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1824. Decr. 24 1825 Dec. 18. + B + 10
Constitutional Code
IV
Ch. XXVI Local Headmen
§.23. Relation to Registrar
Instruction
10
1
Instructions
§.23. Relation to Registrar. Instructions to the Legislator.
Of Between the Local Headman and the Registrar the relation to the Local
Headman will it will be in stands upon a very different footing from that of the relation
between a Judge and the Registrar. On various accounts on the situation of the Local Headman must
not only the term of
service will require to
be short, and his location
the Election of belonging
the to his territory. Of
the several branches of
appropriate aptitude
the moral is that
which is principally looked
to on the occasion of the
location of this functionary.
For the intellectual and active
branches and a
much greater length of
service will be required
To these the effect of
these qualities must
be looked for referred
the confidence deference which
it is expected will
be referred paid to him
him by the his
colleague to whose
situation
his is in appearance
but subservient.
The To the Local Headman a necessary Mentor
is the Local Registrar.
2
Stationary his Office, located by a
functionary endowed as far as the provision arrangements
endow a man with appropriate in all its branches, and
more especially the intellectual . and by being
stationary in office, fortified equipped with expression, the Registrar
will be comparison constantly
excessive st and check
1
1 Of the Headman nothing
more can in the beginning at this stage be h except that at the
moment of his election he was popular, and that the probability
is that by the prudent and beneficent use of
a degree portion of more or less permanent, he had acquired
the reputation of comparative prudence wisdom and benevolence. But in any
number of Bissubdistricts having no one can say what
proportion to the whole, the means any faculty of right judgment may
be, no one can say in what proportion wanting: he will
not be malevolent but he may be in a considerable degree
be in the intellectual sense, weak. In the Town situations, this
weakness infirmity will naturally be at its minimum, less in the direct ratio
of their populariness: in the country situations, at its maximum,
greater in the inverse ratio of their populariness. For the
denser the population, the stronger the tutelary power of the
Public Opinion Tribunal, as per Ch. V. Constitution, §.
Now as to the Registrar. His appropriate moral aptitude
having by the checks applied in his selection, as per §.16, sufficiently
it is supposed provided for r to be provided for his appropriate
intellectual and active aptitude. The Provision For this requisite, therefore this the
in tests he has undergone stood under the public examination
principle, as per Ch. Locable who: 1. choice made of him
by
1
Art. 1. Different from the relation
of Judiciary Registrar to
Judge is Local Registrar
to Local Headman.
1. Moral is the aptitude
looked for in Headman
2. Short his term of service
3. Election, his mode of
location
4. In some Country territories
though annual Election will
prevent his being malevolent,
not so his being weak
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