:-

Number of Pupils.

English

Vernacular

Total.

Schools.

Schools.

Government Schools,

2,929

2,929

Military Schools,

145

145

ExcludedPrivateSchools,

121

26

147

Grant Schools,

2,330

3,409

5,739

Controlled Private

Schools,

3,679

13,719

17,398

Controlled

Private

Schools, New Terri-

tories,

-

1,761

1,761

Technical Institute,

-

588

588

Total,

9,792

18,915

28,707

The most important schools, apart from the excluded schools, are Queen's College for Chinese, four District Schools its feeders, and the Belilios Public School for Chinese girls. There is an Indian School of growing importance now housed in a new building pre- sented to the Colony by Sir Ellis Kadoorie. Kowloon School and Victoria School for children of British parentage have an average attendance of 124. There is also a school for the children of

Comments

Approved members can add comments, bookmarks, and private notes.

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.