CO129-335 - Governor Nathan - 1906 [8-10] — Page 389

CO129 Colonial Office Hong Kong Records 理藩院香港檔案 All AI Reviewed

General Post Office,

Hongkong, 24th September, 1903.

C.O. 41032/385

Sir,

I have the honour to acknowledge receipt of your letter of 20th September, 1903, No. 7348/1903/C.U.D., enclosing a copy of extracts from a confidential despatch from the Secretary of State regarding the case of the New Territories absconding Shroff To Mai-lan.

I would point out that this is the first intimation I have had that my name had been mentioned in connection with this case.

The recommendation was made nearly two and a half years ago and I cannot now speak from personal recollection of this particular man but I would mention that since I have been in this Colony it has fallen to my lot to make a very large number of selections and recommendations for clerical appointments probably more than any other officer in the Service.

I may state that I have invariably made it a rule to enquire as to the character of applicants as well as their other qualifications. I have always insisted on the production of references either written or verbal and in the latter case have always had them verified.

To Mai-lan found no difficulty in obtaining two valid sureties and the fact that these men were willing to guarantee him was in itself considered sufficient testimony to his honesty.

I had no means of discovering that he had already been dismissed from Government Service or that he had been imprisoned for misconduct and his name did not appear to attract attention in the Colonial Secretary's office.

The Honourable

The Colonial Secretary.

Edit History

2026-06-02 09:36:00 · NVIDIA / meta/llama-4-maverick-17b-128e-instruct
Live
View comparison
AI Proofread
General Post Office, Hongkong, 24th September, 1903. C.O. 41032/385 Sir, I have the honour to acknowledge receipt of your letter of 20th September, 1903, No. 7348/1903/C.U.D., enclosing a copy of extracts from a confidential despatch from the Secretary of State regarding the case of the New Territories absconding Shroff To Mai-lan. I would point out that this is the first intimation I have had that my name had been mentioned in connection with this case. The recommendation was made nearly two and a half years ago and I cannot now speak from personal recollection of this particular man but I would mention that since I have been in this Colony it has fallen to my lot to make a very large number of selections and recommendations for clerical appointments probably more than any other officer in the Service. I may state that I have invariably made it a rule to enquire as to the character of applicants as well as their other qualifications. I have always insisted on the production of references either written or verbal and in the latter case have always had them verified. To Mai-lan found no difficulty in obtaining two valid sureties and the fact that these men were willing to guarantee him was in itself considered sufficient testimony to his honesty. I had no means of discovering that he had already been dismissed from Government Service or that he had been imprisoned for misconduct and his name did not appear to attract attention in the Colonial Secretary's office. The Honourable The Colonial Secretary.
Baseline (Original)
5. JUPY. General Fost Office, hongkong, 24th. Septerber, 1903. C O 41032 385 ! i Sir, RECE PrGE 7 NOV 06! I have the honour to acknowledge receipt of your letter of 20th. Septarber, 1998, No. 7348/1909/C.U.D., enclosing a copy of extracts from a confidential despatch from the Secretary of State regarding the case of the New Territories absconding Shroff To Aai-lan. I woull point out that this is the first intimation I have had that my name had been mentioned in connect- -tion with this cass. The recommendation was made nearly two and a half years ago and I cannot now speak from personal recollection of this particular man but i would mention that since I have been in this Colony it has fallen to my lot to like a very large number of selections and recommendations for clerical appoint- -ments probably more than any other officer in the Service. I may state that I have invariably made it a rule to enquire as to the character of applicants as well as their other qualifications. i have always insisted on the production of references either Aritten or verbal and in the latter case have always bad then verified. ip Mai-ian found no difficulty in cotaining two vall Sureties and the fact that these men were wuing to guarantee hin right in itseif ce considered sufficient testimony to his honesty. The monourable I had no nears of discovering that he had already been dismissed from Government Service or that he had been imprisoned for misconduct and his name and not appear to attract attention in the Colonial Secretary's office. The Colonial Secretary.
2026-06-02 09:36:00 · Baseline
View content

5.

JUPY.

General Fost Office,

hongkong, 24th. Septerber, 1903.

C O

41032

385

!

i

Sir,

RECE PrGE 7 NOV 06! I have the honour to acknowledge receipt of

your letter of 20th. Septarber, 1998, No. 7348/1909/C.U.D.,

enclosing a copy of extracts from a confidential despatch from the Secretary of State regarding the case of the New Territories

absconding Shroff To Aai-lan.

I woull point out that this is the first

intimation I have had that my name had been mentioned in connect-

-tion with this cass.

The recommendation was made nearly two and a

half years ago and I cannot now speak from personal recollection

of this particular man but i would mention that since I have been

in this Colony it has fallen to my lot to like a very large

number of selections and recommendations for clerical appoint-

-ments probably more than any other officer in the Service. I may

state that I have invariably made it a rule to enquire as to the

character of applicants as well as their other qualifications.

i have always insisted on the production of references either

Aritten or verbal and in the latter case have always bad then

verified. ip Mai-ian found no difficulty in cotaining two vall

Sureties and the fact that these men were wuing to guarantee

hin right in itseif ce considered sufficient testimony to his

honesty.

The monourable

I had no nears of discovering that he had

already been dismissed from Government Service or that he had

been imprisoned for misconduct and his name and not appear to

attract attention in the Colonial Secretary's office.

The Colonial Secretary.

Comments

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

No comments yet.

Private Research Note

Private notes are available after approval.