1042
THE HONG KONG GOVERNMENT GAZETTE, OCTOBER 25, 1935.
(hereinafter called the defendant) being a child (or young person under the age of sixteen years) brought before the Juvenile Court sitting and charged with having (state the sub-
at
stance of the Offence)
The hearing of the case being adjourned.
You, the said constables, are therefore commanded to convey the defendant to the said Remand Home, and there to deliver him/her to the person in charge thereof, together with this warrant; and you, the person in charge of the Remand Home, to receive him/her into your custody, and, unless he/she shall have been bailed in the meantime, keep him/her until the
day of
193......, and on that day you, the said constables, are required to convey him/her before the Juvenile Court sitting at
in the
at the hour of
noon, to be further dealt with according to law, unless otherwise ordered in the meantime.
Dated this
[L.S.]
day of
2
193......
Magistrate.
JUVENILE OFFENDERS ORDINANCE, 1932.
[Section 9.]
Recognizance to be of good behaviour and to appear for sentence or for conviction and sentence.
(Without sureties).
IN THE POLICE COURT AT
HONG KONG.
JUVENILE COURT.
I, the undersigned
King the sum of
do hereby acknowledge myself to owe to our Sovereign Lord the
dollars to be levied on my
goods, lands and tenements if I fail in the following condition.
Signed (where not taken orally)
Taken (orally) before me the
day of
193......
[L.S.]
Interpreted and explained by
Magistrate.
Sworn Interpreter.
CONDITION.
The condition of the above-written recognizance is such that if the within-bounden
is of good behaviour towards His Majesty and all his liege people for the term of
now next ensuing
and if the within-bounden
appears for sentence or for conviction and sentence when called upon before such Magistrate as may then be sitting at the Police Court
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