<P> and that these ill - effects were so marked and significant that Government intervention was justified but where Sadler's Bill was for a ten - hour day for all workers under eighteen, the Commission recommended an eight - hour day for those under thirteen, hoping for a two - shift system for them which would allow mills to run 16 hours a day . </P> <P> The Factory Act 1833 (3 & 4 Will . IV) c103 was an attempt to establish a regular working day in textile manufacture . The act had the following provisions: </P> <Ul> <Li> Children under 9 could not be employed in textile manufacture (except in silk mills). </Li> <Li> Children under 18 must not work at night (i.e. after 8 . 30 p.m. and before 5.30 a.m.) </Li> <Li> Children (ages 9--13) must not work more than 8 hours with an hour lunch break . (Employers could (and it was envisaged they would) operate a' relay system' with two shifts of children between them covering the permitting working day; adult millworkers therefore being' enabled' to work a 15 - hour day) </Li> <Li> Children (ages 9--13) could only be employed if they had a schoolmaster's certificate that the previous week they had had two hours of education per day (This was to be paid for by a deduction of a penny in the shilling from the children's wages . A factory inspector could disallow payment of any of this money to an' incompetent' schoolmaster, but could not cancel a certificate issued by him .) </Li> <Li> Children (ages 14--18) must not work more than 12 hours a day with an hour lunch break . </Li> <Li> Provided for routine inspections of factories and set up a Factory Inspectorate (subordinate to the Home Office) to carry out such inspections, with the right to demand entry and the authority to act as a magistrate . (Under previous Acts supervision had been by local' visitors' (a Justice of the Peace (JP), and a clergyman) and effectively discretionary). The inspectors were empowered to make and enforce rules and regulations on the detailed application of the Act, independent of the Home Secretary </Li> <Li> Millowners and their close relatives were no longer debarred (if JPs) from hearing cases brought under previous Acts, but were unlikely to be effectively supervised by their colleagues on the local bench or be zealous in supervising other millowners </Li> </Ul> <Li> Children under 9 could not be employed in textile manufacture (except in silk mills). </Li>

What did the english factory act of 1833 do
find me the text answering this question